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Configuring the NFS Client
You can configure a virtual router on the E Series
router as a Network File System (NFS) client to provide remote file
access for E Series applications that need NFS-based transport.
The system provides NFS client support only for
E Series applications designed to use NFS-based transport. Unlike
the typical implementation on UNIX workstations, the E Series NFS
client does not provide services such as mounting or unmounting of
files through the CLI.
This section describes how to configure the NFS
client if you are using an E Series application that requires NFS-based
transport.
References
The NFS client complies with the following standards:
- RFC 1094—Network File System Protocol Specification
(March 1989)
- RFC 1057—Remote Procedure Call Protocol Specification
(June 1988)
Prerequisites
The E Series NFS client requires a remote host
to act as an NFS server. The remote host must support NFS server protocol
version 2 or higher.
Configuration Tasks
To configure a virtual router as an NFS client:
- Access the virtual router context.
- Add the remote host to the host table.
- Configure the remote host as an NFS server for this virtual
router.
- Specify the E Series interface that this virtual router
will use to exchange NFS communications with this server.
host
- Use to add or modify an entry to the host table.
- Example
- host1:boston(config)#host host50 10.2.3.4
- Use the no version to remove
a specified host.
- See host.
ip nfs
- Use to specify the E Series interface that the current
virtual router will use to exchange messages with the NFS server.
- Specify either the source-address keyword with the IP address of the interface or the source-interface keyword with the interface type and
specifier. For information about interface types and specifiers, see Interface Types and Specifiers in JUNOSe Command Reference Guide.
- Issuing this command provides connectivity between the
E Series router and the remote host if the network configuration restricts
communications between devices.
- Example
- host1:boston(config)#ip nfs source-address
10.1.1.1
- host1:boston(config)#ip nfs source-interface
atm 3/2.6
- Use the no version to delete
the name server.
- See ip nfs.
ip nfs host
- Use to configure a remote host as an NFS server for the
current virtual router.
- Optionally, specify a user identity and a group identity
that a user must specify to connect to the remote host. The default
user identity is 2001, and the default group identity is 100.
- Example
- host1:boston(config)#ip nfs host host50 user
1500 group 150
- Use the no version to disassociate
this NFS server from the current virtual router.
- See ip nfs host.
Monitoring the NFS Client
Use show hosts command (see Monitoring the System) to monitor information about connected NFS
servers. Use show ip nfs command to display information
about the interface that the current virtual router uses to exchange
messages with the NFS server.
show ip nfs
- Use to display information about the interface that
the current virtual router uses to exchange messages with the NFS
server.
- Field descriptions
- Source address—IP address of the interface that
the current virtual router uses to exchange messages with the NFS
server.
- Source interface—Type and specifier of the interface
that the current virtual router uses to exchange messages with the
NFS server. For information about interface types and specifiers,
see Interface Types and Specifiers in JUNOSe Command Reference Guide.
- Example
host1#show ip nfs
Source address is 1.1.1.1
- See show ip nfs.
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