FreeBSD NFS server not responding to TCP SYN packets from
Linux/SunOS clients
Mike Silbersack
silby at silby.com
Fri Oct 14 03:04:34 PDT 2005
On Fri, 14 Oct 2005, on at cs.ait.ac.th wrote:
> Nicolas KOWALSKI wrote:
>> Our FreeBSD 4.10 NFS server has some problems serving files by NFS on
>> TCP (no problem with UDP) when the Linux (2.6) or Solaris (5.9)
>> clients shut down in an unclean manner (power failure). When the clients
>> try to mount the shares from the server after an
>> unclean shutdown, the mount process hang during several minutes (delay
>> is varying), then succeeds.
>
> That is just a wild guess, but NFS mounting would happen always at the same
> stage of the boot, so maybe with the same source port number and you could be
> facing the problem that the connection is waiting for termination on the
> server
> (close_wait or fin_wait or something)... Se source port in working example is
> 798 and source port in failing example is 799 certainly not random.
>
> Olivier
The socket on the server would still be in the ESTABLISHED state, which is
even worse than the close_wait or fin_wait states in this case. The SYN
will be accepted if it's greater than the previous sequence number, so
that's a 50% chance it'll work.
Assuming that port reuse is the problem, there is no quick fix for this,
just resetting connections when a SYN comes in would be a really big
security problem.
Actually, there may be a quick fix for this specific machine. If you set
net.inet.tcp.keepidle to 1 minute (60*whatever kern.hz is), that'll cause
keepalive packets to be sent every minute to an idle connection, rather
than every 2 hours. That would kill the stuck connections much quicker.
However, it's also possible that this could cause problems in normal
operation if keepalive packets cause problems. So, give it a shot, but be
careful.
Mike "Silby" Silbersack
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