openafs/README
Matt Benjamin c63e2541e5 amd64-fbsd-20081215
LICENSE IPL10
FIXES 123811

add support for fbsd 7.1, amd64 fbsd
2008-12-15 20:37:51 +00:00

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Copyright 2000, International Business Machines Corporation and others.
All Rights Reserved.
This software has been released under the terms of the IBM Public
License. For details, see the LICENSE file in the top-level source
directory or online at http://www.openafs.org/dl/license10.html
Short instructions for sites upgrading from a previous version of AFS:
% ./configure --enable-transarc-paths
% make
% make dest
will create a Transarc-style dest tree in ${SYS_NAME}/dest where
${SYS_NAME} is the AFS sysname of the system you built for.
This assumes if you're building for Linux that your kernel source is
in /usr/src/linux.
Otherwise, please read on.
Building OpenAFS on UNIX and Linux
----------------------------------
A Configuring
Uncompress the source into a directory of your choice. A directory
in afs space is also valid. In the directory that you uncompressed the
source in, you will only have an src/ directory.
1. Pick a system to build for, and note its default AFS sys_name.
A directory will be automatically created for binaries to be written
into with this name when you build.
alpha_dux40, alpha_dux50, alpha_dux51
alpha_linux22, alpha_linux24, alpha_linux26
alpha_nbsd15, alpha_nbsd16
amd64_fbsd_53 (client does not work)
amd64_linux24, amd64_linux26
amd64_nbsd20, amd64_nbsd30, amd64_nbsd40
arm_linux24, arm_linux26
hp_ux11i, hp_ux110, hp_ux1123 (See notes below for information on
getting missing header)
hp_ux102 (Client port possible, but db servers and utilities work)
i386_fbsd_42, i386_fbsd_43, i386_fbsd_44, i386_fbsd_45,
i386_fbsd_46, i386_fbsd_47, i386_fbsd_50, i386_fbsd_51,
i386_fbsd_52, i386_fbsd_53, i386_fbsd_60, i386_fbsd_61,
i386_fbsd_62, i386_fbsd_70, i386_fbsd_80
(client may work on 70)
i386_linux22, i386_linux24, i386_linux26
i386_nbsd15, i386_nbsd16, i386_nbsd20, i386_nbsd21, i386_nbsd30,
i386_nbsd40
i386_obsd31, i386_obsd32, i386_obsd33, i386_obsd34, i386_obsd35,
i386_obsd36, i386_obsd37, i386_obsd38, i386_obsd39, i386_obsd40,
i386_obsd41
i386_umlinux22, i386_umlinux24, i386_umlinux26
ia64_hpux1122, ia64_hpux1123
ia64_linux24, ia64_linux26
parisc_linux24
ppc64_linux24, ppc64_linux26
ppc_darwin_12, ppc_darwin_13, ppc_darwin_14, ppc_darwin_60,
ppc_darwin_70, ppc_darwin_80, ppc_darwin_90
ppc_linux22, ppc_linux24, ppc_linux26
ppc_nbsd16, ppc_nbsd20
rs_aix42, rs_aix51, rs_aix52, rs_aix53, rs_aix61
s390_linux22, s390_linux24, s390_linux26
s390x_linux24, s390x_linux26
sgi_62, sgi_63, sgi_64, sgi_65 (file server not tested)
sparc64_linux22, sparc64_linux24, sparc64_linux26
sparc_linux22, sparc_linux24
sun4_413 (No client support, no fileserver support, db servers only)
sun4x_56, sun4x_57, sun4x_58, sun4x_59, sun4x_510, sun4x_511
(logging UFS not supported for mixed-use partitions containing
client cache)
sunx86_57, sunx86_58, sunx86_59, sunx86_510, sunx86_511
(logging UFS not supported for mixed-use partitions containing
client cache)
x86_darwin_80, x86_darwin90
2. Using configure in the top level directory, configure for your
AFS system type, providing the necessary flags:
% ./configure --with-afs-sysname=sun4x_58 --enable-transarc-paths
If you do not have the "configure" script, or if you modify the
source files, you can re-create it by running regen.sh. You will
need autoconf to do this.
For some systems you need also provide the path in which your kernel
headers for your configured kernel can be found. See the
system-specific Notes sections below for details. If you want to
build only the user-space programs and servers and not the kernel
module, specify the --disable-kernel-module option on the
./configure command line.
All binaries, except for the 'fileserver' and 'volserver'
executables, are stripped of their symbol table information by
default. To enable a debugging build, specify the --enable-debug
option on the ./configure command line. This builds with debugging
compiler options and disables stripping of binaries.
You can also use different combinations of --enable-debug and
--enable (or --disable)-strip-binaries for finer control. One can,
for example, compile binaries for debug and strip them anyway.
Alternatively, one can compile without debug and force the binaries
to not be stripped. Note that these combinations are not
necessarily useful.
The two binaries noted above, 'fileserver' and 'volserver' will
never be stripped, regardless of any options given to configure.
There are two modes for directory path handling: "Transarc mode" and
"default mode":
- In Transarc mode, we retain compatibility with Transarc/IBM AFS tools
by putting client configuaration files in /usr/vice/etc, and server
files in /usr/afs under the traditional directory layout.
- In default mode, files are located in standardized locations, usually
under $(prefix).
- Client programs, libraries, and related files always go in standard
directories under $(prefix). This rule covers things that would go
into $(bindir), $(includedir), $(libdir), $(mandir), and $(sbindir).
- Other files get located in the following places:
Directory Transarc Mode Default Mode
============ ========================= ==============================
viceetcdir /usr/vice/etc $(sysconfdir)/openafs
afssrvdir /usr/afs/bin (servers) $(libexecdir)/openafs
afsconfdir /usr/afs/etc $(sysconfdir)/openafs/server
afslocaldir /usr/afs/local $(localstatedir)/openafs
afsdbdir /usr/afs/db $(localstatedir)/openafs/db
afslogdir /usr/afs/logs $(localstatedir)/openafs/logs
afsbosconfig $(afslocaldir)/BosConfig $(afsconfdir)/BosConfig
afsbosserver $(afsbindir)/bosserver $(sbindir)/bosserver
The Demand Attach Fileserver (DAFS), is built by providing the
--enable-demand-attach-fs argument to configure. Note that the
bosserver must be built with DAFS in order to be able to create the
dafs instance, which will be used in place of the fs instance. In
addition, the fileserver, volserver, salvager, salvage, and
salvageserver binaries must be built for DAFS.
For additional options, see section H below.
B Building
1. Now, you can build OpenAFS.
% make
2. Install your build using either "make install" to install
into the current system (you will need to be root, and files
will be placed as appropriate for Transarc or standard paths),
"make install DESTDIR=/some/path" to install into an alternate
directory tree, or if you configured with --enable-transarc-paths
make dest to create a complete binary tree in the dest directory
under the directory named for the sys_name you built for,
e.g. sun4x_57/dest or i386_linux22/dest
2. As appropriate you can clean up or, if you're using Linux, build for
another kernel version.
To clean up:
% make clean
C Problems
If you have a problem building this source, you may want to visit
http://www.openafs.org/ to see if any problems have been reported
or to find out how to get more help.
Mailing lists have been set up to help; More details can be found
on the openafs.org site.
D Linux Notes
For Linux systems you need also provide the path in which your
kernel headers for your configured kernel can be found. This should
be the path of the directory containing a child directory named
"include". So if your version file was
/usr/src/linux/include/linux/version.h you would invoke:
% ./configure --with-afs-sysname=i386_linux24 \
--with-linux-kernel-headers=/usr/src/linux
Currently you can build for only one Linux kernel at a time,
and the version is extracted from the kernel headers in the root
you specify.
To build for another Linux kernel version:
the system type defined in step A1.
% ./configure --with-afs-sysname=i386_linux24 \
--with-linux-kernel-headers=/usr/src/linux-2.2.19-i686
% make
Your dest tree will now include an additional kernel module for your
additional kernel headers. Be aware that if the kernel version string
which UTS_RELEASE is defined to in include/linux/version.h matches the
last kernel you built for, the previous kernel module will be
overwritten.
E HP-UX 11.0 Notes
HP-UX 11.0 requires a header called vfs_vm.h which HP has provided on
their web site. Go to http://www.hp.com/dspp, choose Software
downloads from the side menu, and select Software: HP operating systems
and then Operating systems: HP-UX from the select boxes. The last
select box will have an option for downloading vfs_vm.h.
F OpenBSD Notes
If you need to run regen.sh to make the configure script, you should
first install autoconf-2.59, then setenv AUTOCONF_VERSION 2.59.
You need kernel source installed to build OpenAFS. Use the
--with-bsd-kernel-headers= configure option if your kernel source is
not in /usr/src/sys.
If you want to build src/aklog, add the following options to your
configure. Note that you shouldn't need aklog because heimdal afslog
does (almost) the same thing.
--with-krb5 KRB5CFLAGS=-I/usr/include/kerberosV KRB5LIBS=-lcrypto
src/packaging/OpenBSD/buildpkg.sh will make a tar file for installing
the client. There is no server package, but I am told that "make
install" will put server binaries in /usr/afs.
Your kernel may panic when you try to shutdown after running the
OpenAFS client. To prevent this, change the "dangling vnode" panic in
sys/kern/vfs_syscalls.c to a printf and build a new kernel.
You can't run arla and OpenAFS at the same time.
G FreeBSD Notes
The FreeBSD client may now work; It is tested on 7.0 and on current
as of the commit date.
You need kernel source installed to build OpenAFS. Use the
--with-bsd-kernel-headers= configure option if your kernel source is
not in /usr/src/sys.
You also need access to your kernel build directory for the opt_global.h
include file. Use the --with-bsd-kernel-build= configure option if your
kernel build is not GENERIC in the standard place. If
/usr/src/sys/${CPUARCH}/compile/GENERIC does not point to
/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GENERIC you may need to resolve that and retry the
build.
There is no server package, but I am told that "make install" will put
server binaries in /usr/afs.
You can't run arla and OpenAFS at the same time.
H AIX notes
Make sure that your default build environment is 32bit, ie.
the OBJECT_MODE environment variable is either unset or set to "32".
Verify this before doing configure and make. For example, assuming ksh/bash:
export OBJECT_MODE=32
To build aklog (in order to be able to get tokens from your KRB5 ticket)
you have to supply --with-krb5 to configure, the following example is for
building on AIX 6.1 with the IBM Kerberos5 (krb5.client.rte and
krb5.toolkit.adt on the Expansion Pack):
./configure --with-afs-sysname=rs_aix61 --enable-transarc-paths \
--enable-supergroups \
--with-krb5 KRB5CFLAGS=-I/usr/include KRB5LIBS=-lkrb5
I Other configure options
AFS has a ton of other optional features that must be enabled using
configure options. Here is a summary:
--enable-bitmap-later
Speeds the startup of the fileserver by deferring reading volume
bitmaps until necessary. Demand attach is a better solution to the
same problem.
--enable-bos-new-config
A bosserver built with this option will look for BosConfig.new when
it restarts and, if present, replace BosConfig with that file
before reading its configuration.
--enable-bos-restricted-mode
Enables support for restricted mode in the bosserver. This mode
can be enabled or disabled via a command-line switch and a signal
and can be enabled (but not disabled) remotely. When enabled,
bosserver will not permit any operations that change the local file
system (install, uninstall, prune), run commands on the server
(exec, create, delete), or view files (getlog).
--enable-demand-attach-fs
Enable Demand Attach file servers. Demand Attach is an extensive
re-engineering of the file server that avoids the long startup and
shutdown delays of the traditional file server by enabling
persistance of file server state to disk. It is still very new,
but is expected to become the default in a future version of
OpenAFS.
--enable-disconnected
Enable disconnected support in the cache manager (EXPERIMENTAL).
--enable-fast-restart
When restarting the fileserver, don't salvage volumes. Instead,
assume all volumes are okay and only take them off-line if that
assumption is incorrect. Using this option safely requires
scanning the fileserver log for error messages when volumes are
taken off-line and salvaging them manually. Not recommended; use
demand attach instead.
--enable-icmp-pmtu-discovery
Enable path MTU discovery in the Rx libraries by decoding ICMP
unreachable packets.
--enable-namei-fileserver
Forces the namei fileserver on platforms (like Solaris) where the
inode fileserver is the default.
--enable-pthreaded-ubik
Enable the threaded version of Ubik and install the threaded
versions of Ubik servers. See README.PTHREADED_UBIK for more
information. (EXPERIMENTAL)
--enable-supergroups
Enables support of nested groups in the ptserver. WARNING: Once
you make use of this option by nesting one group inside another,
the resulting PTS database cannot be correctly and safely used by a
ptserver built without this option.
--enable-tivoli-tsm
Build with the Tivoli TSM API libraries for butc support of the
Tivoli backup system.
--enable-unix-sockets
Enable use of UNIX domain sockets for fssync.
It's also possible to disable some standard features. None of these
options are recommended but may be useful in unusual circumstances:
--disable-afsdb
Disable AFSDB DNS record support in the cache manager, normally
used to find cell VLDB servers.
--disable-full-vos-listvol-switch
Removes support for the -format option to vos listvol and also
suppresses some additional fields that were added to vos examine
output but may confuse older software.
--disable-largefile-fileserver
Disable large file (>2GB) support in the fileserver.
--disable-pam
Do not build the AFS PAM modules. Normally building them is
harmless, but the PAM modules that come with OpenAFS are deprecated
and should not be used unless you're still using the OpenAFS
kaserver (which is itself deprecated and should not be used).