rpc.idmapd in container [message #46026] |
Mon, 23 April 2012 08:34 |
Bj
Messages: 3 Registered: April 2012
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Junior Member |
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Hi,
I'm trying to setup NFS4 in a container but are having trouble getting
the rpc.idmapd daemon process to work.
At startup rpc.idmapd tries to access two proc files which are missing
in the container.
/proc/net/rpc/nfs4.nametoid/channel
/proc/net/rpc/nfs4.idtoname/channel
They are available on the host node through kernel module nfsd.ko
How do I configure OpenVZ to get these?
Running CentOS 6.2 with
042stab053.5< http://wiki.openvz.org/News/updates#Kernel_RHEL6_042stab053. 5_released>
Regards,
Bjorn
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Re: rpc.idmapd in container [message #46103 is a reply to message #46027] |
Thu, 26 April 2012 08:12 |
Bj
Messages: 3 Registered: April 2012
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Junior Member |
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Ok, I see. Sorry FuseFS is no option for us at present time.
Can any OpenVZ developer please fill in? is it at current time possible
or not to get working NFS4 name-to-id mapping in a CT?
/Bjorn
On 04/23/2012 11:56 AM, massimiliano.sciabica@kiiama.com wrote:
>
> You can find some hints on Openvz Wiki, but...
>
> Some rpc software must be patched or substituted with a release that I
> could not find.
>
> To me, the NFS question is still opened, but I switched to fusefs,
> much lighter and performing very well. I suggets you to give it a try.
>
> On Mon, 23 Apr 2012 10:34:04 +0200, Björn Lindgren wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> I'm trying to setup NFS4 in a container but are having trouble
>> getting the rpc.idmapd daemon process to work.
>>
>> At startup rpc.idmapd tries to access two proc files which are
>> missing in the container.
>>
>> /proc/net/rpc/nfs4.nametoid/channel
>> /proc/net/rpc/nfs4.idtoname/channel
>>
>> They are available on the host node through kernel module nfsd.ko
>>
>> How do I configure OpenVZ to get these?
>>
>> Running CentOS 6.2 with 042stab053.5
>>
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Re: rpc.idmapd in container [message #46174 is a reply to message #46110] |
Mon, 30 April 2012 10:32 |
Bj
Messages: 3 Registered: April 2012
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Junior Member |
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On 04/26/2012 05:53 PM, Kir Kolyshkin wrote:
> On 04/23/2012 12:34 PM, Björn Lindgren wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> I'm trying to setup NFS4 in a container but are having trouble
>> getting the rpc.idmapd daemon process to work.
>>
>> At startup rpc.idmapd tries to access two proc files which are
>> missing in the container.
>>
>> /proc/net/rpc/nfs4.nametoid/channel
>> /proc/net/rpc/nfs4.idtoname/channel
>>
>> They are available on the host node through kernel module nfsd.ko
>>
>> How do I configure OpenVZ to get these?
>>
>> Running CentOS 6.2 with
>> 042stab053.5< http://wiki.openvz.org/News/updates#Kernel_RHEL6_042stab053. 5_released>
>
> NFS server (and client) inside container is fully supported, for it to
> work you need to
> (1) have kernel module nfsd loaded before starting CT
> (2) have feature nfsd turned on for CT
>
> Both of this is described at
> http://wiki.openvz.org/NFS_server_inside_container
>
> Having said that, only NFS v2 and NFS v3 are supported inside CT.
>
> We are currently working on making NFS v4 work inside containers, but
> we do it for mainline
> kernels rather than in RHEL6 kernel. So whenever we will port OpenVZ
> to any of 3.3 kernels,
> it will most probably have NFS v4 support. RHEL7-based OpenVZ kernel
> will have it, too.
>
> Is there any specific reason why you need NFS v4 and not v3?
Thanks for clarifying the status of NFSv4 support in OpenVZ.
We are currently using NFSv3 and some of our applications are dependent
on the file locking feature (fcntl/fcntl64 syscall) and we have had
troubles getting remote locking to work correctly between CT and the NFS
server. Sometimes it do work, but suddenly it stop working or stop
working after a reboot of the CT. Looks like it is related to the
out-of-band communication between the CT and rpc.lockd on the NFS
server, or in the locking functionality in the kernel space in VE or NFS
server.
We have found an work-around to the issue by resort to enforcing local
locking with mount option "nolock", this enables the applications to run
on top of NFSv3 in the VE.
Regards,
Bjorn
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