PNFS Block Server Setup Instructions

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See utils/blkmapd/etc/blkmapd.conf and utils/blkmapd/etc/initd/initd.redhat for
See utils/blkmapd/etc/blkmapd.conf and utils/blkmapd/etc/initd/initd.redhat for
more information about its setup.
more information about its setup.
 +
 +
For more instructions on setting up the client, see [[Fedora pNFS Client Setup]].
== Exporting the filesystem ==  
== Exporting the filesystem ==  

Latest revision as of 00:15, 16 March 2012

How to guide to setup the pNFS Block Layout server based on sPNFS

This page describes the setup of the pNFS Block Layout Server. This is based on the Rick McNeal's how to guide. Please note that Fedora 11 was used to setup the server, some of the content you see might be specific to Fedora ( for e.g yum).

Note that this is an early development prototype, and recently has not been actively maintained; thus this is recommended for developers only.

Contents

Building the code



1) Building the kernel source

Obtain the code from Linux pNFS git. pNFS Block Layout server is currently a part of the pNFS git.

    git clone git://linux-nfs.org/~bhalevy/linux-pnfs.git

Use the pnfs-all-latest branch and configure the kernel as follows:

CONFIG_NFSD=m
CONFIG_NFSD_V4=y
CONFIG_PNFSD=y
# CONFIG_PNFSD_LOCAL_EXPORT is not set
CONFIG_PNFSD_BLOCK=y

Note: CONFIG_PNFSD_LOCAL_EXPORT must be disabled for pnfsd-block since it currently takes precedence over it in run-time.

This page doesn't discuss anything about kernel compilation.

2) Building the nfsutils and utils/blkmapd

The nfs-utils-1.2.5-3.fc16.x86_64 Fedora RPM package already includes the blkmapd service

Here the instructions for building the utilities for older distributions:

Obtain the "nfs-utils" source code.

    git clone git://linux-nfs.org/~bhalevy/pnfs-nfs-utils.git

Run the autogen.sh to generate the "configure" file. If you are trying to build the code first time several packages are required. I have either installed or updated the following packages.

A one-liner command to install all prerequisites on Fedora 15:

yum install autoconf automake libtool libtirpc{,-devel} tcp_wrappers{,-devel} libevent{,-devel} \
            libnfsidmap{,-devel} openldap-devel libgssglue{,-devel} krb5-devel libblkid{,-devel} \
            device-mapper-devel libcap{,-devel}

Or run selectively:

yum install autoconf automake
yum install libtool
yum install libtirpc-devel
yum install tcp_wrappers-devel
yum install libevent-devel
yum install libnfsidmap-devel
yum install nfs-utils-lib-devel (deprecated in Fedora 15)
yum install openldap-devel
yum install libgssglue-devel
# Fedora 12 and later require also:
yum install libblkid-devel
yum install device-mapper-devel
# Fedora 13 and later require also:
yum install krb5-devel

blkmapd

The blkmapd daemon should be run on the pnfs client to map the block devices according the pnfs device information. See utils/blkmapd/etc/blkmapd.conf and utils/blkmapd/etc/initd/initd.redhat for more information about its setup.

For more instructions on setting up the client, see Fedora pNFS Client Setup.

Exporting the filesystem

For the block access to work properly the disks must have a signature. Partitioned the disks using "parted". Disks partitioned with "fdisk" doesn't have the signatures.

I have followed the below mentioned steps.

  1. parted /dev/sdb
(parted) mklabel gpt
(parted) mkpart 1 <Provide start and end of the partetions>
(parted) print
Model: VMware Virtual disk (scsi)
Disk /dev/sdb: 53.7GB
Sector size (logical/physical): 512B/512B
Partition Table: gpt
Number  Start   End     Size    File system  Name  Flags
1      17.4kB  53.7GB  53.7GB  ext3         1     msftres

I have tested with ext4 filesystem, create ext4 filesystem with 4K block size.


 # mkfs.ext4 -b 4096 /dev/sdb1 


Setting up the BLOCK storage / SAN

I haven't setup the block storage and metadata server on the same machine. You may setup them on two different machines , but client and metadata sever should see the same disks.

I have used iSCSI to setup the block storage , "scsi-target-utils" is required to setup the iscsi target. One key thing is when adding a LUN to the target , don't add the disk partition (/dev/sdb1), instead add the entire disk(/dev/sdb).

The disk signatures are not visible when if you add the disk partetion to the target.

Export Options

/mnt *(rw,sync,fsid=0,insecure,no_subtree_check,no_root_squash,pnfs)

ctl

The "ctl" daemon should be run on the pnfs server to map the block devices according the pnfs device information.

Obtain the "ctl" source code.

    git clone git://linux-nfs.org/~bhalevy/pnfsd-block-ctl.git

Simply run "make" to build the daemon.

Run the daemon on the server using the following command:

# ctl -u

How to Start the server

I have used the following script to start the server

#/bin/bash 
# UMOUNT /mnt
umount /mnt
#start the service
service tgtd restart
sleep 8
# Create iSCSI target
tgtadm --lld iscsi --op new --mode target --tid 1 -T iqn.1992-05.com.emc:openblock
# Expose LUN as iSCSI target
tgtadm --lld iscsi --mode logicalunit --op new --tid 1 --lun 1 --backing-store /dev/sdb
# Allow acces of all initiator
tgtadm --lld iscsi --mode target --op bind --tid 1 --initiator-address ALL
# show all the details
tgtadm --lld iscsi --op show --mode target
# mount the partetion
mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt
sleep 3
# start the nfs server
service nfs restart
sleep 3
# start the deamon
cd <CTL_SRC>/ctl/
./ctl -u &

Mount from the client

# modprobe blocklayoutdriver 
# mount -t nfs4 -o minorversion=1 SN:/ /mnt/ob

How to verify

 - tcpdump/wireshark  is the best way to see what is happening.
 - The other way is after mounting the export,on the client check /proc/self/mountstats.
 - nfsstat also provides operations counters
 - echo 32767 > /proc/sys/sunrpc/nfs_debug (and nfsd_debug, correspondingly) provides debug printouts in /var/log/messages
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