FedFsNfsServer0.8
From Linux NFS
Chucklever (Talk | contribs) (Simplify and clean up introduction) |
Chucklever (Talk | contribs) (→Introduction) |
||
Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
== Introduction == | == Introduction == | ||
- | A [[FedFsGlossary#Junction|junction]] is a link between two shared file systems | + | A [[FedFsGlossary#Junction|junction]] is a link between two shared file systems. Junctions tie together disparate filesystems to create a [[FedFsGlossary#FedFs_Domain|FedFS domain]]. |
A junction stores a list of [[FedFsGlossary#Location|locations]]. When a client attempts to access a junction, a file server must convert this list into a [[FedFsGlossary#Referral|referral]]. This is known as [[FedFsGlossary#Junction_Resolution|junction resolution]]. | A junction stores a list of [[FedFsGlossary#Location|locations]]. When a client attempts to access a junction, a file server must convert this list into a [[FedFsGlossary#Referral|referral]]. This is known as [[FedFsGlossary#Junction_Resolution|junction resolution]]. |
Latest revision as of 16:30, 27 November 2012
Project: fedfs-utils
[ Project Home | News | Downloads | Docs | Mailing Lists | Source Control | Issues ]
Introduction
A junction is a link between two shared file systems. Junctions tie together disparate filesystems to create a FedFS domain.
A junction stores a list of locations. When a client attempts to access a junction, a file server must convert this list into a referral. This is known as junction resolution.
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 a junction's location information into an NFSv4 referral which can be sent to NFS clients.
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.
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.
Build nfs-utils
On Fedora 18, rpc.mountd already has working junction resolution support. On other distributions, you'll need to build a version of rpc.mountd with working junction resolution support.
First, you'll need to install the nfs-plugin.h header.
The "make install" step should install the header in /usr/include/nfs-plugin.h . If not, you can find it in fedfs-utils-0.8/src/include/nfs-plugin.h and install it by hand.
Now download and unpack the latest nfs-utils tarball on the same system where you built fedfs-utils. Build nfs-utils, and replace rpc.mountd on your NFS server. The configure options are complicated; I usually copy them from the latest nfs-utils RPM spec file from my distribution.
$ ./configure yada yada $ make $ sudo install utils/mountd/mountd /usr/sbin/rpc.mountd
Then restart the NFS service.
# systemctl restart nfs-server.service