On 25.11.2014 16:03, Chuck Lever wrote: > > On Nov 25, 2014, at 9:26 AM, poma <pomidorabelisima@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> On 25.11.2014 14:29, Josh Boyer wrote: >>> On Tue, Nov 25, 2014 at 02:12:08PM +0100, Paul Bolle wrote: >>>> On Tue, 2014-11-25 at 13:40 +0100, poma wrote: >>>>> On 25.11.2014 11:14, Ian Chapman wrote: >>>>>> Hi, >>>>>> >>>>>> Is anyone successfully running NFS over RDMA on Fedora 20+? >>>>>> >>>>>> I've edited /etc/sysconfig/nfs and set the the following config paramter. >>>>>> >>>>>> RDMA_PORT=20049 >>>>>> >>>>>> Upon restarting the nfs server I get the following: >>>>>> >>>>>> modprobe: FATAL: Module svcrdma not found >>>>>> /usr/libexec/nfs-utils/scripts/nfs-server.postconfig: line 12: echo: >>>>>> write error: Protocol not supported >>>>>> >>>>>> So it looks like the kernel module svcrdma is missing and the last >>>>>> kernel to have it was 3.11.10-301.fc20. The postconfig script belongs to >>>>>> nfs-utils. >>>>>> >>>>>> Is svcrdma intentionally not built in the current kernels or has it been >>>>>> replaced by something else? >>>>>> >>>>> >>>>> [snip unedited copy from someone's terminal] >>>> >>>> 0) In mainline kernel v3.15 the config option SUNRPC_XPRT_RDMA was split >>>> in two options: SUNRPC_XPRT_RDMA_CLIENT and SUNRPC_XPRT_RDMA_SERVER. See >>>> commit 2e8c12e1b765 ("xprtrdma: add separate Kconfig options for >>>> NFSoRDMA client and server support"). >>>> >>>> 1) Fedora 20 first shipped v3.15 in last July (kernel-3.15.3-200.fc20). >>>> Looking at the git history of the Fedora kernel package I found commit >>>> commit fd469c7db4e6 ("Linux v3.15.2"). It dropped >>>> CONFIG_SUNRPC_XPRT_RDMA=m from the config files (as it was useless). It >>>> set CONFIG_SUNRPC_XPRT_RDMA_CLIENT to 'm' but did not set >>>> CONFIG_SUNRPC_XPRT_RDMA_SERVER. The commit offers no explanation of this >>>> choice. Perhaps it was discusses somewhere else. >>>> >>>> 2) A similar commit for Rawhide was 700baa35a69e ("Linux >>>> v3.14-12042-g69cd9eba3886"), but it doesn't comment on this choice >>>> either. >>>> >>>> 3) Perhaps Justin or Josh, authors of those commits, might recall why >>>> only CONFIG_SUNRPC_XPRT_RDMA_CLIENT was set. >>> >>> At the time, server support for NFSoRDMA wasn't in the greatest shape >>> and we disabled it at the request of the NFS developers. > > The NFS/RDMA server crashed often and there was no identified > upstream resource to help with it, so it was surgically > disabled rather than fixed. > >>> I believe this >>> also matches what wound up in RHEL7. > >>> The NFS developers haven't asked us to turn it back on, so it has stayed >>> off since. >>> >>> josh >>> >> >> Chuck, what is the current recommendation for 'CONFIG_SUNRPC_XPRT_RDMA_SERVER’? > > The server in 3.17 and later kernels no longer crashes > regularly. > > As to whether you should re-enable it, here’s full > disclosure: > > As I understand it the NFS/RDMA server-side transport > effort was defunded after a prototype was merged. It was > hoped that a production-quality implementation would be > funded but it never was. > > The code as it stands needs some work, but is operational. > I use it for NFS/RDMA client work every day, so it is > getting some exercise. > > Distributions can enable this if they have the resources > (ie, test and support engineers and RDMA adapters) to test > and support customer issues. I assume RH/Fedora do, as > they support client side NFS/RDMA already. But perhaps > consider it as “tech preview” for your enterprise > kernels. > > Or they may choose to wait until upstream has changed the > default setting of CONFIG_SUNRPC_XPRT_RDMA_SERVER. > > Note that community support for NFS/RDMA server-side is > still best-effort only. We don’t have any designated > specialists, just a few folks who need the server to work > for other reasons. We are actively looking for interested > parties. > > Upstream bugs can be filed here: > > https://bugzilla.linux-nfs.org > > HTH > > -- > Chuck Lever > chuck[dot]lever[at]oracle[dot]com > > > Thanks man. poma -- 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