FSIRAND(8) OpenBSD System Manager's Manual FSIRAND(8)NAME
fsirand - randomize inode generation numbers
SYNOPSIS
fsirand [-bfp] special ...
DESCRIPTION
The fsirand command installs random generation numbers on all the inodes
for each filesystem specified on the command line by special. This
increases the security of NFS-exported filesystems by making it difficult
to ``guess'' filehandles.
Note: newfs(8) now does the equivalent of fsirand itself so it is no
longer necessary to run fsirand by hand on a new filesystem. It is only
used to re-randomize or report on an existing filesystem.
fsirand should only be used on an unmounted filesystem that has been
checked with fsck(8) or a filesystem that is mounted read-only. fsirand
may be used on the root filesystem in single-user mode but the system
should be rebooted via ``reboot -n'' afterwards.
The options are as follows:
-b Use the default block size (usually 512 bytes) instead of the
value gleaned from the disklabel.
-f Force fsirand to run even if the filesystem on special is not
marked as clean.
-p Print the current generation numbers for all inodes instead of
generating new ones.
SEE ALSOfs(5), fsck(8), newfs(8), reboot(8)HISTORY
The fsirand command appeared in SunOS 3.x. This version of fsirand first
appeared in OpenBSD 2.1.
AUTHORS
Todd C. Miller
CAVEATS
Since fsirand allocates enough memory to hold all the inodes in a given
cylinder group, it may use a large amount of memory for large disks with
few cylinder groups.
OpenBSD 4.9 May 31, 2007 OpenBSD 4.9