NetBSD/sbin/mount_portal/examples/overview

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$NetBSD: overview,v 1.2 2001/10/11 18:41:12 atatat Exp $
Overall notes:
1. Whenever mounting anything with mount_portal, always
specify absolute paths. By specifying an absolute path for the
configuration file, it can be re-parsed by sending a HUP to the
mount process. But since mount_portal calls daemon(), which
does a chdir("/"), the re-parse will fail unless the
specified file is absolute, not relative.
2. The mount point should always be specified as an absolute
path. Otherwise, umount may not be able to unmount it, as it
first converts a relative path to an absolute path before
checking against the mounted file systems (see
realpath(3)). If you mistakenly mount on portal, instead of
`pwd`/portal, you can umount with "umount -R portal", which
may seg fault, but it will umount.
Descriptions of files in this directory:
*.conf Configuration files for the corresponding file
tcp.1 Simple and advanced tcp: daytime and finger
fing.c Program for tcp.1
fs.1 Simple fs
rfilter.1 Simple rfilter usage: bunzip2/bzcat
rfilter.2 Advanced rfilter usage
advanced.1 A tutorial
cvs.1 How to map a cvs server into your local file system
cvs.pl A perl script that does the work for the cvs configuration
In progress:
wfilter.1 Simple wfilter usage: bzip2
Most (if not all) of these examples were written by Brian Grayson
(bgrayson@netbsd.org). Please contact me if you have problems or
improvements.