afpd (8) - Linux Manuals
afpd: AppleTalk Filing Protocol daemon
NAME
afpd - AppleTalk Filing Protocol daemon
SYNOPSIS
-
afpd [-duptDTvI] [-f
defaultvolumes] [-s systemvolumes] [-n nbpname] [-c maxconnections] [-g guest] [-P pidfile] [-S port] [-L message] [-F config] [-U uamsv] [-m umask]
DESCRIPTION
afpd
The list of volumes offered to the user is generated from /etc/atalk//AppleVolumes.system and one of /etc/atalk//AppleVolumes.default, ~/AppleVolumes, or ~/.AppleVolumes. The AppleVolumes files is used to specify volumes to mount and file name extension mappings. It is formatted as follows, one specification per line: pathname [ volumename ] .extension [ type [ creator ] ] If volumename is unspecified, the last component of pathname is used. No two volumes may have the same name. If type is unspecified '????' is used. If creator is unspecified 'UNIX' is used. The extension '.' sets the default creator and type for otherwise untyped Unix files. Blank lines and lines beginning with `#' are ignored.
OPTIONS
-d
- Specifies that the daemon should not fork. If netatalk has been configured with --enable-debug1, a trace of all AFP commands will be written to stdout.
-p
- Prevents clients from saving their passwords. (Equivalent to -nosavepasswd in afpd.conf.)
-t
- Allows clients to change their passwords. (Equivalent to -setpasswd in afpd.conf.)
-D
- Use DDP (AppleTalk) as transport protocol. (Equivalent to -ddp in afpd.cond.)
-T
- Use TCP/IP as transport protocol. (Equivalent to -tcp in afpd.conf.)
-v
- Print version information and exit.
-I
- Use a platform specific icon. (Equivalent to -icon in afpd.conf.)
-f defaultvolumes
- Specifies that defaultvolumes should be read for a list of default volumes to offer, instead of /etc/atalk//AppleVolumes.default.
-s systemvolumes
- Specifies that systemvolumes should be read for a list of volume that all users will be offered, instead of /etc/atalk//AppleVolumes.system.
-u
- Read the user's AppleVolumes file first. This option causes volume names in the user's AppleVolumes file to override volume names in the system's AppleVolumes file. The default is to read the system AppleVolumes file first. Note that this option doesn't effect the precendence of filename extension mappings: the user's AppleVolumes file always has precedence.
-n nbpname
- Specifies that nbpname should be used for NBP registration, instead of the first component of the hostname in the local zone.
-c maxconnections
- Specifies the maximum number of connections to allow for this afpd. The default is 20.
-g guest
- Specifies the name of the guest account. The default is 'nobody'.
-P pidfile
- Specifies the file in which afpd stores its process id.
-S port
- Specifies the port to register with when doing AFPoverTCP. Defaults to 548. (Equivalent to -port in afpd.conf.)
-L message
- Specifies the login message that will be sent to clients. (Equivalent to -loginmsg in afpd.conf.)
-F configfile
- Specifies the configuration file to use. (Defaults to /etc/atalk//netatalk/afpd.conf.)
-U uams
- Comma-separated list of UAMs to use for the authentication process. (Equivalent to -uamlist in afpd.conf.)
-m umask
- Use this umask for the creation of folders in Netatalk.
SIGNALS
Signals that are sent to the main afpd process are propagated to the children, so all will be affected.
SIGHUP
- Sending a SIGHUP to afpd will cause it to reload its configuration files.
SIGUSR1
- The afpd process will send the message "The server is going down for maintenance." to the client and shut itself down in 5 minutes. New connections are not allowed. If this is sent to a child afpd, the other children are not affected. However, the main process will still exit, disabling all new connections.
SIGUSR2
-
The
afpd
process will look in the message directory configured at build time for a file named message.pid. For each one found, a the contents will be sent as a message to the associated AFP client. The file is removed after the message is sent. This should only be sent to a child
afpd. Warning: If the --with-message-dir option was not used, this will kill the
afpd
process
To shut down a user's afpd process it is recommended that SIGKILL (-9) NOT be used, except as a last resort, as this may leave the CNID database in an inconsistent state. The safe way to terminate an afpd is to send it a SIGTERM (-15) signal and wait for it to die on its own.
FILES
/etc/atalk//AppleVolumes.default
- list of default volumes to mount
/etc/atalk//AppleVolumes.system
- list of volumes to offer all users
~/AppleVolumes
- user's list of volumes to mount
/etc/atalk//netatalk/msg/message.pid
- contains messages to be sent to users.