Manilla is one of the projects to provide “shared” access to file-systems.
I thought that at the moment, Manilla doesn’t support the GPFS protocol but is implemented on top of Ganesha so it provided as NFS access. So you wouldn’t get mmunlinkfileset. This sorta brings me back to one of the things I talked about at the GPFS UG, as in the GPFS security model is trusting, which in multi-tenant environments is a bad thing. I know I’ve spoken to a few people recently who’ve commented / agreed / had thoughts on it, so can I ask that if multi-tenancy security is something that you think is of concern with GPFS, can you drop me an email (directly is fine) which your use case and what sort of thing you’d like to see, then I’ll collate this and have a go at talking to IBM again about this. Thanks Simon From: <Wahl>, Edward <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> Reply-To: gpfsug main discussion list <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> Date: Monday, 15 June 2015 14:59 To: gpfsug main discussion list <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> Subject: Re: [gpfsug-discuss] OpenStack Manila Driver Perhaps I misunderstand here, but if the tenants have administrative (ie:root) privileges to the underlying file system management commands I think mmunlinkfileset might be a minor concern here. There are FAR more destructive things that could occur. I am not an OpenStack expert and I've not even looked at anything past Kilo, but my understanding was that these commands were not necessary for tenants. They access a virtual block device that backs to GPFS, correct? Ed Wahl OSC ________________________________ ++ From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> [[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>] on behalf of Luke Raimbach [[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>] Sent: Monday, June 15, 2015 4:35 AM To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> Subject: [gpfsug-discuss] OpenStack Manila Driver Dear All, We are looking forward to using the manila driver for auto-provisioning of file shares using GPFS. However, I have some concerns... Manila presumably gives tenant users access to file system commands like mmlinkfileset and mmunlinkfileset. Given that mmunlinkfileset quiesces the file system, there is potentially an impact from one tenant on another - i.e. someone unlinking and deleting a lot of filesets during a tenancy cleanup might cause a cluster pause long enough to trigger other failure events or even start evicting nodes. You can see why this would be bad in a cloud environment. Has this scenario been addressed at all? Cheers, Luke. Luke Raimbach Senior HPC Data and Storage Systems Engineer The Francis Crick Institute Gibbs Building 215 Euston Road London NW1 2BE E: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> W: www.crick.ac.uk<http://www.crick.ac.uk/> The Francis Crick Institute Limited is a registered charity in England and Wales no. 1140062 and a company registered in England and Wales no. 06885462, with its registered office at 215 Euston Road, London NW1 2BE.
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