.TH U9FS 4 .SH NAME u9fs \- serve 9P from Unix .SH SYNOPSIS .B u9fs [ .B -Dnz ] [ .B -a .I authtype ] [ .B -A .I autharg ] [ .B -l .I logfile ] [ .B -m .I msize ] [ .B -u .I onlyuser ] .I fsroot .SH DESCRIPTION .I U9fs is .I not a Plan 9 program. Instead it is a program that serves Unix files to Plan 9 machines using the 9P protocol (see .IR intro (5)). It is typically invoked on a Unix machine by .B inetd with its standard input and output connected to a network connection, typically TCP on an Ethernet. It typically runs as user .B root and multiplexes access to multiple Plan 9 clients over the single wire. It assumes Plan 9 uids match Unix login names, and changes to the corresponding Unix effective uid when processing requests. Characters in file and directory names unacceptable to Plan 9 are translated into a three-character sequence: .L \e followed by two hexadecimal digits. .I U9fs serves both 9P1 (the 9P protocol as used by the second and third editions of Plan 9) and 9P2000. .PP The options are: .TF "\fL-A \fIautharg" .PD .TP .B -D Write very chatty debugging output to the log file (see .B -l option below). .TP .B -n Signals that .I u9fs is .I not being invoked with a network connection on standard input and output, and thus should not try to determine the remote address of the connection. This is useful when .I u9fs is not invoked from .I inetd (see examples below). .TP .B -z Truncate the log file on startup. This is useful mainly when debugging with .BR -D . .TP .BI -a " authtype Sets the authentication method to be used. .I Authtype should be .BR rhosts , .BR none , or .BR p9any . The default is .BR rhosts , which uses the .I ruserok library call to authenticate users by entries in .B /etc/hosts.equiv or .BR $HOME/.rhosts . This default is discouraged for all but the most controlled networks. Specifying .B none turns off authentication altogether. This is useful when .I u9fs is not invoked from .I inetd (see examples below, or .I srvssh in .IR srv (4)). Specifying .B p9any uses the fourth edition Plan 9 authentication mechanisms. The file .BR /etc/u9fs.key , or .I autharg if specified (see the .B -A option), is consulted for the authentication data and should be suitably protected. This file must contain exactly three lines: .I secret (plaintext password), .I u9fs-user (user id), and .I plan9-auth.dom (authentication domain). .RS .LP Finally, .I factotum must be taught a key of the form: .LP .EX .B key proto=p9sk1 dom=\fIplan9-auth.dom\fP user=\fIu9fs-user\fP !password=\fIsecret\fP .EE .RE .TP .BI -A " autharg Used to specify an argument to the authentication method. See the authentication descriptions above. .TP .BI -l " logfile Specifies the file which should contain debugging output and other messages. The out-of-the-box compile-time default is .BR /tmp/u9fs.log . .TP .BI -m " msize Set .I msize for 9P2000 (see .IR open (5)). .TP .BI -u " user Treat all attaches as coming from .IR user . This is useful in some cases when running without .IR inetd ; see the examples. .PP If .I fsroot is specified, .I u9fs will serve only that tree; othwise, it will serve the entire Unix file system. .SH EXAMPLES .PP Plan 9 calls 9P file service .B 9fs with TCP port number 564. Set up this way on a machine called, say, .BR kremvax , .I u9fs may be connected to the name space of a Plan 9 process by .IP .EX 9fs kremvax .EE .PP For more information on this procedure, see .IR srv (4) and .IR bind (1). .PP By default, .I u9fs serves the entire file system of the Unix machine. It forbids access to devices because the program is single-threaded and may block unpredictably. Using the .B attach specifier .B device connects to a file system identical to the usual system except it only permits device access (and may block unpredictably): .IP .EX srv tcp!kremvax!9fs mount -c /srv/tcp!kremvax!9fs /n/kremvax device .EE .PP (The .B 9fs command does not accept an attach specifier.) Even so, device access may produce unpredictable results if the block size of the device is greater than 8192, the maximum data size of a 9P message. .PP The source to .I u9fs is in the Plan 9 directory .BR /sys/src/cmd/unix/u9fs . To install .I u9fs on a Unix system with an ANSI C compiler, copy the source to a directory on that system and run .BR make . Then install the binary in .BR /usr/etc/u9fs . Add this line to .BR inetd.conf : .IP .EX 9fs stream tcp nowait root /usr/etc/u9fs u9fs .EE .PP and this to .BR services : .IP .EX 9fs 564/tcp 9fs # Plan 9 fs .EE .LP Due to a bug in their IP software, some systems will not accept the service name .BR 9fs , thinking it a service number because of the initial digit. If so, run the service as .B u9fs or .BR 564 . .PP On systems where listeners cannot be started, .IR execnet (4) is useful for running .I u9fs via other network mechanisms; the script .I srvssh in .IR srv (4) provides this for the .I ssh protocol. .SH SOURCE .B /sys/src/cmd/unix/u9fs .SH DIAGNOSTICS Problems are reported to the log file specified with the .B -l option (default .BR /tmp/u9fs.log ). The .B -D flag enables chatty debugging. .SH SEE ALSO .IR bind (1), .IR execnet (4), .IR srv (4), .IR ip (3), .IR nfsserver (8) .SH BUGS The implementation of devices is unsatisfactory. .LP Semantics like remove-on-close or the atomicity of .B wstat are hard to provide exactly.