On Mon, Oct 27, 2014 at 5:46 PM, walt <w41...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On 10/27/2014 12:56 PM, Canek Peláez Valdés wrote:
>> On Mon, Oct 27, 2014 at 1:38 PM, walt <w41...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> Last night when I powered off my machines NFS was working perfectly.  Today
>>> it's broken again for the nth time:
>>>
>>> #systemctl status nfs-server
>>> ● nfs-server.service - NFS server and services
>>>    Loaded: loaded (/usr/lib64/systemd/system/nfs-server.service; enabled)
>>>    Active: failed (Result: exit-code) since Mon 2014-10-27 11:50:38 PDT; 
>>> 25min ago
>>>   Process: 896 ExecStopPost=/usr/sbin/exportfs -f (code=exited, 
>>> status=0/SUCCESS)
>>>   Process: 893 ExecStopPost=/usr/sbin/exportfs -au (code=exited, 
>>> status=0/SUCCESS)
>>>   Process: 939 ExecStart=/usr/sbin/rpc.nfsd $RPCNFSDARGS (code=exited, 
>>> status=1/FAILURE)
>
>> I think I know the answer. Some days ago you moved /etc/conf.d for
>> NetworkManager to work, right? Where does the environment variable
>> RPCNFSDARGS is defined? I'm willing to bet that is in a /etc/conf.d
>> file.
>>
>> Could you please post here the contents of nfs-server.service, and if
>> it exists, the files inside /etc/systemd/system/nfs-server.service.d
>> and their contents?
>
> Bingo again :)  Your question led me to the answer, which I think is a bug
> in /usr/lib64/systemd/system/nfs-server.service.
>
> Here's why the bug showed up just this morning:  way back at the beginning
> of systemd I stole some .service files from RedHat Fedora, including one
> named 'nfs.service'.

Gentoo nfs-utils package still doesn't include a systemd unit file,
really? With a perfunctory look at
/usr/portage/net-fs/nfs-utils/files, I see several *.service files. I
highly recommend using the unit files provided by the Gentoo devs.

> Turns out the foreign RedHat file was starting rpcbind for me all those
> months and, when I deleted it last night, rpcbind didn't get started this
> morning by nfs-server.service from gentoo (which I think is a bug).
>
> #cat nfs-server.service
> [Unit]
> Description=NFS server and services
> Requires= network.target proc-fs-nfsd.mount rpcbind.target
> Requires= nfs-mountd.service
> Wants=rpc-statd.service nfs-idmapd.service rpc-gssd.service 
> rpc-svcgssd.service
> Wants=rpc-statd-notify.service
>
> After= network.target proc-fs-nfsd.mount rpcbind.target nfs-mountd.service
> After= nfs-idmapd.service rpc-statd.service
> After= rpc-gssd.service rpc-svcgssd.service
> Before= rpc-statd-notify.service
>
> [Service]
> EnvironmentFile=/etc/conf.d/nfs
>
> Type=oneshot
> RemainAfterExit=yes
> ExecStartPre=/usr/sbin/exportfs -r
> ExecStart=/usr/sbin/rpc.nfsd $RPCNFSDARGS
> ExecStop=/usr/sbin/rpc.nfsd 0
> ExecStopPost=/usr/sbin/exportfs -au
> ExecStopPost=/usr/sbin/exportfs -f
>
> ExecReload=/usr/sbin/exportfs -r
>
> [Install]
> WantedBy=multi-user.target
>
>
> I can see that rpcbind.target is Required, but NOT rpcbind.service. AFAICT
> rpc.target does nothing (please explain if I'm wrong about that).

I have no idea; I haven't set an NFS server in years. However, most
target units usually are kinda "virtuals"; the bring other units up.

> BTW, /etc/conf.d/nfs doesn't define RPCNFSDARGS because it is intended
> for use by openrc (another bug?):

Something should define RPCNFSDARGS; perhaps a drop-in?

> #cat /etc/conf.d/nfs
> # /etc/conf.d/nfs
>
> # If you wish to set the port numbers for lockd,
> # please see /etc/sysctl.conf
>
> # Optional services to include in default `/etc/init.d/nfs start`
> # For NFSv4 users, you'll want to add "rpc.idmapd" here.
> NFS_NEEDED_SERVICES="rpc.idmapd"
>
> # Number of servers to be started up by default
> OPTS_RPC_NFSD="8"
>
> # Options to pass to rpc.mountd
> # ex. OPTS_RPC_MOUNTD="-p 32767"
> OPTS_RPC_MOUNTD=""
>
> # Options to pass to rpc.statd
> # ex. OPTS_RPC_STATD="-p 32765 -o 32766"
> OPTS_RPC_STATD=""
>
> # Options to pass to rpc.idmapd
> OPTS_RPC_IDMAPD=""
>
> # Options to pass to rpc.gssd
> OPTS_RPC_GSSD=""
>
> # Options to pass to rpc.svcgssd
> OPTS_RPC_SVCGSSD=""
>
> # Options to pass to rpc.rquotad (requires sys-fs/quota)
> OPTS_RPC_RQUOTAD=""
>
> # Timeout (in seconds) for exportfs
> EXPORTFS_TIMEOUT=30
>
> # Options to set in the nfsd filesystem (/proc/fs/nfsd/).
> # Format is <option>=<value>.  Multiple options are allowed.
> #OPTS_NFSD="nfsv4leasetime=30 max_block_size=4096"
>
>
> Thanks Canek!

Walt, from time to time run "systemd-delta" and see what
configurations of yours differ from upstream (either systemd and/or
Gentoo). I think you should be using nfs-utils' included unit files.

Regards.
-- 
Canek Peláez Valdés
Profesor de asignatura, Facultad de Ciencias
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México

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