On Thu, Nov 17, 2016 at 10:34:20PM +0100, Ulrich Gemkow wrote: > Hello Bruce, > > thanks... > > On Thursday 17 November 2016, J. Bruce Fields wrote: > > On Thu, Nov 17, 2016 at 09:32:47PM +0100, Ulrich Gemkow wrote: > > > Hello, > > > > > > we use Linux NFS clients with a Linux NFS server in an configuration > > > where NFS mounts are done on client boot _and_ on user login in a > > > session; umounts are done on users logout from the session. > > > > > > We see occasionally several different problems which all may have > > > the same root cause: > > > > > > - When a client accesses a file which was accessed before > > > from the same client in a previous session the server > > > prevents access to the file until a timeout happens. > > > > > > The timeout has a duration of about 1-3 minutes. > > > In this case the "blocked" file can not even be deleted > > > on the server. > > > > > > --> What causes this timeout? I found nothing in the > > > server code which has such a timeout How can I debug what > > > the server is waiting for or why he is blocking access > > > to the file? > > > > > > - Sometimes client processes hang in the middle of a session > > > on some file. After a timeout the file is accessible again. > > > The timeout can take 1 upto several minutes. The file is > > > also blocked on the server, it cannot be accessed. > > > > > > I think all theses problemes are caused by something like > > > dangling locks or another invalid state on the server. > > > > > > The clients show no network error like dropped packets > > > or something like this. > > > > > > --> How can I debug such hangs? > > > > > > We use Linux NFS server and client from vanilla kernel 4.4.31 > > > with sec=sys. > > > > > > Can anyone help? Does "a bell ring"? > > > > The lease period is 90 seconds by default, and there are several cases > > where you can end up waiting for a lease period. > > I found the 90sec lease time period but the timeout is sometimes > much longer than 90 sec, often up to 3minutes or longer. Is there > something which may cause these longer delays (I played with the > 90sec constant and it did not help :-) A delegation is the only thing that I can think of that would prevent a file from being deleted on the server (by that you mean, not even a "rm blockfiled" run from a terminal on the server works?) Delegations should definitely be forcibly revoked after the lease period passes. Note that you need to reboot (well, restart the nfs server) after changing the lease period, or the change will not take effect. > > > For example, if the client held some delegations that it didn't return > > on unmount, and then it denied knowledge of them when the server tried > > to recall them, then the server would have to wait a lease period to > > forcibly remove them. But, the client should be returning delegations > > on unmount, so I don't see how this happens. > > > > For locks and opens and other state, again the client should be > > returning them on unmount. And anyway the server isn't going to > > forcibly remove those ever, unless the entire client goes away > > completely, e.g. in a client crash or network partition. > > > > So, I don't know. Are you sure there aren't client crashes or network > > problems? > > It happens that clients crash I'm not sure what you mean there--do you mean clients are involved in all of these cases, or some of them? > but IMHO the server should notice this by dropped connections. We have > no network problems in these cases. By design, an NFS server won't drop locks on loss a TCP connection. They'll be dropped either: - after a full lease period passes without the server hearing anything from the client, or - if the client crashes and reboots; in this case the client should inform the server that it just rebooted and that all its old locks can be discarded. > > > Also I'd personally try to arrange things so you, say, just mount /home/ > > on boot instead of automounting /home/bfields when bfields logs in. > > But, I don't know your situation. > > Sure, we can do this. But we are in an unsecure environment and it > gives additional (required) security to use more specific mounts > (we make the export on the server when the user has authenticated > with our own daemon). > > What I really miss is an option to disable locks in NFSv4. Maybe > you can point me to the right place in the source..? Delegations can be turned off, by running this on the server before starting it: echo 0 >/proc/sys/fs/leases-enable There's no way to turn off file locks. --b. -- 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