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We've supported reexport for a while but documentation is limited. This is mainly a simplified version of the text I wrote for the linux-nfs wiki at https://wiki.linux-nfs.org/wiki/index.php/NFS_re-export. Signed-off-by: J. Bruce Fields <bfields@redhat.com>
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4.4 KiB
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114 lines
4.4 KiB
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Reexporting NFS filesystems
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===========================
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Overview
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--------
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It is possible to reexport an NFS filesystem over NFS. However, this
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feature comes with a number of limitations. Before trying it, we
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recommend some careful research to determine whether it will work for
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your purposes.
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A discussion of current known limitations follows.
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"fsid=" required, crossmnt broken
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---------------------------------
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We require the "fsid=" export option on any reexport of an NFS
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filesystem. You can use "uuidgen -r" to generate a unique argument.
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The "crossmnt" export does not propagate "fsid=", so it will not allow
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traversing into further nfs filesystems; if you wish to export nfs
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filesystems mounted under the exported filesystem, you'll need to export
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them explicitly, assigning each its own unique "fsid= option.
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Reboot recovery
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---------------
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The NFS protocol's normal reboot recovery mechanisms don't work for the
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case when the reexport server reboots. Clients will lose any locks
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they held before the reboot, and further IO will result in errors.
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Closing and reopening files should clear the errors.
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Filehandle limits
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-----------------
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If the original server uses an X byte filehandle for a given object, the
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reexport server's filehandle for the reexported object will be X+22
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bytes, rounded up to the nearest multiple of four bytes.
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The result must fit into the RFC-mandated filehandle size limits:
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+-------+-----------+
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| NFSv2 | 32 bytes |
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+-------+-----------+
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| NFSv3 | 64 bytes |
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+-------+-----------+
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| NFSv4 | 128 bytes |
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+-------+-----------+
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So, for example, you will only be able to reexport a filesystem over
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NFSv2 if the original server gives you filehandles that fit in 10
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bytes--which is unlikely.
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In general there's no way to know the maximum filehandle size given out
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by an NFS server without asking the server vendor.
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But the following table gives a few examples. The first column is the
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typical length of the filehandle from a Linux server exporting the given
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filesystem, the second is the length after that nfs export is reexported
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by another Linux host:
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+--------+-------------------+----------------+
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| | filehandle length | after reexport |
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+========+===================+================+
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| ext4: | 28 bytes | 52 bytes |
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+--------+-------------------+----------------+
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| xfs: | 32 bytes | 56 bytes |
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+--------+-------------------+----------------+
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| btrfs: | 40 bytes | 64 bytes |
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+--------+-------------------+----------------+
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All will therefore fit in an NFSv3 or NFSv4 filehandle after reexport,
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but none are reexportable over NFSv2.
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Linux server filehandles are a bit more complicated than this, though;
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for example:
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- The (non-default) "subtreecheck" export option generally
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requires another 4 to 8 bytes in the filehandle.
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- If you export a subdirectory of a filesystem (instead of
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exporting the filesystem root), that also usually adds 4 to 8
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bytes.
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- If you export over NFSv2, knfsd usually uses a shorter
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filesystem identifier that saves 8 bytes.
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- The root directory of an export uses a filehandle that is
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shorter.
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As you can see, the 128-byte NFSv4 filehandle is large enough that
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you're unlikely to have trouble using NFSv4 to reexport any filesystem
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exported from a Linux server. In general, if the original server is
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something that also supports NFSv3, you're *probably* OK. Re-exporting
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over NFSv3 may be dicier, and reexporting over NFSv2 will probably
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never work.
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For more details of Linux filehandle structure, the best reference is
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the source code and comments; see in particular:
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- include/linux/exportfs.h:enum fid_type
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- include/uapi/linux/nfsd/nfsfh.h:struct nfs_fhbase_new
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- fs/nfsd/nfsfh.c:set_version_and_fsid_type
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- fs/nfs/export.c:nfs_encode_fh
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Open DENY bits ignored
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----------------------
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NFS since NFSv4 supports ALLOW and DENY bits taken from Windows, which
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allow you, for example, to open a file in a mode which forbids other
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read opens or write opens. The Linux client doesn't use them, and the
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server's support has always been incomplete: they are enforced only
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against other NFS users, not against processes accessing the exported
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filesystem locally. A reexport server will also not pass them along to
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the original server, so they will not be enforced between clients of
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different reexport servers.
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