Re: [PATCH 1/1] NFSv4.0 encode nconnect-enabled client into clientid

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On Fri, Jan 31, 2020 at 1:36 PM Chuck Lever <chuck.lever@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
>
>
> > On Jan 31, 2020, at 12:46 PM, Olga Kornievskaia <olga.kornievskaia@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >
> > Hi Chuck,
> >
> > Thanks for the discussion!
> >
> > On Fri, Jan 31, 2020 at 12:10 PM Chuck Lever <chuck.lever@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >>
> >> Hi Olga-
> >>
> >>> On Jan 31, 2020, at 11:57 AM, Olga Kornievskaia <olga.kornievskaia@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >>>
> >>> From: Olga Kornievskaia <kolga@xxxxxxxxxx>
> >>>
> >>> It helps some servers to be able to identify if the incoming client is
> >>> doing nconnect mount or not. While creating the unique client id for
> >>> the SETCLIENTID operation add nconnect=X to it.
> >>
> >> This makes me itch uncomfortably.
> >
> > I was asked...
> >
> >> The long-form client ID string is not supposed to be used to communicate
> >> client implementation details. In fact, this string is supposed to be
> >> opaque to the server -- it can only compare these strings for equality.
> >
> > Indeed, to servers it should only be using it for equality no argument
> > there but I don't think they are prohibited from deriving info from it
> > but shouldn't complain if something changed.
> >
> > My reasoning was that we are currently already putting some
> > descriptive stuff into the clientid string. We specify what version
> > this client is. So why not add something that speaks about its
> > nconnect ability?
>
> RFC 7350 Section 9.1.1 discusses what belongs in the client ID string.
>
> - Does adding nconnect help distinguish this client from others?
> I think that it adds no new value there.

How does adding LinuxV4.0 helps?  I think "nconnect" servers the same
value. It distinguishes from another linux client that doesn't do
nconnect.

> - How do you guarantee that this client presents the same nconnect
> setting after every reboot? If the nconnect setting varies for different
> mount points, it's possible that the cl_nconnect value can be different
> depending on the order the client performs the mounts.

Different mount points share the same clientid. A submount will have
the same nconnect as the original mount. Given existing
implementation, we can't have different mounts with different nconnect
values.

What reboot are we talking about server or client?

On a client reboot, the same nconnect value is used (if say it's
mounted from /etc/fstab). If somebody, after a client reboot, manually
remounted and used a different nconnect value, so what, it's a
different mount, what problem are you thinking about?

If you are talking about a server reboot, then why would a client's
data structure change that stores the value that created the orginal
clientid string with the nconnect value.


> In fact I don't see how the client is constrained to present the same
> nconnect setting even during the same reboot, for similar reasons.
>
> That will break open/lock state reclaim, iiuc. And it will be subtle,
> silent, non-deterministic breakage.

I'm missing how this can be possible.
>
>
> >> IMO you would also need to write something akin to a standard that describes
> >> this convention so that servers can depend on the form of the string.
> >>
> >> How would a server use this information?
> >
> > The server is interested in identifying whether or not client is doing
> > nconnect or not in order to decide whether or not to apply extra
> > locking for a given client mount in order to provide best performance.
> > In 4.1 spec, we clearly define how to bind connections to
> > session/clientid so server can use that information but 4.0 is lacking
> > that and a server is left to just deal with existence of multiple
> > connection (trunking) at any give time.
>
> You can't insist that clients use NFSv4.1 in those cases?
>
> Seems like this is proposing that the Linux NFS client should be changed
> to fix a server implementation issue for a protocol that already has been
> fixed in newer versions.
>
>
> >>> Signed-off-by: Olga Kornievskaia <kolga@xxxxxxxxxx>
> >>> ---
> >>> fs/nfs/nfs4proc.c | 20 +++++++++++---------
> >>> 1 file changed, 11 insertions(+), 9 deletions(-)
> >>>
> >>> diff --git a/fs/nfs/nfs4proc.c b/fs/nfs/nfs4proc.c
> >>> index 402410c..a90ea28 100644
> >>> --- a/fs/nfs/nfs4proc.c
> >>> +++ b/fs/nfs/nfs4proc.c
> >>> @@ -5950,7 +5950,7 @@ static void nfs4_init_boot_verifier(const struct nfs_client *clp,
> >>>              return 0;
> >>>
> >>>      rcu_read_lock();
> >>> -     len = 14 +
> >>> +     len = 14 + 12 +
> >>>              strlen(clp->cl_rpcclient->cl_nodename) +
> >>>              1 +
> >>>              strlen(rpc_peeraddr2str(clp->cl_rpcclient, RPC_DISPLAY_ADDR)) +
> >>> @@ -5972,13 +5972,15 @@ static void nfs4_init_boot_verifier(const struct nfs_client *clp,
> >>>
> >>>      rcu_read_lock();
> >>>      if (nfs4_client_id_uniquifier[0] != '\0')
> >>> -             scnprintf(str, len, "Linux NFSv4.0 %s/%s/%s",
> >>> +             scnprintf(str, len, "Linux NFSv4.0 nconnect=%d %s/%s/%s",
> >>> +                       clp->cl_nconnect,
> >>>                        clp->cl_rpcclient->cl_nodename,
> >>>                        nfs4_client_id_uniquifier,
> >>>                        rpc_peeraddr2str(clp->cl_rpcclient,
> >>>                                         RPC_DISPLAY_ADDR));
> >>>      else
> >>> -             scnprintf(str, len, "Linux NFSv4.0 %s/%s",
> >>> +             scnprintf(str, len, "Linux NFSv4.0 nconnect=%d %s/%s",
> >>> +                       clp->cl_nconnect,
> >>>                        clp->cl_rpcclient->cl_nodename,
> >>>                        rpc_peeraddr2str(clp->cl_rpcclient,
> >>>                                         RPC_DISPLAY_ADDR));
> >>> @@ -5994,7 +5996,7 @@ static void nfs4_init_boot_verifier(const struct nfs_client *clp,
> >>>      size_t len;
> >>>      char *str;
> >>>
> >>> -     len = 10 + 10 + 1 + 10 + 1 +
> >>> +     len = 10 + 10 + 1 + 10 + 1 + 12 +
> >>>              strlen(nfs4_client_id_uniquifier) + 1 +
> >>>              strlen(clp->cl_rpcclient->cl_nodename) + 1;
> >>>
> >>> @@ -6010,9 +6012,9 @@ static void nfs4_init_boot_verifier(const struct nfs_client *clp,
> >>>      if (!str)
> >>>              return -ENOMEM;
> >>>
> >>> -     scnprintf(str, len, "Linux NFSv%u.%u %s/%s",
> >>> +     scnprintf(str, len, "Linux NFSv%u.%u nconnect=%d %s/%s",
> >>>                      clp->rpc_ops->version, clp->cl_minorversion,
> >>> -                     nfs4_client_id_uniquifier,
> >>> +                     clp->cl_nconnect, nfs4_client_id_uniquifier,
> >>>                      clp->cl_rpcclient->cl_nodename);
> >>
> >> Doesn't this also change the client ID string used for EXCHANGE_ID ?
> >
> > I didn't think it would hurt there. But honestly, I just didn't know
> > which of the 3 functions that we have to create clientid were used for
> > what protocols so I added nconnect to all.
>
> non_uniform is for NFSv4.0 only. uniform can be used by any minor version.
>
>
> >>>      clp->cl_owner_id = str;
> >>>      return 0;
> >>> @@ -6030,7 +6032,7 @@ static void nfs4_init_boot_verifier(const struct nfs_client *clp,
> >>>      if (nfs4_client_id_uniquifier[0] != '\0')
> >>>              return nfs4_init_uniquifier_client_string(clp);
> >>>
> >>> -     len = 10 + 10 + 1 + 10 + 1 +
> >>> +     len = 10 + 10 + 1 + 10 + 1 + 12 +
> >>>              strlen(clp->cl_rpcclient->cl_nodename) + 1;
> >>>
> >>>      if (len > NFS4_OPAQUE_LIMIT + 1)
> >>> @@ -6045,9 +6047,9 @@ static void nfs4_init_boot_verifier(const struct nfs_client *clp,
> >>>      if (!str)
> >>>              return -ENOMEM;
> >>>
> >>> -     scnprintf(str, len, "Linux NFSv%u.%u %s",
> >>> +     scnprintf(str, len, "Linux NFSv%u.%u nconnect=%d %s",
> >>>                      clp->rpc_ops->version, clp->cl_minorversion,
> >>> -                     clp->cl_rpcclient->cl_nodename);
> >>> +                     clp->cl_nconnect, clp->cl_rpcclient->cl_nodename);
> >>>      clp->cl_owner_id = str;
> >>>      return 0;
> >>> }
> >>> --
> >>> 1.8.3.1
> >>>
> >>
> >> --
> >> Chuck Lever
>
> --
> Chuck Lever
>
>
>



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