NFSv4 Working Group J. Lentini
Internet-Draft C. Everhart
Intended status: Standards Track NetApp
Expires: January 11, 2010 D. Ellard
BBN Technologies
R. Tewari
M. Naik
IBM Almaden
July 10, 2009
NSDB Protocol for Federated Filesystems
draft-ietf-nfsv4-federated-fs-protocol-02
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Abstract
This document describes a filesystem federation protocol that enables
file access and namespace traversal across collections of
independently administered fileservers. The protocol specifies a set
of interfaces by which fileservers with different administrators can
form a fileserver federation that provides a namespace composed of
the filesystems physically hosted on and exported by the constituent
fileservers.
Requirements Language
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2. Overview of Features and Concepts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2.1. Namespace . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
2.2. Fileset and Fileset Name (FSN) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
2.3. Fileset Location (FSL) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
2.3.1. Mutual Consistency across Fileset Locations . . . . . 7
2.3.2. Caching of Fileset Locations . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
2.4. Namespace Database (NSDB) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
2.5. Mount Points, Junctions and Referrals . . . . . . . . . . 9
2.6. Unified Namespace and the Root Fileset . . . . . . . . . . 10
2.7. Fileservers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
2.8. File-access Clients . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
3. Examples . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
3.1. Creating a Fileset and its FSL(s) . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
3.1.1. Creating a Fileset and an FSN . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
3.1.2. Adding a Replica of a Fileset . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
3.2. Junction Resolution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
3.3. Example Use Case for Fileset Annotations . . . . . . . . . 12
4. Mapping the NSDB onto LDAP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
4.1. Basic LDAP Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
4.2. LDAP Schema . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
4.2.1. LDAP Attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
4.2.2. LDAP Objects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
5. NSDB Operations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
5.1. NSDB Operations for Administrators . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
5.1.1. Create an FSN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
5.1.2. Delete an FSN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
5.1.3. Create an FSL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
5.1.4. Delete an FSL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
5.1.5. Update an FSL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
5.2. NSDB Operations for Fileservers . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
5.2.1. Lookup FSLs for an FSN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
6. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
7. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
7.1. LDAP Descriptor Registration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
8. Glossary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
9. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
9.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
9.2. Informational References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
Appendix A. Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
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1. Introduction
A federated filesystem enables file access and namespace traversal in
a uniform, secure and consistent manner across multiple independent
fileservers within an enterprise or across multiple enterprises.
This document specifies a set of protocols that allow fileservers,
possibly from different vendors and with different administrators, to
cooperatively form a federation containing one or more federated
filesystems. Each federated filesystem's namespace is composed of
the filesystems physically hosted on and exported by the federation's
fileservers. A federation MAY contain a common namespace across all
its fileservers. A federation MAY project multiple namespaces and
enable clients to traverse each one. A federation MAY contain an
arbitrary number of namespace repositories, each belonging to a
different administrative entity, and each rendering a part of the
namespace. A federation MAY also have an arbitrary number of
administrative entities responsible for administering disjoint
subsets of the fileservers.
Traditionally, building a namespace that spans multiple fileservers
has been difficult for two reasons. First, the fileservers that
export pieces of the namespace are often not in the same
administrative domain. Second, there is no standard mechanism for
the fileservers to cooperatively present the namespace. Fileservers
may provide proprietary management tools and in some cases an
administrator may be able to use the proprietary tools to build a
shared namespace out of the exported filesystems. However, relying
on vendor-proprietary tools does not work in larger enterprises or
when collaborating across enterprises because the fileservers are
likely to be from multiple vendors or use different software
versions, each with their own namespace protocols, with no common
mechanism to manage the namespace or exchange namespace information.
The federated filesystem protocols in this document define how to
construct a namespace accessible by an NFSv4 [RFC3530] or NFSv4.1
[NFSv4.1] client and have been designed to accommodate other file
access protocols in the future.
The requirements for federated filesystems are described in
[FEDFS-REQTS]. A protocol for administering a fileserver's namespace
is described in [FEDFS-ADMIN]. In the rest of the document, the term
fileserver denotes a fileserver that is part of a federation.
2. Overview of Features and Concepts
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2.1. Namespace
The goal of a unified namespace is to make all managed data available
to all clients via the same path in a common filesystem-like
namespace. This should be achieved with minimal or zero client
configuration. In particular, updates to the common namespace should
not require configuration changes at the client. Filesets, which are
the unit of data management, are a set of files and directories.
From the perspective of the clients, the common namespace is
constructed by mounting filesets that are physically located on
different fileservers. The namespace, which is defined in terms of
fileset definitions, fileset identifiers, the location of each
fileset in the namespace, and the physical location of the
implementation(s) of each fileset, is stored in a set of namespace
repositories, each managed by an administrative entity. The
namespace schema defines the model used for populating, modifying,
and querying the namespace repositories. It is not required by the
federation that the namespace be common across all fileservers. It
should be possible to have several independently rooted namespaces.
2.2. Fileset and Fileset Name (FSN)
A fileset is defined to be a container of data and is the basic unit
of data management. Depending on the implementation, they may be
anything between an individual directory of an exported filesystem to
an entire exported filesystem at a fileserver. A fileset is uniquely
represented by its fileset name (FSN). An FSN is considered unique
across the federation. An FSN contains information sufficient to
locate the namespace database (NSDB) that holds authoritative
information about it and an identifier, called the FsnUuid, that
identifies it on that NSDB. After an FSN is created, it is
associated with a fileset location (FSL) on a fileserver. A fileset
can be implemented by one or more FSLs. The attributes of an FSN
are:
NsdbName: the fully qualified domain name of an NSDB location
that contains authoritative information for this FSN.
FsnUuid: a 128-bit UUID (universally unique identifier),
conforming to [RFC4122], that is used to uniquely identify an
FSN. To minimize the probability of two UUIDs colliding, a
consistent procedure for generating UUIDs SHOULD be used
throughout the federation. Within the federation, UUIDs SHOULD
be generated using the procedure described for version 1 of the
UUID variant specified in [RFC4122]. An NSDB SHOULD ensure
that no two FSNs it stores have the same FsnUuid.
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2.3. Fileset Location (FSL)
An FSL represents the location where the fileset data resides. Each
FSL contains the host addresses of the fileserver storing the FSL and
protocol specific information for accessing the FSL. Each location
has an associated type that determines the protocol(s) that may be
used to access its data. Type information can be used to decide the
list of locations that will be returned to the client.
Each FSL consists of:
FslUuid: a 128-bit UUID, conforming to [RFC4122], that is used to
uniquely identify an FSL. To minimize the probability of two
UUIDs colliding, a consistent procedure for generating UUIDs
SHOULD be used throughout the federation. Within the
federation, UUIDs SHOULD be generated using the procedure
described for version 1 of the UUID variant specified in
[RFC4122]. An NSDB SHOULD ensure that no two FSLs it stores
have the same FslUuid.
FsnUuid: the 128-bit UUID of the FSL's FSN.
NsdbName: the fully qualified domain name of an NSDB location
that contains authoritative information for this FSL.
FSL Host: the fully qualified domain name of the host fileserver
storing the physical data
FSL TTL: the time in seconds during which the FSL may be cached
Annotations: optional name/value pairs that can be interpreted by
a fileserver. The semantics of this field are not defined by
this document. These tuples are intended to be used by higher-
level protocols.
Descriptions: optional text descriptions. The semantics of this
field are not defined by this document.
In addition, an NFS FSL contains information suitable for an NFSv4
fs_locations [RFC3530] or NFSv4.1 fs_locations_info attribute
[NFSv4.1]:
Pathname: the exported pathname at that host fileserver
Major Version: the NFS protocol major version (e.g. 4 for
NFSv4.1)
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Minor Version: the NFS protocol minor version (e.g. 1 for
NFSv4.1)
Currency: the time lag of this FSL represented as the number of
time units it lags the latest version as defined by the NFSv4.1
fs_locations_server's fls_currency field. A currency value of
0 represents the latest version. Currency values are less than
or equal to zero
Info: as defined by the NFSv4.1 fl_locations_server's fls_info
field.
Flags: as defined by the NFSv4.1 fs_locations_info's fli_flags
field.
Valid For: as defined by the NFSv4.1 fs_locations_info's
fli_valid_for field.
A fileset MAY be accessible by protocols other than NFS. For each
such protocol, a corresponding FSL subtype SHOULD be defined. The
contents and format of such FSL subtypes are not defined in this
document.
2.3.1. Mutual Consistency across Fileset Locations
All of the FSLs that have the same FSN (thereby reference the same
fileset) are equivalent from the point of view of client access; the
different locations of a fileset represent the same data, though
potentially at different points in time. Fileset locations are
equivalent but not identical. Locations may either be read-only or
read-write. Typically, multiple read-write locations are backed by a
clustered filesystem while read-only locations are replicas created
by a federation-initiated or external replication. Read-only
locations may represent consistent point-in-time copies of a read-
write location. The federation protocols, however, cannot prevent
subsequent changes to a read-only location nor guarantee point-in-
time consistency of a read-only location if the read-write location
is changing.
Regardless of the type, all locations exist at the same mount point
in the namespace and, thus, one client may be referred to one
location while another is directed to a different location. Since
updates to each fileset location are not controlled by the federation
protocol, it is the responsibility of administrators to guarantee the
functional equivalence of the data.
The federation protocol does not guarantee that the different
locations are mutually consistent in terms of the currency of the
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data. It relies on the client file-access protocol (i.e., NFSv4) to
contain sufficient information to help the clients determine the
currency of the data at each location in order to ensure that the
clients do not revert back in time when switching locations.
2.3.2. Caching of Fileset Locations
To resolve an FSN to a set of FSL records, the fileserver queries the
appropriate NSDB for the FSL records. A fileserver MAY cache these
FSL records for a limited period of time. The period of time, if
any, during which FSL records are cached is indicated by the FSL's
TTL field.
The combination of FSL caching and FSL migration presents a
challenge. For example, suppose there are three fileservers named A,
B, and C and fileserver A contains a junction to fileset X stored on
fileserver B. Now suppose that fileset X is migrated from fileserver
B to fileserver C and the corresponding FSL information for fileset X
in the appropriate NSDB is updated. If fileserver A has a cached FSL
for fileset X, a user traversing the junction on fileserver A will be
referred to fileserver B even though fileset X has migrated to
fileserver C. If fileserver A was not caching FSL records, it would
have obtained the correct location of fileset X from the NSDB.
Administrators are advised to be aware of FSL caching when performing
a migration. When migrating a fileset, administrators SHOULD create
a junction at the fileset's old location referring back to the NSDB
entry for the fileset. This junction will redirect any users who
follow stale FSL information to the correct location. Thus, in the
above example, fileserver A would direct clients to fileserver B, but
fileserver B would in turn direct clients to fileserver C.
Such supplemental junctions (on fileserver B in the example) would
not be required to be in place forever. They need to stay in place
only until cached FSL entries for the target fileset are invalidated.
Each FSL contains a TTL field, a count in seconds of the time
interval which is an upper bound for the lifetime of the cached
information and a lower bound for the lifetime of the supplemental
junctions. For example, suppose this field contains the value 3600
seconds (one hour). In such a case, administrators MUST keep the
supplemental junctions in place for at least one hour after the
fileset move has taken place, and FSL data MUST NOT be cached by a
referring fileserver for more than one hour without a refresh.
2.4. Namespace Database (NSDB)
The NSDB service is a federation-wide service that provides
interfaces to define, update, and query FSN information and FSN to
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FSL mapping information. An individual repository of namespace
information is called an NSDB location. Each NSDB location is
managed by a single administrative entity. A single admin entity can
manage multiple NSDB locations.
The difference between the NSDB service and an NSDB location is
analogous to that between the DNS service and a particular DNS
server.
Each NSDB location stores the definition of the FSNs for which it is
authoritative. It also stores the definitions of the FSLs associated
with those FSNs. An NSDB location is authoritative for the filesets
that it defines. An NSDB location can cache information from a peer
NSDB location. The fileserver can always contact a local NSDB
location (if it has been defined) or directly contact any NSDB
location to resolve a junction. Each NSDB location supports an LDAP
[RFC4510] interface and can be accessed by an LDAP client.
An NSDB MAY be replicated throughout the federation. If an NSDB is
replicated, the NSDB MUST exhibit loose, converging consistency as
defined in [RFC3254]. The mechanism by which this is achieved is
outside the scope of this document. Many LDAP implementations
support replication. These features MAY be used to replicate the
NSDB.
2.5. Mount Points, Junctions and Referrals
A mount point is a directory in a parent fileset where a target
fileset may be attached. If a client traverses the path leading from
the root of the namespace to the mount point of a target fileset it
should be able to access the data in that target fileset (assuming
appropriate permissions).
The directory where a fileset is mounted is represented by a junction
in the underlying filesystem. In other words, a junction can be
viewed as a reference from a directory in one fileset to the root of
the target fileset. A junction can be implemented as a special
marker on a directory that is interpreted by the fileserver as a
mount point, or by some other mechanism in the underlying filesystem.
What data is used by the underlying filesystem to represent the
junction is not defined by this protocol. The essential property is
that the server must be able to find, given the junction, the FSN for
the target fileset. The mechanism by which the server maps a
junction to an FSN is outside the scope of this document. The FSN
(as described earlier) contains both the the authoritative NSDB
location and the FsnUuid (a UUID for the fileset).
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When a client traversal reaches a junction, the client is referred to
a list of FSLs associated with the FSN that was the target of the
junction. The client can then redirect its connection to one of the
FSLs. This act is called a referral. For NFSv4 and NFSv4.1 clients,
the FSL information is returned in the fs_locations and
fs_locations_info attributes respectively.
The federation protocols do not limit where and how many times a
fileset is mounted in the namespace. Filesets can be nested; a
fileset can be mounted under another fileset.
2.6. Unified Namespace and the Root Fileset
The root fileset, when defined, is the top-level fileset of the
federation-wide namespace. The root of the unified namespace is the
top level directory of this fileset. A set of designated fileservers
in the federation can export the root fileset to render the
federation-wide unified namespace. When a client mounts the root
fileset from any of these designated fileservers it can view a common
federation-wide namespace. The properties and schema definition of
the root fileset and the protocol details that describe how to
configure and replicate the root fileset are not defined in this
document.
2.7. Fileservers
Fileservers are servers that store the physical fileset data or refer
the client to other fileservers. A fileserver can be implemented in
a number of different ways, including a single system, a cluster of
systems, or some other configuration. A fileserver access to a
federated filesystem via NFSv4, NFSv4.1, or some other protocol.
2.8. File-access Clients
File access clients are standard off-the-shelf NAS clients that
access file data using the NFSv4 protocol, the NFSv4.1 protocol, or
some other protocol.
3. Examples
In this section we provide examples and discussion of the basic
operations facilitated by the federated filesystem protocol: creating
a fileset, adding a replica of a fileset, resolving a junction, and
creating a junction.
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3.1. Creating a Fileset and its FSL(s)
A fileset is the abstraction of a set of files and their containing
directory tree. The fileset abstraction is the fundamental unit of
data management in the federation. This abstraction is implemented
by an actual directory tree whose root location is specified by a
fileset location (FSL).
In this section, we describe the basic requirements for starting with
a directory tree and creating a fileset that can be used in the
federation protocols. Note that we do not assume that the process of
creating a fileset requires any transformation of the files or the
directory hierarchy. The only thing that is required by this process
is assigning the fileset a fileset name (FSN) and expressing the
location(s) of the implementation of the fileset as FSL(s).
There are many possible variations to this procedure, depending on
how the FSN that binds the FSL is created, and whether other replicas
of the fileset exist, are known to the federation, and need to be
bound to the same FSN.
It is easiest to describe this in terms of how to create the initial
implementation of the fileset, and then describe how to add replicas.
3.1.1. Creating a Fileset and an FSN
1. Choose the NSDB node that will keep track of the FSL(s) and
related information for the fileset.
2. Request that the NSDB node register a new FSN for the fileset.
The FSN UUID is chosen by the administrator or generated
automatically by administration software. The former case is
used if the fileset is being restored, perhaps as part of
disaster recovery, and the administrator wishes to specify the
FSN UUID in order to permit existing junctions that reference
that FSN to work again.
At this point, the FSN exists, but its fileset locations are
unspecified.
3. Send the FSN, the hostname, the export path, the type, the
currency, info, and annotations for the fileset to the NSDB node.
The NSDB node records this info and creates the initial FSL for
the fileset.
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3.1.2. Adding a Replica of a Fileset
Adding a replica is straightforward: the NSDB node and the FSN are
already known. The only remaining step is to add another FSL.
Note that the federation protocols do not include methods for
creating or managing replicas: this is assumed to be a platform-
dependent operation (at least at this time). The only interface
required is the ability to register or remove the registration of
replicas for a fileset.
3.2. Junction Resolution
A fileset may contain references to other filesets. These references
are represented by junctions. If a client requests access to a
fileset object that is a junction, the server resolves the junction
to discover the FSL(s) that implements the referenced fileset.
There are many possible variations to this procedure, depending on
how the junctions are represented and how the information necessary
to perform resolution is represented by the server.
Step 4 is the only step that interacts directly with the federation
protocols. The rest of the steps may use platform-specific
interfaces.
1. The server determines that the object being accessed is a
junction.
2. The server does a local lookup to find the FSN of the target
fileset.
3. Using the FSN, the server finds the NSDB node responsible for the
target object.
4. The server contacts that NSDB node and asks for the set of FSLs
that implement the target FSN. The NSDB node responds with a set
of FSLs.
3.3. Example Use Case for Fileset Annotations
The fileset annotations can be used to define relationships between
filesets that can be used by an auxiliary replication protocol.
Consider the scenario where a fileset is created and mounted at some
point in the namespace. A snapshot of the read-write FSL of that
fileset is taken periodically at different frequencies say a daily
snapshot or a weekly snapshot. The different snapshots are mounted
at different locations in the namespace. The daily snapshots are
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considered as a different fileset from the weekly ones but both are
related to the source fileset. For this we can define an annotation
labeling the filesets as source and replica. The replication
protocol can use this information to copy data from one or more FSLs
of the source fileset to all the FSLs of the replica fileset. The
replica filesets are read-only while the source fileset is read-
write.
This follows the traditional Andrew File System (AFS) model of
mounting the read-only volume at a path in the namespace different
from that of the read-write volume [AFS].
The federation protocol does not control or manage the relationship
among filesets. It merely enables annotating the filesets with user-
defined relationships.
4. Mapping the NSDB onto LDAP
This section describes how an NSDB is constructed using an LDAP
Version 3 [RFC4510] Directory. Section 4.1 describes the basic
properties of the LDAP configuration that MUST be used in order to
ensure compatibility between different implementations. Section 4.2
defines the new LDAP attribute types, the new object types, and
specifies how the distinguished name (DN) of each object instance
MUST be constructed.
4.1. Basic LDAP Configuration
The base name (or suffix) of the NSDB directory information tree
(DIT) is "o=fedfs".
The DN of the privileged LDAP user is, by convention,
"cn=admin,o=fedfs". This user is able to modify the contents of the
LDAP database. It is permitted to use a different DN (or add
additional privileged users) but if a different DN is used then every
admin entity that needs to modify the contents of the database or
view privileged information must be made aware of the new DN.
It MUST be possible for the anonymous (unauthenticated) user to
perform LDAP queries that access the NSDB data.
All implementations SHOULD use the same schema, or, at minimum, a
schema that includes all of the objects, with each of the attributes,
named in the following sections.
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4.2. LDAP Schema
The schema definitions provided in this document use the LDAP schema
syntax defined in [RFC4512]. The definitions are formatted to allow
the reader to easily extract them from the document. The reader can
use the following shell script to extract the definitions:
<CODE BEGINS>
#!/bin/sh
grep '^ *///' | sed 's?^ */// ??' | sed 's?^ *///$??'
<CODE ENDS>
If the above script is stored in a file called "extract.sh", and this
document is in a file called "spec.txt", then the reader can do:
<CODE BEGINS>
sh extract.sh < spec.txt > fedfs.schema
<CODE ENDS>
The effect of the script is to remove leading white space from each
line, plus a sentinel sequence of "///".
4.2.1. LDAP Attributes
This section describes the required attributes of the NSDB LDAP
schema.
4.2.1.1. fedfsUuid
A fedfsUuid is the base type for all of the universally unique
identifiers (UUIDs) used by the federated filesystem protocols.
This SHOULD be defined in terms of the text representation of the
standard UUID (as defined in [RFC4122]).
It MAY also be useful, for purposes of debugging or annotation, to
permit a fedfsUuid to include members of a more general class of
strings.
A fedfsUuid is a single-valued LDAP attribute. It is formally
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defined as follows:
///
/// attributetype (
/// 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.1 NAME 'fedfsUuid'
/// DESC 'A UUID used by NSDB'
/// SUP name
/// SINGLE-VALUE
/// )
///
4.2.1.2. fedfsNetAddr
A fedfsNetAddr is the locative name of a network service. It MUST be
a UTF-8 string and represent a network location in either IPv4, IPv6,
or DNS host name notation. The format is the same as that specified
for an fs_location4's server array elements in section 11.9 of
[NFSv4.1].
This attribute is single-valued. It is formally defined as follows:
///
/// attributetype (
/// 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.2 NAME 'fedfsNetAddr'
/// DESC 'The network name of a host or service'
/// SUP name
/// SINGLE-VALUE
/// )
///
4.2.1.3. fsnUuid
A fsnUuid represents the fsnUuid component of an FSN.
The fsnUuid is a subclass of fedfsUuid.
This attribute is single-valued.
///
/// attributetype (
/// 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.3 NAME 'fsnUuid'
/// DESC 'The FSN UUID component of an FSN'
/// SUP fedfsUuid
/// SINGLE-VALUE
/// )
///
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4.2.1.4. nsdbName
An nsdbName is the NSDB component of an FSN.
The nsdbName attribute is a subclass of fedfsNetAddr.
This attribute is single-valued.
///
/// attributetype (
/// 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.4 NAME 'nsdbName'
/// DESC 'The NSDB location component of an FSN'
/// SUP fedfsNetAddr
/// SINGLE-VALUE
/// )
///
4.2.1.5. fslUuid
Each FSL must have a UUID associated with it, which serves as part of
its DN.
The fslUuid attribute is a subclass of fedfsUuid.
This attribute is single-valued.
///
/// attributetype (
/// 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.5 NAME 'fslUuid'
/// DESC 'UUID of an FSL'
/// SUP fedfsUuid
/// SINGLE-VALUE
/// )
///
4.2.1.6. fslHost
An fslHost is the hostname/port component of an FSL.
The fslHost attribute is a subclass of fedfsNetAddr.
This attribute is single-valued.
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///
/// attributetype (
/// 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.6 NAME 'fslHost'
/// DESC 'Service location for a fileserver'
/// SUP fedfsNetAddr
/// SINGLE-VALUE
/// )
///
4.2.1.7. fslTTL
An fslTTL is the amount of time in seconds an FSL SHOULD be cached by
a fileserver. The numeric fslTTL value should be converted to a
string and encoded as a UTF-8 string.
This attribute is single-valued.
///
/// attributetype (
/// 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.7 NAME 'fslTTL'
/// DESC 'Time to live of an FSL'
/// SUP name
/// SINGLE-VALUE
/// )
///
4.2.1.8. fslNfsPath
The path component of an FSL encoded as a UTF-8 string.
This attribute is single-valued.
///
/// attributetype (
/// 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.8 NAME 'fslNfsPath'
/// DESC 'Server-local path to a fileset'
/// SUP name
/// SINGLE-VALUE
/// )
///
4.2.1.9. fslNfsMajorVer
The NFS major version of the associated NFS FSL. The numeric fslTTL
value should be converted to a string and encoded as a UTF-8 string.
For example if the FSL was exported via NFS 4.1, the contents of this
attribute would be the value 4.
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This attribute is single-valued.
///
/// attributetype (
/// 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.9 NAME 'fslNfsMajorVer'
/// DESC 'NFS major version'
/// SUP name
/// SINGLE-VALUE
/// )
///
4.2.1.10. fslNfsMinorVer
The NFS minor version of the associated NFS FSL. The numeric fslTTL
value should be converted to a string and encoded as a UTF-8 string.
For example if the FSL was exported via NFS 4.1, the contents of this
attribute would be the value 1.
This attribute is single-valued.
///
/// attributetype (
/// 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.10 NAME 'fslNfsMinorVer'
/// DESC 'NFS minor version'
/// SUP name
/// SINGLE-VALUE
/// )
///
4.2.1.11. fslNfsCurrency
The currency of an FSL. The signed 32-bit numeric value should be
converted to a string encoded as a UTF-8 string.
This attribute is used to populate the NFSv4.1 fs_locations_server's
currency field.
This attribute is single-valued.
///
/// attributetype (
/// 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.11 NAME 'fslNfsCurrency'
/// DESC 'up-to-date measure of the data'
/// SUP name
/// SINGLE-VALUE
/// )
///
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4.2.1.12. fslNfsInfo
Information about the FSL. The variable sized array of octets is
stored directly in this attribute.
This attribute is used to populate the NFSv4.1 fs_locations_server's
info field.
This attribute is single-valued.
///
/// attributetype (
/// 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.12 NAME 'fslNfsInfo'
/// DESC 'Information about the FSL'
/// EQUALITY octetStringMatch
/// SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.40
/// SINGLE-VALUE
/// )
///
1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.40 refers to the Octet String syntax
[RFC4517].
4.2.1.13. fslNfsFlags
An NFS FSL's flags. The unsigned 32-bit numeric value should be
converted to a string encoded as a UTF-8 string.
This attribute is used to populate the NFSv4.1 fs_locations_info's
fli_flags field.
This attribute is single-valued.
///
/// attributetype (
/// 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.13 NAME 'fslNfsFlags'
/// DESC 'Flags'
/// SUP name
/// SINGLE-VALUE
/// )
///
4.2.1.14. fslNfsValidFor
An NFS FSL's "valid for" flag. The signed 32-bit numeric value
should be converted to a string encoded as a UTF-8 string.
This attribute is used to populate the NFSv4.1 fs_locations_info's
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fli_valid_for field.
This attribute is single-valued.
///
/// attributetype (
/// 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.14 NAME 'fslNfsValidFor'
/// DESC 'Valid for time'
/// SUP name
/// SINGLE-VALUE
/// )
///
4.2.1.15. annotation
An annotation of an object.
This attribute is multi-valued; an object type that permits
annotations may have any number of annotations per instance.
///
/// attributetype (
/// 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.15 NAME 'annotation'
/// DESC 'Annotation of an object'
/// SUP name
/// )
///
An annotation attribute MUST be an UTF-8 string formatted as follows:
"KEY" = "VAL"
White space, defined as space, form-feed ('\f'), newline ('\n'),
carriage return ('\r'), horizontal tab ('\t'), and vertical tab
('\v') characters, is ignored.
KEY and VAL MAY may contain any UTF-8 characters. The following
escape sequences are allowed:
+-----------------+-------------+
| escape sequence | replacement |
+-----------------+-------------+
| \\ | \ |
| \" | " |
+-----------------+-------------+
An annotation attribute that does not adhere to this format SHOULD be
ignored.
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The following are examples of valid annotation attributes:
"key1" = "foo"
"another key" = "x=3"
"key-2" = "A string with \" and \\ characters."
which correspond to the following key/value pairs:
+-------------+-----------------------------------+
| key | value |
+-------------+-----------------------------------+
| key1 | foo |
| another key | x=3 |
| key-2 | A string with " and \ characters. |
+-------------+-----------------------------------+
4.2.1.16. descr
This attribute is used to store an object's description encoded as a
UTF-8 string.
This attribute is multi-valued which permits any number of
descriptions per entry.
///
/// attributetype (
/// 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.16 NAME 'descr'
/// DESC 'Description of an object'
/// SUP name
/// )
///
4.2.2. LDAP Objects
4.2.2.1. fedfsFsn
A fedfsFsn represents an FSN.
The required attributes of a fedfsFsn are an nsdbName and fsnUuid.
A fedfsFsn's annotation and descr attributes are OPTIONAL.
The DN of an FSN is REQUIRED to take the following form:
"fsnUuid=FSNUUID,o=fedfs", where FSNUUID is the UUID of the FSN.
Since LDAP requires a DN to be unique, this ensures that each FSN
entry has a unique UUID value within the LDAP directory.
A fedfsFsn MAY also have additional attributes, but these attributes
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MUST NOT be referenced by any part of this document.
///
/// objectclass (
/// 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.1001 NAME 'fedfsFsn'
/// DESC 'Represents a fileset'
/// SUP top STRUCTURAL
/// MUST (
/// fsnUuid
/// $ nsdbName
/// )
/// MAY (
/// annotation
/// $ descr
/// ))
///
4.2.2.2. fedfsFsl
The fedfsFsl object class represents an FSL.
A fedfsFsl's required attributes are an fslUuid, fsnUuid, nsdbName,
fslHost, and fslTTL.
A fedfsFsl's annotation and descr attributes are OPTIONAL.
The fedfsFsl is an abstract object class. Protocol specific subtypes
of this object class are used to store FSL information. The
fedfsNfsFsl object class defined below is used to record an NFS FSL's
location. Other subtypes MAY be defined for other protocols (e.g.
CIFS).
The DN of an FSL is REQUIRED to take the following form:
"fslUuid=FSLUUID,fsnUuid=FSNUUID,o=fedfs" where FSLUUID and FSNUUID
are the UUIDs of the FSL and its FSN respectively. Since LDAP
requires a DN to be unique, this ensures that each FSL entry has a
unique UUID value within the LDAP directory.
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///
/// objectclass (
/// 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.1002 NAME 'fedfsFsl'
/// DESC 'A physical location of a fileset'
/// SUP top ABSTRACT
/// MUST (
/// fslUuid
/// $ fsnUuid
/// $ nsdbName
/// $ fslHost
/// $ fslTTL
/// )
/// MAY (
/// annotation
/// $ descr
/// ))
///
4.2.2.3. fedfsNfsFsl
A fedfsNfsFsl is used to represent an NFS FSL. The fedfsNfsFsl
inherits all of the attributes of the fedfsFsl and extends the
fedfsFsl with information specific to the NFS protocol.
The DN of an NFS FSL is REQUIRED to take the following form:
"fslUuid=FSLUUID,fsnUuid=FSNUUID,o=fedfs" where FSLUUID and FSNUUID
are the UUIDs of the FSL and its FSN respectively. Since LDAP
requires a DN to be unique, this ensures that each NFS FSL entry has
a unique UUID value within the LDAP directory.
///
/// objectclass (
/// 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.1003 NAME 'fedfsNfsFsl'
/// DESC 'A NFS location of a fileset'
/// SUP fedfsFsl STRUCTURAL
/// MUST (
/// fslNfsPath
/// $ fslNfsMajorVer
/// $ fslNfsMinorVer
/// $ fslNfsCurrency
/// $ fslNfsInfo
/// $ fslNfsFlags
/// $ fslNfsValidFor
/// ))
///
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5. NSDB Operations
The operations defined by the protocol can be described as several
sub-protocols that are used by entities within the federation to
perform different roles.
The first of these sub-protocols defines how the state of an NSDB
location can be initialized and updated. The primary use of this
sub-protocol is by an administrator to add, edit, or delete filesets,
their properties, and their fileset locations.
The second of these sub-protocols defines the queries that are sent
to an NSDB location in order to perform resolution (or to find other
information about the data stored within that NSDB location) and the
responses returned by the NSDB location. The primary use of this
sub-protocol is by a fileserver in order to perform resolution, but
it may also be used by an administrator to query the state of the
system.
The first and second sub-protocols are defined as LDAP operations,
using the schema defined in the previous section. If each NSDB
location is a standard LDAP server, then, in theory, it is
unnecessary to describe the LDAP operations in detail, because the
operations are ordinary LDAP operations to query and update records.
However, we do not require that an NSDB location implement a complete
LDAP service, and therefore we define in these sections the minimum
level of LDAP functionality required to implement an NSDB location.
The NSDB sub-protocols are defined in the next two sub-sections.
The third sub-protocol defines the queries and other requests that
are sent to a fileserver in order to get information from it or to
modify the state of the fileserver in a manner related to the
federation protocols. The primary purpose of this protocol is for an
administrator to create or delete a junction or discover related
information about a particular fileserver.
The third sub-protocol is defined as an ONC RPC protocols. The
reason for using ONC RPC instead of LDAP is that all fileservers
support ONC RPC but some do not support an LDAP Directory server.
The ONC RPC administration protocol is defined in [FEDFS-ADMIN].
5.1. NSDB Operations for Administrators
The admin entity initiates and controls the commands to manage
fileset and namespace information. The admin entity, however, is
stateless. All state is maintained at the NSDB locations or at the
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fileserver.
We require that each NSDB location be able to act as an LDAP server
and that the protocol used for communicating between the admin entity
and each NSDB location is LDAP.
The names we assign to these operations are entirely for the purpose
of exposition in this document, and are not part of the LDAP dialogs.
In the description of the LDAP messages and LDIF, we use the
following notation: constant strings and literal names are specified
in lower or mixed case, while variables or values are specified in
uppercase.
5.1.1. Create an FSN
The administrator uses this operation to create a new FSN by
requesting the NSDB to create a new fedfsFsn in its LDAP database
with an fsnUuid value of FSNUUID and an NsdbName value of NSDBNAME.
The NSDB location that receives the request SHOULD check that the
NSDBNAME matches its own value and return an error if it does not.
This is to ensure that an FSN is always created by the NSDB location
encoded within the FSN as its owner.
The NSDB location that receives the request SHOULD check all of the
attributes for validity and consistency, but this is not generally
possible for LDAP servers because the consistency requirements cannot
be expressed in the LDAP schema (although many LDAP servers can be
extended, via plug-ins or other mechanisms, to add functionality
beyond the strict definition of LDAP).
5.1.1.1. LDAP Request
The admin chooses the fsnUuid and NsdbName of the FSN. The fsnUuid
is a UUID and should be chosen via a standard process for creating a
UUID (described in [RFC4122]). The NsdbName is the name of the NSDB
location that will serve as the source of definitive information
about an FSN for the life of that FSN. In the example below, the
admin server chooses a fsnUuid of FSNUUID and the NsdbName of
NSDBNAME and then sends an LDAP ADD request, described by the LDIF
below, to the NSDB location NSDBNAME. This will create a new
fedfsFsn on that NSDB location with the given attributes in the LDAP
database.
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dn: fsnUuid=FSNUUID,o=fedfs
changeType: add
objectClass: fedfsFsn
fsnUuid: FSNUUID
nsdbName: NSDBNAME
5.1.2. Delete an FSN
This operation deletes the given fileset name. If the FSN entry
being deleted has child FSL entries, this function MUST return an
error. This ensures that the NSDB will not contain any orphaned FSL
entries. A compliant LDAP implementation will meet this requirement
since Section 4.8 of [RFC4511] defines the LDAP delete operation to
only be capable of removing leaf entries.
Note that the FSN delete function only removes the fileset from the
namespace (by removing the records for that FSN from the NSDB
location that receives this request). The fileset and its data are
not deleted. Any junction that has this FSN as its target may
continue to point to this non-existent FSN. A dangling reference may
be detected when a client tries to resolve the target of a junction
that refers to the deleted FSN and the NSDB returns an error.
5.1.2.1. LDAP Request
The admin sends an LDAP DELETE request to the NSDB server to remove
the fedfsFsn from the NSDB server. An example LDIF for the delete
request is shown below.
dn: fsnUuid=FSNUUID,o=fedfs
changeType: delete
5.1.3. Create an FSL
This operations creates a new Fileset location at the given location
denoted by HOST and PATH for the given FSN. Normally an FSL is
identified by the HOST:PATH pair. A UUID is an optional way to
identify an FSL if it is recovered to a different HOST:PATH after a
backup/restore.
The FSL create command will result in the admin server sending an
LDAP ADD request to create a new fedfsFsl at the NSDB maintaining the
given FSN. The example LDIF is shown below. The PATH is the
pathname where the fileset is located on the fileserver HOST.
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5.1.3.1. LDAP Request
The admin sends an LDAP ADD request to the NSDB server to add the
FSL. An example LDIF for adding an NFS FSL is shown below.
dn:fslUuid=UUID,fsnUuid=FSNUUID,o=fedfs
changeType: add
objectClass: fedfsNfsFsl
fslUuid: UUID
fsnUuid: FSNUUID
nsdbName: NSDBNAME
fslHost: HOST
fslTTL: TTL
fslNfsPath: PATH
fslNfsMajorVer: MAJOR
fslNfsMinorVer: MINOR
fslNfsCurrency: CURRENCY
fslNfsInfo: INFO
fslNfsFlags: FLAGS
fslNfsValidFor: TIME
annotation: ANNOTATION
descr: DESCR
5.1.4. Delete an FSL
This operation deletes the given Fileset location. The admin
requests the NSDB location storing the fedfsFsl to delete it from its
database. This operation does not result in the fileset location's
data being deleted at the fileserver.
5.1.4.1. LDAP Request
The admin sends an LDAP DELETE request to the NSDB server to remove
the FSL.
dn: fslUuid=UUID,fsnUuid=FSNUUID,o=fedfs
changeType: delete
5.1.5. Update an FSL
This operation updates the attributes of a given FSL. This command
results in a change in the attributes of the fedfsFsl at the NSDB
server maintaining this FSL. The attributes that must not change are
the fslUuid and the fsnUuid of the fileset this FSL implements.
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5.1.5.1. LDAP Request
The admin sends an LDAP MODIFY request to the NSDB server to update
the FSL.
dn: fslUuid=UUID,fsnUuid=FSNUUID,o=fedfs
changeType: modify
replace: ATTRIBUTE-TYPE
5.2. NSDB Operations for Fileservers
5.2.1. Lookup FSLs for an FSN
Using an LDAP search, the fileserver can obtain all of the FSLs for a
given FSN. The FSN's fsnUuid is used as the search key. To obtain a
list of all FSLs, the following search can be used:
LDAP Request
Search base: fsnUuid=FSNUUID, o=fedfs
Search scope: onelevel
Search filter: (objectClass=fedfsFsl)
This search is for the children of the object with DN
"fsnUuid=FSNUUID,o=fedfs" with a filter for "objectClass = fedfsFsl".
(If you want to be doubly careful, you can also filter by the
nsdbName.)
The following search can be used to obtain only the NFS FSLs:
LDAP Request
Search base: fsnUuid=FSNUUID, o=fedfs
Search scope: onelevel
Search filter: (objectClass=fedfsNfsFsl)
This also searches for the children of the object with DN
"fsnUuid=FSNUUID,o=fedfs", but the filter for "objectClass =
fedfsNfsFsl" restricts the results to only NFS FSLs. (If you want to
be doubly careful, you can also filter by the nsdbName.)
The fileserver can present the search results in a format useful to
the type of the client on whose behalf the fileserver is performing
the request. For an NFS client, the fileserver can use the search
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results to construct an NFSv4 fs_locations list or NFSv4.1
fs_locations_info list.
6. Security Considerations
Both LDAP and NFSv4/NFSv4.1 provide security mechanisms. When used
in conjunction with the federated filesystem protocols described in
this document, the use of these mechanisms is RECOMMENDED.
Specifically, the use of RPCSEC_GSS [RFC2203] [RFC2743] is
RECOMMENDED on all connections between a client and fileserver. For
all LDAP connections established by the federated filesystem
protocols, TLS [RFC5246] [RFC4513] is RECOMMENDED.
Within a federation, there are two components that an attacker may be
able to compromise: a fileserver and an NSDB. If an attacker
compromises a fileserver, the attacker can interfere with the
client's filesystem I/O operations (e.g. by returning fictitious data
in the response to a read request) or fabricating a referral. The
attacker's abilities are the same regardless of whether or not the
federation protocols are in use. If an attacker compromises an NSDB,
the attacker will be able to forge FSL information and thus poison
the fileserver's referral information. Therefore an NSDB should be
as secure as the fileservers which query it.
It should be noted that the federation protocols do not directly
provide access to filesystem data. The federation protocols only
provide a mechanism for building a namespace. All data transfers
occur between a client and server just as they would if the
federation protocols were not in use. As a result, the federation
protocols do not require new user authentication and authorization
mechanisms or require a file server to act as a proxy for a client.
7. IANA Considerations
The LDAP attributes and object classes defined in this document are
assigned object identifier (OID) values from the 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.x
range. This is an Internet Private Enterprise Numbers range and was
assigned to the authors using the process described in [RFC2578].
In accordance with Section 3.4 and Section 4 of [RFC4520], the object
identifier descriptors defined in this document (listed below) will
be registered via the Expert Review process.
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7.1. LDAP Descriptor Registration
Subject: Request for LDAP Descriptor Registration
Person & email address to contact for further information: See
"Author/Change Controller"
Specification: draft-ietf-nfsv4-federated-fs-protocol
Author/Change Controller: [document authors]
Object Identifier: 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.1
Descriptor (short name): fedfsUuid
Object Identifier: 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.2
Descriptor (short name): fedfsNetAddr
Object Identifier: 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.3
Descriptor (short name): fsnUuid
Object Identifier: 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.4
Descriptor (short name): nsdbName
Object Identifier: 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.5
Descriptor (short name): fslUuid
Object Identifier: 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.6
Descriptor (short name): fslHost
Object Identifier: 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.7
Descriptor (short name): fslTTL
Object Identifier: 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.8
Descriptor (short name): fslNfsPath
Object Identifier: 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.9
Descriptor (short name): fslNfsMajorVer
Object Identifier: 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.10
Descriptor (short name): fslNfsMinorVer
Object Identifier: 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.11
Descriptor (short name): fslNfsCurrency
Object Identifier: 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.12
Descriptor (short name): fslNfsInfo
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Object Identifier: 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.13
Descriptor (short name): fslNfsFlags
Object Identifier: 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.14
Descriptor (short name): fslNfsValidFor
Object Identifier: 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.15
Descriptor (short name): annotation
Object Identifier: 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.16
Descriptor (short name): descr
Object Identifier: 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.1001
Descriptor (short name): fedfsFsn
Object Identifier: 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.1002
Descriptor (short name): fedfsFsl
Object Identifier: 1.3.6.1.4.1.31103.1.1003
Descriptor (short name): fedfsNfsFsl
8. Glossary
Administrator: user with the necessary authority to initiate
administrative tasks on one or more servers.
Admin entity: A server or agent that administers a collection of
fileservers and persistently stores the namespace information.
Client: Any client that accesses the fileserver data using a
supported filesystem access protocol.
Federation: A set of server collections and singleton servers that
use a common set of interfaces and protocols in order to provide
to their clients a federated namespace accessible through a
filesystem access protocol.
Fileserver: A server exporting a filesystem via a network filesystem
access protocol.
Fileset: The abstraction of a set of files and their containing
directory tree. A fileset is the fundamental unit of data
management in the federation.
Note that all files within a fileset are descendants of one
directory, and that filesets do not span filesystems.
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Filesystem: A self-contained unit of export for a fileserver, and
the mechanism used to implement filesets. The fileset does not
need to be rooted at the root of the filesystem, nor at the export
point for the filesystem.
A single filesystem MAY implement more than one fileset, if the
client protocol and the fileserver permit this.
Filesystem access protocol: A network filesystem access protocol
such as NFSv2 [RFC1094], NFSv3 [RFC1813], NFSv4 [RFC3530], or
CIFS.
FSL (Fileset location): The location of the implementation of a
fileset at a particular moment in time. A FSL MUST be something
that can be translated into a protocol-specific description of a
resource that a client can access directly, such as a fs_location
(for NFSv4), or share name (for CIFS). Note that not all FSLs
need to be explicitly exported as long as they are contained
within an exported path on the fileserver.
FSN (Fileset name): A platform-independent and globally unique name
for a fileset. Two FSLs that implement replicas of the same
fileset MUST have the same FSN, and if a fileset is migrated from
one location to another, the FSN of that fileset MUST remain the
same.
Junction: A filesystem object used to link a directory name in the
current fileset with an object within another fileset. The
server-side "link" from a leaf node in one fileset to the root of
another fileset.
Namespace: A filename/directory tree that a sufficiently-authorized
client can observe.
NSDB (Namespace Database Service): A service that maps FSNs to FSLs.
The NSDB may also be used to store other information, such as
annotations for these mappings and their components.
NSDB Node: The name or location of a server that implements part of
the NSDB service and is responsible for keeping track of the FSLs
(and related info) that implement a given partition of the FSNs.
Referral: A server response to a client access that directs the
client to evaluate the current object as a reference to an object
at a different location (specified by an FSL) in another fileset,
and possibly hosted on another fileserver. The client re-attempts
the access to the object at the new location.
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Replica: A replica is a redundant implementation of a fileset. Each
replica shares the same FSN, but has a different FSL.
Replicas may be used to increase availability or performance.
Updates to replicas of the same fileset MUST appear to occur in
the same order, and therefore each replica is self-consistent at
any moment.
We do not assume that updates to each replica occur simultaneously
If a replica is offline or unreachable, the other replicas may be
updated.
Server Collection: A set of fileservers administered as a unit. A
server collection may be administered with vendor-specific
software.
The namespace provided by a server collection could be part of the
federated namespace.
Singleton Server: A server collection containing only one server; a
stand-alone fileserver.
9. References
9.1. Normative References
[FEDFS-ADMIN]
Lentini, J., Everhart, C., Ellard, D., Tewari, R., and M.
Naik, "Administration Protocol for Federated Filesystems",
draft-ietf-nfsv4-federated-fs-admin (Work In Progress),
2008.
[FEDFS-REQTS]
Lentini, J., Everhart, C., Ellard, D., Tewari, R., and M.
Naik, "Requirements for Federated File Systems",
draft-ietf-nfsv4-federated-fs-reqts (Work In Progress),
2008.
[NFSv4.1] Shepler, S. and M. Eisler, "NFS Version 4 Minor Version
1", draft-ietf-nfsv4-minorversion1 (Work In Progress),
2008.
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
[RFC2203] Eisler, M., Chiu, A., and L. Ling, "RPCSEC_GSS Protocol
Specification", RFC 2203, September 1997.
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[RFC2578] McCloghrie, K., Ed., Perkins, D., Ed., and J.
Schoenwaelder, Ed., "Structure of Management Information
Version 2 (SMIv2)", STD 58, RFC 2578, April 1999.
[RFC2743] Linn, J., "Generic Security Service Application Program
Interface Version 2, Update 1", RFC 2743, January 2000.
[RFC3530] Shepler, S., Callaghan, B., Robinson, D., Thurlow, R.,
Beame, C., Eisler, M., and D. Noveck, "Network File System
(NFS) version 4 Protocol", RFC 3530, April 2003.
[RFC4122] Leach, P., Mealling, M., and R. Salz, "A Universally
Unique IDentifier (UUID) URN Namespace", RFC 4122,
July 2005.
[RFC4510] Zeilenga, K., "Lightweight Directory Access Protocol
(LDAP): Technical Specification Road Map", RFC 4510,
June 2006.
[RFC4511] Sermersheim, J., "Lightweight Directory Access Protocol
(LDAP): The Protocol", RFC 4511, June 2006.
[RFC4512] Zeilenga, K., "Lightweight Directory Access Protocol
(LDAP): Directory Information Models", RFC 4512,
June 2006.
[RFC4513] Harrison, R., "Lightweight Directory Access Protocol
(LDAP): Authentication Methods and Security Mechanisms",
RFC 4513, June 2006.
[RFC4517] Legg, S., "Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP):
Syntaxes and Matching Rules", RFC 4517, June 2006.
[RFC4520] Zeilenga, K., "Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA)
Considerations for the Lightweight Directory Access
Protocol (LDAP)", BCP 64, RFC 4520, June 2006.
[RFC5246] Dierks, T. and E. Rescorla, "The Transport Layer Security
(TLS) Protocol Version 1.2", RFC 5246, August 2008.
9.2. Informational References
[AFS] Howard, J., "An Overview of the Andrew File System",
Proceeding of the USENIX Winter Technical Conference ,
1988.
[RFC1094] Nowicki, B., "NFS: Network File System Protocol
specification", RFC 1094, March 1989.
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[RFC1813] Callaghan, B., Pawlowski, B., and P. Staubach, "NFS
Version 3 Protocol Specification", RFC 1813, June 1995.
[RFC3254] Alvestrand, H., "Definitions for talking about
directories", RFC 3254, April 2002.
Appendix A. Acknowledgments
We would like to thank Andy Adamson of NetApp, Paul Lemahieu of EMC,
Robert Thurlow of Sun Microsystems, and Mario Wurzl of EMC for
helping to author this document.
We would also like to thank George Amvrosiadis for pointing out that
several LDAP attributes were missing the SINGLE-VALUE keyword in a
draft version of this document.
Authors' Addresses
James Lentini
NetApp
1601 Trapelo Rd, Suite 16
Waltham, MA 02451
US
Phone: +1 781-768-5359
Email: jlentini@netapp.com
Craig Everhart
NetApp
7301 Kit Creek Rd
Research Triangle Park, NC 27709
US
Phone: +1 919-476-5320
Email: everhart@netapp.com
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Daniel Ellard
BBN Technologies
10 Moulton Street
Cambridge, MA 02138
US
Phone: +1 617-873-8000
Email: dellard@bbn.com
Renu Tewari
IBM Almaden
650 Harry Rd
San Jose, CA 95120
US
Email: tewarir@us.ibm.com
Manoj Naik
IBM Almaden
650 Harry Rd
San Jose, CA 95120
US
Email: manoj@almaden.ibm.com
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