amd.conf « MAN PAGE



AMD.CONF(5)							   AMD.CONF(5)

NAME
       amd.conf - Amd configuration file

SYNOPSIS
       amd.conf

DESCRIPTION
       The amd.conf file is the configuration file for Amd, as part of the am-
       utils suite.

       amd.conf contains runtime configuration information for the  Amd  auto-
       mounter program.

FILE FORMAT
       The  file  consists  of sections and parameters.  A section begins with
       the name of the section in square brackets and continues until the next
       section begins or the end the file is reached.  Sections contain param-
       eters of the form 'name = value'.

       The file is line-based - that is, each newline-terminated  line	repre-
       sents either a comment, a section name or a parameter.  No line-contin-
       uation syntax is available.

       Section, parameter names and their values are case sensitive.

       Only the first equals sign in a parameter is  significant.   Whitespace
       before  or after the first equals sign is discarded.  Leading, trailing
       and internal whitespace in section and parameter names  is  irrelevant.
       Leading	and  trailing  whitespace  in  a parameter value is discarded.
       Internal whitespace within a parameter value is not allowed, unless the
       whole  parameter value is quoted with double quotes as in 'name = "some
       value"'.

       Any line beginning with a pound sign (#) is ignored, as are lines  con-
       taining only whitespace.

       The  values  following  the  equals sign in parameters are all either a
       string (no quotes needed if  string  does  not  include	spaces)  or  a
       boolean, which may be given as yes/no.  Case is significant in all val-
       ues.  Some items such as cache timeouts are numeric.

SECTIONS
   The [global] section
       Parameters in this section either apply to Amd as a whole,  or  to  all
       other  regular  map  sections  which  follow.  There should be only one
       global section defined in one configuration file.

       It is highly recommended that this section be specified	first  in  the
       configuration file.  If it is not, then regular map sections which pre-
       cede it will not use global values defined later.

   Regular [/map] sections
       Parameters in regular (non-global)  sections  apply  to	a  single  map
       entry.	For  example, if the map section [/homes] is defined, then all
       parameters following it will be applied to the /homes Amd-managed mount
       point.

PARAMETERS
   Parameters common to all sections
       These  parameters  can  be specified either in the global or a map spe-
       cific section.  Entries specified in a  map-specific  section  override
       the  default  value  or	one defined in the global section.   If such a
       common parameter is specified only in the global section, it is	appli-
       cable to all regular map sections that follow.

       browsable_dirs (string, default=no)
	      If "yes," then Amd's top-level mount points will be browsable to
	      readdir(3) calls.  This means you could run  for	example  ls(1)
	      and see what keys are available to mount in that directory.  Not
	      all entries are  made  visible  to  readdir(3):  the  "/default"
	      entry,  wildcard	entries,  and those with a "/" in them are not
	      included.  If  you  specify  "full"  to  this  option,  all  but
	      "/default"  will	be  visible.   Note  that if you run a command
	      which will attempt to stat(2) the entries, such as often done by
	      "ls  -l"	or  "ls  -F," Amd will attempt to mount every entry in
	      that map.  This is often called a ``mount storm.''

       map_defaults (string, default to empty)
	      This option sets a string to be  used  as  the  map's  /defaults
	      entry,  overriding  any  /defaults  specified  in the map.  This
	      allows local users to override map  defaults  without  modifying
	      maps globally.

       map_options (string, default no options)
	      This option is the same as specifying map options on the command
	      line to Amd, such as "cache:=all".

       map_type (string, default search all map types)
	      If specified, Amd will initialize the  map  only	for  the  type
	      given.  This is useful to avoid the default map search type used
	      by Amd which takes longer and can  have  undesired  side-effects
	      such as initializing NIS even if not used.  Possible values are

	      exec	executable maps
	      file	plain files
	      hesiod	Hesiod name service from MIT
	      ldap	Lightweight Directory Access Protocol
	      ndbm	(New) dbm style hash files
	      nis	Network Information Services (version 2)
	      nisplus	Network Information Services Plus (version 3)
	      passwd	local password files
	      union	union maps

       mount_type (string, default=nfs)
	      All  Amd	mount  types  default  to NFS.	That is, Amd is an NFS
	      server on the map mount points, for the local host it is running
	      on.   If "autofs" is specified, Amd will be an autofs server for
	      those mount points.

       autofs_use_lofs (string, default=yes)
	      When set to "yes" and  using  Autofs,  Amd  will	use  lofs-type
	      (loopback) mounts for type:=link mounts.	This has the advantage
	      of mounting in place, and users get to the see the same pathname
	      that  they  chdir'ed  into.  If this option is set to "no," then
	      Amd will use symlinks instead: that code	is  more  tested,  but
	      negates autofs's big advantage of in-place mounts.

       search_path (string, default no search path)
	      This  provides  a  (colon-delimited)  search path for file maps.
	      Using a search path, sites can allow for	local  map  customiza-
	      tions  and  overrides,  and  can	distributed  maps  in  several
	      locations as needed.

       selectors_in_defaults (boolean, default=no)
	      If "yes," then the /defaults entry of maps will search  for  and
	      process any selectors before setting defaults for all other keys
	      in that map.  Useful when you want to set different options  for
	      a  complete  map based on some parameters.  For example, you may
	      want to better the NFS performance over slow slip-based networks
	      as follows:

	      /defaults \
		  wire==slip-net;opts:=intr,rsize=1024,wsize=1024 \
		  wire!=slip-net;opts:=intr,rsize=8192,wsize=8192

	      Deprecated form: selectors_on_default

   Parameters applicable to the global section only
       arch (string, default to compiled in value)
	      Same  as the -A option to Amd.  Allows you to override the value
	      of the arch Amd variable.

       auto_attrcache (numeric, default=0)
	      Specify in seconds (or units of 0.1 seconds,  depending  on  the
	      OS),  what  is the (kernel-side) NFS attribute cache timeout for
	      @i{Amd}'s own automount points.  A value of  0  is  supposed  to
	      turn  off  attribute  caching, meaning that @i{Amd} will be con-
	      sulted via a kernel-RPC each time  someone  stat()'s  the  mount
	      point  (which  could  be	abused as a denial-of-service attack).
	      Warning: some OSs are incapable of turning off the NFS attribute
	      cache  reliably.	 On  such  systems,  Amd may not work reliably
	      under heavy load.  See the README.attrcache document in the  Am-
	      utils distribution for more details.

       auto_dir (string, default=/a)
	      Same  as	the -a option to Amd.  This sets the private directory
	      where Amd will create sub-directories for its real mount points.

       cache_duration (numeric, default=300)
	      Same as the -c option to Amd.  Sets the duration in seconds that
	      looked-up or mounted map entries remain in the cache.

       cluster (string, default no cluster)
	      Same as the -C option to Amd.   Specifies  the  alternate  HP-UX
	      cluster to use.

       debug_mtab_file (string, default=/tmp/mnttab)
	      Path to mtab file that is used by Amd to store a list of mounted
	      file systems during debug-mtab mode.  This option  only  applies
	      to systems that store mtab information on disk.

       debug_options (string, default no debug options)
	      Same  as	the  -D  option  to Amd.  Specify any debugging
	      options for Amd.	Works only if am-utils	was  configured
	      for debugging using the --enable-debug option.  The "mem"
	      option, as well as all other options, can  be  turned  on
	      via  --enable-debug=mem.	Otherwise debugging options are
	      ignored.	 Options  are  comma  delimited,  and  can   be
	      preceded by the string "no" to negate their meaning.  You
	      can get the list of supported debugging options  by  run-
	      ning Amd -H.  Possible values are:

	      all	all options
	      amq	register for amq
	      daemon	enter daemon mode
	      fork	fork server
	      full	program trace
	      hrtime	print high resolution time stamps (only if syslog(3) is not used)
	      info	info service specific debugging (hesiod, nis, etc.)
	      mem	trace memory allocations
	      mtab	use local "./mtab" file
	      readdir	show browsable_dirs progress
	      str	debug string munging
	      test	full debug but no daemon
	      trace	trace protocol and NFS mount arguments
	      xdrtrace	trace XDR routines

       dismount_interval (numeric, default=120)
	      Same  as	the  -w option to Amd.	Specify in seconds, the
	      time between attempts to dismount file systems that  have
	      exceeded their cached times.

       domain_strip (boolean, default=yes)
	      If  "yes,"  then	the  domain  name  part  referred to by
	      ${rhost} is stripped off.  This is useful  to  keep  logs
	      and  smaller.  If "no," then the domain name part is left
	      changed.	This is useful when using multiple domains with
	      the  same  maps  (as  you  may  have  hosts whose domain-
	      stripped name is identical).

       exec_map_timeout (numeric, default=10)
	      The timeout in seconds that Amd will  wait  for  an  exe-
	      cutable  map  program  before  an answer is returned from
	      that program (or script).  This value should be set to as
	      small  as possible while still allowing normal replies to
	      be returned before the timer expires, because during  the
	      time  that  the executable map program is queried, Amd is
	      essentially waiting and is thus  not  responding	to  any
	      other queries.

       forced_unmounts (boolean, default=no)
	      If  set  to  "yes,"  and the client OS supports forced or
	      lazy unmounts, then Amd will attempt to use  them  if  it
	      gets any of three serious error conditions when trying to
	      unmount an existing mount point or mount on top  of  one:
	      EIO, ESTALE, or EBUSY.

	      This  could  be useful to recover from serious conditions
	      such as hardware failure of mounted disks, or NFS servers
	      which  are  down	permanently,  were migrated, or changed
	      their IP address.  Only "type:=toplvl" mounts  hung  with
	      EBUSY  are forcibly unmounted using this option, which is
	      useful to recover from a hung Amd).

       full_os (string, default to compiled in value)
	      The full name of the operating  system,  along  with  its
	      version.	 Allows  you  to  override the compiled-in full
	      name and version of the operating  system.   Useful  when
	      the  compiled-in	name  is not desired.  For example, the
	      full  operating  system  name  on  linux	comes	up   as
	      ``linux'', but you can override it to ``linux-2.2.5.''

       fully_qualified_hosts (string, default=no)
	      If  "yes,"  Amd  will  perform  RPC  authentication using
	      fully-qualified host names.  This is necessary  for  some
	      systems,	and  especially  when  performing  cross-domain
	      mounting.  For this function to work,  the  Amd  variable
	      ${hostd} is used, requiring that ${domain} not be null.

       hesiod_base (string, default=automount)
	      Specify the base name for hesiod maps.

       karch (string, default to karch of the system)
	      Same as the -k option to Amd.  Allows you to override the
	      kernel-architecture of your system.  Useful  for	example
	      on  Sun  (Sparc)	machines,  where  you can build one Amd
	      binary, and run it on multiple  machines,  yet  you  want
	      each one to get the correct karch variable set (for exam-
	      ple, sun4c, sun4m, sun4u, etc.)  Note that if not  speci-
	      fied,  Amd  will	use  uname(3)  to figure out the kernel
	      architecture of the machine.

       ldap_base (string, default not set)
	      Specify the base name  for  LDAP.   This	often  includes
	      LDAP-specific values such as country and organization.

       ldap_cache_maxmem (numeric, default=131072)
	      Specify  the  maximum memory Amd should use to cache LDAP
	      entries.

       ldap_cache_seconds (numeric, default=0)
	      Specify the number of seconds  to  keep  entries	in  the
	      cache.

       ldap_hostports (string, default not set)
	      Specify the LDAP host and port values.

       ldap_proto_version (numeric, default=2)
	      Specify the version of the LDAP protocol to use.

       local_domain (string, default no sub-domain)
	      Same  as	the -d option to Amd.  Specify the local domain
	      name.  If this option is not given  the  domain  name  is
	      determined  from the hostname, by removing the first com-
	      ponent of the fully-qualified host name.

       localhost_address (string, default to localhost or 127.0.0.1)
	      Specify the name or IP address for Amd to use  when  con-
	      necting  the sockets for the local NFS server and the RPC
	      server.  This defaults to 127.0.0.1 or whatever the  host
	      reports  as  its local address.  This parameter is useful
	      on hosts with multiple addresses where you want to  force
	      Amd to connect to a specific address.

       log_file (string, default=/dev/stderr)
	      Same as the -l option to Amd.  Specify a file name to log
	      Amd events to.  If the string /dev/stderr  is  specified,
	      Amd  will  send  its  events  to	the standard error file
	      descriptor.  If the string  syslog  is  given,  Amd  will
	      record its events with the system logger syslogd(8).  The
	      default syslog facility used is LOG_DAEMON.  If you  wish
	      to  change  it,  append  its  name  to the log file name,
	      delimited by a single colon.  For example, if logfile  is
	      the  string  syslog:local7 then Amd will log messages via
	      syslog(3) using the LOG_LOCAL7 facility (if it exists  on
	      the system).

       log_options (string, default no logging options)
	      Same  as	the  -x  option  to  Amd.   Specify any logging
	      options for Amd.	Options are comma delimited, and can be
	      preceded by the string "no" to negate their meaning.  The
	      "debug" logging option is only available if am-utils  was
	      configured  with --enable-debug.	You can get the list of
	      supported debugging and logging options  by  running  amd
	      -H.  Possible values are:

	      all	all messages
	      debug	debug messages
	      error	non-fatal system errors
	      fatal	fatal errors
	      info	information
	      map	map errors
	      stats	additional statistical information
	      user	non-fatal user errors
	      warn	warnings
	      warning	warnings

       map_reload_interval (numeric, default=3600)
	      The number of seconds that Amd will wait before it checks
	      to see if any maps have  changed	at  their  source  (NIS
	      servers,	LDAP  servers,	files,	etc.).	Amd will reload
	      only those maps that have changed.

       nfs_allow_any_interface (string, default=no)
	      Normally	Amd  accepts  local  NFS  packets   only   from
	      127.0.0.1.   If  this  parameter is set to "yes" then Amd
	      will accept local NFS packets from any  local  interface;
	      this is useful on hosts that may have multiple interfaces
	      where the system is forced to send all  outgoing	packets
	      (even  those bound to the same host) via an address other
	      than 127.0.0.1.

       nfs_allow_insecure_port (string, default=no)
	      Normally Amd will refuse requests  coming  from  unprivi-
	      leged  ports  (i.e.   ports  >= 1024 on Unix systems), so
	      that only privileged users and the kernel  can  send  NFS
	      requests	to it.	However, some kernels (certain versions
	      of Darwin, MacOS X, and Linux) have bugs that cause  them
	      to  use  unprivileged  ports in certain situations, which
	      causes Amd to stop dead in its  tracks.	This  parameter
	      allows  Amd  to operate normally even on such systems, at
	      the expense of a slight decrease in the security	of  its
	      operations.   If	you see messages like "ignoring request
	      from foo:1234, port not reserved" in your  Amd  log,  try
	      enabling this parameter and give it another go.

       nfs_proto (string, default to trying version tcp then udp)
	      By  default,  Amd  tries	TCP  and then UDP.  This option
	      forces the overall NFS protocol used to TCP or  UDP.   It
	      overrides what is in the Amd maps, and is useful when Amd
	      is compiled with NFSv3 support that may  not  be	stable.
	      With  this  option you can turn off the complete usage of
	      NFSv3 dynamically (without having to recompile Amd) until
	      such time as NFSv3 support is desired again.

       nfs_retransmit_counter (numeric, default=11)
	      Same  as the retransmit part of the -t timeout.retransmit
	      option to Amd.  Specifies the number of  NFS  retransmis-
	      sions that the kernel will use to communicate with Amd.

       nfs_retransmit_counter_udp (numeric, default=11)
	      Same  as	the  nfs_retransmit_counter option, but for all
	      UDP mounts only.

       nfs_retransmit_counter_tcp (numeric, default=11)
	      Same as the nfs_retransmit_counter option,  but  for  all
	      TCP mounts only.

       nfs_retransmit_counter_toplvl (numeric, default=11)
	      Same  as	the nfs_retransmit_counter option, but only for
	      Amd's top-level UDP mounts.

       nfs_retry_interval (numeric, default=8)
	      Same as the timeout part	of  the  -t  timeout.retransmit
	      option  to  Amd.	 Specifies the NFS timeout interval, in
	      tenths of seconds, between NFS/RPC retries (for  UDP  and
	      TCP).  This is the value that the kernel will use to com-
	      municate with Amd.

	      Amd relies on the  kernel  RPC  retransmit  mechanism  to
	      trigger  mount  retries.	 The values of the nfs_retrans-
	      mit_counter and the nfs_retry_interval parameters  change
	      the  overall  retry interval.  Too long an interval gives
	      poor interactive response; too short an  interval  causes
	      excessive retries.

       nfs_retry_interval_udp (numeric, default=8)
	      Same  as	the  nfs_retry_interval option, but for all UDP
	      mounts only.

       nfs_retry_interval_tcp (numeric, default=8)
	      Same as the nfs_retry_interval option, but  for  all  TCP
	      mounts only.

       nfs_retry_interval_toplvl (numeric, default=8)
	      Same as the nfs_retry_interval option, but only for Amd's
	      top-level UDP mounts.

       nfs_vers (numeric, default to trying version 3 then 2)
	      By default, Amd tries version 3 and then version 2.  This
	      option  forces the overall NFS protocol used to version 3
	      or 2.  It overrides what is  in  the  Amd  maps,	and  is
	      useful  when  Amd is compiled with NFSv3 support that may
	      not be stable.  With this option you  can  turn  off  the
	      complete	usage  of  NFSv3 dynamically (without having to
	      recompile Amd)  until  such  time  as  NFSv3  support  is
	      desired again.

       nis_domain (string, default to local NIS domain name)
	      Same as the -y option to Amd.  Specify an alternative NIS
	      domain from which to fetch the NIS maps.	The default  is
	      the  system  domain  name.  This option is ignored if NIS
	      support is not available.

       normalize_hostnames (boolean, default=no)
	      Same as the -n option to Amd.  If "yes,"	then  the  name
	      refereed	to  by	${rhost}  is normalized relative to the
	      host database before being used.	The effect is to trans-
	      late aliases into ``official'' names.

       normalize_slashes (boolean, default=yes)

	      If  "yes,"  then	Amd  will  condense  all multiple ``/''
	      (slash) characters  into	one  and  remove  all  trailing
	      slashes.	 If  "no," then Amd will not touch strings that
	      may contain repeated or trailing slashes.  The latter  is
	      sometimes  useful  with  SMB  mounts, which often require
	      multiple slash characters in pathnames.

       os (string, default to compiled in value)
	      Same as the -O option to Amd.  Allows you to override the
	      compiled-in  name  of  the operating system.  Useful when
	      the built-in name is not desired for backward compatibil-
	      ity  reasons.   For  example,  if  the  build  in name is
	      ``sunos5'', you can override  it	to  ``sos5'',  and  use
	      older maps which were written with the latter in mind.

       osver (string, default to compiled in value)
	      Same  as the -o option to Amd.  Overrides the compiled-in
	      version number of the operating system.  Useful when  the
	      built  in version is not desired for backward compatibil-
	      ity reasons.  For example, if the  build	in  version  is
	      ``2.5.1'',  you  can  override  it  to ``5.5.1'', and use
	      older maps that were written with the latter in mind.

       pid_file (string, default=/dev/stdout)
	      Specify a file to store the process  ID  of  the	running
	      daemon  into.   If not specified, Amd will print its pro-
	      cess id onto the standard output.  Useful for killing Amd
	      after it had run.  Note that the PID of a running Amd can
	      also be retrieved via amq -p.  This file is used only  if
	      the print_pid option is on.

       plock (boolean, default=yes)
	      Same as the -S option to Amd.  If "yes," lock the running
	      executable pages of Amd into memory.   To  improve  Amd's
	      performance,  systems that support the plock(3) or mlock-
	      all(2) call can lock the Amd process into  memory.   This
	      way  there  is  less  chance it the operating system will
	      schedule, page out, and swap the Amd process  as	needed.
	      This improves Amd's performance, at the cost of reserving
	      the memory used by the Amd process (making it unavailable
	      for other processes).

       portmap_program (numeric, default=300019)
	      Specify  an  alternate  Port-mapper  RPC	program number,
	      other than the official number.  This is useful when run-
	      ning  multiple  Amd  processes.  For example, you can run
	      another Amd in "test" mode, without affecting the primary
	      Amd  process  in any way.  For safety reasons, the alter-
	      nate program numbers that can be specified must be in the
	      range  300019-300029,  inclusive.   Amq  has an option -P
	      which can be used to specify an alternate program  number
	      of an Amd to contact.  In this way, amq can fully control
	      any number of Amd processes running on the same host.

       preferred_amq_port (numeric, default=0)
	      Specify an alternate  Port-mapper  RPC  port  number  for
	      Amd's  Amq  service.   This is used for both UDP and TCP.
	      Setting this value to 0 (or not defining it)  will  cause
	      Amd  to select an arbitrary port number.	Setting the Amq
	      RPC service port to a specific number is useful in  fire-
	      walled  or  NAT'ed  environments,  where you need to know
	      which port Amd will listen on.

       print_pid (boolean, default=no)
	      Same as the -p option to Amd.  If "yes," Amd  will  print
	      its process ID upon starting.

       print_version (boolean, default=no)
	      Same  as the -v option to Amd, but the version prints and
	      Amd continues to run.  If "yes," Amd will print its  ver-
	      sion  information  string, which includes some configura-
	      tion and compilation values.

       restart_mounts (boolean, default=no)
	      Same as the -r option to Amd.  If "yes" Amd will scan the
	      mount table to determine which file systems are currently
	      mounted.	Whenever one of these  would  have  been  auto-
	      mounted, Amd inherits it.

       show_statfs_entries (boolean), default=no)
	      If  "yes,"  then	all  maps which are browsable will also
	      show the number of entries (keys)  they  have  when  "df"
	      runs.  (This is accomplished by returning non-zero values
	      to the statfs(2) system call).

       truncate_log (boolean), default=no)
	      If "yes," then the log file (if it is  a	regular  file),
	      will be truncated upon startup.

       unmount_on_exit (boolean), default=no)
	      If  "yes," then Amd will attempt to unmount all file sys-
	      tems which it knows about.  Normally Amd leaves all (esp.
	      NFS) mounted file systems intact.  Note that Amd does not
	      know about file systems  mounted	before	it  starts  up,
	      unless the restart_mounts option or -r flag are used.

       use_tcpwrappers (boolean), default=yes)
	      If  "yes," then Amd will use the tcpd/librwap tcpwrappers
	      library (if available) to control access to Amd  via  the
	      /etc/hosts.allow and /etc/hosts.deny files.

       vendor (string, default to compiled in value)
	      The  name  of  the vendor of the operating system.  Over-
	      rides the compiled-in vendor name.  Useful when the  com-
	      piled-in	name  is  not desired.	For example, most Intel
	      based systems set the vendor name to ``unknown'', but you
	      can set it to ``redhat.''

   Parameters applicable to regular map sections
       map_name (string, must be specified)
	      Name of the map where the keys are located.

       tag (string, default no tag)
	      Each  map  entry in the configuration file can be tagged.
	      If no tag is specified, that map section will  always  be
	      processed by Amd.  If it is specified, then Amd will pro-
	      cess the map if the -T option was given to Amd,  and  the
	      value  given  to that command-line option matches that in
	      the map section.

EXAMPLES
       Here is a real Amd configuration file I use daily.

       # GLOBAL OPTIONS SECTION
       [ global ]
       normalize_hostnames =	no
       print_pid =		no
       restart_mounts = 	yes
       auto_dir =		/n
       log_file =		/var/log/amd
       log_options =		all
       #debug_options = 	all
       plock =			no
       selectors_in_defaults =	yes
       # config.guess picks up "sunos5" and I don't want to edit my maps yet
       os =			sos5
       # if you print_version after setting up "os," it will show it.
       print_version =		no
       map_type =		file
       search_path =		/etc/amdmaps:/usr/lib/amd:/usr/local/AMD/lib
       browsable_dirs = 	yes

       # DEFINE AN AMD MOUNT POINT
       [ /u ]
       map_name =		amd.u

       [ /proj ]
       map_name =		amd.proj

       [ /src ]
       map_name =		amd.src

       [ /misc ]
       map_name =		amd.misc

       [ /import ]
       map_name =		amd.import

       [ /tftpboot/.amd ]
       tag =			tftpboot
       map_name =		amd.tftpboot

SEE ALSO
       amd(8), amq(8), ctl-amd(8), hosts_access(5).

       ``am-utils'' info(1) entry.

       Linux NFS and Automounter Administration  by  Erez  Zadok,  ISBN
       0-7821-2739-8, (Sybex, 2001).

       http://www.am-utils.org

       Amd - The 4.4 BSD Automounter

AUTHORS
       Erez  Zadok  <ezk@cs.sunysb.edu>,  Computer  Science Department,
       Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York, USA.

       Other authors and contributors to am-utils  are	listed	in  the
       AUTHORS file distributed with am-utils.

				 7 August 1997			   AMD.CONF(5)

		

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