share(8) 맨 페이지 - 윈디하나의 솔라나라

개요

섹션
맨 페이지 이름
검색(S)

share(8)

System Administration Commands                                        share(8)



NAME
       share  - display file system shares or make local file system available
       for mounting by remote systems

SYNOPSIS
       share [-F protocol] -a


       share [-F protocol] [-o options] [-d description] pathname [sharename]


       share [-F protocol] [-A]

DESCRIPTION
       The share command defines and publishes  a  file  system  share,  which
       means  the file system is available for mounting through a sharing pro‐
       tocol.


       If the -F  protocol option is omitted, the first file sharing  protocol
       listed in /etc/dfs/fstypes is used as the default.


       For  a  description of NFS-specific share options, see share_nfs(8) man
       page. For a description of SMB specific share options, see share_smb(8)
       man page.


       Using  the share command to define and publish an NFS or SMB share of a
       ZFS file system is considered a legacy operation. Consider setting  the
       share.nfs property or using the zfs share command to define and publish
       an NFS or an SMB share of a ZFS file system. For more information,  see
       share_nfs(8) and share_smb(8) man pages.


       In  the  third  form  of share command, as shown in the Synopsis above,
       share displays published shares or, with the -A  option,  displays  all
       configured (defined) shares.

OPTIONS
       -F protocol

           Specify the file sharing protocol.


       -o specific_options


           rw

               Share  pathname  is published with read and write access to all
               clients. This is the default behavior.


           rw=client[:client]...

               Share pathname is published with read and write access only  to
               the listed clients. No other systems can access the share path‐
               name.


           ro

               Share pathname  is  published  with  read-only  access  to  all
               clients.


           ro=client[:client]...

               Share  pathname  is published with read-only access only to the
               listed clients. No other systems can access the share pathname.

           Separate multiple options with commas. Separate  multiple  operands
           for an option with colons. See EXAMPLES.


       -d

           Provide  a  comment that describes the file system share to be pub‐
           lished.


       -a

           Publish all defined shares.


       -A

           Display all defined shares.


EXAMPLES
       Example 1 Publishing an NFS Share With Read-Only Access



       The following command defines and publishes an NFS share of /ufsfs with
       read-only access.


         # share -F nfs -o ro /ufsfs


       Example 2 Publishing an NFS Share with Multiple Share Options



       The  following  command  defines  and  publishes  an  NFS  share of the
       /export/manuals file system with a netgroup called users_nfs  who  have
       read-only access and users from specified hosts who have read and write
       access.


         # share -F nfs -o ro=users_nfs,rw=host1:host2:host3 /export/manuals


FILES
       /etc/dfs/dfstab

           This file is obsolete. An SMF service publishes NFS or  SMB  shares
           at boot time.


       /etc/dfs/fstypes

           List  of  file-sharing  protocols.  NFS is the default file sharing
           protocol.


ATTRIBUTES
       See attributes(7) for descriptions of the following attributes:


       tab() box; cw(2.75i) |cw(2.75i) lw(2.75i) |lw(2.75i) ATTRIBUTE  TYPEAT‐
       TRIBUTE VALUE _ Availabilitysystem/core-os


SEE ALSO
       attributes(7),  mountd(8),  nfsd(8), share_nfs(8), share_smb(8), share‐
       all(8), unshare(8), zfs(8), zfs_share(8)

NOTES
       If share commands are invoked multiple times on the same  file  system,
       the  last  share  invocation  supersedes  the  previous invocation. The
       options set by the last share command  replace  the  old  options.  For
       example,  if  read-write  permission was granted to usera on the legacy
       /somefs file system, then you want to grant read-write permission  also
       to userb on /somefs, use the following syntax:

         example% share -F nfs -o rw=usera:userb /somefs




Oracle Solaris 11.4               09 May 2016                         share(8)
맨 페이지 내용의 저작권은 맨 페이지 작성자에게 있습니다.
RSS ATOM XHTML 5 CSS3