On Nov 29, 2001 11:07 -0500, Christopher Friesen wrote:
> I'm working on an embedded platform and we seem to be having a problem with
> syslog and logging to NFS-mounted files.
>
> We have syslog logging to NFS and also logging to a server on another machine.
Why not just log to the syslog daemon on another machine. Logging to NFS
does not help you in this case.
> The desired behaviour is that if the NFS server or the net connection conks
> out, the logs are silently dropped. (Critical logs are also logged in memory
> that isn't wiped out on reboot.)
> The problem we are seeing is that if we lose the network connection or the
> NFS mount (which immediately causes an attempt to log the problem), it seems
> that syslog gets stuck in NFS code in the kernel and other stuff can be
> delayed for a substantial amount of time (many tens of seconds). Just for
> kicks we tried logging to ramdisk, and everything works beautifully.
Well, it seems obvious, doesn't it? If the network connection is lost, then
you can't very well write to the Network File System, can you? One of the
features of NFS is that if the network dies, or the server is lost, then
the client does not lose any data that was being written to the NFS mount.
> Now I'm a bit unclear as to why other processes are being delayed--does anyone
> have any ideas? My current theories are that either the nfs client code has a
> bug, or syslog() calls are somehow blocking if syslogd can't write the file
> out. I've just started looking at the syslog code, but its pretty rough going
> as there are very few comments.
This is entirely a syslog problem, if you want to do it that way. The NFS
code is working as expected, and will not be changed. You might have to
multi-thread syslog to get it to do what you want, but in the end you are
better off just using the network logging feature and write the logs at
the server directly.
Cheers, Andreas
-- Andreas Dilger http://sourceforge.net/projects/ext2resize/ http://www-mddsp.enel.ucalgary.ca/People/adilger/- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Fri Nov 30 2001 - 21:00:35 EST