Configuring a system to share files and directories using NFS is a
simple process. Every file system being exported to remote users via
NFS, as well as the access rights relating to those file systems, is
located in the /etc/exports file. This file is read
by the exportfs command to give
rpc.mountd and rpc.nfsd the
information necessary to allow the remote mounting of a file system by
an authorized host.
The exportfs command allows the root user to
selectively export or unexport directories without restarting the
NFS service. When exportfs is passed the
proper options, the file systems to be exported are written to
/var/lib/nfs/xtab. Since
rpc.mountd refers to the xtab
file when deciding access privileges to a file system, changes to the
list of exported file systems take effect immediately.
Various options are available when using exportfs:
-r — Causes all directories listed in
/etc/exports to be exported by constructing a
new export list in /etc/lib/nfs/xtab. This
option effectively refreshes the export list with any changes that
have been made to /etc/exports.
-a — Causes all directories to be exported or
unexported, depending on the other options passed to
exportfs.
-o options — Allows the
user to specify directories to be exported that are not listed in
/etc/exports. These additional file system
shares must be written in the same way they are specified in
/etc/exports. This option is used to test an
exported file system before adding it permanently to the list of
file systems to be exported.
-i — Ignore
/etc/exports; only options given from the
command line are used to define exported file systems.
-u — Unexports directories from being
mounted by remote users. The command exportfs
-ua effectively suspends NFS file sharing while keeping the
various NFS daemons up. To allow NFS sharing to continue, type
exportfs -r.
-v — Verbose operation, where the file systems
being exported or unexported are displayed in greater detail when the
exportfs command is executed.
If no options are passed to the exportfs command, it
displays a list of currently exported file systems.
Changes to /etc/exports can also be read by
reloading the NFS service with the service nfs reload
command. This keeps the NFS daemons running while re-exporting the
/etc/exports file.
9.2.1. /etc/exports
The /etc/exports file controls which file systems
are exported to remote hosts and specifies options. Blank lines are
ignored, comments can be made by starting a line with the hash mark
(#), and long lines can be wrapped with a backslash
(\). Each exported file system should be on its own
individual line. Lists of authorized hosts placed after an exported
file system must be separated by space characters. Options for each of
the hosts must be placed in parentheses directly after the host
identifier, without any spaces separating the host and the first
parenthesis.
In its simplest form, /etc/exports only needs to
know the directory to be exported and the hosts permitted to use it:
After re-exporting /etc/exports with the
/sbin/service nfs reload command, the
bob.example.com host will be able to
mount /some/directory and
192.168.0.3 can mount
/another/exported/directory. Because no options
are specified in this example, several default NFS preferences take
effect:
ro — Read-only. Hosts mounting this
file system will not be able to change it. To allow hosts to make
changes to the file system, the rw (read-write)
option must be specified.
async — Allows the server to write data to the disk
when it sees fit. While this is not important if the host is
accessing data as read-only, if a host is making changes to a
read-write file system and the server crashes, data could be
lost. By specifying the sync option, all file
writes must be committed to the disk before the write request by
the client is actually completed. This may lower performance.
wdelay — Causes the NFS server to delay
writing to the disk if it suspects another write request is
imminent. This can improve performance by reducing the number of
times the disk must be accessed by separate write commands,
reducing write overhead. The no_wdelay option
turns off this feature, but is only available when using the
sync option.
root_squash — Strips root users connected
remotely from having root privileges by assigning them the nobody
userid. This effectively "squashes" the power of the remote root
user to the lowest local user, preventing remote root users from
acting as though they were the root user on the local
system. Alternatively, the no_root_squash option
turns off root squashing. To squash every remote user, including
root, use the all_squash option. To specify the
user and group IDs to use with remote users from a particular host,
use the anonuid and anongid
options, respectively. In this case, a special user account can be
created for remote NFS users to share and specify
(anonuid=<uid-value>,anongid=<gid-value>),
where <uid-value>
is the userid number and
<gid-value> is the
group ID number.
In order to override these defaults, you must specify an option that
takes its place. For example, if you do not specify
rw, then that export will only be shared
read-only. Each default for every exported file system must be
explicitly overridden. Additionally, other options are available where
no default value is in place. These include the ability to disable
sub-tree checking, allow access from insecure ports, and allow
insecure file locks (necessary for certain early NFS client
implementations). See the exports man page for
details on these lesser used options.
When specifying hostnames, use the following methods:
single host — Where one particular
host is specified with a fully qualified domain name, hostname, or
IP address.
wildcards — Where a
* or ? character is used to take
into account a grouping of fully qualified domain names that match
a particular string of letters. Wildcards are not to be used with
IP addresses; however, they may accidently work if reverse DNS
lookups fail.
However, be careful when using wildcards with fully qualified
domain names, as they tend to be more exact than you would
expect. For example, the use of *.example.com as
wildcard will allow sales.example.com to access an exported
file system, but not bob.sales.example.com. To match both
possibilities, as well as sam.corp.example.com, you would have to
provide *.example.com *.*.example.com.
IP networks — Allows the matching of
hosts based on their IP addresses within a larger network. For
example, 192.168.0.0/28 will allow the first 16
IP addresses, from 192.168.0.0 to 192.168.0.15, to access the
exported file system but not 192.168.0.16 and higher.
netgroups — Permits an NIS netgroup
name, written as
@<group-name>,
to be used. This effectively puts the NIS server in charge of
access control for this exported file system, where users can be
added and removed from an NIS group without affecting
/etc/exports.
Warning
The format of the /etc/exports file is
very precise, particularly in regards to use of the
space character. Remember to always separate exported file systems
from hosts and hosts from one another with a space
character. However, there should be no other space characters in the
file except on comment lines.
For example, the following two lines do not mean the same thing:
The first line allows only users from
bob.example.com read-write access to the
/home directory. The second line allows users
from bob.example.com to mount
the directory read-only (the default), but the rest of the world can
mount it read-write.