I have an NFS server and NFS client separated by a firewall. Both servers are FreeBSD 7.1.
Server configuration: nfs_server_enable="YES" nfs_server_flags="-t -n 4" rpcbind_enable="YES" mountd_flags="-r -p 737" mountd_enable="YES" The firewall allows tcp and udp to port 111, but only tcp to ports 2049 and 737 (configured for mountd, see above). On the client I use e.g. the following command for mounting: mount -t nfs -o nfsv3,tcp,intr,rdirplus,-r=32768,-w=32768 XXXX:/export/usr/obj /usr/obj Mounting and subsequent fs operations work flawlessly. When I unmount umount command hangs but can be interrupted with ^C. Everything seems to be clean after that - the filesystem is unmounted, there are no post-effects on both client and server. I used ktrace and tcpdump to investigate this and it seems that umount command tries to send something to server's mountd via udp: ... 13181 umount CALL sendto(0x4,0x2823e354,0x70,0,0x2823c008,0x10) 13181 umount GIO fd 4 wrote 112 bytes ... 000477 IP (tos 0x0, ttl 64, id 19976, offset 0, flags [none], proto UDP (17), length 140) 10.99.15.160.960 > 10.99.10.87.737: UDP, length 112 If wonder if this is correct behavior of umount. Do I need to get mountd udp port allowed in the firewall? Or is there a way to configure "everything" to tcp only? -- Andriy Gapon _______________________________________________ [email protected] mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-stable To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[email protected]"
