AppleVolumes.default — Configuration file used by afpd(8) to determine the shares made available through Appletalk
AppleVolumes.default
is the
configuration file used by afpd to determine what
portions of the file system will be shared via Apple Filing Protocol, as
well as their behaviour. Any line not prefixed with # is interpreted.
Newline escaping is supported. The configuration lines are composed
like:
path
[ volume name ] [ options
]
The path name must be a fully qualified path name, or a path name using either the ~ shell shorthand or any of the substitution variables, which are listed below.
The volume name is the name that appears in the Chooser ot the "connect to server" dialog on Macintoshes to represent the appropriate share. If there are spaces in the name, it should be in quotes (i.e. "File Share"). The volume name may not exceed 27 characters in length, and cannot contain the ':' character.
Each volume has to be configured on a single line. Though newline escaping is supported.
The possible options and their meanings are:
[v1|v2|osx]
specify the format of the metadata files, which are used for saving Mac resource fork as well. Earlier versions used AppleDouble V1, the new default format is V2. Starting with Netatalk 2.0, the scheme MacOS X uses currently (10.3.x), is also supported
Using adouble:osx
is not recommended for production use. Its
only aim is to temporarely share eg. FAT32 formatted FireWire
harddrives written on a Macintosh with afpd. Apple's metadata
scheme lacks several essential features, so using it on the
server's side will break both CNIDs and MacOS 9
compatibility
[users/groups]
The allow option allows the users and groups that access a share to be specified. Users and groups are specified, delimited by commas. Groups are designated by a @ prefix. Example: allow:user1,user2,@group
[users/groups]
The deny option specifies users and groups who are not allowed access to the share. It follows the same format as the allow option.
[IPv4 host address/IPv4 netmask
bits[, ... ]]
Only listed hosts and networks are allowed, all others are rejected. Example: allowed_hosts:10.1.0.0/16,10.2.1.100
[IPv4 host address/IPv4 netmask bits[,
...]]
Listed hosts and nets are rejected, all others are allowed. Example: denied_hosts: 192.168.100/24,10.1.1.1
[backend]
set the CNID backend to be used for the volume, default is [:DEFAULT_CNID_SCHEME:] available schemes: [:COMPILED_BACKENDS:]
[path]
Sets the database information to be stored in path. You have to specifiy a writable location, even if the volume is read only.
[charset]
specifies the mac client codepage for this Volume, e.g.
"MAC_ROMAN", "MAC_CYRILLIC". If not specified the setting from
afpd.conf
is inherited. This setting is only
required if you need volumes, where the mac codepage differs from
the one globally set in afpd.conf
.
[option]
This allows multiple options to be specified in a comma delimited format. The available options are:
Enable Time Machine suport for this volume.
Use with usedots
: make dot files
invisible.
Limit disk size reporting to 2GB. This can be used for older Macintoshes using newer Appleshare clients.
a non-zero return code from preexec close the volume being immediately, preventing clients to mount/see the volume in question.
Specifies the share as being read only for all users.
The .AppleDB directory has to be writeable, you can use the
-dbpath
option to relocate it.
a non-zero return code from root_preexec closes the volume immediately, preventing clients to mount/see the volume in question.
use AFP3 unix privileges. Become familiar with the new
"unix privileges" AFP permissions concepts in MacOS X before
using this option. See also:
perm|fperm|dperm
.
Don't do :hex translation for dot files. note: when this
option gets set, certain file names become illegal. These are
.Parent and anything that starts with .Apple. See also
invisibledots
.
[password]
This option allows you to set a volume password, which can be a maximum of 8 characters long (using ASCII strongly recommended at the time of this writing).
Add(or) with the client requested permissions:
perm
affects files and directories,
fperm
is for files only, dperm
is
for directories only. Use with
options:upriv
.
Example 5.7. Volume for a collaborative workgroup
/path/to/volume "Workgroup" options:upriv dperm:0770 fperm:0660
[command]
command to be run when the volume is mounted, ignored for user defined volumes
[command]
command to be run when the volume is closed, ignored for user defined volumes
[command]
command to be run as root when the volume is mounted, ignored for user defined volumes
[command]
command to be run as root when the volume is closed, ignored for user defined volumes
users/groups
]Allows certain users and groups to have read-only access to a share. This follows the allow option format.
[users/groups]
Allows certain users and groups to have read/write access to a share. This follows the allow option format.
[vetoed name]
hide files and directories,where the path matches one of the
'/' delimited vetoed names. Matches are partial, e.g. path is
/abc/def/file
and veto:/abc/ will hide the
file.
[charset]
specifies the volume codepage, e.g. "UTF8", "UTF8-MAC", "ISO-8859-15". Defaults to "UTF8".
You can use variables in both volume path and volume name.
if you specify an unknown variable, it will not get converted.
if you specify a known variable, but that variable doesn't have a value, it will get ignored.
The variables which can be used for substitutions are:
basename
client's ip or appletalk address
volume pathname on server
full name (contents of the gecos field in the passwd file)
group name
hostname
client's ip, without port
server name (this can be the hostname)
user name (if guest, it is the user that guest is running as)
volume name (either ADEID_NAME or basename of path)
appletalk zone (may not exist)
prints dollar sign ($)
When using variable substitution in the volume name, always keep in mind, not to exceed the 27 characters limit
Example 5.8. Using variable substitution when defining volumes
/home/groups/$g "Groupdir for $g" ~ "$f is the best one"
We define "groupdirs" for each primary group and use a personalized server name for homedir shares.
The AFP protocol mostly refers to files and directories by ID and
not by name. Netatalk needs a way to store these ID's in a persistent way,
to achieve this several different CNID backends are available. The CNID
Databases are by default located in the .AppleDB
folder in the volume root.
"Concurrent database", backend is based on Sleepycat's Berkely DB. With this backend several afpd deamons access the CNID database directly. Berkeley DB locking is used to synchronize access, if more than one afpd process is active for a volume. The drawback is, that the crash of a single afpd process might corrupt the database.
Access to the CNID database is restricted to the
cnid_metad daemon process.
afpd processes communicate with the daemon for
database reads and updates. If built with Berkeley DB transactions
the probability for database corruption is practically zero, but
performance can be slower than with cdb
This backend is an exception, in terms of ID persistency. ID's are only valid for the current session. This is basically what afpd did in the 1.5 (and 1.6) versions. This backend is still available, as it is useful for e.g. sharing cdroms.
Warning: It is NOT recommended to use this backend for volumes anymore, as afpd now relies heavily on a persistent ID database. Aliases will likely not work and filename mangling is not supported.
Even though ./configure --help might show that there are other CNID backends available, be warned those are likely broken or mainly used for testing. Don't use them unless you know what you're doing, they may be removed without further notice from future versions.
With OS X Apple introduced the AFP3 protocol. One of the most important changes was that AFP3 uses unicode names encoded as UTF-8 decomposed. Previous AFP/OS versions used codepages, like MacRoman, MacCentralEurope, etc.
afpd needs a way to preserve extended macintosh
characters, or characters illegal in unix filenames, when saving files on
a unix filesystem. Earlier versions used the the so called CAP encoding.
An extended character (>0x7F) would be converted to a :xx sequence,
e.g. the Apple Logo (MacRoman: 0XF0) was saved as :f0
.
Some special characters will be converted as to :xx notation as well.
'/' will be encoded to :2f
, if
-usedots
is not specified, a leading dot
'.' will be encoded as :2e
.
This version now uses UTF-8 as the default encoding for names. Special characters, like '/' and a leading '.' will still be CAP style encoded .
The -volcharset
option will allow you to select
another volume encoding. E.g. for western users another useful setting
could be -volcharset ISO-8859-15. apfd will accept any
iconv(1) provided charset. If a character cannot be converted
from the mac codepage to the selected volcharset, afpd will save it as a
CAP encoded character. For AFP3 clients, afpd will
convert the UTF-8 character to -maccharset
first. If this
conversion fails, you'll receive a -50 error on the mac.
Note: Whenever you can, please stick with the default UTF-8 volume format.
To use a volume created with an earlier afpd version, you'll have to specify the following options:
In case you used an NLS you could try using a compatible iconv
charset for -volcharset
.
Example 5.10. use a 1.x style volume, created with maccode.iso8859-1
/path/to/volume "Volname" adouble:v1 volcharset:ISO-8859-1
You should consider converting old style volumes to the new UTF-8/AD2 format. The safest way to do this, is to create a new volume with the default options and copy the files between this volumes with a mac.
Note: Using above example options will allow you to downgrade to 1.x netatalk again.
Note: Some 1.x NLS files used non standard
mappings, e.g. maccode.iso8859-1.adapted
. This is not
supported anymore. You'll have to copy the contents of those volumes files
to a Mac and then back to the netatalk server, preferably to an UTF-8
volume.
The following options should only be used after serious consideration. Be sure you fully understood the, sometimes complex, consequences, before using them.
[option]
The casefold option handles, if the case of filenames should be changed. The available options are:
tolower
- Lowercases names in both
directions.
toupper
- Uppercases names in both
directions.
xlatelower
- Client sees lowercase, server
sees uppercase.
xlateupper
- Client sees uppercase, server
sees lowercase.
option
]This allows multiple options to be specified in a comma delimited format. The available options are:
If set afpd uses the ID information stored in AppleDouble V2 header files to reduce database load. Don't set this option if the volume is modified by non AFP clients (NFS/SMB/local). Defaults to off.
Enables crlf translation for TEXT files, automatically converting macintosh line breaks into Unix ones. Use of this option might be dangerous since some older programs store binary data files as type "TEXT" when saving and switch the filetype in a second step. Afpd will potentially destroy such files when "erroneously" changing bytes in order to do line break translation.
Allows a volume to be declared as being a "dropbox." Note that netatalk must be compiled with dropkludge support for this to function. Warning: This option is deprecated and might not work as expected.
Forces filename restrictions imposed by MS WinXX. Warning: This is NOT recommened for volumes mainly used by Macs. Please make sure you fully understand this option before using it.
This option breaks direct saving to netatalk volumes from some applications, i.e. OfficeX.
Forces afpd to not create .AppleDouble directories unless macintosh metadata needs to be written. This option is only useful if you want to share files mostly used NOT by macs, causing afpd to not automatically create .AppleDouble subdirs containing AD header files in every directory it enters (which will it do by default).
In case, you save or change files from mac clients, AD metadata files have to be written even in case you set this option. So you can't avoid the creation of .AppleDouble directories and its contents when you give macs write access to a share and they make use of it.
Try to avoid noadouble
whenever
possible.
always use 0 for device number, helps when the device number is not constant across a reboot, cluster, ...
don't advertise createfileid, resolveid, deleteid calls.
Disables :hex translations for anything except dot files. This option makes the '/' character illegal.
don't stat volume path when enumerating volumes list, useful for automounting or volumes created by a preexec script.
Provides compatibility with Apple II clients.