FreeBSD NFS client goes into infinite retry loop
John Baldwin
jhb at freebsd.org
Mon Mar 22 17:41:04 UTC 2010
On Monday 22 March 2010 12:44:04 pm Steve Polyack wrote:
> On 03/22/10 12:00, John Baldwin wrote:
> > On Monday 22 March 2010 11:47:43 am Steve Polyack wrote:
> >
> >> On 03/22/10 10:52, Steve Polyack wrote:
> >>
> >>> On 3/19/2010 11:27 PM, Rick Macklem wrote:
> >>>
> >>>> On Fri, 19 Mar 2010, Steve Polyack wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>> [good stuff snipped]
> >>>>
> >>>>> This makes sense. According to wireshark, the server is indeed
> >>>>> transmitting "Status: NFS3ERR_IO (5)". Perhaps this should be STALE
> >>>>> instead; it sounds more correct than marking it a general IO error.
> >>>>> Also, the NFS server is serving its share off of a ZFS filesystem,
> >>>>> if it makes any difference. I suppose ZFS could be talking to the
> >>>>> NFS server threads with some mismatched language, but I doubt it.
> >>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>> Ok, now I think we're making progress. If VFS_FHTOVP() doesn't return
> >>>> ESTALE when the file no longer exists, the NFS server returns whatever
> >>>> error it has returned.
> >>>>
> >>>> So, either VFS_FHTOVP() succeeds after the file has been deleted, which
> >>>> would be a problem that needs to be fixed within ZFS
> >>>> OR
> >>>> ZFS returns an error other than ESTALE when it doesn't exist.
> >>>>
> >>>> Try the following patch on the server (which just makes any error
> >>>> returned by VFS_FHTOVP() into ESTALE) and see if that helps.
> >>>>
> >>>> --- nfsserver/nfs_srvsubs.c.sav 2010-03-19 22:06:43.000000000 -0400
> >>>> +++ nfsserver/nfs_srvsubs.c 2010-03-19 22:07:22.000000000 -0400
> >>>> @@ -1127,6 +1127,8 @@
> >>>> }
> >>>> }
> >>>> error = VFS_FHTOVP(mp,&fhp->fh_fid, vpp);
> >>>> + if (error != 0)
> >>>> + error = ESTALE;
> >>>> vfs_unbusy(mp);
> >>>> if (error)
> >>>> goto out;
> >>>>
> >>>> Please let me know if the patch helps, rick
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>> The patch seems to fix the bad behavior. Running with the patch, I
> >>> see the following output from my patch (return code of nfs_doio from
> >>> within nfsiod):
> >>> nfssvc_iod: iod 0 nfs_doio returned errno: 70
> >>>
> >>> Furthermore, when inspecting the transaction with Wireshark, after
> >>> deleting the file on the NFS server it looks like there is only a
> >>> single error. This time there it is a reply to a V3 Lookup call that
> >>> contains a status of "NFS3ERR_NOENT (2)" coming from the NFS server.
> >>> The client also does not repeatedly try to complete the failed request.
> >>>
> >>> Any suggestions on the next step here? Based on what you said it
> >>> looks like ZFS is falsely reporting an IO error to VFS instead of
> >>> ESTALE / NOENT. I tried looking around zfs_fhtovp() and only saw
> >>> returns of EINVAL, but I'm not even sure I'm looking in the right place.
> >>>
> >> Further on down the rabbit hole... here's the piece in zfs_fhtovp()
> >> where it's kicking out EINVAL instead of ESTALE - the following patch
> >> corrects the behavior, but of course also suggests further digging
> >> within the zfs_zget() function to ensure that _it_ is returning the
> >> correct thing and whether or not it needs to be handled there or within
> >> zfs_fhtovp().
> >>
> >> ---
> >> src-orig/sys/cddl/contrib/opensolaris/uts/common/fs/zfs/zfs_vfsops.c
> >> 2010-03-22 11:41:21.000000000 -0400
> >> +++ src/sys/cddl/contrib/opensolaris/uts/common/fs/zfs/zfs_vfsops.c
> >> 2010-03-22 16:25:21.000000000 -0400
> >> @@ -1246,7 +1246,7 @@
> >> dprintf("getting %llu [%u mask %llx]\n", object, fid_gen,
gen_mask);
> >> if (err = zfs_zget(zfsvfs, object,&zp)) {
> >> ZFS_EXIT(zfsvfs);
> >> - return (err);
> >> + return (ESTALE);
> >> }
> >> zp_gen = zp->z_phys->zp_gen& gen_mask;
> >> if (zp_gen == 0)
> >>
> > So the odd thing here is that ffs_fhtovp() doesn't return ESTALE if
VFS_VGET()
> > (which calls ffs_vget()) fails, it only returns ESTALE if the generation
count
> > doesn't matter.
> >
> >
> It looks like it also returns ESTALE when the inode is invalid (<
> ROOTINO || > max inodes?) - would an unlinked file in FFS referenced at
> a later time report an invalid inode?
>
> But back to your point, zfs_zget() seems to be failing and returning the
> EINVAL before zfs_fhtovp() even has a chance to set and check zp_gen.
> I'm trying to get some more details through the use of gratuitous
> dprintf()'s, but they don't seem to be making it to any logs or the
> console even with vfs.zfs.debug=1 set. Any pointers on how to get these
> dprintf() calls working?
That I have no idea on. Maybe Rick can chime in? I'm actually not sure why
we would want to treat a FHTOVP failure as anything but an ESTALE error in the
NFS server to be honest.
--
John Baldwin
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