Commit Graph

9 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Sheldon Hearn f2e366a105 Remove single-space hard sentence breaks. These degrade the quality
of the typeset output, tend to make diffs harder to read and provide
bad examples for new-comers to mdoc.
2000-03-01 14:09:25 +00:00
Peter Wemm 97d92980a9 $Id$ -> $FreeBSD$ 1999-08-28 01:35:59 +00:00
Philippe Charnier f12a14713b .Sh AUTHOR -> .Sh AUTHORS. Use .An/.Aq. 1998-03-23 08:31:20 +00:00
Philippe Charnier 1e96bb57a6 Use err(3). Remove multiply defined Id string. 1997-10-13 11:22:39 +00:00
Peter Wemm 476602a9d0 Revert $FreeBSD$ to $Id$ 1997-02-22 16:15:28 +00:00
Thomas Gellekum 767c0e7bdc Typos. 1997-02-05 07:36:51 +00:00
Wolfram Schneider bfd34a4a60 Sort cross references. 1997-01-20 00:03:00 +00:00
Jordan K. Hubbard 1130b656e5 Make the long-awaited change from $Id$ to $FreeBSD$
This will make a number of things easier in the future, as well as (finally!)
avoiding the Id-smashing problem which has plagued developers for so long.

Boy, I'm glad we're not using sup anymore.  This update would have been
insane otherwise.
1997-01-14 07:20:47 +00:00
Bill Paul 16118c2bcb Import rpc.ypxfrd.
This server impliments an RPC-based file transfer protocol that allows
an NIS slave server to copy a raw map database file from an NIS master.

The goal here is to speed up the transfer of very large maps. If you
have, for example, an NIS password database with 30,000 records in it,
it can take around 8 to 10 minutes to regenerate it (four hash databases
are created). As it stands now, ypxfr(8) transfers a map by sucking all
the records from ypserv(8) on the master using yp_all() and writing them
to a new database using the db(3) library. This adds up to another 8 to 10
minutes, per slave. With as the number of slaves increases, this latency
becomes prohibitive.

With rpc.ypxfrd, all the slave has to do is copy the already-built
hash database file from the master and move it into place. Even with a
multi-megabyte file, this reduces the master to slave transfer time
to well under a minute. (This is using TCP.)

Access restrictions are applied using the same mechanism as in ypserv:
you can control access using /var/yp/securenets, and the server will
not transmit the master.passwd.* maps unless the transfer request originates
on a reserved port.

Note: this server is based on my hastily contrived protocol and is _NOT_
compatible with Sun's protocol of the same name. It can't be compatible
for a couple of reasons. For one thing, Sun's protocol has not been published
anywhere that I know of. It is not included in any of the SunRPC source
distributions that I've been able to find. Second, Sun's NIS v2 code
uses old style ndbm maps while FreeBSD uses Berkeley DB. The file formats
are incompatible, so being able to transfer maps between FreeBSD and SunOS
hosts wouldn't do any good anyway. (You could always port the FreeBSD NIS
code to SunOS if you really wanted to do it. :)

(There's also the little fact that SunOS/SPARC is big-endian and FreeBSD/i386
is little-endian. Berkeley DB can handle byte ordering differences; ndbm
probably can't.)
1996-06-05 04:36:55 +00:00