checking at open time. It may improve performance for read-only
NFS mounts. Use deliberately.
MFC after: 1 week
Reviewed by: rmacklem, jhb (earlier version)
NFS client (which I guess is no longer experimental). The fstype "newnfs"
is now "nfs" and the regular/old NFS client is now fstype "oldnfs".
Although mounts via fstype "nfs" will usually work without userland
changes, an updated mount_nfs(8) binary is needed for kernels built with
"options NFSCL" but not "options NFSCLIENT". Updated mount_nfs(8) and
mount(8) binaries are needed to do mounts for fstype "oldnfs".
The GENERIC kernel configs have been changed to use options
NFSCL and NFSD (the new client and server) instead of NFSCLIENT and NFSSERVER.
For kernels being used on diskless NFS root systems, "options NFSCL"
must be in the kernel config.
Discussed on freebsd-fs@.
when building kernels that don't have "options NFS_ROOT"
specified. I plan on moving the functions that use these
data structures into the shared code in sys/nfs/nfs_diskless.c
in a future commit. At that time, these definitions will no
longer be needed in nfs_vfsops.c and nfs_clvfsops.c.
MFC after: 2 weeks
set the f_flags field of "struct statfs". This had the interesting
effect of making the NFSv4 mounts "disappear" after r221014,
since NFSMNT_NFSV4 and MNT_IGNORE became the same bit.
Move the files used for a diskless NFS root from sys/nfsclient
to sys/nfs in preparation for them to be used by both NFS
clients. Also, move the declaration of the three global data
structures from sys/nfsclient/nfs_vfsops.c to sys/nfs/nfs_diskless.c
so that they are defined when either client uses them.
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
"struct nfs_args" as the regular NFS client. This is needed
so that the old mount(2) syscall will work and it makes
sharing of the diskless NFS root code easier. Eary in the
porting exercise I introduced a new revision of nfs_args, but
didn't actually need it, thanks to nmount(2). I re-introduced the
NFSMNT_KERB flag, since it does essentially the same thing and
the old one would not have been used because it never worked.
I also added a few new NFSMNT_xxx flags to sys/nfsclient/nfs_args.h
that are used by the experimental NFS client.
MFC after: 2 weeks
PMC/SYSV/...).
No FreeBSD version bump, the userland application to query the features will
be committed last and can serve as an indication of the availablility if
needed.
Sponsored by: Google Summer of Code 2010
Submitted by: kibab
Reviewed by: arch@ (parts by rwatson, trasz, jhb)
X-MFC after: to be determined in last commit with code from this project
VNET socket push back:
try to minimize the number of places where we have to switch vnets
and narrow down the time we stay switched. Add assertions to the
socket code to catch possibly unset vnets as seen in r204147.
While this reduces the number of vnet recursion in some places like
NFS, POSIX local sockets and some netgraph, .. recursions are
impossible to fix.
The current expectations are documented at the beginning of
uipc_socket.c along with the other information there.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: CK Software GmbH
Reviewed by: jhb
Tested by: zec
Tested by: Mikolaj Golub (to.my.trociny gmail.com)
MFC after: 2 weeks
and vop_reclaim() methods. They seems to be unused, and the reported
situation is normal for the forced unmount.
MFC after: 1 week
X-MFC-note: keep prtactive symbol in vfs_subr.c
by both clients. Since the NLM uses various fields of the
nfsmount structure, those fields were extracted and put in a
separate nfs_mountcommon structure stored in sys/nfs/nfs_mountcommon.h.
This structure also has a function pointer for a function that
extracts the required information from the mount point and nfs vnode
for that particular client, for information stored differently by the
clients.
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
fixed the issues with file descriptor locks, but the same problems are
present for vnode lock/user map lock.
If the nfs_asyncio() cannot find the free nfsiod, schedule task to
create new nfsiod and return error. This causes fall back to the
synchronous i/o for nfs_strategy(), or does not start read at all in
the case of readahead. The caller that holds vnode and potentially
user map lock does not wait for kproc_create() to finish, preventing
the LORs.
The change effectively reverts r203072, because we never hand off the
request to newly created nfsiod thread anymore.
Reviewed by: jhb
Tested by: jhb, pluknet
MFC after: 3 weeks
vnode lock and several locks needed during fork, like fd lock.
Instead, schedule the task to be executed in the taskqueue context. We
still waiting for the fork to finish, but the context of the thread
executing the task does not make real LORs with our vnode lock.
Submitted by: pluknet at gmail com
Reviewed by: jhb
Tested by: pho
MFC after: 3 weeks
directories for purposes of validating name cache entries. This
closes races where two updates to a file or directory within the same
second could result in stale entries in the name cache. While here,
remove the 'n_expiry' field as it is no longer used.
Reviewed by: rmacklem
MFC after: 1 week
boot.nfsroot.nfshandlelen and set the diskless root fs to
use NFSv3 and this file handle length when it is set. If
this environment variable is not set, the diskless root fs
will use NFSv2 and the same defaults as before. This fixes
the problem where the diskless nfs root fs had to be on a
FreeBSD server for NFSv3 to work, because it did not know
the correct file handle length and assumed the size used
by FreeBSD. Until pxeboot and loader are replaced by ones
built from commits coming soon, boot.nfsroot.nfshandlelen
will not be set by them and the diskless root fs will use
NFSv2 unless the /etc/fstab entry has the "nfsv3" option
specified.
Tested by: danny at cs.huji.ac.il
MFC after: 2 weeks
LK_CANRECURSE after a lock is created. Use them to implement macros that
otherwise manipulated the flags directly. Assert that the associated
lockmgr lock is exclusively locked by the current thread when manipulating
these flags to ensure the flag updates are safe. This last change required
some minor shuffling in a few filesystems to exclusively lock a brand new
vnode slightly earlier.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 3 days
module that can be used by both the regular and experimental nfs
clients. This fixes the problem reported by jh@ where /dev/nfslock
would be registered twice when both nfs clients were used.
I also defined the size of the lm_fh field to be the correct value,
as it should be the maximum size of an NFSv3 file handle.
Reviewed by: jh
MFC after: 2 weeks
to avoid sending multiple ACCESS/GETATTR RPCs during a single open()
between VOP_LOOKUP() and VOP_OPEN(). Now we always send the RPC in
VOP_LOOKUP() and not VOP_OPEN() in the cases that multiple RPCs could be
sent.
MFC after: 2 weeks
name cache up into nfs_lookup() instead of nfs_open(). Continue this
trend by flushing the attribute cache for leaf nodes in nfs_lookup() during
an open() if we do a LOOKUP RPC. For NFSv3 this should generally be a NOP
as the attributes are flushed before fetching the post-op attributes from
the LOOKUP RPC which most (all?) NFSv3 servers provide, so the post-op
attributes should populate the cache.
Now all NFS open() calls will always clear the cached attributes during the
nfs_lookup() prior to nfs_open() in the !NMODIFIED case to provide CTOC.
As a result, we can remove the conditional flushing of the attribute
cache from nfs_open().
Reviewed by: rmacklem, bde
MFC after: 2 weeks
DIAGNOSTIC and #ifndef DIAGNOSTIC for debug assertions, prefer
KASSERT(). Also change one #ifdef DIAGNOSTIC in the new nfs server.
Submitted by: Mikolaj Golub <to.my.trociny gmail com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
file via NFS. Specifically, to satisfy close-to-open-consistency, the NFS
client always performs at least one RPC on a file during an open(2) to see
if the file has changed. Normally this RPC is an ACCESS or GETATTR RPC
that is forced by flushing a file's attribute cache during nfs_open() and
then requesting new attributes. However, if the file is noticed to be
stale during nfs_open(), the only recourse is to fail the open(2) call
with ESTALE. On the other hand, if the ACCESS or GETATTR RPC is sent
during nfs_lookup(), then the NFS client can fall back to a LOOKUP RPC to
obtain the new file handle in the case that a file has been replaced.
This change causes the NFS client to flush the attribute cache during
nfs_lookup() when validating a name cache hit if the attributes fetched
during nfs_lookup() can be reused in nfs_open(). This allows the client
to open a replaced file via the new file handle the first time that it
notices a replaced file rather than failing with ESTALE in some cases.
Reviewed by: rmacklem, bde
Reviewed by: mohans (older version)
MFC after: 1 week
the jail(8) command. [10:04]
Fix a one-NUL-byte buffer overflow in libopie. [10:05]
Correctly sanity-check a buffer length in nfs mount. [10:06]
Approved by: so (cperciva)
Approved by: re (kensmith)
Security: FreeBSD-SA-10:04.jail
Security: FreeBSD-SA-10:05.opie
Security: FreeBSD-SA-10:06.nfsclient
managed pages that didn't already have that lock held. (Freeing an
unmanaged page, such as the various pmaps use, doesn't require the page
lock.)
This allows a change in vm_page_remove()'s locking requirements. It now
expects the page lock to be held instead of the page queues lock.
Consequently, the page queues lock is no longer required at all by callers
to vm_page_rename().
Discussed with: kib
module. With r203732 it became apparent that creating the sysctl nodes
twice causes at least a warning, however the whole code shouldn't be
present twice in the first place.
Discussed with: rmacklem
remove the NFS server version in order to reduce code duplication.
The shared version now uses a second parameter how, which is passed
on to m_get(9) and m_getcl(9) as the server used M_WAIT while the
client requires M_DONTWAIT, and replaces the the previously unused
parameter hsiz.
- Change nfs_realign() to use nfsm_aligned() so as with other NFS code
the alignment check isn't actually performed on platforms without
strict alignment requirements for performance reasons because as the
comment suggests unaligned data only occasionally occurs with TCP.
- Change fha_extract_info() to use nfs_realign() with M_DONTWAIT rather
than M_WAIT because it's called with the RPC sp_lock held.
Reviewed by: jhb, rmacklem
MFC after: 1 week
Without this patch it was possible for a different thread that calls
nfs_asyncio() to snitch a newly created nfsiod thread that was
intended for another caller of nfs_asyncio(), because the nfs_iod_mtx
mutex was unlocked while the new nfsiod thread was created. This patch
labels the newly created nfsiod, so that it is not taken by another
caller of nfs_asyncio(). This is believed to fix the problem reported
on the freebsd-stable email list under the subject:
FreeBSD NFS client/Linux NFS server issue.
Tested by: to DOT my DOT trociny AT gmail DOT com
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
This avoids a bogus negative name cache entry from persisting forever
when another client creates an entry with the same name within the
same NFS server time of day clock tick. The mount option negnametimeo
can be used to override the default timeout interval on a
per-mount-point basis. Setting negnametimeo to 0 disables negative
name caching for the mount point.
I also fixed one obvious typo where args.timeo should be
args.maxgrouplist.
Submitted by: jhb (earlier version)
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
kernel to boot from NFS. [1]
Note: this is not a full virtualization of nfsclient. It is only does
what advertised above and nothing more.
Requested by: public demand [1]
Tested by: kris, ..
MFC after: 5 days
Specifically, clients only trust -ve cache entries while the directory
remains unchanged and discard any -ve cache entries for a directory when
they notice that the modification time of a directory entry changes. The
race involves two concurrent lookups as follows:
- Thread A does a lookup for file 'foo' which sends a lookup RPC to the
server. The lookup fails and the server replies.
- The 'foo' file is created (either by the same client or a different
client) updating the modification time on the parent directory of 'foo'.
- Thread B does a lookup for a different file 'bar' which updates the
cached attributes of the parent directory of 'foo' to reflect the new
modification time after 'foo' was created.
- Thread A finally resumes execution to parse the reply from the NFS
server. It adds a -ve cache entry and sets the cached value of the
directory's modification time that is used for invalidating -ve cached
lookups to the new modification time set by thread B.
At this point, future lookups of 'foo' will honor the -ve cached entry
until the cached entry is pushed out of the name cache's LRU or the
modification time of the parent directory is changed again by some other
change. The fix is to read the directory's modification time before
sending the lookup RPC and use that cached modification time when setting
the directory's cached modification time. Also, we do not add a -ve cache
entry if another thread has added -ve cache entry that set the directory's
cached modification time to a newer value than the value we read before
sending the lookup RPC.
Reviewed by: rmacklem
MFC after: 1 week