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RPC.STATD(8)                         System Manager's Manual                         RPC.STATD(8)



NAME
       rpc.statd - NSM service daemon

SYNOPSIS
       rpc.statd [-dh?FLNvV] [-H prog] [-n my-name] [-o outgoing-port]
                 [-p listener-port] [-P path]
                 [--nlm-port port] [--nlm-udp-port port]

DESCRIPTION
       File  locks  are not part of persistent file system state.  Lock state is thus lost when a
       host reboots.

       Network file systems must also detect when lock state is lost because a  remote  host  has
       rebooted.   After an NFS client reboots, an NFS server must release all file locks held by
       applications that were running on that client.  After a  server  reboots,  a  client  must
       remind the server of file locks held by applications running on that client.

       For NFS version 2 [RFC1094] and NFS version 3 [RFC1813], the Network Status Monitor proto-
       col (or NSM for short) is used to notify NFS peers of reboots.   On  Linux,  two  separate
       user-space components constitute the NSM service:

       rpc.statd
              A  daemon  that  listens for reboot notifications from other hosts, and manages the
              list of hosts to be notified when the local system reboots

       sm-notify
              A helper program that notifies NFS peers after the local system reboots

       The local NFS lock manager alerts its local rpc.statd of each remote peer that  should  be
       monitored.   When the local system reboots, the sm-notify command notifies the NSM service
       on monitored peers of the reboot.  When a remote reboots, that  peer  notifies  the  local
       rpc.statd,  which  in  turn passes the reboot notification back to the local NFS lock man-
       ager.

NSM OPERATION IN DETAIL
       The first file locking interaction between an NFS client and server causes  the  NFS  lock
       managers  on  both peers to contact their local NSM service to store information about the
       opposite peer.  On Linux, the local lock manager contacts rpc.statd.

       rpc.statd records information about each monitored NFS peer on persistent  storage.   This
       information  describes  how to contact a remote peer in case the local system reboots, how
       to recognize which monitored peer is reporting a reboot, and how to notify the local  lock
       manager when a monitored peer indicates it has rebooted.

       An  NFS  client  sends  a  hostname,  known as the client's caller_name, in each file lock
       request.  An NFS server can use this hostname  to  send  asynchronous  GRANT  calls  to  a
       client, or to notify the client it has rebooted.

       The  Linux NFS server can provide the client's caller_name or the client's network address
       to rpc.statd.  For the purposes of the NSM protocol, this name or address is known as  the
       monitored  peer's  mon_name.   In addition, the local lock manager tells rpc.statd what it
       thinks its own hostname is.  For the purposes of the NSM protocol, this hostname is  known
       as my_name.

       There is no equivalent interaction between an NFS server and a client to inform the client
       of the server's caller_name.  Therefore NFS clients do not actually know what mon_name  an
       NFS  server might use in an SM_NOTIFY request.  The Linux NFS client uses the server host-
       name from the mount command to identify rebooting NFS servers.

   Reboot notification
       When the local system reboots, the sm-notify command reads the  list  of  monitored  peers
       from  persistent  storage and sends an SM_NOTIFY request to the NSM service on each listed
       remote peer.  It uses the mon_name string as the destination.  To identify which host  has
       rebooted,  the  sm-notify  command  sends the my_name string recorded when that remote was
       monitored.  The remote rpc.statd matches incoming SM_NOTIFY requests using this string, or
       the caller's network address, to one or more peers on its own monitor list.

       If  rpc.statd  does not find a peer on its monitor list that matches an incoming SM_NOTIFY
       request, the notification is not forwarded to the local lock manager.  In  addition,  each
       peer  has  its  own NSM state number, a 32-bit integer that is bumped after each reboot by
       the sm-notify command.  rpc.statd uses this number to distinguish between  actual  reboots
       and replayed notifications.

       Part  of  NFS  lock recovery is rediscovering which peers need to be monitored again.  The
       sm-notify command clears the monitor list on persistent storage after each reboot.

OPTIONS
       -d, --no-syslog
              Causes rpc.statd to write log messages on stderr instead of to the system  log,  if
              the -F option was also specified.

       -F, --foreground
              Keeps  rpc.statd  attached to its controlling terminal so that NSM operation can be
              monitored directly or run under a debugger.   If  this  option  is  not  specified,
              rpc.statd backgrounds itself soon after it starts.

       -h, -?, --help
              Causes rpc.statd to display usage information on stderr and then exit.

       -H, --ha-callout prog
              Specifies a high availability callout program.  If this option is not specified, no
              callouts are performed.  See  the  High-availability  callouts  section  below  for
              details.

       -L, --no-notify
              Prevents rpc.statd from running the sm-notify command when it starts up, preserving
              the existing NSM state number and monitor list.

              Note: the sm-notify command contains a check to ensure it runs only once after each
              system  reboot.   This  prevents spurious reboot notification if rpc.statd restarts
              without the -L option.

       -n, --name ipaddr | hostname
              Specifies the bind address used for RPC listener sockets.  The ipaddr form  can  be
              expressed as either an IPv4 or an IPv6 presentation address.  If this option is not
              specified, rpc.statd uses a wildcard address as the transport bind address.

              This string is also passed to the sm-notify  command  to  be  used  as  the  source
              address  from  which  to  send  reboot notification requests.  See sm-notify(8) for
              details.

       -N     Causes rpc.statd to run the sm-notify command, and then exit.  Since the  sm-notify
              command can also be run directly, this option is deprecated.

       -o, --outgoing-port port
              Specifies  the  source  port  number  the sm-notify command should use when sending
              reboot notifications.  See sm-notify(8) for details.

       -p, --port port
              Specifies the port number used for RPC listener sockets.  If  this  option  is  not
              specified,  rpc.statd  will try to consult /etc/services, if gets port succeed, set
              the same port for all listener socket, otherwise chooses a  random  ephemeral  port
              for each listener socket.

              This  option  can  be  used  to  fix the port value of its listeners when SM_NOTIFY
              requests must traverse a firewall between clients and servers.

       -T, --nlm-port port
              Specifies the port number that lockd should listen on for NLM requests.  This  sets
              both the TCP and UDP ports unless the UDP port is set separately.

       -U, --nlm-udp-port port
              Specifies the UDP port number that lockd should listen on for NLM requests.

       -P, --state-directory-path pathname
              Specifies the pathname of the parent directory where NSM state information resides.
              If this option is not specified, rpc.statd uses /var/lib/nfs/statd by default.

              After starting, rpc.statd attempts to set its effective UID and GID  to  the  owner
              and group of this directory.

       -v, -V, --version
              Causes rpc.statd to display version information on stderr and then exit.

CONFIGURATION FILE
       Many  of  the  options  that can be set on the command line can also be controlled through
       values set in the [statd] or, in some cases, the [lockd]  sections  of  the  /etc/nfs.conf
       configuration file.  Values recognized in the [statd] section include port, outgoing-port,
       name, state-directory-path, and ha-callout which each have the same effect as  the  option
       with the same name.

       The values recognized in the [lockd] section include port and udp-port which have the same
       effect as the --nlm-port and --nlm-udp-port options, respectively.


SECURITY
       The rpc.statd daemon must be started as root to acquire privileges needed to create  sock-
       ets  with  privileged source ports, and to access the state information database.  Because
       rpc.statd maintains a long-running network service, however, it drops root  privileges  as
       soon as it starts up to reduce the risk of a privilege escalation attack.

       During normal operation, the effective user ID it chooses is the owner of the state direc-
       tory.  This allows it to continue to access files in that directory after it  has  dropped
       its  root  privileges.  To control which user ID rpc.statd chooses, simply use chown(1) to
       set the owner of the state directory.

       You can also protect your rpc.statd listeners  using  the  tcp_wrapper  library  or  ipta-
       bles(8).   To  use  the  tcp_wrapper  library,  add  the hostnames of peers that should be
       allowed access to /etc/hosts.allow.  Use the daemon  name  statd  even  if  the  rpc.statd
       binary has a different filename.

       For further information see the tcpd(8) and hosts_access(5) man pages.

ADDITIONAL NOTES
       Lock  recovery  after  a  reboot  is critical to maintaining data integrity and preventing
       unnecessary application  hangs.   To  help  rpc.statd  match  SM_NOTIFY  requests  to  NLM
       requests, a number of best practices should be observed, including:

              The  UTS  nodename of your systems should match the DNS names that NFS peers use to
              contact them

              The UTS nodenames of your systems should always be fully qualified domain names

              The forward and reverse DNS mapping of the UTS nodenames should be consistent

              The hostname the client uses to mount the server should match the server's mon_name
              in SM_NOTIFY requests it sends

       Unmounting  an  NFS  file system does not necessarily stop either the NFS client or server
       from monitoring each other.  Both may continue monitoring each other for a  time  in  case
       subsequent  NFS  traffic between the two results in fresh mounts and additional file lock-
       ing.

       On Linux, if the lockd kernel module is unloaded during normal operation, all  remote  NFS
       peers  are  unmonitored.  This can happen on an NFS client, for example, if an automounter
       removes all NFS mount points due to inactivity.

   High-availability callouts
       rpc.statd can exec a special callout  program  during  processing  of  successful  SM_MON,
       SM_UNMON, and SM_UNMON_ALL requests, or when it receives SM_NOTIFY.  Such a program may be
       used in High Availability NFS (HA-NFS) environments to track lock state that may  need  to
       be migrated after a system reboot.

       The  name of the callout program is specified with the -H option.  The program is run with
       3 arguments: The first is either add-client del-client or sm-notify depending on the  rea-
       son  for the callout.  The second is the mon_name of the monitored peer.  The third is the
       caller_name of the requesting lock manager for add-client or del-client , otherwise it  is
       IP_address of the caller sending SM_NOTIFY.  The forth is the state_value in the SM_NOTIFY
       request.


   IPv6 and TI-RPC support
       TI-RPC is a pre-requisite for supporting NFS on IPv6.  If TI-RPC  support  is  built  into
       rpc.statd,  it  attempts  to  start  listeners  on  network transports marked 'visible' in
       /etc/netconfig.  As long as at least one network transport listener  starts  successfully,
       rpc.statd will operate.

ENVIRONMENT
       RPC_STATD_NO_NOTIFY=
              If set to a positive integer, has the same effect as --no-notify.

FILES
       /var/lib/nfs/statd/sm    directory containing monitor list

       /var/lib/nfs/statd/sm.bak
                                directory containing notify list

       /var/lib/nfs/statd/state NSM state number for this host

       /var/run/run.statd.pid   pid file

       /etc/netconfig           network transport capability database

SEE ALSO
       sm-notify(8), nfs(5), rpc.nfsd(8), rpcbind(8), tcpd(8), hosts_access(5), iptables(8), net-
       config(5)

       RFC 1094 - "NFS: Network File System Protocol Specification"
       RFC 1813 - "NFS Version 3 Protocol Specification"
       OpenGroup Protocols for Interworking: XNFS, Version 3W - Chapter 11

AUTHORS
       Jeff Uphoff <juphoff AT users.net>
       Olaf Kirch <okir AT monad.de>
       H.J. Lu <hjl AT gnu.org>
       Lon Hohberger <hohberger AT missioncriticallinux.com>
       Paul Clements <paul.clements AT steeleye.com>
       Chuck Lever <chuck.lever AT oracle.com>



                                         1 November 2009                             RPC.STATD(8)

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