xref: /freebsd/usr.sbin/nfsd/nfsv4.4 (revision 50d922a0)
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25.\" $FreeBSD$
26.\"
27.Dd May 15, 2011
28.Dt NFSV4 4
29.Os
30.Sh NAME
31.Nm NFSv4
32.Nd NFS Version 4 Protocol
33.Sh DESCRIPTION
34The NFS client and server provides support for the
35.Tn NFSv4
36specification; see
37.%T "Network File System (NFS) Version 4 Protocol RFC 3530" .
38The protocol is somewhat similar to NFS Version 3, but differs in significant
39ways.
40It uses a single compound RPC that concatenates operations to-gether.
41Each of these operations are similar to the RPCs of NFS Version 3.
42The operations in the compound are performed in order, until one of
43them fails (returns an error) and then the RPC terminates at that point.
44.Pp
45It has
46integrated locking support, which implies that the server is no longer
47stateless.
48As such, the
49.Nm
50server remains in recovery mode for a grace period (always greater than the
51lease duration the server uses) after a reboot.
52During this grace period, clients may recover state but not perform other
53open/lock state changing operations.
54To provide for correct recovery semantics, a small file described by
55.Xr stablerestart 5
56is used by the server during the recovery phase.
57If this file is missing or empty, there is a backup copy maintained by
58.Xr nfsd 8
59that will be used. If either file is missing, they will be
60created by the
61.Xr nfsd 8 .
62If both the file and the backup copy are empty,
63it will result in the server starting without providing a grace period
64for recovery.
65Note that recovery only occurs when the server
66machine is rebooted, not when the
67.Xr nfsd 8
68are just restarted.
69.Pp
70It provides several optional features not present in NFS Version 3:
71.sp
72.Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
73- NFS Version 4 ACLs
74- Referrals, which redirect subtrees to other servers
75  (not yet implemented)
76- Delegations, which allow a client to operate on a file locally
77.Ed
78.Pp
79The
80.Nm
81protocol does not use a separate mount protocol and assumes that the
82server provides a single file system tree structure, rooted at the point
83in the local file system tree specified by one or more
84.sp 1
85.Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
86V4: <rootdir> [-sec=secflavors] [host(s) or net]
87.Ed
88.sp 1
89line(s) in the
90.Xr exports 5
91file.
92(See
93.Xr exports 5
94for details.)
95The
96.Xr nfsd 8
97allows a limited subset of operations to be performed on non-exported subtrees
98of the local file system, so that traversal of the tree to the exported
99subtrees is possible.
100As such, the ``<rootdir>'' can be in a non-exported file system.
101However,
102the entire tree that is rooted at that point must be in local file systems
103that are of types that can be NFS exported.
104Since the
105.Nm
106file system is rooted at ``<rootdir>'', setting this to anything other
107than ``/'' will result in clients being required to use different mount
108paths for
109.Nm
110than for NFS Version 2 or 3.
111Unlike NFS Version 2 and 3, Version 4 allows a client mount to span across
112multiple server file systems, although not all clients are capable of doing
113this.
114.Pp
115.Nm
116uses names for users and groups instead of numbers.
117On the wire, they
118take the form:
119.sp
120.Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
121<user>@<dns.domain>
122.Ed
123.sp
124where ``<dns.domain>'' is not the same as the DNS domain used
125for host name lookups, but is usually set to the same string.
126Most systems set this ``<dns.domain>''
127to the domain name part of the machine's
128.Xr hostname 1
129by default.
130However, this can normally be overridden by a command line
131option or configuration file for the daemon used to do the name<->number
132mapping.
133Under FreeBSD, the mapping daemon is called
134.Xr nfsuserd 8
135and has a command line option that overrides the domain component of the
136machine's hostname.
137For use of
138.Nm ,
139either client or server, this daemon must be running.
140If this ``<dns.domain>'' is not set correctly or the daemon is not running, ``ls -l'' will typically
141report a lot of ``nobody'' and ``nogroup'' ownerships.
142.Pp
143Although uid/gid numbers are no longer used in the
144.Nm
145protocol, they will still be in the RPC authentication fields when
146using AUTH_SYS (sec=sys), which is the default.
147As such, in this case both the user/group name and number spaces must
148be consistent between the client and server.
149.Pp
150However, if you run
151.Nm
152with RPCSEC_GSS (sec=krb5, krb5i, krb5p), only names and KerberosV tickets
153will go on the wire.
154.Sh SERVER SETUP
155To set up the NFS server that supports
156.Nm ,
157you will need to either set the variables in
158.Xr rc.conf 5
159as follows:
160.sp
161.Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
162nfs_server_enable="YES"
163nfsv4_server_enable="YES"
164nfsuserd_enable="YES"
165.Ed
166.sp
167or start
168.Xr mountd 8
169and
170.Xr nfsd 8
171without the ``-o'' option, which would force use of the old server.
172The
173.Xr nfsuserd 8
174daemon must also be running.
175.Pp
176You will also need to add at least one ``V4:'' line to the
177.Xr exports 5
178file for
179.Nm
180to work.
181.Pp
182If the file systems you are exporting are only being accessed via
183.Nm
184there are a couple of
185.Xr sysctl 8
186variables that you can change, which might improve performance.
187.Bl -tag -width Ds
188.It Cm vfs.nfsd.issue_delegations
189when set non-zero, allows the server to issue Open Delegations to
190clients.
191These delegations permit the client to manipulate the file
192locally on the client.
193Unfortunately, at this time, client use of
194delegations is limited, so performance gains may not be observed.
195This can only be enabled when the file systems being exported to
196.Nm
197clients are not being accessed locally on the server and, if being
198accessed via NFS Version 2 or 3 clients, these clients cannot be
199using the NLM.
200.It Cm vfs.nfsd.enable_locallocks
201can be set to 0 to disable acquisition of local byte range locks.
202Disabling local locking can only be done if neither local accesses
203to the exported file systems nor the NLM is operating on them.
204.El
205.sp
206Note that Samba server access would be considered ``local access'' for the above
207discussion.
208.Pp
209To build a kernel with the NFS server that supports
210.Nm
211linked into it, the
212.sp
213.Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
214options	NFSD
215.Ed
216.sp
217must be specified in the kernel's
218.Xr config 5
219file.
220.Sh CLIENT MOUNTS
221To do an
222.Nm
223mount, specify the ``nfsv4'' option on the
224.Xr mount_nfs 8
225command line.
226This will force use of the client that supports
227.Nm
228plus set ``tcp'' and
229.Nm .
230.Pp
231The
232.Xr nfsuserd 8
233must be running, as above.
234If the
235.Nm
236server that is being mounted on supports delegations, you can start the
237.Xr nfscbd 8
238daemon to handle client side callbacks.
239This will occur if
240.sp
241.Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
242nfsuserd_enable="YES"
243nfscbd_enable="YES"
244.Ed
245.sp
246are set in
247.Xr rc.conf 5 .
248.sp
249Without a functioning callback path, a server will never issue Delegations
250to a client.
251.sp
252By default, the callback address will be set to the IP address acquired via
253rtalloc() in the kernel and port# 7745.
254To override the default port#, a command line option for
255.Xr nfscbd 8
256can be used.
257.sp
258To get callbacks to work when behind a NAT gateway, a port for the callback
259service will need to be set up on the NAT gateway and then the address
260of the NAT gateway (host IP plus port#) will need to be set by assigning the
261.Xr sysctl 8
262variable vfs.nfs.callback_addr to a string of the form:
263.sp
264N.N.N.N.N.N
265.sp
266where the first 4 Ns are the host IP address and the last two are the
267port# in network byte order (all decimal #s in the range 0-255).
268.Pp
269To build a kernel with the client that supports
270.Nm
271linked into it, the option
272.sp
273.Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
274options	NFSCL
275.Ed
276.sp
277must be specified in the kernel's
278.Xr config 5
279file.
280.Pp
281Options can be specified for the
282.Xr nfsuserd 8
283and
284.Xr nfscbd 8
285daemons at boot time via the ``nfsuserd_flags'' and ``nfscbd_flags''
286.Xr rc.conf 5
287variables.
288.Sh FILES
289.Bl -tag -width /var/db/nfs-stablerestart.bak -compact
290.It Pa /var/db/nfs-stablerestart
291NFS V4 stable restart file
292.It Pa /var/db/nfs-stablerestart.bak
293backup copy of the file
294.El
295.Sh SEE ALSO
296.Xr stablerestart 5 ,
297.Xr mountd 8 ,
298.Xr nfscbd 8 ,
299.Xr nfsd 8 ,
300.Xr nfsdumpstate 8 ,
301.Xr nfsrevoke 8 ,
302.Xr nfsuserd 8
303.Sh BUGS
304At this time, there is no recall of delegations for local file system
305operations.
306As such, delegations should only be enabled for file systems
307that are being used solely as NFS export volumes and are not being accessed
308via local system calls nor services such as Samba.
309