On Tue, Mar 22 2016, Jeff Layton wrote: > On Mon, 21 Mar 2016 17:56:38 -0300 > Christian Robottom Reis <kiko-HInyCGIudOg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> On Mon, Mar 21, 2016 at 02:55:00PM -0300, Christian Robottom Reis wrote: >> > > Alternately, there is the /proc/fs/nfsd/unlock_ip interface. Supposedly >> > > you can echo an address into there and it'll forcibly drop all of the >> > > locks that that that client holds. I've not used that so YMMV there. >> > >> > Oh! That's a very interesting, and I now see it documented here: >> > >> > http://people.redhat.com/rpeterso/Patches/NFS/NLM/004.txt >> >> On second look, I don't think that interface is meant to take a client >> IP, but rather a server IP: >> >> "They are intended to allow admin or user mode script to release NLM >> locks based on either a path name or a server in-bound ip address[...]" >> >> That's why echoing the client IP makes no difference. >> >> I'm surprised -- so far I've found no facility for lock management >> server-side other than restarting the server. > > Ahh that's exactly right -- my bad. I had forgotten that the idea there > was to use that for clustering. > > And you're also correct that there is currently no facility for > administratively revoking locks. That's something that would be a nice > to have, if someone wanted to propose a sane interface and mechanism > for it. I was all set to give you an answer until I saw that word "sane"... nearly scared me off, but I chose to persist. You know this, but let me remind you and inform Christian. When an NFS client ("bob") asks the NFS server ("jane") to lock a file (the first time), the kernel says to statd "Hey, Bob wants a lock. Can you keep and eye on him and let me know when he reboots - when he does I want to discard his locks". So statd on Jane talks to statd on Bob saying "Hey Bob, tell me if you ever reboot - OK"? Bob takes note of this request by writing "Jane" in /var/lib/nfs/sm. When Bob reboots, sm-notify sees "Jane" in /var/lib/nfs/sm and sends a message to statd on Jane "Hey Jane, Bob just rebooted. You're welcome". statd on Jane then tells the kernel "Bob rebooted" and the kernel drops all those locks. And there, in that last step, we see the key. It is already possible to tell the kernel "drop all the locks held by Bob", you just have to say "Hey, I'm statd - Bob rebooted". Or maybe we could stay to statd "Hi Jane, this is Bob, I just rebooted" - even though we aren't really Bob. (Or we could just reboot Bob and let it do the talking). I'd have to hunt through the statd code to figure out what is possible and what is best. It can't be too hard though. Christian: If the problem client actually comes back up (instead of staying down) do the locks get drops as they should? NeilBrown
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