Re: nfs client: Now you see it, now you don't (aka spurious ESTALE errors)

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On Thu, 25 Jul 2013 17:05:26 +0000
Larry Keegan <lk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> On Thu, 25 Jul 2013 10:11:43 -0400
> Jeff Layton <jlayton@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > On Thu, 25 Jul 2013 13:45:15 +0000
> > Larry Keegan <lk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > 
> > > Dear Chaps,
> > > 
> > > I am experiencing some inexplicable NFS behaviour which I would
> > > like to run past you.
> > > 
> > > I have a linux NFS server running kernel 3.10.2 and some clients
> > > running the same. The server is actually a pair of identical
> > > machines serving up a small number of ext4 filesystems atop drbd.
> > > They don't do much apart from serve home directories and deliver
> > > mail into them. These have worked just fine for aeons.
> > > 
> > > The problem I am seeing is that for the past month or so, on and
> > > off, one NFS client starts reporting stale NFS file handles on some
> > > part of the directory tree exported by the NFS server. During the
> > > outage the other parts of the same export remain unaffected. Then,
> > > some ten minutes to an hour later they're back to normal. Access to
> > > the affected sub-directories remains possible from the server (both
> > > directly and via nfs) and from other clients. There do not appear
> > > to be any errors on the underlying ext4 filesystems.
> > > 
> > > Each NFS client seems to get the heebie-jeebies over some directory
> > > or other pretty much independently. The problem affects all of the
> > > filesystems exported by the NFS server, but clearly I notice it
> > > first in home directories, and in particular in my dot
> > > subdirectories for things like my mail client and browser. I'd say
> > > something's up the spout about 20% of the time.
> > > 
> > > The server and clients are using nfs4, although for a while I tried
> > > nfs3 without any appreciable difference. I do not have
> > > CONFIG_FSCACHE set.
> > > 
> > > I wonder if anyone could tell me if they have ever come across this
> > > before, or what debugging settings might help me diagnose the
> > > problem?
> > > 
> > > Yours,
> > > 
> > > Larry
> > > --
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> > 
> > 
> > Were these machines running older kernels before this started
> > happening? What kernel did you upgrade from if so?
> > 
> 
> Dear Jeff,
> 
> The full story is this:
> 
> I had a pair of boxes running kernel 3.4.3 with the aforementioned drbd
> pacemaker malarkey and some clients running the same.
> 
> Then I upgraded the machines by moving from plain old dos partitions to
> gpt. This necessitated a complete reload of everything, but there were
> no software changes. I can be sure that nothing else was changed
> because I build my entire operating system in one ginormous makefile.
> 
> Rapidly afterwards I switched the motherboards for ones with more PCI
> slots. There were no software changes except those relating to MAC
> addresses.
> 
> Next I moved from 100Mbit to gigabit hubs. Then the problems started.
> 
> The symptoms were much as I've described but I didn't see them that
> way. Instead I assumed the entire filesystem had gone to pot and tried
> to unmount it from the client. Fatal mistake. umount hung. I was left
> with an entry in /proc/mounts showing the affected mountpoints as
> "/home/larry\040(deleted)" for example. It was impossible to get rid of
> this and I had to reboot the box. Unfortunately the problem
> snowballed and affected all my NFS clients and the file servers, so
> they had to be bounced too.
> 
> Anyway, to cut a long story short, this problem seemed to me to be a
> file server problem so I replaced network cards, swapped hubs,
> checked filesystems, you name it, but I never experienced any actual
> network connectivity problems, only NFS problems. As I had kernel 3.4.4
> upgrade scheduled I upgraded all the hosts. No change.
> 
> Then I upgraded everything to kernel 3.4.51. No change.
> 
> Then I tried mounting using NFS version 3. It could be argued the
> frequency of gyp reduced, but the substance remained.
> 
> Then I bit the bullet and tried kernel 3.10. No change. I noticed that
> NFS_V4_1 was on so I turned it off and re-tested. No change. Then
> I tried 3.10.1 and 3.10.2. No change.
> 
> I've played with the kernel options to remove FSCACHE, not that I was
> using it, and that's about it.
> 
> Are there any (client or server) kernel options which I should know
> about?
> 
> > What might be helpful is to do some network captures when the problem
> > occurs. What we want to know is whether the ESTALE errors are coming
> > from the server, or if the client is generating them. That'll narrow
> > down where we need to look for problems.
> 
> As it was giving me gyp during typing I tried to capture some NFS
> traffic. Unfortunately claws-mail started a mail box check in the
> middle of this and the problem disappeared! Normally it's claws which
> starts this. It'll come along again soon enough and I'll send a trace.
> 
> Thank you for your help.
> 
> Yours,
> 
> Larry.

Ok, we had a number of changes to how ESTALE errors are handled over
the last few releases. When you mentioned 3.10, I had assumed that you
might be hitting a regression in one of those, but those went in well
after the 3.4 series.

Captures are probably your best bet. My suspicion is that the server is
returning these ESTALE errors occasionally, but it would be best to
have you confirm that. They may also help make sense of why it's
occurring...

-- 
Jeff Layton <jlayton@xxxxxxxxxx>
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