NFSv4 D. Noveck, Ed.
Internet-Draft NetApp
Intended status: Informational P. Shivam
Expires: September 30, 2017 C. Lever
B. Baker
ORACLE
March 29, 2017
NFSv4 migration: Implementation Experience and Specification Issues
draft-ietf-nfsv4-migration-issues-12
Abstract
The migration feature of NFSv4 provides for moving responsibility for
a single filesystem from one server to another, without disruption to
clients. A number of problems in the specification of this feature
in NFSv4.0 were resolved by the publication of RFC 7931. In
addition, there are specification issues to be resolved with regard
to the NFSv4.1 version of this feature which are discussed in this
document.
Status of This Memo
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provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.
Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
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and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
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material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."
This Internet-Draft will expire on September 30, 2017.
Copyright Notice
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document authors. All rights reserved.
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carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
2. Conventions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
3. NFSv4.0 Issues and Their Resolution . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
3.1. NFSv4.0 Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
3.2. Resolution of NFSv4.0 Protocol Difficulties . . . . . . . 4
4. Issues for NFSv4.1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
4.1. Issues to Address for NFSv4.1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
4.1.1. Addressing state merger in NFSv4.1 . . . . . . . . . 6
4.1.2. Addressing pNFS relationship with migration . . . . . 7
4.1.3. Addressing server_owner changes in NFSv4.1 . . . . . 7
4.1.4. Addressing Confirmation Status of Migrated
Client IDs in NFSv4.1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
4.1.5. Addressing Session Migration in NFSv4.1 . . . . . . . 9
4.2. Possible Resolutions for NFSv4.1 Issues . . . . . . . . . 9
4.2.1. Server Responsibilities in Effecting Transparent
State Migration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
4.2.2. Determining Initial Migration Status in NFSv4.1 . . . 11
4.2.3. Client Response to Migration in NFSv4.1 . . . . . . . 13
4.2.4. Dealing with Multiple Location Entries . . . . . . . 13
4.2.5. Client Recovery from Migration Events . . . . . . . . 15
4.2.6. The Migration Discovery Process . . . . . . . . . . . 18
4.2.7. Synchronzing Session Transfer . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
4.2.8. Migration and pNFS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
5. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
6. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
7. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Appendix A. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
1. Introduction
This document. which deals with existing issues/problems in
standards-track documents, is in the informational category, and
while the facts it reports may have normative implications, any such
normative significance reflects the readers' preferences. For
example, we may report that the existing definition of migration for
NFSv4.1 does not properly describe how migrating state is to be
merged with existing state for the destination server. While it is
to be expected that client and server implementers will judge this to
be a situation that is best avoided, the judgment as to how pressing
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this issue should be considered is a judgment for the reader, and
eventually the nfsv4 working group to make.
We do explore possible ways in which such issues can be avoided, with
minimal negative effects, given that the working group has decided to
address these issues, but the choice of exactly how to address these
is best given effect in one or more standards-track documents and/or
errata.
This document focuses on NFSv4.1, since the analogous issues for
NFSv4.0 have already been addressed by the publication of [RFC7931].
Nevertheless, the history of these issues in NFSv4.0 is presented,
since understanding the similarities and differences between these
protocols may be helpful in deciding how best to address remaining
issues.
2. Conventions
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].
In the context of this informational document, these normative
keywords will always occur in the context of a quotation, most often
direct but sometimes indirect. The context will make it clear
whether the quotation is from:
o The previously current definitive definition of the NFSv4.0
protocol [RFC7530].
o The current definitive definition of the NFSv4.1 protocol
[RFC5661].
o A proposed or possible text to serve as a replacement for the
current or previous definitive document text. Sometimes, a number
of possible alternative texts may be listed and benefits and
detriments of each examined in turn.
3. NFSv4.0 Issues and Their Resolution
3.1. NFSv4.0 Issues
Many of the problems seen with Transparent State Migration derived
from the inability of servers to determine whether two client IDs,
issued on different servers, corresponded to the same client. This
difficulty derived in turn from the common practice, recommended by
[RFC7530], in which each client presented different client
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identification strings to different servers, rather than presenting
the same identification string to all servers.
This practice, later referred to as the "non-uniform" client string
approach, derived from concern that, since NFSv4.0 provided no means
to determine whether two IP addresses correspond to the server, a
single client connected to both might be confused by the fact that
state changes made via one IP address might unexpectedly affect the
state maintained with respect to the second IP address, thought of as
a separate server
To avoid this unexpected behavior, clients used the non-uniform
client id string approach. By doing so, a client connected to two
different servers (or to two IP addresses connected to the same
server) appeared to be two different servers. Since the server is
under the impression that two different clients are involved, state
changes made on each distinct IP address cannot be reflected on
another.
However, by doing things this way, state migrated from server to
server cannot be referred to the actual client which generated it,
leading to confusion.
In addition to this core problem, the following issues with regard to
Transparent State Migration needed to be addressed:
o Clarification regarding the ability to merge state from different
leases even though their expiration times might not be precisely
synchronized.
o Clarifying the treatment of client IDs since it is not always
clear when clientid4 and when nfs_client_id4 was intended.
o Clarifying the logic of returning NFS4ERR_LEASE_MOVED.
o Clarifying the handling NFS4ERR_CLID_INUSE.
3.2. Resolution of NFSv4.0 Protocol Difficulties
The client string identification issue was addressed in [RFC7931] as
follows:
o Defining both the uniform and non-uniform client id string
approaches as valid choices but indicating that the latter posed
difficulties for Transparent Stare Migration.
o Providing a way that clients could use to determine whether two IP
addresses are connected to the same server.
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o Allowing clients using the uniform approach to avoid negative
consequences due to otherwise unexpected behavior since behavior
that is a consequence of known trunking relationships is not
unexpected.
o As a result, servers migrating state are aware of the fact that
the same client is associated with two different items of state
even when that state was originally created on two different
servers.
Since all of the other issues noted in Section 3.1 were also
addressed, publication of [RFC7931] updating [RFC7530] addressed all
known issues with Transparent State Migration in NFSv4.0.
4. Issues for NFSv4.1
4.1. Issues to Address for NFSv4.1
Because NFSv4.1 embraces the uniform client-string approach, as
advised by section 2.4 of [RFC5661], addressing migration issues is
simpler, in that a shift in client id string models is not required.
Instead, NFSv4 returns information in the EXCHANGE_ID response to
enable trunking relationships to be determined by the client.
The other necessary part of addressing migration issues, providing
for the server's merger of leases that relate to the same client, is
not currently addressed by [RFC5661] and changes need to be made to
make it clear that state needs to be appropriately merged as part of
migration, to avoid multiple client IDs between a client-server pair.
In addition, there are a number of new features within NFSv4.1 whose
relationship with migration needs to be clarified. Some examples:
o The interaction of trunking with migration and other aspects of
multi-server namespace needs to be clarified.
o There needs to be some clarification of how migration, and
particularly Transparent State Migration, should interact with
pNFS layouts.
o The current discussion (in [RFC5661]), of the possibility of
server_owner changes is incomplete and confusing.
o The expected confirmation status of client IDs transferred by
Transparent State Migration needs to be clarified.
o There are a number of issues related to the migration of sessions
that need to be addressed
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Discussion of how to resolve these issues will appear in the sections
below.
4.1.1. Addressing state merger in NFSv4.1
The existing treatment of state transfer in [RFC5661], has similar
problems to that in [RFC7530] in that it assumes that the state for
multiple filesystems formerly on different servers will not be merged
so that it appears under a single common client ID. We've already
seen the reasons that this is a problem with regard to NFSv4.0.
Although we don't have the problems stemming from the non-uniform
client-string approach, there are a number of complexities in the
existing treatment of state management in the section entitled "Lock
State and File System Transitions" in [RFC5661] that make this non-
trivial to address:
o Migration is currently treated together with other sorts of
filesystem transitions including transitioning between replicas
without any NFS4ERR_MOVED errors.
o There is separate handling and discussion of the cases of matching
and non-matching server scopes.
o In the case of matching server scopes, the text calls for an
unrealistic degree of transparency, suggesting that the source and
destination servers need to cooperate in stateid assignment.
o In the case of non-matching server scopes, the text does not
mention the possibility of the transparent migration of state at
all, resulting in a functional regression from NFSV4.0
o The potential interaction between migration and trunking has not
been addressed.
o There is insufficient attention to the question of how clients can
deal with the complexities of recovering from migration. As part
of this, the implications of the shift of lease migration
notification shifting from an error (NFS4ERR_LEASE_MOVED in
NFSv4.0) to status bit (SEQ4_STATUS_LEASE_MOVED in NFSv4.1) need
to be explored.
To summarize, there is a need for an NFSv4.1 treatment of Transparent
State Migration that is an extension of that in [RFC7931] and that
includes appropriate handling for NFSv4.1 features such as trunking.
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4.1.2. Addressing pNFS relationship with migration
This is made difficult because, within the pNFS framework, migration
might mean any of several things:
o Transfer of the MDS, leaving DS's as they are.
This would be minimally disruptive to those using layouts but
would require the pNFS control protocol being used to support the
DS being directed to a new MDS.
o Transfer of a DS, leaving everything else in place.
Such a transfer can be handled without using migration at all.
The server can recall/revoke layouts, and issue new ones, as
appropriate.
o Transfer of the filesystem to a new filesystem with both MDS and
DS's moving.
In such a transfer, an entirely different set of DS's will be at
the target location. There may even be no pNFS support on the
destination filesystem at all.
Migration needs to support both the first and last of these models.
4.1.3. Addressing server_owner changes in NFSv4.1
Section 2.10.5 of [RFC5661] states the following.
The client should be prepared for the possibility that
eir_server_owner values may be different on subsequent EXCHANGE_ID
requests made to the same network address, as a result of various
sorts of reconfiguration events. When this happens and the
changes result in the invalidation of previously valid forms of
trunking, the client should cease to use those forms, either by
dropping connections or by adding sessions. For a discussion of
lock reclaim as it relates to such reconfiguration events, see
Section 8.4.2.1.
While this paragraph is literally true in that such reconfiguration
events can happen and clients have to deal with them, it is confusing
in that it can be read as suggesting that clients have to deal with
them without disruption, which in general is impossible.
A clearer alternative would be:
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It is always possible that, as a result of various sorts of
reconfiguration events, eir_server_scope and eir_server_owner
values may be different on subsequent EXCHANGE_ID requests made to
the same network address.
In most cases such reconfiguration events will be disruptive and
indicate that an IP address formerly connected to one server is
now connected to an entirely different one.
Some guidelines on client handling of such situations follow:
o When eir_server_scope changes, the client has no assurance that
any id's it obtained previously (e.g. file handles) can be
validly used on the new server, and, even if the new server
accepts them, there is no assurance that this is not due to
accident. Thus it is best to treat all such state as lost/
stale although a client may assume that the probability of
inadvertent acceptance is low and treat this situation as
within the next case.
o When eir_server_scope remains the same and
eir_server_owner.so_major_id changes, the client can use
filehandles it has and attempt reclaims. It may find that
these are now stale but if NFS4ERR_STALE is not received, he
can proceed to reclaim his opens.
o When eir_server_scope and eir_server_owner.so_major_id remain
the same, the client has to use the now-current values of
eir_server-owner.so_minor_id in deciding on appropriate forms
of trunking.
4.1.4. Addressing Confirmation Status of Migrated Client IDs in NFSv4.1
When a client ID is transferred between systems as a part of
migration, it is not always clear whether it should be considered
confirmed or unconfirmed on the target server. In the case in which
an associated session is transferred together with the client ID, it
is clear that the transferred client ID needs to be considered
confirmed, as the existence of an associated session is incompatible
with an unconfirmed client ID.
The case in which a client ID is transferred without an associated
session is less clear-cut and there needs to be a choice between two
possibilities:
o Consider it unconfirmed, because of the lack of an associated
session. This makes it simpler for the client to determine
whether there is an associated session transferred at the same
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time. However, it is inconsistent with the fact there are
stateids which have been transferred with the client ID.
o Consider it confirmed, because it was confirmed on the source
server and the transfer is not considered to have affected that.
Although this makes it simpler for the client to determine whether
there is an associated session transferred at the same time, an
alternative is discussed in Section 4.1.5.
A related issue concerns the potential use the SEQ4_STATUS flags to
determine whether all or some of the state present on the source has
been transferred the destination server. This could be done using
either of the alternatives above but it is more in the spirit of the
second alternative. One potential use of these flags is discussed in
more detail in Section 4.2.2.
4.1.5. Addressing Session Migration in NFSv4.1
Some issues that need to be addressed regard the migration of
sessions, in addition to client IDs and stateids
o It needs to be made clearer how the client can deal with the
possibility that sessions might or might not be transferred as
part of Transparent State Migration.
o Rules need to be clarified regarding possible transfer of sessions
when either the source session is being used to access other file
systems on source server or there is already a session connecting
the client to the destination server.
o There needs to be more detail regarding how the protocol avoids
situations in which the same session is subject to concurrent
changes on two different servers at the same time.
4.2. Possible Resolutions for NFSv4.1 Issues
The subsections below explore some ways of dealing with the issues
discussed in Section 4.1
First we introduce some terminology we will be using in these
sections:
o Location attributes include the fs_locations and fs_locations_info
attributes.
o Location entries are the individual file system locations in the
location attributes.
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o Location elements are derived from location entries. If a
location entry specifies an IP address there is only a single
corresponding location element. Location entries that contain a
host name, are resolved using DNS, and may result in one or more
location elements. All location elements consist of a location
address which is the IP address of an interface to a server and an
fs name which is the location of the file system within the
server's pseudo-fs. The fs name is empty if the server has no
pseudo-fs and only a single exported file system at the root
filehandle.
o Two location elements are trunkable if they specify the same fs
name and the location addresses are such that trunking of the
location addresses can be used as shown by the server_owner values
returned.
4.2.1. Server Responsibilities in Effecting Transparent State Migration
The basic responsibility of the source server in effecting
Transparent State Migration is to make available to the destination
server a description of each piece of locking state associated with
the file system being migrated. In addition to client id string and
verifier, the source server needs to provide. for each stateid:
o The stateid including the current sequence value.
o The associated client ID.
o The handle of the associated file.
o The type of the lock, such as open, byte-range lock, delegation,
layout.
o For locks such as opens and byte-range locks, there will be
information about the owner(s) of the lock.
o For recallable/revocable lock types, the current recall status
needs to be included.
o For each lock type there will by type-specific information, such
as share and deny modes for opens and type and byte ranges for
byte-range locks and layouts.
A further server responsibility concerns locks that are revoked or
otherwise lost during the process of file system migration. Because
locks that appear to be lost during the process of migration will be
reclaimed by the client, the servers have to take steps to ensure
that locks revoked soon before or soon after migration are not
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inadvertently allowed to be reclaimed in situations in which the
continuity of lock possession cannot be assured.
o For locks lost on the source but whose loss has not yet been
acknowledged by the client (by using FREE_STATEID), the
destination must be aware of this loss so that it can deny a
request to reclaim them.
o For locks lost on the destination after the state transfer but
before the client's RECLAIM_COMPLTE is done, the destination
server should note these and not allow them to be reclaimed.
A further responsibility of the servers concerns situations in which
stateid cannot be transferred transparently because it conflicts with
an existing stateid held by the client and associated with a
different file systems. In this case there are two valid choices:
o Treat the transfer, as in NFSv4.0, as one without Transparent
State Migration. In this case, conflicting locks cannot be
granted until the client does a RECLAIM_COMPLETE, after reclaiming
the lock it had, with the exception of reclaims denied because
they were attempts to reclaim locks that had been lost.
o Implement Transparent State Migration, except for the lock with
the conflicting stateid. In this case, the client will be aware
of a lost lock (through the SEQ4_STATUS flags) and be allowed to
reclaim it.
4.2.2. Determining Initial Migration Status in NFSv4.1
This section proposes a way in which a client which receives
NFS4ERR_MOVED can determine:
o Whether the NFS4ERR_MOVED indicates migration has occurred, or
whether it indicates another sort of file system transition as
discussed in Section 4.2.4
o In the case of migration, whether Transparent State Migration has
occurred.
o Whether any state has been lost during the process of Transparent
State Migration.
o Whether sessions have been transferred as part of Transparent
State Migration.
This is written assuming that the second option regarding client ID
confirmation status after migration (as discussed in Section 4.1.4)
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is adopted. However that choice is not essential to the procedure
and could be changed.
The process begins by the client examining the location entries using
either of the location attributes. For those whose fs name matches
that currently being used, an EXCHANGE_ID is directed at the location
address and the server_owner and scope used to determine if the entry
is trunkable with that previously being used to access the file
system (i.e. that it represents another path to the same file system
and can share locking state with it). If it is, then this should be
treated as a transition from one set of paths to another, as
described in Section 4.2.4, rather than a migration event.
Otherwuse, if one or more of the EXCHANGE_ID operations above has
encountered a distinct server, then migration has occurred and the
procedure continues. If there were no location entries with a
matching fs name, then one with another fs name is selected, an
EXCHANGE_ID is done, and the procedure continues using the result of
that operation.
The determination of whether Transparent State Migration has occurred
is driven by the client ID returned and its confirmation status.
o If the client ID is an unconfirmed client ID not previously known
to the client, then Transparent State Migration has not occurred.
o If the client ID is a confirmed client ID previously known to the
client, then any transferred state would have been merged with an
existing client ID representing the client to the destination
server. In this state merger case, Transparent State Migration
might or might not have occurred.
o If the client ID is a confirmed client ID not previously known to
the client, then the client can conclude that the client ID was
transferred as part of Transparent State Migration. In this
transferred client ID case, Transparent State Migration has
occurred although some state may have been lost.
In the state merger case, it is possible that the server has not
attempted Transparent State Migration, in which case state may have
been lost without it being reflected in the SEQ4_STATUS bits. To
determine whether this has happened, the client can use TEST_STATEID
to check whether the stateids created on the source server are still
accessible on the destination server. Once a single stateid is found
to have been successfully transferred, the client can conclude that
Transparent State Migration was begun and any failure to transport
all of the stateids will be reflected in the SEQ4_STATUS bits.
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In any of the cases in which Transparent State Migration has
occurred, it is possible that a session was transferred as well. To
deal with that possibility, clients can, after doing the EXCHANGE_ID,
issue a BIND_CONN_TO_SESSION to connect the transferred session to a
connection to the new server. If that fails, it is an indication
that the session was not transferred and that a new session needs to
be created to take its place.
4.2.3. Client Response to Migration in NFSv4.1
Once the client has determined the initial migration status, it needs
to re-establish its lock state, if possible. To enable this to
happen without loss of the guarantees normally provided by locking,
the destination server needs to implement a per-fs grace period in
all cases in which lock state was lost, including those in which
Transparent State Migration was not implemented.
The following cases need to be dealt with:
o In a case in which Transparent State Migration has not occurred,
the client can use the per-fs grace period provided by the
destination server to reclaim locks that were held on the source
server.
o In a cases in which Transparent State Migration has occurred, and
no lock state was lost (as shown by SEQ4_STATUS flags), no lock
reclaim is necessary.
o In a case in which Transparent State Migration has occurred, and
some lock state was lost (as shown by SEQ4_STATUS flags), existing
stateids need to be checked for validity using TEST_STATEID, and
reclaim used to re-establish any that were not transferred.
For all of the cases above, RECLAIM_COMPLETE with an rca_one_fs value
of true should be done before normal use of the file system including
obtaining new locks for the file system. This applies even if no
locks were lost and needed to be reclaimed.
4.2.4. Dealing with Multiple Location Entries
The possibility that more than one server address may be present in
location attributes requires further clarification. This is
particularly the case, given the potential role of trunking for
NFSv4.1, whose connection to migration needs to be clarified.
The description of the location attributes in [RFC5661], while it
indicates that multiple address entries in these attributes may be
used to indicate alternate paths to the file system, does so mainly
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in the context of replication and does so without mentioning
trunking. The discussion of migration does not discuss the
possibility of multiple location entries or trunking, which we will
explore here.
We will cover cases in which multiple addresses appear directly in
the attributes as well as those in which the multiple addresses
result because a single location entry is expanded into multiple
location elements using addresses provided by DNS.
When the set of valid location elements by which a file system may be
accessed changes, migration need not be involved. Some cases to
consider:
o When the set of location elements expands, migration is not
involved. In the case in which the additional elements are not
trunkable with ones previously being used, the new elements serve
as additional access locations, available in case of the failure
of server addresses being used. When additional elements are
trunkable with those currently being used the client may use the
additional addresses just as they might have if they had been
available when use of the file system began.
There is no current mechanism by which the client can be notified
of a change in the set of available location for an fs. Given the
client has at least one IP address available to access the
filesystem in question, periodic polling is an adequate mechanism
for the client to find additional server addresses to use to
access the file system.
o When the set of location elements contracts but none of the
elements no longer usable were in fact being used by the client,
then no migration is involved. Only if the client were to start
using one of the unavailable elements will the client be notified
(via NFS4ERR_MOVED) of the need to not use those elements and to
use others provided by a location attribute.
When a specific server address being used becomes unavailable to
service a particular file system, NF4ERR_MOVED will be returned, and
the client will respond based on the available locations. Whether
continuity of locking state will be available depends on a number of
factors:
o If there are still elements in use trunkable with the element that
has become unavailable, there will still be a continuity of
locking state, even though Transparent State Migration per se has
not occurred. If the in-use addresses are session-trunkable with
the address becoming unavailable, only one connection is lost and
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all existing sessions will remain available. If, on the other
hand, the in-use addresses are only clientid-trunkable with the
address becoming unavailable, a session can be lost. However,
that session can be made available on those other nodes, just as
they it would have been if Transparent State Migration were in
effect, even though no migration has occurred.
o Otherwise, if there are available addresses trunkable with the one
that has become unavailable, the client has access to existing
locking state once it establishes a connection with the new
addresses, using a new or existing session depending on the type
of trunking in effect. This is also similar to the case in which
Transparent State Migration has occurred, even though there is no
migration, with the state remaining on the existing server.
Note that this case, as well as the previous one, can be expected
in the case in which the server seeks to direct traffic with
regard to particular file systems to choose addresses, in the
interest of load balancing, to adjust to hardware availability
constraints, or for other reasons.
o In other cases, migration has occurred and the client can use the
procedure described in Section 4.2.2 to determine whether
Transparent State Migration occurred and whether any locking state
was lost during the transfer.
One should note the following differences between migration with
Transparent State Migration and the similar cases in which there is a
continuity of locking state with no change in the server.
o When locks are lost (as indicated when using them or via the
SEQ4_STAUS flags) and migration has not been done, they are not to
be reclaimed. Instead such losses are treated as lock revocations
and acknowledged using FREE_STATEID.
o When migration has not been done, there is no need for a
RECLAIM_COMPLETE (with rca_one_fs set to true).
4.2.5. Client Recovery from Migration Events
When a file system is migrated, there a number of migration-related
status indications with which clients need to deal:
o If an attempt is made to use or return a filehandle within a file
system that has been migrated away from the server on which it was
previously available, the error NFS4ERR_MOVED is returned.
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This condition continues on subsequent attempts to access the file
system in question. The only way the client can avoid the error
is to cease accessing the filesystem in question at its old server
location and access it instead on the server to which it has been
migrated.
o Whenever a SEQUENCE operation is sent by a client to a server
which generated state held on that client which is associated with
a file system that has been migrated away from the server on which
it was previously available, the status bit
SEQ4_STATUS_LEASE_MOVED is set in the response.
This condition continues until the client acknowledges the
notification by fetching a location attribute for the migrated
file system. When there are multiple migrated file systems, a
location attribute for each such migrated file system needs to be
fetched, in order to clear the condition. Even after the
condition is cleared, the client needs to respond by using the
location information to access the destination server to ensure
that leases are not needlessly expired.
Unlike the case of NFSv4.0 in which the corresponding conditions are
both errors, in NFSv4.1 the client can, and often will, receive both
indications on the same request. As a result, the question of how to
co-ordinate the necessary recovery actions when both indications
arrive simultaneously must be resolved. It should be noted that when
the server decides whether SEQ4_STATUS_LEASE_MOVED is ti be set, it
has no way of knowing which file system will be referenced or whether
NFS4ERR_MOVED will be returned.
While it is true that, when only a single migrated file system is
involved, a single set of actions will clear both indications, the
possibility of multiple migrated file systems calls for an approach
in which there are separate recovery actions for each indication. In
general, the response to neither indication can be subsumed within
the other since:
o If the client were to respond only to the MOVED indication, there
would be no effective client response to a situation in which a
file system was not being actively accessed at the time migration
occurred. As a result, leases on the destination server might be
needlessly expired.
o If the client were to respond only to the LEASE_MOVED indication,
recovery for migrated file systems in active use could be deferred
in order to accomplish recovery for others not being actively
accessed. The consequences of this choice can pose particular
problems when there are a large number of file systems supported
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by a particular server, or when it happens that some servers,
after receiving migrated file systems have periods of
unavailability, such as occur as a result of server reboot. This
can result in recovery for actively accessed migrated file systems
being unnecessarily delayed for long periods of time.
Similar considerations apply to other arrangements in which one of
the indications, while not ignored per se, is subsumed within a
single recovery process focused on recovery for the other indication.
Generally speaking, client recovery for these indications should have
the following characteristics:
o All instances of the MOVED indication should be dealt with
promptly, either by doing the necessary recovery directly,
providing that it be done asynchronously, or ensuring that it is
already under way.
o All instances of the LEASE_MOVED indication should be dealt with
asynchronously, in a migration discovery thread whose job is to
clear that indication by fetching the appropriate location
attribute. Because this thread will only be fetching a location
attribute and the fs_status attribute for the file systems
referenced by the client, it cannot receive MOVED indications.
Some useful guidance regarding possible implementation of the
migration discovery thread can be found in Section 4.2.6.
o When a migration discovery thread happens upon a migrated file
system (i.e. not present and not a referral), the thread is likely
to have cleared one (out of an unknown number) of file systems
whose migration needs to be responded to. The discovery thread
needs to schedule the appropriate migration recovery (as described
in Section 4.2.3). This is necessary to ensure that migrated file
systems will be referenced on the destination server in order to
avoid lease expiration
For many of the migrated file systems discovered in this way, the
client has not received any MOVED indication. In such cases,
lease recovery needs to be scheduled but it should not interfere
with continuation of the migration discovery function.
o When a migration discovery thread receives a LEASE_MOVED
indication, it takes no special action but continues its normal
operation. On the other hand, if a LEASE_MOVED indication is not
received, it indicates that the thread has completed its work
successfully.
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4.2.6. The Migration Discovery Process
As noted above, LEASE_MOVED indications are best dealt with in a
migration discovery thread. Because of this structure,
o No action needs to be taken for such indications received by the
migration discovery threads, since continuation of that thread's
work will address the issue.
o For such indications received in other contexts, the generally
appropriate response is to initiate or otherwise provide for the
execution of a migration discovery thread for file systems
associated with the server IP address returning the indication.
o In all cases in which the appropriate migration discovery thread
is running, nothing further need be done to respond to LEASE_MOVED
indications.
This leaves a potential difficulty in situations in which the
migration discovery thread is near to completion but is still
operating. One should not ignore a LEASE_MOVED indication if the
discovery thread is not able to respond to migrated file system
without additional aid. A further difficulty in addressing such
situation is that a LEASE_MOVED indication may reflect the server's
state at the time the SEQUENCE operation was processed, which may be
different from that in effect at the time the response is received.
A useful approach to this issue involves the use of separate
externally-visible discovery thread states representing non-
operation, normal operation, and completion/verification of migration
discovery processing.
Within that framework, discovery thread processing would proceed as
follows.
o While in the normal-operation state, the thread would fetch, for
successive file systems known to the client on the server being
worked on, a location attribute plus the fs_status attribute.
o If the fs_status attribute indicates that the file system is a
migrated one (i.e. fss_absent is true and fss_type !=
STATUS4_REFERRAL) and thus that it is likely that the fetch of the
location attribute has cleared one the file systems contributing
to the LEASE_MOVED indication.
o In cases in which that happened, the thread cannot know whether
the LEASE_MOVED indication has been cleared and so it enters the
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completion/verification state and proceeds to issue a COMPOUND to
see if the LEASE_MOVED indication has been cleared.
o When the discovery thread is in the completion/verification state,
if others get a LEASE_MOVED indication they note this fact and it
is used when the request completes, as described below.
When the request used in the completion/verification state completes:
o If a LEASE_MOVED indication is returned, the discovery thread
resumes its normal work.
o Otherwise, if there is any record that other requests saw a
LEASE_MOVED indication, that record is cleared and the
verification request retried. The discovery thread remains in
completion/verification state.
o If there has been no LEASE_MOVED indication, the work of the
discovery thread is considered completed and it enters the non-
operating state.
4.2.7. Synchronzing Session Transfer
When transferring state between the source and destination, the
issues discussed in Section 7.2 of [RFC7931] must still be attended
to. In this case, the use of NFS4ERR_DELAY is still necessary in
NFSv4.1, as it was in NFSv4.0, to prevent locking state changing
while it is being transferred.
There are a number of important differences in the NFS4.1 context:
o The absence of RELEASE_LOCKOWNER means that the one case in which
an operation could not be deferred by use of NFS4ERR_DELAY no
longer exists.
o Sequencing of operations is no longer done using owner-based
operation sequences numbers. Instead, sequencing is session-
based
As a result, when sessions are not transferred, the techniques
discussed in [RFC7931] are adequate and will not be further
discussed.
When sessions are transferred, there are a number of issues that pose
challenges since,
o A single session may be used to access multiple file systems, not
all of which are being transferred.
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o Requests made on a session, even if rejected may, affect the state
of the session by advancing the sequence number associated with
the slot used.
As a result, when the filesystem state might otherwise be considered
unmodifiable, the client might have any number of in-flight requests,
each of which is capable of changing session state, which may be of a
number of types:
1. Those requests that were processed on the migrating file system,
before migration began.
2. Those requests which got the error NFS4ERR_DELAY because the file
system being accessed was in the process of being migrated.
3. Those requests which got the error NFS4ERR_MOVED because the file
system being accessed had been migrated.
4. Those requests that accessed the migrating file system, in order
to obtain location or status information.
5. Those requests that did not reference the migrating file system.
It should be noted that the history of any particular slot is likely
to include a number of these request classes. In the case in which a
session which is migrated is used by filesystems other than the one
migrated, requests of class 5 may be common and be the last request
processed, for many slots.
Since session state can change even after the locking state has been
fixed as part of the migration process, the session state known to
the client could be different from that on the destination server,
which necessarily reflects the session state on the source server, at
an earlier time. In deciding how to deal with this situation, it is
helpful to distinguish between two sorts of behavioral consequences
of the choice of initial sequence ID values.
o The error NFS4ERR_SEQ_MISORDERED is returned when the sequence ID
in a request is neither equal to the last one seen for the current
slot nor the next greater one.
In view of the difficulty of arriving at a mutually acceptable
value for the correct last sequence a the point of migration, it
may be necessary for the server to show some degree of
forbearance, when the sequence ID is one that would be considered
unacceptable if session migration were not involved.
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o Returning the cached reply for a previously executed request when
the sequence ID in the request matches the last value recorded for
the slot.
In the cases in which an error is returned and there is no
possibility of any non-idempotent operation having been executed,
it may not be necessary to adhere to this as strictly as might be
proper if session migration were not involved. For example, the
fact that the error NFS4ERR_DELAY was returned may not assist the
client in any material way, while the fact that NFS4ERR_MOVED was
returned by the source server may not be relevant when the request
was reissued, directed to the destination server.
One part of adapting to these sorts of issues would restrict
enforcement of normal slot sequence enforcement semantics until the
client itself, by issuing a request using a particular slot on the
destination server, established the new starting sequence for that
slot on the migrated session.
An important issue is that the specification needs to take note of
all potential COMPOUNDs, even if they might be unlikely in practice.
For example, a COMPOUND is allow to access multiple file systems and
might perform non-idempotent operations in some of them before
accessing a file system being migrated. Also, a COMPOUND may return
considerable data in the response, before being rejected with
NFS4ERR_DELAY or NFS4ERR_MOVED, and may in addition be marked as
sa_cachethis.
Some possibilities that need to be considered to address the issues:
o Do not enforce any sequencing semantics for a particular slot
until the client has established the starting sequence for that
slot on the destination server.
o For each slot, do not return a cached reply returning
NFS4ERR_DELAY or NFS4ERR_MOVED until the client has established
the starting sequence for that slot on the destination server.
o Until the client has established the starting sequence for a
particular slot on the destination server, do not report
NFS4ERR_SEQ_MISORDERED or return a cached reply returning
NFS4ERR_DELAY or NFS4ERR_MOVED, where the reply consists solely of
a series of operations where the response is NFS4_OK until the
final error.
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4.2.8. Migration and pNFS
When pNFS is involved, migration is capable of supporting:
o Migration of the MDS, leaving DS's in place.
o Migration of the file system as a whole, including the MDS and
associated DS's.
o Replacement of one DS by another.
o Migration of a pNFS file system to one in which pNFS is not used.
o Migration of a file system not using pNFS to one in which layouts
are available.
Migration of the MDS function is directly supported by Transparent
State Migration. Layout state will normally be transparently
transferred, just as other state is. As a result, Transparent State
Migration provides a framework in which, given appropriate inter-MDS
data transfer, one MDS can be substituted for another.
Migration of the file system function can be accomplished by
recalling all layouts as part of the initial phase of the migration
process. As a result, IO will be done through the MDS during the
migration process, and new layouts can be granted once the client is
interacting with the new MDS. An MDS can also effect this sort of
transition by revoking all layouts as part of Transparent State
Migration, as long as the client is notified about the loss of state.
In order to allow migration to a file system on which pNFS is not
supported, clients need to be prepared for a situation in layouts are
not available or supported on the destination file system and be
prepared to direct IO request to the destination server, rather than
depending on layouts being available.
Replacement of one DS by another is not addressed by migration as
such but can be effected by an MDS recalling layouts for the DS to be
replaced and issuing new ones to be served by the successor DS.
Migration may transfer a file system from a server which does not
support pNFS to one which does. In order to properly adapt to this
situation, clients which support pNFS, but function adequately in its
absence, should check for pNFS support when a file system is migrated
and be prepared to use pNFS when support is available.
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5. Security Considerations
With regard to NFSv4.0, the Security Considerations section of
[RFC7530] encourages clients to protect the integrity of the SECINFO
operation, any GETATTR operation for the fs_locations attribute. A
needed change is to include the operations SETCLIENTID/
SETCLIENTID_CONFIRM as among those for which integrity protection is
recommended. A migration recovery event can use any or all of these
operations.
With regard to NFSv4.1, the Security Considerations section of
[RFC5661] takes proper care of migration-related issues. No change
is needed.
6. IANA Considerations
This document does not require actions by IANA.
7. Normative References
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
<http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.
[RFC5661] Shepler, S., Ed., Eisler, M., Ed., and D. Noveck, Ed.,
"Network File System (NFS) Version 4 Minor Version 1
Protocol", RFC 5661, DOI 10.17487/RFC5661, January 2010,
<http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5661>.
[RFC7530] Haynes, T., Ed. and D. Noveck, Ed., "Network File System
(NFS) Version 4 Protocol", RFC 7530, DOI 10.17487/RFC7530,
March 2015, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7530>.
[RFC7931] Noveck, D., Ed., Shivam, P., Lever, C., and B. Baker,
"NFSv4.0 Migration: Specification Update", RFC 7931,
DOI 10.17487/RFC7931, July 2016,
<http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7931>.
Appendix A. Acknowledgements
The editor and authors of this document gratefully acknowledge the
contributions of Trond Myklebust of NetApp and Robert Thurlow of
Oracle. We also thank Tom Haynes of Primary Data and Spencer Shepler
of Microsoft for their guidance and suggestions.
Special thanks go to members of the Oracle Solaris NFS team,
especially Rick Mesta and James Wahlig, for their work implementing
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an NFSv4.0 migration prototype and identifying many of the issues
documented here.
Authors' Addresses
David Noveck (editor)
NetApp
26 Locust Avenue
Lexington, MA 02421
US
Phone: +1 781 572 8038
Email: davenoveck@gmail.com
Piyush Shivam
Oracle Corporation
5300 Riata Park Ct.
Austin, TX 78727
US
Phone: +1 512 401 1019
Email: piyush.shivam@oracle.com
Charles Lever
Oracle Corporation
1015 Granger Avenue
Ann Arbor, MI 48104
US
Phone: +1 248 614 5091
Email: chuck.lever@oracle.com
Bill Baker
Oracle Corporation
5300 Riata Park Ct.
Austin, TX 78727
US
Phone: +1 512 401 1081
Email: bill.baker@oracle.com
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