Re: NFSv4 referrals - custom (non-2049) port numbers in fs_locations?

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On 10 Nov 2023, at 2:54, Martin Wege wrote:

> On Wed, Nov 1, 2023 at 3:42 PM Benjamin Coddington <bcodding@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>
>> On 1 Nov 2023, at 5:06, Martin Wege wrote:
>>
>>> Good morning!
>>>
>>> We have questions about NFSv4 referrals:
>>> 1. Is there a way to test them in Debian Linux?
>>>
>>> 2. How does a fs_locations attribute look like when a nonstandard port
>>> like 6666 is used?
>>> RFC5661 says this:
>>>
>>> * http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5661#section-11.9
>>> * 11.9. The Attribute fs_locations
>>> * An entry in the server array is a UTF-8 string and represents one of a
>>> * traditional DNS host name, IPv4 address, IPv6 address, or a zero-length
>>> * string.  An IPv4 or IPv6 address is represented as a universal address
>>> * (see Section 3.3.9 and [15]), minus the netid, and either with or without
>>> * the trailing ".p1.p2" suffix that represents the port number.  If the
>>> * suffix is omitted, then the default port, 2049, SHOULD be assumed.  A
>>> * zero-length string SHOULD be used to indicate the current address being
>>> * used for the RPC call.
>>>
>>> Does anyone have an example of how the content of fs_locations should
>>> look like with a custom port number?
>>
>> If you keep following the references, you end up with the example in
>> rfc5665, which gives an example for IPv4:
>>
>> https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc5665#section-5.2.3.3
>
> So just <address>.<upper-byte-of-port-number>.<lower-byte-of-port-number>?
>
> How can I test that with the refer= option in /etc/exports? nfsref
> does not seem to have a ports option...

Just test it!

I thought the nfsref program actually populates the "trusted.junction.nfs"
xattr, which is part of the "fedfs" project's metadata to link filesystems
together.  I don't think that's what you want here.

Chuck - am I right to say that the nfsref program does not populate
nfsd4_fs_locations on knfsd?

Ben




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