FedFsInstallationGuide0.9
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- | === | + | === Introduction === |
- | There are three roles a host can play in a FedFS domain. A host can play one or more of these roles. | + | The purpose of fedfs-utils is to manage a network file namespace (a FedFS domain) that consists of multiple exports on one or more file servers. There are three roles a host can play in a FedFS domain. A host can play one or more of these roles. |
; File-access client | ; File-access client | ||
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: An NSDB node stores location information about data on file-access servers. LDAP is used to access and manage this information. | : An NSDB node stores location information about data on file-access servers. LDAP is used to access and manage this information. | ||
- | + | A DNS SRV record refers file-access clients to the top-most directory in a FedFS domain. | |
- | + | An administrative entity that has write access to the LDAP server acting as the NSDB that can create, modify and delete the entries. | |
=== Road map for setting up a simple FedFS domain === | === Road map for setting up a simple FedFS domain === |
Revision as of 23:26, 4 October 2012
Contents |
Project: fedfs-utils
[ Project Home | News | Downloads | Docs | Mailing Lists | Source Control | Issues ]
Introduction
The purpose of fedfs-utils is to manage a network file namespace (a FedFS domain) that consists of multiple exports on one or more file servers. There are three roles a host can play in a FedFS domain. A host can play one or more of these roles.
- File-access client
- This is a network file system client that communicates with fileservers using a standard file-access protocol (such as NFS).
- File-access server
- This is a server that stores data or refers file-access clients to other file-access servers
- Namespace Database (NSDB)
- An NSDB node stores location information about data on file-access servers. LDAP is used to access and manage this information.
A DNS SRV record refers file-access clients to the top-most directory in a FedFS domain.
An administrative entity that has write access to the LDAP server acting as the NSDB that can create, modify and delete the entries.
Road map for setting up a simple FedFS domain
What you need for a minimal FedFS file-access server
- Linux NFS server that supports NFSv4 or later
- nfsref program installed
- libnfsjunct.so installed
- rpc.mountd updated with junction support
What you need to define a FedFS domain
- Define a domain root directory on a FedFS-enabled NFS server, then export it
- Define a DNS SRV record that points to that export
- Create NFS referrals in the root directory to other NFS servers that participate in this domain
What you need for a minimal FedFS file-access client
- Linux NFS client that supports NFSv4 or later
- Automounter installed
- fedfs-nfs4-map program installed
- Kernel DNS resolver upcall working
Road map for setting up a complete FedFS domain
All the items in the "minimal FedFS domain set up" above, and:
What you need for a minimal FedFS NSDB
- An installed and configured LDAP server
- Backing database set up for the DIT that hosts FedFS entries
- The FedFS schema installed on the server
- Administrative access to the DIT that hosts FedFS entries
What you need to allow file servers to access the NSDB
- Install nsdbparams program on file servers that participate in your FedFS domain
What you need to administer junctions and NSDB connection parameters remotely
- Install rpc.fedfsd program (this is optional)