NAME
nfsuserd
—
load user and group information into
the kernel for NFSv4 services plus support manage-gids for all NFS
versions
SYNOPSIS
nfsuserd |
[-domain domain_name]
[-usertimeout minutes]
[-usermax max_cache_size]
[-verbose ] [-force ]
[-manage-gids ]
[num_servers] |
DESCRIPTION
nfsuserd
loads user and group information into the
kernel for NFSv4. For Kerberized NFSv4 mounts, it must be running on both
client(s) and server for correct operation. For non-Kerberized NFSv4 mounts,
this daemon must be running unless all client(s) plus the server are
configured to put uid/gid numbers in the owner and owner_group strings.
It also provides support for manage-gids and must be running on the server if this is being used for any version of NFS.
Upon startup, it loads the machines DNS domain name, plus timeout and cache size limit into the kernel. It then preloads the cache with group and user information, up to the cache size limit and forks off N children (default 4), that service requests from the kernel for cache misses. The master server is there for the sole purpose of killing off the slaves. To stop the nfsuserd, send a SIGUSR1 to the master server.
The following options are available:
-domain
domain_name- This option allows you to override the default DNS domain name, which is acquired by taking either the suffix on the machine's hostname or, if that name is not a fully qualified host name, the canonical name as reported by getaddrinfo(3).
-usertimeout
minutes- Overrides the default timeout for cache entries, in minutes. The longer the time out, the better the performance, but the longer it takes for replaced entries to be seen. If your user/group database management system almost never re-uses the same names or id numbers, a large timeout is recommended. The default is 1 minute.
-usermax
max_cache_size- Overrides the default upper bound on the cache size. The larger the cache, the more kernel memory is used, but the better the performance. If your system can afford the memory use, make this the sum of the number of entries in your group and password databases. The default is 200 entries.
-verbose
- When set, the server logs a bunch of information to syslog.
-force
- This flag option must be set to restart the daemon after it has gone away abnormally and refuses to start, because it thinks nfsuserd is already running.
-manage-gids
- This flag enables manage-gids for the NFS server nfsd(8). When this is enabled, all NFS requests using AUTH_SYS authentication take the uid from the RPC request and uses the group list for that uid provided by getgrouplist(3) on the server instead of the list of groups provided in the RPC authenticator. This can be used to avoid the 16 group limit for AUTH_SYS.
- num_servers
- Specifies how many servers to create (max 20). The default of 4 may be sufficient. You should run enough servers, so that ps(1) shows almost no running time for one or two of the slaves after the system has been running for a long period. Running too few will have a major performance impact, whereas running too many will only tie up some resources, such as a process table entry and swap space.
SEE ALSO
getgrent(3), getgrouplist(3), getpwent(3), nfsv4(4), group(5), passwd(5), nfsd(8)
HISTORY
The nfsuserd
utility was introduced with
the NFSv4 experimental subsystem in 2009.
BUGS
The nfsuserd
use
getgrent(3),
getgrouplist(3) and
getpwent(3) library calls to resolve requests and will hang if the
servers handling those requests fail and the library functions don't return.
See group(5) and
passwd(5) for more information on how the databases are accessed.
Since the kernel communicates with the
nfsuserd
daemon via an upcall that uses the IP
address 127.0.0.1, it does not work correctly when
jail(8) are used and can crash the system.