xref: /freebsd/usr.sbin/nfsd/nfsd.8 (revision 848ee2a3a8b47c9905fc51fefcf60eb371edbb98)
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28.\"	@(#)nfsd.8	8.4 (Berkeley) 3/29/95
29.\" $FreeBSD$
30.\"
31.Dd December 20, 2019
32.Dt NFSD 8
33.Os
34.Sh NAME
35.Nm nfsd
36.Nd remote
37NFS server
38.Sh SYNOPSIS
39.Nm
40.Op Fl ardute
41.Op Fl n Ar num_servers
42.Op Fl h Ar bindip
43.Op Fl p Ar pnfs_setup
44.Op Fl m Ar mirror_level
45.Op Fl V Ar virtual_hostname
46.Op Fl Fl maxthreads Ar max_threads
47.Op Fl Fl minthreads Ar min_threads
48.Sh DESCRIPTION
49The
50.Nm
51utility runs on a server machine to service NFS requests from client machines.
52At least one
53.Nm
54must be running for a machine to operate as a server.
55.Pp
56Unless otherwise specified, eight servers per CPU for UDP transport are
57started.
58.Pp
59The following options are available:
60.Bl -tag -width Ds
61.It Fl r
62Register the NFS service with
63.Xr rpcbind 8
64without creating any servers.
65This option can be used along with the
66.Fl u
67or
68.Fl t
69options to re-register NFS if the rpcbind server is restarted.
70.It Fl d
71Unregister the NFS service with
72.Xr rpcbind 8
73without creating any servers.
74.It Fl V Ar virtual_hostname
75Specifies a hostname to be used as a principal name, instead of
76the default hostname.
77.It Fl n Ar threads
78Specifies how many servers to create.
79This option is equivalent to specifying
80.Fl Fl maxthreads
81and
82.Fl Fl minthreads
83with their respective arguments to
84.Ar threads .
85.It Fl Fl maxthreads Ar threads
86Specifies the maximum servers that will be kept around to service requests.
87.It Fl Fl minthreads Ar threads
88Specifies the minimum servers that will be kept around to service requests.
89.It Fl h Ar bindip
90Specifies which IP address or hostname to bind to on the local host.
91This option is recommended when a host has multiple interfaces.
92Multiple
93.Fl h
94options may be specified.
95.It Fl a
96Specifies that nfsd should bind to the wildcard IP address.
97This is the default if no
98.Fl h
99options are given.
100It may also be specified in addition to any
101.Fl h
102options given.
103Note that NFS/UDP does not operate properly when
104bound to the wildcard IP address whether you use -a or do not use -h.
105.It Fl p Ar pnfs_setup
106Enables pNFS support in the server and specifies the information that the
107daemon needs to start it.
108This option can only be used on one server and specifies that this server
109will be the MetaData Server (MDS) for the pNFS service.
110This can only be done if there is at least one
111.Fx
112system configured
113as a Data Server (DS) for it to use.
114.Pp
115The
116.Ar pnfs_setup
117string is a set of fields separated by ',' characters:
118Each of these fields specifies one DS.
119It consists of a server hostname, followed by a ':'
120and the directory path where the DS's data storage file system is mounted on
121this MDS server.
122This can optionally be followed by a '#' and the mds_path, which is the
123directory path for an exported file system on this MDS.
124If this is specified, it means that this DS is to be used to store data
125files for this mds_path file system only.
126If this optional component does not exist, the DS will be used to store data
127files for all exported MDS file systems.
128The DS storage file systems must be mounted on this system before the
129.Nm
130is started with this option specified.
131.br
132For example:
133.sp
134nfsv4-data0:/data0,nfsv4-data1:/data1
135.sp
136would specify two DS servers called nfsv4-data0 and nfsv4-data1 that comprise
137the data storage component of the pNFS service.
138These two DSs would be used to store data files for all exported file systems
139on this MDS.
140The directories
141.Dq /data0
142and
143.Dq /data1
144are where the data storage servers exported
145storage directories are mounted on this system (which will act as the MDS).
146.br
147Whereas, for the example:
148.sp
149nfsv4-data0:/data0#/export1,nfsv4-data1:/data1#/export2
150.sp
151would specify two DSs as above, however nfsv4-data0 will be used to store
152data files for
153.Dq /export1
154and nfsv4-data1 will be used to store data files for
155.Dq /export2 .
156.sp
157When using IPv6 addresses for DSs
158be wary of using link local addresses.
159The IPv6 address for the DS is sent to the client and there is no scope
160zone in it.
161As such, a link local address may not work for a pNFS client to DS
162TCP connection.
163When parsed,
164.Nm
165will only use a link local address if it is the only address returned by
166.Xr getaddrinfo 3
167for the DS hostname.
168.It Fl m Ar mirror_level
169This option is only meaningful when used with the
170.Fl p
171option.
172It specifies the
173.Dq mirror_level ,
174which defines how many of the DSs will
175have a copy of a file's data storage file.
176The default of one implies no mirroring of data storage files on the DSs.
177The
178.Dq mirror_level
179would normally be set to 2 to enable mirroring, but
180can be as high as NFSDEV_MAXMIRRORS.
181There must be at least
182.Dq mirror_level
183DSs for each exported file system on the MDS, as specified in the
184.Fl p
185option.
186This implies that, for the above example using "#/export1" and "#/export2",
187mirroring cannot be done.
188There would need to be two DS entries for each of "#/export1" and "#/export2"
189in order to support a
190.Dq mirror_level
191of two.
192.Pp
193If mirroring is enabled, the server must use the Flexible File
194layout.
195If mirroring is not enabled, the server will use the File layout
196by default, but this default can be changed to the Flexible File layout if the
197.Xr sysctl 8
198vfs.nfsd.default_flexfile
199is set non-zero.
200.It Fl t
201Serve TCP NFS clients.
202.It Fl u
203Serve UDP NFS clients.
204.It Fl e
205Ignored; included for backward compatibility.
206.El
207.Pp
208For example,
209.Dq Li "nfsd -u -t -n 6"
210serves UDP and TCP transports using six daemons.
211.Pp
212A server should run enough daemons to handle
213the maximum level of concurrency from its clients,
214typically four to six.
215.Pp
216The
217.Nm
218utility listens for service requests at the port indicated in the
219NFS server specification; see
220.%T "Network File System Protocol Specification" ,
221RFC1094,
222.%T "NFS: Network File System Version 3 Protocol Specification" ,
223RFC1813,
224.%T "Network File System (NFS) Version 4 Protocol" ,
225RFC7530,
226.%T "Network File System (NFS) Version 4 Minor Version 1 Protocol" ,
227RFC5661,
228.%T "Network File System (NFS) Version 4 Minor Version 2 Protocol" ,
229RFC7862,
230.%T "File System Extended Attributes in NFSv4" ,
231RFC8276 and
232.%T "Parallel NFS (pNFS) Flexible File Layout" ,
233RFC8435.
234.Pp
235If
236.Nm
237detects that
238NFS is not loaded in the running kernel, it will attempt
239to load a loadable kernel module containing NFS support using
240.Xr kldload 2 .
241If this fails, or no NFS KLD is available,
242.Nm
243will exit with an error.
244.Pp
245If
246.Nm
247is to be run on a host with multiple interfaces or interface aliases, use
248of the
249.Fl h
250option is recommended.
251If you do not use the option NFS may not respond to
252UDP packets from the same IP address they were sent to.
253Use of this option
254is also recommended when securing NFS exports on a firewalling machine such
255that the NFS sockets can only be accessed by the inside interface.
256The
257.Nm ipfw
258utility
259would then be used to block NFS-related packets that come in on the outside
260interface.
261.Pp
262If the server has stopped servicing clients and has generated a console message
263like
264.Dq Li "nfsd server cache flooded..." ,
265the value for vfs.nfsd.tcphighwater needs to be increased.
266This should allow the server to again handle requests without a reboot.
267Also, you may want to consider decreasing the value for
268vfs.nfsd.tcpcachetimeo to several minutes (in seconds) instead of 12 hours
269when this occurs.
270.Pp
271Unfortunately making vfs.nfsd.tcphighwater too large can result in the mbuf
272limit being reached, as indicated by a console message
273like
274.Dq Li "kern.ipc.nmbufs limit reached" .
275If you cannot find values of the above
276.Nm sysctl
277values that work, you can disable the DRC cache for TCP by setting
278vfs.nfsd.cachetcp to 0.
279.Pp
280The
281.Nm
282utility has to be terminated with
283.Dv SIGUSR1
284and cannot be killed with
285.Dv SIGTERM
286or
287.Dv SIGQUIT .
288The
289.Nm
290utility needs to ignore these signals in order to stay alive as long
291as possible during a shutdown, otherwise loopback mounts will
292not be able to unmount.
293If you have to kill
294.Nm
295just do a
296.Dq Li "kill -USR1 <PID of master nfsd>"
297.Sh EXIT STATUS
298.Ex -std
299.Sh SEE ALSO
300.Xr nfsstat 1 ,
301.Xr kldload 2 ,
302.Xr nfssvc 2 ,
303.Xr nfsv4 4 ,
304.Xr pnfs 4 ,
305.Xr pnfsserver 4 ,
306.Xr exports 5 ,
307.Xr stablerestart 5 ,
308.Xr gssd 8 ,
309.Xr ipfw 8 ,
310.Xr mountd 8 ,
311.Xr nfsiod 8 ,
312.Xr nfsrevoke 8 ,
313.Xr nfsuserd 8 ,
314.Xr rpcbind 8
315.Sh HISTORY
316The
317.Nm
318utility first appeared in
319.Bx 4.4 .
320.Sh BUGS
321If
322.Nm
323is started when
324.Xr gssd 8
325is not running, it will service AUTH_SYS requests only.
326To fix the problem you must kill
327.Nm
328and then restart it, after the
329.Xr gssd 8
330is running.
331.Pp
332For a Flexible File Layout pNFS server,
333if there are Linux clients doing NFSv4.1 or NFSv4.2 mounts, those
334clients might need the
335.Xr sysctl 8
336vfs.nfsd.flexlinuxhack
337to be set to one on the MDS as a workaround.
338.Pp
339Linux 5.n kernels appear to have been patched such that this
340.Xr sysctl 8
341does not need to be set.
342