CITI ASC status
From Linux NFS
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We have set up test machines and begun planning for tests. We have some immediate concerns over the memory footprint imposed by server lock structures. | We have set up test machines and begun planning for tests. We have some immediate concerns over the memory footprint imposed by server lock structures. | ||
==Task 4. Analysis of directory delegations – how well does it work and when, when does it totally not work.== | ==Task 4. Analysis of directory delegations – how well does it work and when, when does it totally not work.== | ||
- | === | + | ===Background=== |
- | + | '''Directory delegations''' promise to extend the usefulness of dentry caching in two ways. First, the client is no longer forced to revalidate the dentry cache after a timeout. Second, while positive caching can be treated as a hint, negative caching without cache invalidation violates open-to-close semantics. | |
+ | Directory delegations allow the client to cache negative results. | ||
- | + | For example, if a client opens a file that does not exist, it issues an OPEN RPC that fails. But a subsequent open of the same file might succeed, if the file is created in the interim. Open-to-close semantics requires that the newly created file be seen by the client, so the earlier negative result can not be cached. Consequently, subsequent opens of the same non-existent file also require OPEN RPC calls being sent to the server. This example is played out repeatedly when the shell searches for executables in PATH or when the linker searches for shared libraries in LD_LIBRARY_PATH. | |
- | + | With directory delegations, the server callback mechanism can guarantee that no entries have been added or modified in a cached directory, which allows consistent negative caching and eliminates repeated checks for non-existent files. | |
+ | ===Status=== | ||
+ | We implemented directory delegations in the Linux NFSv4 client and server. | ||
- | + | Our server implementation follows the file delegations architecture. We extended the lease API in the Linux VFS to support read-only leases on directories and NFS-specific lease-breaking semantics. | |
+ | |||
+ | We implemented a '''/proc''' interface on the server to enable or disable directory delegation at run time. At startup, the client queries the server for directory delegation support. | ||
The server has hooks for a policy layer to control the granting of directory delegations. (No policy is implemented yet.) When and whether to acquire delegations is also a client concern. | The server has hooks for a policy layer to control the granting of directory delegations. (No policy is implemented yet.) When and whether to acquire delegations is also a client concern. | ||
+ | |||
===Testing=== | ===Testing=== | ||
We are testing delegation grant and recall in a test rig with one or two clients. Testing consists mostly of comparing NFS operation-counts when directory delegations is enabled or disabled. | We are testing delegation grant and recall in a test rig with one or two clients. Testing consists mostly of comparing NFS operation-counts when directory delegations is enabled or disabled. |
Revision as of 21:37, 17 October 2006
University of Michigan/CITI NFSv4 ASC alliance
Status of October 2006
Task 1. Demonstration of pNFS with multiple back end methods (PVFS and File) including layout recall — LANL will replicate this demonstration at LANL working with CITI remotely.
Development
We updated the Linux pNFS client and server to the 2.6.17 kernel level, and are preparing to rebase again for 2.6.19.
We updated the pNFS code base to draft-ietf-nfsv4-minorversion1-05. Testing identified multiple bugs, which we fixed.
To make a clean separation of the common NFS v2/3/4/4.1 code from code specific to pNFS, we rewrote the Linux pNFS client to use its own set of RPC operations.
Four client layout modules are in development.
- File layout driver (CITI, Network Appliance, and IBM Almaden).
- PVFS2 layout driver (CITI).
- Object layout driver (Panasas).
- Block layout driver (CITI under contract with EMC).
To accommodate the requirements of the multiple layout drivers, we expanded the layout operation policy interfaces between the layout driver and generic pNFS client.
We are designing and coding a pNFS client layout cache to replace the current implementation, which supports only a single layout per inode.
We improved the interface to the underlying file system on the Linux pNFS server. The new interface is being used by the Panasas object layout server and the IBM GPFS server.
We are coding the pNFS layout management service and file system interfaces on the Linux pNFS server to do a better job of bookkeeping so that we can extend the layout recall implementation, which is limited to a single layout.
We've continued to developed the pVFS2 layout and pVFS2 pNFS server.
* Dean, can you throw some text here?
We developed prototype implementations of pNFS operations:
- OP_GETDEVICELIST,
- OP_GETDEVICEINFO,
- OP_LAYOUTGET,
- OP_LAYOUTCOMMIT,
- OP_LAYOUTRETURN and
- OP_CB_LAYOUTRECALL
We continue to test the ability of our prototype to send direct I/O data to data servers.
Milestones
At the September 2006 NFSv4 Bake-a-thon, hosted by CITI, we continued to test the ability of CITI's Linux pNFS client to operate with multiple layouts, and the ability of CITI's Linux pNFS server to export pNFS capable underlying file systems.
We demonstrated the Linux pNFS client support for multiple layouts by copying files between multiple pNFS back ends.
The following pNFS implementations were tested.
File Layout
- Clients: Linux, Solaris
- Servers: Network Appliance, Linux IBM GPFS, DESY dCache, Solaris
Object layout
- Clients: Linux
- Servers: Linux, Panasas
Block layout
- Clients: Linux
- Server: EMC
Activities
Our current Linux pNFS implementation uses a single whole file layout. We are extending the layout cache on the client and layout management on the server to support multiple layouts and small byte ranges.
In cooperation with EMC, we continue to develop a block layout driver module for the generic pNFS client.
We continue to measure I/O performance.
We joined the Ultralight project and are testing pNFS I/O using pNFS clients on 10 GbE against pNFS clusters on 1 GbE. The Linux pNFS client included in the Ultralight kernel and distributed to Ultralight sites, providing opportunities for future long-haul WAN testing.
Task 2. Migration of client from one mount/metadata server to another to be demonstrated. This demonstration may be replicated at LANL depending on success of this work.
When a file system moves, the old server notifies clients with NFS4ERR_MOVED. Clients then reclaim state held on the old server by engaging in reboot recovery with the new server. For cluster file systems, server-to-server state transfer lets clients avoid the reclaim.
We redesigned state bookkeeping to ensure that state created on NFSv4 servers exporting the same cluster file system will not collide.
As presently implemented, clients save the old server's state in stable storage and pass the state information to the new server as part of the recovery operation. We are rewriting that interface to also support server-to-server state transfer.
* Please check that sentence
It remains to inform clients that state established with the old server remains valid on the new server. The IETF NFSv4 working group is considering solutions, e.g., augmented FS_LOCATIONS information or a new error code NFS4ERR_MOVED_DATA_AND_STATE.
Task 3. Analysis of caching and lock coherency, demonstration of caching and lock performance with scaling, under various levels of conflict, using byte range locks (looking at lock splitting issues etc.).
We have set up test machines and begun planning for tests. We have some immediate concerns over the memory footprint imposed by server lock structures.
Task 4. Analysis of directory delegations – how well does it work and when, when does it totally not work.
Background
Directory delegations promise to extend the usefulness of dentry caching in two ways. First, the client is no longer forced to revalidate the dentry cache after a timeout. Second, while positive caching can be treated as a hint, negative caching without cache invalidation violates open-to-close semantics. Directory delegations allow the client to cache negative results.
For example, if a client opens a file that does not exist, it issues an OPEN RPC that fails. But a subsequent open of the same file might succeed, if the file is created in the interim. Open-to-close semantics requires that the newly created file be seen by the client, so the earlier negative result can not be cached. Consequently, subsequent opens of the same non-existent file also require OPEN RPC calls being sent to the server. This example is played out repeatedly when the shell searches for executables in PATH or when the linker searches for shared libraries in LD_LIBRARY_PATH.
With directory delegations, the server callback mechanism can guarantee that no entries have been added or modified in a cached directory, which allows consistent negative caching and eliminates repeated checks for non-existent files.
Status
We implemented directory delegations in the Linux NFSv4 client and server.
Our server implementation follows the file delegations architecture. We extended the lease API in the Linux VFS to support read-only leases on directories and NFS-specific lease-breaking semantics.
We implemented a /proc interface on the server to enable or disable directory delegation at run time. At startup, the client queries the server for directory delegation support.
The server has hooks for a policy layer to control the granting of directory delegations. (No policy is implemented yet.) When and whether to acquire delegations is also a client concern.
Testing
We are testing delegation grant and recall in a test rig with one or two clients. Testing consists mostly of comparing NFS operation-counts when directory delegations is enabled or disabled.
Tests range from simple UNIX utilities — ls, find, touch — to hosting a CVS repository or compiling with shared libraries and header files on NFS servers. Tests will become more specific.
We have extended PyNFS to support directory delegations. So far, the support is basic and the tests are trivial. Tests will become more specific.
We are designing mechanisms that allow simulation experiments to compare delegation policies on NFSv4 network traces.
Task 5. How do you specify/measure NFS Server load.
We have no progress to report on this task.