* [PATCH] nfs(5): Treatment of *atime mount options
@ 2013-11-18 15:36 Chuck Lever
2013-11-20 21:25 ` Steve Dickson
0 siblings, 1 reply; 2+ messages in thread
From: Chuck Lever @ 2013-11-18 15:36 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: steved; +Cc: linux-nfs, trond.myklebust
I was reminded recently that NFS treats file atime time stamps
differently than other filesystems. It also ignores the generic
*atime mount options because it cannot support the atime semantics
of local filesystems.
We should document that somewhere. nfs(5) seems like a logical
place for it.
Signed-off-by: Chuck Lever <chuck.lever@oracle.com>
---
utils/mount/nfs.man | 59 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1 file changed, 59 insertions(+)
diff --git a/utils/mount/nfs.man b/utils/mount/nfs.man
index 67031b5..2250963 100644
--- a/utils/mount/nfs.man
+++ b/utils/mount/nfs.man
@@ -1227,6 +1227,65 @@ If absolute cache coherence among clients is required,
applications should use file locking. Alternatively, applications
can also open their files with the O_DIRECT flag
to disable data caching entirely.
+.SS "File timestamp maintainence"
+NFS servers are responsible for managing file and directory timestamps
+.RB ( atime ,
+.BR ctime ", and"
+.BR mtime ).
+When a file is accessed or updated on an NFS server,
+the file's timestamps are updated just like they would be on a filesystem
+local to an application.
+.P
+NFS clients cache file attributes, including timestamps.
+A file's timestamps are updated on NFS clients when its attributes
+are retrieved from the NFS server.
+Thus there may be some delay before timestamp updates
+on an NFS server appear to applications on NFS clients.
+.P
+To comply with the POSIX filesystem standard, the Linux NFS client
+relies on NFS servers to keep a file's
+.B mtime
+and
+.B ctime
+timestamps properly up to date.
+It does this by flushing local data changes to the server
+before reporting
+.B mtime
+to applications via system calls such as
+.BR stat (2).
+.P
+The Linux client handles
+.B atime
+updates more loosely, however.
+NFS clients maintain good performance by caching data,
+but that means that application reads, which normally update
+.BR atime ,
+are not reflected to the server where a file's
+.B atime
+is actually maintained.
+.P
+Because of this caching behavior,
+the Linux NFS client does not support generic atime-related mount options.
+See
+.BR mount (8)
+for details on these options.
+.P
+In particular, the
+.BR atime / noatime ,
+.BR diratime / nodiratime ,
+.BR relatime / norelatime ,
+and
+.BR strictatime / nostrictatime
+mount options have no effect on NFS mounts.
+.P
+.I /proc/mounts
+may report that the
+.B relatime
+mount option is set on NFS mounts, but in fact the
+.B atime
+semantics are always as described here, and are not like
+.B relatime
+semantics.
.SS "Directory entry caching"
The Linux NFS client caches the result of all NFS LOOKUP requests.
If the requested directory entry exists on the server,
^ permalink raw reply related [flat|nested] 2+ messages in thread
* Re: [PATCH] nfs(5): Treatment of *atime mount options
2013-11-18 15:36 [PATCH] nfs(5): Treatment of *atime mount options Chuck Lever
@ 2013-11-20 21:25 ` Steve Dickson
0 siblings, 0 replies; 2+ messages in thread
From: Steve Dickson @ 2013-11-20 21:25 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Chuck Lever; +Cc: linux-nfs, trond.myklebust
On 18/11/13 10:36, Chuck Lever wrote:
> I was reminded recently that NFS treats file atime time stamps
> differently than other filesystems. It also ignores the generic
> *atime mount options because it cannot support the atime semantics
> of local filesystems.
>
> We should document that somewhere. nfs(5) seems like a logical
> place for it.
>
> Signed-off-by: Chuck Lever <chuck.lever@oracle.com>
Committed (tag: nfs-utils-1-2-10-rc1)
steved.
> ---
> utils/mount/nfs.man | 59 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
> 1 file changed, 59 insertions(+)
>
> diff --git a/utils/mount/nfs.man b/utils/mount/nfs.man
> index 67031b5..2250963 100644
> --- a/utils/mount/nfs.man
> +++ b/utils/mount/nfs.man
> @@ -1227,6 +1227,65 @@ If absolute cache coherence among clients is required,
> applications should use file locking. Alternatively, applications
> can also open their files with the O_DIRECT flag
> to disable data caching entirely.
> +.SS "File timestamp maintainence"
> +NFS servers are responsible for managing file and directory timestamps
> +.RB ( atime ,
> +.BR ctime ", and"
> +.BR mtime ).
> +When a file is accessed or updated on an NFS server,
> +the file's timestamps are updated just like they would be on a filesystem
> +local to an application.
> +.P
> +NFS clients cache file attributes, including timestamps.
> +A file's timestamps are updated on NFS clients when its attributes
> +are retrieved from the NFS server.
> +Thus there may be some delay before timestamp updates
> +on an NFS server appear to applications on NFS clients.
> +.P
> +To comply with the POSIX filesystem standard, the Linux NFS client
> +relies on NFS servers to keep a file's
> +.B mtime
> +and
> +.B ctime
> +timestamps properly up to date.
> +It does this by flushing local data changes to the server
> +before reporting
> +.B mtime
> +to applications via system calls such as
> +.BR stat (2).
> +.P
> +The Linux client handles
> +.B atime
> +updates more loosely, however.
> +NFS clients maintain good performance by caching data,
> +but that means that application reads, which normally update
> +.BR atime ,
> +are not reflected to the server where a file's
> +.B atime
> +is actually maintained.
> +.P
> +Because of this caching behavior,
> +the Linux NFS client does not support generic atime-related mount options.
> +See
> +.BR mount (8)
> +for details on these options.
> +.P
> +In particular, the
> +.BR atime / noatime ,
> +.BR diratime / nodiratime ,
> +.BR relatime / norelatime ,
> +and
> +.BR strictatime / nostrictatime
> +mount options have no effect on NFS mounts.
> +.P
> +.I /proc/mounts
> +may report that the
> +.B relatime
> +mount option is set on NFS mounts, but in fact the
> +.B atime
> +semantics are always as described here, and are not like
> +.B relatime
> +semantics.
> .SS "Directory entry caching"
> The Linux NFS client caches the result of all NFS LOOKUP requests.
> If the requested directory entry exists on the server,
>
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 2+ messages in thread
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