#!/bin/sh # this script needs to be installed so that statd points to it with the -H # command line argument. The easiest way to do that is to put something like this in # /etc/sysconfig/nfs: # STATD_HOSTNAME="myhostname -H /etc/ctdb/statd-callout" [ -z "$CTDB_BASE" ] && { export CTDB_BASE="/etc/ctdb" } . $CTDB_BASE/functions loadconfig ctdb loadconfig nfs [ -z $NFS_HOSTNAME ] && { echo NFS_HOSTNAME is not configured. statd-callout failed. exit 0 } case "$1" in add-client) # the callout does not tell us to which ip the client connected # so we must add it to all the ips that we serve PNN=`ctdb xpnn | sed -e "s/.*://"` ctdb ip -Y | while read LINE; do NODE=`echo $LINE | cut -f3 -d:` [ "$NODE" = "$PNN" ] || { # not us continue } IP=`echo $LINE | cut -f2 -d:` mkdir -p $CTDB_VARDIR/state/statd/ip/$IP touch $CTDB_VARDIR/state/statd/ip/$IP/$2 done ;; del-client) # the callout does not tell us to which ip the client disconnected # so we must remove it from all the ips that we serve PNN=`ctdb xpnn | sed -e "s/.*://"` ctdb ip -Y | while read LINE; do NODE=`echo $LINE | cut -f3 -d:` [ "$NODE" = "$PNN" ] || { # not us continue } IP=`echo $LINE | cut -f2 -d:` mkdir -p $CTDB_VARDIR/state/statd/ip/$IP rm -f $CTDB_VARDIR/state/statd/ip/$IP/$2 done ;; updatelocal) # For all IPs we serve, collect info and push to the config database PNN=`ctdb xpnn | sed -e "s/.*://"` ctdb ip -Y | tail -n +2 | while read LINE; do NODE=`echo $LINE | cut -f3 -d:` [ "$NODE" = "$PNN" ] || { continue } IP=`echo $LINE | cut -f2 -d:` mkdir -p $CTDB_VARDIR/state/statd/ip/$IP rm -f $CTDB_VARDIR/state/statd/ip/$IP.tar tar cfP $CTDB_VARDIR/state/statd/ip/$IP.tar $CTDB_VARDIR/state/statd/ip/$IP rm -f $CTDB_VARDIR/state/statd/ip/$IP.rec ctdb pfetch ctdb.tdb statd-state:$IP $CTDB_VARDIR/state/statd/ip/$IP.rec 2>/dev/null [ "$?" = "0" ] || { # something went wrong, try storing this data echo No record. Store STATD state data for $IP ctdb pstore ctdb.tdb statd-state:$IP $CTDB_VARDIR/state/statd/ip/$IP.tar 2>/dev/null continue } cmp $CTDB_VARDIR/state/statd/ip/$IP.tar $CTDB_VARDIR/state/statd/ip/$IP.rec >/dev/null 2>/dev/null [ "$?" = "0" ] || { # something went wrong, try storing this data echo Updated record. Store STATD state data for $IP ctdb pstore ctdb.tdb statd-state:$IP $CTDB_VARDIR/state/statd/ip/$IP.tar 2>/dev/null continue } done ;; updateremote) # For all IPs we dont serve, pull the state from the database PNN=`ctdb xpnn | sed -e "s/.*://"` ctdb ip -Y | tail -n +2 | while read LINE; do NODE=`echo $LINE | cut -f3 -d:` [ "$NODE" = "$PNN" ] && { continue } IP=`echo $LINE | cut -f2 -d:` mkdir -p $CTDB_VARDIR/state/statd/ip/$IP rm -f $CTDB_VARDIR/state/statd/ip/$IP.rec ctdb pfetch ctdb.tdb statd-state:$IP $CTDB_VARDIR/state/statd/ip/$IP.rec 2>/dev/null [ "$?" = "0" ] || { continue } rm -f $CTDB_VARDIR/state/statd/ip/$IP/* tar xfP $CTDB_VARDIR/state/statd/ip/$IP.rec done ;; notify) # we must restart the lockmanager (on all nodes) so that we get # a clusterwide grace period (so other clients dont take out # conflicting locks through other nodes before all locks have been # reclaimed) # we need these settings to make sure that no tcp connections survive # across a very fast failover/failback #echo 10 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_fin_timeout #echo 0 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_max_tw_buckets #echo 0 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_max_orphans # Delete the notification list for statd, we dont want it to # ping any clients rm -f /var/lib/nfs/statd/sm/* rm -f /var/lib/nfs/statd/sm.bak/* # we must keep a monotonically increasing state variable for the entire # cluster so state always increases when ip addresses fail from one # node to another # We use epoch and hope the nodes are close enough in clock. # Even numbers mean service is shut down, odd numbers mean # service is started. STATE=`date +"%s"` STATE=`expr "$STATE" "/" "2"` # we must also let some time pass between stopping and restarting the # lockmanager since othervise there is a window where the lockmanager # will respond "strangely" immediately after restarting it, which # causes clients to fail to reclaim the locks. # startstop_nfslock stop > /dev/null 2>&1 sleep 2 # now start lockmanager again with the new state directory. startstop_nfslock start > /dev/null 2>&1 # we now need to send out additional statd notifications to ensure # that clients understand that the lockmanager has restarted. # we have three cases: # 1, clients that ignore the ip address the stat notification came from # and ONLY care about the 'name' in the notify packet. # these clients ONLY work with lock failover IFF that name # can be resolved into an ipaddress that matches the one used # to mount the share. (==linux clients) # This is handled when starting lockmanager above, but those # packets are sent from the "wrong" ip address, something linux # clients are ok with, buth other clients will barf at. # 2, Some clients only accept statd packets IFF they come from the # 'correct' ip address. # 2a,Send out the notification using the 'correct' ip address and also # specify the 'correct' hostname in the statd packet. # Some clients require both the correct source address and also the # correct name. (these clients also ONLY work if the ip addresses # used to map the share can be resolved into the name returned in # the notify packet.) # 2b,Other clients require that the source ip address of the notify # packet matches the ip address used to take out the lock. # I.e. that the correct source address is used. # These clients also require that the statd notify packet contains # the name as the ip address used when the lock was taken out. # # Both 2a and 2b are commonly used in lockmanagers since they maximize # probability that the client will accept the statd notify packet and # not just ignore it. # For all IPs we serve, collect info and push to the config database PNN=`ctdb xpnn | sed -e "s/.*://"` ctdb ip -Y | tail -n +2 | while read LINE; do NODE=`echo $LINE | cut -f3 -d:` [ "$NODE" = "$PNN" ] || { continue } IP=`echo $LINE | cut -f2 -d:` ls $CTDB_VARDIR/state/statd/ip/$IP | while read CLIENT; do rm $CTDB_VARDIR/state/statd/ip/$IP/$CLIENT smnotify --client=$CLIENT --ip=$IP --server=$ip --stateval=$STATE smnotify --client=$CLIENT --ip=$IP --server=$NFS_HOSTNAME --stateval=$STATE STATE=`expr "$STATE" "+" "1"` smnotify --client=$CLIENT --ip=$IP --server=$ip --stateval=$STATE smnotify --client=$CLIENT --ip=$IP --server=$NFS_HOSTNAME --stateval=$STATE done done ;; esac