From: Steve Dickson <SteveD@redhat.com>
To: NeilBrown <neilb@suse.de>
Cc: linux-nfs@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: [PATCH/RFC: nfs-utils] Common systemd unit files for nfs-utils.
Date: Tue, 11 Feb 2014 07:56:32 -0500 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <52FA1E00.8000801@RedHat.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20140205145514.2c44b575@notabene.brown>
Sorry for the delayed response... I got suck into another world... ;-(
On 02/04/2014 10:55 PM, NeilBrown wrote:
> On Tue, 04 Feb 2014 13:26:42 -0500 Steve Dickson <SteveD@redhat.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> How is rpc.svcgssd enabled? Since the .service file does
>>>> not have a [Install] section the systemctl enable rpc.svcgssd
>>>> fails.
>>>
>>> The "README" touches on this. If you
>>> systemctl enable nfs-secure.target
>>> then rpc.svcgssd will be run whenever nfs-server.target is started.
>> I was thinking nfs-server would only start rpc.svcgssd when its
>> enabled... not every time...
>
> I don't follow what you are saying ... not that it really matters as we both
> seem to be agreed to take a different approach with the gss daemons.
>
> In my original plan:
> if nfs-secure is enabled, then whenever nfs-server is started, it makes sure
> that rpc.svcgssd is running.
> if nfs-secure is not enabled, then rpc.svcgssd will refuse to start.
Understood... and that's good...
>
>
>>
>>> Also rpc.gssd will be run whenever nfs-server.target or nfs-client.target is
>>> started.
>> Why is rpc.gssd started when the nfs server is started? Possibly for secure
>> loopback mounts??
>
> Call-backs from NFSv4.0 server, as has been mentioned elsewhere.
But kerberos has to be configure... but I think we are talking
about that in a another thread...
>
>>
>>>
>>>>
>>>> How would these daemons be restart and shutdown? Since this is a
>>>> target, systemctl restart and system stop don't do anything.
>>>
>>> This is something I haven't completely figured out yet.
>>>
>>> Part of the solution might be the "PartOf" directive.
>>> If each service claims to be "PartOf" the main one, then stopping or
>>> restarting the main service will propagate to stopping and restarting the
>>> individual services.
>>> Unfortunately in nfs we have some shared services. rpc.statd and rpc.gssd
>>> are needed by both server and client. That isn't a big problem for 'restart',
>>> but if you 'systemctl stop nfs-client' and find that the server isn't
>>> properly working any more, that would be awkward
>>> If could possibly work around that by setting "StopWhenUnneeded" for those
>>> shared services. Then e.g. rpc.statd would stop when both client and server
>>> are stopped, but not if either one of them is stopped.
>>> However I don't know how that interacts with restart. I suspect that the
>>> StopWhenUnneeded services are *not* stopped and restarted when the main
>>> service is stopped. So it would be hard to restart all nfs services on an
>>> upgrade.
>>>
>>> Further research seems needed here.
>> Fine... I'll try to digest what you are saying here, but
>> would it make it easier if everything was in a service file?
>
> No, the only way the .target files are more awkward is that you have to type
> ".target".
>
> In fact a .target can be turned into an .service by adding:
>
> [Service]
> Type=oneshot
> RemainAfterExit=yes
> ExecStart=/bin/true
>
> at the end. You might even get away with less than that.
> Given this and that ".target" is extra typing, there seems little reason to
> use .target unit files.
So are you saying are not going use .target units? They will all be .service units?
>
>>
>>>
>>>
>>>>
>>>>> +
>>>>> + nfs-secure.target
>>>>> + If enabled, then rpc.gssd will be run when either -client or
>>>>> + -server is started, and rpc.svcgssd will be run when -server
>>>>> + is started
>>>> I like that fact that rpc.gssd is started by nfs-client but
>>>> I don't like that API change. systemctl restart nfs-secure breaks
>>>
>>> Why would you want to "restart nfs-secure". I can understanding wanting to
>>> restart individual processed, or the whole collection, but why that subset?
>> Well in Fedora nfs-secure is one process ;-)
>
> Oh yes, "nfs-secure" means "run rpc.gssd".
> If you wanted to preserve that I think you could create a drop-in file
> for rpc-gssd.service containing
> [Install]
> Alias=nfs-secure.service
> though that would require "systemctl enable rpc-gssd" so maybe it isn't the
> best approach.
If I'm understanding this and above... systemctl enable nfs-secure would
be controlling the starting up of both rpc.gssd and rpc.svcgssd/gss-proxy?
steved.
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2014-02-11 12:56 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 41+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2014-01-30 6:24 [PATCH/RFC: nfs-utils] Common systemd unit files for nfs-utils NeilBrown
2014-01-30 15:04 ` Weston Andros Adamson
2014-01-30 17:56 ` Weston Andros Adamson
2014-01-30 18:52 ` J. Bruce Fields
2014-01-30 22:50 ` NeilBrown
2014-01-30 23:17 ` Jim Rees
2014-01-30 20:06 ` Steve Dickson
2014-01-30 22:14 ` NeilBrown
2014-01-31 15:19 ` Steve Dickson
2014-01-31 16:15 ` Steve Dickson
2014-02-03 21:01 ` Steve Dickson
2014-02-03 22:34 ` NeilBrown
2014-02-04 16:20 ` J. Bruce Fields
2014-02-04 16:30 ` Chuck Lever
2014-02-04 19:00 ` Steve Dickson
2014-02-06 12:32 ` Simo Sorce
2014-02-05 3:09 ` NeilBrown
2014-02-05 15:56 ` Chuck Lever
2014-02-06 1:27 ` NeilBrown
2014-02-06 12:15 ` Simo Sorce
2014-02-06 16:09 ` Chuck Lever
2014-02-06 16:19 ` J. Bruce Fields
2014-02-10 20:50 ` Steve Dickson
2014-02-11 4:50 ` NeilBrown
2014-02-11 12:38 ` Steve Dickson
2014-02-11 16:37 ` J. Bruce Fields
2014-02-11 16:47 ` Steve Dickson
2014-02-11 16:56 ` J. Bruce Fields
2014-02-11 20:12 ` Steve Dickson
2014-02-04 18:26 ` Steve Dickson
2014-02-04 18:48 ` Anthony Messina
2014-02-04 18:54 ` J. Bruce Fields
2014-02-05 3:55 ` NeilBrown
2014-02-11 12:56 ` Steve Dickson [this message]
2014-02-05 5:43 ` NeilBrown
2014-02-05 21:11 ` J. Bruce Fields
2014-02-06 0:58 ` NeilBrown
2014-02-13 19:39 ` Steve Dickson
2014-02-04 12:42 ` Anthony Messina
2014-02-04 13:24 ` Jeff Layton
2014-02-04 14:18 ` Anthony Messina
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