From: Jeff Layton <jlayton@redhat.com>
To: NeilBrown <neilb@suse.com>
Cc: Linux NFS Mailing List <linux-nfs@vger.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: Question about nfsdcltrack --storagedir
Date: Wed, 09 Nov 2016 19:55:58 -0500 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <1478739358.2442.1.camel@redhat.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <877f8c9pku.fsf@notabene.neil.brown.name>
On Thu, 2016-11-10 at 10:54 +1100, NeilBrown wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 09 2016, Jeff Layton wrote:
>
> > On Wed, 2016-11-09 at 14:46 +1100, NeilBrown wrote:
> > > Hi,
> > > I notice that nfsdcltrack has a "--storagedir" option.
> > > I wonder how this can be used, given the nfsdcltrack is only(?) called
> > > from the kernel and there is no(?) mechanism to pass extra options.
> > >
> > > In a clustered-server context it would make sense(?) to share the
> > > database between cluster nodes and it is easiest to do this if the
> > > file in a separate filesystem (mounted as part of fail-over) rather
> > > than in /var.
> > > This can(?) be achieved using a symlink, but rpm likes to remove
> > > symlinks to non-existent locations.
> > >
> > > With NFSv3 the equivalent is the state files maintained by statd, and
> > > these can be relocated by passing the -P option to rpc.statd.
> > > How does one do a similar thing for NFSv4???
> > >
> > >
> >
> > Ahh, I added that option mostly for when I was testing it. I did a lot
> > of the earlier testing running it by hand, and --storagedir let me use a
> > different directory for the db. I did have a vague idea that we might
> > use it in the situation you describe, but I never wired that up as I
> > didn't have a real need for it.
> >
> > We could add a new module parm that would set that option when the
> > kernel does its callout, or allow passing the storagedir by environment
> > variable.
> >
> > What would make the most sense from a usability standpoint?
>
> Maybe a config file in /etc/ which nfsdcltrack reads on start-up?
> Though in some ways I'd rather that instead of running a program, the
> kernel sent a message to user-space. Possibly a u-event?
> Then existing configuration mechanisms could be used to choose a program
> and a context for it to run in.
> I wonder if u-events handle namespaces at all.
>
> This came up because a customer was symlinking all of /var/lib/nfs to
> shared storage (and lost their symlink thanks to rpm). That isn't a
> solution that I really like, and it led me to reflect on other things in
> /var/lib/nfs.
>
> etab - holds a normalized copy of /etc/exports, plus ad hoc changes.
> It would like in /run/nfs if we built this today
> export-lock - lockfile to protect changes to above. Would also be
> in /run if we built it today. (I wonder why that doesn't
> use .etab.lock, which is already used for locking)
> state, sm, sm.bak - statd state files. These belong in /var/lib/nfs
> but are easily relocated with args to rpc.statd and sm-notify.
> v4recovery - the NFSv4 version of above
> xtab - this hasn't been needed since we gained /proc/fs/nfs/exports
> It is just a record of what should be in the kernel
> We should remove this. I'll make a patch.
> rmtab - this hasn't been needed since the "new cache" and the
> up-call mechanism were created. It might be still used
> to respond to "showmount" commands, but that was never reliable.
> If we keep it, it should probably move to /run.
> But what do people think if finally discarding the old
> (non-new_cache) code and using that as an excuse to increment
> the major version number of nfs-utils?
>
> rpc_pipefs - mountpoint of NFS upcall filesystem. This was another
> source of problems when /var/lib/nfs is a symlink elsewhere.
> It isn't nice to mount this filesystem on that shared storage.
> While programs that access this can be told to use an alternate
> directory, it is hard to tell systemd's unit files to mount
> it somewhere special (previously an init script would just
> mount it wherever the config file said)
> I note that Debian mounts this at /run/rpc_pipefs.
> That seems like a really good idea. What do people think of
> making this the "official" mount point?
>
> If we moved some things to /run and removed others, it would just leave
> state,sm,sm.bak and v4recovery in /var/lib/nfs. That is all the same
> type of data, which is nice.
>
> So there are lots of things we could do, but at a minimum -
> /etc/nfsdcltrack.conf ??
>
> Thanks,
> NeilBrown
No objection here, especially if we make it so that we have existing
behavior when there is no config file. nfs-utils even has some config
file parsing routines now in support/nfs that should be sufficient.
--
Jeff Layton <jlayton@redhat.com>
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2016-11-10 0:56 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 17+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2016-11-09 3:46 Question about nfsdcltrack --storagedir NeilBrown
2016-11-09 11:57 ` Jeff Layton
2016-11-09 23:54 ` NeilBrown
2016-11-10 0:55 ` Jeff Layton [this message]
2016-11-10 4:58 ` [PATCH/RFC nfs-utils] nfsdcltrack: read configuration from a file NeilBrown
2016-11-10 15:00 ` Jeff Layton
2016-11-10 22:17 ` NeilBrown
2016-11-13 12:40 ` Jeff Layton
2016-11-15 16:52 ` Steve Dickson
2016-11-15 17:07 ` Steve Dickson
2016-11-16 18:22 ` Steve Dickson
2016-11-10 14:55 ` Question about nfsdcltrack --storagedir Chuck Lever
2016-11-10 22:32 ` NeilBrown
2016-11-11 16:19 ` Chuck Lever
2016-11-16 4:00 ` NeilBrown
2016-11-10 16:35 ` J. Bruce Fields
2016-11-10 22:35 ` NeilBrown
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