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40dfd90a9f
Do not create new server log files when servers are restarted by default. External log rotation tools may be used to rotate the logs by renaming log files and then signaling server processes to reopen log files. Add the -transarc-logs option to each server to provide backward compatibility with the traditional Transarc-style logging. When -transarc-logs is given, log files are renamed to an ".old" file (overwriting the existing ".old" file) and the previous the log file is truncated. Change-Id: I2eeb67e3db32b2f75fe685b68dab1159e62061e9 Reviewed-on: https://gerrit.openafs.org/11731 Reviewed-by: Benjamin Kaduk <kaduk@mit.edu> Tested-by: BuildBot <buildbot@rampaginggeek.com>
464 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
464 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
=over 4
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=item B<-auditlog> <I<log path>>
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Turns on audit logging, and sets the path for the audit log. The audit
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log records information about RPC calls, including the name of the RPC
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call, the host that submitted the call, the authenticated entity (user)
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that issued the call, the parameters for the call, and if the call
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succeeded or failed.
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=item B<-audit-interface> (file | sysvmq)
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Specifies what audit interface to use. The C<file> interface writes audit
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messages to the file passed to B<-auditlog>. The C<sysvmq> interface
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writes audit messages to a SYSV message (see L<msgget(2)> and
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L<msgrcv(2)>). The message queue the C<sysvmq> interface writes to has the
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key C<ftok(path, 1)>, where C<path> is the path specified in the
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B<-auditlog> option.
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Defaults to C<file>.
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=item B<-d> <I<debug level>>
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Sets the detail level for the debugging trace written to the
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F</usr/afs/logs/FileLog> file. Provide one of the following values, each
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of which produces an increasingly detailed trace: C<0>, C<1>, C<5>, C<25>,
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and C<125>. The default value of C<0> produces only a few messages.
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=item B<-p> <I<number of processes>>
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Sets the number of threads (or LWPs) to run. Provide a positive integer.
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The File Server creates and uses five threads for special purposes,
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in addition to the number specified (but if this argument specifies
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the maximum possible number, the File Server automatically uses five
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of the threads for its own purposes).
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The maximum number of threads can differ in each release of OpenAFS.
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Consult the I<OpenAFS Release Notes> for the current release.
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=item B<-spare> <I<number of spare blocks>>
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Specifies the number of additional kilobytes an application can store in a
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volume after the quota is exceeded. Provide a positive integer; a value of
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C<0> prevents the volume from ever exceeding its quota. Do not combine
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this argument with the B<-pctspare> argument.
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=item B<-pctspare> <I<percentage spare>>
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Specifies the amount by which the File Server allows a volume to exceed
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its quota, as a percentage of the quota. Provide an integer between C<0>
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and C<99>. A value of C<0> prevents the volume from ever exceeding its
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quota. Do not combine this argument with the B<-spare> argument.
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=item B<-b> <I<buffers>>
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Sets the number of directory buffers. Provide a positive integer.
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=item B<-l> <I<large vnodes>>
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Sets the number of large vnodes available in memory for caching directory
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elements. Provide a positive integer.
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=item B<-s> <I<small nodes>>
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Sets the number of small vnodes available in memory for caching file
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elements. Provide a positive integer.
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=item B<-vc> <I<volume cachesize>>
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Sets the number of volumes the File Server can cache in memory. Provide a
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positive integer.
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=item B<-w> <I<call back wait interval>>
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Sets the interval at which the daemon spawned by the File Server performs
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its maintenance tasks. Do not use this argument; changing the default
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value can cause unpredictable behavior.
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=item B<-cb> <I<number of callbacks>>
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Sets the number of callbacks the File Server can track. Provide a positive
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integer.
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=item B<-banner>
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Prints the following banner to F</dev/console> about every 10 minutes.
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File Server is running at I<time>.
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=item B<-novbc>
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Prevents the File Server from breaking the callbacks that Cache Managers
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hold on a volume that the File Server is reattaching after the volume was
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offline (as a result of the B<vos restore> command, for example). Use of
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this flag is strongly discouraged.
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=item B<-nobusy>
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This option slightly changes the error codes reported to clients when an
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unattached volume is accessed by a client during fileserver startup.
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Normally, non-DAFS fileservers start accepting requests immediately on startup,
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but attachment of volumes can take a while. So if a client tries to access a
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volume that is not attached simply because the fileserver hasn't attached it
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yet, that client will get an error. With the B<-nobusy> option present, the
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fileserver will immediately respond with an error code that indicates the
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server is starting up. However, some older clients (before OpenAFS 1.0) don't
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understand this error code, and may not function optimally. So the default
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behavior, without the B<-nobusy> option, is to at first respond with a
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different error code that is understood by more clients, but is
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indistinguishable from other scenarios where the volume is busy and not
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attached for other reasons.
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There is usually no reason to use this option under normal operation.
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=item B<-implicit> <I<admin mode bits>>
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Defines the set of permissions granted by default to the
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system:administrators group on the ACL of every directory in a volume
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stored on the file server machine. Provide one or more of the standard
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permission letters (C<rlidwka>) and auxiliary permission letters
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(C<ABCDEFGH>), or one of the shorthand notations for groups of permissions
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(C<all>, C<none>, C<read>, and C<write>). To review the meaning of the
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permissions, see the B<fs setacl> reference page.
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=item B<-readonly>
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Don't allow writes to this fileserver.
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=item B<-hr> <I<number of hours between refreshing the host cps>>
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Specifies how often the File Server refreshes its knowledge of the
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machines that belong to protection groups (refreshes the host CPSs for
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machines). The File Server must update this information to enable users
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from machines recently added to protection groups to access data for which
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those machines now have the necessary ACL permissions.
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=item B<-busyat> <I<< redirect clients when queue > n >>>
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Defines the number of incoming RPCs that can be waiting for a response
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from the File Server before the File Server returns the error code
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C<VBUSY> to the Cache Manager that sent the latest RPC. In response, the
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Cache Manager retransmits the RPC after a delay. This argument prevents
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the accumulation of so many waiting RPCs that the File Server can never
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process them all. Provide a positive integer. The default value is
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C<600>.
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=item B<-rxpck> <I<number of rx extra packets>>
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Controls the number of Rx packets the File Server uses to store data for
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incoming RPCs that it is currently handling, that are waiting for a
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response, and for replies that are not yet complete. Provide a positive
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integer.
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=item B<-rxdbg>
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Writes a trace of the File Server's operations on Rx packets to the file
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F</usr/afs/logs/rx_dbg>.
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=item B<-rxdbge>
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Writes a trace of the File Server's operations on Rx events (such as
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retransmissions) to the file F</usr/afs/logs/rx_dbg>.
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=item B<-rxmaxmtu> <I<bytes>>
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Defines the maximum size of an MTU. The value must be between the
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minimum and maximum packet data sizes for Rx.
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=item B<-jumbo>
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Allows the server to send and receive jumbograms. A jumbogram is
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a large-size packet composed of 2 to 4 normal Rx data packets that share
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the same header. The fileserver does not use jumbograms by default, as some
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routers are not capable of properly breaking the jumbogram into smaller
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packets and reassembling them.
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=item B<-nojumbo>
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Deprecated; jumbograms are disabled by default.
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=item B<-rxbind>
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Force the fileserver to only bind to one IP address.
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=item B<-allow-dotted-principals>
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By default, the RXKAD security layer will disallow access by Kerberos
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principals with a dot in the first component of their name. This is to avoid
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the confusion where principals user/admin and user.admin are both mapped to the
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user.admin PTS entry. Sites whose Kerberos realms don't have these collisions
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between principal names may disable this check by starting the server
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with this option.
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=item B<-L>
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Sets values for many arguments in a manner suitable for a large file
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server machine. Combine this flag with any option except the B<-S> flag;
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omit both flags to set values suitable for a medium-sized file server
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machine.
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=item B<-S>
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Sets values for many arguments in a manner suitable for a small file
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server machine. Combine this flag with any option except the B<-L> flag;
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omit both flags to set values suitable for a medium-sized file server
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machine.
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=item B<-realm> <I<Kerberos realm name>>
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Defines the Kerberos realm name for the File Server to use. If this
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argument is not provided, it uses the realm name corresponding to the cell
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listed in the local F</usr/afs/etc/ThisCell> file.
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=item B<-udpsize> <I<size of socket buffer in bytes>>
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Sets the size of the UDP buffer, which is 64 KB by default. Provide a
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positive integer, preferably larger than the default.
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=item B<-sendsize> <I<size of send buffer in bytes>>
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Sets the size of the send buffer, which is 16384 bytes by default.
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=item B<-abortthreshold> <I<abort threshold>>
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Sets the abort threshold, which is triggered when an AFS client sends
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a number of FetchStatus requests in a row and all of them fail due to
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access control or some other error. When the abort threshold is
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reached, the file server starts to slow down the responses to the
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problem client in order to reduce the load on the file server.
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The throttling behaviour can cause issues especially for some versions
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of the Windows OpenAFS client. When using Windows Explorer to navigate
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the AFS directory tree, directories with only "look" access for the
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current user may load more slowly because of the throttling. This is
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because the Windows OpenAFS client sends FetchStatus calls one at a
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time instead of in bulk like the Unix Open AFS client.
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Setting the threshold to 0 disables the throttling behavior. This
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option is available in OpenAFS versions 1.4.1 and later.
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=item B<-enable_peer_stats>
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Activates the collection of Rx statistics and allocates memory for their
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storage. For each connection with a specific UDP port on another machine,
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a separate record is kept for each type of RPC (FetchFile, GetStatus, and
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so on) sent or received. To display or otherwise access the records, use
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the Rx Monitoring API.
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=item B<-enable_process_stats>
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Activates the collection of Rx statistics and allocates memory for their
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storage. A separate record is kept for each type of RPC (FetchFile,
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GetStatus, and so on) sent or received, aggregated over all connections to
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other machines. To display or otherwise access the records, use the Rx
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Monitoring API.
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=item B<-syslog> [<loglevel>]
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Use syslog instead of the normal logging location for the fileserver
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process. If provided, log messages are at <loglevel> instead of the
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default LOG_USER.
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=item B<-mrafslogs>
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Use MR-AFS (Multi-Resident) style logging. This option is deprecated.
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=item B<-transarc-logs>
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Use Transarc style logging features. Rename the existing log file
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F</usr/afs/logs/FileLog> to F</usr/afs/logs/FileLog.old> when the fileserver is
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restarted. This option is provided for compatibility with older versions.
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=item B<-saneacls>
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Offer the SANEACLS capability for the fileserver. This option is
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currently unimplemented.
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=item B<-help>
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Prints the online help for this command. All other valid options are
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ignored.
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=item B<-vhandle-setaside> <I<fds reserved for non-cache io>>
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Number of file handles set aside for I/O not in the cache. Defaults to 128.
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=item B<-vhandle-max-cachesize> <I<max open files>>
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Maximum number of available file handles.
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=item B<-vhandle-initial-cachesize> <I<initial open file cache>>
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Number of file handles set aside for I/O in the cache. Defaults to 128.
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=item B<-vattachpar> <I<number of volume attach threads>>
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The number of threads assigned to attach and detach volumes. The default
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is 1. Warning: many of the I/O parallelism features of Demand-Attach
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Fileserver are turned off when the number of volume attach threads is only
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1.
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This option is only meaningful for a file server built with pthreads
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support.
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=item B<-m> <I<min percentage spare in partition>>
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Specifies the percentage of each AFS server partition that the AIX version
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of the File Server creates as a reserve. Specify an integer value between
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C<0> and C<30>; the default is 8%. A value of C<0> means that the
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partition can become completely full, which can have serious negative
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consequences. This option is not supported on platforms other than AIX.
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=item B<-lock>
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Prevents any portion of the fileserver binary from being paged (swapped)
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out of memory on a file server machine running the IRIX operating system.
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This option is not supported on platforms other than IRIX.
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=item B<-offline-timeout> <I<timeout in seconds>>
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Setting this option to I<N> means that if any clients are reading from a
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volume when we want to offline that volume (for example, as part of
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releasing a volume), we will wait I<N> seconds for the clients' request
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to finish. If the clients' requests have not finished, we will then
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interrupt the client requests and send an error to those clients,
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allowing the volume to go offline.
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If a client is interrupted, from the client's point of view, it will
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appear as if they had accessed the volume after it had gone offline. For
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RO volumes, this mean the client should fail-over to other valid RO
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sites for that volume. This option may speed up volume releases if
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volumes are being accessed by clients that have slow or unreliable
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network connections.
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Setting this option to C<0> means to interrupt clients immediately if a
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volume is waiting to go offline. Setting this option to C<-1> means to
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wait forever for client requests to finish. The default value is C<-1>.
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For the LWP fileserver, the only valid value for this option is C<-1>.
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=item B<-offline-shutdown-timeout> <I<timeout in seconds>>
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This option behaves similarly to B<-offline-timeout> but applies to
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volumes that are going offline as part of the fileserver shutdown
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process. If the value specified is I<N>, we will interrupt any clients
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reading from volumes after I<N> seconds have passed since we first
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needed to wait for a volume to offline during the shutdown process.
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Setting this option to C<0> means to interrupt all clients reading from
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volumes immediately during the shutdown process. Setting this option to
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C<-1> means to wait forever for client requests to finish during the
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shutdown process.
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If B<-offline-timeout> is specified, the default value of
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B<-offline-shutdown-timeout> is the value specified for
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B<-offline-timeout>. Otherwise, the default value is C<-1>.
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For the LWP fileserver, the only valid value for this option is C<-1>.
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=item B<-sync> <always | onclose | none>
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This option changes how hard the fileserver tries to ensure that data written
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to volumes actually hits the physical disk.
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Normally, when the fileserver writes to disk, the underlying filesystem or
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Operating System may delay writes from actually going to disk, and reorder
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which writes hit the disk first. So, during an unclean shutdown of the machine
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(if the power goes out, or the machine crashes, etc), file data may become lost
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that the server previously told clients was already successfully written.
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To try to mitigate this, the fileserver will try to "sync" file data to the
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physical disk at numerous points during various I/O. However, this can result
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in significantly reduced performance. Depending on the usage patterns, this may
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or may not be acceptable. This option dictates specifically what the fileserver
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does when it wants to perform a "sync".
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There are several options; pass one of these as the argument to -sync. The
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default is C<onclose>.
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=over 4
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=item always
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This causes a sync operation to always sync immediately and synchronously.
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This is the slowest option that provides the greatest protection against data
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loss in the event of a crash.
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Note that this is still not a 100% guarantee that data will not be lost or
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corrupted during a crash. The underlying filesystem itself may cause data to
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be lost or corrupt in such a situation. And OpenAFS itself does not (yet) even
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guarantee that all data is consistent at any point in time; so even if the
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filesystem and OS do not buffer or reorder any writes, you are not guaranteed
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that all data will be okay after a crash.
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This was the only behavior allowed in OpenAFS releases prior to 1.4.5.
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=item onclose
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This causes a sync to do nothing immediately, but causes the relevant file to
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be flagged as potentially needing a sync. When a volume is detached, volume
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metadata files flaged for synced are synced, as well as data files that have
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been accessed recently. Events that cause a volume to detach include:
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performing volume operations (dump, restore, clone, etc), a clean shutdown
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of the fileserver, or during DAFS "soft detachment".
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Effectively this option is the same as C<never> while a volume is attached and
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actively being used, but if a volume is detached, there is an additional
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guarantee for the data's consistency.
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After the removal of the C<delayed> option after the OpenAFS 1.6 series, this
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option became the default.
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=item never
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This causes all syncs to never do anything. This is the fastest option, with
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the weakest guarantees for data consistency.
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Depending on the underlying filesystem and Operating System, there may be
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guarantees that any data written to disk will hit the physical media after a
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certain amount of time. For example, Linux's pdflush process usually makes this
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guarantee, and ext3 can make certain various consistency guarantees according
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to the options given. ZFS on Solaris can also provide similar guarantees, as
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can various other platforms and filesystems. Consult the documentation for
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your platform if you are unsure.
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=item delayed
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This option used to exist in OpenAFS 1.6, but was later removed due to issues
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encountered with data corruption during normal operation. Outside of the
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OpenAFS 1.6 series, it is not a valid option, and the fileserver will fail to
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start if you specify this (or any other unknown option). It caused syncs to
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occur in a background thread, executing every 10 seconds.
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This was the only behavior allowed in OpenAFS releases starting from 1.4.5 up
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to and including 1.6.2. It was also the default for the 1.6 series starting in
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OpenAFS 1.6.3.
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=back
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Which option you choose is not an easy decision to make. Various developers
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and experts sometimes disagree on which option is the most reasonable, and it
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may depend on the specific scenario and workload involved. Some argue that
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the C<always> option does not provide significantly greater guarantees over
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any other option, whereas others argue that choosing anything besides the
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C<always> option allows for an unacceptable risk of data loss. This may
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depend on your usage patterns, your platform and filesystem, and who you talk
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to about this topic.
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=item B<-logfile> <I<log file>>
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Sets the file to use for server logging. If logfile is not specified and
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no other logging options are supplied, this will be F</usr/afs/logs/FileLog>.
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Note that this option is intended for debugging and testing purposes.
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Changing the location of the log file from the command line may result
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in undesirable interactions with tools such as B<bos>.
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=item B<-config> <I<configuration directory>>
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Set the location of the configuration directory used to configure this
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service. In a typical configuration this will be F</usr/afs/etc> - this
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option allows the use of alternative configuration locations for testing
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purposes.
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