195702, 195703, and 195821 prevented a thread from suspending while holding
locks inside of NFS by forcing the thread to fail sleeps with EINTR or
ERESTART but defer the thread suspension to the user boundary. However,
this had the effect that stopping a process during an NFS request could
abort the request and trigger EINTR errors that were visible to userland
processes (previously the thread would have suspended and completed the
request once it was resumed).
This change instead effectively masks stop signals while in the NFS client.
It uses the existing TDF_SBDRY flag to effect this since SIGSTOP cannot
be masked directly. Also, instead of setting PBDRY on individual sleeps,
the NFS client now sets the TDF_SBDRY flag around each NFS request and
stop signals are masked for all sleeps during that region (the previous
change missed sleeps in lockmgr locks). The end result is that stop
signals sent to threads performing an NFS request are completely
ignored until after the NFS request has finished processing and the
thread prepares to return to userland. This restores the behavior of
stop signals being transparent to userland processes while still
preventing threads from suspending while holding NFS locks.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 month
- Use NFSD_MONOSEC (which maps to time_uptime) instead of the seconds
portion of wall-time stamps to manage timeouts on events.
- Remove unused nd_starttime from the per-request structure in the new
NFS server.
- Use nanotime() for the modification time on a delegation to get as
precise a time as possible.
- Use time_second instead of extracting the second from a call to
getmicrotime().
Submitted by: bde (3)
Reviewed by: bde, rmacklem
MFC after: 2 weeks
by returning an error of EINTR rather than EACCES.
- While here, bring back some (but not all) of the NFS RPC statistics lost
when krpc was committed.
Reviewed by: rmacklem
MFC after: 1 week
to head. I don't think the NFS client behaviour will change unless
the new "minorversion=1" mount option is used. It includes basic
NFSv4.1 support plus support for pNFS using the Files Layout only.
All problems detecting during an NFSv4.1 Bakeathon testing event
in June 2012 have been resolved in this code and it has been tested
against the NFSv4.1 server available to me.
Although not reviewed, I believe that kib@ has looked at it.
subject "Data corruption over NFS in -current". During investigation
of this, I came across an ugly bogusity in the new NFS client where
it replaced the cr_uid with the one used for the mount. This was
done so that "system operations" like the NFSv4 Renew would be
performed as the user that did the mount. However, if any other
thread shares the credential with the one doing this operation,
it could do an RPC (or just about anything else) as the wrong cr_uid.
This patch fixes the above, by using the mount credentials instead of
the one provided as an argument for this case. It appears
to have fixed Martin's problem.
This patch is needed for NFSv4 mounts and NFSv3 mounts against
some non-FreeBSD servers that do not put post operation attributes
in the NFSv3 Statfs RPC reply.
Tested by: Martin Cracauer (cracauer at cons.org)
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
The effect of this was, for clients mounted via inet6 addresses,
that the DRC cache would never have a hit in the server. It also
broke NFSv4 callbacks when an inet6 address was the only one available
in the client. This patch fixes the above, plus deletes opt_inet6.h
from a couple of files it is not needed for.
MFC after: 2 weeks
get a reply of EEXIST from an NFS server when a Mkdir RPC was retried,
for an NFS over UDP mount.
Upon investigation, it was found that the client was retransmitting
the Mkdir RPC request over UDP, but with a different xid. As such,
the retransmitted message would miss the Duplicate Request Cache
in the server, causing it to reply EEXIST. The kernel client side
UDP rpc code has two timers. The first one causes a retransmit using
the same xid and socket and was set to a fixed value of 3seconds.
(The default can be overridden via CLSET_RETRY_TIMEOUT.)
The second one creates a new socket and xid and should be larger
than the first. However, both NFS clients were setting the second
timer to nm_timeo ("timeout=<value>" mount argument), which defaulted to
1second, so the first timer would never time out.
This patch fixes both NFS clients so that they set the first timer
using nm_timeo and makes the second timer larger than the first one.
Reported by: jwd
Tested by: jwd
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
for the remove and rename operations. Some NFSv4 servers will
report NFSERR_GRACE for these operations. This patch changes
the behaviour of the client so that it handles NFSERR_GRACE
like NFSERR_DELAY for non-state related operations like
remove and rename. It also exempts the delegreturn operation
from handling within newnfs_request() for NFSERR_DELAY/NFSERR_GRACE
so that it can handle NFSERR_GRACE in the same manner as before.
This problem was resolved thanks to discussion with bfields at fieldses.org.
The problem was identified at the recent NFSv4 ineroperability
bakeathon.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Isilon has the concept of an in-memory exit-code ring that saves the last exit
code of a function and allows for stack tracing. This is very helpful when
debugging tough issues.
This patch is essentially a no-op for BSD at this point, until we upstream
the dexitcode logic itself. The patch adds DEXITCODE calls to every NFS
function that returns an errno error code. A number of code paths were also
reorganized to have single exit paths, to reduce code duplication.
Submitted by: David Kwan <dkwan@isilon.com>
Reviewed by: rmacklem
Approved by: zml (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
server replied NFS3ERR_JUKEBOX/NFS4ERR_DELAY to an rpc.
This affected both NFSv3 and NFSv4. Found during testing
at the recent NFSv4 interoperability Bakeathon.
MFC after: 2 weeks
was used for doing a mount when performing system operations
on AUTH_SYS mounts. This resolved an issue when mounting
a Linux server. Found during testing at the recent
NFSv4 interoperability Bakeathon.
MFC after: 2 weeks
the NFS subsystems use five of the rpcsec_gss/kgssapi entry points,
but since it was not obvious which others might be useful, all
nineteen were included. Basically the nineteen entry points are
set in a structure called rpc_gss_entries and inline functions
defined in sys/rpc/rpcsec_gss.h check for the entry points being
non-NULL and then call them. A default value is returned otherwise.
Requested by rwatson.
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
cloned from the old NFS client, plus additions for NFSv4. A
review of this code is in progress, however it was felt by the
reviewer that it could go in now, before code slush. Any changes
required by the review can be committed as bug fixes later.
message that was generated when doing experimental NFS client
mounts. I put that message in because the krpc would hang with
the default size for mounts that used large rsize/wsize values.
Since the bug that caused these hangs was fixed by r213756,
I think the message is no longer needed.
MFC after: 2 weeks
during the grace period after startup. This grace period must
be at least the lease duration, which is typically 1-2 minutes.
It seems prudent for the experimental NFS client to wait a few
seconds before retrying such an RPC, so that the server isn't
flooded with non-recovery RPCs during recovery. This patch adds
an argument to nfs_catnap() to implement a 5 second delay
for this case.
MFC after: 1 week
to it for the client side reply. Hopefully this fixes the
problem with using the new krpc for arm for the experimental
nfs client.
Approved by: kib (mentor)
case of a kerberized mount without a host based principal
name. This will only work for mounts being done by a user
other than root. Support for a host based principal name
will not work until proposed changes to the rpcsec_gss part
of the krpc are committed. It now builds for "options KGSSAPI".
Approved by: kib (mentor)
the code will build when "options KGSSAPI" is specified
without requiring the proposed changes that add host based
initiator principal support. It will not handle the case where
the client uses a host based initiator principal until those
changes are committed. The code that uses those changes is
#ifdef'd notyet until the krpc rpcsec_changes are committed.
Approved by: kib (mentor)
required two changes: setting the program and version numbers before
connect and fixing the handling of the Null Rpc case in newnfs_request().
Approved by: kib (mentor)
support for NFSv4 as well as NFSv2 and 3.
It lives in 3 subdirs under sys/fs:
nfs - functions that are common to the client and server
nfsclient - a mutation of sys/nfsclient that call generic functions
to do RPCs and handle state. As such, it retains the
buffer cache handling characteristics and vnode semantics that
are found in sys/nfsclient, for the most part.
nfsserver - the server. It includes a DRC designed specifically for
NFSv4, that is used instead of the generic DRC in sys/rpc.
The build glue will be checked in later, so at this point, it
consists of 3 new subdirs that should not affect kernel building.
Approved by: kib (mentor)