Adding or modifying share configuration
In the
Filesystem Manager,
select
Share NFS Add Share Configuration
or
Share NFS Modify Share Configuration.
-
If you are adding a new configuration,
choose a directory to grant permissions for, either by
entering its name or by using the Select button to
bring up the directory selection dialog.
-
Use the ``Read-only Clients'' and ``Read-write Clients''
fields to specify the systems that are allowed
read-only and read-write access: All systems, Selected
systems, or None.
If you choose Selected systems, press Select and:
-
Add clients to the share list by pressing Add Clients.
Enter one or more client or netgroup names or select them
from the list shown when you press Select.
-
Remove clients from the export list by highlighting them from
the list and pressing Remove clients.
-
Add or remove root privileges by highlighting a client name and
pressing Add root privilege or Remove root privilege.
Click on OK when finished modifying the selected clients.
-
You can access these options clicking on Advanced Options:
Writes to filesystem-
Select Synchronous if you want processes to wait until
writes have been serviced - otherwise use Asynchronous.
Secure authentication-
If Yes, clients must use the AUTH_DES
authentication of RPC. If No,
AUTH_UNIX authentication is the default. See
``Secure RPC overview''
for more information.
Anonymous Access-
Select Allowed if you wish to permit access from
unidentified systems.
Anonymous User ID-
Enter the user ID you wish to have associated with anonymous access.
-
Click on OK to save the configuration.
NOTE:
If you manually enter a client name, you should enter it as
a fully qualified name, for example: nairobi.sco.COM.
If you do not use the fully qualified domain name, the Filesystem
Manager attempts to expand the name for you. However, this
expansion fails if the same machine name exists in multiple subnets in
your domain (such as nairobi.sco.COM and
nairobi.engr.sco.COM. In this case, you must enter
the fully qualified name.
See also:
Next topic:
Setting anonymous NFS access permissions
Previous topic:
Using marry to create filesystem images on files
© 2004 The SCO Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
UnixWare 7 Release 7.1.4 - 22 April 2004