table of contents
NFSSVC(2) | System Calls Manual | NFSSVC(2) |
NAME¶
nfssvc — NFS servicesLIBRARY¶
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)SYNOPSIS¶
#include <sys/param.h>#include <sys/mount.h>
#include <sys/time.h>
#include <nfs/rpcv2.h>
#include <nfsserver/nfs.h>
#include <unistd.h> int
nfssvc(int flags, void *argstructp);
DESCRIPTION¶
The nfssvc() system call is used by the NFS daemons to pass information into and out of the kernel and also to enter the kernel as a server daemon. The flags argument consists of several bits that show what action is to be taken once in the kernel and the argstructp points to one of three structures depending on which bits are set in flags. On the client side, nfsiod(8) calls nfssvc() with the flags argument set toNFSSVC_BIOD
and argstructp set
to NULL
to enter the kernel as a block I/O server
daemon. For NQNFS, mount_nfs(8) calls
nfssvc() with the NFSSVC_MNTD
flag,
optionally or'd with the flags NFSSVC_GOTAUTH
and
NFSSVC_AUTHINFAIL
along with a pointer to a
struct nfsd_cargs { char *ncd_dirp; /* Mount dir path */ uid_t ncd_authuid; /* Effective uid */ int ncd_authtype; /* Type of authenticator */ int ncd_authlen; /* Length of authenticator string */ u_char *ncd_authstr; /* Authenticator string */ int ncd_verflen; /* and the verifier */ u_char *ncd_verfstr; NFSKERBKEY_T ncd_key; /* Session key */ };
NFSSVC_MNTD
flag set to specify service for the mount point. If the mount point is using
Kerberos, then the mount_nfs(8) utility will return from
nfssvc() with errno ==
ENEEDAUTH
whenever the client side requires an
``rcmd'' authentication ticket for the user. The
mount_nfs(8) utility will attempt to get the Kerberos
ticket, and if successful will call nfssvc() with the flags
NFSSVC_MNTD
and NFSSVC_GOTAUTH
after filling the ticket into the ncd_authstr field and setting the
ncd_authlen and ncd_authtype fields of the nfsd_cargs structure. If
mount_nfs(8) failed to get the ticket,
nfssvc() will be called with the flags
NFSSVC_MNTD
, NFSSVC_GOTAUTH
and NFSSVC_AUTHINFAIL
to denote a failed
authentication attempt.
On the server side, nfssvc() is called with the flag
NFSSVC_NFSD
and a pointer to a
struct nfsd_srvargs { struct nfsd *nsd_nfsd; /* Pointer to in kernel nfsd struct */ uid_t nsd_uid; /* Effective uid mapped to cred */ u_int32_t nsd_haddr; /* Ip address of client */ struct ucred nsd_cr; /* Cred. uid maps to */ int nsd_authlen; /* Length of auth string (ret) */ u_char *nsd_authstr; /* Auth string (ret) */ int nsd_verflen; /* and the verifier */ u_char *nsd_verfstr; struct timeval nsd_timestamp; /* timestamp from verifier */ u_int32_t nsd_ttl; /* credential ttl (sec) */ NFSKERBKEY_T nsd_key; /* Session key */ };
ENEEDAUTH
. The nfsd(8) utility
will attempt to authenticate the ticket and generate a set of credentials on
the server for the ``user id'' specified in the field nsd_uid. This is done by
first authenticating the Kerberos ticket and then mapping the Kerberos
principal to a local name and getting a set of credentials for that user via
getpwnam(3) and getgrouplist(3). If
successful, the nfsd(8) utility will call
nfssvc() with the NFSSVC_NFSD
and
NFSSVC_AUTHIN
flags set to pass the credential mapping
in nsd_cr into the kernel to be cached on the server socket for that client.
If the authentication failed, nfsd(8) calls
nfssvc() with the flags NFSSVC_NFSD
and NFSSVC_AUTHINFAIL
to denote an authentication
failure.
The master nfsd(8) server daemon calls
nfssvc() with the flag
NFSSVC_ADDSOCK
and a pointer to a
struct nfsd_args { int sock; /* Socket to serve */ caddr_t name; /* Client address for connection based sockets */ int namelen;/* Length of name */ };
RETURN VALUES¶
Normally nfssvc() does not return unless the server is terminated by a signal when a value of 0 is returned. Otherwise, -1 is returned and the global variable errno is set to specify the error.ERRORS¶
- [
ENEEDAUTH
] - This special error value is really used for authentication support, particularly Kerberos, as explained above.
- [
EPERM
] - The caller is not the super-user.
SEE ALSO¶
mount_nfs(8), nfsd(8), nfsiod(8)HISTORY¶
The nfssvc() system call first appeared in 4.4BSD.BUGS¶
The nfssvc() system call is designed specifically for the NFS support daemons and as such is specific to their requirements. It should really return values to indicate the need for authentication support, sinceENEEDAUTH
is not really an error. Several fields of
the argument structures are assumed to be valid and sometimes to be unchanged
from a previous call, such that nfssvc() must be used with
extreme care.June 9, 1993 | Debian |