vfs_fileid
8
Samba
System Administration tools
&doc.version;
vfs_fileid
Generates file_id structs with unique device id values for
cluster setups. It also adds ways to deliberately break lock coherency for specific inodes
vfs objects = fileid
DESCRIPTION
This VFS module is part of the
samba
7
suite.
Samba uses file_id structs to uniquely identify files
for locking purpose. By default the file_id contains the device
and inode number returned by the stat() system call.
As the file_id is a unique identifier of a file, it must be the same
on all nodes in a cluster setup. This module overloads the
SMB_VFS_FILE_ID_CREATE() operation and
generates the device number based on the configured algorithm
(see the "fileid:algorithm" option).
When using the fsname or fsid algorithm a
stat() and statfs() call is
required for all mounted file systems to generate the file_id. If e.g.
an NFS file system is unresponsive such a call might block and the smbd
process will become unresponsive. Use the "fileid:fstype deny",
"fileid:fstype allow", "fileid:mntdir deny", or "fileid:mntdir allow"
options to ignore potentially unresponsive file systems.
OPTIONS
fileid:algorithm = ALGORITHM
Available algorithms are fsname,
fsid, next_module. The default value is
fsname. As well as the following legacy
algorithms: fsname_nodirs, fsname_norootdir,
fsname_norootdir_ext and hostname.
The fsname algorithm generates
device id by hashing the kernel device name.
The fsid algorithm generates
the device id from the f_fsid returned
from the statfs() syscall.
The next_module algorithm lets the next vfs module
in the module chain generate the id. This is mainly used in combination
with the various 'nolock' features the fileid module provides.
The legacy hostname algorithm generates unique
devid by hashing the hostname and low level device id.
It also implies fileid:nolock_all_inodes=yes.
This can be used to deliberately break lock coherency in a cluster
and with fileid:nolock_max_slots also between local processes
within a node. NOTE: Do not use this without knowing what you are doing!
It breaks SMB semantics and it can lead to data corruption!
This implies fileid:nolock_all_inodes=yes.
The legacy fsname_nodirs algorithm is an alias
for using the fsname algorithm together with
fileid:nolock_all_dirs=yes.
NOTE: Do not use this without knowing what you are doing!
It breaks SMB semantics!
See fileid:nolock_paths for a more fine grained
approach.
The legacy fsname_norootdir algorithm is an alias
for using the fsname algorithm together with
fileid:nolock_paths= .
. It means
this can be used to deliberately break lock coherency
in a cluster for the root directory of a share.
The legacy fsname_norootdir_ext algorithm is an alias
for using the fsname algorithm together with
fileid:nolock_paths= .
and
fileid:nolock_max_slots = 18446744073709551615.
It means this can be used to deliberately break lock coherency
completely for the root directory of a share. Even local processes
are no longer lock coherent.
fileid:mapping = ALGORITHM
This option is the legacy version of the
fileid:algorithm option, which was used in earlier
versions of fileid mapping feature in custom Samba 3.0 versions.
fileid:fstype deny = LIST
List of file system types to be ignored for file_id
generation.
fileid:fstype allow = LIST
List of file system types to be allowed for file_id
generation. If this option is set, file system types not listed
here are ignored.
fileid:mntdir deny = LIST
List of file system mount points to be ignored for
file_id generation.
fileid:mntdir allow = LIST
List of file system mount points to be allowed for file_id
generation. If this option is set, file system mount points
not listed here are ignored.
fileid:nolock_max_slots = NUMBER(1-18446744073709551615)
This option alters the behavior of the nolock algorithm
in a way that it also breaks the lock coherency between individual processes
on the same host. The default is to have just 1 concurrent slot available per host.
By increasing the number of slots you can specify how many concurrent processes
can work on a given inode without contention, the number should typically be larger
than the number of logical cpus, maybe 2 times num_cpus.
fileid:nolock_all_dirs = BOOL
This option triggers the use of the fileid nolock behavior
for all directory inodes, which can be used to deliberately break
the lock coherency for all directories.
NOTE: Do not use this without knowing what you are doing!
It breaks SMB semantics!
See fileid:nolock_paths for a more fine grained
approach.
fileid:nolock_all_inodes = BOOL
This option triggers the use of the fileid nolock algorithm
for all directoriy inode, which can be used to deliberately break
the lock coherency for all directories.
NOTE: Do not use this without knowing what you are doing!
It breaks SMB semantics and it can lead to data corruption!
See fileid:nolock_paths for a more fine grained
approach.
fileid:nolock_paths = LIST
This option specifies a path list referring to files and/or directories,
which should use fileid nolock algorithm in order to deliberately break
the lock coherency for them. The specified paths can be relative to
the share root directory or absolute. The names are case sensitive unix pathnames!
Note all paths are only evaluated at tree connect time, when the share is being connected, from there on
only the related device and inode numbers from the stat() syscall are compared.
Non existing paths will generate a log level 0 message.
NOTE: This option should be used with care as it breaks SMB semantics!
But it may help in situation where a specific (commonly read-only) inode is highly contended.
fileid:nolockinode = NUMBER
This legacy option triggers use of the fileid nolock behavior
for the configured inode, while ignoring and device id. This can be used to deliberately break
lock coherency for the corresponding file or directory in a
cluster. Using the fileid:nolock_paths option is much more flexible and simpler to use.
EXAMPLES
Usage of the fileid module with the
fsid algorithm:
fileid
fsid
Usage of the fileid module in order
avoid load on heavily contended (most likely read-only) inodes.
fileid
next_module
. ContendedFolder1 /path/to/contended.exe
256
VERSION
This man page is part of version &doc.version; of the Samba suite.
AUTHOR
The original Samba software and related utilities
were created by Andrew Tridgell. Samba is now developed
by the Samba Team as an Open Source project similar
to the way the Linux kernel is developed.