1.\" Copyright (c) 1989, 1991, 1993 2.\" The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. 3.\" 4.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 5.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 6.\" are met: 7.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 8.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 9.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 10.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 11.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 12.\" 3. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors 13.\" may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software 14.\" without specific prior written permission. 15.\" 16.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND 17.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE 18.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE 19.\" ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE 20.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL 21.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS 22.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) 23.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT 24.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY 25.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 26.\" SUCH DAMAGE. 27.\" 28.\" @(#)exports.5 8.3 (Berkeley) 3/29/95 29.\" $FreeBSD$ 30.\" 31.Dd November 20, 2020 32.Dt EXPORTS 5 33.Os 34.Sh NAME 35.Nm exports 36.Nd define remote mount points for 37.Tn NFS 38mount requests 39.Sh SYNOPSIS 40.Nm 41.Sh DESCRIPTION 42The 43.Nm 44file specifies remote mount points for the 45.Tn NFS 46mount protocol per the 47.Tn NFS 48server specification; see 49.%T "Network File System Protocol Specification" , 50RFC1094, Appendix A and 51.%T "NFS: Network File System Version 3 Specification" , 52Appendix I. 53.Pp 54Each line in the file 55(other than comment lines that begin with a #) 56specifies the mount point(s) and export flags within one local server 57file system or the NFSv4 tree root for one or more hosts. 58A long line may be split over several lines by ending all but the 59last line with a backslash 60.Pq Ql \e . 61A host may be specified only once for each local file or the NFSv4 tree root on the 62server and there may be only one default entry for each server 63file system that applies to all other hosts. 64The latter exports the file system to the 65.Dq world 66and should 67be used only when the file system contains public information. 68.Pp 69In a mount entry, 70the first field(s) specify the directory path(s) within a server file system 71that can be mounted on by the corresponding client(s). 72There are three forms of this specification. 73The first is to list all mount points as absolute 74directory paths separated by whitespace. 75This list of directory paths should be considered an 76.Dq administrative control , 77since it is only enforced by the 78.Xr mountd 8 79daemon and not the kernel. 80As such, it only applies to NFSv2 and NFSv3 mounts and only 81with respect to the client's use of the mount protocol. 82The second is to specify the pathname of the root of the file system 83followed by the 84.Fl alldirs 85flag; 86this form allows the host(s) to mount at any point within the file system, 87including regular files if the 88.Fl r 89option is used on 90.Xr mountd 8 . 91Because NFSv4 does not use the mount protocol, 92the 93.Dq administrative controls 94are not applied and all directories within this server 95file system are mountable via NFSv4 even if the 96.Fl alldirs 97flag has not been specified. 98The third form has the string ``V4:'' followed by a single absolute path 99name, to specify the NFSv4 tree root. 100This line does not export any file system, but simply marks where the root 101of the server's directory tree is for NFSv4 clients. 102The exported file systems for NFSv4 are specified via the other lines 103in the 104.Nm 105file in the same way as for NFSv2 and NFSv3. 106The pathnames must not have any symbolic links in them and should not have 107any 108.Dq Pa \&. 109or 110.Dq Pa .. 111components. 112Mount points for a file system may appear on multiple lines each with 113different sets of hosts and export options. 114.Pp 115The second component of a line specifies how the file system is to be 116exported to the host set. 117The option flags specify whether the file system 118is exported read-only or read-write and how the client UID is mapped to 119user credentials on the server. 120For the NFSv4 tree root, the only options that can be specified in this 121section are ones related to security: 122.Fl sec , 123.Fl tls , 124.Fl tlscert 125and 126.Fl tlscertuser . 127.Pp 128Export options are specified as follows: 129.Pp 130.Sm off 131.Fl maproot Li = Sy user 132.Sm on 133The credential of the specified user is used for remote access by root. 134The credential includes all the groups to which the user is a member 135on the local machine (see 136.Xr id 1 ) . 137The user may be specified by name or number. 138The user string may be quoted, or use backslash escaping. 139.Pp 140.Sm off 141.Fl maproot Li = Sy user:group1:group2:... 142.Sm on 143The colon separated list is used to specify the precise credential 144to be used for remote access by root. 145The elements of the list may be either names or numbers. 146Note that user: should be used to distinguish a credential containing 147no groups from a complete credential for that user. 148The group names may be quoted, or use backslash escaping. 149.Pp 150.Sm off 151.Fl mapall Li = Sy user 152.Sm on 153or 154.Sm off 155.Fl mapall Li = Sy user:group1:group2:... 156.Sm on 157specifies a mapping for all client UIDs (including root) 158using the same semantics as 159.Fl maproot . 160.Pp 161The option 162.Fl r 163is a synonym for 164.Fl maproot 165in an effort to be backward compatible with older export file formats. 166.Pp 167In the absence of 168.Fl maproot 169and 170.Fl mapall 171options, remote accesses by root will result in using a credential of 65534:65533. 172All other users will be mapped to their remote credential. 173If a 174.Fl maproot 175option is given, 176remote access by root will be mapped to that credential instead of 65534:65533. 177If a 178.Fl mapall 179option is given, 180all users (including root) will be mapped to that credential in 181place of their own. 182.Pp 183.Sm off 184.Fl sec Li = Sy flavor1:flavor2... 185.Sm on 186specifies a colon separated list of acceptable security flavors to be 187used for remote access. 188Supported security flavors are sys, krb5, krb5i and krb5p. 189If multiple flavors are listed, they should be ordered with the most 190preferred flavor first. 191If this option is not present, 192the default security flavor list of just sys is used. 193.Pp 194The 195.Fl ro 196option specifies that the file system should be exported read-only 197(default read/write). 198The option 199.Fl o 200is a synonym for 201.Fl ro 202in an effort to be backward compatible with older export file formats. 203.Pp 204.Tn WebNFS 205exports strictly according to the spec (RFC 2054 and RFC 2055) can 206be done with the 207.Fl public 208flag. 209However, this flag in itself allows r/w access to all files in 210the file system, not requiring reserved ports and not remapping UIDs. 211It 212is only provided to conform to the spec, and should normally not be used. 213For a 214.Tn WebNFS 215export, 216use the 217.Fl webnfs 218flag, which implies 219.Fl public , 220.Sm off 221.Fl mapall No = Sy nobody 222.Sm on 223and 224.Fl ro . 225Note that only one file system can be 226.Tn WebNFS 227exported on a server. 228.Pp 229A 230.Sm off 231.Fl index No = Pa file 232.Sm on 233option can be used to specify a file whose handle will be returned if 234a directory is looked up using the public filehandle 235.Pq Tn WebNFS . 236This is to mimic the behavior of URLs. 237If no 238.Fl index 239option is specified, a directory filehandle will be returned as usual. 240The 241.Fl index 242option only makes sense in combination with the 243.Fl public 244or 245.Fl webnfs 246flags. 247.Pp 248The 249.Fl tls , 250.Fl tlscert 251and 252.Fl tlscertuser 253export options are used to require the client to use TLS for the mount(s) 254per RFC NNNN. 255For NFS mounts using TLS to work, 256.Xr rpc.tlsservd 8 257must be running on the server. 258.Bd -filled -offset indent 259.Fl tls 260requires that the client use TLS. 261.br 262.Fl tlscert 263requires that the client use TLS and provide a verifiable X.509 certificate 264during TLS handshake. 265.br 266.Fl tlscertuser 267requires that the client use TLS and provide a verifiable X.509 certificate. 268The otherName component of the certificate's subjAltName must have a 269an OID of 1.3.6.1.4.1.2238.1.1.1 and a UTF8 string of the form 270.Dq user@domain . 271.Dq user@domain 272will be translated to the credentials of the specified user in the same 273manner as 274.Xr nfsuserd 8 , 275where 276.Dq user 277is normally a username is the server's password database and 278.Dq domain 279is the DNS domain name for the server. 280All RPCs will be performed using these credentials instead of the 281ones in the RPC header in a manner similar to 282.Sm off 283.Fl mapall Li = Sy user . 284.Sm on 285.Ed 286.Pp 287If none of these three flags are specified, TLS mounts are permitted but 288not required. 289.Pp 290Specifying the 291.Fl quiet 292option will inhibit some of the syslog diagnostics for bad lines in 293.Pa /etc/exports . 294This can be useful to avoid annoying error messages for known possible 295problems (see 296.Sx EXAMPLES 297below). 298.Pp 299The third component of a line specifies the host set to which the line applies. 300The set may be specified in three ways. 301The first way is to list the host name(s) separated by white space. 302(Standard Internet 303.Dq dot 304addresses may be used in place of names.) 305The second way is to specify a 306.Dq netgroup 307as defined in the 308.Pa netgroup 309file (see 310.Xr netgroup 5 ) . 311The third way is to specify an Internet subnetwork using a network and 312network mask that is defined as the set of all hosts with addresses within 313the subnetwork. 314This latter approach requires less overhead within the 315kernel and is recommended for cases where the export line refers to a 316large number of clients within an administrative subnet. 317.Pp 318The first two cases are specified by simply listing the name(s) separated 319by whitespace. 320All names are checked to see if they are 321.Dq netgroup 322names 323first and are assumed to be hostnames otherwise. 324Using the full domain specification for a hostname can normally 325circumvent the problem of a host that has the same name as a netgroup. 326The third case is specified by the flag 327.Sm off 328.Fl network Li = Sy netname Op Li / Ar prefixlength 329.Sm on 330and optionally 331.Sm off 332.Fl mask No = Sy netmask . 333.Sm on 334The netmask may be specified either by attaching a 335.Ar prefixlength 336to the 337.Fl network 338option, or by using a separate 339.Fl mask 340option. 341If the mask is not specified, it will default to the mask for that network 342class (A, B or C; see 343.Xr inet 4 ) . 344See the 345.Sx EXAMPLES 346section below. 347.Pp 348Scoped IPv6 address must carry scope identifier as documented in 349.Xr inet6 4 . 350For example, 351.Dq Li fe80::%re2/10 352is used to specify 353.Li fe80::/10 354on 355.Li re2 356interface. 357.Pp 358For the third form which specifies the NFSv4 tree root, the directory path 359specifies the location within the server's file system tree which is the 360root of the NFSv4 tree. 361There can only be one NFSv4 root directory per server. 362As such, all entries of this form must specify the same directory path. 363For file systems other than ZFS, 364this location can be any directory and does not 365need to be within an exported file system. 366If it is not in an exported file system, a very limited set of operations 367are permitted, so that an NFSv4 client can traverse the tree to an 368exported file system. 369Although parts of the NFSv4 tree can be non-exported, the entire NFSv4 tree 370must consist of local file systems capable of being exported via NFS. 371All ZFS file systems in the subtree below the NFSv4 tree root must be 372exported. 373NFSv4 does not use the mount protocol and does permit clients to cross server 374mount point boundaries, although not all clients are capable of crossing the 375mount points. 376.Pp 377The 378.Fl sec 379option on these line(s) specifies what security flavors may be used for 380NFSv4 operations that do not use file handles. 381Since these operations (SetClientID, SetClientIDConfirm, Renew, DelegPurge 382and ReleaseLockOnwer) allocate/modify state in the server, it is possible 383to restrict some clients to the use of the krb5[ip] security flavors, 384via this option. 385See the 386.Sx EXAMPLES 387section below. 388This third form is meaningless for NFSv2 and NFSv3 and is ignored for them. 389.Pp 390The 391.Xr mountd 8 392utility can be made to re-read the 393.Nm 394file by sending it a hangup signal as follows: 395.Bd -literal -offset indent 396/etc/rc.d/mountd reload 397.Ed 398.Pp 399After sending the 400.Dv SIGHUP , 401check the 402.Xr syslogd 8 403output to see whether 404.Xr mountd 8 405logged any parsing errors in the 406.Nm 407file. 408.Sh FILES 409.Bl -tag -width /etc/exports -compact 410.It Pa /etc/exports 411the default remote mount-point file 412.El 413.Sh EXAMPLES 414.Bd -literal -offset indent 415/usr /usr/local -maproot=0:10 friends 416/usr -maproot=daemon grumpy.cis.uoguelph.ca 131.104.48.16 417/usr -ro -mapall=nobody 418/u -maproot=bin: -network 131.104.48 -mask 255.255.255.0 419/a -network 192.168.0/24 420/a -network 3ffe:1ce1:1:fe80::/64 421/u2 -maproot=root friends 422/u2 -alldirs -network cis-net -mask cis-mask 423/cdrom -alldirs,quiet,ro -network 192.168.33.0 -mask 255.255.255.0 424/private -sec=krb5i 425/secret -sec=krb5p 426V4: / -sec=krb5:krb5i:krb5p -network 131.104.48 -mask 255.255.255.0 427V4: / -sec=sys:krb5:krb5i:krb5p grumpy.cis.uoguelph.ca 428.Ed 429.Pp 430Given that 431.Pa /usr , /u , /a 432and 433.Pa /u2 434are 435local file system mount points, the above example specifies the following: 436.Pp 437The file system rooted at 438.Pa /usr 439is exported to hosts 440.Em friends 441where friends is specified in the netgroup file 442with users mapped to their remote credentials and 443root mapped to UID 0 and group 10. 444It is exported read-write and the hosts in 445.Dq friends 446can mount either 447.Pa /usr 448or 449.Pa /usr/local . 450It is exported to 451.Em 131.104.48.16 452and 453.Em grumpy.cis.uoguelph.ca 454with users mapped to their remote credentials and 455root mapped to the user and groups associated with 456.Dq daemon ; 457it is exported to the rest of the world as read-only with 458all users mapped to the user and groups associated with 459.Dq nobody . 460.Pp 461The file system rooted at 462.Pa /u 463is exported to all hosts on the subnetwork 464.Em 131.104.48 465with root mapped to the UID for 466.Dq bin 467and with no group access. 468.Pp 469The file system rooted at 470.Pa /u2 471is exported to the hosts in 472.Dq friends 473with root mapped to UID and groups 474associated with 475.Dq root ; 476it is exported to all hosts on network 477.Dq cis-net 478allowing mounts at any 479directory within /u2. 480.Pp 481The file system rooted at 482.Pa /a 483is exported to the network 192.168.0.0, with a netmask of 255.255.255.0. 484However, the netmask length in the entry for 485.Pa /a 486is not specified through a 487.Fl mask 488option, but through the 489.Li / Ns Ar prefix 490notation. 491.Pp 492The file system rooted at 493.Pa /a 494is also exported to the IPv6 network 495.Li 3ffe:1ce1:1:fe80:: 496address, using the upper 64 bits as the prefix. 497Note that, unlike with IPv4 network addresses, the specified network 498address must be complete, and not just contain the upper bits. 499With IPv6 addresses, the 500.Fl mask 501option must not be used. 502.Pp 503The file system rooted at 504.Pa /cdrom 505will be exported read-only to the entire network 192.168.33.0/24, including 506all its subdirectories. 507Since 508.Pa /cdrom 509is the conventional mountpoint for a CD-ROM device, this export will 510fail if no CD-ROM medium is currently mounted there since that line 511would then attempt to export a subdirectory of the root file system 512with the 513.Fl alldirs 514option which is not allowed. 515The 516.Fl quiet 517option will then suppress the error message for this condition that 518would normally be syslogged. 519As soon as an actual CD-ROM is going to be mounted, 520.Xr mount 8 521will notify 522.Xr mountd 8 523about this situation, and the 524.Pa /cdrom 525file system will be exported as intended. 526Note that without using the 527.Fl alldirs 528option, the export would always succeed. 529While there is no CD-ROM medium mounted under 530.Pa /cdrom , 531it would export the (normally empty) directory 532.Pa /cdrom 533of the root file system instead. 534.Pp 535The file system rooted at 536.Pa /private 537will be exported using Kerberos 5 authentication and will require 538integrity protected messages for all accesses. 539The file system rooted at 540.Pa /secret 541will also be exported using Kerberos 5 authentication and all messages 542used to access it will be encrypted. 543.Pp 544For the experimental server, the NFSv4 tree is rooted at ``/'', 545and any client within the 131.104.48 subnet is permitted to perform NFSv4 state 546operations on the server, so long as valid Kerberos credentials are provided. 547The machine grumpy.cis.uoguelph.ca is permitted to perform NFSv4 state 548operations on the server using AUTH_SYS credentials, as well as Kerberos ones. 549.Pp 550In the following example some directories are exported as NFSv3 and NFSv4: 551.Bd -literal -offset indent 552V4: /wingsdl/nfsv4 553/wingsdl/nfsv4/usr-ports -maproot=root -network 172.16.0.0 -mask 255.255.0.0 554/wingsdl/nfsv4/clasper -maproot=root clasper 555.Ed 556.Pp 557Only one V4: line is needed or allowed to declare where NFSv4 is 558rooted. 559The other lines declare specific exported directories with 560their absolute paths given in /etc/exports. 561.Pp 562The exported directories' paths are used for both v3 and v4. 563However, they are interpreted differently for v3 and v4. 564A client mount command for usr-ports would use the server-absolute name when 565using nfsv3: 566.Bd -literal -offset indent 567mount server:/wingsdl/nfsv4/usr-ports /mnt/tmp 568.Ed 569.Pp 570A mount command using NFSv4 would use the path relative to the NFSv4 571root: 572.Bd -literal -offset indent 573mount server:/usr-ports /mnt/tmp 574.Ed 575.Pp 576This also differentiates which version you want if the client can do 577both v3 and v4. 578The former will only ever do a v3 mount and the latter will only ever 579do a v4 mount. 580.Pp 581Note that due to different mount behavior between NFSv3 and NFSv4 a 582NFSv4 mount request for a directory that the client does not have 583permission for will succeed and read/write access will fail 584afterwards, whereas NFSv3 rejects the mount request. 585.Sh SEE ALSO 586.Xr nfsv4 4 , 587.Xr netgroup 5 , 588.Xr mountd 8 , 589.Xr nfsd 8 , 590.Xr rpc.tlsservd 8 , 591.Xr showmount 8 592.Sh STANDARDS 593The implementation is based on the specification in 594.Rs 595.%T "Network File System Protocol Specification, Appendix A, RFC 1094" 596.%T "NFS: Network File System Version 3, Appendix I, RFC 1813" 597.%T "Towards Remote Procedure Call Encryption By Default, RFC nnnn" 598.Re 599.Sh BUGS 600The export options are tied to the local mount points in the kernel and 601must be non-contradictory for any exported subdirectory of the local 602server mount point. 603It is recommended that all exported directories within the same server 604file system be specified on adjacent lines going down the tree. 605You cannot specify a hostname that is also the name of a netgroup. 606Specifying the full domain specification for a hostname can normally 607circumvent the problem. 608