diod
is a multi-threaded, user space file server that speaks
9P2000.L protocol.
sudo apt-get install build-essential libpopt-dev ncurses-dev automake autoconf git pkgconf
sudo apt-get install lua5.1 liblua5.1-dev libmunge-dev libwrap0-dev libcap-dev libattr1-dev
./autogen.sh
./configure
make
make check
sudo yum install epel-release gperftools-devel ncurses-devel automake autoconf libattr-devel
sudo yum install lua lua-devel munge-devel tcp_wrappers-devel libcap-devel pkgconf
./autogen.sh
./configure
make
make check
portmaster security/munge
portmaster lang/lua53
./autogen.sh
./configure
make
See also the remarks below if you want a server that supports impersonation (access=user in v9fs).
The kernel 9P client, sometimes referred to as "v9fs", consists
of the 9p.ko
file system module, and its network transport module,
9pnet.ko
.
Although the kernel client supports several 9P variants, diod only supports 9P2000.L, and only in its feature-complete form, as it appeared in 2.6.38.
Earlier versions of the kernel that do not support 9P2000.L will fail at mount time when version negotiation fails. Some pre-2.6.38 versions of the kernel that have 9P2000.L but still send some 9P2000.u ops may fail in less obvious ways. Use a 2.6.38 or later kernel.
Start the diod server in foreground, with protocol debugging to stderr, no authentication, and one export:
sudo ./diod -f -d 1 -n -e /tmp/9
Mount it using the raw mount command:
sudo mount -t 9p -n 127.0.0.1 /mnt \
-oaname=/tmp/9,version=9p2000.L,uname=root,access=user
Or (simpler), mount it using diodmount:
sudo ./diodmount -n localhost:/tmp/9 /mnt
Or (even simpler) if diodmount is installed as /sbin/mount.diod
:
sudo mount -t diod -n localhost:/tmp/9 /mnt
On I/O node, set up /etc/diod.conf
according to diod.conf(5), then:
chkconfig diod on
service diod start
On compute node, if I/O node is fritz42
, add entries like this to
/etc/fstab
:
fritz42:/g/g0 /g/g0 diod default 0 0
Alternatively, use "zero-config" automounter method:
DIOD_SERVERS="fritz42"
in /etc/sysconfig/auto.diod1
/d /etc/auto.diod
to /etc/auto.master
Then:
mkdir /d
chkconfig autofs on
service autofs start
ln -s /d/g.g0 /g/g0
Note that at this point diod is only being tested with NFS file systems. Use it with Lustre or GPFS at your own peril - but if you do, please report issues!
FreeBSD does not support per-thread credentials. If you want a diod server that supports v9fs' access=user, you can:
--enable-impersonation
(disabled by default on FreeBSD)net/nfs-ganesha-kmod
from ports (or at least the modules
setthreadgid
, setthreadgroups
and setthreaduid
) or from
sourcekldload /path/to/nfs-ganesha-kmod/setthreaduid/setthreaduid.ko
kldload /path/to/nfs-ganesha-kmod/setthreadgid/setthreadgid.ko
kldload /path/to/nfs-ganesha-kmod/setthreadgroups/setthreadgroups.ko
Please read nfs-ganesha-kmod's README first, and use at your own risk.
Use GitHub!
SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later