FedFsNfsServer0.9
From Linux NFS
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Project: fedfs-utils
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Introduction
A junction is a link between two shared file systems. The two shared file systems may not reside on the same server. There may be more than one replica of the linked-to shared file system, stored on several different file servers. Each replica of the linked-to file system is called a location.
Junctions store a list of locations. Each location in the list is represented as an export path paired with a server name or IP address. When a file-access client encounters a junction, the file server (via a referral) provides the stored list of locations to the client, who chooses a location and mounts it.
A file server must convert the information stored in a junction into a list of locations that's in a format which is correct for the protocol clients are using to access the server (say, NFSv4). The server-side process of recognizing a junction and converting its contents is known as junction resolution.
A single junction is useful for linking together two shared file systems. A web of junctions can be used to create a namespace that crosses between multiple file systems on multiple file servers. FedFS uses junctions for just such a purpose.
This article describes how to configure a Linux NFS server to resolve junctions. Once a file server can resolve junctions in its local file systems, it can participate in a FedFS domain.
Prepare mountd to resolve junctions
On Linux, a junction is denoted by a directory with special mode bits and an extended attribute that contains the junction location list. The NFS server must convert the junction's location information into an NFSv4 referral.
When the Linux in-kernel NFS server encounters a junction, it resolves the junction by performing an upcall to mountd. It is mountd that actually reads a junction and converts it to information that the kernel NFS server can put on the wire as an NFSv4 referral.
Pre-packaged install
If you are running Fedora 19, you can install a pre-packaged version of fedfs-utils-0.9. The server-side components are installed with:
# yum install fedfs-utils-server
The rpc.mountd in this distribution is already prepared for junction resolution.
Build fedfs-utils
If your distribution does not provide a pre-packaged version of fedfs-utils-0.9, follow these steps instead.
Unpack the fedfs-utils-0.9 tarball somewhere convenient. For example:
$ cd fedfs-utils-0.9 $ ./configure $ make
Note: If you're building for a 64-bit target, specify the directory in which to install libraries (by default for 64-bit, this is somewhere mountd can't find it). Add "--libdir=/usr/lib64" to the ./configure command line.
There are three pieces that need to be installed first. The plug-in library:
# cd fedfs-utils-0.9/src/plug-ins ; make install
The header describing the library's API:
# cd fedfs-utils-0.9/src/include ; make install
And finally, the "nfsref" command:
# cd fedfs-utils-0.9/src/nfsref ; make install
If you're feeling brave, a single "make install" in the top level directory should take care of all of this, and provide lovely man pages to boot.
Build nfs-utils
Now download and unpack the latest nfs-utils tarball. Build and replace rpc.mountd on your NFS server (The configure options are complicated; I usually copy them from the Fedora nfs-utils RPM spec file).
$ ./configure yada yada $ make $ sudo install utils/mountd/mountd /usr/sbin/rpc.mountd
Then restart the NFS service.
# systemctl restart nfs-server.service
Install the nfsref command
- nfsref program installed (fedfs-utils package install, or built from source)