xref: /freebsd/usr.sbin/mountd/exports.5 (revision 4b9d6057)
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28.Dd August 16, 2022
29.Dt EXPORTS 5
30.Os
31.Sh NAME
32.Nm exports
33.Nd define remote mount points for
34.Tn NFS
35mount requests
36.Sh SYNOPSIS
37.Nm
38.Sh DESCRIPTION
39The
40.Nm
41file specifies remote mount points for the
42.Tn NFS
43mount protocol per the
44.Tn NFS
45server specification; see
46.%T "Network File System Protocol Specification" ,
47RFC1094, Appendix A and
48.%T "NFS: Network File System Version 3 Specification" ,
49Appendix I.
50.Pp
51Each line in the file
52(other than comment lines that begin with a #)
53specifies the mount point(s) and export flags within one local server
54file system or the NFSv4 tree root for one or more hosts.
55A long line may be split over several lines by ending all but the
56last line with a backslash
57.Pq Ql \e .
58A host may be specified only once for each local file or the NFSv4 tree root on the
59server and there may be only one default entry for each server
60file system that applies to all other hosts.
61The latter exports the file system to the
62.Dq world
63and should
64be used only when the file system contains public information.
65.Pp
66In a mount entry,
67the first field(s) specify the directory path(s) within a server file system
68that can be mounted on by the corresponding client(s).
69There are three forms of this specification.
70The first is to list all mount points as absolute
71directory paths separated by whitespace.
72This list of directory paths should be considered an
73.Dq administrative control ,
74since it is only enforced by the
75.Xr mountd 8
76daemon and not the kernel.
77As such, it only applies to NFSv2 and NFSv3 mounts and only
78with respect to the client's use of the mount protocol.
79The second is to specify the pathname of the root of the file system
80followed by the
81.Fl alldirs
82flag;
83this form allows the host(s) to mount at any point within the file system,
84including regular files if the
85.Fl r
86option is used on
87.Xr mountd 8 .
88Because NFSv4 does not use the mount protocol,
89the
90.Dq administrative controls
91are not applied and all directories within this server
92file system are mountable via NFSv4 even if the
93.Fl alldirs
94flag has not been specified.
95The third form has the string ``V4:'' followed by a single absolute path
96name, to specify the NFSv4 tree root.
97This line does not export any file system, but simply marks where the root
98of the server's directory tree is for NFSv4 clients.
99The exported file systems for NFSv4 are specified via the other lines
100in the
101.Nm
102file in the same way as for NFSv2 and NFSv3.
103The pathnames must not have any symbolic links in them and should not have
104any
105.Dq Pa \&.
106or
107.Dq Pa ..
108components.
109Mount points for a file system may appear on multiple lines each with
110different sets of hosts and export options.
111.Pp
112The second component of a line specifies how the file system is to be
113exported to the host set.
114The option flags specify whether the file system
115is exported read-only or read-write and how the client UID is mapped to
116user credentials on the server.
117For the NFSv4 tree root, the only options that can be specified in this
118section are ones related to security:
119.Fl sec ,
120.Fl tls ,
121.Fl tlscert
122and
123.Fl tlscertuser .
124.Pp
125Export options are specified as follows:
126.Pp
127.Sm off
128.Fl maproot Li = Sy user
129.Sm on
130The credential of the specified user is used for remote access by root.
131The credential includes all the groups to which the user is a member
132on the local machine (see
133.Xr id 1 ) .
134The user may be specified by name or number.
135The user string may be quoted, or use backslash escaping.
136.Pp
137.Sm off
138.Fl maproot Li = Sy user:group1:group2:...
139.Sm on
140The colon separated list is used to specify the precise credential
141to be used for remote access by root.
142The elements of the list may be either names or numbers.
143Note that user: should be used to distinguish a credential containing
144no groups from a complete credential for that user.
145The group names may be quoted, or use backslash escaping.
146.Pp
147.Sm off
148.Fl mapall Li = Sy user
149.Sm on
150or
151.Sm off
152.Fl mapall Li = Sy user:group1:group2:...
153.Sm on
154specifies a mapping for all client UIDs (including root)
155using the same semantics as
156.Fl maproot .
157.Pp
158The option
159.Fl r
160is a synonym for
161.Fl maproot
162in an effort to be backward compatible with older export file formats.
163.Pp
164In the absence of
165.Fl maproot
166and
167.Fl mapall
168options, remote accesses by root will result in using a credential of 65534:65533.
169All other users will be mapped to their remote credential.
170If a
171.Fl maproot
172option is given,
173remote access by root will be mapped to that credential instead of 65534:65533.
174If a
175.Fl mapall
176option is given,
177all users (including root) will be mapped to that credential in
178place of their own.
179.Pp
180.Sm off
181.Fl sec Li = Sy flavor1:flavor2...
182.Sm on
183specifies a colon separated list of acceptable security flavors to be
184used for remote access.
185Supported security flavors are sys, krb5, krb5i and krb5p.
186If multiple flavors are listed, they should be ordered with the most
187preferred flavor first.
188If this option is not present,
189the default security flavor list of just sys is used.
190.Pp
191The
192.Fl ro
193option specifies that the file system should be exported read-only
194(default read/write).
195The option
196.Fl o
197is a synonym for
198.Fl ro
199in an effort to be backward compatible with older export file formats.
200.Pp
201.Tn WebNFS
202exports strictly according to the spec (RFC 2054 and RFC 2055) can
203be done with the
204.Fl public
205flag.
206However, this flag in itself allows r/w access to all files in
207the file system, not requiring reserved ports and not remapping UIDs.
208It
209is only provided to conform to the spec, and should normally not be used.
210For a
211.Tn WebNFS
212export,
213use the
214.Fl webnfs
215flag, which implies
216.Fl public ,
217.Sm off
218.Fl mapall No = Sy nobody
219.Sm on
220and
221.Fl ro .
222Note that only one file system can be
223.Tn WebNFS
224exported on a server.
225.Pp
226A
227.Sm off
228.Fl index No = Pa file
229.Sm on
230option can be used to specify a file whose handle will be returned if
231a directory is looked up using the public filehandle
232.Pq Tn WebNFS .
233This is to mimic the behavior of URLs.
234If no
235.Fl index
236option is specified, a directory filehandle will be returned as usual.
237The
238.Fl index
239option only makes sense in combination with the
240.Fl public
241or
242.Fl webnfs
243flags.
244.Pp
245The
246.Fl tls ,
247.Fl tlscert
248and
249.Fl tlscertuser
250export options are used to require the client to use TLS for the mount(s)
251per RFC NNNN.
252For NFS mounts using TLS to work,
253.Xr rpc.tlsservd 8
254must be running on the server.
255.Bd -filled -offset indent
256.Fl tls
257requires that the client use TLS.
258.br
259.Fl tlscert
260requires that the client use TLS and provide a verifiable X.509 certificate
261during TLS handshake.
262.br
263.Fl tlscertuser
264requires that the client use TLS and provide a verifiable X.509 certificate.
265The otherName component of the certificate's subjAltName must have a
266an OID of 1.3.6.1.4.1.2238.1.1.1 and a UTF8 string of the form
267.Dq user@domain .
268.Dq user@domain
269will be translated to the credentials of the specified user in the same
270manner as
271.Xr nfsuserd 8 ,
272where
273.Dq user
274is normally a username is the server's password database and
275.Dq domain
276is the DNS domain name for the server.
277All RPCs will be performed using these credentials instead of the
278ones in the RPC header in a manner similar to
279.Sm off
280.Fl mapall Li = Sy user .
281.Sm on
282.Ed
283.Pp
284If none of these three flags are specified, TLS mounts are permitted but
285not required.
286.Pp
287Specifying the
288.Fl quiet
289option will inhibit some of the syslog diagnostics for bad lines in
290.Pa /etc/exports .
291This can be useful to avoid annoying error messages for known possible
292problems (see
293.Sx EXAMPLES
294below).
295.Pp
296The third component of a line specifies the host set to which the line applies.
297The set may be specified in three ways.
298The first way is to list the host name(s) separated by white space.
299(Standard Internet
300.Dq dot
301addresses may be used in place of names.)
302The second way is to specify a
303.Dq netgroup
304as defined in the
305.Pa netgroup
306file (see
307.Xr netgroup 5 ) .
308The third way is to specify an Internet subnetwork using a network and
309network mask that is defined as the set of all hosts with addresses within
310the subnetwork.
311This latter approach requires less overhead within the
312kernel and is recommended for cases where the export line refers to a
313large number of clients within an administrative subnet.
314.Pp
315The first two cases are specified by simply listing the name(s) separated
316by whitespace.
317All names are checked to see if they are
318.Dq netgroup
319names
320first and are assumed to be hostnames otherwise.
321Using the full domain specification for a hostname can normally
322circumvent the problem of a host that has the same name as a netgroup.
323The third case is specified by the flag
324.Sm off
325.Fl network Li = Sy netname Op Li / Ar prefixlength
326.Sm on
327and optionally
328.Sm off
329.Fl mask No = Sy netmask .
330.Sm on
331The netmask may be specified either by attaching a
332.Ar prefixlength
333to the
334.Fl network
335option, or by using a separate
336.Fl mask
337option.
338If the mask is not specified, it will default to the historical mask
339for that network class (A, B, or C; see
340.Xr inet 4 ) .
341This usage is deprecated, and will elicit a warning log message.
342See the
343.Sx EXAMPLES
344section below.
345.Pp
346Scoped IPv6 address must carry scope identifier as documented in
347.Xr inet6 4 .
348For example,
349.Dq Li fe80::%re2/10
350is used to specify
351.Li fe80::/10
352on
353.Li re2
354interface.
355.Pp
356For the third form which specifies the NFSv4 tree root, the directory path
357specifies the location within the server's file system tree which is the
358root of the NFSv4 tree.
359There can only be one NFSv4 root directory per server.
360As such, all entries of this form must specify the same directory path.
361For file systems other than ZFS,
362this location can be any directory and does not
363need to be within an exported file system.
364If it is not in an exported file system, a very limited set of operations
365are permitted, so that an NFSv4 client can traverse the tree to an
366exported file system.
367Although parts of the NFSv4 tree can be non-exported, the entire NFSv4 tree
368must consist of local file systems capable of being exported via NFS.
369All ZFS file systems in the subtree below the NFSv4 tree root must be
370exported.
371NFSv4 does not use the mount protocol and does permit clients to cross server
372mount point boundaries, although not all clients are capable of crossing the
373mount points.
374.Pp
375The
376.Fl sec
377option on these line(s) specifies what security flavors may be used for
378NFSv4 operations that do not use file handles.
379Since these operations (SetClientID, SetClientIDConfirm, Renew, DelegPurge
380and ReleaseLockOnwer) allocate/modify state in the server, it is possible
381to restrict some clients to the use of the krb5[ip] security flavors,
382via this option.
383See the
384.Sx EXAMPLES
385section below.
386This third form is meaningless for NFSv2 and NFSv3 and is ignored for them.
387.Pp
388The
389.Xr mountd 8
390utility can be made to re-read the
391.Nm
392file by sending it a hangup signal as follows:
393.Bd -literal -offset indent
394/etc/rc.d/mountd reload
395.Ed
396.Pp
397After sending the
398.Dv SIGHUP ,
399check the
400.Xr syslogd 8
401output to see whether
402.Xr mountd 8
403logged any parsing errors in the
404.Nm
405file.
406.Sh FILES
407.Bl -tag -width /etc/exports -compact
408.It Pa /etc/exports
409the default remote mount-point file
410.El
411.Sh EXAMPLES
412Given that
413.Pa /usr , /u , /a
414and
415.Pa /u2
416are
417local file system mount points, let's consider the following example:
418.Pp
419.Bd -literal -offset indent
420/usr /usr/local -maproot=0:10 friends
421/usr -maproot=daemon grumpy.cis.uoguelph.ca 131.104.48.16
422/usr -ro -mapall=nobody
423/u -maproot=bin: -network 131.104.48 -mask 255.255.255.0
424/a -network 192.168.0/24
425/a -network 3ffe:1ce1:1:fe80::/64
426/u2 -maproot=root friends
427/u2 -alldirs -network cis-net -mask cis-mask
428/cdrom -alldirs,quiet,ro -network 192.168.33.0 -mask 255.255.255.0
429/private -sec=krb5i
430/secret -sec=krb5p
431V4: /	-sec=krb5:krb5i:krb5p -network 131.104.48 -mask 255.255.255.0
432V4: /	-sec=sys:krb5:krb5i:krb5p grumpy.cis.uoguelph.ca
433.Ed
434.Pp
435The file systems rooted at
436.Pa /usr
437and
438.Pa /usr/local
439are exported to hosts within the
440.Dq friends
441network group
442with users mapped to their remote credentials and
443root mapped to UID 0 and group 10.
444They are exported read-write and the hosts in
445.Dq friends .
446.Pp
447The file system rooted at
448.Pa /usr
449is exported to
450.Em 131.104.48.16
451and
452.Em grumpy.cis.uoguelph.ca
453with users mapped to their remote credentials and
454root mapped to the user and groups associated with
455.Dq daemon ;
456it is exported to the rest of the world as read-only with
457all users mapped to the user and groups associated with
458.Dq nobody .
459.Pp
460The file system rooted at
461.Pa /u
462is exported to all hosts on the subnetwork
463.Em 131.104.48
464with root mapped to the UID for
465.Dq bin
466and with no group access.
467.Pp
468The file system rooted at
469.Pa /u2
470is exported to the hosts in
471.Dq friends
472with root mapped to UID and groups
473associated with
474.Dq root ;
475it is exported to all hosts on network
476.Dq cis-net
477allowing mounts at any
478directory within /u2.
479.Pp
480The file system rooted at
481.Pa /a
482is exported to the network 192.168.0.0, with a netmask of 255.255.255.0.
483However, the netmask length in the entry for
484.Pa /a
485is not specified through a
486.Fl mask
487option, but through the
488.Li / Ns Ar prefix
489notation.
490.Pp
491The file system rooted at
492.Pa /a
493is also exported to the IPv6 network
494.Li 3ffe:1ce1:1:fe80::
495address, using the upper 64 bits as the prefix.
496Note that, unlike with IPv4 network addresses, the specified network
497address must be complete, and not just contain the upper bits.
498With IPv6 addresses, the
499.Fl mask
500option must not be used.
501.Pp
502The file system rooted at
503.Pa /cdrom
504will be exported read-only to the entire network 192.168.33.0/24, including
505all its subdirectories.
506Since
507.Pa /cdrom
508is the conventional mountpoint for a CD-ROM device, this export will
509fail if no CD-ROM medium is currently mounted there since that line
510would then attempt to export a subdirectory of the root file system
511with the
512.Fl alldirs
513option which is not allowed.
514The
515.Fl quiet
516option will then suppress the error message for this condition that
517would normally be syslogged.
518As soon as an actual CD-ROM is going to be mounted,
519.Xr mount 8
520will notify
521.Xr mountd 8
522about this situation, and the
523.Pa /cdrom
524file system will be exported as intended.
525Note that without using the
526.Fl alldirs
527option, the export would always succeed.
528While there is no CD-ROM medium mounted under
529.Pa /cdrom ,
530it would export the (normally empty) directory
531.Pa /cdrom
532of the root file system instead.
533.Pp
534The file system rooted at
535.Pa /private
536will be exported using Kerberos 5 authentication and will require
537integrity protected messages for all accesses.
538The file system rooted at
539.Pa /secret
540will also be exported using Kerberos 5 authentication and all messages
541used to access it will be encrypted.
542.Pp
543For the experimental server, the NFSv4 tree is rooted at ``/'',
544and any client within the 131.104.48 subnet is permitted to perform NFSv4 state
545operations on the server, so long as valid Kerberos credentials are provided.
546The machine grumpy.cis.uoguelph.ca is permitted to perform NFSv4 state
547operations on the server using AUTH_SYS credentials, as well as Kerberos ones.
548.Pp
549In the following example some directories are exported as NFSv3 and NFSv4:
550.Bd -literal -offset indent
551V4: /wingsdl/nfsv4
552/wingsdl/nfsv4/usr-ports -maproot=root -network 172.16.0.0 -mask 255.255.0.0
553/wingsdl/nfsv4/clasper   -maproot=root clasper
554.Ed
555.Pp
556Only one V4: line is needed or allowed to declare where NFSv4 is
557rooted.
558The other lines declare specific exported directories with
559their absolute paths given in /etc/exports.
560.Pp
561The exported directories' paths are used for both v3 and v4.
562However, they are interpreted differently for v3 and v4.
563A client mount command for usr-ports would use the server-absolute name when
564using nfsv3:
565.Bd -literal -offset indent
566mount server:/wingsdl/nfsv4/usr-ports /mnt/tmp
567.Ed
568.Pp
569A mount command using NFSv4 would use the path relative to the NFSv4
570root:
571.Bd -literal -offset indent
572mount server:/usr-ports /mnt/tmp
573.Ed
574.Pp
575This also differentiates which version you want if the client can do
576both v3 and v4.
577The former will only ever do a v3 mount and the latter will only ever
578do a v4 mount.
579.Pp
580Note that due to different mount behavior between NFSv3 and NFSv4 a
581NFSv4 mount request for a directory that the client does not have
582permission for will succeed and read/write access will fail
583afterwards, whereas NFSv3 rejects the mount request.
584.Sh SEE ALSO
585.Xr nfsv4 4 ,
586.Xr netgroup 5 ,
587.Xr mountd 8 ,
588.Xr nfsd 8 ,
589.Xr rpc.tlsservd 8 ,
590.Xr showmount 8
591.Sh STANDARDS
592The implementation is based on the following documents:
593.Bl -dash
594.It
595.Rs
596.%T "Network File System Protocol Specification, Appendix A, RFC 1094"
597.Re
598.It
599.Rs
600.%T "NFS: Network File System Version 3, Appendix I, RFC 1813"
601.Re
602.It
603.Rs
604.%T "Towards Remote Procedure Call Encryption By Default, RFC nnnn"
605.Re
606.El
607.Sh BUGS
608The export options are tied to the local mount points in the kernel and
609must be non-contradictory for any exported subdirectory of the local
610server mount point.
611It is recommended that all exported directories within the same server
612file system be specified on adjacent lines going down the tree.
613You cannot specify a hostname that is also the name of a netgroup.
614Specifying the full domain specification for a hostname can normally
615circumvent the problem.
616