From owner-man-jp@jp.freebsd.org  Thu Apr 30 16:52:26 1998
Received: by jaz.jp.freebsd.org (8.8.8+3.0Wbeta7/8.7.3) id QAA06634
	Thu, 30 Apr 1998 16:52:26 +0900 (JST)
Received: by jaz.jp.freebsd.org (8.8.8+3.0Wbeta7/8.7.3) with ESMTP id QAA06617
	for <man-jp@jp.freebsd.org>; Thu, 30 Apr 1998 16:52:22 +0900 (JST)
Received: from robo1.mech.eng.osaka-u.ac.jp (robo1 [133.1.207.216]) by ams-srv.ams.eng.osaka-u.ac.jp (8.8.8/3.5Wpl4) with SMTP id QAA11106 for <man-jp@jp.freebsd.org>; Thu, 30 Apr 1998 16:49:04 +0900 (JST)
Received: from asahi.ams.eng.osaka-u.ac.jp (asahi [133.1.207.250]) by robo1.mech.eng.osaka-u.ac.jp (8.6.12+2.5Wb7/3.5Wpl4-for-MECH-subdomain-nomx) with ESMTP id QAA23016 for <man-jp@jp.freebsd.org>; Thu, 30 Apr 1998 16:52:21 +0900
Message-Id: <199804300752.QAA23016@robo1.mech.eng.osaka-u.ac.jp>
To: man-jp@jp.freebsd.org
From: MITSUNAGA Noriaki <mitchy@er.ams.eng.osaka-u.ac.jp>
In-Reply-To: Your message of "Thu, 30 Apr 1998 01:01:13 +0900"
References: <19980430010113I.yoshiaki@kt.rim.or.jp>
X-Mailer: Mew version 1.70 on Emacs 19.28.1 / Mule 2.3
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: Text/Plain; charset=iso-2022-jp
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Date: Thu, 30 Apr 1998 16:55:31 +0900
Reply-To: man-jp@jp.freebsd.org
Precedence: bulk
X-Distribute: distribute [version 2.1 (Alpha) patchlevel=24]
X-Sequence: man-jp 891
Subject: [man-jp 891] Re: mount_nfs
Errors-To: owner-man-jp@jp.freebsd.org
Sender: owner-man-jp@jp.freebsd.org

In message <19980430010113I.yoshiaki@kt.rim.or.jp>
    [man-jp 890] mount_nfs
    Yoshiaki Uchikawa <yoshiaki@kt.rim.or.jp> wrote:
> mount_nfs.8 $B$NLu$K$D$$$F2~A1Ds0F$G$9!#(B
	$B!'(B
> $B$NItJ,$G$9$,!"(B ( $B0J9_$NItJ,$O(B
> 
> $B%/%i%$%"%s%H$,?.Mj$G$-$k(B root $B%"%+%&%s%H$r;}$C$F$$$k$,!"(B
> $B?.Mj$G$-$J$$%f!<%6$,$$$F!"$+$D%M%C%H%o!<%/%1!<%V%k$O0BA4$G$"$k$h$&$J$^(B
> $B$l$J>l9g$K$OLu$KN)$A$^$9$,(B ...
> 
> $B$H$$$&$h$&$J46$8$G$O$J$$$G$7$g$&$+(B?

$B$[$+$K(B2-3$B$DL\$NJ8$,Lu$7;D$5$l$F$$$^$9$M!#>/$70ULu$G$9$,!"A4BN$rD>$9$H!"(B

$BM=Ls$5$l$?%=%1%C%H%]!<%HHV9f$r;H$$$^$9!#(B
$B$3$N%U%i%0$OITMW$G$9!#8_49@-$N$?$a$@$1$K;D$5$l$F$$$^$9!#(B
$B8=:_$OM=Ls%]!<%HHV9f$,%G%U%)%k%H$G;H$o$l$^$9!#(B
NFS$B$,$h$j0BA4$K$J$k$H$N9M$(J}(B($B$3$l$O8m$j$G$9(B)$B$+$i!"(B
$B%/%i%$%"%s%H$,M=Ls%]!<%H$r;HMQ$7$J$$$H%^%&%s%H$G$-$J$$%5!<%P(B
$B$r%^%&%s%H$9$k$N$KLrN)$A$^$9!#(B
($B%/%i%$%"%s%H$N(B root $B$,?.Mj$G$-!"%M%C%H%o!<%/%1!<%V%k$b0BA4$J>l=j$K$"(B
$B$k$,!"%/%i%$%"%s%H$N%f!<%6$O?.Mj$G$-$J$$$H$$$&!"$^$l$J>l9g$K$O(B
$BLr$KN)$D$G$7$g$&$,!"DL>o$N%G%9%/%H%C%W%/%i%$%"%s%H$K$OEv$F$O$^$j$^$;$s!#(B)

$B$H$$$&46$8$G$7$g$&$+!#(B

>      -P      $BM=Ls$5$l$?%=%1%C%H%]!<%HHV9f$r;H$$$^$9!#$3$l$O%/%i%$%"%s%H$K!"M=(B
>              $BLs$5$l$?%]!<%H$r;HMQ$9$k;v$K$h$j$h$j0BA4$K(B NFS $B$r9T$($k$H8@$&8m$C(B
>              $B$?9M$($K4p$E$-!"M=Ls$5$l$?%]!<%H$r%/%i%$%"%s%H$K;HMQ$5$;$k%5!<%P(B
>              $B$r%^%&%s%H$9$k>l9g$KM-8z$G$9!#(B($B$^$l$J>l9g!"%/%i%$%"%s%H$,?.Mj$G$-(B
>              $B$k(B root $B%"%+%&%s%H$r;}$A!"?.Mj$G$-$J$$%f!<%6$d%M%C%H%o!<%/%1!<%V(B
>              $B%k$O0BA4$J=j$K$"$k>l9gLr$KN)$A$^$9$,!"DL>o$N%G%9%/%H%C%W%/%i%$%"(B
>              $B%s%H$K$OEv$F$O$^$j$^$;$s!#(B)
> 
>      -P      Use a reserved socket port number.  This flag is obsolete, and
>              only retained for compatibility reasons.  Reserved port numbers
>              are used by default now.  This is useful for mounting servers
>              that require clients to use a reserved port number on the mistak-
>              en belief that this makes NFS more secure. (For the rare case
>              where the client has a trusted root account but untrustworthy
>              users and the network cables are in secure areas this does help,
>              but for normal desktop clients this does not apply.)
