jessie: help debugging NFS shares not mounted at boot, double mounts with mount -a, and @reboot cronjobs
Felipe Sateler
fsateler at debian.org
Thu Feb 18 16:11:00 GMT 2016
On 10 February 2016 at 14:37, Sandro Tosi <morph at debian.org> wrote:
> Disabling ifplugd didnt change the situation, and there are still missing
> mount points
>
>
> On Tue, Feb 9, 2016 at 9:21 PM, Michael Biebl <biebl at debian.org> wrote:
>> Am 09.02.2016 um 22:11 schrieb Sandro Tosi:
>>>> Another idea: maybe it's related to name resolution. How is that
>>>> configured? Does it help if you use IP adresses in /etc/fstab?
>>>
>>> # cat /etc/resolv.conf
>>> search OUR-DOMAIN.com
>>> nameserver 127.0.0.1
>>> nameserver XXX.YYY.32.33
>>> nameserver XXX.YYY.32.22
>>> options no_tld_query
>>>
>>> on localhost we have unbound as dns cache with this config
>>>
>>> # cat /etc/unbound/unbound.conf
>>> server:
>>> val-permissive-mode: yes
>>> local-zone: "10.in-addr.arpa" nodefault
>>> forward-zone:
>>> name: .
>>> forward-addr: XXX.YYY.32.33
>>> forward-addr: XXX.YYY.32.22
>>> remote-control:
>>> control-enable: yes
>>>
>>> the NFS storage appliance we are using is configured to have a
>>> multiple ip addresses to resolve to the same domain name, and it
>>> automatically balances connections between clients providing different
>>> ip addresses, so we cannot change that.
>>
>> For testing purposes, it should be possible to configure one client to
>> use a fixed IP address in /etc/fstab.
>
> oh yes, totally. I just tried that (with ifplugd still disabled) and...
>
>> If the mount then doesn't fail,
>> you have narrowed down the problem then at least.
>
> ... sadly now all the nfs shares fail to mount at first:
>
> Feb 10 12:08:27 SERVER kernel: RPC: Registered tcp NFSv4.1 backchannel
> transport module.
> Feb 10 12:08:27 SERVER kernel: FS-Cache: Netfs 'nfs' registered for caching
> Feb 10 12:08:27 SERVER kernel: NFS: Registering the id_resolver key type
> Feb 10 12:08:27 SERVER kernel: Installing knfsd (copyright (C) 1996
> okir at monad.swb.de).
> Feb 10 12:08:30 SERVER kernel: igb 0000:01:00.0 eth0: igb: eth0 NIC Link is
> Up 1000 Mbps Full Duplex, Flow Control: RX
> Feb 10 12:08:30 SERVER mount[576]: mount to NFS server 'XXX.YYY.21.22'
> failed: No route to host, retrying
> Feb 10 12:08:30 SERVER mount[567]: mount to NFS server 'XXX.YYY.27.74'
> failed: No route to host, retrying
> Feb 10 12:08:30 SERVER mount[578]: mount to NFS server 'XXX.YYY.16.226'
> failed: No route to host, retrying
> Feb 10 12:08:30 SERVER mount[582]: mount to NFS server 'XXX.YYY.26.132'
> failed: No route to host, retrying
> Feb 10 12:08:30 SERVER mount[574]: mount to NFS server 'XXX.YYY.36.210'
> failed: No route to host, retrying
> Feb 10 12:08:30 SERVER mount[572]: mount to NFS server 'XXX.YYY.27.74'
> failed: No route to host, retrying
> Feb 10 12:08:30 SERVER mount[583]: mount to NFS server 'XXX.YYY.32.75'
> failed: No route to host, retrying
> Feb 10 12:08:30 SERVER mount[569]: mount to NFS server 'XXX.YYY.32.111'
> failed: No route to host, retrying
> Feb 10 12:08:30 SERVER mount[564]: mount to NFS server 'XXX.YYY.20.176'
> failed: No route to host, retrying
> Feb 10 12:08:30 SERVER mount[580]: mount to NFS server 'XXX.YYY.20.176'
> failed: No route to host, retrying
> Feb 10 12:08:30 SERVER mount[561]: mount.nfs: backgrounding
> "XXX.YYY.20.176:/VOL"
> Feb 10 12:08:30 SERVER mount[562]: mount.nfs: backgrounding
> "XXX.YYY.27.74:/VOL"
> Feb 10 12:08:30 SERVER mount[563]: mount.nfs: backgrounding
> "XXX.YYY.32.111:/VOL"
> Feb 10 12:08:30 SERVER mount[565]: mount.nfs: backgrounding
> "XXX.YYY.27.74:/VOL"
> Feb 10 12:08:30 SERVER mount[568]: mount.nfs: backgrounding
> "XXX.YYY.36.210:/VOL"
> Feb 10 12:08:30 SERVER mount[573]: mount.nfs: backgrounding
> "XXX.YYY.21.22:/VOL"
> Feb 10 12:08:30 SERVER mount[575]: mount.nfs: backgrounding
> "XXX.YYY.16.226:/VOL"
> Feb 10 12:08:30 SERVER mount[579]: mount.nfs: backgrounding
> "XXX.YYY.26.132:/VOL"
> Feb 10 12:08:30 SERVER mount[581]: mount.nfs: backgrounding
> "XXX.YYY.32.75:/VOL"
> Feb 10 12:08:30 SERVER mount[577]: mount.nfs: backgrounding
> "XXX.YYY.20.176:/VOL"
> Feb 10 12:08:30 SERVER nfs-common[612]: Starting NFS common utilities: statd
> idmapd.
>
> but just above all these failures, the eth0 is marked as UP.
Could the networking script be exiting too early? Do you have more
interfaces in these machines? Are all of them configured as auto or
static?
>
> in the critical-chain now I no longer see the remote-fs target (so I'm not
> sure when it is started in relation with the networking target), is it
> normal?
remote-fs is After=network-online.target which in turn is After=network.target
--
Saludos,
Felipe Sateler
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