From: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
To: Greg Banks <gnb-cP1dWloDopni96+mSzHFpQC/G2K4zDHf@public.gmane.org>
Cc: "J. Bruce Fields" <bfields@fieldses.org>,
NFS list <linux-nfs@vger.kernel.org>,
nfsv4@linux-nfs.org
Subject: Re: A new NFSv4 server...
Date: Fri, 04 Jan 2008 02:04:38 -0500 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <477DDA86.6020100@garzik.org> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <477DD11B.40909-cP1dWloDopni96+mSzHFpQC/G2K4zDHf@public.gmane.org>
Greg Banks wrote:
> It's entirely possible someone might run your server code on a spare
> machine,
> given functioning install packages and easy instructions.
Easy enough to do...
>> Plus, surely in this day and age, we can figure out something better
>> than waiting for face-to-face events to test something. Maybe somebody
>> could arrange a donation of some slice of a grid (Amazon EC2?), make
>> various OS images available, and give engineers some way to request a
>> selection of tests, with a selection of OS images?
>>
> Vendors turn up to cthon with proprietary and unreleased software and
> hardware
> which they most certainly are not going to let anyone else run for
> them. Also,
> being in the same hall with all those vendors' technical folks tends to
> make bugs
> shallow. It's a very valuable exercise for any organisation making a
> living from
> NFS.
Certainly, but I could see a grid of released, non-proprietary software
as quite a valuable resource in addition to f2f events. Quality can
only increase, if the [Linux | *BSD | OpenSolaris |...] NFS clients
could run regression tests against several different NFS servers, each
time an NFS client receives a set of changes.
Even if it's only the open source operating systems that wish to
participate, having a mix of OS's and platforms would be useful. A
permanent, virtual cthon.
>> I really wish the entire wire protocol were scrapped and replaced with
>> something more sane, and easier to parse.
> You had me worried there for a moment, I thought you might be the first
> person to admit to liking the NFS4 protocol design.
>
>> It's tempting to see what would arise from a clean-slate wire protocol
>> effort, something that is otherwise compatible with NFS 4.x operations,
>> objects, and data model.
It's more like v4 is a vast relative improvement over prior NFS. Given
the huge number of NFS users and sites, IMO v4 is a huge improvement for
Unix file sharing overall.
But if you are dreaming of a truly clean slate protocol... I've got a
long wish list too :)
> Much like the old phone system, the primary value of protocols like NFS
> is the
> widespread presence of reliable conformant implementations. Most of the
> rest of
> the NFS is problematic. I would argue that some aspects of the NFS
> operations,
> objects, and data model is rather more busted than the XDR encoding.
>
> The classic persistent file handles, for example, could be considered a
> major
> design flaw. Firstly it makes the inode# -> dentry lookup a performance
> path
> for the underlying filesystem, which it isn't in any local load.
Oh, certainly. I was mainly thinking a replacement of the wire protocol
would be an easier step for people to swallow than a new protocol.
But if you are implying there is enough momentum to simply rewrite NFS
from scratch, I'll cheer and help out with coding :) Or maybe Zach
Brown will do it for us with CRFS:
http://linux.conf.au/programme/detail?TalkID=247
A big feature of NFS today is its high Just Works(tm) value (ease of
configuration and some minimum level of fault tolerance), so any
replacement would need to have similar attributes.
> Another major flaw is putting the client in control of when unstable data is
> written to disk, but not providing any way for the client to find out how to
> do that optimally.
>
> Then there's the NFS4 approach to extended attributes.
Ugh. Don't get me started. That's not in my server yet, but I can
already see the mess ahead.
Jeff
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2008-01-04 7:04 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 37+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2008-01-03 12:16 A new NFSv4 server Jeff Garzik
2008-01-03 16:32 ` J. Bruce Fields
2008-01-04 5:32 ` Jeff Garzik
2008-01-04 6:24 ` Greg Banks
[not found] ` <477DD11B.40909-cP1dWloDopni96+mSzHFpQC/G2K4zDHf@public.gmane.org>
2008-01-04 7:04 ` Jeff Garzik [this message]
2008-01-04 9:07 ` Benny Halevy
2008-01-04 15:49 ` Jeff Garzik
2008-01-04 19:51 ` Benny Halevy
2008-01-05 1:46 ` Greg Banks
2008-01-05 7:56 ` Benny Halevy
2008-01-04 17:47 ` J. Bruce Fields
2008-01-04 19:55 ` Benny Halevy
2008-01-04 9:15 ` Peter Åstrand
2008-01-04 10:05 ` Neil Brown
[not found] ` <Pine.LNX.4.64.0801040954070.5004-K9BqGu7AvB3wj5YHdwD3Ga2PxDmRETKR@public.gmane.org>
2008-01-04 13:50 ` Frank van Maarseveen
2008-01-04 16:41 ` Jeff Garzik
2008-01-04 20:03 ` Peter Åstrand
[not found] ` <Pine.LNX.4.64.0801042030380.18738-K9BqGu7AvB3wj5YHdwD3Ga2PxDmRETKR@public.gmane.org>
2008-01-06 23:54 ` James Morris
2008-01-04 20:31 ` Muntz, Daniel
2008-01-04 9:15 ` Peter Åstrand
2008-01-04 16:14 ` Jeff Garzik
2008-01-04 19:58 ` Peter Åstrand
-- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
2008-01-04 15:28 Rick Macklem
[not found] ` <200801041528.KAA18776-bYVALtacgsT800Iu1Vt84J3p9npsUQCG@public.gmane.org>
2008-01-04 17:21 ` J. Bruce Fields
2008-01-04 18:03 ` Tom Haynes
[not found] ` <477E750A.2030905-8AdZ+HgO7noAvxtiuMwx3w@public.gmane.org>
2008-01-04 18:21 ` J. Bruce Fields
2008-01-04 19:50 ` Jeff Garzik
2008-01-04 19:57 ` Peter Åstrand
[not found] ` <Pine.LNX.4.64.0801042055490.18738-K9BqGu7AvB3wj5YHdwD3Ga2PxDmRETKR@public.gmane.org>
2008-01-05 0:43 ` Jeff Garzik
2008-01-04 15:48 Rick Macklem
[not found] ` <200801041548.KAA18953-bYVALtacgsT800Iu1Vt84J3p9npsUQCG@public.gmane.org>
2008-01-04 17:15 ` J. Bruce Fields
2008-01-05 2:32 ` Greg Banks
2008-01-04 17:11 Rick Macklem
[not found] ` <200801041711.MAA19577-bYVALtacgsT800Iu1Vt84J3p9npsUQCG@public.gmane.org>
2008-01-05 0:51 ` Jeff Garzik
2008-01-04 17:28 Rick Macklem
[not found] ` <200801041728.MAA19743-bYVALtacgsT800Iu1Vt84J3p9npsUQCG@public.gmane.org>
2008-01-04 17:42 ` J. Bruce Fields
2008-01-04 17:45 ` Trond Myklebust
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