nfs-utils/sysconfig.nfs
Neil Brown 5073990325 - update upstream version from 1.3.4 to 2.1.1
The significant update is that configuration can
  now be read from a central /etc/nfs.conf file, and
  it can include other files such as /etc/sysconfig/nfs
  This means that the old nfs-config.service systemd
  unit is no longer needed.
- /etc/nfs.conf file created to import all sysconfig
  settings except *_OPTIONS directly into running code.
- dropins created to pass *_OPTIONS sysconfig setting to
  the various daemons.
- various specfile improvements, such as using "-D" in
  "install" commands, and adding "verify_permissions".
- "xtab" has not been needed for years and has now been remove.
- sysconfig.nfs updated, particular the ServiceRestart
  declarations have been tuned for systemd units.
- 0003-nfs-server-generator-handle-noauto-mounts-correctly.patch
  Fix the nfs-server-generator so that mounts marked "noauto"
  are not automatically mounted when NFS exported.
  (bsc#1019211)
- 0001-conffile-ignore-empty-environment-variables.patch
  0002-mount-call-setgroups-before-setuid.patch
  Other minor fixes found during testing.
- REMOVED 0001-Make-location-of-nfs-utils_env.sh-configurable.patch
  now included upstream

OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Base:System/nfs-utils?expand=0&rev=177
2017-02-08 02:43:23 +00:00

208 lines
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## Path: Network/File systems/NFS server
## Description: number of threads for kernel nfs server
## Type: integer
## Default: 4
## ServiceRestart: nfs-server
#
# the kernel nfs-server supports multiple server threads
#
USE_KERNEL_NFSD_NUMBER="4"
## Path: Network/File systems/NFS server
## Description: use fixed port number for mountd
## Type: integer
## Default: ""
## ServiceRestart: nfs-mountd
#
# Only set this if you want to start mountd on a fixed
# port instead of the port assigned by rpc. Only for use
# to export nfs-filesystems through firewalls.
#
MOUNTD_PORT=""
## Path: Network/File systems/NFS server
## Description: NFSv3 server support
## Type: yesno
## Default: yes
## ServiceRestart: nfs-server
#
# Enable NFSv3 server support (yes/no)
# This causes the NFS server to respond to
# NFSv2 and NFSv3 requests. Only disable this
# if you want to ensure only NFSv4 is used.
#
NFS3_SERVER_SUPPORT="yes"
## Path: Network/File systems/NFS server
## Description: NFSv4 protocol support
## Type: yesno
## Default: yes
## ServiceRestart: nfs-server
#
# Enable NFSv4 support (server and/or client) (yes/no)
#
NFS4_SUPPORT="yes"
## Path: Network/File systems/NFS server
## Description: Network Status Monitor options
## Type: string
## Default: ""
#
# If a fixed port should be used to send reboot notification
# messages to other systems, that port should be given
# here as "-p portnumber".
#
SM_NOTIFY_OPTIONS=""
## Path: Network/File systems/NFS server
## Description: Port rpc.statd should listen on
## Type: integer
## Default: ""
## ServiceRestart: rpc-statd
#
# Statd will normally choose a random port to listen on and
# SuSE-Firewall is able to detect which port and allow for it.
# If you have another firewall, you may want to set a fixed
# port number which can then be opened in that firewall.
STATD_PORT=""
## Path: Network/File systems/NFS server
## Description: Hostname used by rpc.statd
## Type: string
## Default: ""
## ServiceRestart: rpc-statd
#
# statd will normally use the system hostname in status
# monitoring conversations with other hosts. If a different
# host name should be used, as can be useful with fail-over
# configurations, that name should be given here.
#
STATD_HOSTNAME=""
## Path: Network/File systems/NFS server
## Description: TCP Port that lockd should listen on
## Type: integer
## Default: ""
## ServiceRestart: nfs-server
#
# Lockd will normally choose a random port to listen on and
# SuSE-Firewall is able to detect which port and allow for it.
# If you have another firewall, you may want to set a fixed
# port number which can then be opened in that firewall.
# lockd opens a UDP and a TCP port. This setting only affect
# the TCP port.
LOCKD_TCPPORT=""
## Path: Network/File systems/NFS server
## Description: UDP Port that lockd should listen on
## Type: integer
## Default: ""
## ServiceRestart: nfs-server
#
# Lockd will normally choose a random port to listen on and
# SuSE-Firewall is able to detect which port and allow for it.
# If you have another firewall, you may want to set a fixed
# port number which can then be opened in that firewall.
# lockd opens a UDP and a TCP port. This setting only affect
# the UDP port.
LOCKD_UDPPORT=""
## Path: Network/File systems/NFS server
## Description: Command line parameters for rpc.statd
## Type: string
## Default: ""
## ServiceRestart: rpc-statd
#
# Custom parameters for rpc.statd daemon. Typically this will
# be used to set the port number (-p).
#
STATD_OPTIONS=""
## Path: Network/File systems/NFS server
## Description: Lease time for NFSv4 leases
## Type: integer
## Default: ""
#
# Set the lease time for the NFSv4 server. This allows new locks
# to be taken sooner after a server restart, so it is useful for
# servers which need to recover quickly after a failure, particularly
# in fail-over configurations. Reducing the lease time can be a
# problem is some clients connect over high latency networks.
# The default is 90 seconds. A number like 15 might be appropriate
# in a fail-over configuration with all clients on well connected
# low latency links.
NFSV4LEASETIME=""
## Path: Network/File systems/NFS server
## Description: Alternate mount point for rpc_pipefs filesystem
## Type: string
## Default: ""
## ServiceRestart: nfs-utils
#
# In a high-availabilty configuration it is possible that /var/lib/nfs
# is redirected so some shared storage and so it is not convenient to
# mount the rpc_pipefs filesystem at /var/lib/nfs/rpc_pipefs. In that
# case an alternate mount point can be given here.
RPC_PIPEFS_DIR=""
## Path: Network/File systems/NFS server
## Description: Options for svcgssd
## Type: string
## Default: ""
## ServiceRestart: rpc-svcgssd
#
# Normally svcgssd does not require any option. However in a
# high-availabilty configuration it can be useful to pass "-n"
# to guide the choice of default credential. To allow for that
# case or any other requiring options ot svcgssd, they can
# be specified here.
SVCGSSD_OPTIONS=""
## Path: Network/File systems/NFS server
## Description: Extra options for nfsd
## Type: string
## Default: ""
## ServiceRestart nfs-server
#
# This setting allows extra options to be specified for NFSD, such as
# -H <shared_hostname> in a high-availability configuration.
NFSD_OPTIONS=""
## Path: Network/File systems/NFS server
## Description: Extra options for gssd
## Type: string
## Default: ""
## ServiceRestart: rpc-gssd
#
# Normally gssd does not require any options. In some circumstances,
# -n, -l or other options might be useful. See "man 8 rpc.gssd" for
# details. Those options can be set here.
GSSD_OPTIONS=""
## Path: Network/File systems/NFS server
## Description: Extra options for mountd
## Type: string
## Default: ""
## ServiceRestart nfs-mountd
#
# Normally mountd does not require any options. In some circumstances,
# -n, -t, -g or other options might be useful. See "man 8 rpc.mountd" for
# details. Those options can be set here.
# -p or -N should be set using MOUNTD_PORT or NFS4_SUPPORT rather than
# this option.
MOUNTD_OPTIONS=""
## Path: Network/File systems/NFS server
## Description: Avoid DNS lookups for kerberos principal
## Type: yesno
## Default: no
## ServiceRestart: rpc-gssd
#
# Avoid DNS lookups when determining kerberos identity
# of NFS server (yes/no)
# "yes" is safest, but "no" might be needed to preserve
# correct behaviour at sites that don't use
# Fully Qualified Domain Names when mounting NFS Shares.
#
NFS_GSSD_AVOID_DNS="no"