afs.txt 6.7 KB

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  1. ====================
  2. kAFS: AFS FILESYSTEM
  3. ====================
  4. Contents:
  5. - Overview.
  6. - Usage.
  7. - Mountpoints.
  8. - Proc filesystem.
  9. - The cell database.
  10. - Security.
  11. - Examples.
  12. ========
  13. OVERVIEW
  14. ========
  15. This filesystem provides a fairly simple secure AFS filesystem driver. It is
  16. under development and does not yet provide the full feature set. The features
  17. it does support include:
  18. (*) Security (currently only AFS kaserver and KerberosIV tickets).
  19. (*) File reading and writing.
  20. (*) Automounting.
  21. (*) Local caching (via fscache).
  22. It does not yet support the following AFS features:
  23. (*) pioctl() system call.
  24. ===========
  25. COMPILATION
  26. ===========
  27. The filesystem should be enabled by turning on the kernel configuration
  28. options:
  29. CONFIG_AF_RXRPC - The RxRPC protocol transport
  30. CONFIG_RXKAD - The RxRPC Kerberos security handler
  31. CONFIG_AFS - The AFS filesystem
  32. Additionally, the following can be turned on to aid debugging:
  33. CONFIG_AF_RXRPC_DEBUG - Permit AF_RXRPC debugging to be enabled
  34. CONFIG_AFS_DEBUG - Permit AFS debugging to be enabled
  35. They permit the debugging messages to be turned on dynamically by manipulating
  36. the masks in the following files:
  37. /sys/module/af_rxrpc/parameters/debug
  38. /sys/module/kafs/parameters/debug
  39. =====
  40. USAGE
  41. =====
  42. When inserting the driver modules the root cell must be specified along with a
  43. list of volume location server IP addresses:
  44. modprobe rxrpc
  45. modprobe kafs rootcell=cambridge.redhat.com:172.16.18.73:172.16.18.91
  46. The first module is the AF_RXRPC network protocol driver. This provides the
  47. RxRPC remote operation protocol and may also be accessed from userspace. See:
  48. Documentation/networking/rxrpc.txt
  49. The second module is the kerberos RxRPC security driver, and the third module
  50. is the actual filesystem driver for the AFS filesystem.
  51. Once the module has been loaded, more modules can be added by the following
  52. procedure:
  53. echo add grand.central.org 18.9.48.14:128.2.203.61:130.237.48.87 >/proc/fs/afs/cells
  54. Where the parameters to the "add" command are the name of a cell and a list of
  55. volume location servers within that cell, with the latter separated by colons.
  56. Filesystems can be mounted anywhere by commands similar to the following:
  57. mount -t afs "%cambridge.redhat.com:root.afs." /afs
  58. mount -t afs "#cambridge.redhat.com:root.cell." /afs/cambridge
  59. mount -t afs "#root.afs." /afs
  60. mount -t afs "#root.cell." /afs/cambridge
  61. Where the initial character is either a hash or a percent symbol depending on
  62. whether you definitely want a R/W volume (hash) or whether you'd prefer a R/O
  63. volume, but are willing to use a R/W volume instead (percent).
  64. The name of the volume can be suffixes with ".backup" or ".readonly" to
  65. specify connection to only volumes of those types.
  66. The name of the cell is optional, and if not given during a mount, then the
  67. named volume will be looked up in the cell specified during modprobe.
  68. Additional cells can be added through /proc (see later section).
  69. ===========
  70. MOUNTPOINTS
  71. ===========
  72. AFS has a concept of mountpoints. In AFS terms, these are specially formatted
  73. symbolic links (of the same form as the "device name" passed to mount). kAFS
  74. presents these to the user as directories that have a follow-link capability
  75. (ie: symbolic link semantics). If anyone attempts to access them, they will
  76. automatically cause the target volume to be mounted (if possible) on that site.
  77. Automatically mounted filesystems will be automatically unmounted approximately
  78. twenty minutes after they were last used. Alternatively they can be unmounted
  79. directly with the umount() system call.
  80. Manually unmounting an AFS volume will cause any idle submounts upon it to be
  81. culled first. If all are culled, then the requested volume will also be
  82. unmounted, otherwise error EBUSY will be returned.
  83. This can be used by the administrator to attempt to unmount the whole AFS tree
  84. mounted on /afs in one go by doing:
  85. umount /afs
  86. ===============
  87. PROC FILESYSTEM
  88. ===============
  89. The AFS modules creates a "/proc/fs/afs/" directory and populates it:
  90. (*) A "cells" file that lists cells currently known to the afs module and
  91. their usage counts:
  92. [root@andromeda ~]# cat /proc/fs/afs/cells
  93. USE NAME
  94. 3 cambridge.redhat.com
  95. (*) A directory per cell that contains files that list volume location
  96. servers, volumes, and active servers known within that cell.
  97. [root@andromeda ~]# cat /proc/fs/afs/cambridge.redhat.com/servers
  98. USE ADDR STATE
  99. 4 172.16.18.91 0
  100. [root@andromeda ~]# cat /proc/fs/afs/cambridge.redhat.com/vlservers
  101. ADDRESS
  102. 172.16.18.91
  103. [root@andromeda ~]# cat /proc/fs/afs/cambridge.redhat.com/volumes
  104. USE STT VLID[0] VLID[1] VLID[2] NAME
  105. 1 Val 20000000 20000001 20000002 root.afs
  106. =================
  107. THE CELL DATABASE
  108. =================
  109. The filesystem maintains an internal database of all the cells it knows and the
  110. IP addresses of the volume location servers for those cells. The cell to which
  111. the system belongs is added to the database when modprobe is performed by the
  112. "rootcell=" argument or, if compiled in, using a "kafs.rootcell=" argument on
  113. the kernel command line.
  114. Further cells can be added by commands similar to the following:
  115. echo add CELLNAME VLADDR[:VLADDR][:VLADDR]... >/proc/fs/afs/cells
  116. echo add grand.central.org 18.9.48.14:128.2.203.61:130.237.48.87 >/proc/fs/afs/cells
  117. No other cell database operations are available at this time.
  118. ========
  119. SECURITY
  120. ========
  121. Secure operations are initiated by acquiring a key using the klog program. A
  122. very primitive klog program is available at:
  123. http://people.redhat.com/~dhowells/rxrpc/klog.c
  124. This should be compiled by:
  125. make klog LDLIBS="-lcrypto -lcrypt -lkrb4 -lkeyutils"
  126. And then run as:
  127. ./klog
  128. Assuming it's successful, this adds a key of type RxRPC, named for the service
  129. and cell, eg: "afs@<cellname>". This can be viewed with the keyctl program or
  130. by cat'ing /proc/keys:
  131. [root@andromeda ~]# keyctl show
  132. Session Keyring
  133. -3 --alswrv 0 0 keyring: _ses.3268
  134. 2 --alswrv 0 0 \_ keyring: _uid.0
  135. 111416553 --als--v 0 0 \_ rxrpc: afs@CAMBRIDGE.REDHAT.COM
  136. Currently the username, realm, password and proposed ticket lifetime are
  137. compiled in to the program.
  138. It is not required to acquire a key before using AFS facilities, but if one is
  139. not acquired then all operations will be governed by the anonymous user parts
  140. of the ACLs.
  141. If a key is acquired, then all AFS operations, including mounts and automounts,
  142. made by a possessor of that key will be secured with that key.
  143. If a file is opened with a particular key and then the file descriptor is
  144. passed to a process that doesn't have that key (perhaps over an AF_UNIX
  145. socket), then the operations on the file will be made with key that was used to
  146. open the file.