*** Notes on SFS configuration: SFS is a complex system to configure, and cannot be adequately described in these limited files. It is strongly suggested that you read the SFS documentation on before configuring any of the various programs. A limited roadmap is provided for reference here, but that is no substitute for a reading of the full documentation. GNU info documentation ("info sfs") and manual pages are installed as well. The various programs in the SFS package are configured via files in two directories: /usr/local/share/sfs/ (henceforth "share/sfs") and /usr/local/etc/sfs (henceforth "etc/sfs"). The port installs various configuration files into share/sfs directly from the compilation of the SFS package. These files should never be edited directly; they can be overridden by the creation of new files in etc/sfs, as detailed below. *** IMPORTANT SECURITY NOTE: SFS operates by interfacing with NFS processes on localhost (127.0.0.1). While every effort is taken to insure security, NFS is a large subsystem with a long history of security problems. Utilizing SFS thus may expose you to NFS-related problems and attacks. It is strongly suggested that you read and ponder the security considerations section of the SFS documentation before setting up an SFS client or server. Additionally, it is STRONGLY suggested that you set up a software firewall on any SFS client or server machine to block unauthorized traffic to NFS-related programs from other machines to the non-localhost IP addresses of your machine. Discussions of how best to do this are outside the scope of this document; consult your local guru, users group, mailing list, or search engine. *** Starting the SFS daemons (client and server): There are sample startup files for sfscd and sfssd in /usr/local/etc/rc.d, under the name sfscd.sh.sample and sfssd.sh.sample respectively. These startup files are not enabled by default. Copy the files to sfscd.sh or sfssd.sh to enable sfscd or sfssd (respectively) on system boot. sfscd and sfssd also run nicely under Daniel Bernstein's daemontools package (/usr/ports/sysutils/daemontools or ); the -d flag makes the main process stay in the foreground, and sends logs to stderr for easy processing by multilog. *** Setting up an SFS client 1) Set up sfscd to start on boot, via /usr/local/etc/rc.d/sfscd.sh or some other method of your preference. 2) Put the following line into /etc/rc.conf: nfs_client_enable="YES" 3) Set up a firewall to prevent NFS traffic from outside the machine from contacting your NFS processes. 4) Reboot. You should now have a working SFS client, which you can test via the following command: $ cat /sfs/@sfs.fs.net,uzwadtctbjb3dg596waiyru8cx5kb4an/CONGRATULATIONS You have set up a working SFS client. *** Setting up an SFS server (You do not need to set up an SFS host key on the server machine; the port installation does this for you in /usr/local/etc/sfs/sfs_host_key.) 1) Set up sfssd to start on boot, via /usr/local/etc/rc.d/sfssd.sh or some other method of your preference. 2) Put the following lines into /etc/rc.conf: mountd_flags="" nfs_reserved_port_only="YES" nfs_server_enable="YES" portmap_enable="YES" If the following line occurs in /etc/rc.conf, remove it: weak_mountd_authentication="YES" 3) Set up a firewall to prevent NFS traffic from outside the machine from contacting your NFS processes. 4) Create a suitable /usr/local/etc/sfs/sfsrwsd_config file, e.g.: Export /root/sfsroot / R Export /usr/src /src R Export /usr/ports /ports R Export /local/baz /local/baz 5) Add any local filesystems that are being exported to /etc/exports, and export them to localhost, e.g.: /root/sfsroot 127.0.0.1 /usr/src /usr/ports 127.0.0.1 /local/baz 127.0.0.1 NOTA BENE: any directories exported via SFS must follow all NFS export rules, i.e. no symlinks in the exported directory pathname, the exported path must be absolute to the physical mount point. If you want to export /usr/ports via SFS, and /usr/ports is really a symlink to /vol/h0/ports, you have to use: Export /vol/h0/ports /ports not: Export /usr/ports /ports Similarly, /etc/exports must reference /vol/h0/ports rather than /usr/ports. 6) Make an empty directory structure mirroring your SFS namespace, e.g.: # mkdir /root/sfsroot # mkdir /root/sfsroot/src # mkdir /root/sfsroot/ports # mkdir /root/sfsroot/local # mkdir /root/sfsroot/local/baz 7) Reboot. You should now have a working SFS server. sfssd will emit a message into /var/log/messages like the following: sfsrwsd: serving /sfs/@, From a DIFFERENT machine with an SFS client already installed and running, attempt to access /sfs/@,. Note that the SFS client machine will have to be able to connect to TCP port 4 on the SFS server machine. Note also that you must test your SFS server from a separate SFS client machine to avoid deadlock issues; see the SFS documentation for more details. If your server setup has been successful, the client machine should be able to see src, ports, and local/baz in the root directory of the SFS mount. 8) Consider using your machine's firewall to restrict who has access to your SFS server by restricting access to TCP port 4. Advanced SFS server configurations, such as user authentication, is outside the scope of this document. Read the full SFS documentation for details. *** SFS configuration files: [ The following section is taken nearly verbatim from . ] SFS comprises a number of programs, many of which have configuration files. All programs look for configuration files in two directories--first /usr/local/etc/sfs, then, if they don't find the file there, in /usr/local/share/sfs. This port installs reasonable defaults in /usr/local/share/sfs for all configuration files except sfsrwsd_config. On particular hosts where you wish to change the default behavior, you can override the default configuration file by creating a new file of the same name in /usr/local/etc/sfs. The sfs_config file contains system-wide configuration parameters for most of the programs comprising SFS. Note that /usr/local/share/sfs/sfs_config is always parsed, even if /usr/local/etc/sfs/sfs_config exists. Options in /usr/local/etc/sfs/sfs_config simply override the defaults in /usr/local/share/sfs/sfs_config. For the other configuration files, a file in /usr/local/etc/sfs/ entirely overrides the version in /usr/local/share/sfs/. If you are running a server, you will need to create an sfsrwsd_config file to tell SFS what directories to export, and possibly an sfsauthd_config if you wish to share the database of user public keys across several file servers. The sfssd_config file contains information about which protocols and services to route to which daemons on an SFS server, including support for backwards compatibility across several versions of SFS. You probably don't need to change this file. sfs_srp_params contains some cryptographic parameters for retrieving keys securely over the network with a passphrase (as with the sfskey add usr@server command). sfscd_config contains information about extensions to the SFS protocol and which kinds of file servers to route to which daemons. You almost certainly should not touch this file unless you are developing new versions of the SFS software. Note that configuration command names are case-insensitive in all configuration files (though the arguments are not).