> On Dec 14, 2022, at 03:47, Chengen Du <chengen.du@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > The access cache only expires if either NFS_INO_INVALID_ACCESS flag is on > or timeout (without delegation). > Adding a user to a group in the NFS server will not cause any file > attributes to change. > The client will encounter permission errors until other file attributes > are changed or the memory cache is dropped. > > Steps to reproduce the issue: > 1.[client side] testuser is not part of testgroup > testuser@kinetic:~$ ls -ld /mnt/private/ > drwxrwx--- 2 root testgroup 4096 Nov 24 08:23 /mnt/private/ > testuser@kinetic:~$ mktemp -p /mnt/private/ > mktemp: failed to create file via template > ‘/mnt/private/tmp.XXXXXXXXXX’: Permission denied > 2.[server side] add testuser into testgroup, which has access to folder > root@kinetic:~$ usermod -aG testgroup testuser && > echo `date +'%s'` > /proc/net/rpc/auth.unix.gid/flush > 3.[client side] create a file again but still fail > testuser@kinetic:~$ mktemp -p /mnt/private/ > mktemp: failed to create file via template > ‘/mnt/private/tmp.XXXXXXXXXX’: Permission denied > Thanks, but the correct way to deal with this is to log out and log back in again, the way the POSIX gods intended. See commit 0eb43812c027 ("NFS: Clear the file access cache upon login”). _________________________________ Trond Myklebust Linux NFS client maintainer, Hammerspace trond.myklebust@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx