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Lab 5: NFS

Objectives

After completing this lab, you will be able to

  • install and configure NFS
  • share files and directories between Linux systems using NFS
  • use common NFS utilities to query or troubleshoot NFS issues

Estimated time to complete this lab: 40 minutes

NFS

NFS is an acronym for Network File System. It allows sharing of files and folders over a network with other systems. NFS provides a simple way for making the contents of the local file system available to multiple users (or systems) on a network.

This sharing is traditionally between UNIX/Linux like systems, but systems running Microsoft Windows operating systems can also access NFS shares if they have the proper software installed to do this.

Support for NFS must be enabled or compiled into the kernel.

As with most networking concepts, NFS has client and server sides. The server side consists of the system that exports (shares) file systems to other systems. The client side consists of the systems that need access to the file system exported by the server.

NFSv4 requires the services of the following programs (daemons):

  • portmap - maps RPC programs to regular network ports
  • mountd - handles incoming mount requests
  • nfsd - this is the main NFS program that handles the actual file transfers

/etc/exports

The /etc/exports configuration file serves as an access control list for specifying file systems that may be exported via NFS to authorized clients. It provides information to mountd and to the kernel-based NFS file server daemon nfsd.

The directives in /etc/exports uses the following syntax:

shareable_directory  allowed_clients(options_affecting_allowed_clients) 

Exercise 1

Managing NFS

In this exercise you will share (export) a local directory to be shared with your partner system, but first you will learn how to manage the NFS service.

NFS is a Remote Procedure Call (RPC) based client and server application. It is therefore useful to have RPC utilities handy that can be used for querying, debugging, and making RPC calls to RPC servers (like NFS servers). rpcinfo is one such useful utility. Its usage syntax and options are shown here:

SYNOPSIS
     rpcinfo [-m | -s] [host]
     rpcinfo -p [host]
     rpcinfo -T transport host prognum [versnum]
     rpcinfo -l [-T transport] host prognum versnum
     rpcinfo [-n portnum] -u host prognum [versnum]
     rpcinfo [-n portnum] [-t] host prognum [versnum]
     rpcinfo -a serv_address -T transport prognum [versnum]
     rpcinfo -b [-T transport] prognum versnum
     rpcinfo -d [-T transport] prognum versnum

To start NFS

  1. Ensure you are logged on to your system as a user with Administrative privileges.

  2. Start by installing the nfs-utils package. This package provides various utilities for use with NFS clients and servers. Type:

    dnf -y install nfs-utils
    
  3. Amongst things, the newly installed nfs-utils package also provides the systemd service unit (nfs-server.service) needed for managing the NFS daemon on the system. Use systemctl to view some of the ancillary services that the nfs-server unit "Wants". Type:

     systemctl show  -p "Wants"  nfs-server
    

    OUTPUT

    Wants=nfs-idmapd.service nfsdcld.service rpcbind.socket rpc-statd-notify.service rpc-statd.service auth-rpcgss-module.service network-online.target
    

    Some important and notable services that nfs-server needs are nfs-idmapd, nfsdcld, rpcbind, rpc-statd-notify, rpc-statd, auth-rpcgss-module.

  4. The rpcinfo command is used for making RPC calls to an RPC server and then reports on its findings. rpcinfo lists all the RPC services registered with rpcbind. Use rpcinfo to query your local server for a list of all registered RPC services. Type:

    rpcinfo -p localhost
    

    OUTPUT

    program vers proto   port  service
    100000    4   tcp    111  portmapper
    100000    3   tcp    111  portmapper
    100000    2   tcp    111  portmapper
    100000    4   udp    111  portmapper
    

    From the sample output above, we can tell a portmapper service is registered on the RPC server running localhost.

    Questions

    1. What is portmapper?

    2. Find out the meaning of the different fields of the rpcinfo command (column headings) (Program, Vers, proto, and service.)

  5. Check the status of nfs-server.service. Type:

    systemctl status nfs-server
    

OUTPUT

bash ● nfs-server.service - NFS server and services Loaded: loaded (/usr/lib/systemd/system/nfs-server.service; disabled; vendor preset: disabled) Active: inactive (dead)

nfs-server.service is currently not running according to the output on our demo system.
  1. Use systemctl to start the nfs-server daemon. Type:

    systemctl start nfs-server
    
  2. Check the status of the nfs-server service again.

  3. Run the rpcinfo command again to check if anything has changed.

    Question

    What new services do you see listed in the rpcinfo output after starting nfs-server?

  4. Verify that nfs-server.service is set to automatically start every time the system reboots. Type:

    systemctl is-enabled nfs-server
    
  5. If the nfs-server is disabled on your system, run the command to configure it for automatic starts with the system.

  6. If the firewall sub-system is running on your server, you'll need to allow/permit NFS traffic through the firewall for remote NFS clients. This can be done by running:

    firewall-cmd --permanent --add-service nfs && firewall-cmd --reload
    

Exercise 2

Exporting Shares

Creating a share is done by creating a directory or sharing an already existing directory on the local file system.

The exportfs utility is used for viewing and maintaining the table of exported NFS file systems. Its usage syntax and options are:

SYNOPSIS
       /usr/sbin/exportfs [-avi] [-o options,..] [client:/path ..]
       /usr/sbin/exportfs -r [-v]
       /usr/sbin/exportfs [-av] -u [client:/path ..]
       /usr/sbin/exportfs [-v]
       /usr/sbin/exportfs -f
       /usr/sbin/exportfs -s

Note

Don't forget to replace all references to server with your partners actual hostname.

To create and export a share

You will create and share a directory called /mnt/nfs. This directory will be the source file-system that exported from the NFS server.

  1. Ensure you are logged on to your system as a user with administrative privileges.

  2. Create a directory under /mnt called nfs and change to that directory.

    mkdir /mnt/nfs && cd /mnt/nfs
    
  3. Create 5 sample files under the new directory you created. Type:

     touch {1..5}nfs
    
  4. Use the HEREDOC shell feature to create a new NFS export entry in /etc/exports. The single line entry you want is - /mnt/nfs foocentos2(rw) localhost(rw). Type:

    cat << EOF > /etc/exports
    /mnt/nfs    172.16.99.0/24(rw)   localhost(rw)
    EOF
    

    You can also use any text editor you are comfortable with to create the entry.

  5. Verify the contents of /etc/exports to ensure no mistakes.

  6. After making any change to the /etc/exports file you should run the exportfs command. Type:

    exportfs -r
    
  7. Use the -s flag with the exportfs command to display the current export list suitable for /etc/exports. For example, view the list of directories, allowed hosts, and options. Type:

    exportfs -s
    

    Question

    What was the output? Make a list of the output contents.

Exercise 3

Mounting NFS shares

This exercise deals with the client side of NFS. You'll try accessing the NFS server as a client.

showmount is a handy utility for querying and showing mount information on NFS servers. It can also show the state of the NFS server and list the clients that are mounting from the server. Its syntax and options are shown here:

SYNOPSIS
       showmount [ -adehv ] [ --all ] [ --directories ] [ --exports ] [ --help ] [ --version ] [ host ]

OPTIONS
       -a or --all
              List  both  the  client  hostname or IP address and mounted directory in host:dir format.
       -d or --directories
              List only the directories mounted by some client.
       -e or --exports
              Show the NFS server's export list.
       -h or --help
              Provide a short help summary.
       -v or --version
              Report the current version number of the program.
       --no-headers
              Suppress the descriptive headings from the output.

To access an NFS share locally

You will test the NFS server's configuration from Exercise 1 by trying to access the exported directory from your local machine, before testing it from a remote machine.

  1. While logged in as the superuser, create a directory called /mnt/nfs-local. This directory will serve as the test mount point for the NFS share.

  2. As a quick pre-flight check, run showmount as a client to show the available export list on the server. Type:

    showmount  -e localhost
    

    OUTPUT

    Export list for localhost:
    /mnt/nfs 172.16.99.0/24,localhost
    

    You should see whatever NFS exports that are configured on the server.

  3. You are now ready to mount the NFS share at the test mount point. Type:

    mount  -t  nfs  localhost:/mnt/nfs   /mnt/nfs-local
    
  4. Change your PWD to the /mnt/nfs-local directory and list its contents.

  5. While still in the /mnt/nfs-local directory, attempt to delete some files. Type:

    rm -rf 1nfs  2nfs
    

    OUTPUT

    rm: cannot remove '1nfs': Permission denied
    rm: cannot remove '2nfs': Permission denied
    

    Question

    Was your file deletion attempt successful?

  6. Now try creating additional files (6nfs, 7nfs, 8nfs) on the NFS share. Type:

    touch {6..8}nfs
    

    Question

    Was your file creation attempt successful? Why do you think this failed?

PERFORM THIS EXERCISE FROM YOUR PARTNER-SYSTEM

To access an NFS share remotely

  1. While logged into serverPR as the superuser, install the nfs-utils package if it isn't installed.

  2. Create a directory called “/mnt/nfs-remote” that will serve as the mount point for the remote NFS share. Type:

    mkdir   /mnt/nfs-remote
    
  3. Assuming the IP address for the remote serverXY is 172.16.99.100, mount the NFS share on serverXY by running:

    mount -t nfs  172.16.99.100:/mnt/nfs  /mnt/nfs-remote
    
  4. Use the mount command to display some extra information about the NFS share that you just mounted. Type:

     mount -t nfs4
    

    OUTPUT

    172.16.99.100:/mnt/nfs on /mnt/nfs-remote type nfs4 (rw,relatime,vers=4.2,rsize=1048576,wsize=1048576,namlen=255
    ...<SNIP>...
    
  5. cd to the NFS mount point and try to delete its contents. Type:

    cd /mnt/nfs-remote ; rm -f   
    

    Question

    Was your attempt successful?

  6. Logout of serverPR as the superuser and log back in as the unprivileged user “ying”

  7. While logged into serverPR as “ying” cd to the directory mounted in step 2. Type:

    cd /mnt/nfs-remote/
    
  8. Make a note of the contents of the directory. If can see the expected files, you have successfully completed the NFS lab!

    Lab tasks:

    1. Configure the NFS setup on your local server (serverXY), such that the superuser at the H.Q. (hq.example.org) will be able to mount your nfs share (/mnt/nfsXY) for use on the hq machine.

    2. The superuser at HQ should be able to write (create) new files and delete the files on your NFS share.

    Tip

    You need to disable NFS’s special treatment of root-owned files. This is done by specifying a special option that will “un-squash” the superuser in the “/etc/exports” file. The special option is called no_root_squash. Please note that it is considered bad practise and a security risk to use the no_root_squash option. A sample entry to accomplish this for any host that matches localhost in /etc/exports will look like:

    /mnt/nfs    172.16.99.0/24(rw)   localhost(rw,no_root_squash)
    

Author: Wale Soyinka

Contributors: Steven Spencer, Ganna Zhyrnova