upserver8upserverInitializes the server portion of the Update ServerSynopsisupserver [<directory>+] [-crypt <directory>+]
[-clear <directory>+] [-auth <directory>+] [-help]DescriptionThe upserver command initializes the server portion of the Update
Server (the upserver process). In the conventional configuration, its
binary file is located in the /usr/afs/bin directory on a file server
machine.The upserver command is not normally issued at the command shell prompt
but rather placed into a file server machine's /usr/afs/local/BosConfig
file with the bos create command. If it is ever issued at the command
shell prompt, the issuer must be logged onto a database server machine as
the local superuser root.The upserver command specifies which of the directories on the local
disk are eligible for distribution in response to requests from the client
portion of the Update Server (the upclient process) running on other
machines. If no directories are specified, the upserver process
distributes the contents of any directory on its local disk.The upserver process can distribute a directory's contents in encrypted
or unencrypted form. By default, it does not use encryption unless an
upclient process requests it (this default is equivalent to setting the
-clear flag). When the -crypt flag is provided, the upserver
process only fulfills requests for encrypted transfer.The upclient and upserver processes always mutually authenticate,
whether or not the data they pass is encrypted; they use the key with the
highest key version number in the /usr/afs/etc/KeyFile file to
construct a server ticket for mutual authentication.This command does not use the syntax conventions of the AFS command
suites. Provide the command name and all option names in full.CautionsDo not use the Update Server to distribute the contents of the
/usr/afs/etc directory without the -crypt flag. The contents of
this directory are sensitive.Options<directory>+Names each directory to distribute in unencrypted form (because they
appear before the first -crypt or -clear flag on the command
line). If this argument is omitted, all directories on the machine's local
disk are eligible for distribution.-crypt <directory>+Precedes a list of one or more directories that the upserver process
distributes only in encrypted form.-clear <directory>+Precedes a list of one or more directories that the upserver process
distributes in unencrypted form unless the upclient process requests
them in encrypted form. Use this argument only if a list of directories
headed by the -crypt flag precedes it on the command line.-auth <directory>+Precedes a list of one or more directories which the upserver process
distributes using a form of encryption that is intermediate in complexity
and security between the unencrypted and encrypted levels set by the
-clear and -crypt arguments. Do not use this argument, because the
upclient process does not have a corresponding argument that it can use
to request data transfer at this level.-helpPrints the online help for this command. All other valid options are
ignored.ExamplesThe following example bos create command defines and starts an upserver
process on the host machine fs1.abc.com. The last parameter (enclosed
in quotes) instructs the upserver process to distribute the contents of
the /usr/afs/bin directory in unencrypted form and the contents of the
/usr/afs/etc directory in encrypted form.
% bos create -server fs1.abc.com -instance upserver -type simple \
-cmd "/usr/afs/bin/upserver /usr/afs/bin -crypt /usr/afs/etc"
Privilege RequiredThe issuer must be logged in as the superuser root on a file server
machine to issue the command at a command shell prompt. It is conventional
instead to create and start the process by issuing the bos create
command.See AlsoBosConfig(5),
bos_create(8),
upclient(8)CopyrightIBM Corporation 2000. <http://www.ibm.com/> All Rights Reserved.This documentation is covered by the IBM Public License Version 1.0. It was
converted from HTML to POD by software written by Chas Williams and Russ
Allbery, based on work by Alf Wachsmann and Elizabeth Cassell.