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AMD.CONF(5)		      File Formats Manual		   AMD.CONF(5)

NAME
       amd.conf	- Amd configuration file

SYNOPSIS
       amd.conf

DESCRIPTION
       The amd.conf file is the	configuration file for Amd, as part of the am-
       utils suite.

       amd.conf	contains runtime configuration information for the  Amd	 auto-
       mounter program.

FILE FORMAT
       The  file  consists  of sections	and parameters.	 A section begins with
       the name	of the section in square brackets and continues	until the next
       section begins or the end the file is reached.  Sections	contain	param-
       eters of	the form 'name = value'.

       The file	is line-based -	that is, each newline-terminated  line	repre-
       sents either a comment, a section name or a parameter.  No line-contin-
       uation syntax is	available.

       Section,	parameter names	and their values are case sensitive.

       Only the	first equals sign in a parameter is  significant.   Whitespace
       before  or after	the first equals sign is discarded.  Leading, trailing
       and internal whitespace in section and parameter	names  is  irrelevant.
       Leading and trailing whitespace in a parameter value is discarded.  In-
       ternal whitespace within	a parameter value is not allowed,  unless  the
       whole  parameter	value is quoted	with double quotes as in 'name = "some
       value"'.

       Any line	beginning with a pound sign (#)	is ignored, as are lines  con-
       taining only whitespace.

       The  values  following  the  equals sign	in parameters are all either a
       string (no quotes needed	if string does not include spaces) or a	 bool-
       ean,  which may be given	as yes/no.  Case is significant	in all values.
       Some items such as cache	timeouts are numeric.

SECTIONS
   The [global]	section
       Parameters in this section either apply to Amd as a whole,  or  to  all
       other  regular  map  sections  which  follow.  There should be only one
       global section defined in one configuration file.

       It is highly recommended	that this section be specified	first  in  the
       configuration file.  If it is not, then regular map sections which pre-
       cede it will not	use global values defined later.

   Regular [/map] sections
       Parameters in regular (non-global) sections apply to a single  map  en-
       try.  For example, if the map section [/homes] is defined, then all pa-
       rameters	following it will be applied to	the /homes  Amd-managed	 mount
       point.

PARAMETERS
   Parameters common to	all sections
       These  parameters  can  be specified either in the global or a map spe-
       cific section.  Entries specified in a  map-specific  section  override
       the  default  value  or	one defined in the global section.   If	such a
       common parameter	is specified only in the global	section, it is	appli-
       cable to	all regular map	sections that follow.

       browsable_dirs (string, default=no)
	      If "yes,"	then Amd's top-level mount points will be browsable to
	      readdir(3) calls.	 This means you	could run  for	example	 ls(1)
	      and see what keys	are available to mount in that directory.  Not
	      all entries are made visible to readdir(3): the  "/default"  en-
	      try,  wildcard entries, and those	with a "/" in them are not in-
	      cluded.  If you specify "full" to	this  option,  all  but	 "/de-
	      fault"  will  be	visible.  Note that if you run a command which
	      will attempt to stat(2) the entries, such	as often done  by  "ls
	      -l"  or  "ls  -F," Amd will attempt to mount every entry in that
	      map.  This is often called a ``mount storm.''

       map_defaults (string, default to	empty)
	      This option sets a string	to be used as the map's	/defaults  en-
	      try, overriding any /defaults specified in the map.  This	allows
	      local users to override  map  defaults  without  modifying  maps
	      globally.

       map_options (string, default no options)
	      This option is the same as specifying map	options	on the command
	      line to Amd, such	as "cache:=all".

       map_type	(string, default search	all map	types)
	      If specified, Amd	will initialize	the  map  only	for  the  type
	      given.  This is useful to	avoid the default map search type used
	      by Amd which takes longer	and can	 have  undesired  side-effects
	      such as initializing NIS even if not used.  Possible values are

	      exec	executable maps
	      file	plain files
	      hesiod	Hesiod name service from MIT
	      ldap	Lightweight Directory Access Protocol
	      ndbm	(New) dbm style	hash files
	      nis	Network	Information Services (version 2)
	      nisplus	Network	Information Services Plus (version 3)
	      passwd	local password files
	      union	union maps

       mount_type (string, default=nfs)
	      All  Amd	mount  types  default  to NFS.	That is, Amd is	an NFS
	      server on	the map	mount points, for the local host it is running
	      on.   If "autofs"	is specified, Amd will be an autofs server for
	      those mount points.

       autofs_use_lofs (string,	default=yes)
	      When set to "yes"	and  using  Autofs,  Amd  will	use  lofs-type
	      (loopback) mounts	for type:=link mounts.	This has the advantage
	      of mounting in place, and	users get to the see the same pathname
	      that  they  chdir'ed  into.  If this option is set to "no," then
	      Amd will use symlinks instead: that code	is  more  tested,  but
	      negates autofs's big advantage of	in-place mounts.

       search_path (string, default no search path)
	      This  provides  a	 (colon-delimited)  search path	for file maps.
	      Using a search path, sites can allow for	local  map  customiza-
	      tions  and  overrides, and can distributed maps in several loca-
	      tions as needed.

       selectors_in_defaults (boolean, default=no)
	      If "yes,"	then the /defaults entry of maps will search  for  and
	      process any selectors before setting defaults for	all other keys
	      in that map.  Useful when	you want to set	different options  for
	      a	 complete  map based on	some parameters.  For example, you may
	      want to better the NFS performance over slow slip-based networks
	      as follows:

	      /defaults	\
		  wire==slip-net;opts:=intr,rsize=1024,wsize=1024 \
		  wire!=slip-net;opts:=intr,rsize=8192,wsize=8192

	      Deprecated form: selectors_on_default

       sun_map_syntax (boolean,	default=no)
	      If "yes,"	then Amd will parse the	map according to the Sun Auto-
	      mount syntax.

   Parameters applicable to the	global section only
       arch (string, default to	compiled in value)
	      Same as the -A option to Amd.  Allows you	to override the	 value
	      of the arch Amd variable.

       auto_attrcache (numeric,	default=0)
	      Specify  in  seconds  (or	units of 0.1 seconds, depending	on the
	      OS), what	is the (kernel-side) NFS attribute cache  timeout  for
	      @i{Amd}'s	 own  automount	 points.   A value of 0	is supposed to
	      turn off attribute caching, meaning that @i{Amd}	will  be  con-
	      sulted  via  a  kernel-RPC  each time someone stat()'s the mount
	      point (which could be abused  as	a  denial-of-service  attack).
	      Warning: some OSs	are incapable of turning off the NFS attribute
	      cache reliably.  On such systems,	Amd may	not work reliably  un-
	      der  heavy  load.	  See the README.attrcache document in the Am-
	      utils distribution for more details.

       auto_dir	(string, default=/a)
	      Same as the -a option to Amd.  This sets the  private  directory
	      where Amd	will create sub-directories for	its real mount points.

       cache_duration (numeric,	default=300)
	      Same as the -c option to Amd.  Sets the duration in seconds that
	      looked-up	or mounted map entries remain in the cache.

       cluster (string,	default	no cluster)
	      Same as the -C option to Amd.   Specifies	 the  alternate	 HP-UX
	      cluster to use.

       debug_mtab_file (string,	default=/tmp/mnttab)
	      Path to mtab file	that is	used by	Amd to store a list of mounted
	      file systems during debug-mtab mode.  This option	 only  applies
	      to systems that store mtab information on	disk.

       debug_options (string, default no debug options)
	      Same as the -D option to Amd.  Specify any debugging options for
	      Amd.  Works only if am-utils was configured for debugging	 using
	      the  --enable-debug  option.   The  "mem"	option,	as well	as all
	      other options, can be turned on via --enable-debug=mem.	Other-
	      wise  debugging  options	are ignored.  Options are comma	delim-
	      ited, and	can be preceded	by the string  "no"  to	 negate	 their
	      meaning.	You can	get the	list of	supported debugging options by
	      running Amd -H.  Possible	values are:

	      all	all options (excludes hrtime and mtab)
	      defaults	"sensible" default options (all--excluding hrtime, mtab, and xdrtrace)
	      test	full debug options plus	mtab,nodaemon,nofork,noamq
	      amq	register for amq
	      daemon	enter daemon mode
	      fork	fork server
	      full	program	trace
	      hrtime	print high resolution time stamps (only	if syslog(3) is	not used)
	      info	info service specific debugging	(hesiod, nis, etc.)
	      mem	trace memory allocations
	      mtab	use local "/tmp/mtab" file
	      readdir	show browsable_dirs progress
	      str	debug string munging
	      trace	trace protocol and NFS mount arguments
	      xdrtrace	trace XDR routines

       dismount_interval (numeric, default=120)
	      Same as the -w option to Amd.  Specify in	seconds, the time  be-
	      tween attempts to	dismount file systems that have	exceeded their
	      cached times.

       domain_strip (boolean, default=yes)
	      If "yes,"	then the domain	name part referred to by  ${rhost}  is
	      stripped	off.   This  is	 useful	 to keep logs and smaller.  If
	      "no," then the domain name part is left changed.	This is	useful
	      when  using multiple domains with	the same maps (as you may have
	      hosts whose domain-stripped name is identical).

       exec_map_timeout	(numeric, default=10)
	      The timeout in seconds that Amd will wait	for an executable  map
	      program  before  an  answer  is  returned	 from that program (or
	      script).	This value should be set to as small as	possible while
	      still  allowing  normal  replies to be returned before the timer
	      expires, because during the time that the	executable map program
	      is  queried, Amd is essentially waiting and is thus not respond-
	      ing to any other queries.

       forced_unmounts (boolean, default=no)
	      If set to	"yes," and the client OS supports forced or  lazy  un-
	      mounts,  then  Amd  will	attempt	 to use	them if	it gets	any of
	      three serious error conditions when trying to unmount an	exist-
	      ing mount	point or mount on top of one: EIO, ESTALE, or EBUSY.

	      This  could be useful to recover from serious conditions such as
	      hardware failure of mounted disks, or NFS	servers	which are down
	      permanently,  were  migrated, or changed their IP	address.  Only
	      "type:=toplvl" mounts hung with EBUSY are	forcibly unmounted us-
	      ing this option, which is	useful to recover from a hung Amd).

       full_os (string,	default	to compiled in value)
	      The  full	 name of the operating system, along with its version.
	      Allows you to override the compiled-in full name and version  of
	      the  operating  system.  Useful when the compiled-in name	is not
	      desired.	For example, the full operating	system name  on	 linux
	      comes   up   as	``linux'',   but   you	 can  override	it  to
	      ``linux-2.2.5.''

       fully_qualified_hosts (string, default=no)
	      If "yes,"	Amd will perform RPC authentication using fully-quali-
	      fied  host names.	 This is necessary for some systems, and espe-
	      cially when performing cross-domain mounting.  For this function
	      to work, the Amd variable	${hostd} is used, requiring that ${do-
	      main} not	be null.

       hesiod_base (string, default=automount)
	      Specify the base name for	hesiod maps.

       karch (string, default to karch of the system)
	      Same as the -k option to Amd.  Allows you	to override  the  ker-
	      nel-architecture	of  your  system.   Useful  for	example	on Sun
	      (Sparc) machines,	where you can build one	Amd binary, and	run it
	      on  multiple  machines, yet you want each	one to get the correct
	      karch variable set (for  example,	 sun4c,	 sun4m,	 sun4u,	 etc.)
	      Note  that if not	specified, Amd will use	uname(3) to figure out
	      the kernel architecture of the machine.

       ldap_base (string, default not set)
	      Specify the base name for	LDAP.  This often  includes  LDAP-spe-
	      cific values such	as country and organization.

       ldap_cache_maxmem (numeric, default=131072)
	      Specify the maximum memory Amd should use	to cache LDAP entries.

       ldap_cache_seconds (numeric, default=0)
	      Specify the number of seconds to keep entries in the cache.

       ldap_hostports (string, default not set)
	      Specify the LDAP host and	port values.

       ldap_proto_version (numeric, default=2)
	      Specify the version of the LDAP protocol to use.

       local_domain (string, default no	sub-domain)
	      Same  as	the  -d	option to Amd.	Specify	the local domain name.
	      If this option is	not given the domain name is  determined  from
	      the hostname, by removing	the first component of the fully-qual-
	      ified host name.

       localhost_address (string, default to localhost or 127.0.0.1)
	      Specify the name or IP address for Amd to	 use  when  connecting
	      the  sockets  for	the local NFS server and the RPC server.  This
	      defaults to 127.0.0.1 or whatever	the host reports as its	 local
	      address.	 This  parameter  is useful on hosts with multiple ad-
	      dresses where you	want to	force Amd to connect to	a specific ad-
	      dress.

       log_file	(string, default=/dev/stderr)
	      Same  as	the  -l	option to Amd.	Specify	a file name to log Amd
	      events to.  If the string	/dev/stderr  is	 specified,  Amd  will
	      send  its	 events	to the standard	error file descriptor.	If the
	      string syslog is given, Amd will record its events with the sys-
	      tem  logger  syslogd(8).	 The  default  syslog facility used is
	      LOG_DAEMON.  If you wish to change it, append its	 name  to  the
	      log  file	 name,	delimited  by a	single colon.  For example, if
	      logfile is the string syslog:local7 then Amd will	 log  messages
	      via syslog(3) using the LOG_LOCAL7 facility (if it exists	on the
	      system).

       log_options (string, default=defaults)
	      Same as the -x option to Amd.  Specify any logging  options  for
	      Amd.   Options  are  comma delimited, and	can be preceded	by the
	      string "no" to negate their meaning.  The	"debug"	logging	option
	      is  only	available if am-utils was configured with --enable-de-
	      bug.  You	can get	the list of supported  debugging  and  logging
	      options by running amd -H.  Possible values are:

	      all	all messages
	      defaults	default	messages (fatal,error,user,warning,info)
	      debug	debug messages
	      error	non-fatal system errors	(cannot	be turned off)
	      fatal	fatal errors (cannot be	turned off)
	      info	information
	      map	map errors
	      stats	additional statistical information
	      user	non-fatal user errors
	      warn	warnings
	      warning	warnings

       map_reload_interval (numeric, default=3600)
	      The number of seconds that Amd will wait before it checks	to see
	      if any maps have changed at  their  source  (NIS	servers,  LDAP
	      servers,	files,	etc.).	 Amd  will reload only those maps that
	      have changed.

       nfs_allow_any_interface (string,	default=no)
	      Normally Amd accepts local NFS packets only from 127.0.0.1.   If
	      this  parameter  is  set to "yes"	then Amd will accept local NFS
	      packets from any local interface;	this is	useful on  hosts  that
	      may  have	multiple interfaces where the system is	forced to send
	      all outgoing packets (even those bound to	the same host) via  an
	      address other than 127.0.0.1.

       nfs_allow_insecure_port (string,	default=no)
	      Normally Amd will	refuse requests	coming from unprivileged ports
	      (i.e.  ports >= 1024 on Unix systems), so	that  only  privileged
	      users and	the kernel can send NFS	requests to it.	 However, some
	      kernels (certain versions	of Darwin, MacOS X,  and  Linux)  have
	      bugs that	cause them to use unprivileged ports in	certain	situa-
	      tions, which causes Amd to stop dead in its tracks.  This	param-
	      eter allows Amd to operate normally even on such systems,	at the
	      expense of a slight decrease in the security of its  operations.
	      If  you  see messages like "ignoring request from	foo:1234, port
	      not reserved" in your Amd	log, try enabling this	parameter  and
	      give it another go.

       nfs_proto (string, default to trying version tcp	then udp)
	      By  default, Amd tries TCP and then UDP.	This option forces the
	      overall NFS protocol used	to TCP or UDP.	It overrides  what  is
	      in  the  Amd maps, and is	useful when Amd	is compiled with NFSv3
	      support that may not be stable.  With this option	you  can  turn
	      off  the	complete usage of NFSv3	dynamically (without having to
	      recompile	Amd) until such	 time  as  NFSv3  support  is  desired
	      again.

       nfs_retransmit_counter (numeric,	default=11)
	      Same  as the retransmit part of the -t timeout.retransmit	option
	      to Amd.  Specifies the number of NFS  retransmissions  that  the
	      kernel will use to communicate with Amd.

       nfs_retransmit_counter_udp (numeric, default=11)
	      Same  as	the  nfs_retransmit_counter  option,  but  for all UDP
	      mounts only.

       nfs_retransmit_counter_tcp (numeric, default=11)
	      Same as the  nfs_retransmit_counter  option,  but	 for  all  TCP
	      mounts only.

       nfs_retransmit_counter_toplvl (numeric, default=11)
	      Same  as	the  nfs_retransmit_counter option, but	only for Amd's
	      top-level	UDP mounts.

       nfs_retry_interval (numeric, default=8)
	      Same as the timeout part of the -t timeout.retransmit option  to
	      Amd.   Specifies the NFS timeout interval, in tenths of seconds,
	      between NFS/RPC retries (for UDP and TCP).  This	is  the	 value
	      that the kernel will use to communicate with Amd.

	      Amd  relies  on  the  kernel RPC retransmit mechanism to trigger
	      mount retries.  The values of the	nfs_retransmit_counter and the
	      nfs_retry_interval parameters change the overall retry interval.
	      Too long an interval gives poor interactive response; too	 short
	      an interval causes excessive retries.

       nfs_retry_interval_udp (numeric,	default=8)
	      Same  as	the  nfs_retry_interval	option,	but for	all UDP	mounts
	      only.

       nfs_retry_interval_tcp (numeric,	default=8)
	      Same as the nfs_retry_interval option, but for  all  TCP	mounts
	      only.

       nfs_retry_interval_toplvl (numeric, default=8)
	      Same  as	the nfs_retry_interval option, but only	for Amd's top-
	      level UDP	mounts.

       nfs_vers	(numeric, default to trying version 3 then 2)
	      By default, Amd tries version 3 and then version 2.  This	option
	      forces  the  overall  NFS	 protocol  used	to version 3 or	2.  It
	      overrides	what is	in the Amd maps, and is	 useful	 when  Amd  is
	      compiled	with  NFSv3 support that may not be stable.  With this
	      option you can turn off the complete usage of NFSv3  dynamically
	      (without	having to recompile Amd) until such time as NFSv3 sup-
	      port is desired again.

       nis_domain (string, default to local NIS	domain name)
	      Same as the -y option to Amd.  Specify an	alternative NIS	domain
	      from which to fetch the NIS maps.	 The default is	the system do-
	      main name.  This option is ignored if NIS	support	is not	avail-
	      able.

       normalize_hostnames (boolean, default=no)
	      Same  as the -n option to	Amd.  If "yes,"	then the name refereed
	      to by ${rhost} is	normalized relative to the host	 database  be-
	      fore  being used.	 The effect is to translate aliases into ``of-
	      ficial'' names.

       normalize_slashes (boolean, default=yes)

	      If "yes,"	then Amd will  condense	 all  multiple	``/''  (slash)
	      characters  into	one and	remove all trailing slashes.  If "no,"
	      then Amd will not	touch strings that  may	 contain  repeated  or
	      trailing	slashes.   The	latter	is  sometimes  useful with SMB
	      mounts, which often require multiple slash characters  in	 path-
	      names.

       os (string, default to compiled in value)
	      Same  as	the -O option to Amd.  Allows you to override the com-
	      piled-in name of the operating system.  Useful when the built-in
	      name is not desired for backward compatibility reasons.  For ex-
	      ample, if	the build in name is ``sunos5'', you can  override  it
	      to ``sos5'', and use older maps which were written with the lat-
	      ter in mind.

       osver (string, default to compiled in value)
	      Same as the -o option to Amd.  Overrides the compiled-in version
	      number  of  the operating	system.	 Useful	when the built in ver-
	      sion is not desired for backward compatibility reasons.  For ex-
	      ample, if	the build in version is	``2.5.1'', you can override it
	      to ``5.5.1'', and	use older maps that were written with the lat-
	      ter in mind.

       pid_file	(string, default=/dev/stdout)
	      Specify  a  file	to  store the process ID of the	running	daemon
	      into.  If	not specified, Amd will	print its process id onto  the
	      standard output.	Useful for killing Amd after it	had run.  Note
	      that the PID of a	running	Amd can	also be	retrieved via amq  -p.
	      This file	is used	only if	the print_pid option is	on.

       plock (boolean, default=yes)
	      Same  as	the -S option to Amd.  If "yes," lock the running exe-
	      cutable pages of Amd into	memory.	 To improve Amd's performance,
	      systems  that  support the plock(3) or mlockall(2) call can lock
	      the Amd process into memory.  This way there is less  chance  it
	      the  operating  system will schedule, page out, and swap the Amd
	      process as needed.  This improves	Amd's performance, at the cost
	      of  reserving  the memory	used by	the Amd	process	(making	it un-
	      available	for other processes).

       portmap_program (numeric, default=300019)
	      Specify an alternate Port-mapper RPC program number, other  than
	      the  official  number.  This is useful when running multiple Amd
	      processes.  For example, you can run another Amd in "test" mode,
	      without  affecting  the  primary	Amd  process  in any way.  For
	      safety reasons, the alternate program numbers that can be	speci-
	      fied  must be in the range 300019-300029,	inclusive.  Amq	has an
	      option -P	which can be used to specify an	alternate program num-
	      ber  of  an  Amd to contact.  In this way, amq can fully control
	      any number of Amd	processes running on the same host.

       preferred_amq_port (numeric, default=0)
	      Specify an alternate Port-mapper RPC port	number for  Amd's  Amq
	      service.	This is	used for both UDP and TCP.  Setting this value
	      to 0 (or not defining it)	will cause Amd to select an  arbitrary
	      port  number.   Setting  the  Amq	RPC service port to a specific
	      number is	useful in firewalled or	NAT'ed environments, where you
	      need to know which port Amd will listen on.

       print_pid (boolean, default=no)
	      Same  as	the  -p	 option	 to Amd.  If "yes," Amd	will print its
	      process ID upon starting.

       print_version (boolean, default=no)
	      Same as the -v option to Amd, but	the  version  prints  and  Amd
	      continues	to run.	 If "yes," Amd will print its version informa-
	      tion string, which includes some configuration  and  compilation
	      values.

       restart_mounts (boolean,	default=no)
	      Same  as the -r option to	Amd.  If "yes" Amd will	scan the mount
	      table to determine which file  systems  are  currently  mounted.
	      Whenever one of these would have been auto-mounted, Amd inherits
	      it.

       show_statfs_entries (boolean), default=no)
	      If "yes,"	then all maps which are	browsable will also  show  the
	      number  of entries (keys)	they have when "df" runs. (This	is ac-
	      complished by returning non-zero values to the statfs(2)	system
	      call).

       truncate_log (boolean), default=no)
	      If  "yes,"  then the log file (if	it is a	regular	file), will be
	      truncated	upon startup.

       unmount_on_exit (boolean), default=no)
	      If "yes,"	then Amd will attempt  to  unmount  all	 file  systems
	      which  it	 knows	about.	 Normally  Amd	leaves	all (esp. NFS)
	      mounted file systems intact.  Note that Amd does not know	 about
	      file   systems   mounted	 before	  it  starts  up,  unless  the
	      restart_mounts option or -r flag are used.

       use_tcpwrappers (boolean), default=yes)
	      If "yes,"	then Amd will use the tcpd/librwap tcpwrappers library
	      (if available) to	control	access to Amd via the /etc/hosts.allow
	      and /etc/hosts.deny files.

       vendor (string, default to compiled in value)
	      The name of the vendor of	the operating system.	Overrides  the
	      compiled-in  vendor  name.   Useful when the compiled-in name is
	      not desired.  For	example, most Intel based systems set the ven-
	      dor name to ``unknown'', but you can set it to ``redhat.''

   Parameters applicable to regular map	sections
       map_name	(string, must be specified)
	      Name of the map where the	keys are located.

       tag (string, default no tag)
	      Each  map	 entry in the configuration file can be	tagged.	 If no
	      tag is specified,	that map section will always be	 processed  by
	      Amd.   If	 it is specified, then Amd will	process	the map	if the
	      -T option	was given to Amd, and the value	given to that command-
	      line option matches that in the map section.

EXAMPLES
       Here is a real Amd configuration	file I use daily.

       # GLOBAL	OPTIONS	SECTION
       [ global	]
       normalize_hostnames =	no
       print_pid =		no
       restart_mounts =		yes
       auto_dir	=		/n
       log_file	=		/var/log/amd
       log_options =		all
       #debug_options =		all
       plock =			no
       selectors_in_defaults =	yes
       # config.guess picks up "sunos5"	and I don't want to edit my maps yet
       os =			sos5
       # if you	print_version after setting up "os," it	will show it.
       print_version =		no
       map_type	=		file
       search_path =		/etc/amdmaps:/usr/lib/amd:/usr/local/AMD/lib
       browsable_dirs =		yes

       # DEFINE	AN AMD MOUNT POINT
       [ /u ]
       map_name	=		amd.u

       [ /proj ]
       map_name	=		amd.proj

       [ /src ]
       map_name	=		amd.src

       [ /misc ]
       map_name	=		amd.misc

       [ /import ]
       map_name	=		amd.import

       [ /tftpboot/.amd	]
       tag =			tftpboot
       map_name	=		amd.tftpboot

SEE ALSO
       amd(8), amq(8), ctl-amd(8), automount(8), hosts_access(5).

       ``am-utils'' info(1) entry.

       Linux   NFS   and   Automounter	Administration	by  Erez  Zadok,  ISBN
       0-7821-2739-8, (Sybex, 2001).

       http://www.am-utils.org

       Amd - The 4.4 BSD Automounter

AUTHORS
       Erez Zadok  <ezk@cs.sunysb.edu>,	 Computer  Science  Department,	 Stony
       Brook University, Stony Brook, New York,	USA.

       Other  authors  and  contributors to am-utils are listed	in the AUTHORS
       file distributed	with am-utils.

				 7 August 1997			   AMD.CONF(5)

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | FILE FORMAT | SECTIONS | PARAMETERS | EXAMPLES | SEE ALSO | AUTHORS

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