xref: /freebsd/usr.sbin/nfsd/pnfsserver.4 (revision c697fb7f)
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24.\" $FreeBSD$
25.\"
26.Dd December 20, 2019
27.Dt PNFSSERVER 4
28.Os
29.Sh NAME
30.Nm pNFSserver
31.Nd NFS Version 4.1 and 4.2 Parallel NFS Protocol Server
32.Sh DESCRIPTION
33A set of FreeBSD servers may be configured to provide a
34.Xr pnfs 4
35service.
36One FreeBSD system needs to be configured as a MetaData Server (MDS) and
37at least one additional FreeBSD system needs to be configured as one or
38more Data Servers (DS)s.
39.Pp
40These FreeBSD systems are configured to be NFSv4.1 and NFSv4.2
41servers, see
42.Xr nfsd 8
43and
44.Xr exports 5
45if you are not familiar with configuring a NFSv4.n server.
46All DS(s) and the MDS should support NFSv4.2 as well as NFSv4.1.
47Mixing an MDS that supports NFSv4.2 with any DS(s) that do not support
48NFSv4.2 will not work correctly.
49As such, all DS(s) must be upgraded from
50.Fx 12
51to
52.Fx 13
53before upgrading the MDS.
54.Sh DS server configuration
55The DS(s) need to be configured as NFSv4.1 and NFSv4.2 server(s),
56with a top level exported
57directory used for storage of data files.
58This directory must be owned by
59.Dq root
60and would normally have a mode of
61.Dq 700 .
62Within this directory there needs to be additional directories named
63ds0,...,dsN (where N is 19 by default) also owned by
64.Dq root
65with mode
66.Dq 700 .
67These are the directories where the data files are stored.
68The following command can be run by root when in the top level exported
69directory to create these subdirectories.
70.Bd -literal -offset indent
71jot -w ds 20 0 | xargs mkdir -m 700
72.Ed
73.sp
74Note that
75.Dq 20
76is the default and can be set to a larger value on the MDS as shown below.
77.sp
78The top level exported directory used for storage of data files must be
79exported to the MDS with the
80.Dq maproot=root sec=sys
81export options so that the MDS can create entries in these subdirectories.
82It must also be exported to all pNFS aware clients, but these clients do
83not require the
84.Dq maproot=root
85export option and this directory should be exported to them with the same
86options as used by the MDS to export file system(s) to the clients.
87.Pp
88It is possible to have multiple DSs on the same FreeBSD system, but each
89of these DSs must have a separate top level exported directory used for storage
90of data files and each
91of these DSs must be mountable via a separate IP address.
92Alias addresses can be set on the DS server system for a network
93interface via
94.Xr ifconfig 8
95to create these different IP addresses.
96Multiple DSs on the same server may be useful when data for different file systems
97on the MDS are being stored on different file system volumes on the FreeBSD
98DS system.
99.Sh MDS server configuration
100The MDS must be a separate FreeBSD system from the FreeBSD DS system(s) and
101NFS clients.
102It is configured as a NFSv4.1 and NFSv4.2 server with
103file system(s) exported to clients.
104However, the
105.Dq -p
106command line argument for
107.Xr nfsd
108is used to indicate that it is running as the MDS for a pNFS server.
109.Pp
110The DS(s) must all be mounted on the MDS using the following mount options:
111.Bd -literal -offset indent
112nfsv4,minorversion=2,soft,retrans=2
113.Ed
114.sp
115so that they can be defined as DSs in the
116.Dq -p
117option.
118Normally these mounts would be entered in the
119.Xr fstab 5
120on the MDS.
121For example, if there are four DSs named nfsv4-data[0-3], the
122.Xr fstab 5
123lines might look like:
124.Bd -literal -offset
125nfsv4-data0:/ /data0 nfs rw,nfsv4,minorversion=2,soft,retrans=2 0 0
126nfsv4-data1:/ /data1 nfs rw,nfsv4,minorversion=2,soft,retrans=2 0 0
127nfsv4-data2:/ /data2 nfs rw,nfsv4,minorversion=2,soft,retrans=2 0 0
128nfsv4-data3:/ /data3 nfs rw,nfsv4,minorversion=2,soft,retrans=2 0 0
129.Ed
130.sp
131The
132.Xr nfsd 8
133command line option
134.Dq -p
135indicates that the NFS server is a pNFS MDS and specifies what
136DSs are to be used.
137.br
138For the above
139.Xr fstab 5
140example, the
141.Xr nfsd 8
142nfs_server_flags line in your
143.Xr rc.conf 5
144might look like:
145.Bd -literal -offset
146nfs_server_flags="-u -t -n 128 -p nfsv4-data0:/data0,nfsv4-data1:/data1,nfsv4-data2:/data2,nfsv4-data3:/data3"
147.Ed
148.sp
149This example specifies that the data files should be distributed over the
150four DSs and File layouts will be issued to pNFS enabled clients.
151If issuing Flexible File layouts is desired for this case, setting the sysctl
152.Dq vfs.nfsd.default_flexfile
153non-zero in your
154.Xr sysctl.conf 5
155file will make the
156.Nm
157do that.
158.br
159Alternately, this variant of
160.Dq nfs_server_flags
161will specify that two way mirroring is to be done, via the
162.Dq -m
163command line option.
164.Bd -literal -offset
165nfs_server_flags="-u -t -n 128 -p nfsv4-data0:/data0,nfsv4-data1:/data1,nfsv4-data2:/data2,nfsv4-data3:/data3 -m 2"
166.Ed
167.sp
168With two way mirroring, the data file for each exported file on the MDS
169will be stored on two of the DSs.
170When mirroring is enabled, the server will always issue Flexible File layouts.
171.Pp
172It is also possible to specify which DSs are to be used to store data files for
173specific exported file systems on the MDS.
174For example, if the MDS has exported two file systems
175.Dq /export1
176and
177.Dq /export2
178to clients, the following variant of
179.Dq nfs_server_flags
180will specify that data files for
181.Dq /export1
182will be stored on nfsv4-data0 and nfsv4-data1, whereas the data files for
183.Dq /export2
184will be store on nfsv4-data2 and nfsv4-data3.
185.Bd -literal -offset
186nfs_server_flags="-u -t -n 128 -p nfsv4-data0:/data0#/export1,nfsv4-data1:/data1#/export1,nfsv4-data2:/data2#/export2,nfsv4-data3:/data3#/export2"
187.Ed
188.sp
189This can be used by system administrators to control where data files are
190stored and might be useful for control of storage use.
191For this case, it may be convenient to co-locate more than one of the DSs
192on the same FreeBSD server, using separate file systems on the DS system
193for storage of the respective DS's data files.
194If mirroring is desired for this case, the
195.Dq -m
196option also needs to be specified.
197There must be enough DSs assigned to each exported file system on the MDS
198to support the level of mirroring.
199The above example would be fine for two way mirroring, but four way mirroring
200would not work, since there are only two DSs assigned to each exported file
201system on the MDS.
202.Pp
203The number of subdirectories in each DS is defined by the
204.Dq vfs.nfs.dsdirsize
205sysctl on the MDS.
206This value can be increased from the default of 20, but only when the
207.Xr nfsd 8
208is not running and after the additional ds20,... subdirectories have been
209created on all the DSs.
210For a service that will store a large number of files this sysctl should be
211set much larger, to avoid the number of entries in a subdirectory from
212getting too large.
213.Sh Client mounts
214Once operational, NFSv4.1 or NFSv4.2 FreeBSD client mounts
215done with the
216.Dq pnfs
217option should do I/O directly on the DSs.
218The clients mounting the MDS must be running the
219.Xr nfscbd
220daemon for pNFS to work.
221Set
222.Bd -literal -offset indent
223nfscbd_enable="YES"
224.Ed
225.sp
226in the
227.Xr rc.conf 5
228on these clients.
229Non-pNFS aware clients or NFSv3 mounts will do all I/O RPCs on the MDS,
230which acts as a proxy for the appropriate DS(s).
231.Sh Backing up a pNFS service
232Since the data is separated from the metadata, the simple way to back up
233a pNFS service is to do so from an NFS client that has the service mounted
234on it.
235If you back up the MDS exported file system(s) on the MDS, you must do it
236in such a way that the
237.Dq system
238namespace extended attributes get backed up.
239.Sh Handling of failed mirrored DSs
240When a mirrored DS fails, it can be disabled one of three ways:
241.sp
2421 - The MDS detects a problem when trying to do proxy
243operations on the DS.
244This can take a couple of minutes
245after the DS failure or network partitioning occurs.
246.sp
2472 - A pNFS client can report an I/O error that occurred for a DS to the MDS in
248the arguments for a LayoutReturn operation.
249.sp
2503 - The system administrator can perform the pnfsdskill(8) command on the MDS
251to disable it. If the system administrator does a pnfsdskill(8) and it fails
252with ENXIO (Device not configured) that normally means the DS was already
253disabled via #1 or #2. Since doing this is harmless, once a system
254administrator knows that there is a problem with a mirrored DS, doing the
255command is recommended.
256.sp
257Once a system administrator knows that a mirrored DS has malfunctioned
258or has been network partitioned, they should do the following as root/su
259on the MDS:
260.Bd -literal -offset indent
261# pnfsdskill <mounted-on-path-of-DS>
262# umount -N <mounted-on-path-of-DS>
263.Ed
264.sp
265Note that the <mounted-on-path-of-DS> must be the exact mounted-on path
266string used when the DS was mounted on the MDS.
267.Pp
268Once the mirrored DS has been disabled, the pNFS service should continue to
269function, but file updates will only happen on the DS(s)
270that have not been disabled. Assuming two way mirroring, that implies
271the one DS of the pair stored in the
272.Dq pnfsd.dsfile
273extended attribute for the file on the MDS, for files stored on the disabled DS.
274.Pp
275The next step is to clear the IP address in the
276.Dq pnfsd.dsfile
277extended attribute on all files on the MDS for the failed DS.
278This is done so that, when the disabled DS is repaired and brought back online,
279the data files on this DS will not be used, since they may be out of date.
280The command that clears the IP address is
281.Xr pnfsdsfile 8
282with the
283.Dq -r
284option.
285.Bd -literal -offset
286For example:
287# pnfsdsfile -r nfsv4-data3 yyy.c
288yyy.c:	nfsv4-data2.home.rick	ds0/207508569ff983350c000000ec7c0200e4c57b2e0000000000000000	0.0.0.0	ds0/207508569ff983350c000000ec7c0200e4c57b2e0000000000000000
289.Ed
290.sp
291replaces nfsv4-data3 with an IPv4 address of 0.0.0.0, so that nfsv4-data3
292will not get used.
293.Pp
294Normally this will be called within a
295.Xr find 1
296command for all regular
297files in the exported directory tree and must be done on the MDS.
298When used with
299.Xr find 1 ,
300you will probably also want the
301.Dq -q
302option so that it won't spit out the results for every file.
303If the disabled/repaired DS is nfsv4-data3, the commands done on the MDS
304would be:
305.Bd -literal -offset
306# cd <top-level-exported-dir>
307# find . -type f -exec pnfsdsfile -q -r nfsv4-data3 {} \;
308.Ed
309.sp
310There is a problem with the above command if the file found by
311.Xr find 1
312is renamed or unlinked before the
313.Xr pnfsdsfile 8
314command is done on it.
315This should normally generate an error message.
316A simple unlink is harmless
317but a link/unlink or rename might result in the file not having been processed
318under its new name.
319To check that all files have their IP addresses set to 0.0.0.0 these
320commands can be used (assuming the
321.Xr sh 1
322shell):
323.Bd -literal -offset
324# cd <top-level-exported-dir>
325# find . -type f -exec pnfsdsfile {} \; | sed "/nfsv4-data3/!d"
326.Ed
327.sp
328Any line(s) printed require the
329.Xr pnfsdsfile 8
330with
331.Dq -r
332to be done again.
333Once this is done, the replaced/repaired DS can be brought back online.
334It should have empty ds0,...,dsN directories under the top level exported
335directory for storage of data files just like it did when first set up.
336Mount it on the MDS exactly as you did before disabling it.
337For the nfsv4-data3 example, the command would be:
338.Bd -literal -offset
339# mount -t nfs -o nfsv4,minorversion=2,soft,retrans=2 nfsv4-data3:/ /data3
340.Ed
341.sp
342Then restart the nfsd to re-enable the DS.
343.Bd -literal -offset
344# /etc/rc.d/nfsd restart
345.Ed
346.sp
347Now, new files can be stored on nfsv4-data3,
348but files with the IP address zeroed out on the MDS will not yet use the
349repaired DS (nfsv4-data3).
350The next step is to go through the exported file tree on the MDS and,
351for each of the
352files with an IPv4 address of 0.0.0.0 in its extended attribute, copy the file
353data to the repaired DS and re-enable use of this mirror for it.
354This command for copying the file data for one MDS file is
355.Xr pnfsdscopymr 8
356and it will also normally be used in a
357.Xr find 1 .
358For the example case, the commands on the MDS would be:
359.Bd -literal -offset
360# cd <top-level-exported-dir>
361# find . -type f -exec pnfsdscopymr -r /data3 {} \;
362.Ed
363.sp
364When this completes, the recovery should be complete or at least nearly so.
365As noted above, if a link/unlink or rename occurs on a file name while the
366above
367.Xr find 1
368is in progress, it may not get copied.
369To check for any file(s) not yet copied, the commands are:
370.Bd -literal -offset
371# cd <top-level-exported-dir>
372# find . -type f -exec pnfsdsfile {} \; | sed "/0\.0\.0\.0/!d"
373.Ed
374.sp
375If this command prints out any file name(s), these files must
376have the
377.Xr pnfsdscopymr 8
378command done on them to complete the recovery.
379.Bd -literal -offset
380# pnfsdscopymr -r /data3 <file-path-reported>
381.Ed
382.sp
383If this commmand fails with the error
384.br
385.Dq pnfsdscopymr: Copymr failed for file <path>: Device not configured
386.br
387repeatedly, this may be caused by a Read/Write layout that has not
388been returned.
389The only way to get rid of such a layout is to restart the
390.Xr nfsd 8 .
391.sp
392All of these commands are designed to be
393done while the pNFS service is running and can be re-run safely.
394.Pp
395For a more detailed discussion of the setup and management of a pNFS service
396see:
397.Bd -literal -offset indent
398http://people.freebsd.org/~rmacklem/pnfs-planb-setup.txt
399.Ed
400.sp
401.Sh SEE ALSO
402.Xr nfsv4 4 ,
403.Xr pnfs 4 ,
404.Xr exports 5 ,
405.Xr fstab 5 ,
406.Xr rc.conf 5 ,
407.Xr sysctl.conf 5 ,
408.Xr nfscbd 8 ,
409.Xr nfsd 8 ,
410.Xr nfsuserd 8 ,
411.Xr pnfsdscopymr 8 ,
412.Xr pnfsdsfile 8 ,
413.Xr pnfsdskill 8
414.Sh HISTORY
415The
416.Nm
417service first appeared in
418.Fx 12.0 .
419.Sh BUGS
420Since the MDS cannot be mirrored, it is a single point of failure just
421as a non
422.Tn pNFS
423server is.
424For non-mirrored configurations, all FreeBSD systems used in the service
425are single points of failure.
426