Re: Linux NFS4.1 client's "server trunking" seems to do the opposite of what the name implies

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hi Olga, thanks for the response. more comments/questions below:

On 4/21/21 2:28 AM, Olga Kornievskaia wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 20, 2021 at 4:59 PM guy keren <guy@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> when attempting to make two NFS 4.1 mounts from a linux NFS client, to
>> two IP addresses belonging to two different hosts in the same cluster
>> (i.e. the server major id in the EXCHANGE_ID response is the same) - the
>> linux NFS4.1 client discards the new TCP connection (to the 2nd IP) and
>> instead decides to use the first client connection for both mounts. this
>> seems to be handled in a hard-coded inside the function named
>> "nfs41_discover_server_trunking", and leads to reduced performance,
>> relative to using NFS3 (which will use two different TCP connections to
>> the two different hosts in the storage cluster).
>>
>> i was under the impression that (client_id) trunking is supposed to
>> allow to multiplex commands over multiple TCP connections - not to
>> consolidate different workloads onto the same TCP connection.
>>
>> is there a way to avoid this behaviour, other then faking that the
>> "server major id" is different on each node in the cluster? (this is
>> what appears to be done by NetApp, for instance).
> Hi Guy,
>
> Current implementation of the linux client does not support session
> trunking to the MDS (nor does it support client id trunking). I'm
> hoping session trunking support comes in the near future. Clientid
> trunking might not be something that's supported unless we'll have a
> clustered NFS server out there that can utilize that behaviour.

i see.

> Btw you can do multipath NFS flows by using the combination of
> nconnect and the newly proposed sysfs interface (still in review) that
> can manipulate server endpoints.

the problem with nconnect is that although we will have multiple TCP connections, they will all utilize the same session, which limits the requests parallelism that can be achieved (since the slot table size is the limiting factor for the number of in-flight commands).

the same problem will also exist with session trunking - while when doing only client-id trunking (with a separate NFS4.1 session per TCP connection) - the number of in-flight commands can be increased linearly to the number of TCP connections.

is there any way to work around that?


p.s. is there anyone actively working on session trunking support, or is it just a "future roadmap item: with no concrete plans?

thanks,

--guy keren


Vast Data.



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