NFSD & HTTPD are key requirements in making a phone useful. Of course, if a phone has NFSD, it doesn't need HTTPD.
Using a phone's wifi for network services is theoretically ideal, but after 8 years of using a web server on a phone's wifi, the experience has been pretty bad. The mane problems are the phone's wifi constantly going down, the phone constantly restarting the server, & the phone server sometimes being very slow. IOS won't even allow a server to run in the background. Phones turn their wifi off based on inactivity & tethering, despite the icon showing it on. A typical lion commute involves enabling tethering twice a day, then switching between 2 access points, so servers on phone wifi have constantly changing addresses & require a lot of fenegling to connect to.
A practical phone based server needs to be accessed through ADB. ADB itself supports a network device, but not on crippled phones. PPP over ADB, ADB over TCP are all disabled, too.
Its only option is redirecting the stdio of ADB to a kernel driver on the host & running a user space network program on the phone. The user space network program would forward packets to the phone's kernel. The host would look like a local application on the phone. It would not want to run the NFS server & web server itself because that loses the standard socket interface for connecting programs.
There's still a user space NFSD, https://github.com/unfs3/unfs3
Then, an ordinary text editor, compiler, or media player on the host could access files on the phone like a normal disk.
ADB allows automatically running a program & reading stdout, but not writing stdin. It would take some magic to run adb shell with stdio redirected to a program on the host.
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