1 ## <a name="3 AFS administration"></a> 3 AFS administration
3 The Administration Section of the [[AFSFrequentlyAskedQuestions]].
11 <li><a href="#3 AFS administration"> 3 AFS administration</a><ul>
12 <li><a href="#3.01 Is there a version of xdm"> 3.01 Is there a version of xdm available with AFS authentication?</a></li>
13 <li><a href="#3.02 Is there a version of xloc"> 3.02 Is there a version of xlock available with AFS authentication?</a></li>
14 <li><a href="#3.03 What is /afs/@cell?"> 3.03 What is /afs/@cell?</a></li>
15 <li><a href="#3.04 Given that AFS data is loc"> 3.04 Given that AFS data is location independent, how does an AFS client determine which server houses the data its user is attempting to access?</a></li>
16 <li><a href="#3.05 How does AFS maintain cons"> 3.05 How does AFS maintain consistency on read-write files?</a></li>
17 <li><a href="#3.06 Which protocols does AFS u"> 3.06 Which protocols does AFS use?</a></li>
18 <li><a href="#3.07 Which TCP/IP ports and pro"> 3.07 Which TCP/IP ports and protocols do I need to enable in order to operate AFS through my Internet firewall?</a></li>
19 <li><a href="#3.08 Are setuid programs execut"> 3.08 Are setuid programs executable across AFS cell boundaries?</a></li>
20 <li><a href="#3.09 How can I run daemons with"> 3.09 How can I run daemons with tokens that do not expire?</a></li>
21 <li><a href="#3.10 Can I check my user's pass"> 3.10 Can I check my user's passwords for security purposes?</a></li>
22 <li><a href="#3.11 Is there a way to automati"> 3.11 Is there a way to automatically balance disk usage across fileservers?</a></li>
23 <li><a href="#3.12 Can I shutdown an AFS file"> 3.12 Can I shutdown an AFS fileserver without affecting users?</a></li>
24 <li><a href="#3.13 How can I set up mail deli"> 3.13 How can I set up mail delivery to users with $HOMEs in AFS?</a></li>
25 <li><a href="#3.14 Should I replicate a _Read"> 3.14 Should I replicate a ReadOnly volume on the same partition and server as the ReadWrite volume?</a></li>
26 <li><a href="#3.15 Should I start AFS before"> 3.15 Should I start AFS before NFS in /etc/inittab?</a></li>
27 <li><a href="#3.16 Will AFS run on a multi-ho"> 3.16 Will AFS run on a multi-homed fileserver?</a></li>
28 <li><a href="#3.17 Can I replicate my user's"> 3.17 Can I replicate my user's home directory AFS volumes?</a></li>
29 <li><a href="#3.18 What is the Andrew Benchma"> 3.18 What is the Andrew Benchmark?</a></li>
30 <li><a href="#3.19 Where can I find the Andre"> 3.19 Where can I find the Andrew Benchmark?</a></li>
31 <li><a href="#3.20 Is there a version of HP V"> 3.20 Is there a version of HP VUE login with AFS authentication?</a></li>
32 <li><a href="#3.21 How can I list which clien"> 3.21 How can I list which clients have cached files from a server?</a></li>
33 <li><a href="#3.22 Do Backup volumes require"> 3.22 Do Backup volumes require as much space as ReadWrite volumes?</a></li>
34 <li><a href="#3.23 Should I run timed on my A"> 3.23 Should I run timed on my AFS client?</a></li>
35 <li><a href="#3.24 Why should I keep /usr/vic"> 3.24 Why should I keep /usr/vice/etc/CellServDB current?</a></li>
36 <li><a href="#3.25 How can I keep /usr/vice/e"> 3.25 How can I keep /usr/vice/etc/CellServDB current?</a></li>
37 <li><a href="#3.26 How can I compute a list o"> 3.26 How can I compute a list of AFS fileservers?</a></li>
38 <li><a href="#3.27 How can I set up anonymous"> 3.27 How can I set up anonymous FTP login to access /afs?</a></li>
39 <li><a href="#3.28 Is the data sent over the n"> 3.28 Is the data sent over the network encrypted in AFS ?</a></li>
40 <li><a href="#3.29 What underlying filesystems"> 3.29 What underlying filesystems can I use for AFS ?</a></li>
41 <li><a href="#3.30 Compiling _OpenAFS"> 3.30 Compiling OpenAFS</a></li>
42 <li><a href="#3.31 Upgrading _OpenAFS"> 3.31 Upgrading OpenAFS</a></li>
43 <li><a href="#3.32 Debugging _OpenAFS"> 3.32 Debugging OpenAFS</a></li>
44 <li><a href="#3.33 Tuning client cache for hug"> 3.33 Tuning client cache for huge data</a></li>
45 <li><a href="#3.34 Settting up PAM with AFS"> 3.34 Settting up PAM with AFS</a></li>
46 <li><a href="#3.35 Setting up AFS key in KDC a"> 3.35 Setting up AFS key in KDC and KeyFile</a></li>
47 <li><a href="#3.36 Obtaining and getting asetk"> 3.36 Obtaining and getting asetkey compiled</a></li>
48 <li><a href="#3.37 afs_krb_get_lrealm() using"> 3.37 afs_krb_get_lrealm() using /usr/afs/etc/krb.conf</a></li>
49 <li><a href="#3.38 Moving from kaserver to Hei"> 3.38 Moving from kaserver to Heimdal KDC</a></li>
50 <li><a href="#3.39 Moving from KTH-KRB4 to Hei"> 3.39 Moving from KTH-KRB4 to Heimdal KDC</a></li>
51 <li><a href="#3.40 What are those bos(1) -type"> 3.40 What are those bos(1) -type values simple and cron?</a></li>
52 <li><a href="#3.41 KDC listens on port 88 inst"> 3.41 KDC listens on port 88 instead of 750</a></li>
53 <li><a href="#3.42 afsd gives me "Error -1 in"> 3.42 afsd gives me "Error -1 in basic initialization." on startup</a></li>
54 <li><a href="#3.43 Although I get krb tickets,"> 3.43 Although I get krb tickets, afslog doesn't give me tokens, I see UDP packets to port 4444</a></li>
55 <li><a href="#3.44 I get error message trhough"> 3.44 I get error message trhough syslogd: "afs: Tokens for user of AFS id 0 for cell foo.bar.baz are discarded (rxkad error=19270407)"</a></li>
56 <li><a href="#3.45 I get tickets and tokens, b"> 3.45 I get tickets and tokens, but still get Permission denied.</a></li>
66 ### <a name="3.01 Is there a version of xdm"></a><a name="3.01 Is there a version of xdm "></a> 3.01 Is there a version of xdm available with AFS authentication?
68 Yes, xdm can be found in:
70 <file:///afs/transarc.com/public/afs-contrib/tools/xdm> <ftp://ftp.transarc.com/pub/afs-contrib/tools/xdm/MANIFEST>
72 ### <a name="3.02 Is there a version of xloc"></a> 3.02 Is there a version of xlock available with AFS authentication?
74 Yes, xlock can be found in:
76 <file:///afs/transarc.com/public/afs-contrib/tools/xlock> <ftp://ftp.transarc.com/pub/afs-contrib/tools/xlock/MANIFEST>
78 ### <a name="3.03 What is /afs/@cell?"></a> 3.03 What is /afs/@cell?
80 It is a symbolic link pointing at /afs/$your\_cell\_name.
82 NB, @cell is not something that is provided by AFS. You may decide it is useful in your cell and wish to create it yourself.
84 /afs/@cell is useful because:
86 - If you look after more than one AFS cell, you could create the link in each cell then set your PATH as:
87 - PATH=$PATH:/afs/@cell/@sys/local/bin
89 - For most cells, it shortens the path names to be typed in thus reducing typos and saving time.
91 A disadvantage of using this convention is that when you cd into /afs/@cell then type "pwd" you see "/afs/@cell" instead of the full name of your cell. This may appear confusing if a user wants to tell a user in another cell the pathname to a file.
93 You could create your own /afs/@cell with the following:
97 [ -L /afs/@cell ] && echo We already have @cell! && exit
98 cell=$(cat /usr/vice/etc/ThisCell)
99 cd /afs/.${cell} && fs mkm temp root.afs
101 ln -s /afs/${cell} @cell
102 ln -s /afs/.${cell} .@cell # .@cell for RW path
103 cd /afs/.${cell} && fs rmm temp
104 vos release root.afs; fs checkv
106 <http://www-archive.stanford.edu/lists/info-afs/hyper95/0298.html>
108 ### <a name="3.04 Given that AFS data is loc"></a> 3.04 Given that AFS data is location independent, how does an AFS client determine which server houses the data its user is attempting to access?
110 The Volume Location Database (VLDB) is stored on AFS Database Servers and is ideally replicated across 3 or more Database Server machines. Replication of the Database ensures high availability and load balances the requests for the data. The VLDB maintains information regarding the current physical location of all volume data (files and directories) in the cell, including the IP address of the [[FileServer]], and the name of the disk partition the data is stored on.
112 A list of a cell's Database Servers is stored on the local disk of each AFS Client machine as: /usr/vice/etc/CellServDB
114 The Database Servers also house the Kerberos Authentication Database (encrypted user and server passwords), the Protection Database (user UID and protection group information) and the Backup Database (used by System Administrators to backup AFS file data to tape).
116 ### <a name="3.05 How does AFS maintain cons"></a> 3.05 How does AFS maintain consistency on read-write files?
118 AFS uses a mechanism called "callback".
120 Callback is a promise from the fileserver that the cache version of a file/directory is up-to-date. It is established by the fileserver with the caching of a file.
122 When a file is modified the fileserver breaks the callback. When the user accesses the file again the Cache Manager fetches a new copy if the callback has been broken.
124 The following paragraphs describe AFS callback mechanism in more detail:
126 If I open() fileA and start reading, and you then open() fileA, write() a change **\*\*and close() or fsync()\*\*** the file to get your changes back to the server - at the time the server accepts and writes your changes to the appropriate location on the server disk, the server also breaks callbacks to all clients to which it issued a copy of fileA.
128 So my client receives a message to break the callback on fileA, which it dutifully does. But my application (editor, spreadsheet, whatever I'm using to read fileA) is still running, and doesn't really care that the callback has been broken.
130 When something causes the application to read() more of the file the read() system call executes AFS cache manager code via the VFS switch, which does check the callback and therefore gets new copies of the data.
132 Of course, the application may not re-read data that it has already read, but that would also be the case if you were both using the same host. So, for both AFS and local files, I may not see your changes.
134 Now if I exit the application and start it again, or if the application does another open() on the file, then I will see the changes you've made.
136 This information tends to cause tremendous heartache and discontent - but unnecessarily so. People imagine rampant synchronization problems. In practice this rarely happens and in those rare instances, the data in question is typically not critical enough to cause real problems or crashing and burning of applications. Since 1985, we've found that the synchronization algorithm has been more than adequate in practice - but people still like to worry!
138 The source of worry is that, if I make changes to a file from my workstation, your workstation is not guaranteed to be notified until I close or fsync the file, at which point AFS guarantees that your workstation will be notified. This is a significant departure from NFS, in which no guarantees are provided.
140 Partially because of the worry factor and largely because of Posix, this will change in DFS. DFS synchronization semantics are identical to local file system synchronization.
142 [ DFS is the Distributed File System which is part of the Distributed ] [ Computing Environment (DCE). ]
144 ### <a name="3.06 Which protocols does AFS u"></a> 3.06 Which protocols does AFS use?
146 AFS may be thought of as a collection of protocols and software processes, nested one on top of the other. The constant interaction between and within these levels makes AFS a very sophisticated software system.
148 At the lowest level is the UDP protocol, which is part of TCP/IP. UDP is the connection to the actual network wire. The next protocol level is the remote procedure call (RPC). In general, RPCs allow the developer to build applications using the client/server model, hiding the underlying networking mechanisms. AFS uses Rx, an RPC protocol developed specifically for AFS during its development phase at Carnegie Mellon University.
150 Above the RPC is a series of server processes and interfaces that all use Rx for communication between machines. Fileserver, volserver, upserver, upclient, and bosserver are server processes that export RPC interfaces to allow their user interface commands to request actions and get information. For example, a bos status command will examine the bos server process on the indicated file server machine.
152 Database servers use ubik, a replicated database mechanism which is implemented using RPC. Ubik guarantees that the copies of AFS databases of multiple server machines remain consistent. It provides an application programming interface (API) for database reads and writes, and uses RPCs to keep the database synchronized. The database server processes, vlserver, kaserver, and ptserver, reside above ubik. These processes export an RPC interface which allows user commands to control their operation. For instance, the pts command is used to communicate with the ptserver, while the command klog uses the kaserver's RPC interface.
154 Some application programs are quite complex, and draw on RPC interfaces for communication with an assortment of processes. Scout utilizes the RPC interface to file server processes to display and monitor the status of file servers. The uss command interfaces with kaserver, ptserver, volserver and vlserver to create new user accounts.
156 The Cache Manager also exports an RPC interface. This interface is used principally by file server machines to break callbacks. It can also be used to obtain Cache Manager status information. The program cmdebug shows the status of a Cache Manager using this interface.
158 For additional information, Section 1.5 of the AFS System Administrator's Guide and the April 1990 Cache Update contain more information on ubik. Udebug information and short descriptions of all debugging tools were included in the January 1991 Cache Update. Future issues will discuss other debugging tools in more detail.
160 [ source: <ftp://ftp.transarc.com/pub/afsug/newsletter/apr91> ] [ Copyright 1991 Transarc Corporation ]
162 ### <a name="3.07 Which TCP/IP ports and pro"></a> 3.07 Which TCP/IP ports and protocols do I need to enable in order to operate AFS through my Internet firewall?
164 Assuming you have already taken care of nameserving, you may wish to use an Internet timeserver for Network Time Protocol [[[NTP|Main/FurtherReading#NTP]]] and the question about [[timed|Main/WebHome#NTP]]:
168 A list of NTP servers is available via anonymous FTP from:
170 - <http://www.eecis.udel.edu/~mills/ntp/servers.html>
172 For further details on NTP see: <http://www.eecis.udel.edu/~ntp/>
174 For a "minimal" AFS service which does not allow inbound or outbound klog:
176 cachemanager 4711/udp (only if you use the arla-client instead of OpenAFS)
178 cachemanager 7001/udp
186 (Ports in the 7020-7029 range are used by the AFS backup system, and won't be needed by external clients performing simple file accesses.)
188 Additionally, for "klog" to work through the firewall you need to allow inbound and outbound UDP on ports >1024 (probably 1024<port<2048 would suffice depending on the number of simultaneous klogs).
190 See also: <http://www-archive.stanford.edu/lists/info-afs/hyper95/0874.html>
192 ### <a name="3.08 Are setuid programs execut"></a> 3.08 Are setuid programs executable across AFS cell boundaries?
194 By default, the setuid bit is ignored but the program may be run (without setuid privilege).
196 It is possible to configure an AFS client to honour the setuid bit. This is achieved by root running:
198 root@toontown # fs setcell -cell $cellname -suid
200 (where $cellname is the name of the foreign cell. Use with care!).
202 NB: making a program setuid (or setgid) in AFS does **not** mean that the program will get AFS permissions of a user or group. To become AFS authenticated, you have to klog. If you are not authenticated, AFS treats you as "system:anyuser".
204 ### <a name="3.09 How can I run daemons with"></a> 3.09 How can I run daemons with tokens that do not expire?
206 It is not a good idea to run with tokens that do not expire because this would weaken one of the security features of Kerberos.
208 A better approach is to re-authenticate just before the token expires.
210 There are two examples of this that have been contributed to afs-contrib. The first is "reauth":
212 - <file:///afs/transarc.com/public/afs-contrib/tools/reauth/>
213 - <ftp://ftp.transarc.com/pub/afs-contrib/tools/reauth/MANIFEST>
214 - <ftp://ftp.andrew.cmu.edu/pub/AFS-Tools/reauth-0.0.5.tar.gz>
218 <file:///afs/transarc.com/public/afs-contrib/pointers/UMich-lat-authenticated-batch-jobs> <ftp://ftp.transarc.com/pub/afs-contrib/pointers/UMich-lat-authenticated-batch-jobs>
220 Another collection of tools was [mentioned](https://lists.openafs.org/pipermail/openafs-info/2002-October/006353.html) by [[DanielClark]]:
222 Another option is [OpenPBS](http://www.openpbs.org/) and [Password Storage and Retrieval](http://www.lam-mpi.org/software/psr/) (PSR), where you encrypt your AFS password with a public key and put it in your home directory, and trusted machine(s) which have the private key on local disk then decrypt your password and run your job. MIT uses a variant of this (e.g. [a](http://web.mit.edu/longjobs/www/) & [b](http://mit.edu/longjobs-dev/notebook/)) that uses their own code (see [longjobs documentation](http://web.mit.edu/longjobs-dev/doc/netsec.txt) sections III and IV) instead of PSR.
224 ### <a name="3.10 Can I check my user's pass"></a> 3.10 Can I check my user's passwords for security purposes?
226 Yes. Alec Muffett's Crack tool (at version 4.1f) has been converted to work on the Transarc kaserver database. This modified Crack (AFS Crack) is available via anonymous ftp from:
228 - <ftp://export.acs.cmu.edu/pub/crack.tar.Z>
229 - <ftp://ftp.andrew.cmu.edu/pub/AFS-Tools/crack.tar.Z>
231 and is known to work on: pmax\_\* sun4\*\_\* hp700\_\* rs\_aix\* next\_\*
233 It uses the file /usr/afs/db/kaserver.DB0, which is the database on the kaserver machine that contains the encrypted passwords. As a bonus, AFS Crack is usually two to three orders of magnitude faster than the standard Crack since there is no concept of salting in a Kerberos database.
235 On a normal UNIX /etc/passwd file, each password can have been encrypted around 4096 (2^12) different saltings of the crypt(3) algorithm, so for a large number of users it is easy to see that a potentially large (up to 4095) number of seperate encryptions of each word checked has been avoided.
237 Author: Dan Lovinger Contact: Derrick J. Brashear <shadow+@andrew.cmu.edu>
239 <table border="1" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0">
242 <td> AFS Crack does not work for MIT Kerberos Databases. The author is willing to give general guidance to someone interested in doing the (probably minimal) amount of work to port it to do MIT Kerberos. The author does not have access to a MIT Kerberos server to do this. </td>
246 ### <a name="3.11 Is there a way to automati"></a> 3.11 Is there a way to automatically balance disk usage across fileservers?
248 Yes. There is a tool, balance, which does exactly this. It can be retrieved via anonymous ftp from:
250 - <ftp://ftp.andrew.cmu.edu/pub/AFS-Tools/balance-1.1b.tar.gz>
252 Actually, it is possible to write arbitrary balancing algorithms for this tool. The default set of "agents" provided for the current version of balance balance by usage, # of volumes, and activity per week, the latter currently requiring a source patch to the AFS volserver. Balance is highly configurable.
254 Author: Dan Lovinger Contact: Derrick Brashear <shadow+@andrew.cmu.edu>
256 ### <a name="3.12 Can I shutdown an AFS file"></a> 3.12 Can I shutdown an AFS fileserver without affecting users?
258 Yes, this is an example of the flexibility you have in managing AFS.
260 Before attempting to shutdown an AFS fileserver you have to make some arrangements that any services that were being provided are moved to another AFS fileserver:
262 1. Move all AFS volumes to another fileserver. (Check you have the space!) This can be done "live" while users are actively using files in those volumes with no detrimental effects.
264 1. Make sure that critical services have been replicated on one (or more) other fileserver(s). Such services include:
265 - kaserver - Kerberos Authentication server
266 - vlserver - Volume Location server
267 - ptserver - Protection server
268 - buserver - Backup server
270 It is simple to test this before the real shutdown by issuing:
272 bos shutdown $server $service
274 where: $server is the name of the server to be shutdown
275 and $service is one (or all) of: kaserver vlserver ptserver buserver
277 Other points to bear in mind:
279 - "vos remove" any RO volumes on the server to be shutdown. Create corresponding RO volumes on the 2nd fileserver after moving the RW. There are two reasons for this:
280 1. An RO on the same partition ("cheap replica") requires less space than a full-copy RO.
281 2. Because AFS always accesses RO volumes in preference to RW, traffic will be directed to the RO and therefore quiesce the load on the fileserver to be shutdown.
283 - If the system to be shutdown has the lowest IP address there may be a brief delay in authenticating because of timeout experienced before contacting a second kaserver.
285 ### <a name="3.13 How can I set up mail deli"></a> 3.13 How can I set up mail delivery to users with $HOMEs in AFS?
287 There are many ways to do this. Here, only two methods are considered:
289 Method 1: deliver into local filestore
291 This is the simplest to implement. Set up your mail delivery to append mail to /var/spool/mail/$USER on one mailserver host. The mailserver is an AFS client so users draw their mail out of local filestore into their AFS $HOME (eg: inc).
293 Note that if you expect your (AFS unauthenticated) mail delivery program to be able to process .forward files in AFS $HOMEs then you need to add "system:anyuser rl" to each $HOMEs ACL.
297 - Simple to implement and maintain.
298 - No need to authenticate into AFS.
302 - It doesn't scale very well.
303 - Users have to login to the mailserver to access their new mail.
304 - Probably less secure than having your mailbox in AFS.
305 - System administrator has to manage space in /var/spool/mail.
307 Method 2: deliver into AFS
309 This takes a little more setting up than the first method.
311 First, you must have your mail delivery daemon AFS authenticated (probably as "postman"). The reauth example in afs-contrib shows how a daemon can renew its token. You will also need to setup the daemon startup soon after boot time to klog (see the -pipe option).
313 Second, you need to set up the ACLs so that "postman" has lookup rights down to the user's $HOME and "lik" on $HOME/Mail.
317 - Scales better than first method.
318 - Delivers to user's $HOME in AFS giving location independence.
319 - Probably more secure than first method.
320 - User responsible for space used by mail.
324 - More complicated to set up.
325 - Need to correctly set ACLs down to $HOME/Mail for every user.
326 - Probably need to store postman's password in a file so that the mail delivery daemon can klog after boot time. This may be OK if the daemon runs on a relatively secure host.
328 An example of how to do this for IBM RISC System/6000 is auth-sendmail. A beta test version of auth-sendmail can be found in:
330 <file:///afs/transarc.com/public/afs-contrib/doc/faq/auth-sendmail.tar.Z> <ftp://ftp.transarc.com/pub/afs-contrib/doc/faq/auth-sendmail.tar.Z>
332 ### <a name="3.14 Should I replicate a _Read"></a> 3.14 Should I replicate a [[ReadOnly]] volume on the same partition and server as the [[ReadWrite]] volume?
334 Yes, Absolutely! It improves the robustness of your served volumes.
336 If [[ReadOnly]] volumes exist (note use of term **exist** rather than **are available**), Cache Managers will **never** utilize the [[ReadWrite]] version of the volume. The only way to access the RW volume is via the "dot" path (or by special mounting).
338 This means if **all** RO copies are on dead servers, are offline, are behind a network partition, etc, then clients will not be able to get the data, even if the RW version of the volume is healthy, on a healthy server and in a healthy network.
340 However, you are **very** strongly encouraged to keep one RO copy of a volume on the **same server and partition** as the RW. There are two reasons for this:
342 1. The RO that is on the same server and partition as the RW is a clone (just a copy of the header - not a full copy of each file). It therefore is very small, but provides access to the same set of files that all other (full copy) [[ReadOnly]] volume do. Transarc trainers refer to this as the "cheap replica".
343 2. To prevent the frustration that occurs when all your ROs are unavailable but a perfectly healthy RW was accessible but not used.
345 If you keep a "cheap replica", then by definition, if the RW is available, one of the RO's is also available, and clients will utilize that site.
347 ### <a name="3.15 Should I start AFS before"></a><a name="3.15 Should I start AFS before "></a> 3.15 Should I start AFS before NFS in /etc/inittab?
349 Yes, it is possible to run both AFS and NFS on the same system but you should start AFS first.
351 In IBM's AIX 3.2, your /etc/inittab would contain:
353 rcafs:2:wait:/etc/rc.afs > /dev/console 2>&1 # Start AFS daemons
354 rcnfs:2:wait:/etc/rc.nfs > /dev/console 2>&1 # Start NFS daemons
356 With AIX, you need to load NFS kernel extensions before the AFS KEs in /etc/rc.afs like this:
359 # example /etc/rc.afs for an AFS fileserver running AIX 3.2
361 echo "Installing NFS kernel extensions (for AFS+NFS)"
362 /etc/gfsinstall -a /usr/lib/drivers/nfs.ext
363 echo "Installing AFS kernel extensions..."
364 D=/usr/afs/bin/dkload
365 ${D}/cfgexport -a ${D}/export.ext
366 ${D}/cfgafs -a ${D}/afs.ext
367 /usr/afs/bin/bosserver &
369 ### <a name="3.16 Will AFS run on a multi-ho"></a> 3.16 Will AFS run on a multi-homed fileserver?
371 (multi-homed = host has more than one network interface.)
373 Yes, it will. However, AFS was designed for hosts with a single IP address. There can be problems if you have one host name being resolved to several IP addresses.
375 Transarc suggest designating unique hostnames for each network interface. For example, a host called "spot" has two tokenring and one ethernet interfaces: spot-tr0, spot-tr1, spot-en0. Then, select which interface will be used for AFS and use that hostname in the [[CellServDB]] file (eg: spot-tr0).
377 You also have to remember to use the AFS interface name with any AFS commands that require a server name (eg: vos listvol spot-tr0).
379 There is a more detailed discussion of this in the August 1993 issue of "Cache Update" (see: <ftp://ftp.transarc.com/pub/afsug/newsletter/aug93>).
381 The simplest way of dealing with this is to make your AFS fileservers single-homed (eg only use one network interface).
383 At release 3.4 of AFS, it is possible to have multi-homed fileservers (but _not_ multi-homed database servers).
385 ### <a name="3.17 Can I replicate my user's"></a><a name="3.17 Can I replicate my user's "></a> 3.17 Can I replicate my user's home directory AFS volumes?
389 Users with $HOMEs in /afs normally have an AFS [[ReadWrite]] volume mounted in their home directory.
391 You can replicate a RW volume but only as a [[ReadOnly]] volume and there can only be one instance of a [[ReadWrite]] volume.
393 In theory, you could have RO copies of a user's RW volume on a second server but in practice this won't work for the following reasons:
395 a) AFS has built-in bias to always access the RO copy of a RW volume.
396 So the user would have a ReadOnly $HOME which is not too useful!
398 b) Even if a) was not true you would have to arrange frequent
399 synchronisation of the RO copy with the RW volume (for example:
400 "vos release user.fred; fs checkv") and this would have to be
401 done for all such user volumes.
403 c) Presumably, the idea of replicating is to recover the $HOME
404 in the event of a server crash. Even if a) and b) were not
405 problems consider what you might have to do to recover a $HOME:
407 1) Create a new RW volume for the user on the second server
408 (perhaps named "user.fred.2").
410 2) Now, where do you mount it?
412 The existing mountpoint cannot be used because it already has
413 the ReadOnly copy of the original volume mounted there.
415 Let's choose: /afs/MyCell/user/fred.2
417 3) Copy data from the RO of the original into the new RW volume
420 4) Change the user's entry in the password file for the new $HOME:
421 /afs/MyCell/user/fred.2
423 You would have to attempt steps 1 to 4 for every user who had
424 their RW volume on the crashed server. By the time you had done
425 all of this, the crashed server would probably have rebooted.
427 The bottom line is: you cannot replicate $HOMEs across servers.
429 ### <a name="3.18 What is the Andrew Benchma"></a> 3.18 What is the Andrew Benchmark?
431 "It is a script that operates on a collection of files constituting an application program. The operations are intended to represent typical actions of an average user. The input to the benchmark is a source tree of about 70 files. The files total about 200 KB in size. The benchmark consists of five distinct phases:
433 I MakeDir - Construct a target subtree that is identical to the
435 II Copy - Copy every file from the source subtree to the target subtree.
436 III ScanDir - Traverse the target subtree and examine the status
438 IV ReadAll - Scan every byte of every file in the target subtree.
439 V Make - Complete and link all files in the target subtree."
441 Source: <file:///afs/transarc.com/public/afs-contrib/doc/benchmark/Andrew.Benchmark.ps> <ftp://ftp.transarc.com/pub/afs-contrib/doc/benchmark/Andrew.Benchmark.ps>
443 ### <a name="3.19 Where can I find the Andre"></a> 3.19 Where can I find the Andrew Benchmark?
445 From Daniel Joseph Barnhart Clark's [message](http://lists.openafs.org/pipermail/openafs-info/2004-April/012942.html):
447 It's linked to from <http://www.citi.umich.edu/projects/linux-scalability/tools.html>; CITI also has some useful mods at <http://www.citi.umich.edu/projects/nfs-perf/results/cmarion/>.
449 ### <a name="3.20 Is there a version of HP V"></a> 3.20 Is there a version of HP VUE login with AFS authentication?
451 Yes, the availability of this is described in: <file:///afs/transarc.com/public/afs-contrib/pointers/HP-VUElogin.txt> <ftp://ftp.transarc.com/pub/afs-contrib/pointers/HP-VUElogin.txt>
453 If you don't have access to the above, please contact Rajeev Pandey of Hewlett Packard whose email address is <rpandey@cv.hp.com>.
455 ### <a name="3.21 How can I list which clien"></a> 3.21 How can I list which clients have cached files from a server?
457 By using the following script:
462 # AUTHOR Rainer Toebbicke <rtb@dxcern.cern.ch>
464 # PURPOSE Display AFS clients which have grabbed files from a server
467 echo "Usage: $0 <afs_server 1> ... <afsserver n>"
471 /usr/afsws/etc/rxdebug -servers $n -allconn
472 done | grep '^Connection' | \
473 while read x y z ipaddr rest; do echo $ipaddr; done | sort -u |
474 while read ipaddr; do
476 n="`nslookup $ipaddr`"
484 ### <a name="3.22 Do Backup volumes require"></a><a name="3.22 Do Backup volumes require "></a> 3.22 Do Backup volumes require as much space as [[ReadWrite]] volumes?
488 The technique used is to create a new volume, where every file in the RW copy is pointed to by the new backup volume. The files don't exist in the BK, only in the RW volume. The backup volume therefore takes up very little space.
490 If the user now starts modifying data, the old copy must not be destroyed.
492 There is a Copy-On-Write bit in the vnode - if the fileserver writes to a vnode with the bit on it allocates a new vnode for the data and turns off the COW bit. The BK volume hangs onto the old data, and the RW volume slowly splits itself away over time.
494 The BK volume is re-synchronised with the RW next time a "vos backupsys" is run.
496 The space needed for the BK volume is directly related to the size of all files changed in the RW between runs of "vos backupsys".
498 ### <a name="3.23 Should I run timed on my A"></a> 3.23 Should I run timed on my AFS client?
502 <a name="NTP"></a> The AFS Servers make use of NTP [[[NTP|Main/FurtherReading#NTP]]] to synchronise time each other and typically with one or more external NTP servers. By default, clients synchronize their time with one of the servers in the local cell. Thus all the machines participating in the AFS cell have an accurate view of the time.
504 For further details on NTP see: <http://www.eecis.udel.edu/~ntp/>. The latest version is 4.1, dated August 2001, which is **much** more recent that the version packaged with Transarc AFS.
506 A list of NTP servers is available via anonymous FTP from:
508 - <http://www.eecis.udel.edu/~mills/ntp/servers.html>
510 The default time setting behavior of the AFS client can be disabled by specifying the `-nosettime` argument to [afsd](http://www.transarc.ibm.com/Library/documentation/afs/3.5/unix/cmd/cmd53.htm). This is recommended for AFS servers which are also configured as clients (because servers normally run NTP daemons) and for clients that run NTP.
512 ### <a name="3.24 Why should I keep /usr/vic"></a> 3.24 Why should I keep /usr/vice/etc/CellServDB current?
514 On AFS clients, /usr/vice/etc/CellservDB, defines the cells and (their servers) that can be accessed via /afs.
516 Over time, site details change: servers are added/removed or moved onto new network addresses. New sites appear.
518 In order to keep up-to-date with such changes, the [[CellservDB]] file on each AFS client should be kept consistent with some master copy (at your site).
520 As well as updating [[CellservDB]], your AFS administrator should ensure that new cells are mounted in your cell's root.afs volume.
522 If a cell is added to [[CellServDB]] then the **client** must either be restared or you must the AFS command "fs newcell -cell .. -servers ... ...".
524 ### <a name="3.25 How can I keep /usr/vice/e"></a> 3.25 How can I keep /usr/vice/etc/CellServDB current?
526 Do a daily copy from a master source and update the AFS kernel sitelist.
528 One good master source is the grand.central.org [[CellServDB]], available from <http://grand.central.org/dl/cellservdb/CellServDB> or <file:/afs/openafs.org/service/CellServDB> (N.B. update to /afs/grand.central.org path when available). You can send updates for this to <cellservdb@central.org>.
530 The client [[CellServDB]] file must not reside under /afs and is best located in local filespace.
532 Simply updating a client [[CellServDB]] file is not enough. You also need to update the AFS kernel sitelist by either: 1 rebooting the client or 1 running "fs newcell $cell\_name $server\_list" for each site in the [[CellServDB]] file.
534 A script to update the AFS kernel sitelist on a running system is newCellServDB.
536 <file:///afs/ece.cmu.edu/usr/awk/Public/newCellServDB> <ftp://ftp.ece.cmu.edu/pub/afs-tools/newCellServDB>
538 One way to distribute [[CellServDB]] is to have a root cron job on each AFS client copy the file then run newCellServDB.
544 # NAME syncCellServDB
545 # PURPOSE Update local CellServDB file and update AFS kernel sitelist
546 # USAGE run by daily root cron job eg:
547 # 0 3 * * * /usr/local/sbin/syncCellServDB
549 # NOTE "@cell" is a symbolic link to /afs/$this_cell_name
551 src=/afs/@cell/service/etc/CellServDB
552 dst=/usr/vice/etc/CellServDB
553 xec=/usr/local/sbin/newCellServDB
554 log=/var/log/syncCellServDB
556 if [ -s ${src} ]; then
557 if [ ${src} -nt ${dst} ]; then
558 cp $dst ${dst}- && cp $src $dst && $xec 2>&1 >$log
560 echo "master copy no newer: no processing to be done" >$log
563 echo "zero length file: ${src}" >&2
566 ### <a name="3.26 How can I compute a list o"></a> 3.26 How can I compute a list of AFS fileservers?
568 Here is a Bourne shell command to do it (it will work in GNU bash and the Korn shell, too):
570 stimpy@nick $ vos listvldb -cell `cat /usr/vice/etc/ThisCell` \\
571 | awk '(/server/) {print $2}' | sort -u
573 ### <a name="3.27 How can I set up anonymous"></a> 3.27 How can I set up anonymous FTP login to access /afs?
575 The easiest way on a primarily "normal" machine (where you don't want to have everything in AFS) is to actually mount root.cell under ~ftp, and then symlink /afs to ~ftp/afs or whatever. It's as simple as changing the mountpoint in /usr/vice/etc/cacheinfo and restarting afsd.
577 Note that when you do this, anon ftp users can go anywhere system:anyuser can (or worse, if you're using IP-based ACLs and the ftp host is PTS groups). The only "polite" solution I've arrived at is to have the ftp host machine run a minimal [[CellServDB]] and police my ACLs tightly.
579 Alternatively, you can make ~ftp an AFS volume and just mount whatever you need under that - this works well if you can keep everything in AFS, and you don't have the same problems with anonymous "escapes" into /afs.
581 Unless you need to do authenticating ftp, you are _strongly_ recommended using wu-ftpdv2.4 (or better).
583 ### <a name="3.28 Is the data sent over the n"></a> 3.28 Is the data sent over the network encrypted in AFS ?
585 There is still no easy way to do this in Transarc AFS, but [[OpenAFS]] now has a "fs" subcommand to turn on encryption of regular file data sent and received by a client. This is a per client setting that persist until reboot. No server actions are needed to support this change. The syntax is:
591 Note that this only encrypts network traffic between the client and server. The data on the server's disk is not encrypted nor is the data in the client's disk cache. The encryption algorithm used is [fcrypt](http://tedanderson.home.mindspring.com/fcrypt-paper.txt), which is a DES variant.
593 Getting encryption enabled by default:
595 - [[RedHat]] Linux: ([src](https://lists.openafs.org/pipermail/openafs-info/2002-July/005085.html)) change the last line of /etc/sysconfig/afs to `AFS_POST_INIT="/usr/bin/fs setcrypt on"`
596 - Windows ([src](https://lists.openafs.org/pipermail/openafs-info/2003-June/009416.html)) set the following registry value named `SecurityLevel` under `HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\TransarcAFSDaemon\Parameters` to 2.
598 I have not tested either of these procedures. -- [[TedAnderson]] - 05 Jun 2003
600 ### <a name="3.29 What underlying filesystems"></a> 3.29 What underlying filesystems can I use for AFS ?
602 See also [[SupportedConfigurations]].
604 You need to distinguish between the filesystem used by the file server to store the actual AFS data (by convention in /vicep?) and the filesystem used by the client cache manager to cache files.
606 Fileserver is started by bosserver. It depends, what ./configure switches were used during compilation from sources. To be always on the safe side, use --enable-namei-fileserver configure flag. That will give you fileserver binary which can act on any /vicep? partition regardless it's filesystem type. With the new namei file server you can basically use any filesystem you want. The namei file server does not do any fancy stuff behind the scenes but only accesses normal files (their names are a bit strange though).
608 The opposite to namei fileserver is inode based nameserver. According to openafs-devel email list, it gave on some Solaris box 10% speedup over the namei based server. The namei based fileserver cannot run on every filesystem, as it stores some internal afs-specific data into the filesystem. Typically, /sbin/fsck distributed withthe operating system zaps these data. Inode based fileserver directly operates on the inodes of the underlying file system which therefore has to fully support the inode abstraction scheme. The the Administrators Guide for more details (they differ from system to system).
610 On the client side where you run /usr/afs/etc/afsd as a kernel process, you always have to use a file system supporting the inode abstraction for the cache (usually /usr/vice/cache) since the cache manager references files by their inode. Fortunately, it does not do such tricky stuff as the inode based fileserver.
612 The following file systems have been reported _not_ to work for the AFS client cache:
616 - advfs (Tru64), it works but gives cachecurruption
617 - efs (SGI) - IBM AFS does support efs, but openafs doesn't have a license for that.
619 - Patch committed to cvs around 6/2003 will now enforce this in some cases and generate a warning to the user if the filesystem type is wrong.
621 The following file systems have been reported to work for the AFS client cache:
626 - xfs (at least on IRIX 6.5)
627 - ufs (Solaris, [[Tru64Unix]])
629 ### <a name="3.30 Compiling _OpenAFS"></a> 3.30 Compiling [[OpenAFS]]
631 The kernel parts on Solaris have to be compiled with Sun cc, same for other platforms, i.e. you need same compiler used to compile kernel to compile your afs modules. [[Tru64Unix]] doesn't support modules, so you have to edit kernel config files and link statically into kernel. Kernel module insertion works fine on Linux, Solaris, Irix ...
633 ./configure --enable-transarc-paths=/usr/etc --with-afs-sysname=i386_linux24
637 ... and continue the install process described in IBM AFS documentation. If you do "make install", you will end up with some stuff installed into /usr/local but something not, regardless the --enable-transarc-paths option ... "make install" it's messy.
639 ### <a name="3.31 Upgrading _OpenAFS"></a> 3.31 Upgrading [[OpenAFS]]
641 Upgrade of AFS on Solaris 2.6
646 cd root.server/usr/afs
647 tar cvf - ./bin | (cd /usr/afs; tar xfp -)
649 cp root.client/usr/vice/etc/modload/libafs.nonfs.o /kernel/fs/afs
650 cp root.server/etc/vfsck /usr/lib/fs/afs/fsck
651 cd root.client/usr/vice
652 tar cvf - ./etc | (cd /usr/vice; tar xf -)
654 cp lib/pam_afs.krb.so.1 /usr/lib/security
655 cp lib/pam_afs.so.1 /usr/lib/security
660 Upgrade of AFS on Irix 6.5
662 /etc/chkconfig -f afsserver off
663 /etc/chkconfig -f afsclient off
664 /etc/chkconfig -f afsml off
665 /etc/chkconfig -f afsxnfs off
667 cd root.server/usr/afs
668 tar cvf - ./bin | (cd /usr/afs; tar xfp -)
670 cp root.client/usr/vice/etc/sgiload/libafs.IP22.nonfs.o /usr/vice/etc/sgiload
671 echo "AFS will be compiled statically into kernel"
672 echo "otherwise skip following lines and use chkconfig afsml on"
673 cp root.client/bin/afs.sm /var/sysgen/system
674 cp root.client/bin/afs /var/sysgen/master.d
675 echo "The next file comes from openafs-*/src/libafs/STATIC.*"
676 cp root.client/bin/libafs.IP22.nonfs.a /var/sysgen/boot/afs.a
679 echo "end of static kernel modifications"
680 cd root.client/usr/vice/etc
681 echo "Delete any of the modload/ files which don't fit your platform if you need space"
682 echo "These files originate from openafs-*/src/libafs/MODLOAD.*"
683 tar cvf - . | (cd /usr/vice/etc; tar xf -)
684 /etc/chkconfig -f afsserver on
685 /etc/chkconfig -f afsclient on
686 # /etc/chkconfig -f afsml on - afs is compiled statically into kernel, so leave afsml off
687 /etc/chkconfig -f afsml off
688 /etc/chkconfig -f afsxnfs off
691 Upgrade of AFS on [[Tru64Unix]]
693 cd root.server/usr/afs/
694 tar cvf - ./bin | (cd /usr/afs; tar xfp -)
695 cd ../../../root.client/bin
696 cp ./libafs.nonfs.o /usr/sys/BINARY/afs.mod
697 ls -la /usr/sys/BINARY/afs.mod
699 cd ../../root.client/usr/vice
700 cp etc/afsd /usr/vice/etc/afsd
701 cp etc/C/afszcm.cat /usr/vice/etc/C/afszcm.cat
703 ### <a name="3.32 Debugging _OpenAFS"></a> 3.32 Debugging [[OpenAFS]]
705 In case of troubles when you need only fileserver process to run (to be able to debug), run the lwp fileserver instead of the pthreads fileserver (src/viced/fileserver instead of src/tviced/fileserver if you have a buildtree handy):
707 cp src/viced/fileserver /usr/afs/bin (or wherever)
709 bos restart calomys fs -local
711 ... then attach with gdb
713 To debug if client running afsd kernel process talks to the servers from [[CellServDB]], do:
715 tcpdump -vv -s 1500 port 7001
719 fileserver 7000/udp # fileport (FILESERVICE)
720 afscb 7001/udp # kernel extensions
721 afsprot 7002/udp # ptserver (PROTSERVICE)
722 afsvldb 7003/udp # vlserver (VLDBSERVICE)
723 afskauth 7004/udp # kaserver (KAUTHSERVICE)
724 afsvol 7005/udp # volserver (VOLUMESERVICE)
725 afserror 7006/udp # ERRORSERVICE
726 afsnanny 7007/udp # bosserver (NANNYSERVICE)
727 afsupdate 7008/udp # upserver (UPDATESERVICE)
728 afsrmtsys 7009/udp # RMTSYSSERVICE
730 ### <a name="3.33 Tuning client cache for hug"></a> 3.33 Tuning client cache for huge data
732 Use on afsd command line -chunk 17 or greater. Be carefull, with certain cache sizes afsd crashes on startup (Linux, [[Tru64Unix]] at least).
734 > So I ran the full suite of iozone tests (13), but at a single file size
735 > (128M) and one record size (64K). I set the AFS cache size to 80000K
736 > for both memcache and diskcache.
738 Note that memcache size and diskcache size are different things.
739 In the case of memcache, a fixed number of chunks are allocated
740 in memory, such that numChunks * chunkSize = memCacheSize. In
741 the case of disk cache, there are a lot more chunks, because the
742 disk cache assumes not every chunk will be filled (the underlying
743 filesystem handles disk block allocation for us). Thus, when you
744 have small file segments, they use up an entire chunk worth of
745 cache in the memcache case, but only their size worth of cache
746 in the diskcache cache.
750 ### <a name="3.34 Settting up PAM with AFS"></a> 3.34 Settting up PAM with AFS
754 auth sufficient /lib/security/pam_afs.so debug try_first_pass ignore_root debug
755 auth required /lib/security/pam_env.so
756 auth sufficient /lib/security/pam_unix.so likeauth nullok
757 auth required /lib/security/pam_deny.so
759 account required /lib/security/pam_unix.so
761 password required /lib/security/pam_cracklib.so retry=3 type=
762 password sufficient /lib/security/pam_unix.so nullok use_authtok md5 shadow
763 password required /lib/security/pam_deny.so
765 session sufficient /lib/security/pam_afs.so set_token
766 session required /lib/security/pam_limits.so
767 session required /lib/security/pam_unix.so
769 # reafslog is to unlock dtlogin's screensaver
770 other auth sufficient /usr/athena/lib/pam_krb4.so reafslog
772 ### <a name="3.35 Setting up AFS key in KDC a"></a> 3.35 Setting up AFS key in KDC and [[KeyFile]]
774 The easiest method is not much recommended, as the password is possibly very weak:
776 dattan# bos addkey server -kvno <n+1>
780 dattan# kstring2key -c <cellname>
783 dattan# kadmin ckey afs
784 <cut-n-paste the ascii output from above>
786 Beware, there is currently a byte order bug in the kadmin tool as of May 2001 in KTH-KRB. If you run kadmin on a little indian machine (PC, Alpha, ...) you must swap the bytes manually. Here is a small example:
788 bg$ kstring2key -c sics.se
790 ascii = \361\334\211\221\221\206\325\334
791 hex = f1dc89919186d5dc
794 bg.admin@SICS.SE's Password:
795 New DES key for afs: \221\211\334\361\334\325\206\221
797 Please note how the bytes are swapped in groups of four.
799 This bug is fixed in an upcoming release.
801 Better approach is to create random key in KDC using "ksrvutil get" (rather then "ksrvutil add" which asks you for the new password), export it into /etc/srvtab ("ksrvutil ext") and from there copy it into /usr/afs/etc/KeyFile using asetkey utility from /afs/transarc.com/public/afs-contrib. After some years, you may wish to regenerate the random afs key using "ksrvutil change" in KDC and exporting it again.
803 There are two nice pages abou this:
805 <http://www.cs.cmu.edu/afs/andrew.cmu.edu/usr/shadow/www/afs/afs-with-kerberos.html> <http://www.contrib.andrew.cmu.edu/~shadow/afs/afs-with-kerberos.html>
807 As someone noted, you might need some ext\_srvtab utility to extract the key from /etc/srvtab, but I don't remeber that I needed it. Then he also suggets to use asetkey utility.
809 Create afs.natur\\.cuni\\.cz@NATUR.CUNI.CZ principal entry in kerberos:
812 principal instance: natur.cuni.cz
813 principal realm: NATUR.CUNI.CZ
815 Import this key from Kerberos (/etc/srvtab) into AFS /usr/afs/etc/KeyFile using asetkey utility, which is I think from /afs/transarc.com/public/afs-contrib
817 ./asetkey add 0 /etc/srvtab <afs.natur.cuni.cz@NATUR.CUNI.CZ>
819 This [[KeyFile]] with the AFS-key you can just always re-copy to new AFS **server** machines. Be sure that the key version number KVNO is always same in this [[KeyFile]] and in Kerberos database. On all these machines you of course need afs.hostname.REALM key loaded into their /etc/srvtab (create them with 'ksrvutil get'). It seems klog(1) needs afs@REALM, so copy the principal afs.cell.name@REALM to it.
821 You can test if you have same keys in kerberos and AFS like this:
826 If you have some tokens now, then it works and you can now shutdown kaserver. Users, which you have created in AFS under kaserver are in /usr/afs/db/kaserver.\*, but you can just forget them. Create these users again in Kerberos IV.
828 AFS users are then looked up in:
830 kerberos database (/var/kerberos/principal.db)
832 /usr/afs/etc/UserList (permission to manipulate 'bos')
834 system:administrators (permissions for vos, pts, fs, i.e. 'pts adduser' etc)
836 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
837 Another approach, untested:
839 http://www.natur.cuni.cz/~majordomo/krb4/krb4.9703/msg00002.html
841 Date: Tue, 9 May 2000 10:57:23 +0200 (MET DST)
842 From: Johan Hedin <johanh at fusion.kth.se>
843 To: Erland Fristedt <Erland.Fristedt@wcs.eraj.ericsson.se>
845 Subject: Re: AFS+KTH-KRB problem
847 This is a printout how we got it to work. Hope this helps.
851 callisto#/usr/athena/sbin/ksrvutil -p johanh.admin -f srvtab get
853 Instance [callisto]: fusion.kth.se
854 Realm [FUSION.KTH.SE]:
855 Is this correct? (y,n) [y]
856 Add more keys? (y,n) [n]
857 Password for johanh.admin@FUSION.KTH.SE:
858 Warning: Are you sure `fusion.kth.se' should not be `fusion'?
859 Added afs.fusion.kth.se@FUSION.KTH.SE
860 Old keyfile in srvtab.old.
861 callisto#/usr/athena/sbin/ksrvutil -p johanh.admin -f srvtab list
863 4 afs.fusion.kth.se@FUSION.KTH.SE
864 callisto#/tmp/asetkey add 4 srvtab afs.fusion.kth.se@FUSION.KTH.SE
866 callisto#bin/bos status callisto
867 Instance buserver, currently running normally.
868 Instance ptserver, currently running normally.
869 Instance vlserver, currently running normally.
870 Instance fs, currently running normally.
871 Auxiliary status is: file server running.
872 callisto#bin/fs la /afs
873 Access list for /afs is
876 system:administrators rlidwka
878 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
879 > Tokens held by the Cache Manager:
881 > User's (AFS ID 6020) tokens for afs@sunrise.ericsson.se [Expires May 5
885 You got your tickets alright, but then
887 > > touch /afs/.sunrise.ericsson.se/tabort
888 > afs: Tokens for user of AFS id 6020 for cell sunrise.ericsson.se are
889 > discarded (rxkad error=19270407)
891 grep 19270407 /usr/afsws/include/rx/*
892 /usr/afsws/include/rx/rxkad.h:#define RXKADBADTICKET (19270407L)
894 so I would guess that the key version number and/or the key on your
895 AFS servers does not match the key of the afs principal.
897 Use klist -v to figure out about key version numbers and then use
899 $ kstring2key -c sunrise.ericsson.se
901 ascii = \242\345\345\260\323p\263\233
902 hex = a2e5e5b0d370b39b
904 or some other means to ensure that you use the same keys.
906 ### <a name="3.36 Obtaining and getting asetk"></a> 3.36 Obtaining and getting asetkey compiled
908 Better approach is to create random key in KDC, export it into /etc/srvtab and from there move in /usr/afs/etc/KeyFile using asetkey utility from /afs/transarc.com/public/afs-contrib
910 | I can not get asetkey to compile.
912 | asetkey.c: In function `main':
913 | asetkey.c:25: `AFSCONF_SERVERNAME' undeclared (first use in this function)
914 | asetkey.c:25: (Each undeclared identifier is reported only once
915 | asetkey.c:25: for each function it appears in.)
918 AFS 3.5 got rid of a few commonly-used AFS defines; I suspect they are now API calls of some kind, akin to the POSIX move from hardcoded constants to use of \{,f\}pathconf() and sysconf(). I have no idea what those calls are, though.
920 In the meantime, the following two defines are useful in building stuff on AFS 3.5:
922 #define AFSCONF_CLIENTNAME "/usr/vice/etc"
923 #define AFSCONF_SERVERNAME "/usr/afs/etc"
925 ### <a name="3.37 afs_krb_get_lrealm() using"></a><a name="3.37 afs_krb_get_lrealm() using "></a> 3.37 afs\_krb\_get\_lrealm() using /usr/afs/etc/krb.conf
927 In this file you can set also another REALM to be used by you afs server processes, if the REALM should differ from the system-wide REALM (
933 Don't forget it's related to these entries in Kerberos KDC:
936 krbtgt CELL.NAME@REALM
938 If you use heimdal (or MIT krb5), do:
940 echo "REALM" > /usr/afs/etc/krb.conf
942 ### <a name="3.38 Moving from kaserver to Hei"></a> 3.38 Moving from kaserver to Heimdal KDC
944 > While converting all our administration tools, we have discovered that
945 > the time a principal changed his/her/its password is _not_ carried over
946 > from the kaserver DB.
948 First of all, some Heimdal's configure flags:
952 requires krb4 libs, so for that you'll need a working krb4 are you still using a kaserver/kaserver emulation ?
956 is just for dumping a kaserver krb4 database. If you are no longer running a kaserver, you don't need it.
960 <https://lists.openafs.org/pipermail/openafs-info/2002-May/004326.html>
962 This works while migrating from kaserver:
964 /usr/heimdal/libexec/hprop --source=kaserver --cell=xxx
965 --kaspecials --stdout | /usr/heimdal/libexec/hpropd --no-inetd --stdin
967 This somewhat doesn't:
969 /usr/heimdal/libexec/hprop --source=kaserver --cell=xxx
970 --encrypt --master-key=<path to key> --kaspecials --stdout |
971 /usr/heimdal/libexec/hpropd --stdin
973 ### <a name="3.39 Moving from KTH-KRB4 to Hei"></a> 3.39 Moving from KTH-KRB4 to Heimdal KDC
975 /usr/heimdal/libexec/hprop -n -k /etc/krb5.keytab --source=krb4-dump -d /var/kerberos/dump.txt --master-key=/.k -D | /usr/heimdal/libexec/hpropd -n
979 1. dump of the krb4 database with kdb_util
980 2. dump of the "default" heimdal database with kadmin -l
981 3. /usr/heimdal/libexec/hprop -n -k /etc/krb5.keytab --source=krb4-dump -d /usr/heimdal/libexec/hprop -n -k /etc/krb5.keytab --source=krb4-dump -d
982 where /etc/krb5.keytab contains hprop/`hostname` keys
983 4. merge of the converted database with file from (2) via kadmin
985 The special thing for me is the use of "-D" in the (3) which seems to
986 cause conversion des-cbc-sha1 keys of old krb4 database entries to
989 ### <a name="3.40 What are those bos(1) -type"></a> 3.40 What are those bos(1) -type values simple and cron?
991 Typically, admins do this once they configure new afs server:
993 bos create foo ptserver simple /usr/afs/bin/ptserver -cell bar.baz
994 bos create foo vlserver simple /usr/afs/bin/vlserver -cell bar.baz
995 bos create foo fs fs /usr/afs/bin/fileserver /usr/afs/bin/volserver /usr/afs/bin/salvager -cell bar.baz
997 Type "simple" has one process. type "cron" gets forked at the appropriate time.
999 ### <a name="3.41 KDC listens on port 88 inst"></a> 3.41 KDC listens on port 88 instead of 750
1001 "Kramer, Matthew" <mattkr@bu.edu> writes:
1004 > Our Kerberos 4 environment listens on only port 750 and doesn't
1005 > listen on port 88. For Win2K/XP machines this causes a problem in
1006 > C:\openafs-1.2.8\src\kauth\user_nt.c line 144 when the Kerberos port is
1007 > queried from the %systemroot%\system32\drivers\etc\services file. Win2K
1008 > and XP both return 88 which is correct for Kerberos 5 but in our case
1009 > not for Kerberos 4. Why doesn't it instead query for kerberos-iv which
1010 > would return the correct value of 750?
1012 > Y:\src\kauth>diff user_nt.c.orig user_nt.c
1014 > < sp = getservbyname("kerberos", "udp");
1016 > > sp = getservbyname("kerberos-iv", "udp");
1018 A quick work around could be to use Loves requestforwarder found at
1020 ftp://ftp.stacken.kth.se/pub/projects/krb-forward/krb-forward-0.1.tar.gz
1024 ### <a name="3.42 afsd gives me "Error -1 in"></a><a name="3.42 afsd gives me "Error -1 in "></a> 3.42 afsd gives me "Error -1 in basic initialization." on startup
1026 When starting afsd, I get the following:
1028 # /usr/vice/etc/afsd -nosettime -debug
1029 afsd: My home cell is 'foo.bar.baz'
1030 ParseCacheInfoFile: Opening cache info file '/usr/vice/etc/cacheinfo'...
1031 ParseCacheInfoFile: Cache info file successfully parsed:
1032 cacheMountDir: '/afs'
1033 cacheBaseDir: '/usr/vice/cache'
1035 afsd: 5000 inode_for_V entries at 0x8075078, 20000 bytes
1036 SScall(137, 28, 17)=-1 afsd: Forking rx listener daemon.
1037 afsd: Forking rx callback listener.
1038 afsd: Forking rxevent daemon.
1039 SScall(137, 28, 48)=-1 SScall(137, 28, 0)=-1 SScall(137, 28, 36)=-1 afsd: Error -1 in basic initialization.
1041 Solution: make sure you have kernel module loaded.
1043 ### <a name="3.43 Although I get krb tickets,"></a> 3.43 Although I get krb tickets, afslog doesn't give me tokens, I see UDP packets to port 4444
1045 Using tcpdump I see the following traffic. What runs on the port 4444?
1047 15:16:54.815194 IP foo.bar.baz.32772 > foo.bar.baz.4444: UDP, length: 269
1048 15:16:54.815199 IP foo.bar.baz > foo.bar.baz: icmp 305: foo.bar.baz udp port 4444 unreachable
1050 This is the 5->4 ticket conversion service on UDP port 4444. Assuming your afs servers know how to deal with krb5 tickets (since openafs-1.2.10? and 1.3.6x?) include the following in /etc/krb5.conf:
1057 ### <a name="3.44 I get error message trhough"></a> 3.44 I get error message trhough syslogd: "afs: Tokens for user of AFS id 0 for cell foo.bar.baz are discarded (rxkad error=19270407)"
1061 grep 19270407 /usr/afsws/include/rx/*
1062 /usr/afsws/include/rx/rxkad.h:#define RXKADBADTICKET (19270407L)
1064 ### <a name="3.45 I get tickets and tokens, b"></a> 3.45 I get tickets and tokens, but still get Permission denied.
1066 Answer: /usr/afs/etc/UserList accepts only krb4 syntax. Use `joe.admin` instead of `joe/admin`. See `https://lists.openafs.org/pipermail/openafs-devel/2002-December/008673.html` and the rest of the thread.
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