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FILESERVER(8)		     AFS Command Reference		 FILESERVER(8)

NAME
       fileserver - Initializes the File Server component of the fs process

SYNOPSIS
       fileserver
	   [-auditlog <path to log file>]
	   [-audit-interface (file | sysvmq)]
	   [-d <debug level>]
	   [-p <number of processes>]
	   [-spare <number of spare blocks>]
	   [-pctspare <percentage spare>]
	   [-b <buffers>]
	   [-l <large vnodes>]
	   [-s <small vnodes>]
	   [-vc <volume cachesize>]
	   [-w <call back wait interval>]
	   [-cb <number of call backs>]
	   [-banner]
	   [-novbc]
	   [-implicit <admin mode bits: rlidwka>]
	   [-readonly]
	   [-hr <number of hours between refreshing the host cps>]
	   [-busyat <redirect clients when queue > n>]
	   [-nobusy]
	   [-rxpck <number of rx extra packets>]
	   [-rxdbg]
	   [-rxdbge]
	   [-rxmaxmtu <bytes>]
	   [-nojumbo]
	   [-jumbo]
	   [-rxbind]
	   [-allow-dotted-principals]
	   [-L]
	   [-S]
	   [-k <stack size>]
	   [-realm <Kerberos realm name>]
	   [-udpsize <size of socket buffer in bytes>]
	   [-sendsize <size of send buffer in bytes>]
	   [-abortthreshold <abort threshold>]
	   [-enable_peer_stats]
	   [-enable_process_stats]
	   [-syslog [< loglevel >]]
	   [-mrafslogs]
	   [-saneacls]
	   [-help]
	   [-vhandle-setaside <fds reserved for non-cache io>]
	   [-vhandle-max-cachesize <max open files>]
	   [-vhandle-initial-cachesize <fds reserved for non-cache io>]
	   [-vattachpar <number of volume attach threads>]
	   [-m <min percentage spare in partition>]
	   [-lock]
	   [-sync <sync behavior>]

DESCRIPTION
       The fileserver command initializes the File Server component of the
       "fs" process. In the conventional configuration, its binary file is
       located in the /usr/afs/bin directory on a file server machine.

       The fileserver command is not normally issued at the command shell
       prompt, but rather placed into a database server machine's
       /usr/afs/local/BosConfig file with the bos create command. If it is
       ever issued at the command shell prompt, the issuer must be logged onto
       a file server machine as the local superuser "root".

       The File Server creates the /usr/afs/logs/FileLog log file as it
       initializes, if the file does not already exist. It does not write a
       detailed trace by default, but the -d option may be used to increase
       the amount of detail. Use the bos getlog command to display the
       contents of the log file.

       The command's arguments enable the administrator to control many
       aspects of the File Server's performance, as detailed in OPTIONS.  By
       default the File Server sets values for many arguments that are
       suitable for a medium-sized file server machine. To set values suitable
       for a small or large file server machine, use the -S or -L flag
       respectively. The following list describes the parameters and
       corresponding argument for which the File Server sets default values,
       and the table below summarizes the setting for each of the three
       machine sizes.

       ·   The maximum number of lightweight processes (LWPs) or pthreads the
	   File Server uses to handle requests for data; corresponds to the -p
	   argument. The File Server always uses a minimum of 32 KB of memory
	   for these processes.

       ·   The maximum number of directory blocks the File Server caches in
	   memory; corresponds to the -b argument. Each cached directory block
	   (buffer) consumes 2,092 bytes of memory.

       ·   The maximum number of large vnodes the File Server caches in memory
	   for tracking directory elements; corresponds to the -l argument.
	   Each large vnode consumes 292 bytes of memory.

       ·   The maximum number of small vnodes the File Server caches in memory
	   for tracking file elements; corresponds to the -s argument.	Each
	   small vnode consumes 100 bytes of memory.

       ·   The maximum volume cache size, which determines how many volumes
	   the File Server can cache in memory before having to retrieve data
	   from disk; corresponds to the -vc argument.

       ·   The maximum number of callback structures the File Server caches in
	   memory; corresponds to the -cb argument. Each callback structure
	   consumes 16 bytes of memory.

       ·   The maximum number of Rx packets the File Server uses; corresponds
	   to the -rxpck argument. Each packet consumes 1544 bytes of memory.

       The default values are:

	 Parameter (Argument)		    Small (-S)	   Medium   Large (-L)
	 ---------------------------------------------------------------------
	 Number of LWPs (-p)			    6		9	   128
	 Number of cached dir blocks (-b)	   70	       90	   120
	 Number of cached large vnodes (-l)	  200	      400	   600
	 Number of cached small vnodes (-s)	  200	      400	   600
	 Maximum volume cache size (-vc)	  200	      400	   600
	 Number of callbacks (-cb)	       20,000	   60,000	64,000
	 Number of Rx packets (-rxpck)		  100	      150	   200

       To override any of the values, provide the indicated argument (which
       can be combined with the -S or -L flag).

       The amount of memory required for the File Server varies. The
       approximate default memory usage is 751 KB when the -S flag is used
       (small configuration), 1.1 MB when all defaults are used (medium
       configuration), and 1.4 MB when the -L flag is used (large
       configuration). If additional memory is available, increasing the value
       of the -cb and -vc arguments can improve File Server performance most
       directly.

       By default, the File Server allows a volume to exceed its quota by 1 MB
       when an application is writing data to an existing file in a volume
       that is full. The File Server still does not allow users to create new
       files in a full volume. To change the default, use one of the following
       arguments:

       ·   Set the -spare argument to the number of extra kilobytes that the
	   File Server allows as overage. A value of 0 allows no overage.

       ·   Set the -pctspare argument to the percentage of the volume's quota
	   the File Server allows as overage.

       By default, the File Server implicitly grants the "a" (administer) and
       "l" (lookup) permissions to system:administrators on the access control
       list (ACL) of every directory in the volumes stored on its file server
       machine. In other words, the group's members can exercise those two
       permissions even when an entry for the group does not appear on an ACL.
       To change the set of default permissions, use the -implicit argument.

       The File Server maintains a host current protection subgroup (host CPS)
       for each client machine from which it has received a data access
       request. Like the CPS for a user, a host CPS lists all of the
       Protection Database groups to which the machine belongs, and the File
       Server compares the host CPS to a directory's ACL to determine in what
       manner users on the machine are authorized to access the directory's
       contents. When the pts adduser or pts removeuser command is used to
       change the groups to which a machine belongs, the File Server must
       recompute the machine's host CPS in order to notice the change. By
       default, the File Server contacts the Protection Server every two hours
       to recompute host CPSs, implying that it can take that long for changed
       group memberships to become effective. To change this frequency, use
       the -hr argument.

       The File Server stores volumes in partitions. A partition is a
       filesystem or directory on the server machine that is named "/vicepX"
       or "/vicepXX" where XX is "a" through "z" or "aa" though "iv". Up to
       255 partitions are allowed. The File Server expects that the /vicepXX
       directories are each on a dedicated filesystem. The File Server will
       only use a /vicepXX if it's a mountpoint for another filesystem, unless
       the file "/vicepXX/AlwaysAttach" exists. The data in the partition is a
       special format that can only be access using OpenAFS commands or an
       OpenAFS client.

       The File Server generates the following message when a partition is
       nearly full:

	  No space left on device

       This command does not use the syntax conventions of the AFS command
       suites. Provide the command name and all option names in full.

CAUTIONS
       There are two strategies the File Server can use for attaching AFS
       volumes at startup and handling volume salvages.	 The traditional
       method assumes all volumes are salvaged before the File Server starts
       and attaches all volumes at start before serving files.	The newer
       demand-attach method attaches volumes only on demand, salvaging them at
       that time as needed, and detaches volumes that are not in use.  A
       demand-attach File Server can also save state to disk for faster
       restarts. The dafileserver implements the demand-attach method, while
       fileserver uses the traditional method.

       The choice of traditional or demand-attach File Server changes the
       required setup in BosConfig. When changing from a traditional File
       Server to demand-attach or vice versa, you will need to stop and remove
       the "fs" or "dafs" node in BosConfig and create a new node of the
       appropriate type. See bos_create(8) for more information.

       Do not use the -k and -w arguments, which are intended for use by the
       OpenAFS developers only. Changing them from their default values can
       result in unpredictable File Server behavior.  In any case, on many
       operating systems the File Server uses native threads rather than the
       LWP threads, so using the -k argument to set the number of LWP threads
       has no effect.

       Do not specify both the -spare and -pctspare arguments. Doing so causes
       the File Server to exit, leaving an error message in the
       /usr/afs/logs/FileLog file.

       Options that are available only on some system types, such as the -m
       and -lock options, appear in the output generated by the -help option
       only on the relevant system type.

       Currently, the maximum size of a volume quota is 2 terabytes (2^41
       bytes) and the maximum size of a /vicepX partition on a fileserver is
       2^64 kilobytes. The maximum partition size in releases 1.4.7 and
       earlier is 2 terabytes (2^31 bytes). The maximum partition size for
       1.5.x releases 1.5.34 and earlier is 2 terabytes as well.

       The maximum number of directory entries is 64,000 if all of the entries
       have names that are 15 octets or less in length. A name that is 15
       octets long requires the use of only one block in the directory.
       Additional sequential blocks are required to store entries with names
       that are longer than 15 octets. Each additional block provides an
       additional length of 32 octets for the name of the entry. Note that if
       file names use an encoding like UTF-8, a single character may be
       encoded into multiple octets.

       In real world use, the maximum number of objects in an AFS directory is
       usually between 16,000 and 25,000, depending on the average name
       length.

OPTIONS
       -auditlog <log path>
	   Turns on audit logging, and sets the path for the audit log.	 The
	   audit log records information about RPC calls, including the name
	   of the RPC call, the host that submitted the call, the
	   authenticated entity (user) that issued the call, the parameters
	   for the call, and if the call succeeded or failed.

       -audit-interface (file | sysvmq)
	   Specifies what audit interface to use. The "file" interface writes
	   audit messages to the file passed to -auditlog. The "sysvmq"
	   interface writes audit messages to a SYSV message (see msgget(2)
	   and msgrcv(2)). The message queue the "sysvmq" interface writes to
	   has the key "ftok(path, 1)", where "path" is the path specified in
	   the -auditlog option.

	   Defaults to "file".

       -d <debug level>
	   Sets the detail level for the debugging trace written to the
	   /usr/afs/logs/FileLog file. Provide one of the following values,
	   each of which produces an increasingly detailed trace: 0, 1, 5, 25,
	   and 125. The default value of 0 produces only a few messages.

       -p <number of processes>
	   Sets the number of threads (or LWPs) to run. Provide a positive
	   integer.  The File Server creates and uses five threads for special
	   purposes, in addition to the number specified (but if this argument
	   specifies the maximum possible number, the File Server
	   automatically uses five of the threads for its own purposes).

	   The maximum number of threads can differ in each release of
	   OpenAFS.  Consult the OpenAFS Release Notes for the current
	   release.

       -spare <number of spare blocks>
	   Specifies the number of additional kilobytes an application can
	   store in a volume after the quota is exceeded. Provide a positive
	   integer; a value of 0 prevents the volume from ever exceeding its
	   quota. Do not combine this argument with the -pctspare argument.

       -pctspare <percentage spare>
	   Specifies the amount by which the File Server allows a volume to
	   exceed its quota, as a percentage of the quota. Provide an integer
	   between 0 and 99. A value of 0 prevents the volume from ever
	   exceeding its quota. Do not combine this argument with the -spare
	   argument.

       -b <buffers>
	   Sets the number of directory buffers. Provide a positive integer.

       -l <large vnodes>
	   Sets the number of large vnodes available in memory for caching
	   directory elements. Provide a positive integer.

       -s <small nodes>
	   Sets the number of small vnodes available in memory for caching
	   file elements. Provide a positive integer.

       -vc <volume cachesize>
	   Sets the number of volumes the File Server can cache in memory.
	   Provide a positive integer.

       -w <call back wait interval>
	   Sets the interval at which the daemon spawned by the File Server
	   performs its maintenance tasks. Do not use this argument; changing
	   the default value can cause unpredictable behavior.

       -cb <number of callbacks>
	   Sets the number of callbacks the File Server can track. Provide a
	   positive integer.

       -banner
	   Prints the following banner to /dev/console about every 10 minutes.

	      File Server is running at I<time>.

       -novbc
	   Prevents the File Server from breaking the callbacks that Cache
	   Managers hold on a volume that the File Server is reattaching after
	   the volume was offline (as a result of the vos restore command, for
	   example). Use of this flag is strongly discouraged.

       -implicit <admin mode bits>
	   Defines the set of permissions granted by default to the
	   system:administrators group on the ACL of every directory in a
	   volume stored on the file server machine. Provide one or more of
	   the standard permission letters ("rlidwka") and auxiliary
	   permission letters ("ABCDEFGH"), or one of the shorthand notations
	   for groups of permissions ("all", "none", "read", and "write"). To
	   review the meaning of the permissions, see the fs setacl reference
	   page.

       -readonly
	   Don't allow writes to this fileserver.

       -hr <number of hours between refreshing the host cps>
	   Specifies how often the File Server refreshes its knowledge of the
	   machines that belong to protection groups (refreshes the host CPSs
	   for machines). The File Server must update this information to
	   enable users from machines recently added to protection groups to
	   access data for which those machines now have the necessary ACL
	   permissions.

       -busyat <redirect clients when queue > n>
	   Defines the number of incoming RPCs that can be waiting for a
	   response from the File Server before the File Server returns the
	   error code "VBUSY" to the Cache Manager that sent the latest RPC.
	   In response, the Cache Manager retransmits the RPC after a delay.
	   This argument prevents the accumulation of so many waiting RPCs
	   that the File Server can never process them all. Provide a positive
	   integer.  The default value is 600.

       -rxpck <number of rx extra packets>
	   Controls the number of Rx packets the File Server uses to store
	   data for incoming RPCs that it is currently handling, that are
	   waiting for a response, and for replies that are not yet complete.
	   Provide a positive integer.

       -rxdbg
	   Writes a trace of the File Server's operations on Rx packets to the
	   file /usr/afs/logs/rx_dbg.

       -rxdbge
	   Writes a trace of the File Server's operations on Rx events (such
	   as retransmissions) to the file /usr/afs/logs/rx_dbg.

       -rxmaxmtu <bytes>
	   Defines the maximum size of an MTU.	The value must be between the
	   minimum and maximum packet data sizes for Rx.

       -jumbo
	   Allows the server to send and receive jumbograms. A jumbogram is a
	   large-size packet composed of 2 to 4 normal Rx data packets that
	   share the same header. The fileserver does not use jumbograms by
	   default, as some routers are not capable of properly breaking the
	   jumbogram into smaller packets and reassembling them.

       -nojumbo
	   Deprecated; jumbograms are disabled by default.

       -rxbind
	   Force the fileserver to only bind to one IP address.

       -allow-dotted-principals
	   By default, the RXKAD security layer will disallow access by
	   Kerberos principals with a dot in the first component of their
	   name. This is to avoid the confusion where principals user/admin
	   and user.admin are both mapped to the user.admin PTS entry. Sites
	   whose Kerberos realms don't have these collisions between principal
	   names may disable this check by starting the server with this
	   option.

       -L  Sets values for many arguments in a manner suitable for a large
	   file server machine. Combine this flag with any option except the
	   -S flag; omit both flags to set values suitable for a medium-sized
	   file server machine.

       -S  Sets values for many arguments in a manner suitable for a small
	   file server machine. Combine this flag with any option except the
	   -L flag; omit both flags to set values suitable for a medium-sized
	   file server machine.

       -k <stack size>
	   Sets the LWP stack size in units of 1 kilobyte. Do not use this
	   argument, and in particular do not specify a value less than the
	   default of 24.

       -realm <Kerberos realm name>
	   Defines the Kerberos realm name for the File Server to use. If this
	   argument is not provided, it uses the realm name corresponding to
	   the cell listed in the local /usr/afs/etc/ThisCell file.

       -udpsize <size of socket buffer in bytes>
	   Sets the size of the UDP buffer, which is 64 KB by default. Provide
	   a positive integer, preferably larger than the default.

       -sendsize <size of send buffer in bytes>
	   Sets the size of the send buffer, which is 16384 bytes by default.

       -abortthreshold <abort threshold>
	   Sets the abort threshold, which is triggered when an AFS client
	   sends a number of FetchStatus requests in a row and all of them
	   fail due to access control or some other error. When the abort
	   threshold is reached, the file server starts to slow down the
	   responses to the problem client in order to reduce the load on the
	   file server.

	   The throttling behaviour can cause issues especially for some
	   versions of the Windows OpenAFS client. When using Windows Explorer
	   to navigate the AFS directory tree, directories with only "look"
	   access for the current user may load more slowly because of the
	   throttling. This is because the Windows OpenAFS client sends
	   FetchStatus calls one at a time instead of in bulk like the Unix
	   Open AFS client.

	   Setting the threshold to 0 disables the throttling behavior. This
	   option is available in OpenAFS versions 1.4.1 and later.

       -enable_peer_stats
	   Activates the collection of Rx statistics and allocates memory for
	   their storage. For each connection with a specific UDP port on
	   another machine, a separate record is kept for each type of RPC
	   (FetchFile, GetStatus, and so on) sent or received. To display or
	   otherwise access the records, use the Rx Monitoring API.

       -enable_process_stats
	   Activates the collection of Rx statistics and allocates memory for
	   their storage. A separate record is kept for each type of RPC
	   (FetchFile, GetStatus, and so on) sent or received, aggregated over
	   all connections to other machines. To display or otherwise access
	   the records, use the Rx Monitoring API.

       -syslog [<loglevel]
	   Use syslog instead of the normal logging location for the
	   fileserver process.	If provided, log messages are at <loglevel>
	   instead of the default LOG_USER.

       -mrafslogs
	   Use MR-AFS (Multi-Resident) style logging.  This option is
	   deprecated.

       -saneacls
	   Offer the SANEACLS capability for the fileserver.  This option is
	   currently unimplemented.

       -help
	   Prints the online help for this command. All other valid options
	   are ignored.

       -vhandle-setaside <fds reserved for non-cache io>
	   Number of file handles set aside for I/O not in the cache. Defaults
	   to 128.

       -vhandle-max-cachesize <max open files>
	   Maximum number of available file handles.

       -vhandle-initial-cachesize <initial open file cache>
	   Number of file handles set aside for I/O in the cache. Defaults to
	   128.

       -vattachpar <number of volume attach threads>
	   The number of threads assigned to attach and detach volumes.	 The
	   default is 1.  Warning: many of the I/O parallelism features of
	   Demand-Attach Fileserver are turned off when the number of volume
	   attach threads is only 1.

	   This option is only meaningful for a file server built with
	   pthreads support.

       -m <min percentage spare in partition>
	   Specifies the percentage of each AFS server partition that the AIX
	   version of the File Server creates as a reserve. Specify an integer
	   value between 0 and 30; the default is 8%. A value of 0 means that
	   the partition can become completely full, which can have serious
	   negative consequences.  This option is not supported on platforms
	   other than AIX.

       -lock
	   Prevents any portion of the fileserver binary from being paged
	   (swapped) out of memory on a file server machine running the IRIX
	   operating system.  This option is not supported on platforms other
	   than IRIX.

       -sync <always | delayed | onclose | never>
	   This option changes how hard the fileserver tries to ensure that
	   data written to volumes actually hits the physical disk.

	   Normally, when the fileserver writes to disk, the underlying
	   filesystem or Operating System may delay writes from actually going
	   to disk, and reorder which writes hit the disk first. So, during an
	   unclean shutdown of the machine (if the power goes out, or the
	   machine crashes, etc), or if the physical disk backing store
	   becomes unavailable, file data may become lost that the server
	   previously told clients was already successfully written.

	   To try to mitigate this, the fileserver will try to "sync" file
	   data to the physical disk at numerous points during various I/O.
	   However, this can result in significantly reduced performance.
	   Depending on the usage patterns, this may or may not be acceptable.
	   This option dictates specifically what the fileserver does when it
	   wants to perform a "sync".

	   There are several options; pass one of these as the argument to
	   -sync. The default is "delayed".

	   always
	       This causes a sync operation to always sync immediately and
	       synchronously.  This is the slowest option that provides the
	       greatest protection against data loss in the event of a crash
	       or backing store unavailability.

	       Note that this is still not a 100% guarantee that data will not
	       be lost or corrupted during a crash. The underlying filesystem
	       itself may cause data to be lost or corrupt in such a
	       situation. And OpenAFS itself does not (yet) even guarantee
	       that all data is consistent at any point in time; so even if
	       the filesystem and OS do not buffer or reorder any writes, you
	       are not guaranteed that all data will be okay after a crash.

	       This option may be appropriate if you have reason to believe a
	       server is prone to data loss failures, such as if the server
	       encounters frequent power failures or connectivity issues with
	       network attached storage. Or if the backend storage is
	       temporarily degraded in some way (for example, a battery on a
	       caching controller fails), it may make sense to temporarily use
	       the "always" option until the situation is fixed. Some servers
	       may also allow for sync operations to occur very quickly, such
	       that the "always" option is not noticeably slower than any
	       other option. In such a case, there is no downside to
	       specifying "always".

	       This was the only behavior allowed in OpenAFS releases prior to
	       1.4.5.

	   delayed
	       This causes a sync to do nothing immediately, but the sync will
	       happen sometime in the background, within approximately the
	       next 10 seconds. This works by having a separate thread that
	       goes through all open file handles every 10 seconds, and it
	       syncs the ones that have been marked as needing a sync. File
	       handles flagged for sync may also get synced on volume
	       detachment, according to the same behavior as with the
	       "onclose" option.

	       This option is currently not recommended, since in the past the
	       code implementing this option has caused rare data corruption
	       during normal operation. However, it is currently the default
	       option to allow consistent behavior from previous OpenAFS
	       releases.

	       This was the only behavior allowed in OpenAFS releases starting
	       from 1.4.5 up to and including 1.6.2. It is the default
	       starting in OpenAFS 1.6.3. This option will be removed in a
	       future version of OpenAFS, and the default behavior will likely
	       change to the "onclose" behavior.

	   onclose
	       This causes a sync to do nothing immediately, but causes the
	       relevant file to be flagged as potentially needing a sync. When
	       a volume is detached, flagged volume metadata files are synced,
	       as well as data files that have been accessed recently. Events
	       that cause a volume to detach include: performing certain
	       volume operations (restore, salvage, offline, et al), detection
	       of volume consistency errors, a clean shutdown of the
	       fileserver, or during DAFS "soft detachment".

	       Effectively this option is the same as "never" while a volume
	       is attached and actively being used, but if a volume is
	       detached, there is an additional guarantee for the data's
	       consistency.

	   never
	       This causes all syncs to never do anything. This is the fastest
	       option, with the weakest guarantees for data consistency.

	       Depending on the underlying filesystem and Operating System,
	       there may be guarantees that any data written to disk will hit
	       the physical media after a certain amount of time. For example,
	       Linux's pdflush process usually makes this guarantee, and ext3
	       can make certain various consistency guarantees according to
	       the options given. ZFS on Solaris can also provide similar
	       guarantees, as can various other platforms and filesystems.
	       Consult the documentation for your platform if you are unsure.

	   Which option you choose is not an easy decision to make. Various
	   developers and experts sometimes disagree on which option is the
	   most reasonable, and it may depend on the specific scenario and
	   workload involved. Some argue that the "always" option does not
	   provide significantly greater guarantees over any other option,
	   whereas others argue that choosing anything besides the "always"
	   option allows for an unacceptable risk of data loss. This may
	   depend on your usage patterns, your hardware, your platform and
	   filesystem, and who you talk to about this topic.

EXAMPLES
       The following bos create command creates a traditional fs process on
       the file server machine "fs2.abc.com" that uses the large configuration
       size, and allows volumes to exceed their quota by 10%. Type the command
       on a single line:

	  % bos create -server fs2.abc.com -instance fs -type fs \
		       -cmd "/usr/afs/bin/fileserver -pctspare 10 -L" \
		       /usr/afs/bin/volserver /usr/afs/bin/salvager

TROUBLESHOOTING
       Sending process signals to the File Server Process can change its
       behavior in the following ways:

	 Process	  Signal       OS     Result
	 ---------------------------------------------------------------------

	 File Server	  XCPU	      Unix    Prints a list of client IP
					      Addresses.

	 File Server	  USR2	    Windows   Prints a list of client IP
					      Addresses.

	 File Server	  POLL	      HPUX    Prints a list of client IP
					      Addresses.

	 Any server	  TSTP	      Any     Increases Debug level by a power
					      of 5 -- 1,5,25,125, etc.
					      This has the same effect as the
					      -d XXX command-line option.

	 Any Server	  HUP	      Any     Resets Debug level to 0

	 File Server	  TERM	      Any     Run minor instrumentation over
					      the list of descriptors.

	 Other Servers	  TERM	      Any     Causes the process to quit.

	 File Server	  QUIT	      Any     Causes the File Server to Quit.
					      Bos Server knows this.

       The basic metric of whether an AFS file server is doing well is the
       number of connections waiting for a thread, which can be found by
       running the following command:

	  % rxdebug <server> | grep waiting_for | wc -l

       Each line returned by "rxdebug" that contains the text "waiting_for"
       represents a connection that's waiting for a file server thread.

       If the blocked connection count is ever above 0, the server is having
       problems replying to clients in a timely fashion.  If it gets above 10,
       roughly, there will be noticeable slowness by the user.	The total
       number of connections is a mostly irrelevant number that goes
       essentially monotonically for as long as the server has been running
       and then goes back down to zero when it's restarted.

       The most common cause of blocked connections rising on a server is some
       process somewhere performing an abnormal number of accesses to that
       server and its volumes.	If multiple servers have a blocked connection
       count, the most likely explanation is that there is a volume replicated
       between those servers that is absorbing an abnormally high access rate.

       To get an access count on all the volumes on a server, run:

	  % vos listvol <server> -long

       and save the output in a file.  The results will look like a bunch of
       vos examine output for each volume on the server.  Look for lines like:

	  40065 accesses in the past day (i.e., vnode references)

       and look for volumes with an abnormally high number of accesses.
       Anything over 10,000 is fairly high, but some volumes like root.cell
       and other volumes close to the root of the cell will have that many
       hits routinely.	Anything over 100,000 is generally abnormally high.
       The count resets about once a day.

       Another approach that can be used to narrow the possibilities for a
       replicated volume, when multiple servers are having trouble, is to find
       all replicated volumes for that server.	Run:

	  % vos listvldb -server <server>

       where <server> is one of the servers having problems to refresh the
       VLDB cache, and then run:

	  % vos listvldb -server <server> -part <partition>

       to get a list of all volumes on that server and partition, including
       every other server with replicas.

       Once the volume causing the problem has been identified, the best way
       to deal with the problem is to move that volume to another server with
       a low load or to stop any runaway programs that are accessing that
       volume unnecessarily.  Often the volume will be enough information to
       tell what's going on.

       If you still need additional information about who's hitting that
       server, sometimes you can guess at that information from the failed
       callbacks in the FileLog log in /var/log/afs on the server, or from the
       output of:

	  % /usr/afsws/etc/rxdebug <server> -rxstats

       but the best way is to turn on debugging output from the file server.
       (Warning: This generates a lot of output into FileLog on the AFS
       server.)	 To do this, log on to the AFS server, find the PID of the
       fileserver process, and do:

	   kill -TSTP <pid>

       where <pid> is the PID of the file server process.  This will raise the
       debugging level so that you'll start seeing what people are actually
       doing on the server.  You can do this up to three more times to get
       even more output if needed.  To reset the debugging level back to
       normal, use (The following command will NOT terminate the file server):

	   kill -HUP <pid>

       The debugging setting on the File Server should be reset back to normal
       when debugging is no longer needed.  Otherwise, the AFS server may well
       fill its disks with debugging output.

       The lines of the debugging output that are most useful for debugging
       load problems are:

	   SAFS_FetchStatus,  Fid = 2003828163.77154.82248, Host 171.64.15.76
	   SRXAFS_FetchData, Fid = 2003828163.77154.82248

       (The example above is partly truncated to highlight the interesting
       information).  The Fid identifies the volume and inode within the
       volume; the volume is the first long number.  So, for example, this
       was:

	  % vos examine 2003828163
	  pubsw.matlab61		   2003828163 RW    1040060 K  On-line
	      afssvr5.Stanford.EDU /vicepa
	      RWrite 2003828163 ROnly 2003828164 Backup 2003828165
	      MaxQuota	  3000000 K
	      Creation	  Mon Aug  6 16:40:55 2001
	      Last Update Tue Jul 30 19:00:25 2002
	      86181 accesses in the past day (i.e., vnode references)

	      RWrite: 2003828163    ROnly: 2003828164	 Backup: 2003828165
	      number of sites -> 3
		 server afssvr5.Stanford.EDU partition /vicepa RW Site
		 server afssvr11.Stanford.EDU partition /vicepd RO Site
		 server afssvr5.Stanford.EDU partition /vicepa RO Site

       and from the Host information one can tell what system is accessing
       that volume.

       Note that the output of vos_examine(1) also includes the access count,
       so once the problem has been identified, vos examine can be used to see
       if the access count is still increasing.	 Also remember that you can
       run vos examine on the read-only replica (e.g.,
       pubsw.matlab61.readonly) to see the access counts on the read-only
       replica on all of the servers that it's located on.

PRIVILEGE REQUIRED
       The issuer must be logged in as the superuser "root" on a file server
       machine to issue the command at a command shell prompt.	It is
       conventional instead to create and start the process by issuing the bos
       create command.

SEE ALSO
       BosConfig(5), FileLog(5), bos_create(8), bos_getlog(8), fs_setacl(1),
       msgget(2), msgrcv(2), salvager(8), volserver(8), vos_examine(1)

COPYRIGHT
       IBM Corporation 2000. <http://www.ibm.com/> All Rights Reserved.

       This documentation is covered by the IBM Public License Version 1.0.
       It was converted from HTML to POD by software written by Chas Williams
       and Russ Allbery, based on work by Alf Wachsmann and Elizabeth Cassell.

OpenAFS				  2013-10-10			 FILESERVER(8)
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