| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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fixes for various minor spelling errors and typos
Reported-by: Patrick Matthäi <pmatthaei@debian.org>
Change-Id: Ic1be36f82e3d822bbdc9559878bd79520fc0fcd5
BUG: 1457808
Signed-off-by: Kaleb S. KEITHLEY <kkeithle@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: https://review.gluster.org/17442
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
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Coverity warn about a code path where 'file' is freed twice. And reading
the code, I also found that 'line' shouldn't be freed using GF_FREE
since it was allocated by getline.
Also call _ng_deinit_parsers() in the success case, preventing leaking
two 'struct parser' upon multiple calls to ng_file_parse().
Change-Id: I05d71fdbf3b48a25d35e7a56a4c245ceb2dd6ed9
BUG: 789278
Signed-off-by: Michael Scherer <misc@redhat.com>
[ndevos: add _ng_deinit_parsers() cleanup suggested by Nithya]
Reviewed-on: https://review.gluster.org/16759
Reviewed-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
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Once an NLM client cancels a lock request, it should be removed from the
list. The list can also be cleaned of unneeded entries once the client
does not have any outstanding lock/share requests/granted.
Change-Id: I2f2b666b627dcb52cddc6d5b95856e420b2b2e26
BUG: 1381970
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: https://review.gluster.org/17188
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: Kaleb KEITHLEY <kkeithle@redhat.com>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: jiffin tony Thottan <jthottan@redhat.com>
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When an NLM client disconnects, it should be removed from the list and
free'd.
Change-Id: Ib427c896bfcdc547a3aee42a652578ffd076e2ad
BUG: 1381970
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: https://review.gluster.org/17189
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: Kaleb KEITHLEY <kkeithle@redhat.com>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: jiffin tony Thottan <jthottan@redhat.com>
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In order to help tracking possible misbehaving clients down, log the
'caller_name' (hostname of the NFS client) that does not have a matching
nlm_client_t structure.
Change-Id: Ib514a78d1809719a3d0274acc31ee632727d746d
BUG: 1381970
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: https://review.gluster.org/17186
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: soumya k <skoduri@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeff Darcy <jeff@pl.atyp.us>
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In certain (unclear) occasions it seems to happen that there are
notifications sent to the Gluster/NFS NLM service, but no call-state can
be found. Instead of segfaulting, log an error but keep on running.
Change-Id: I0f186e56e46a86ca40314d230c1cc7719c61f0b5
BUG: 1381970
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: https://review.gluster.org/17185
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: soumya k <skoduri@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: jiffin tony Thottan <jthottan@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeff Darcy <jeff@pl.atyp.us>
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nlm4svc_send_granted() uses the rpc_clnt by getting it from the
call-state structure. It is safer to unref the rpc_clnt after the
function is done with it.
Change-Id: I7cb7c4297801463d21259c58b50d7df7c57aec5e
BUG: 1381970
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: https://review.gluster.org/17187
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: soumya k <skoduri@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeff Darcy <jeff@pl.atyp.us>
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They snuck in with the HALO patch (07cc8679c)
Change-Id: I8ced6cbb0b49554fc9d348c453d4d5da00f981f6
BUG: 1447953
Signed-off-by: Kaushal M <kaushal@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: https://review.gluster.org/17174
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: Amar Tumballi <amarts@redhat.com>
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Summary:
Halo Geo-replication is a feature which allows Gluster or NFS clients to write
locally to their region (as defined by a latency "halo" or threshold if you
like), and have their writes asynchronously propagate from their origin to the
rest of the cluster. Clients can also write synchronously to the cluster
simply by specifying a halo-latency which is very large (e.g. 10seconds) which
will include all bricks.
In other words, it allows clients to decide at mount time if they desire
synchronous or asynchronous IO into a cluster and the cluster can support both
of these modes to any number of clients simultaneously.
There are a few new volume options due to this feature:
halo-shd-latency: The threshold below which self-heal daemons will
consider children (bricks) connected.
halo-nfsd-latency: The threshold below which NFS daemons will consider
children (bricks) connected.
halo-latency: The threshold below which all other clients will
consider children (bricks) connected.
halo-min-replicas: The minimum number of replicas which are to
be enforced regardless of latency specified in the above 3 options.
If the number of children falls below this threshold the next
best (chosen by latency) shall be swapped in.
New FUSE mount options:
halo-latency & halo-min-replicas: As descripted above.
This feature combined with multi-threaded SHD support (D1271745) results in
some pretty cool geo-replication possibilities.
Operational Notes:
- Global consistency is gaurenteed for synchronous clients, this is provided by
the existing entry-locking mechanism.
- Asynchronous clients on the other hand and merely consistent to their region.
Writes & deletes will be protected via entry-locks as usual preventing
concurrent writes into files which are undergoing replication. Read operations
on the other hand should never block.
- Writes are allowed from _any_ region and propagated from the origin to all
other regions. The take away from this is care should be taken to ensure
multiple writers do not write the same files resulting in a gfid split-brain
which will require resolution via split-brain policies (majority, mtime &
size). Recommended method for preventing this is using the nfs-auth feature to
define which region for each share has RW permissions, tiers not in the origin
region should have RO perms.
TODO:
- Synchronous clients (including the SHD) should choose clients from their own
region as preferred sources for reads. Most of the plumbing is in place for
this via the child_latency array.
- Better GFID split brain handling & better dent type split brain handling
(i.e. create a trash can and move the offending files into it).
- Tagging in addition to latency as a means of defining which children you wish
to synchronously write to
Test Plan:
- The usual suspects, clang, gcc w/ address sanitizer & valgrind
- Prove tests
Reviewers: jackl, dph, cjh, meyering
Reviewed By: meyering
Subscribers: ethanr
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.fb.com/D1272053
Tasks: 4117827
Change-Id: I694a9ab429722da538da171ec528406e77b5e6d1
BUG: 1428061
Signed-off-by: Kevin Vigor <kvigor@fb.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/16099
Reviewed-on: https://review.gluster.org/16177
Tested-by: Pranith Kumar Karampuri <pkarampu@redhat.com>
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: Pranith Kumar Karampuri <pkarampu@redhat.com>
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Summary:
- Prevent crashes for the case where "getattr" actually failed and
returned with a NULL buf, but the op_errno was set to 0.
- This is a cherry-pick of D1571184
Signed-off-by: Shreyas Siravara <sshreyas@fb.com>
Change-Id: Ia2d6ad7539df714f9420dcf063c7c14e727bb7e3
BUG: 1428064
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/16152
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: Kevin Vigor <kvigor@fb.com>
Reviewed-on: https://review.gluster.org/16803
Reviewed-by: Amar Tumballi <amarts@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Jeff Darcy <jeff@pl.atyp.us>
Reviewed-by: Jeff Darcy <jeff@pl.atyp.us>
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initialized
Summary:
- Disconnects RPC transports for requests that cannot be serviced
because volumes are not ready.
- This is a cherry-pick of D2991403
Signed-off-by: Shreyas Siravara <sshreyas@fb.com>
Change-Id: I07ff0795b81d25624541ff981b5f2586d078e9a6
BUG: 1428068
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/16154
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: Kevin Vigor <kvigor@fb.com>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-on: https://review.gluster.org/16805
Reviewed-by: Amar Tumballi <amarts@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Jeff Darcy <jeff@pl.atyp.us>
Reviewed-by: Jeff Darcy <jeff@pl.atyp.us>
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Summary:
When using libtirpc instead of glibc rpc the result needs to be
cast to (struct sockaddr_in *)
This diff was originally a cherry-pick of D3111554 to 3.8
Signed-off-by: Kaleb S. KEITHLEY <kkeithle@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Shreyas Siravara <sshreyas@fb.com>
Change-Id: If4c27dbe6c032f9e278ea08cd3c96a4d07bcc5f9
BUG: 1428073
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/16179
Tested-by: Shreyas Siravara <sshreyas@fb.com>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: Kevin Vigor <kvigor@fb.com>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-on: https://review.gluster.org/16804
Reviewed-by: Amar Tumballi <amarts@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
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This fixes the segfault caused by solaris client in Gluster/NFS.
Volname was not being parsed properly, Instead of volume
name complete path was being used in nfs_mntpath_to_xlator().
Fixed it by striping volume name from complete path in nfs_mntpath_to_xlator().
Modified function name nfs3_funge_solaris_zerolen_fh() to
nfs3_funge_webnfs_zerolen_fh() as zero-filled filehandle is specific to WebNFS.
RFC : https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2055
Solaris uses WebNFS, the zero-filled FH is defined in the WebNFS spec.
Logic was even added in fuction nfs3_funge_webnfs_zerolen_fh() to send
subdir path in function glfs_resolve_at() instead of complete path for
subdir mount.
Change-Id: I19aae3547b8910e7ed4974ee5385424cab3e834a
BUG: 1426667
Signed-off-by: Bipin Kunal <bkunal@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: https://review.gluster.org/16770
Reviewed-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
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'killall' is the only executable that is needed from the psmisc package
on glusterfs-server installations. NetBSD already uses 'pkill' as
alternative, this can be used everywhere.
BUG: 1197308
Change-Id: Ied671a74b735e321f52d99c869627b957aa2bd02
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: https://review.gluster.org/16928
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: Kaleb KEITHLEY <kkeithle@redhat.com>
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While there is proper protection against that, coverity
complain of a loop, and nothing in auth-cache.h use
a declaration of "mount3.h".
Change-Id: I55885ec12496359170f271ae192e9940a35121e1
BUG: 789278
Signed-off-by: Michael Scherer <misc@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: https://review.gluster.org/16728
Reviewed-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
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We initialize and take ref once on mountdict during NFS/MNT3 server
initialization but seem to be unref'in it for every UMNTALL request.
This can lead to crash when there are multiple UMNTALL requests
with >=1 active mount entry(/ies) in the mountlist.
Since we take the ref only once, we should keep the mountdict through
out the life of the process and dereference it only during unitialization
of mnt3 service.
Change-Id: I3238a8df09b8972e56dd93fee426d866d40d9959
BUG: 1421759
Signed-off-by: Soumya Koduri <skoduri@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: https://review.gluster.org/16611
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: Raghavendra Bhat <raghavendra@redhat.com>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: jiffin tony Thottan <jthottan@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
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This patch adds support for multiple brick translator stacks running
in a single brick server process. This reduces our per-brick memory usage by
approximately 3x, and our appetite for TCP ports even more. It also creates
potential to avoid process/thread thrashing, and to improve QoS by scheduling
more carefully across the bricks, but realizing that potential will require
further work.
Multiplexing is controlled by the "cluster.brick-multiplex" global option. By
default it's off, and bricks are started in separate processes as before. If
multiplexing is enabled, then *compatible* bricks (mostly those with the same
transport options) will be started in the same process.
Change-Id: I45059454e51d6f4cbb29a4953359c09a408695cb
BUG: 1385758
Signed-off-by: Jeff Darcy <jdarcy@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: https://review.gluster.org/14763
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: Vijay Bellur <vbellur@redhat.com>
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The nfs3svc_create_cbk() takes "gfid" from inode variable which it
received, not from inode which it performed linking to nfs_setattr().
There is possiblity that the inode passed into this function holds
NULL gfid if there are some parallel operation happening on the same
file.
Similar issue is mentioned in https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1413971
Thanks pranith for proposing the fix
Change-Id: I1a0ff4f02b483416f19f4f064c306c2cad5d9d8b
BUG: 1413971
Signed-off-by: Jiffin Tony Thottan <jthottan@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: https://review.gluster.org/16421
Reviewed-by: soumya k <skoduri@redhat.com>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
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There are no real users of the counter. It was thought of a handy tool
to track and debug refcounting, but it is not used at all. Some parts of
the code would benefit from a pointer getting returned instead.
BUG: 1399780
Change-Id: I97e52c48420fed61be942ea27ff4849b803eed12
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/15971
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: Xavier Hernandez <xhernandez@datalab.es>
Reviewed-by: Kaleb KEITHLEY <kkeithle@redhat.com>
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Currently these are few events related to child_up/down:
GF_EVENT_CHILD_UP : Issued when any of the protocol client
connects.
GF_EVENT_CHILD_MODIFIED : Issued by afr/dht/ec
GF_EVENT_CHILD_DOWN : Issued when any of the protocol client
disconnects.
These events get modified at the dht/afr/ec layers. Here is a
brief on the same.
DHT:
- All the subvolumes reported once, and atleast one child came
up, then GF_EVENT_CHILD_UP is issued
- connect GF_EVENT_CHILD_UP is issued
- disconnect GF_EVENT_CHILD_MODIFIED is issued
- All the subvolumes disconnected, GF_EVENT_CHILD_DOWN is issued
AFR:
- First subvolume came up, then GF_EVENT_CHILD_UP is issued
- Subsequent subvolumes coming up, results in GF_EVENT_CHILD_MODIFIED
- Any of the subvolumes go down, then GF_EVENT_SOME_CHILD_DOWN is issued
- Last up subvolume goes down, then GF_EVENT_CHILD_DOWN is issued
Until the patch [1] introduced GF_EVENT_SOME_CHILD_UP,
GF_EVENT_CHILD_MODIFIED was issued by afr/dht when any of the subvolumes
go up or down.
Now with md-cache changes, there is a necessity to differentiate between
child up and down. Hence, introducing GF_EVENT_SOME_DESCENDENT_DOWN/UP and
getting rid of GF_EVENT_CHILD_MODIFIED.
[1] http://review.gluster.org/12573
Change-Id: I704140b6598f7ec705493251d2dbc4191c965a58
BUG: 1396038
Signed-off-by: Poornima G <pgurusid@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/15764
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: N Balachandran <nbalacha@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Pranith Kumar Karampuri <pkarampu@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Rajesh Joseph <rjoseph@redhat.com>
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when an inode ctx is missing for a linked inode the revalidate
lookups are converted to fresh.
This could result in sending ESTALE when the gfid are recreated
We are not able to reproduce the issue with normal setup, most part of
RCA was done with code reading.
Possible scenario in which this bug can reproduce,
Delete a file and recreate a new file with same name, at the same time
from another client process try to list/or access the file.
In this case the second client may throw an ESTALE error for such files
Thanks to Soumya and Pranith for doing the complete RCA
Change-Id: I73992a65844b09a169cefaaedc0dcfb129d66ea1
BUG: 1379720
Signed-off-by: Mohammed Rafi KC <rkavunga@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/15580
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: soumya k <skoduri@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Kaleb KEITHLEY <kkeithle@redhat.com>
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BUG: 1385593
Change-Id: Icfae9e557a284182c6c22e9606fdd641528906f0
Reported-by: Patrick Matthäi <pmatthaei@debian.org>
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/15656
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: Atin Mukherjee <amukherj@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: jiffin tony Thottan <jthottan@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Kotresh HR <khiremat@redhat.com>
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
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And minor cleanup of a few of the Makefile.am files while we're
at it.
Rewrite the make rules to do what xdrgen does. Now we can get rid
of xdrgen.
Note 1. netbsd6's sed doesn't do -i. Why are we still running
smoke tests on netbsd6 and not netbsd7? We barely support netbsd7
as it is.
Note 2. Why is/was libgfxdr.so (.../rpc/xdr/src/...) linked with
libglusterfs? A cut-and-paste mistake? It has no references to
symbols in libglusterfs.
Note3. "/#ifndef\|#define\|#endif/" (note the '\'s) is a _basic_
regex that matches the same lines as the _extended_ regex
"/#(ifndef|define|endif)/". To match the extended regex sed needs to
be run with -r on Linux; with -E on *BSD. However NetBSD's and
FreeBSD's sed helpfully also provide -r for compatibility. Using a
basic regex avoids having to use a kludge in order to run sed with
the correct option on OS X.
Note 4. Not copying the bit of xdrgen that inserts copyright/license
boilerplate. AFAIK it's silly to pretend that machine generated
files like these can be copyrighted or need license boilerplate.
The XDR source files have their own copyright and license; and
their copyrights are bound to be more up to date than old
boilerplate inserted by a script. From what I've seen of other
Open Source projects -- e.g. gcc and its C parser files generated
by yacc and lex -- IIRC they don't bother to add copyright/license
boilerplate to their generated files.
It appears that it's a long-standing feature of make (SysV, BSD,
gnu) for out-of-tree builds to helpfully pretend that the source
files it can find in the VPATH "exist" as if they are in the $cwd.
rpcgen doesn't work well in this situation and generates files
with "bad" #include directives.
E.g. if you `rpcgen ../../../../$srcdir/rpc/xdr/src/glusterfs3-xdr.x`,
you get an #include directive in the generated .c file like this:
...
#include "../../../../$srcdir/rpc/xdr/src/glusterfs3-xdr.h"
...
which (obviously) results in compile errors on out-of-tree build
because the (generated) header file doesn't exist at that location.
Compared to `rpcgen ./glusterfs3-xdr.x` where you get:
...
#include "glusterfs3-xdr.h"
...
Which is what we need. We have to resort to some Stupid Make Tricks
like the addition of various .PHONY targets to work around the VPATH
"help".
Warning: When doing an in-tree build, -I$(top_builddir)/rpc/xdr/...
looks exactly like -I$(top_srcdir)/rpc/xdr/... Don't be fooled though.
And don't delete the -I$(top_builddir)/rpc/xdr/... bits
Change-Id: Iba6ab96b2d0a17c5a7e9f92233993b318858b62e
BUG: 1330604
Signed-off-by: Kaleb S KEITHLEY <kkeithle@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/14085
Tested-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
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http://review.gluster.org/14085 fixes a/the "leak" - via the
generated rpc/xdr headers - of pragmas that mask these warnings.
However 14085 won't pass the smoke test until all the warnings are
fixed.
Change-Id: I0e872a8025c3b1b5e2aa15d8fe66248e2fd96bf1
BUG: 1369124
Signed-off-by: Kaleb S. KEITHLEY <kkeithle@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/15253
Reviewed-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
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If an entry is not found in the inode table, nfs xlator should be
resolving it by sending an explicit lookup to the brick process.
But currently its broken in case of NFS3_LOOKUP fop where in the server
bails out early resulting in sending pargfid attributes to the client.
To fix the same reset 'cs->resolvedhard' so that an explicit lookup
is done for the entry in the resume_fn "nfs3_lookup_resume()".
Change-Id: I999f8bca7ad008526c174d13f69886dc809d9552
Signed-off-by: Soumya Koduri <skoduri@redhat.com>
BUG: 1356068
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/14911
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
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Hostnames with dashes (like "vagrant-testVM") are not correctly parsed
when reading the exports/netgroups files. This bacomes obvious when
running ./run-tests-in-vagrant.sh because it causes
tests/basic/mount-nfs-auth.t and tests/basic/netgroup_parsing.t to fail.
The regex for hostname (in exports) and the entry and hostname
(netgroups) parsing does not include the "-" sign, and hence the
hostnames are splitted at it.
BUG: 1350237
Change-Id: I38146a283561e1fa386cc841c43fd3b1e30a87ad
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/14809
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: Jeff Darcy <jdarcy@redhat.com>
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The EXPORT procedure of the MOUNT protocol does not correctly create
structures for the 'groupnodes' in the reply. Each 'groupnode' should be
a single entry in the 'nfs.rpc-auth-allow' volume option. Because the
value is handled as a single string, the encoding of the
groupnode->gr_name fails when the value of the volume option is longer
than 255 characters.
In the error case, encoding the EXPORTS reply fails, and the waiting
'showmount' command will not receive a reply and times out.
Splitting the allowed entries and creating a groupnode for each one
prevents the too long ->gr_name. This is following the structures for
the EXPORTS reply in the MOUNT protocol more correctly as well. Note
that the contents of ->gr_name is expected to be server dependent.
Change-Id: Ibbabad581cc9aa00feb80fbbc851a1b10b28383d
BUG: 1343286
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/14667
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
Reviewed-by: bipin kunal <kunalbipin@gmail.com>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: jiffin tony Thottan <jthottan@redhat.com>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
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nfs3_setattr stores the input arguments in cs->stbuf.
However, inode/entry resolution code overwrites cs->stbuf
after a successful resolution, thereby overwriting the
input arguments with iatt values stored on backend.
Hence operations like chmod/chown turns out to be a NOP.
Specifically following are the functions that overwrite
cs->stbuf:
nfs3_fh_resolve_inode_lookup_cbk
nfs3_fh_resolve_entry_lookup_cbk
Since we resort to inode resolution only when inode is not
found in inode table and lru limit guards the number of
inodes in itable, we run into this issue only when the data
set is bigger than lru limit of itable.
Fix is to store input arguments in a member other than
cs->stbuf.
Thanks Du for suggesting the fix
Change-Id: I7caef48839d4f177c3557d7823fc1d35c8294939
BUG: 1318204
Signed-off-by: Jiffin Tony Thottan <jthottan@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/14657
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
Tested-by: Atin Mukherjee <amukherj@redhat.com>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: soumya k <skoduri@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Kaleb KEITHLEY <kkeithle@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Kaleb KEITHLEY <kkeithle@redhat.com>
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If the application opens a file with O_DIRECT, the shards'
anon fds would also need to inherit the flag. Towards this,
shard xl would be passing the odirect flag in the @flags parameter
to the WRITEV fop. This will be used in anon fd resolution
and subsequent opening by posix xl.
Change-Id: Iddb75c9ed14ce5a8c5d2128ad09b749f46e3b0c2
BUG: 1342171
Signed-off-by: Krutika Dhananjay <kdhananj@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/14191
Tested-by: Pranith Kumar Karampuri <pkarampu@redhat.com>
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: Pranith Kumar Karampuri <pkarampu@redhat.com>
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Added space to .description
Reported-by: James Shubin <purpleidea@gmail.com>
Change-Id: Ie4dd8774567ac4d8e1e8ec39aa3ab595d037101a
BUG: 1005257
Signed-off-by: Dustin Black <dblack@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/14621
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
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Mounting a volume over NFS with a subdir followed by a / does not work:
# mount -t nfs -o vers=3 storage.example.com:/media/installation/ /mnt
mount.nfs: an incorrect mount option was specified
In the nfs.log:
[client-rpc-fops.c:2930:client3_3_lookup_cbk] 0-media-client-0: remote operation failed. Path: /installation/ (00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000) [Invalid argument]
[client-rpc-fops.c:2930:client3_3_lookup_cbk] 0-media-client-1: remote operation failed. Path: /installation/ (00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000) [Invalid argument]
[mount3.c:1134:mnt3_resolve_subdir_cbk] 0-nfs: path=/installation/ (Invalid argument) [Invalid argument]
It is not possible to resolve paths with a trailing /. Stripping
trailing /'s from the subdir to mount is sufficient to make it work
again.
Change-Id: I4075d4cd351438de58e1ff81f0fb65a1ff076da4
BUG: 1337597
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/14421
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
Reviewed-by: jiffin tony Thottan <jthottan@redhat.com>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeff Darcy <jdarcy@redhat.com>
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Problem:
Afr does post-ops after write but the stat buffer it unwinds is at the
time of write, so if nfs client caches this, it will see different
ctime when it does stat on it after post-op is done. From NFS client's
perspective it thinks the file is changed. Tar which depends on this
to be correct keeps giving 'file changed as we read it' warning.
If Afr instead has to choose to unwind after post-op, eager-lock,
delayed-post-op will have to be disabled which will lead to bad
performance for all write usecases.
Fix:
Don't let client cache stat after write.
Change-Id: Ic6062acc6e5cdd97a9c83c56bd529ec83cee8a23
BUG: 1302948
Signed-off-by: Pranith Kumar K <pkarampu@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Anuradha Talur <atalur@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/13785
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
Reviewed-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
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When this option is 'disabled', NFS falls back to standard readdir instead
of readdirp
Change-Id: Icaaf4da6533bee56160d4a81e42bb60f7d341945
BUG: 1302948
Signed-off-by: Sakshi Bansal <sabansal@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/13782
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
Reviewed-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
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variable 'mountlock' should be generic
since it is used by macros LOCK_* ,
it can be used spinlock or mutexlock
Change-Id: If558bcf8debd98c4e1a615df0f9f0caec586e39b
BUG: 1312346
Signed-off-by: Prasanna Kumar Kalever <prasanna.kalever@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/13532
Smoke: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
CentOS-regression: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
Reviewed-by: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
NetBSD-regression: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: Jeff Darcy <jdarcy@redhat.com>
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During resolving of an entry or inode, if inode ctx
was not set, we will send a lookup.
This patch also make sure that inode_ctx will be created
after every inode_link.
Change-Id: I137a7e2510635ff4ea6d007b671961341f89c949
BUG: 1297311
Signed-off-by: Mohammed Rafi KC <rkavunga@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/13224
Reviewed-by: soumya k <skoduri@redhat.com>
Tested-by: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: Dan Lambright <dlambrig@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Dan Lambright <dlambrig@redhat.com>
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Due to the changes from http://review.gluster.org/#/c/12722/,
for tier volume the readirp will be send only to cold subvol,
therefore the resulting list may contain 'T' files. For those
files, by performing additional getattr call will populate the
attributes correctly. This check should be based on inode value
passed from the readdirp(both T files and directory have NULL
value) and skip directory in the same.
Change-Id: Ieb6724b05301cdbf0a0ef15ad9db51014faa0457
BUG: 1291212
Signed-off-by: Jiffin Tony Thottan <jthottan@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/12960
Tested-by: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
Reviewed-by: soumya k <skoduri@redhat.com>
Tested-by: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: Kaleb KEITHLEY <kkeithle@redhat.com>
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Summary:
- Using sampling feature you can record details about every Nth FOP.
The fields in each sample are: FOP type, hostname, uid, gid, FOP priority,
port and time taken (latency) to fufill the request.
- Implemented using a ring buffer which is not (m/c) allocated in the IO path,
this should make the sampling process pretty cheap.
- DNS resolution done @ dump time not @ sample time for performance w/
cache
- Metrics can be used for both diagnostics, traffic/IO profiling as well
as P95/P99 calculations
- To control this feature there are two new volume options:
diagnostics.fop-sample-interval - The sampling interval, e.g. 1 means
sample every FOP, 100 means sample every 100th FOP
diagnostics.fop-sample-buf-size - The size (in bytes) of the ring
buffer used to store the samples. In the even more samples
are collected in the stats dump interval than can be held in this buffer,
the oldest samples shall be discarded. Samples are stored in the log
directory under /var/log/glusterfs/samples.
- Uses DNS cache written by sshreyas@fb.com (Thank-you!), the DNS cache
TTL is controlled by the diagnostics.stats-dnscache-ttl-sec option
and defaults to 24hrs.
Test Plan:
- Valgrind'd to ensure it's leak free
- Run prove test(s)
- Shadow testing on 100+ brick cluster
Change-Id: I9ee14c2fa18486b7efb38e59f70687249d3f96d8
BUG: 1271310
Signed-off-by: Jeff Darcy <jdarcy@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/12210
Tested-by: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
Reviewed-by: Vijay Bellur <vbellur@redhat.com>
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Due to changes from http://review.gluster.org/#/c/12162/ a path variable
is added to nfs3_log_common_res() and usually `cs->resolvedloc.path` is
passed for that. But in certain fop function `cs` may not filled due error
and when it is logged using nfs3_log_common_res() results in a crash.
This patch will fix the same.
Change-Id: I5a709818923e7884bd04e329834ee352a1b3a58f
BUG: 1276243
Signed-off-by: Jiffin Tony Thottan <jthottan@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/12458
Reviewed-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Tested-by: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
Reviewed-by: N Balachandran <nbalacha@redhat.com>
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various xlators and other components are invoking system calls
directly instead of using the libglusterfs/syscall.[ch] wrappers.
If not using the system call wrappers there should be a comment
in the source explaining why the wrapper isn't used.
Change-Id: I1f47820534c890a00b452fa61f7438eb2b3f667c
BUG: 1267967
Signed-off-by: Kaleb S. KEITHLEY <kkeithle@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/12276
Tested-by: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeff Darcy <jdarcy@redhat.com>
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Summary:
- Adds a thread to the io-stats translator which dumps out statistics
every N seconds where N is configurable by an option called
"diagnostics.stats-dump-interval"
- Thread cleanly starts/stops when translator is unloaded
- Updates macros to use "Atomic Builtins" (e.g. intel CPU extentions) to
use memory barries to update counters vs using locks. This should
reduce overhead and prevent any deadlock bugs due to lock contention.
Test Plan:
- Test on development machine
- Run prove -v tests/basic/stats-dump.t
Change-Id: If071239d8fdc185e4e8fd527363cc042447a245d
BUG: 1266476
Signed-off-by: Jeff Darcy <jdarcy@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/12209
Tested-by: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Tested-by: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
Reviewed-by: Avra Sengupta <asengupt@redhat.com>
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We've been lucky that we haven't had any symbol collisions until now.
Now we have a collision between the snapview-client's svc_lookup() and
libntirpc's svc_lookup() with nfs-ganesha's FSAL_GLUSTER and libgfapi.
As a short term solution all the snapview-client's FOP methods were
changed to static scope. See http://review.gluster.org/11805. This
works in snapview-client because all the FOP methods are defined in
a single source file. This solution doesn't work for other xlators
with FOP methods defined in multiple source files.
To address this we link with libtool's '-export-symbols $symbol-file'
(a wrapper around `ld --version-script ...` --- on linux anyway) and
only export the minimum required symbols from the xlator sharedlib.
N.B. the libtool man page says that the symbol file should be named
foo.sym, thus the rename of *.exports to *.sym. While foo.exports
worked, we will follow the documentation.
Signed-off-by: Kaleb S. KEITHLEY <kkeithle@redhat.com>
BUG: 1248669
Change-Id: I1de68b3e3be58ae690d8bfb2168bfc019983627c
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/11814
Tested-by: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Tested-by: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
Reviewed-by: soumya k <skoduri@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
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NFS log-warning messages logged twice in cbk function. Though,
the logging messages are not exactly duplicate, instead of
logging twice, they can be merged to one log message and the
other log message is removed in cbk functions.
Example:
(1)
W [nfs3.c:2075:nfs3svc_write_cbk] 0-nfs: 16f4dce6:
/f.195 => -1 (Disk quota exceeded)
(2)
W [nfs3-helpers.c:3443:nfs3_log_write_res] 0-nfs-nfsv3:
XID: 16f4dce6, WRITE: NFS: 69(Resource (quota)
hard limit exceeded), POSIX: 122
(Disk quota exceeded), count: 0, UNSTABLE,
wverf: 1381508849
Here, the second message is more elaborative, and is similar
to (1). Since file name is not present in (2), it is added to (2)
and then removing all mesages of type (1).
Change-Id: I6028ab17b23948493a065dfad92fe4984548511f
BUG: 1254146
Signed-off-by: Manikandan Selvaganesh <mselvaga@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/11936
Tested-by: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: jiffin tony Thottan <jthottan@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
Reviewed-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
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- Fixes issue where NFS mount fail with "Remove I/O error" after the
target directory has been deleted and re-created after the gNFSd has
already cached the inode of the first generation of the target
directory.
- The solution is to follow the guidance of the AFR2 comments and
refresh the inode by deleting it from cache and looking it up
again.
BUG: 1258196
Change-Id: I9c7d8bd460ee9e5ea0b5b47d23886b1afcdcd563
Reported-by: Richard Wareing <rwareing@fb.com>
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/12046
Tested-by: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
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There are three kinds of inline functions: plain inline, extern inline,
and static inline. All three have been removed from .c files, except
those in "contrib" which aren't our problem. Inlines in .h files, which
are overwhelmingly "static inline" already, have generally been left
alone. Over time we should be able to "lower" these into .c files, but
that has to be done in a case-by-case fashion requiring more manual
effort. This part was easy to do automatically without (as far as I can
tell) any ill effect.
In the process, several pieces of dead code were flagged by the
compiler, and were removed.
Change-Id: I56a5e614735c9e0a6ee420dab949eac22e25c155
BUG: 1245331
Signed-off-by: Jeff Darcy <jdarcy@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/11769
Tested-by: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: Dan Lambright <dlambrig@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Kaleb KEITHLEY <kkeithle@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Raghavendra Bhat <raghavendra@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Venky Shankar <vshankar@redhat.com>
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The @owner argument tells RPC layer the xlator that owns
the connection and to which xlator THIS needs be set during
network notifications like CONNECT and DISCONNECT.
Code paths that originate from the head of a (volume) graph and use
STACK_WIND ensure that the RPC local endpoint has the right xlator saved
in the frame of the call (callback pair). This guarantees that the
callback is executed in the right xlator context.
The client handshake process which includes fetching of brick ports from
glusterd, setting lk-version on the brick for the session, don't have
the correct xlator set in their frames. The problem lies with RPC
notifications. It doesn't have the provision to set THIS with the xlator
that is registered with the corresponding RPC programs. e.g,
RPC_CLNT_CONNECT event received by protocol/client doesn't have THIS set
to its xlator. This implies, call(-callbacks) originating from this
thread don't have the right xlator set too.
The fix would be to save the xlator registered with the RPC connection
during rpc_clnt_new. e.g, protocol/client's xlator would be saved with
the RPC connection that it 'owns'. RPC notifications such as CONNECT,
DISCONNECT, etc inherit THIS from the RPC connection's xlator.
Change-Id: I9dea2c35378c511d800ef58f7fa2ea5552f2c409
BUG: 1235582
Signed-off-by: Krishnan Parthasarathi <kparthas@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/11436
Tested-by: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
Tested-by: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: Raghavendra G <rgowdapp@redhat.com>
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If export/netgroups feature is disabled for gluster/nfs, then the "nfs.log"
contains a Warning message which is deceiving for the users. Logging the
message as Info is sufficient.
Change-Id: I3d07e8bc4f09f3eb32014f5a10390d0484b838cf
BUG: 1243805
Signed-off-by: Jiffin Tony Thottan <jthottan@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/11695
Reviewed-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
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Change-Id: Ic6a23165df1703b330636a059967c3c674dbde57
BUG: 1235231
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/11355
Tested-by: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Reviewed-by: Kaleb KEITHLEY <kkeithle@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
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This makes sure that all the auth_cache_entry structures are only free'd
when there is no reference to it anymore. When it is free'd, the
associated data_t from the auth_cache->cache_dict gets unref'd too.
Upon calling auth_cache_purge(), the auth_cache->cache_dict will free
each auth_cache_entry in a secure way.
Change-Id: If097cc11838e43599040f5414f82b30fc0fd40c6
BUG: 1226717
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/11023
Reviewed-by: Xavier Hernandez <xhernandez@datalab.es>
Tested-by: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
Tested-by: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
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This is the 1st step towards implementing reference counters for the
auth_cache_entry structure. Access to the structures should always be
done atomically, but this can not be guaranteed by the a dict.
Change-Id: Ic165221d72f11832177976c989823d861cf12f01
BUG: 1226717
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/11021
Tested-by: NetBSD Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.org>
Tested-by: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
Reviewed-by: jiffin tony Thottan <jthottan@redhat.com>
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When file operations are sent to the NFS server, authorized filehandles
are cached using the exportid, mountid, gfid and host as the key to the
cache. This meant that any file OR directory will always fail on the
*first* fop to that filehandle since the cache used the gfid as part of
the key to the cache. However, if an export is authorized, this
effectively means that ALL subdirectories and files in the export
directory are authorized per the permissions of the export. This results
slow times to walking a directory structure over an NFS mount.
Change-Id: Iad811ad7255b454d1712e75a637478401d40791e
BUG: 1232165
Signed-off-by: Shreyas Siravara <sshreyas@fb.com>
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/11245
Reviewed-by: jiffin tony Thottan <jthottan@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Kaleb KEITHLEY <kkeithle@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
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