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# New configuration file nfs-common and nfs-kernel-server use a common configuration file /etc/nfs.conf. They also support a /etc/nfs.conf.d/*.conf structure. If there are local modifications to either /etc/default/nfs-common or /etc/default/nfs-kernel-server as installed by previous versions of the corresponding Debian packages, nfs-common will attempt a migration to the new configuration file. This migration is done by calling the /usr/share/nfs-common/nfsconvert.py script in postinst. Upon success, the script will produce /etc/nfs.conf.d/local.conf with the local customizations specified in those older config files, while /etc/nfs.conf will remain with the default settings. If the migration fails for some reason, the package installation will fail and manual intervention will be required. This will probably involve temporarily removing the offending configuration option that was not handled by the migration script and configuring the package again. Please consult nfs.conf(5) and each daemon's manpage to determine how to translate the command line options previously defined in /etc/default/nfs-* to the new configuration file format. # Services All NFS related services are enabled by default. This means that depending on the NFS version that you intend to use, some services might be superfluous. For example, if you never intend to serve NFSv3, then you can safely disable the rpc-statd.service unit. Note that some NFSv4 service units will start only if Kerberos is setup.