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Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/filesystems/afs.txt')
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/filesystems/afs.txt | 214 |
1 files changed, 154 insertions, 60 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/filesystems/afs.txt b/Documentation/filesystems/afs.txt index 2f4237dfb8c7..12ad6c7f4e50 100644 --- a/Documentation/filesystems/afs.txt +++ b/Documentation/filesystems/afs.txt | |||
@@ -1,31 +1,82 @@ | |||
1 | ==================== | ||
1 | kAFS: AFS FILESYSTEM | 2 | kAFS: AFS FILESYSTEM |
2 | ==================== | 3 | ==================== |
3 | 4 | ||
4 | ABOUT | 5 | Contents: |
5 | ===== | 6 | |
7 | - Overview. | ||
8 | - Usage. | ||
9 | - Mountpoints. | ||
10 | - Proc filesystem. | ||
11 | - The cell database. | ||
12 | - Security. | ||
13 | - Examples. | ||
14 | |||
15 | |||
16 | ======== | ||
17 | OVERVIEW | ||
18 | ======== | ||
6 | 19 | ||
7 | This filesystem provides a fairly simple AFS filesystem driver. It is under | 20 | This filesystem provides a fairly simple secure AFS filesystem driver. It is |
8 | development and only provides very basic facilities. It does not yet support | 21 | under development and does not yet provide the full feature set. The features |
9 | the following AFS features: | 22 | it does support include: |
10 | 23 | ||
11 | (*) Write support. | 24 | (*) Security (currently only AFS kaserver and KerberosIV tickets). |
12 | (*) Communications security. | ||
13 | (*) Local caching. | ||
14 | (*) pioctl() system call. | ||
15 | (*) Automatic mounting of embedded mountpoints. | ||
16 | 25 | ||
26 | (*) File reading. | ||
17 | 27 | ||
28 | (*) Automounting. | ||
29 | |||
30 | It does not yet support the following AFS features: | ||
31 | |||
32 | (*) Write support. | ||
33 | |||
34 | (*) Local caching. | ||
35 | |||
36 | (*) pioctl() system call. | ||
37 | |||
38 | |||
39 | =========== | ||
40 | COMPILATION | ||
41 | =========== | ||
42 | |||
43 | The filesystem should be enabled by turning on the kernel configuration | ||
44 | options: | ||
45 | |||
46 | CONFIG_AF_RXRPC - The RxRPC protocol transport | ||
47 | CONFIG_RXKAD - The RxRPC Kerberos security handler | ||
48 | CONFIG_AFS - The AFS filesystem | ||
49 | |||
50 | Additionally, the following can be turned on to aid debugging: | ||
51 | |||
52 | CONFIG_AF_RXRPC_DEBUG - Permit AF_RXRPC debugging to be enabled | ||
53 | CONFIG_AFS_DEBUG - Permit AFS debugging to be enabled | ||
54 | |||
55 | They permit the debugging messages to be turned on dynamically by manipulating | ||
56 | the masks in the following files: | ||
57 | |||
58 | /sys/module/af_rxrpc/parameters/debug | ||
59 | /sys/module/afs/parameters/debug | ||
60 | |||
61 | |||
62 | ===== | ||
18 | USAGE | 63 | USAGE |
19 | ===== | 64 | ===== |
20 | 65 | ||
21 | When inserting the driver modules the root cell must be specified along with a | 66 | When inserting the driver modules the root cell must be specified along with a |
22 | list of volume location server IP addresses: | 67 | list of volume location server IP addresses: |
23 | 68 | ||
24 | insmod rxrpc.o | 69 | insmod af_rxrpc.o |
70 | insmod rxkad.o | ||
25 | insmod kafs.o rootcell=cambridge.redhat.com:172.16.18.73:172.16.18.91 | 71 | insmod kafs.o rootcell=cambridge.redhat.com:172.16.18.73:172.16.18.91 |
26 | 72 | ||
27 | The first module is a driver for the RxRPC remote operation protocol, and the | 73 | The first module is the AF_RXRPC network protocol driver. This provides the |
28 | second is the actual filesystem driver for the AFS filesystem. | 74 | RxRPC remote operation protocol and may also be accessed from userspace. See: |
75 | |||
76 | Documentation/networking/rxrpc.txt | ||
77 | |||
78 | The second module is the kerberos RxRPC security driver, and the third module | ||
79 | is the actual filesystem driver for the AFS filesystem. | ||
29 | 80 | ||
30 | Once the module has been loaded, more modules can be added by the following | 81 | Once the module has been loaded, more modules can be added by the following |
31 | procedure: | 82 | procedure: |
@@ -33,7 +84,7 @@ procedure: | |||
33 | echo add grand.central.org 18.7.14.88:128.2.191.224 >/proc/fs/afs/cells | 84 | echo add grand.central.org 18.7.14.88:128.2.191.224 >/proc/fs/afs/cells |
34 | 85 | ||
35 | Where the parameters to the "add" command are the name of a cell and a list of | 86 | Where the parameters to the "add" command are the name of a cell and a list of |
36 | volume location servers within that cell. | 87 | volume location servers within that cell, with the latter separated by colons. |
37 | 88 | ||
38 | Filesystems can be mounted anywhere by commands similar to the following: | 89 | Filesystems can be mounted anywhere by commands similar to the following: |
39 | 90 | ||
@@ -42,11 +93,6 @@ Filesystems can be mounted anywhere by commands similar to the following: | |||
42 | mount -t afs "#root.afs." /afs | 93 | mount -t afs "#root.afs." /afs |
43 | mount -t afs "#root.cell." /afs/cambridge | 94 | mount -t afs "#root.cell." /afs/cambridge |
44 | 95 | ||
45 | NB: When using this on Linux 2.4, the mount command has to be different, | ||
46 | since the filesystem doesn't have access to the device name argument: | ||
47 | |||
48 | mount -t afs none /afs -ovol="#root.afs." | ||
49 | |||
50 | Where the initial character is either a hash or a percent symbol depending on | 96 | Where the initial character is either a hash or a percent symbol depending on |
51 | whether you definitely want a R/W volume (hash) or whether you'd prefer a R/O | 97 | whether you definitely want a R/W volume (hash) or whether you'd prefer a R/O |
52 | volume, but are willing to use a R/W volume instead (percent). | 98 | volume, but are willing to use a R/W volume instead (percent). |
@@ -60,55 +106,66 @@ named volume will be looked up in the cell specified during insmod. | |||
60 | Additional cells can be added through /proc (see later section). | 106 | Additional cells can be added through /proc (see later section). |
61 | 107 | ||
62 | 108 | ||
109 | =========== | ||
63 | MOUNTPOINTS | 110 | MOUNTPOINTS |
64 | =========== | 111 | =========== |
65 | 112 | ||
66 | AFS has a concept of mountpoints. These are specially formatted symbolic links | 113 | AFS has a concept of mountpoints. In AFS terms, these are specially formatted |
67 | (of the same form as the "device name" passed to mount). kAFS presents these | 114 | symbolic links (of the same form as the "device name" passed to mount). kAFS |
68 | to the user as directories that have special properties: | 115 | presents these to the user as directories that have a follow-link capability |
116 | (ie: symbolic link semantics). If anyone attempts to access them, they will | ||
117 | automatically cause the target volume to be mounted (if possible) on that site. | ||
69 | 118 | ||
70 | (*) They cannot be listed. Running a program like "ls" on them will incur an | 119 | Automatically mounted filesystems will be automatically unmounted approximately |
71 | EREMOTE error (Object is remote). | 120 | twenty minutes after they were last used. Alternatively they can be unmounted |
121 | directly with the umount() system call. | ||
72 | 122 | ||
73 | (*) Other objects can't be looked up inside of them. This also incurs an | 123 | Manually unmounting an AFS volume will cause any idle submounts upon it to be |
74 | EREMOTE error. | 124 | culled first. If all are culled, then the requested volume will also be |
125 | unmounted, otherwise error EBUSY will be returned. | ||
75 | 126 | ||
76 | (*) They can be queried with the readlink() system call, which will return | 127 | This can be used by the administrator to attempt to unmount the whole AFS tree |
77 | the name of the mountpoint to which they point. The "readlink" program | 128 | mounted on /afs in one go by doing: |
78 | will also work. | ||
79 | 129 | ||
80 | (*) They can be mounted on (which symbolic links can't). | 130 | umount /afs |
81 | 131 | ||
82 | 132 | ||
133 | =============== | ||
83 | PROC FILESYSTEM | 134 | PROC FILESYSTEM |
84 | =============== | 135 | =============== |
85 | 136 | ||
86 | The rxrpc module creates a number of files in various places in the /proc | ||
87 | filesystem: | ||
88 | |||
89 | (*) Firstly, some information files are made available in a directory called | ||
90 | "/proc/net/rxrpc/". These list the extant transport endpoint, peer, | ||
91 | connection and call records. | ||
92 | |||
93 | (*) Secondly, some control files are made available in a directory called | ||
94 | "/proc/sys/rxrpc/". Currently, all these files can be used for is to | ||
95 | turn on various levels of tracing. | ||
96 | |||
97 | The AFS modules creates a "/proc/fs/afs/" directory and populates it: | 137 | The AFS modules creates a "/proc/fs/afs/" directory and populates it: |
98 | 138 | ||
99 | (*) A "cells" file that lists cells currently known to the afs module. | 139 | (*) A "cells" file that lists cells currently known to the afs module and |
140 | their usage counts: | ||
141 | |||
142 | [root@andromeda ~]# cat /proc/fs/afs/cells | ||
143 | USE NAME | ||
144 | 3 cambridge.redhat.com | ||
100 | 145 | ||
101 | (*) A directory per cell that contains files that list volume location | 146 | (*) A directory per cell that contains files that list volume location |
102 | servers, volumes, and active servers known within that cell. | 147 | servers, volumes, and active servers known within that cell. |
103 | 148 | ||
149 | [root@andromeda ~]# cat /proc/fs/afs/cambridge.redhat.com/servers | ||
150 | USE ADDR STATE | ||
151 | 4 172.16.18.91 0 | ||
152 | [root@andromeda ~]# cat /proc/fs/afs/cambridge.redhat.com/vlservers | ||
153 | ADDRESS | ||
154 | 172.16.18.91 | ||
155 | [root@andromeda ~]# cat /proc/fs/afs/cambridge.redhat.com/volumes | ||
156 | USE STT VLID[0] VLID[1] VLID[2] NAME | ||
157 | 1 Val 20000000 20000001 20000002 root.afs | ||
104 | 158 | ||
159 | |||
160 | ================= | ||
105 | THE CELL DATABASE | 161 | THE CELL DATABASE |
106 | ================= | 162 | ================= |
107 | 163 | ||
108 | The filesystem maintains an internal database of all the cells it knows and | 164 | The filesystem maintains an internal database of all the cells it knows and the |
109 | the IP addresses of the volume location servers for those cells. The cell to | 165 | IP addresses of the volume location servers for those cells. The cell to which |
110 | which the computer belongs is added to the database when insmod is performed | 166 | the system belongs is added to the database when insmod is performed by the |
111 | by the "rootcell=" argument. | 167 | "rootcell=" argument or, if compiled in, using a "kafs.rootcell=" argument on |
168 | the kernel command line. | ||
112 | 169 | ||
113 | Further cells can be added by commands similar to the following: | 170 | Further cells can be added by commands similar to the following: |
114 | 171 | ||
@@ -118,20 +175,65 @@ Further cells can be added by commands similar to the following: | |||
118 | No other cell database operations are available at this time. | 175 | No other cell database operations are available at this time. |
119 | 176 | ||
120 | 177 | ||
178 | ======== | ||
179 | SECURITY | ||
180 | ======== | ||
181 | |||
182 | Secure operations are initiated by acquiring a key using the klog program. A | ||
183 | very primitive klog program is available at: | ||
184 | |||
185 | http://people.redhat.com/~dhowells/rxrpc/klog.c | ||
186 | |||
187 | This should be compiled by: | ||
188 | |||
189 | make klog LDLIBS="-lcrypto -lcrypt -lkrb4 -lkeyutils" | ||
190 | |||
191 | And then run as: | ||
192 | |||
193 | ./klog | ||
194 | |||
195 | Assuming it's successful, this adds a key of type RxRPC, named for the service | ||
196 | and cell, eg: "afs@<cellname>". This can be viewed with the keyctl program or | ||
197 | by cat'ing /proc/keys: | ||
198 | |||
199 | [root@andromeda ~]# keyctl show | ||
200 | Session Keyring | ||
201 | -3 --alswrv 0 0 keyring: _ses.3268 | ||
202 | 2 --alswrv 0 0 \_ keyring: _uid.0 | ||
203 | 111416553 --als--v 0 0 \_ rxrpc: afs@CAMBRIDGE.REDHAT.COM | ||
204 | |||
205 | Currently the username, realm, password and proposed ticket lifetime are | ||
206 | compiled in to the program. | ||
207 | |||
208 | It is not required to acquire a key before using AFS facilities, but if one is | ||
209 | not acquired then all operations will be governed by the anonymous user parts | ||
210 | of the ACLs. | ||
211 | |||
212 | If a key is acquired, then all AFS operations, including mounts and automounts, | ||
213 | made by a possessor of that key will be secured with that key. | ||
214 | |||
215 | If a file is opened with a particular key and then the file descriptor is | ||
216 | passed to a process that doesn't have that key (perhaps over an AF_UNIX | ||
217 | socket), then the operations on the file will be made with key that was used to | ||
218 | open the file. | ||
219 | |||
220 | |||
221 | ======== | ||
121 | EXAMPLES | 222 | EXAMPLES |
122 | ======== | 223 | ======== |
123 | 224 | ||
124 | Here's what I use to test this. Some of the names and IP addresses are local | 225 | Here's what I use to test this. Some of the names and IP addresses are local |
125 | to my internal DNS. My "root.afs" partition has a mount point within it for | 226 | to my internal DNS. My "root.afs" partition has a mount point within it for |
126 | some public volumes volumes. | 227 | some public volumes volumes. |
127 | 228 | ||
128 | insmod -S /tmp/rxrpc.o | 229 | insmod /tmp/rxrpc.o |
129 | insmod -S /tmp/kafs.o rootcell=cambridge.redhat.com:172.16.18.73:172.16.18.91 | 230 | insmod /tmp/rxkad.o |
231 | insmod /tmp/kafs.o rootcell=cambridge.redhat.com:172.16.18.91 | ||
130 | 232 | ||
131 | mount -t afs \%root.afs. /afs | 233 | mount -t afs \%root.afs. /afs |
132 | mount -t afs \%cambridge.redhat.com:root.cell. /afs/cambridge.redhat.com/ | 234 | mount -t afs \%cambridge.redhat.com:root.cell. /afs/cambridge.redhat.com/ |
133 | 235 | ||
134 | echo add grand.central.org 18.7.14.88:128.2.191.224 > /proc/fs/afs/cells | 236 | echo add grand.central.org 18.7.14.88:128.2.191.224 > /proc/fs/afs/cells |
135 | mount -t afs "#grand.central.org:root.cell." /afs/grand.central.org/ | 237 | mount -t afs "#grand.central.org:root.cell." /afs/grand.central.org/ |
136 | mount -t afs "#grand.central.org:root.archive." /afs/grand.central.org/archive | 238 | mount -t afs "#grand.central.org:root.archive." /afs/grand.central.org/archive |
137 | mount -t afs "#grand.central.org:root.contrib." /afs/grand.central.org/contrib | 239 | mount -t afs "#grand.central.org:root.contrib." /afs/grand.central.org/contrib |
@@ -141,15 +243,7 @@ mount -t afs "#grand.central.org:root.service." /afs/grand.central.org/service | |||
141 | mount -t afs "#grand.central.org:root.software." /afs/grand.central.org/software | 243 | mount -t afs "#grand.central.org:root.software." /afs/grand.central.org/software |
142 | mount -t afs "#grand.central.org:root.user." /afs/grand.central.org/user | 244 | mount -t afs "#grand.central.org:root.user." /afs/grand.central.org/user |
143 | 245 | ||
144 | umount /afs/grand.central.org/user | ||
145 | umount /afs/grand.central.org/software | ||
146 | umount /afs/grand.central.org/service | ||
147 | umount /afs/grand.central.org/project | ||
148 | umount /afs/grand.central.org/doc | ||
149 | umount /afs/grand.central.org/contrib | ||
150 | umount /afs/grand.central.org/archive | ||
151 | umount /afs/grand.central.org | ||
152 | umount /afs/cambridge.redhat.com | ||
153 | umount /afs | 246 | umount /afs |
154 | rmmod kafs | 247 | rmmod kafs |
248 | rmmod rxkad | ||
155 | rmmod rxrpc | 249 | rmmod rxrpc |