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openafs-doc-1.8.5-1.mga7.noarch.rpm

## Introduction

This version works on Linux 2.6, and provides the following features:

- Basic AFS/NFS translator functionality, similar to other platforms
- Ability to distinguish PAG's assigned within each NFS client
- A new 'afspag' kernel module, which provides PAG management on
  NFS client systems, and forwards AFS system calls to the translator
  system via the remote AFS system call (rmtsys) protocol.
- Support for transparent migration of an NFS client from one translator
  server to another, without loss of credentials or sysnames.
- The ability to force the translator to discard all credentials
  belonging to a specified NFS client host.


The patch applies to OpenAFS 1.4.1, and has been tested against the
kernel-2.6.9-22.0.2.EL kernel binaries as provided by the CentOS project
(essentially these are rebuilds from source of Red Hat Enterprise Linux).
This patch is not expected to apply cleanly to newer versions of OpenAFS,
due to conflicting changes in parts of the kernel module source.  To apply
this patch, use 'patch -p0'.

It has been integrated into OpenAFS 1.5.x.

## New in Version 1.4

- There was no version 1.3
- Define a "sysname generation number" which changes any time the sysname
  list is changed for the translator or any client.  This number is used
  as the nanoseconds part of the mtime of directories, which forces NFS
  clients to reevaluate directory lookups any time the sysname changes.
- Fixed several bugs related to sysname handling
- Fixed a bug preventing 'fs exportafs' from changing the flag which
  controls whether callbacks are made to NFS clients to obtain tokens
  and sysname lists.
- Starting in this version, when the PAG manager starts up, it makes a
  call to the translator to discard any tokens belonging to that client.
  This fixes a problem where newly-created PAG's on the client would
  inherit tokens owned by an unrelated process from an earlier boot.
- Enabled the PAG manager to forward non-V-series pioctl's.
- Forward ported to OpenAFS 1.4.1 final
- Added a file, /proc/fs/openafs/unixusers, which reports information
  about "unixuser" structures, which are used to record tokens and to
  bind translator-side PAG's to NFS client data and sysname lists.


## Finding the RPC server authtab

In order to correctly detect NFS clients and distinguish between them,
the translator must insert itself into the RPC authentication process.
This requires knowing the address of the RPC server authentication dispatch
table, which is not exported from standard kernels.  To address this, the
kernel must be patched such that net/sunrpc/svcauth.c exports the 'authtab'
symbol, or this symbol's address must be provided when the OpenAFS kernel
module is loaded, using the option "authtab_addr=0xXXXXXXXX" where XXXXXXXX
is the address of the authtab symbol as obtained from /proc/kallsyms.  The
latter may be accomplished by adding the following three lines to the
openafs-client init script in place of 'modprobe openafs':

    modprobe sunrpc
    authtab=`awk '/[ \t]authtab[ \t]/ { print $1 }' < /proc/kallsyms`
    modprobe openafs ${authtab:+authtab_addr=0x$authtab}


## Exporting the NFS filesystem

In order for the translator to work correctly, /afs must be exported with
specific options.  Specifically, the 'no_subtree_check' option is needed
in order to prevent the common NFS server code from performing unwanted
access checks, and an fsid option must be provided to set the filesystem
identifier to be used in NFS filehandles.  Note that for live migration
to work, a consistent filesystem id must be used on all translator systems.
The export may be accomplished with a line in /etc/exports:

    /afs (rw,no_subtree_check,fsid=42)

Or with a command:

    exportfs -o rw,no_subtree_check,fsid=42 :/afs

The AFS/NFS translator code is enabled by default; no additional command
is required to activate it.  However, the 'fs exportafs nfs' command can
be used to disable or re-enable the translator and to set options.  Note
that support for client-assigned PAG's is not enabled by default, and
must be enabled with the following command:

    fs exportafs nfs -clipags on

Support for making callbacks to obtain credentials and sysnames from
newly-discovered NFS clients is also not enabled by default, because this
would result in long timeouts on requests from NFS clients which do not
support this feature.  To enable this feature, use the following command:

    fs exportafs nfs -pagcb on


## Client-Side PAG Management

Management of PAG's on individual NFS clients is provided by the kernel
module afspag.ko, which is automatically built alongside the libafs.ko
module on Linux 2.6 systems.  This component is not currently supported
on any other platform.

To activate the client PAG manager, simply load the module; no additional
parameters or commands are required.  Once the module is loaded, PAG's
may be acquired using the setpag() call, exactly as on systems running the
full cache manager.  Both the traditional system call and new-style ioctl
entry points are supported.

In addition, the PAG manager can forward pioctl() calls to an AFS/NFS
translator system via the remote AFS system call service (rmtsys).  To
enable this feature, the kernel module must be loaded with a parameter
specifying the location of the translator system:

    insmod afspag.ko nfs_server_addr=0xAABBCCDD

In this example, 0xAABBCCDD is the IP address of the translator system,
in network byte order.  For example, if the translator has the IP address
192.168.42.100, the nfs_server_addr parameter should be set to 0xc0a82a64.

The PAG manager can be shut down using 'afsd -shutdown' (ironically, this
is the only circumstance in which that command is useful).  Once the
shutdown is complete, the kernel module can be removed using rmmod.


## Remote System Calls

The NFS translator supports the ability of NFS clients to perform various
AFS-specific operations via the remote system call interface (rmtsys).
To enable this feature, afsd must be run with the -rmtsys switch.  OpenAFS
client utilities will use this feature automatically if the AFSSERVER
environment variable is set to the address or hostname of the translator
system, or if the file ~/.AFSSERVER or /.AFSSERVER exists and contains the
translator's address or hostname.

On systems running the client PAG manager (afspag.ko), AFS system calls
made via the traditional methods will be automatically forwarded to the
NFS translator system, if the PAG manager is configured to do so.  This
feature must be enabled, as described above.


## Credential Caching

The client PAG manager maintains a cache of credentials belonging to each
PAG.  When an application makes a system call to set or remove AFS tokens,
the PAG manager updates its cache in addition to forwarding the request
to the NFS server.

When the translator hears from a previously-unknown client, it makes a
callback to the client to retrieve a copy of any cached credentials.
This means that credentials belonging to an NFS client are not lost if
the translator is rebooted, or if the client's location on the network
changes such that it is talking to a different translator.

This feature is automatically supported by the PAG manager if it has
been configured to forward system calls to an NFS translator.  However,
requests will be honored only if they come from port 7001 on the NFS
translator host.  In addition, this feature must be enabled on the NFS
translator system as described above.


## System Name List

When the NFS translator hears from a new NFS client whose system name
list it does not know, it can make a callback to the client to discover
the correct system name list.  This ability is enabled automatically
with credential caching and retrieval is enabled as described above.

The PAG manager maintains a system-wide sysname list, which is used to
satisfy callback requests from the NFS translator.  This list is set
initially to contain only the compiled-in default sysname, but can be
changed by the superuser using the VIOC_AFS_SYSNAME pioctl or the
'fs sysname' command.  Any changes are automatically propagated to the
NFS translator.


## Dynamic Mount Points

This patch introduces a special directory ".:mount", which can be found
directly below the AFS root directory.  This directory always appears to
be empty, but any name of the form "cell:volume" will resolve to a mount
point for the specified volume.  The resulting mount points are always
RW-path mount points, and so will resolve to an RW volume even if the
specified name refers to a replicated volume.  However, the ".readonly"
and ".backup" suffixes can be used to refer to volumes of those types,
and a numeric volume ID will always be used as-is.

This feature is required to enable the NFS translator to reconstruct a
reachable path for any valid filehandle presented by an NFS client.
Specifically, when the path reconstruction algorithm is walking upward
from a client-provided filehandle and encounters the root directory of
a volume which is no longer in the cache (and thus has no known mount
point), it will complete the path to the AFS root using the dynamic
mount directory.

On non-linux cache managers, this feature is available when dynamic
root and fake stat modes are enabled.

On Linux systems, it is also available even when dynroot is not enabled,
to support the NFS translator.  It is presently not possible to disable
this feature, though that ability may be added in the future.  It would
be difficult to make this feature unavailable to users and still make the
Linux NFS translator work, since the point of the check being performed
by the NFS server is to ensure the requested file would be reachable by
the client.


## Security

The security of the NFS translator depends heavily on the underlying
network.  Proper configuration is required to prevent unauthorized
access to files, theft of credentials, or other forms of attack.

NFS, remote syscall, and PAG callback traffic between an NFS client host
and translator may contain sensitive file data and/or credentials, and
should be protected from snooping by unprivileged users or other hosts.

Both the NFS translator and remote system call service authorize requests
in part based on the IP address of the requesting client.  To prevent an
attacker from making requests on behalf of another host, the network must
be configured such that it is impossible for one client to spoof the IP
address of another.

In addition, both the NFS translator and remote system call service
associate requests with specific users based on user and group ID data
contained within the request.  In order to prevent users on the same client
from making filesystem access requests as each other, the NFS server must
be configured to accept requests only from privileged ports.  In order to
prevent users from making AFS system calls on each other's behalf, possibly
including retrieving credentials, the network must be configured such that
requests to the remote system call service (port 7009) are accepted only
from port 7001 on NFS clients.

When a client is migrated away from a translator, any credentials held
on behalf of that client must be discarded before that client's IP address
can safely be reused.  The VIOC_NFS_NUKE_CREDS pioctl and 'fs nukenfscreds'
command are provided for this purpose.  Both take a single argument, which
is the IP address of the NFS client whose credentials should be discarded.


## Known Issues

  + Because NFS clients do not maintain active references on every inode
    they are using, it is possible that portions of the directory tree
    in use by an NFS client will expire from the translator's AFS and
    Linux dentry cache's.  When this happens, the NFS server attempts to
    reconstruct the missing portion of the directory tree, but may fail
    if the client does not have sufficient access (for example, if his
    tokens have expired).  In these cases, a "stale NFS filehandle" error
    will be generated.  This behavior is similar to that found on other
    translator platforms, but is triggered under a slightly different set
    of circumstances due to differences in the architecture of the Linux
    NFS server.

  + Due to limitations of the rmtsys protocol, some pioctl calls require
    large (several KB) transfers between the client and rmtsys server.
    Correcting this issues would require extensions to the rmtsys protocol
    outside the scope of this project.

  + The rmtsys interface requires that AFS be mounted in the same place
    on both the NFS client and translator system, or at least that the
    translator be able to correctly resolve absolute paths provided by
    the client.

  + If a client is migrated or an NFS translator host is unexpectedly
    rebooted while AFS filesystem access is in progress, there may be
    a short delay before the client recovers.  This is because the NFS
    client must time out any request it made to the old server before
    it can retransmit the request, which will then be handled by the
    new server.  The same applies to remote system call requests.