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Obtained from: Casper H. Dik (by vay of Usenet) Small patch to help improve NIS rebinding times (among other things): >From: casper@fwi.uva.nl (Casper H.S. Dik) >Newsgroups: comp.sys.sun.misc,comp.sys.sun.admin >Subject: FIX for slow rebinding of NIS. >Summary: a small change in libc makes life with NIS a lot easier. >Message-ID: <1992Jan17.173905.11727@fwi.uva.nl> >Date: 17 Jan 92 17:39:05 GMT >Sender: news@fwi.uva.nl >Organization: FWI, University of Amsterdam >Lines: 138 >Nntp-Posting-Host: halo.fwi.uva.nl Have you been plagued by long waits when your NIS server is rebooted? READ ON! Sun has a patch, but the README says: ********************* WARNING ****************************** This is a new version of ypbind that never uses the NIS binding file to cache the servers binding. This will have the effect of fixing the current symptom. However, it might degrade the overall performance of the system when the server is available. This is most likely to happen on an overloaded server, which will cause the network to produce a broadcast storm. ************************************************************* Therefor, I have produced another fix. o What goes wrong. When the NIS server is rebooted, ypserv will obtain different ports to listen for RPC requests. All clients will continue to use the old binding they obtained earlier. The NIS server will send ICMP dst unreachable messages for the RPC requests that arrive at the old port. These ICMPs are dropped on the floor and the client code will continue sending the requests until the timer has expired. The small fix at the end of this message will pick up these ICMP messages and deliver them to the RPC layer. o Before and after. I've tested this on some machines and this is the result: (kill and restart ypserv on the server) original% time ypmatch user passwd user:.... 0.040u 0.090s 2:35.64 0.0% 0+126k 0+0io 0pf+0w (155 seconds elapsed time) fixedhost% time ypmatch user passwd user:.... 0.050u 0.050s 0:10.20 0.9% 0+136k 0+0io 0pf+0w (10 seconds elapsed time) Rebinding is almost instantaneous. o Other benefits. RPC calls that use UDP as transport will no longer time out but will abort much sooner. (E.g., the remote host is unreachable or 111/udp is filtered by an intermediate router)
RPCSRC 4.0 7/11/89 This distribution contains Sun Microsystem's implementation of the RPC and XDR protocols and is compatible with 4.2BSD and 4.3BSD. Also included is complete documentation, utilities, RPC service specification files, and demonstration services in the format used by the RPC protocol compiler (rpcgen). See WHAT'S NEW below for details. NOTE ABOUT SECURE RPC: This release of RPCSRC contains most of the code needed to implement Secure RPC (see "DES Authentication" in the RPC Protocol Specification, doc/rpc.rfc.ms). Due to legal considerations, we are unable to distribute an implementation of DES, the Data Encryption Standard, which Secure RPC requires. For this reason, all of the files, documentation, and programs associated with Secure RPC have been placed into a separate directory, secure_rpc. The RPC library contained in the main body of this release *DOES NOT* support Secure RPC. See secure_rpc/README for more details. (A DES library was posted in Volume 18 of comp.sources.unix.) If you wish to report bugs found in this release, send mail to: Portable ONC/NFS Sun Microsystems, Inc MS 12-33 2550 Garcia Avenue Mountain View, CA 94043 or send Email to nfsnet@sun.com (the Internet) or sun!nfsnet (Usenet). ROADMAP The directory hierarchy is as follows: demo/ Various demonstration services demo/dir Remote directory lister demo/msg Remote console message delivery service demo/sort Remote sort service doc/ Documentation for RPC, XDR and NFS in "-ms" format. etc/ Utilities (rpcinfo and portmap). portmap must be started by root before any other RPC network services are used. SEE BELOW FOR BUGFIX TO 4.3BSD COMPILER. man/ Manual pages for RPC library, rpcgen, and utilities. rpc/ The RPC and XDR library. SEE BELOW FOR BUGFIX TO 4.2BSD COMPILER. rpcgen/ The RPC Language compiler (for .x files) rpcsvc/ Service definition files for various services and the server and client code for the Remote Status service. secure_rpc/ The files in this directory are used to build a version of the RPC library with DES Authentication. See the README file in that directory for more details. BUILD INSTRUCTIONS Makefiles can be found in all directories except for man. The Makefile in the top directory will cause these others to be invoked (except for in the doc, man and demo directories), in turn building the entire release. WARNING! THE DEFAULT INSTALLATION PROCEDURES WILL INSTALL FILES IN /usr/include, /usr/lib, /usr/bin and /etc. The master RPC include file, rpc/rpc.h, is used by all programs and routines that use RPC. It includes other RPC and system include files needed by the RPC system. PLEASE NOTE: If your system has NFS, it may have been based on Sun's NFS Source. The include files installed by this package may duplicate include files you will find on your NFS system. The RPCSRC 4.0 include files are upwardly compatible to all NFS Source include files as of the date of this distribution (not including any new definitions or declarations added by your system vendor). HOWEVER: Please read the comments towards the end of rpc/rpc.h regarding rpc/netdb.h. You may need to uncomment the inclusion of that file if the structures it defines are already defined by your system's include files. After making any compiler fixes that are needed (see below), at the top directory, type: make install For all installations, the Makefile macro DESTDIR is prepended to the installation path. It is defined to be null in the Makefiles, so installations are relative to root. (You will probably need root privileges for installing the files under the default path.) To install the files under some other tree (e.g., /usr/local), use the command: make install DESTDIR=/usr/local This will place the include files in /usr/local/usr/include, the RPC library in /usr/local/usr/lib, rpcgen in /usr/local/usr/bin, and the utilities in /usr/local/etc. You'll have to edit the Makefiles or install the files by hand if you want to do anything other than this kind of relocation of the installation tree. The RPC library will be built and installed first. By default it is installed in /usr/lib as "librpclib.a". The directory /usr/include/rpc will also be created, and several header files will be installed there. ALL RPC SERVICES INCLUDE THESE HEADER FILES. The programs in etc/ link in routines from librpclib.a. If you change where it is installed, be sure to edit etc/'s Makefile to reflect this. These programs are installed in /etc. PORTMAP MUST BE RUNNING ON YOUR SYSTEM BEFORE YOU START ANY OTHER RPC SERVICE. rpcgen is installed in /usr/bin. This program is required to build the demonstration services in demo and the rstat client and server in rpcsvc/. The rpcsvc/ directory will install its files in the directory /usr/include/rpcsvc. The Remote Status service (rstat_svc) will be compiled and installed in /etc. If you wish to make this service available, you should either start this service when needed or have it started at boot time by invoking it in your /etc/rc.local script. (Be sure that portmap is started first!) Sun has modified its version of inetd to automatically start RPC services. (Use "make LIB=" when building rstat on a Sun Workstation.) The Remote Status client (rstat) will be installed in /usr/bin. This program queries the rstat_svc on a remote host and prints a system status summary similar to the one printed by "uptime". The documentation is not built during the "make install" command. Typing "make" in the doc directory will cause all of the manuals to be formatted using nroff into a single file. We have had a report that certain "troff" equivalents have trouble processing the full manual. If you have trouble, try building the manuals individually (see the Makefile). The demonstration services in the demo directory are not built by the top-level "make install" command. To build these, cd to the demo directory and enter "make". The three services will be built. RPCGEN MUST BE INSTALLED in a path that make can find. To run the services, start the portmap program as root and invoke the service (you probably will want to put it in the background). rpcinfo can be used to check that the service succeeded in getting registered with portmap, and to ping the service (see rpcinfo's man page). You can then use the corresponding client program to exercise the service. To build these services on a Sun workstation, you must prevent the Makefile from trying to link the RPC library (as these routines are already a part of Sun's libc). Use: "make LIB=". BUGFIX FOR 4.3BSD COMPILER The use of a 'void *' declaration for one of the arguments in the reply_proc() procedure in etc/rpcinfo.c will trigger a bug in the 4.3BSD compiler. The bug is fixed by the following change to the compiler file mip/manifest.h: *** manifest.h.r1.1 Thu Apr 30 13:52:25 1987 --- manifest.h.r1.2 Mon Nov 23 18:58:17 1987 *************** *** 21,27 **** /* * Bogus type values */ ! #define TNULL PTR /* pointer to UNDEF */ #define TVOID FTN /* function returning UNDEF (for void) */ /* --- 21,27 ---- /* * Bogus type values */ ! #define TNULL INCREF(MOETY) /* pointer to MOETY -- impossible type */ #define TVOID FTN /* function returning UNDEF (for void) */ /* If you cannot fix your compiler, change the declaration in reply_proc() from 'void *' to 'char *'. BUGFIX FOR 4.2BSD COMPILER Unpatched 4.2BSD compilers complain about valid C. You can make old compilers happy by changing some voids to ints. However, the fix to the 4.2 VAX compiler is as follows (to mip/trees.c): *** trees.c.r1.1 Mon May 11 13:47:58 1987 --- trees.c.r1.2 Wed Jul 2 18:28:52 1986 *************** *** 1247,1253 **** if(o==CAST && mt1==0)return(TYPL+TYMATCH); if( mt12 & MDBI ) return( TYPL+LVAL+TYMATCH ); else if( (mt1&MENU)||(mt2&MENU) ) return( LVAL+NCVT+TYPL+PTMATCH+PUN ); ! else if( mt12 == 0 ) break; else if( mt1 & MPTR ) return( LVAL+PTMATCH+PUN ); else if( mt12 & MPTI ) return( TYPL+LVAL+TYMATCH+PUN ); break; --- 1261,1269 ---- if(o==CAST && mt1==0)return(TYPL+TYMATCH); if( mt12 & MDBI ) return( TYPL+LVAL+TYMATCH ); else if( (mt1&MENU)||(mt2&MENU) ) return( LVAL+NCVT+TYPL+PTMATCH+PUN ); ! /* if right is TVOID and looks like a CALL, is not ok */ ! else if (mt2 == 0 && (p->in.right->in.op == CALL || p->in.right->in.op == UNARY CALL)) ! break; else if( mt1 & MPTR ) return( LVAL+PTMATCH+PUN ); else if( mt12 & MPTI ) return( TYPL+LVAL+TYMATCH+PUN ); break; WHAT'S NEW IN THIS RELEASE: RPCSRC 4.0 The previous release was RPCSRC 3.9. As with all previous releases, this release is based directly on files from Sun Microsystem's implementation. Upgrade from RPCSRC 3.9 1) RPCSRC 4.0 upgrades RPCSRC 3.9. Improvements from SunOS 4.0 have been integrated into this release. Secure RPC (in the secure_rpc/ directory) 2) DES Authentication routines and programs are provided. 3) A new manual, "Secure NFS" is provided, which describes Secure RPC and Secure NFS. 4) Skeleton routines and manual pages are provided which describe the DES encryption procedures required by Secure RPC. HOWEVER, NO DES ROUTINE IS PROVIDED. New Functionality 5) rpcinfo can now be used to de-register services from the portmapper which may have terminated abnormally. 6) A new client, rstat, is provided which queries the rstat_svc and prints a status line similar to the one displayed by "uptime".