What is the purpose of FSIDs? I am exporting 30 volumes via NFS. Do I need a FSID option?
TIA
On Sat, Aug 16, 2008 at 11:30, Mag Gam magawake@gmail.com wrote:
What is the purpose of FSIDs? I am exporting 30 volumes via NFS. Do I need a FSID option?
FSID is needed in NFSv3 if the devices you are exporting may change minor numbers across reboots. For example, if you have a filesystem on /dev/sdc1 that you mount and export, if it is always /dev/sdc1 (and not sometimes /dev/sdd1 depending of having another disk attached during boot time) you don't need it. However, if you are exporting filesystems which are mounted on LVM volumes (which will change order on the next reboot if you create or destroy new logical volumes) you should set FSIDs explicitly to avoid them changing on the reboot.
If you don't set the FSIDs explicitly, after a reboot of the NFS server, you may experience NFS clients that show the contents of a different filesystem where you formerly had a specific one mounted, or more frequently you will have your mounted filesystems with "Stale NFS filehandle" errors. You will have to unmount and remount the filesystems on all clients to fix these problems.
HTH, Filipe
Thankyou.
This helps a lot!
On Sun, Aug 17, 2008 at 7:20 PM, Filipe Brandenburger filbranden@gmail.com wrote:
On Sat, Aug 16, 2008 at 11:30, Mag Gam magawake@gmail.com wrote:
What is the purpose of FSIDs? I am exporting 30 volumes via NFS. Do I need a FSID option?
FSID is needed in NFSv3 if the devices you are exporting may change minor numbers across reboots. For example, if you have a filesystem on /dev/sdc1 that you mount and export, if it is always /dev/sdc1 (and not sometimes /dev/sdd1 depending of having another disk attached during boot time) you don't need it. However, if you are exporting filesystems which are mounted on LVM volumes (which will change order on the next reboot if you create or destroy new logical volumes) you should set FSIDs explicitly to avoid them changing on the reboot.
If you don't set the FSIDs explicitly, after a reboot of the NFS server, you may experience NFS clients that show the contents of a different filesystem where you formerly had a specific one mounted, or more frequently you will have your mounted filesystems with "Stale NFS filehandle" errors. You will have to unmount and remount the filesystems on all clients to fix these problems.
HTH, Filipe _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos