.TH SRV 4 .SH NAME srv, 9fs \- start network file service .SH SYNOPSIS .B srv [ .B -an ] [ .B -k .I keypattern ] .I address [ .I srvname ] .PP .B 9fs .I system .SH DESCRIPTION .I Srv dials the given address and initializes the connection to serve the 9P protocol. It then posts the resulting connection in the current name space (see .MR intro (4) ) as .I srvname (default .IR address ). .PP The .B -a option causes .I srv to post a pre-authenticated connection to the file system .I aname (by default, the empty string; see .IR attach (9p)). .PP The .B -n option causes .I srv to reject authentication attempts by clients, useful if the remote server is known not to require authentication. .PP .I Srv authenticates over the 9P connection to establish a valid auth fid. .IR Keypattern , if specified, is used to select the key used for authentication. Client attach requests are rewritten to use the specified .I aname and auth fid. .PP The .I 9fs command executes the .I srv necessary to make available the files of .IR system . .PP .I 9fs recognizes some special names, such as .B sources to make the file server .I sources.cs.bell-labs.com available as service .IR sources . .I 9fs is an .MR rc (1) script; examine it to see what local conventions apply. .SH EXAMPLES List the root directory on .IR sources : .IP .EX 9fs sources 9p ls sources .EE .PP Mount a remote file server .I bootes on Linux using the kernel 9P mount driver, with .I srv handling authentication: .IP .EX srv -a sources.cs.bell-labs.com sources sudo mount -t 9p -o trans=unix,uname=$USER,dfltuid=`id -u`,dfltgid=`id -g` `namespace`/sources /n/sources .EE .SH SOURCE .B \*9/src/cmd/srv.c .br .B \*9/bin/9fs .SH "SEE ALSO .MR dial (3) , .MR intro (4) , .MR netfiles (1)