From: Russ Allbery Date: Sun, 21 Aug 2005 17:58:24 +0000 (+0000) Subject: Fix a few nits caught by Sergio Gelato. X-Git-Tag: debian/1.4rc1-1~23 X-Git-Url: https://git.michaelhowe.org/gitweb/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=6d2f9878eff8aa1f0774fd4ae9871f87bf6b1924;p=packages%2Fo%2Fopenafs.git Fix a few nits caught by Sergio Gelato. --- diff --git a/debian/README.servers b/debian/README.servers index 4f9655265..53d3356b8 100644 --- a/debian/README.servers +++ b/debian/README.servers @@ -190,7 +190,7 @@ Creating a New Cell where REALM is the name of your Kerberos realm. If your AFS cell and Kerberos realm have the same name, this is unnecessary. - 7. Create some space to use for AFS volumes. You can set up a separate + 8. Create some space to use for AFS volumes. You can set up a separate AFS file server on a different system from the Kerberos KDC and AFS db server, and for a larger cell you will want to do so, but when getting started you can make the db server a file server as well. @@ -208,7 +208,7 @@ Creating a New Cell mke2fs will ask you if you're sure you want to create a file system on a non-block device; say yes. - 8. Run afs-newcell. This will prompt you to be sure that the above + 9. Run afs-newcell. This will prompt you to be sure that the above steps have been complete and will ask you for the Kerberos principal to use for AFS administrative access. You should use the username/admin principal discussed above. @@ -241,7 +241,7 @@ Creating a New Cell done the above. This tests authenticated bos access as your admin principal (rather than using the local KeyFile to authenticate). - 9. Run afs-rootvol. This creates the basic AFS volume structure for + 10. Run afs-rootvol. This creates the basic AFS volume structure for your new cell. It will prompt you to be sure that the above steps are complete and then will ask you what file server and partition to create the volume on. If you were following the above instructions, @@ -250,7 +250,7 @@ Creating a New Cell After this command completes, you should be able to /bin/ls /afs and see your local cell (and, if you aren't using dynroot, mount points - for several other cells). Note that if you're not using dynroot, + for several other cells). Note that if you're not using fakestat, run /bin/ls rather than just ls to be sure that ls isn't aliased to ls -F, ls --color, or some other option that would stat each file in /afs, since this would require contacting lots of foreign cells and @@ -258,12 +258,13 @@ Creating a New Cell You should now be able to cd to /afs/cell.name where cell.name is the AFS cell name that you used. Currently, there isn't anything in - your cell. To make modifications, cd to /afs/.cell.name (note the + your cell except two volumes, user and service, created by + afs-rootvol. To make modifications, cd to /afs/.cell.name (note the leading period) and make changes there. To make those changes show up at /afs/cell.name, run vos release root.cell. For more details on what you can do now, see the AFS Administrator's Reference. - 10. While this is optional, you probably want to add AFSDB records to + 11. While this is optional, you probably want to add AFSDB records to DNS for your new AFS cell. These special DNS records let AFS clients find the db servers for your cell without requiring local configuration. To do this, create a DNS record like: