#!/bin/bash . $(dirname $0)/../include.rc . $(dirname $0)/../nfs.rc cleanup; # 1-8 TEST glusterd TEST pidof glusterd TEST $CLI volume create $V0 $H0:$B0/$V0; TEST $CLI volume start $V0 EXPECT_WITHIN $NFS_EXPORT_TIMEOUT 1 is_nfs_export_available TEST mount_nfs $H0:/$V0 $N0 nolock TEST mkdir $N0/dir1 TEST umount $N0 # # Case 1: Allow "dir1" to be mounted only from 127.0.0.1 # 9-12 TEST $CLI volume set $V0 export-dir \""/dir1(127.0.0.1)"\" EXPECT_WITHIN $NFS_EXPORT_TIMEOUT 2 is_nfs_export_available TEST mount_nfs localhost:/$V0/dir1 $N0 nolock TEST umount $N0 # # Case 2: Allow "dir1" to be mounted only from 8.8.8.8. This is # a negative test case therefore the mount should fail. # 13-16 TEST $CLI volume set $V0 export-dir \""/dir1(8.8.8.8)"\" EXPECT_WITHIN $NFS_EXPORT_TIMEOUT 2 is_nfs_export_available TEST ! mount_nfs $H0:/$V0/dir1 $N0 nolock TEST ! umount $N0 # Case 3: Variation of test case1. Here we are checking with hostname # instead of ip address. # 17-20 TEST $CLI volume set $V0 export-dir \""/dir1($H0)"\" EXPECT_WITHIN $NFS_EXPORT_TIMEOUT 2 is_nfs_export_available TEST mount_nfs $H0:/$V0/dir1 $N0 nolock TEST umount $N0 # Case 4: Variation of test case1. Here we are checking with IP range # 21-24 TEST $CLI volume set $V0 export-dir \""/dir1(127.0.0.0/24)"\" EXPECT_WITHIN $NFS_EXPORT_TIMEOUT 2 is_nfs_export_available TEST mount_nfs localhost:/$V0/dir1 $N0 nolock TEST umount $N0 ## Finish up TEST $CLI volume stop $V0; TEST $CLI volume delete $V0; cleanup;