Copyright (c) 1997-1998 Erez Zadok
Copyright (c) 1990 Jan-Simon Pendry
Copyright (c) 1990 Imperial College of Science, Technology & Medicine
Copyright (c) 1990 The Regents of the University of California.
All rights reserved.
This code is derived from software contributed to Berkeley by
Jan-Simon Pendry at Imperial College, London.
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modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
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This product includes software developed by the University of
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%W% (Berkeley) %G%
$Id: amd.conf.5,v 5.2.2.1 1997/02/09 15:11:15 ezk beta $
amd.conf contains runtime configuration information for the
amd automounter program.
**************************************************************************
The file consists of sections and parameters. A section begins with the name of the section in square brackets and continues until the next section begins or the end the file is reached. Sections contain parameters of the form 'name = value'.
The file is line-based - that is, each newline-terminated line represents either a comment, a section name or a parameter. No line-continuation syntax is available.
Section, parameter names and their values are case sensitive.
Only the first equals sign in a parameter is significant. Whitespace before or after the first equals sign is discarded. Leading, trailing and internal whitespace in section and parameter names is irrelevant. Leading and trailing whitespace in a parameter value is discarded. Internal whitespace within a parameter value is not allowed, unless the whole parameter value is quoted with double quotes as in 'name = "some value"'.
Any line beginning with a pound sign (#) is ignored, as are lines containing only whitespace.
The values following the equals sign in parameters are all either a string
(no quotes needed if string does not include spaces) or a boolean, which may
be given as yes/no. Case is significant in all values. Some items such as
cache timeouts are numeric.
**************************************************************************
It is highly recommended that this section be specified first in the configuration file. If it is not, then regular map sections which precede it will not use global values defined later.
browsable_dirs " (string, default=no)" If "yes", then amd's top-level mount points will be browsable to readdir (3) calls. This means you could run for example ls (3) and see what keys are available to mount in that directory. Not all entries are made visible to readdir(3): the "/default" entry, wildcard entries, and those with a "/" in them are not included. If you specify "full" to this option, all but "/default" will be visible. Note that if you run a command which will attempt to stat (2) the entries, such as often done by "ls -l" or "ls -F", amd will attempt to mount every entry in that map. This is often called a ``mount storm''.
map_options " (string, default no options)" This option is the same as specifying map options on the command line to amd, such as "cache:=all".
map_type " (string, default search all map types)" If specified, amd will initialize the map only for the type given. This is useful to avoid the default map search type used by amd which takes longer and can have undesired side-effects such as initializing NIS even if not used. Possible values are
file plain files hesiod Hesiod name service from MIT ldap Lightweight Directory Access Protocol ndbm (New) dbm style hash files nis Network Information Services (version 2) nisplus Network Information Services Plus (version 3) passwd local password files union union maps
mount_type " (string, default=nfs)" All amd mount types default to NFS. That is, amd is an NFS server on the map mount points, for the local host it is running on. If "autofs" is specified, amd will be an autofs server for those mount points.
search_path " (string, default no search path)" This provides a (colon-delimited) search path for file maps. Using a search
path, sites can allow for local map customizations and overrides, and can
distributed maps in several locations as needed.
**************************************************************************
arch " (string, default to compiled in value)" Allows you to override the value of the arch amd variable.
auto_dir " (string, default=/a)" Same as the -a option to amd. This sets the private directory where amd will create sub-directories for its real mount points.
cache_duration " (numeric, default=300)" Same as the -c option to amd. Sets the duration in seconds that looked up map entries remain in the cache.
cluster " (string, default no cluster)" Same as the -C option to amd. Specifies the alternate HP-UX cluster to use.
debug_options " (string, default no debug options)" Same as the -D option to amd. Specify any debugging options for amd. Works only if am-utils was configured for debugging using the --enable-debug option. The "mem" option alone can be turned on via --enable-debug=mem. Otherwise debugging options are ignored. Options are comma delimited, and can be preceded by the string "no" to negate their meaning. You can get the list of supported debugging options by running amd -v. Possible values are:
all all options amq register for amq daemon enter daemon mode fork fork server full program trace info info service specific debugging (hesiod, nis, etc.) mem trace memory allocations mtab use local "./mtab" file str debug string munging test full debug but no daemon trace protocol trace
dismount_interval " (numeric, default=120)" Same as the -w option to amd. Specify in seconds, the time between attempts to dismount file systems that have exceeded their cached times.
fully_qualified_hosts " (string, default=no)" If "yes", Amd will perform RPC authentication using fully-qualified host names. This is necessary for some systems, and especially when performing cross-domain mounting. For this function to work, the Amd variable ${hostd} is used, requiring that ${domain} not be null.
hesiod_base " (string, default=automount)" Specify the base name for hesiod maps.
karch " (string, default to karch of the system)" Same as the -k option to amd. Allows you to override the kernel-architecture of your system. Useful for example on Sun (Sparc) machines, where you can build one amd binary, and run it on multiple machines, yet you want each one to get the correct karch variable set (for example, sun4c, sun4m, sun4u, etc.) Note that if not specified, amd will use uname(2) to figure out the kernel architecture of the machine.
ldap_base " (string, default not set)" Specify the base name for LDAP.
ldap_cache_maxmem " (numeric, default=131072)" Specify the maximum memory amd should use to cache LDAP entries.
ldap_cache_seconds " (numeric, default=0)" Specify the number of seconds to keep entries in the cache.
ldap_hostports " (string, default not set)" Specify LDAP-specific values such as country and organization.
local_domain " (string, default no sub-domain)" Same as the -d option to amd. Specify the local domain name. If this option is not given the domain name is determined from the hostname, by removing the first component of the fully-qualified host name.
log_file " (string, default=/dev/stderr)" Same as the -l option to amd. Specify a file name to log amd events to. If the string /dev/stderr is specified, amd will send its events to the standard error file descriptor. If the string syslog is given, amd will record its events with the system logger syslogd (8). The default syslog facility used is LOG_DAEMON. If you wish to change it, append its name to the log file name, delimited by a single colon. For example, if logfile is the string syslog:local7 then amd will log messages via syslog (3) using the LOG_LOCAL7 facility (if it exists on the system).
log_options " (string, default no logging options)" Same as the -x option to amd. Specify any logging options for amd. Options are comma delimited, and can be preceded by the string "no" to negate their meaning. The "debug" logging option is only available if am-utils was configured with --enable-debug. You can get the list of supported debugging options by running amd -v. Possible values are:
all all messages debug debug messages error non-fatal system errors fatal fatal errors info information map map errors stats additional statistical information user non-fatal user errors warn warnings warning warnings
nfs_retransmit_counter " (numeric, default=110)" Same as the counter part of the -t " interval.counter" option to amd. Specifies the retransmit counter's value in tenths of seconds.
nfs_retry_interval " (numeric, default=8)" Same as the interval part of the -t " interval.counter" option to amd. Specifies the interval in tenths of seconds, between NFS/RPC/UDP retries.
nis_domain " (string, default to local NIS domain name)" Same as the -y option to amd. Specify an alternative NIS domain from which to fetch the NIS maps. The default is the system domain name. This option is ignored if NIS support is not available.
normalize_hostnames " (boolean, default=no)" Same as the -n option to amd. If "yes", then the name refereed to by ${rhost} is normalized relative to the host database before being used. The effect is to translate aliases into ``official'' names.
os " (string, default to compiled in value)" Same as the -O option to amd. Allows you to override the compiled-in name of the operating system. Useful when the built-in name is not desired for backward compatibility reasons. For example, if the build in name is ``sunos5'', you can override it to ``sos5'', and use older maps which were written with the latter in mind.
osver " (string, default to compiled in value)" Same as the -o option to amd. Override the compiled-in version number of the operating system. Useful when the built in version is not desired for backward compatibility reasons. For example, if the build in version is ``2.5.1'', you can override it to ``5.5.1'', and use older maps that were written with the latter in mind.
pid_file " (string, default=/dev/stdout)" Specify a file to store the process ID of the running daemon into. If not specified, amd will print its process id onto the standard output. Useful for killing amd after it had run. Note that the PID of a running amd can also be retrieved via amq -p . This file is used only if the print_pid option is on.
plock " (boolean, default=yes)" Same as the -S option to amd. If "yes", lock the running executable pages of amd into memory. To improve amd's performance, systems that support the plock (3) call can lock the amd process into memory. This way there is less chance it the operating system will schedule, page out, and swap the amd process as needed. This improves amd's performance, at the cost of reserving the memory used by the amd process (making it unavailable for other processes).
portmap_program " (numeric, default=300019)" Specify an alternate Port-mapper RPC program number, other than the official number. This is useful when running multiple amd processes. For example, you can run another amd in "test" mode, without affecting the primary amd process in any way. For safety reasons, the alternate program numbers that can be specified must be in the range 300019-300029, inclusive. amq has an option -P which can be used to specify an alternate program number of an amd to contact. In this way, amq can fully control any number of amd processes running on the same host.
print_pid " (boolean, default=no)" Same as the -p option to amd. If "yes", amd will print its process ID upon starting.
print_version " (boolean, default=no)" Same as the -v option to amd, but the version prints and amd continues to run. If "yes", amd will print its version information string, which includes some configuration and compilation values.
restart_mounts " (boolean, default=no)" Same as the -r option to amd. If "yes" amd will scan the mount table to determine which file systems are currently mounted. Whenever one of these would have been auto-mounted, amd inherits it.
selectors_on_default " (boolean, default=no)" If "yes", then the /default entry of maps will be look for and process any selectors before setting defaults for all other keys in that map. Useful when you want to set different options for a complete map based on some parameters. For example, you may want to better the NFS performance over slow slip-based networks as follows:
/defaults \\ wire==slip-net;opts:=intr,rsize=1024,wsize=1024 \\ wire!=slip-net;opts:=intr,rsize=8192,wsize=8192
show_statfs_entries " (boolean), default=no)" If "yes", then all maps which are browsable will also show the number of entries (keys) they have when "df" runs. (This is accomplished by returning non-zero values to the statfs(2) system call).
unmount_on_exist " (boolean), default=no)" If "yes", then amd will attempt to unmount all file systems which it knows
about. Normally amd leaves all (esp. NFS) mounted file systems intact.
Note that amd does not know about file systems mounted before it starts up,
unless the restart_mounts option or
-r flag are used.
**************************************************************************
map_name " (string, must be specified)" Name of the map where the keys are located.
tag " (string, default no tag)" Each map entry in the configuration file can be tagged. If no tag is
specified, that map section will always be processed by amd. If it is
specified, then amd will process the map if the
-T option was given to amd, and the value given to that command-line option
matches that in the map section.
**************************************************************************
# GLOBAL OPTIONS SECTION [ global ] normalize_hostnames = no print_pid = no restart_mounts = yes auto_dir = /n log_file = /var/log/amd log_options = all #debug_options = all plock = no selectors_on_default = yes # config.guess picks up "sunos5" and I don't want to edit my maps yet os = sos5 # if you print_version after setting up "os", it will show it. print_version = no map_type = file search_path = /etc/amdmaps:/usr/lib/amd:/usr/local/AMD/lib browsable_dirs = yes # DEFINE AN AMD MOUNT POINT [ /u ] map_name = amd.u [ /proj ] map_name = amd.proj [ /src ] map_name = amd.src [ /misc ] map_name = amd.misc [ /import ] map_name = amd.import [ /tftpboot/.amd ] tag = tftpboot map_name = amd.tftpboot**************************************************************************
Other authors and contributors to am-utils are listed in the AUTHORS file distributed with am-utils.