referred to as the experimental server. It also adds a new command
line option "-o" to both mountd and nfsd that forces them to use the
old/regular NFS server. The "-e" option for these commands is now
a no-op, since the new server is the default. I will be committing rc
script and man changes soon. Discussed on freebsd-fs@.
used for NFSv4 restart. This permits the nfsd to create
the stable restart file as required and minimizes the risk
of trouble if the file is lost.
Suggested by: Tim Kientzle
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
I was considering committing all these patches one by one, but as
discussed with brooks@, there is no need to do this. If we ever
need/want to merge these changes back, it is still possible to do this
per application.
choice of variable names for rc.conf and option name for the
experimental server.
Also replace the inaccurate description of the nfsv4 root lines
in /etc/exports, mostly with a reference to exports(5).
Approved by: kib (mentor)
This includes the addition of a new flag "-4" that will force
use of the experimental server with nfsv4 support in it. This
commit also adds two new man pages to the repository that are
NFSv4 specific. One describes the file used by the server to
restart nfsv4 services safely. The other is a brief overview
of nfsv4 and its setup.
Reviewed by: dfr
Approved by: kib (mentor)
and server. This replaces the RPC implementation of the NFS client and
server with the newer RPC implementation originally developed
(actually ported from the userland sunrpc code) to support the NFS
Lock Manager. I have tested this code extensively and I believe it is
stable and that performance is at least equal to the legacy RPC
implementation.
The NFS code currently contains support for both the new RPC
implementation and the older legacy implementation inherited from the
original NFS codebase. The default is to use the new implementation -
add the NFS_LEGACYRPC option to fall back to the old code. When I
merge this support back to RELENG_7, I will probably change this so
that users have to 'opt in' to get the new code.
To use RPCSEC_GSS on either client or server, you must build a kernel
which includes the KGSSAPI option and the crypto device. On the
userland side, you must build at least a new libc, mountd, mount_nfs
and gssd. You must install new versions of /etc/rc.d/gssd and
/etc/rc.d/nfsd and add 'gssd_enable=YES' to /etc/rc.conf.
As long as gssd is running, you should be able to mount an NFS
filesystem from a server that requires RPCSEC_GSS authentication. The
mount itself can happen without any kerberos credentials but all
access to the filesystem will be denied unless the accessing user has
a valid ticket file in the standard place (/tmp/krb5cc_<uid>). There
is currently no support for situations where the ticket file is in a
different place, such as when the user logged in via SSH and has
delegated credentials from that login. This restriction is also
present in Solaris and Linux. In theory, we could improve this in
future, possibly using Brooks Davis' implementation of variant
symlinks.
Supporting RPCSEC_GSS on a server is nearly as simple. You must create
service creds for the server in the form 'nfs/<fqdn>@<REALM>' and
install them in /etc/krb5.keytab. The standard heimdal utility ktutil
makes this fairly easy. After the service creds have been created, you
can add a '-sec=krb5' option to /etc/exports and restart both mountd
and nfsd.
The only other difference an administrator should notice is that nfsd
doesn't fork to create service threads any more. In normal operation,
there will be two nfsd processes, one in userland waiting for TCP
connections and one in the kernel handling requests. The latter
process will create as many kthreads as required - these should be
visible via 'top -H'. The code has some support for varying the number
of service threads according to load but initially at least, nfsd uses
a fixed number of threads according to the value supplied to its '-n'
option.
Sponsored by: Isilon Systems
MFC after: 1 month
measurements suggest that higher degrees of parallelism for large
numbers of clients help performance substantially.
Submitted by: Eric Anderson <anderson at centtech dot com>
This commit does not affect the code generated, as proven by md5'ing
resulting binaries.
Bump WARNS accordingly.
Compiled on: sparc64, ia64, i386
Reviewed by: alfred (but blame me if anything goes wrong :-)
tied to nfsd(8), exports is the configuration file users will most
likely need to configure when dealing with a NFS server.
Submitted by: Florian Hars <hars@bik-gmbh.de>
PR: docs/64714
MFC after: 3 days
When an NFS server is port-scanned nfsd sometimes exits. This has
happened 3 times the last few weeks.
Nfsd has been written to exit when accept(2) fails. Unfortunately
accept can sometimes make a "normal" return with errno ECONNABORTED
and in this case nfsd exits prematurely.
Solution:
Check for ECONNABORTED (and also EINTR, since nfsd uses signals)
and continue.
Submitted by: Bjoern Groenvall <bg@sics.se>
PR: 61084
with random garbage in lower bits corresponding to stdin, stdout and
stderr to select(2).
This fixes the problem with nfsd sometimes getting stuck in a tight
select(2) loop eating 100% CPU time.
Reviewed by: iedowse
Approved by: obrien
fatal if the declaration of strdup() isn't in scope. The upper 32 bits
of the pointer are lost since it defaults to returning "int". Fix some
warnings while here, including trying to make gcc-3.1 happy.
spin in a loop eating CPU time. This bug has existed since the
TI-RPC import. The problem is that we should only enter the select
loop if at least one TCP server was started. Fix this by having
the master nfsd become a UDP server itself if there are no TCP
servers.
Also improve/correct the code for cleaning up slave nfsd processes
and unregistering with rpcbind when the master nfsd exits.
One issue that remains open is that if a slave nfsd dies, then all
nfsds will shut down. This is because nfssvc() in the master nfsd
returns 0 when the master nfsd receives a SIGCHLD.
Submitted by: tmm