NAME
mount_portal
—
mount the portal daemon
SYNOPSIS
mount_portal |
[-o options]
/etc/portal.conf
mount_point |
DESCRIPTION
The mount_portal
command attaches an
instance of the portal daemon to the global filesystem namespace. The
conventional mount point is /p. The directory
specified by mount_point is converted to an absolute
path before use. This command is normally executed by
mount(8) at boot time.
The options are as follows:
-o
- Options are specified with a
-o
flag followed by a comma separated string of options. See the mount(8) man page for possible options and their meanings.
The portal daemon provides an open service. Objects opened under the portal mount point are dynamically created by the portal daemon according to rules specified in the named configuration file. Using this mechanism allows descriptors such as sockets to be made available in the filesystem namespace.
The portal daemon works by being passed the full pathname of the object being opened. The daemon creates an appropriate descriptor according to the rules in the configuration file, and then passes the descriptor back to the calling process as the result of the open system call.
NAMESPACE
By convention, the portal daemon divides the namespace into sub-namespaces, each of which handles objects of a particular type.
Currently, four sub-namespaces are implemented: tcp, fs, rfilter and wfilter. The tcp namespace takes a hostname and a port (slash separated) and creates an open TCP/IP connection. The fs namespace opens the named file, starting back at the root directory. This can be used to provide a controlled escape path from a chrooted environment.
The rfilter and wfilter namespaces open a pipe to a process, typically a data-filter such as compression or decompression programs. The rfilter namespace opens a read-only pipe, while the wfilter namespace opens a write-only pipe. See the EXAMPLES section below for more examples.
CONFIGURATION FILE
The configuration file contains a list of rules. Each rule takes one line and consists of two or more whitespace separated fields. A hash (“#”) character at beginning of the line, or after whitespace, causes the remainder of a line to be ignored. Blank lines are ignored.
The first field is a pathname prefix to match against the requested pathname. If a match is found, the second field tells the daemon what type of object to create. Subsequent fields are passed to the creation function.
The rfilter and
wfilter namespaces have additional meanings for the
remaining fields. The third field specifies a prefix that is to be stripped
off of the passed name before passing it on to the pipe program. If the
prefix does not match, no stripping is performed. The fourth argument
specifies the program to use for the pipe. Any remaining fields are passed
to the pipe program. If the string
“%s
” exists within these remaining
fields, it will be replaced by the path after stripping is performed. If
there is no field after the program name,
“%s
” will be assumed, to maintain
similarity with the tcp and
fs namespaces.
FILES
- /p/*
EXAMPLES
A tutorial and several examples are provided in /usr/share/examples/mount_portal. The following is an example configuration file.
# @(#)portal.conf 5.1 (Berkeley) 7/13/92 tcp/ tcp tcp/ fs/ file fs/ echo/ rfilter echo/ echo %s echo_nostrip/ rfilter nostrip echo %s echo_noslash rfilter echo_noslash echo %s gzcat/ rfilter gzcat/ gzcat %s gzip/ wfilter gzip/ gzip > %s gzip9/ wfilter gzip9/ gzip -9 > %s ftp/ rfilter ftp/ ftp -Vo - %s ftp:// rfilter nostrip ftp -Vo - %s http:// rfilter nostrip ftp -Vo - %s bzcat/ rfilter bzcat/ bzcat %s nroff/ rfilter nroff/ nroff -man %s
As is true with many other filesystems, a weird sense of humor is handy.
Notice that after the keynames, like nroff/ and bzcat/, we
typically use another slash. In reality, the
mount_portal
process changes directory to
/, which makes the subsequent slash unnecessary.
However, the extra slash provides a visual hint that we are not operating on
an ordinary file. An alternative would be to change the configuration file
to something like:
nroff% rfilter nroff% nroff -man
One might then use
less /p/nroff%/usr/share/man/man8/mount_portal.8
SEE ALSO
HISTORY
The mount_portal
utility first appeared in
4.4BSD. The rfilter and
wfilter capabilities first appeared in
NetBSD 1.5. The portal kernel driver was removed and
mount_portal
was converted to use
puffs(3) in NetBSD 6.0.
BUGS
This filesystem may not be NFS-exported.