NFSv2 Wrong FS Size
John Morgan Salomon
john at zog.net
Tue Feb 3 14:00:54 PST 2009
I was starting to suspect that it might be something along these
lines. NFSv3 hasn't been possible so far because the Terastation
hacked firmware on this particular platform (TS Pro v1) doesn't seem
to play nice with kernel-level nfs (userland nfs only has packages for
v2, and I've been too intimidated to approach the idea of rolling my
own so far.)
This explains a lot -- I thought maybe it might be the result of me
running normal 32-bit i386 release on a 64-bit CPU. I will see if I
can get NFS3 working.
(I guess MacOS X/Mach/BSDI treat the size value as unsigned...)
-John
On 3 Feb 2009, at 22:53, Dan Nelson wrote:
>
> In the last episode (Feb 03), John Morgan Salomon said:
>> On 3 Feb 2009, at 19:21, John Morgan Salomon wrote:
>>> Hi there,
>>>
>>> I'm facing an odd problem with an NFSv2 mount. I'm using userland
>>> nfsd from a Buffalo TeraStation Pro v1 NAS, running PPC Linux
>>> 2.4.20.
>>>
>>> root at LEVIATHAN:~# uname -a
>>> Linux LEVIATHAN 2.4.20_mvl31-ppc_terastation #3 Tue Jul 18
>>> 09:29:11 JST 2006 ppc GNU/Linux
>>>
>>> I am sharing the following filesystem:
>>>
>>> root at LEVIATHAN:~# df -k
>>> Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on
>>> <local filesystems>
>>> /dev/md1 1755708928 979032844 776676084 56% /mnt/array1
>>>
>>> Mounting this on a FreeBSD 7.1 client:
>>>
>>> behemoth# mount /data
>>> behemoth# df -k
>>> Filesystem 1024-blocks Used Avail
>>> Capacity Mounted on
>>> <local filesystems>
>>> 192.168.2.11:/mnt/array1/data -391774720 -1168450804 776676084
>>
>> I did more digging and found this:
>>
>> http://www.freebsd.org/projects/bigdisk/index.html
>>
>> "An audit is needed to make sure that all reported fields are 64-bit
>> clean. There are reports with certain fields being incorrect or
>> negative with NFS volumes, which could either be an NFS or df
>> problem."
>>
>> Not sure where to go now, as the last entry in that project is dated
>> 2005 -- again, any tips welcome.
>
> The real problem is that NFSv2 only provides a 32-bit field for
> filesystem
> size, and multiplies that by the reported blocksize. Most NFS
> servers claim
> 512-byte blocks no matter what the underlying filessytem has, so in
> your
> case that would result in the filesystem size being reported as
> 1755708928*1024/512 = 3511417856 blocks. This number is larger than
> 2^31,
> which techinically isn't a problem because the NFSv2 spec says that
> the
> filesystem size is unsigned. FreeBSD treats it as signed, though,
> so it can
> display "negative" free space when root starts using its 8% reserve,
> so your
> unsigned 3511417856 gets printed as a signed -783549440, which messes
> everything up.
>
> NFSv3 uses 64-bit fields for those size values, so just mount with
> NFSv3
> (which actually is the default on FreeBSD; maybe you have it
> disabled on
> your TeraStation for some reason), and you should get correct
> filesystem
> stats, as well as better performance and the ability to work with
> files over
> 2gb.
>
> Alternatively, you could rebuild "df" to print its numbers as unsigned
> instead of signed. Just watch out if your local filesystems start
> eating
> into their 8% reserve, since they'll start reporting huge values.
>
> --
> Dan Nelson
> dnelson at allantgroup.com
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