Specifications
3 From the expanded Servers list, select NFS.
4 Click Overview.
The Overview pane tells you whether the service is running and whether nfsd,
portmap, rpc.lockd, and rpc.statd processes are running.
The nfsd process responds to NFS protocol and mount protocol requests from client
computers that have mounted folders.
The portmap process enables client computers to nd nfs daemons (always one
process).
The rpc.lockd daemon provides le and record-locking services in an NFS environment.
The rpc.statd daemon cooperates with rpc.statd daemons on other hosts to provide
a status monitoring service. If a local NFS service quits unexpectedly and restarts, the
local rpc.statd daemon noties the hosts being monitored at the time the service quit.
5 To see a list of connected users, click Connections.
The list includes the user name, the user IP address or domain name, the time since
the last data transfer (idle time), NFS requests, and the bytes read and written.
From the command line:
To see if the service and related processes are running: m
$ sudo serveradmin status nfs
To see complete status: m
$ sudo serveradmin fullstatus nfs
For information about serveradmin, see its man page. For the basics of command-line
tool usage, see Introduction to Command-Line Administration.
Viewing NFS Connections
Use Server Admin to view the active clients that are connected to the server through
NFS service.
To view NFS connections:
1 Open Server Admin and connect to the server.
2 Click the triangle at the left of the server.
The list of services appears.
3 From the expanded Servers list, select NFS.
4 To see a list of active users, click Connections.
The list includes the user name, the user IP address or domain name, the time since
the last data transfer (idle time), NFS requests, and the bytes read and written.
5 To update the list of connected users, click the Refresh button (below the Servers list).
11 4 Chapter 6 Working with NFS Service