NAME
nfsd —
remote NFS server
SYNOPSIS
nfsd |
[-ardut] [-n
num_servers] [-h
bindip] |
DESCRIPTION
Thenfsd utility runs on a server machine to service NFS
requests from client machines. At least one nfsd must
be running for a machine to operate as a server.
Unless otherwise specified, four servers for UDP transport are started.
The following options are available:
-r- Register the NFS service with
rpcbind(8) without creating any servers. This option can be
used along with the
-uor-toptions to re-register NFS if the rpcbind server is restarted. -d- Unregister the NFS service with rpcbind(8) without creating any servers.
-n- Specifies how many servers to create.
-hbindip- Specifies which IP address or hostname to bind to on the local host. This
option is recommended when a host has multiple interfaces. Multiple
-hoptions may be specified. -a- Specifies that nfsd should bind to the wildcard IP address. This is the
default if no
-hoptions are given. It may also be specified in addition to any-hoptions given. Note that NFS/UDP does not operate properly when bound to the wildcard IP address whether you use -a or do not use -h. -t- Serve TCP NFS clients.
-u- Serve UDP NFS clients.
For example, “nfsd -u -t -n
6” serves UDP and TCP transports using six daemons.
A server should run enough daemons to handle the maximum level of concurrency from its clients, typically four to six.
The nfsd utility listens for service
requests at the port indicated in the NFS server specification; see
Network File System Protocol Specification, RFC
1094 and NFS: Network File System Version 3 Protocol
Specification.
If nfsd detects that NFS is not loaded in
the running kernel, it will attempt to load a loadable kernel module
containing NFS support using
kldload(2). If this fails, or no NFS KLD is available,
nfsd will exit with an error.
If nfsd is to be run on a host with
multiple interfaces or interface aliases, use of the
-h option is recommended. If you do not use the
option NFS may not respond to UDP packets from the same IP address they were
sent to. Use of this option is also recommended when securing NFS exports on
a firewalling machine such that the NFS sockets can only be accessed by the
inside interface. The ipfw utility would then be
used to block nfs-related packets that come in on the outside interface.
The nfsd utility has to be terminated with
SIGUSR1 and cannot be killed with
SIGTERM or SIGQUIT. The
nfsd utility needs to ignore these signals in order
to stay alive as long as possible during a shutdown, otherwise loopback
mounts will not be able to unmount. If you have to kill
nfsd just do a “kill -USR1
<PID of master nfsd>”
EXIT STATUS
The nfsd utility exits 0 on
success, and >0 if an error occurs.
SEE ALSO
nfsstat(1), kldload(2), nfssvc(2), exports(5), ipfw(8), mountd(8), nfsiod(8), rpcbind(8)
HISTORY
The nfsd utility first appeared in
4.4BSD.