ypbind - NIS binder process ypbind



  • System Administration Commands					    ypbind(1M)
    
    
    
    NAME
           ypbind -	NIS binder process
    
    SYNOPSIS
           /usr/lib/netsvc/yp/ypbind [-broadcast | -ypset |	-ypsetme]
    
    
    DESCRIPTION
           NIS  provides  a	 simple	network	lookup service consisting of databases
           and processes. The databases are	stored at the machine that runs	an NIS
           server  process.	 The  programmatic  interface  to  NIS is described in
           ypclnt(3NSL).  Administrative  tools  are  described   in   ypinit(1M),
           ypwhich(1),  and	 ypset(1M).  Tools to see the contents of NIS maps are
           described in ypcat(1), and ypmatch(1).
    
    
           ypbind is a daemon process that is activated  at	 system	 startup  time
           from  the  svc:/network/nis/client:default  service.  By	default, it is
           invoked as ypbind -broadcast. ypbind runs on all	client	machines  that
           are  set	 up to use NIS.	The function of	ypbind is to remember informa-
           tion that lets all NIS client processes on a node communicate with some
           NIS  server  process.  ypbind  must  run	on every machine which has NIS
           client processes. The NIS server	may or may not be running on the  same
           node, but must be running somewhere on the network.
    
    
           The SMF service svc:/network/nis/client has the following properties in
           the config property group:
    
    	 config.use_broadcast
    	 config.use_ypsetme
    
    
    
    
           The information ypbind remembers	is called a binding -- the association
           of a domain name	with a NIS server. The process of binding is driven by
           client requests.	As a request  for  an  unbound	domain	comes  in,  if
           started	with  the  -broadcast option, the ypbind process broadcasts on
           the net trying to find an NIS server, that is, a	ypserv process serving
           the  domain  with  a  name the same as (case sensitive) the name	of the
           domain in the client request.  Since  the  binding  is  established  by
           broadcasting,  there  must  be  at  least one NIS server	on the net. If
           started without the -broadcast option, ypbind process steps through the
           list  of	 NIS  servers  that was	created	by ypinit -c for the requested
           domain. There must be an	NIS server process on  at  least  one  of  the
           hosts  in the NIS servers file. It is recommended that you list each of
           these NIS servers by name and numeric IP	address	in /etc/hosts.	Though
           the  practice  is  not  recommended,  NIS allows	you to list servers by
           numeric address only, bypassing /etc/hosts. In  such  a	configuration,
           ypwhich(1) returns a numeric address instead of a name.
    
    
           Once  a	domain is bound	by ypbind, that	same binding is	given to every
           client process on the node. The ypbind process on the local node	 or  a
           remote  node  may  be queried for the binding of	a particular domain by
           using the ypwhich(1) command.
    
    
           If ypbind is unable to speak to the NIS server process it is bound  to,
           it  marks  the  domain  as  unbound,  tells the client process that the
           domain is unbound, and tries to bind the	domain	once  again.  Requests
           received	 for an	unbound	domain will wait until the requested domain is
           bound. In general, a bound domain is marked as unbound  when  the  node
           running	the  NIS  server  crashes  or gets overloaded. In such a case,
           ypbind will try to  bind	 to  another  NIS  server  using  the  process
           described  above.ypbind	also accepts requests to set its binding for a
           particular domain. The request is usually generated  by	the  ypset(1M)
           command.	In order for ypset to work, ypbind must	have been invoked with
           flags -ypset or -ypsetme.
    
       Interaction with Location Profiles
           NIS configuration and activation	is managed in Location profiles	(refer
           to netcfg(1M) for more information about	location profiles). These pro-
           files are either	fixed, meaning the network configuration is being man-
           aged  in	the traditional	way, or	reactive, meaning the network configu-
           ration is being managed automatically, reacting to changes in the  net-
           work environment	according to policy rules specified in the profiles.
    
    
           When  a	fixed  location	(there can currently be	only one, the Default-
           Fixed location) is active, changes made to the SMF repository  will  be
           applied	to the location	when it	is disabled, and thus will be restored
           if that location	is later re-enabled.
    
    
           When a reactive location	is  active,  changes  should  not  be  applied
           directly	 to the	SMF repository;	these changes will not be preserved in
           the location profile, and will thus be lost if  the  location  is  dis-
           abled,  or  if  the  system's  network  configuration,  as  managed  by
           svc:/network/physical:default  and  svc:/network/location:default,   is
           refreshed  or restarted.	Changes	should instead be applied to the loca-
           tion itself, using the netcfg(1M) command; this will save the change to
           the  location  profile  repository,  and	 will also apply it to the SMF
           repository (if the change is made to the	currently active location).
    
    
           The presence or absence of nis in the nameservices property of a	 loca-
           tion    profile	  will	  determine    whether	  or   not   svc:/net-
           work/nis/client:default is enabled.  The	nis-nameservice-servers	 prop-
           erty  may be empty, indicating that -broadcast should be	enabled, or it
           may contain the list of servers to which	the client may bind.
    
    OPTIONS
           -broadcast
    
    	   Send	a broadcast datagram using UDP/IP that requests	 the  informa-
    	   tion	needed to bind to a specific NIS server. This option is	analo-
    	   gous	to ypbind with no options in earlier Sun releases and is  rec-
    	   ommended for	ease of	use.
    
    	   Enabling the	SMF property config.use_broadcast enables -broadcast.
    
    
           -ypset
    
    	   Allow  users	from any remote	machine	to change the binding by means
    	   of the ypset	command. By default, no	one can	 change	 the  binding.
    	   This	option is insecure.
    
    
           -ypsetme
    
    	   Only	 allow	root  on  the local machine to change the binding to a
    	   desired server by means of the ypset	command. ypbind	can verify the
    	   caller is indeed a root user	by accepting such requests only	on the
    	   loopback transport. By default, no external process can change  the
    	   binding.
    
    	   Enabling the	SMF property config.use_ypsetme	enables	-ypsetme.
    
    
    FILES
           /var/yp/binding/ypdomain/ypservers
    
    	   Lists the servers to	which the NIS client is	allowed	to bind.
    
    
           /etc/inet/hosts
    
    	   File	in which it is recommended that	NIS servers be listed.
    
    
    ATTRIBUTES
           See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
    
    
    
    
           +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
           |      ATTRIBUTE	TYPE	     |	    ATTRIBUTE VALUE	   |
           +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
           |Availability		     |system/network/nis	   |
           +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
    
    SEE ALSO
           svcs(1),	 ypcat(1),  ypmatch(1),	 ypwhich(1), ifconfig(1M), netcfg(1M),
           svcadm(1M), ypinit(1M), ypset(1M), ypclnt(3NSL),	hosts(4),  ypfiles(4),
           attributes(5), smf(5)
    
    NOTES
           ypbind supports multiple	domains. The ypbind process can	maintain bind-
           ings to several domains and their servers, the default  domain  is  the
           one specified by	the domainname(1M) command at startup time.
    
    
           The  -broadcast	option works only on the UDP transport.	It is insecure
           since it	trusts "any" machine on	the net	that responds to the broadcast
           request and poses itself	as an NIS server.
    
    
           The  ypbind  service  is	 managed  by  the service management facility,
           smf(5), under the service identifier:
    
    	 svc:/network/nis/client:default
    
    
    
    
           Administrative actions on this service, such as enabling, disabling, or
           requesting  restart,  can  be performed using svcadm(1M). The service's
           status can be queried using the svcs(1) command.
    
    
    
    SunOS 5.11			  1 Jun	2012			    ypbind(1M)
    

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