ref: 84989770721391018dd6a247831cb79a43c1d86b
dir: /man/4/9srvfs/
.TH 9SRVFS 4 "Plan 9" .SH NAME 9srvfs \- add Inferno service to Plan 9 service registry .SH SYNOPSIS .B 9srvfs [ .BI -p " perm" ] .I srvname .I source .SH DESCRIPTION .I 9srvfs is only usable (or indeed of interest) on Inferno hosted under Plan 9. It uses .IR srv9 (3) to make an Inferno service .I source available to Plan 9 applications via the Plan 9 service registry. .IR Srv9 (3) must previously have been bound to .B /srv in the current name space, with .B -c to allow file creation (see .IR bind (1)). .PP .I Source may be either a command or the name of a directory. If .I source is surrounded by braces .RB ( { and .BR } ), it is invoked as a .IR sh (1) command, and its standard input (sic) is posted as Plan 9 service .BI /srv/ srvname with permissions .I perm (default: mode 600). Otherwise, .I source is taken to be a directory that is the root of a name space to export to Plan 9, an exporting file service is started (see .IR sys-export (2)), and again posted as Plan 9 service .BI /srv/ srvname, and the export terminates when the Plan 9 service file has been removed and the last mounted instance goes away in Plan 9. .SH EXAMPLE Make the current Inferno environment variables available to Plan 9 applications: .IP .EX bind -c '#₪' /srv # if not already done 9srvfs infenv /env .EE .PP The name space can then be mounted in Plan 9, allowing variables to be read and written in that Inferno environment: .IP .EX mount -c /srv/infenv /n/ftp ls /n/ftp cat /n/ftp/emuargs echo masked man >/n/ftp/zorro .EE .SH SOURCE .B /appl/cmd/9srvfs.b .SH SEE ALSO .IR bind (1), .IR srv9 (3), .IR import (4)