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Message-ID: <20111118205749.GA1680@umich.edu>
Date:	Fri, 18 Nov 2011 15:57:49 -0500
From:	Jim Rees <rees@...ch.edu>
To:	Trond Myklebust <Trond.Myklebust@...app.com>
Cc:	John Hughes <john@...vaedi.com>, John Hughes <john@...va.com>,
	linux-nfs@...r.kernel.org, linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org
Subject: Re: [PATCH] Add "-e" option to rpc.gssd to allow error on ticket
 expiry. Try 2 with added man pages.

Trond Myklebust wrote:

  On Fri, 2011-11-18 at 20:19 +0100, John Hughes wrote: 
  > On 11/18/2011 07:35 PM, Trond Myklebust wrote:
  > > On Fri, 2011-11-18 at 15:34 +0100, John Hughes wrote:
  > >    
  > >> Description: Add "-e" (ticket expiry is error) option to rpc.gssd
  > >>    In kernels starting around 2.6.34 the nfs4 server will block all I/O
  > >>    when a user ticket expires.  In earlier kernels the I/O would fail
  > >>    with an EACCESS error.  This patch adds a "-e" option to rpc.gssd
  > >>    which allow the earlier behaviour (EKEYEXPIRED is converted to
  > >>    EACCESS).  This behaviour is particularly useful when user home
  > >>    directories are nfs4 mounted with krb5 security - if the user is
  > >>    absent from their workstation for long enough for the ticket to
  > >>    expire a new ticket will be obtained (via pam_krb5) by the screen
  > >>    unlock process.
  > >>      
  > > You need a big fat warning somewhere that enabling this option WILL
  > > cause data corruption...
  > >    
  > Why?
  > 
  > Because some process may get the EACCES error half way through it's 
  > operation.
  
  No. Because the process can receive a reply to the write() syscall that
  indicates that the data is safe, but the EKEYEXPIRED error will cause
  the data to be lost when the client tries to actually commit the data to
  disk.

The write() syscall doesn't indicate whether the data is safe or not.  That
would be the close() syscall.
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