afslog
—
obtain AFS tokens
afslog |
[-h |
- -help ]
[- -no-v5 ]
[-u |
- -unlog ]
[-v |
- -verbose ]
[- -version ]
[-c cell |
- -cell= cell]
[-k realm |
- -realm= realm]
[-P principal |
- -principal= principal]
[-p path | - -file= path]
[cell | path ...] |
afslog
obtains AFS tokens for a number of cells. What
cells to get tokens for can either be specified as an explicit list, as file
paths to get tokens for, or be left unspecified, in which case
afslog
will use whatever magic
krb_afslog(3)
decides upon.
Supported options:
-
-no-v5
- This makes
afslog
not try using Kerberos 5.
-P
principal,
-
-principal
principal
- select what Kerberos 5 principal to use.
-
-cache
cache
- select what Kerberos 5 credential cache to use.
-
-principal
overrides this
option.
-u
,
-
-unlog
- Destroy tokens instead of obtaining new. If this is specified, all other
options are ignored (except for
-
-help
and
-
-version
).
-v
,
-
-verbose
- Adds more verbosity for what is actually going on.
-c
cell,
-
-cell=
cell
- This specified one or more cell names to get tokens for.
-k
realm,
-
-realm=
realm
- This is the Kerberos realm the AFS servers live in, this should normally
not be specified.
-p
path,
-
-file=
path
- This specified one or more file paths for which tokens should be
obtained.
Instead of using -c
and
-p
, you may also pass a list of cells and file paths
after any other options. These arguments are considered files if they are
either the strings “.” or “..” or they contain a
slash, or if there exists a file by that name.
Assuming that there is no file called “openafs.org” in the current
directory, and that /afs/openafs.org points to that
cell, the follwing should be identical:
$ afslog -c openafs.org
$ afslog openafs.org
$ afslog /afs/openafs.org/some/file