| |
| The NFS client |
| ============== |
| |
| The NFS version 2 protocol was first documented in RFC1094 (March 1989). |
| Since then two more major releases of NFS have been published, with NFSv3 |
| being documented in RFC1813 (June 1995), and NFSv4 in RFC3530 (April |
| 2003). |
| |
| The Linux NFS client currently supports all the above published versions, |
| and work is in progress on adding support for minor version 1 of the NFSv4 |
| protocol. |
| |
| The purpose of this document is to provide information on some of the |
| upcall interfaces that are used in order to provide the NFS client with |
| some of the information that it requires in order to fully comply with |
| the NFS spec. |
| |
| The DNS resolver |
| ================ |
| |
| NFSv4 allows for one server to refer the NFS client to data that has been |
| migrated onto another server by means of the special "fs_locations" |
| attribute. See |
| http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3530#section-6 |
| and |
| http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-nfsv4-referrals-00 |
| |
| The fs_locations information can take the form of either an ip address and |
| a path, or a DNS hostname and a path. The latter requires the NFS client to |
| do a DNS lookup in order to mount the new volume, and hence the need for an |
| upcall to allow userland to provide this service. |
| |
| Assuming that the user has the 'rpc_pipefs' filesystem mounted in the usual |
| /var/lib/nfs/rpc_pipefs, the upcall consists of the following steps: |
| |
| (1) The process checks the dns_resolve cache to see if it contains a |
| valid entry. If so, it returns that entry and exits. |
| |
| (2) If no valid entry exists, the helper script '/sbin/nfs_cache_getent' |
| (may be changed using the 'nfs.cache_getent' kernel boot parameter) |
| is run, with two arguments: |
| - the cache name, "dns_resolve" |
| - the hostname to resolve |
| |
| (3) After looking up the corresponding ip address, the helper script |
| writes the result into the rpc_pipefs pseudo-file |
| '/var/lib/nfs/rpc_pipefs/cache/dns_resolve/channel' |
| in the following (text) format: |
| |
| "<ip address> <hostname> <ttl>\n" |
| |
| Where <ip address> is in the usual IPv4 (123.456.78.90) or IPv6 |
| (ffee:ddcc:bbaa:9988:7766:5544:3322:1100, ffee::1100, ...) format. |
| <hostname> is identical to the second argument of the helper |
| script, and <ttl> is the 'time to live' of this cache entry (in |
| units of seconds). |
| |
| Note: If <ip address> is invalid, say the string "0", then a negative |
| entry is created, which will cause the kernel to treat the hostname |
| as having no valid DNS translation. |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| A basic sample /sbin/nfs_cache_getent |
| ===================================== |
| |
| #!/bin/bash |
| # |
| ttl=600 |
| # |
| cut=/usr/bin/cut |
| getent=/usr/bin/getent |
| rpc_pipefs=/var/lib/nfs/rpc_pipefs |
| # |
| die() |
| { |
| echo "Usage: $0 cache_name entry_name" |
| exit 1 |
| } |
| |
| [ $# -lt 2 ] && die |
| cachename="$1" |
| cache_path=${rpc_pipefs}/cache/${cachename}/channel |
| |
| case "${cachename}" in |
| dns_resolve) |
| name="$2" |
| result="$(${getent} hosts ${name} | ${cut} -f1 -d\ )" |
| [ -z "${result}" ] && result="0" |
| ;; |
| *) |
| die |
| ;; |
| esac |
| echo "${result} ${name} ${ttl}" >${cache_path} |
| |