util-linux/util-linux-2.13-mount-man-n...

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3.0 KiB
Diff

--- util-linux-2.12p/mount/mount.8.nfsdoc 2005-05-10 11:46:25.119592000 -0400
+++ util-linux-2.12p/mount/mount.8 2005-10-07 09:46:13.374277000 -0400
@@ -1339,29 +1339,17 @@ For details, see
Especially useful options include
.TP
-.B rsize=8192,wsize=8192
-This will make your nfs connection faster than with the default
-buffer size of 4096. (NFSv2 does not work with larger values of
-.B rsize
-and
-.BR wsize .)
-.TP
-.B hard
-The program accessing a file on a NFS mounted file system will hang
-when the server crashes. The process cannot be interrupted or
-killed unless you also specify
-.BR intr .
-When the NFS server is back online the program will continue undisturbed
-from where it was. This is probably what you want.
-.TP
-.B soft
-This option allows the kernel to time out if the nfs server is not
-responding for some time. The time can be
-specified with
-.BR timeo=time .
-This option might be useful if your nfs server sometimes doesn't respond
-or will be rebooted while some process tries to get a file from the server.
-Usually it just causes lots of trouble.
+.B rsize=32768,wsize=32768
+This causes the NFS client to try to negotiate a buffer size
+up to the size specified.
+A large buffer size does improve performance, but both the
+server and client have to support it.
+In the case where one of these does not support the size specified,
+the size negotiated will be the largest that both support.
+.TP
+.B intr
+This will allow NFS operations (on hard mounts) to be
+interrupted while waiting for a response from the server.
.TP
.B nolock
Do not use locking. Do not start lockd.
@@ -1408,30 +1396,16 @@ For details, see
Especially useful options include
.TP
.B rsize=32768,wsize=32768
-This will make your NFS connection faster than with the default
-buffer size of 4096.
-.TP
-.B hard
-The program accessing a file on a NFS mounted file system will hang
-when the server crashes. The process cannot be interrupted or
-killed unless you also specify
-.BR intr .
-When the NFS server is back online the program will continue undisturbed
-from where it was. This is probably what you want.
-.TP
-.B soft
-This option allows the kernel to time out if the NFS server is not
-responding for some time. The time can be
-specified with
-.BR timeo=time .
-This timeout value is expressed in tenths of a second.
-The
-.BR soft
-option might be useful if your NFS server sometimes doesn't respond
-or will be rebooted while some process tries to get a file from the server.
-Avoid using this option with
-.BR proto=udp
-or with a short timeout.
+This causes the NFS4 client to try to negotiate a buffer size
+up to the size specified.
+A large buffer size does improve performance, but both the
+server and client have to support it.
+In the case where one of these does not support the size specified,
+the size negotiated will be the largest that both support.
+.TP
+.B intr
+This will allow NFS4 operations (on hard mounts) to be
+interrupted while waiting for a response from the server.
.SH "Mount options for ntfs"
.TP