xref: /linux/Documentation/filesystems/nfs/exporting.rst (revision 0ea5c948cb64bab5bc7a5516774eb8536f05aa0d)
1ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab:orphan:
2ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
3ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho ChehabMaking Filesystems Exportable
4ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab=============================
5ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
6ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho ChehabOverview
7ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab--------
8ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
9ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho ChehabAll filesystem operations require a dentry (or two) as a starting
10ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehabpoint.  Local applications have a reference-counted hold on suitable
11ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehabdentries via open file descriptors or cwd/root.  However remote
12ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehabapplications that access a filesystem via a remote filesystem protocol
13ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehabsuch as NFS may not be able to hold such a reference, and so need a
14ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehabdifferent way to refer to a particular dentry.  As the alternative
15ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehabform of reference needs to be stable across renames, truncates, and
16ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehabserver-reboot (among other things, though these tend to be the most
17ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehabproblematic), there is no simple answer like 'filename'.
18ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
19ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho ChehabThe mechanism discussed here allows each filesystem implementation to
20ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehabspecify how to generate an opaque (outside of the filesystem) byte
21ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehabstring for any dentry, and how to find an appropriate dentry for any
22ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehabgiven opaque byte string.
23ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho ChehabThis byte string will be called a "filehandle fragment" as it
24ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehabcorresponds to part of an NFS filehandle.
25ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
26ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho ChehabA filesystem which supports the mapping between filehandle fragments
27ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehaband dentries will be termed "exportable".
28ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
29ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
30ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
31ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho ChehabDcache Issues
32ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab-------------
33ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
34ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho ChehabThe dcache normally contains a proper prefix of any given filesystem
35ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehabtree.  This means that if any filesystem object is in the dcache, then
36ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehaball of the ancestors of that filesystem object are also in the dcache.
37ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho ChehabAs normal access is by filename this prefix is created naturally and
38ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehabmaintained easily (by each object maintaining a reference count on
39ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehabits parent).
40ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
41ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho ChehabHowever when objects are included into the dcache by interpreting a
42ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehabfilehandle fragment, there is no automatic creation of a path prefix
43ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehabfor the object.  This leads to two related but distinct features of
44ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehabthe dcache that are not needed for normal filesystem access.
45ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
46ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab1. The dcache must sometimes contain objects that are not part of the
47ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab   proper prefix. i.e that are not connected to the root.
48ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab2. The dcache must be prepared for a newly found (via ->lookup) directory
49ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab   to already have a (non-connected) dentry, and must be able to move
50ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab   that dentry into place (based on the parent and name in the
51ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab   ->lookup).   This is particularly needed for directories as
52ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab   it is a dcache invariant that directories only have one dentry.
53ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
54ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho ChehabTo implement these features, the dcache has:
55ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
56ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehaba. A dentry flag DCACHE_DISCONNECTED which is set on
57ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab   any dentry that might not be part of the proper prefix.
58ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab   This is set when anonymous dentries are created, and cleared when a
59ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab   dentry is noticed to be a child of a dentry which is in the proper
60ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab   prefix.  If the refcount on a dentry with this flag set
61ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab   becomes zero, the dentry is immediately discarded, rather than being
62ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab   kept in the dcache.  If a dentry that is not already in the dcache
63ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab   is repeatedly accessed by filehandle (as NFSD might do), an new dentry
64ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab   will be a allocated for each access, and discarded at the end of
65ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab   the access.
66ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
67ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab   Note that such a dentry can acquire children, name, ancestors, etc.
68ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab   without losing DCACHE_DISCONNECTED - that flag is only cleared when
69ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab   subtree is successfully reconnected to root.  Until then dentries
70ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab   in such subtree are retained only as long as there are references;
71ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab   refcount reaching zero means immediate eviction, same as for unhashed
72ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab   dentries.  That guarantees that we won't need to hunt them down upon
73ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab   umount.
74ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
75ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehabb. A primitive for creation of secondary roots - d_obtain_root(inode).
76ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab   Those do _not_ bear DCACHE_DISCONNECTED.  They are placed on the
77ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab   per-superblock list (->s_roots), so they can be located at umount
78ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab   time for eviction purposes.
79ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
80ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehabc. Helper routines to allocate anonymous dentries, and to help attach
81ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab   loose directory dentries at lookup time. They are:
82ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
83ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab    d_obtain_alias(inode) will return a dentry for the given inode.
84ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab      If the inode already has a dentry, one of those is returned.
85ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
86ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab      If it doesn't, a new anonymous (IS_ROOT and
87ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab      DCACHE_DISCONNECTED) dentry is allocated and attached.
88ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
89ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab      In the case of a directory, care is taken that only one dentry
90ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab      can ever be attached.
91ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
92ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab    d_splice_alias(inode, dentry) will introduce a new dentry into the tree;
93ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab      either the passed-in dentry or a preexisting alias for the given inode
94ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab      (such as an anonymous one created by d_obtain_alias), if appropriate.
95ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab      It returns NULL when the passed-in dentry is used, following the calling
96ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab      convention of ->lookup.
97ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
98ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho ChehabFilesystem Issues
99ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab-----------------
100ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
101ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho ChehabFor a filesystem to be exportable it must:
102ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
103ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab   1. provide the filehandle fragment routines described below.
104ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab   2. make sure that d_splice_alias is used rather than d_add
105ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab      when ->lookup finds an inode for a given parent and name.
106ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
107ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab      If inode is NULL, d_splice_alias(inode, dentry) is equivalent to::
108ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
109ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab		d_add(dentry, inode), NULL
110ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
111ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab      Similarly, d_splice_alias(ERR_PTR(err), dentry) = ERR_PTR(err)
112ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
113ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab      Typically the ->lookup routine will simply end with a::
114ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
115ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab		return d_splice_alias(inode, dentry);
116ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab	}
117ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
118ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
119ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
120ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho ChehabA file system implementation declares that instances of the filesystem
121ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehabare exportable by setting the s_export_op field in the struct
122ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehabsuper_block.  This field must point to a "struct export_operations"
123ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehabstruct which has the following members:
124ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
125*e21fc203SAmir Goldstein  encode_fh (mandatory)
126304e9c83SAmir Goldstein    Takes a dentry and creates a filehandle fragment which may later be used
127*e21fc203SAmir Goldstein    to find or create a dentry for the same object.
128ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
129ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab  fh_to_dentry (mandatory)
130ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab    Given a filehandle fragment, this should find the implied object and
131ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab    create a dentry for it (possibly with d_obtain_alias).
132ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
133ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab  fh_to_parent (optional but strongly recommended)
134ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab    Given a filehandle fragment, this should find the parent of the
135ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab    implied object and create a dentry for it (possibly with
136ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab    d_obtain_alias).  May fail if the filehandle fragment is too small.
137ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
138ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab  get_parent (optional but strongly recommended)
139ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab    When given a dentry for a directory, this should return  a dentry for
140ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab    the parent.  Quite possibly the parent dentry will have been allocated
141ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab    by d_alloc_anon.  The default get_parent function just returns an error
142ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab    so any filehandle lookup that requires finding a parent will fail.
143ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab    ->lookup("..") is *not* used as a default as it can leave ".." entries
144ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab    in the dcache which are too messy to work with.
145ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
146ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab  get_name (optional)
147ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab    When given a parent dentry and a child dentry, this should find a name
148ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab    in the directory identified by the parent dentry, which leads to the
149ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab    object identified by the child dentry.  If no get_name function is
150ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab    supplied, a default implementation is provided which uses vfs_readdir
151ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab    to find potential names, and matches inode numbers to find the correct
152ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab    match.
153ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
154daab110eSJeff Layton  flags
155daab110eSJeff Layton    Some filesystems may need to be handled differently than others. The
156daab110eSJeff Layton    export_operations struct also includes a flags field that allows the
157daab110eSJeff Layton    filesystem to communicate such information to nfsd. See the Export
158daab110eSJeff Layton    Operations Flags section below for more explanation.
159ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehab
160ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho ChehabA filehandle fragment consists of an array of 1 or more 4byte words,
161ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehabtogether with a one byte "type".
162ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho ChehabThe decode_fh routine should not depend on the stated size that is
163ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehabpassed to it.  This size may be larger than the original filehandle
164ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehabgenerated by encode_fh, in which case it will have been padded with
165ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehabnuls.  Rather, the encode_fh routine should choose a "type" which
166ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehabindicates the decode_fh how much of the filehandle is valid, and how
167ec23eb54SMauro Carvalho Chehabit should be interpreted.
168daab110eSJeff Layton
169daab110eSJeff LaytonExport Operations Flags
170daab110eSJeff Layton-----------------------
171daab110eSJeff LaytonIn addition to the operation vector pointers, struct export_operations also
172daab110eSJeff Laytoncontains a "flags" field that allows the filesystem to communicate to nfsd
173daab110eSJeff Laytonthat it may want to do things differently when dealing with it. The
174daab110eSJeff Laytonfollowing flags are defined:
175daab110eSJeff Layton
176daab110eSJeff Layton  EXPORT_OP_NOWCC - disable NFSv3 WCC attributes on this filesystem
177daab110eSJeff Layton    RFC 1813 recommends that servers always send weak cache consistency
178daab110eSJeff Layton    (WCC) data to the client after each operation. The server should
179daab110eSJeff Layton    atomically collect attributes about the inode, do an operation on it,
180daab110eSJeff Layton    and then collect the attributes afterward. This allows the client to
181daab110eSJeff Layton    skip issuing GETATTRs in some situations but means that the server
182daab110eSJeff Layton    is calling vfs_getattr for almost all RPCs. On some filesystems
183daab110eSJeff Layton    (particularly those that are clustered or networked) this is expensive
184daab110eSJeff Layton    and atomicity is difficult to guarantee. This flag indicates to nfsd
185daab110eSJeff Layton    that it should skip providing WCC attributes to the client in NFSv3
186daab110eSJeff Layton    replies when doing operations on this filesystem. Consider enabling
187daab110eSJeff Layton    this on filesystems that have an expensive ->getattr inode operation,
188daab110eSJeff Layton    or when atomicity between pre and post operation attribute collection
189daab110eSJeff Layton    is impossible to guarantee.
190ba5e8187SJeff Layton
191ba5e8187SJeff Layton  EXPORT_OP_NOSUBTREECHK - disallow subtree checking on this fs
192ba5e8187SJeff Layton    Many NFS operations deal with filehandles, which the server must then
193ba5e8187SJeff Layton    vet to ensure that they live inside of an exported tree. When the
194ba5e8187SJeff Layton    export consists of an entire filesystem, this is trivial. nfsd can just
195ba5e8187SJeff Layton    ensure that the filehandle live on the filesystem. When only part of a
196ba5e8187SJeff Layton    filesystem is exported however, then nfsd must walk the ancestors of the
197ba5e8187SJeff Layton    inode to ensure that it's within an exported subtree. This is an
198ba5e8187SJeff Layton    expensive operation and not all filesystems can support it properly.
199ba5e8187SJeff Layton    This flag exempts the filesystem from subtree checking and causes
200ba5e8187SJeff Layton    exportfs to get back an error if it tries to enable subtree checking
201ba5e8187SJeff Layton    on it.
2027f84b488SJeff Layton
2037f84b488SJeff Layton  EXPORT_OP_CLOSE_BEFORE_UNLINK - always close cached files before unlinking
2047f84b488SJeff Layton    On some exportable filesystems (such as NFS) unlinking a file that
2057f84b488SJeff Layton    is still open can cause a fair bit of extra work. For instance,
2067f84b488SJeff Layton    the NFS client will do a "sillyrename" to ensure that the file
2077f84b488SJeff Layton    sticks around while it's still open. When reexporting, that open
2087f84b488SJeff Layton    file is held by nfsd so we usually end up doing a sillyrename, and
2097f84b488SJeff Layton    then immediately deleting the sillyrenamed file just afterward when
2107f84b488SJeff Layton    the link count actually goes to zero. Sometimes this delete can race
2117f84b488SJeff Layton    with other operations (for instance an rmdir of the parent directory).
2127f84b488SJeff Layton    This flag causes nfsd to close any open files for this inode _before_
2137f84b488SJeff Layton    calling into the vfs to do an unlink or a rename that would replace
2147f84b488SJeff Layton    an existing file.
215b38a6023SChuck Lever
216b38a6023SChuck Lever  EXPORT_OP_REMOTE_FS - Backing storage for this filesystem is remote
217b38a6023SChuck Lever    PF_LOCAL_THROTTLE exists for loopback NFSD, where a thread needs to
218b38a6023SChuck Lever    write to one bdi (the final bdi) in order to free up writes queued
219b38a6023SChuck Lever    to another bdi (the client bdi). Such threads get a private balance
220b38a6023SChuck Lever    of dirty pages so that dirty pages for the client bdi do not imact
221b38a6023SChuck Lever    the daemon writing to the final bdi. For filesystems whose durable
222b38a6023SChuck Lever    storage is not local (such as exported NFS filesystems), this
223b38a6023SChuck Lever    constraint has negative consequences. EXPORT_OP_REMOTE_FS enables
224b38a6023SChuck Lever    an export to disable writeback throttling.
225b38a6023SChuck Lever
226b38a6023SChuck Lever  EXPORT_OP_NOATOMIC_ATTR - Filesystem does not update attributes atomically
227b38a6023SChuck Lever    EXPORT_OP_NOATOMIC_ATTR indicates that the exported filesystem
228b38a6023SChuck Lever    cannot provide the semantics required by the "atomic" boolean in
229b38a6023SChuck Lever    NFSv4's change_info4. This boolean indicates to a client whether the
230b38a6023SChuck Lever    returned before and after change attributes were obtained atomically
231b38a6023SChuck Lever    with the respect to the requested metadata operation (UNLINK,
232b38a6023SChuck Lever    OPEN/CREATE, MKDIR, etc).
233b38a6023SChuck Lever
234b38a6023SChuck Lever  EXPORT_OP_FLUSH_ON_CLOSE - Filesystem flushes file data on close(2)
235b38a6023SChuck Lever    On most filesystems, inodes can remain under writeback after the
236b38a6023SChuck Lever    file is closed. NFSD relies on client activity or local flusher
237b38a6023SChuck Lever    threads to handle writeback. Certain filesystems, such as NFS, flush
238b38a6023SChuck Lever    all of an inode's dirty data on last close. Exports that behave this
239b38a6023SChuck Lever    way should set EXPORT_OP_FLUSH_ON_CLOSE so that NFSD knows to skip
240b38a6023SChuck Lever    waiting for writeback when closing such files.
2412dd10de8SAlexander Aring
2422dd10de8SAlexander Aring  EXPORT_OP_ASYNC_LOCK - Indicates a capable filesystem to do async lock
2432dd10de8SAlexander Aring    requests from lockd. Only set EXPORT_OP_ASYNC_LOCK if the filesystem has
2442dd10de8SAlexander Aring    it's own ->lock() functionality as core posix_lock_file() implementation
2452dd10de8SAlexander Aring    has no async lock request handling yet. For more information about how to
2462dd10de8SAlexander Aring    indicate an async lock request from a ->lock() file_operations struct, see
2472dd10de8SAlexander Aring    fs/locks.c and comment for the function vfs_lock_file().
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