Lars Marowsky-Bree
2005-Jul-20 13:09 UTC
[Clusters_sig] RE: [Linux-cluster] Re: [Ocfs2-devel] [RFC] nodemanager, ocfs2, dlm
On 2005-07-20T09:55:31, "Walker, Bruce J (HP-Labs)" <bruce.walker@hp.com> wrote:> Like Lars, I too was under the wrong impression about this configfs > "nodemanager" kernel component. Our discussions in the cluster > meeting Monday and Tuesday were assuming it was a general service that > other kernel components could/would utilize and possibly also > something that could send uevents to non-kernel components wanting a > std. way to see membership information/events.Let me clarify that this was something we briefly touched on in Walldorf: The node manager would (re-)export the current data via sysfs (which would result in uevents being sent, too), and not something we dreamed up just Monday ;-)> As to kernel components without corresponding user-level "managers", > look no farther than OpenSSI. Our hope was that we could adapt to a > user-land membership service and this interface thru configfs would > drive all our kernel subsystems.Well, node manager still can provide you the input as to which nodes are configured, which in a way translates to "membership". The thing it doesn't seem to provide yet is the supsend/modify/resume cycle which for example the RHAT DLM seems to require. Sincerely, Lars Marowsky-Br?e <lmb@suse.de> -- High Availability & Clustering SUSE Labs, Research and Development SUSE LINUX Products GmbH - A Novell Business -- Charles Darwin "Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge"
Daniel Phillips
2005-Jul-22 15:54 UTC
[Linux-cluster] Re: [Ocfs2-devel] [RFC] nodemanager, ocfs2, dlm
On Thursday 21 July 2005 02:55, Walker, Bruce J (HP-Labs) wrote:> Like Lars, I too was under the wrong impression about this configfs > "nodemanager" kernel component. Our discussions in the cluster meeting > Monday and Tuesday were assuming it was a general service that other > kernel components could/would utilize and possibly also something that > could send uevents to non-kernel components wanting a std. way to see > membership information/events. > > As to kernel components without corresponding user-level "managers", look > no farther than OpenSSI. Our hope was that we could adapt to a user-land > membership service and this interface thru configfs would drive all our > kernel subsystems.Guys, it is absolutely stupid to rely on a virtual filesystem for userspace/kernel communication for any events that might have to be transmitted inside the block IO path. This includes, among other things, memberhips events. Inserting a virtual filesystem into this path does nothing but add long call chains and new, hard-to-characterize memory usage. There are already tried-and-true interfaces that are designed to do this kind of job efficiently and with quantifiable resource requirements: sockets (UNIX domain or netlink) and ioctls. If you want to layer a virtual filesystem on top as a user friendly way to present current cluster configuration or as a way to provide some administrator knobs, then fine, virtual filesystems are good for this kind of thing. But please do not try to insinuate that bloat into the block IO path. Regards, Daniel
Walker, Bruce J (HP-Labs)
2005-Jul-22 15:54 UTC
[Linux-cluster] Re: [Ocfs2-devel] [RFC] nodemanager, ocfs2, dlm
Like Lars, I too was under the wrong impression about this configfs "nodemanager" kernel component. Our discussions in the cluster meeting Monday and Tuesday were assuming it was a general service that other kernel components could/would utilize and possibly also something that could send uevents to non-kernel components wanting a std. way to see membership information/events. As to kernel components without corresponding user-level "managers", look no farther than OpenSSI. Our hope was that we could adapt to a user-land membership service and this interface thru configfs would drive all our kernel subsystems. Bruce Walker OpenSSI Cluster project -----Original Message----- From: linux-cluster-bounces@redhat.com [mailto:linux-cluster-bounces@redhat.com] On Behalf Of Lars Marowsky-Bree Sent: Wednesday, July 20, 2005 9:27 AM To: David Teigland Cc: linux-cluster@redhat.com; linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org; ocfs2-devel@oss.oracle.com Subject: [Linux-cluster] Re: [Ocfs2-devel] [RFC] nodemanager, ocfs2, dlm On 2005-07-20T11:35:46, David Teigland <teigland@redhat.com> wrote:> > Also, eventually we obviously need to have state for the nodes - > > up/down et cetera. I think the node manager also ought to track this. > We don't have a need for that information yet; I'm hoping we won't > ever need it in the kernel, but we'll see.Hm, I'm thinking a service might have a good reason to want to know the possible list of nodes as opposed to the currently active membership; though the DLM as the service in question right now does not appear to need such. But, see below.> There are at least two ways to handle this: > > 1. Pass cluster events and data into the kernel (this sounds like what > you're talking about above), notify the effected kernel components, > each kernel component takes the cluster data and does whatever it > needs to with it (internal adjustments, recovery, etc). > > 2. Each kernel component "foo-kernel" has an associated user space > component "foo-user". Cluster events (from userland clustering > infrastructure) are passed to foo-user -- not into the kernel. > foo-user determines what the specific consequences are for foo-kernel. > foo-user then manipulates foo-kernel accordingly, through user/kernel > hooks (sysfs, configfs, etc). These control hooks would largely be specific to foo. > > We're following option 2 with the dlm and gfs and have been for quite > a while, which means we don't need 1. I think ocfs2 is moving that > way, too. Someone could still try 1, of course, but it would be of no > use or interest to me. I'm not aware of any actual projects pushing > forward with something like 1, so the persistent reference to it is somewhat baffling.Right. I thought that the node manager changes for generalizing it where pushing into sort-of direction 1. Thanks for clearing this up. Sincerely, Lars Marowsky-Br?e <lmb@suse.de> -- High Availability & Clustering SUSE Labs, Research and Development SUSE LINUX Products GmbH - A Novell Business -- Charles Darwin "Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge" -- Linux-cluster mailing list Linux-cluster@redhat.com http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-cluster