On Fri, 2011-11-04 at 11:20 -0500, Nico Williams wrote: > On Fri, Nov 4, 2011 at 10:55 AM, Adamson, Andy > <William.Adamson@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Nov 4, 2011, at 11:13 AM, Nico Williams wrote: > >> Ideally we could store in each RPCSEC_GSS context (not GSS context) > >> enough state on the client side to recover quickly when the server > >> reboots. > > > > You mean not to use the user Kerberos credential to re-establish the GSS context with the server? > > Kerberos has tickets. Other GSS mechanisms don't. The GSS-API > completely abstracts this, so there's no way to extract a service > ticket and store it alongside the context (RPCSEC_GSS, in this case) > where you might need it in the future. Storing all of a GSS-API > credential (think of a whole ccache) in kernel memory is not an option > either (ccaches have unbounded size). > > Moreover, if we do this in a light-weight enough fashion we might be > able to handle all of the recovery path in kernel-mode, with no > dependence on upcalls. But if we didn't by somehow extracting the > service ticket and storing it in the RPCSEC_GSS context we'd probably > still need to upcall to make use of it. > > >> How would we do this? Suppose the server gives the client a > >> "ticket", and a key much like the Kerberos ticket session key is > >> agreed upon or sent by the server -- that could be stored in the > >> RPCSEC_GSS context and could be used to recover it quickly for > >> recovery from server reboot. I'm eliding a lot of details here, but I > >> believe this is fundamentally workable. > > > > So re-establish the RPCSEC_GSS session lost at the server on server reboot by storing enough additional info on the client? > > Yes. And not just server reboot. The server is free to lose > RPCSEC_GSS contexts any time it wants to. > > Basically, we need a fast re-authentication facility that is easy to > code entirely in kernel-mode. Thinking of it this way I would not > reuse any Kerberos tech for this. The server would return a ticket in > RPCSEC_GSS context establishment, but the ticket would consist of > {secret key index, encrypted octet string} and the server and client > would both compute a "session key" (for proving ticket possession) > with GSS_Pseudo_random() (this way we can make this work even when the > GSS mech only does MICs and not wrap tokens). To re-authenticate the > client would send the ticket and an authenticator just like in > Kerberos, but simpler. I agree this would be a very nice feature for fast reconnects in NFSv4, but it looks more and more out of topic. Time to move this sub-thread to the NFSv4 WG ? Simo. -- Simo Sorce * Red Hat, Inc * New York -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-nfs" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html