Thursday 8 October 2015

Configure NFS Server in RHEL6

How to configure NFS Server on RHEL6

Our first task is to install the necessary RPM. Two RPM are required for NFS server
  • nfs-utils
  • rpcbind
  • nfs-utils
This is the main RPM which provide nfs service.
  • rpcbind
NFS depends on Remote Procedure Calls(RPC) service which is controlled by rpcbind service. In earlier version of RHEL portmap service was used to map RPC program numbers to IP address port number combinations. This service is now replaced by rpcbind to enable IPv6 support.

If you do not have above RPM installed, than first install them. You can use any method to install RPM.

"NFS file server" is the primary group associated with NFS. So if you have configured yum repository than following command will install the mandatory packages[nfs-utils and nfs4-acl-tools] from that group.

#yum groupinstall " NFS file server"


Or alternatively you can use

# yum install nfs* -y

If you do not have yum repository use RPM command to install these packages. Go in the folder which contain RPM (In installation disk of RHEL6, Package folder contains all RPM ) and run following command.

#rpm -ivh nfs* --nodeps --force

#rpm -ivh rpcbind* --nodeps --force




Our second task is to verify that the NFS services are installed. This can be done form following command.
#rpm –qa nfs-utils

Verify that rpcbind package is installed.
#rpm –qa rpcbind




For this article I assume that you have both packages installed.

Following services are associated with NFS daemons. Each service have its script file stored in init.d directory.
  • /etc/init.d/nfs Main control script for NFS Daemons which control NFS services.
  • /etc/init.d/nfslock Script for lock files and the statd daemon, which locks and provides status of files those are currently in use.
  • /etc/init.d/portreserve Replacement script for the portmap which used to set up ports for RPC services.
  • /etc/init.d/rpcbind RPC program number converter.
  • /etc/init.d/rpcgssd Script for RPC-related security services.
  • /etc/init.d/rpcidmapd Configuration script used for mapping of NFS user ID to LDAP and Kerberos systems.
  • /etc/init.d/rpcsvcgssd Control script for the server side of RPC-related general security services.

You can start each script directly by following command
#/etc/init.d/[script name]

For example to start nfs service
#/etc/init.d/nfs

Or you can use service command to start / stop /restart the service
#service nfs start
 
nfs and rpcbind are the compulsory services for nfs daemons.
Make sure nfs and rpcbind scripts are active before you configure NFS server.
Start the services



Make sure that services remain on after reboot



Check the status to services it must be running





How to configure NFS client on RHEL6

Check necessary RPM




Install if you are missing them

Start the necessary services and Verify the status of services it must be running




Make sure service remain on after reboot




Check connectivity form server



How to create NFS Share

So far we have setup NFS Server and NFS client with basic configurations. Now create a NFS Share on NFS Server and mount it from NFS Client.

On Server system make a directory /nfs_share and create a test file in it




On Server /etc/exportfs defines what resources will be available for clients. /etc/exports file use following syntax to share resources


[mountpoint] [host][permissions/options]


Remember there is no space between the [host] field and the [permissions/options] field. If you include a space, you receive a syntax error.


Common Mount Permission options
rw       read/write permissions
ro        read-only permissions
insecure Allows the use of ports over 1024
sync Specifies that all changes must be written to disk before a command completes
no_wdelay Forces the writing of changes immediately
root_squash Prevents root users

NFS Host Entries

/etc/exportfs supports conventional wildcards which provide flexibility when specifying hosts.
you can use the hostname for hosts within your domain.
you need fully qualified domain name for outside hosts.
you can reference all the hosts within a specific domain.
You can use the * for the host segment, followed by the domain name for the network, such as *.example.com for all the hosts in the example.com network.


Instead of host name, You can also use single host's ip address.
you can use IP network addresses with a CNDR format
You can also use an NIS netgroup name to reference a collection of hosts. The NIS netgroup name is preceded by an @ sign.

For example following are the valid example for hosts entries
#directory host(options)
/nfs_share *(rw,sync)
/nfs_share *.example.com(rw,sync)
/nfs_share 192.168.1.10(rw,sync)
/nfs_share 192.168.1.0/255.255.255.0(rw,sync)
/nfs_share 192.168.1.0/24(rw,sync)
/nfs_share @netgroup(rw,sync)


We will share it globally with read / write options. Open /etc/exports file




add following line and save the file




Restart the NFS service




Showmount

showmount command with -e option will display shared NFS directories locally and remotely. To review the export list for a NFS server, add the name / IP address of NFS server. If this command doesn't work, communication may be blocked with a firewall.

During the exam you may face two common errors as the output of showmount -e command


On NfS server
clnt_create: RPC: Program not registered

On NFS client
clnt_create: RPC: Port mapper failure - Unable to receive: errno 113 (No route to host)

On server this is generated due to order of services. In exam always start /restart rpcbind service before nfs.




On client this is generated due to firewall configured on NFS server. On linuxclient system use showmount to list all NFS Share



clnt_create: RPC: Port mapper failure - Unable to receive: errno 113 (No route to host)


showmount -e command returns above error on NFS client if firewall is not properly configured on NFS Server.


Configure IPTABLES rules for NFS Server.

During the RHCE6 exam you may have a iptable firewall enabled system. You should know how to allow nfs through firewall.
NFS port range

In order to allow NFS through iptable firewall we need to open following ports

TCP and UDP port 2049 for NFS.
TCP and UDP port 111 (rpcbind/sunrpc).
TCP and UDP port specified with MOUNTD_PORT="port"
TCP and UDP port specified with STATD_PORT="port"
TCP port specified with LOCKD_TCPPORT="port"
UDP port specified with LOCKD_UDPPORT="port"

NFS requires rpcbind, which dynamically assigns ports for RPC services at startup time. Dynamic ports could not be protected by iptables as these ports might change on reboot and make changes obsolete.

So you need to configure NFS services to use fixed ports.

Open /etc/sysconfig/nfs




Uncomment following directives to use default port, Or change them with desired TCP / UDP unused ports and save the file.

# TCP port rpc.lockd should listen on.
LOCKD_TCPPORT=[port-number]
# UDP port rpc.lockd should listen on. LOCKD_UDPPORT=[port-number]
# Port rpc.mountd should listen on. MOUNTD_PORT=[port-number]
# Port rquotad should listen on. RQUOTAD_PORT=[port-number]
# Port rpc.statd should listen on. STATD_PORT=[port-number]
# Outgoing port statd should used. The default is port is random STATD_OUTGOING_PORT=[port-number]


Here is the sample listing with default port number
LOCKD_TCPPORT=32803
LOCKD_UDPPORT=32769
MOUNTD_PORT=892
RQUOTAD_PORT=875
STATD_PORT=662
STATD_OUTGOING_PORT=2020



So far we have configured fix port for nfs server now let's configure firewall to allow nfs traffic.

Run setup command




Select firewall configuration



Select Customize [Make sure firewall option remain selected ]




Select NFS4




Select Forward and press enter




Select eth+ and press enter on close button




Select ok and press enter




Select Yes and press enter




Select Quit and press enter



Now open /etc/sysconfig/iptables file




Add following iptable rules


-A INPUT -m state --state NEW -m udp -p udp --dport 111 -j ACCEPT

-A INPUT -m state --state NEW -m tcp -p tcp --dport 111 -j ACCEPT

-A INPUT -m state --state NEW -m tcp -p tcp --dport 32803 -j ACCEPT

-A INPUT -m state --state NEW -m udp -p udp --dport 32769 -j ACCEPT

-A INPUT -m state --state NEW -m tcp -p tcp --dport 892 -j ACCEPT

-A INPUT -m state --state NEW -m udp -p udp --dport 892 -j ACCEPT

-A INPUT -m state --state NEW -m tcp -p tcp --dport 875 -j ACCEPT

-A INPUT -m state --state NEW -m udp -p udp --dport 875 -j ACCEPT

-A INPUT -m state --state NEW -m tcp -p tcp --dport 662 -j ACCEPT

-A INPUT -m state --state NEW -m udp -p udp --dport 662 -j ACCEPT





under the rule for port 2049 and save file



NFS and SELinux

SELinux is the integral part of RHEL6 and directories shared via NFS would not work without proper changes to SELinux.

Important SELinux Booleans for NFS
nfs_export_all_ro Allows NFS to share files and directories as read-only
nfs_export_all_rw Allows NFS to share files and directories as read/write
httpd_use_nfs Allows httpd to access NFS file systems
use_nfs_home_dirs Supports NFS home directories
samba_share_nfs Allows Samba to export NFS volumes
allow_nfsd_anon_write Allows NFS servers to modify public files
allow_ftpd_usr_nfs Allows FTP servers to use NFS for public file transfer services

During the exam Make sure the SELinux booleans are compatible, specifically nfs_export_all_ro and nfs_export_all_rw are set to on

If nfs_export_all_ro and nfs_export_all_rw Booleans are set to off change the value



Verify that the Booleans have been changed:



Restart the iptables , rpcbind, and nfs service



Now try again to run showmount -e command on NFS client



Create a /nfs_tmp directory to mount NFS share locally



Mount /nfs_share to local /nfs_tmp directory


Perform read and write operations, You can read but write will be denied.




We shared with write permission still we are getting permission denied message because default Linux file permission always over ride NFS share permission. To fix it

On Server system change file permission



On client try again to write this time it will be permitted



Now we have full file permission on nfs_share directory open /etc/exportfs file



Change rw [Read, Write] share option to ro[Read only] and save the file




Restart the nfs service

Or use the exportfs command to manually export any new resources added to the /etc/exports file.

-a Exports directories
-r Reexports directories
-u Unexports directories
-v Show verbose output


In real world I would recommended to use exportfs to manually export the directories rather than restart the service because while you restart the nfs service, you also disconnect your nfs clients as well.




On client remount the nfs_share




Try to perform write operation, This time you will get NFS share error message.




NFS Tools

During the exam following commands could be helpful for troubleshooting
mountstats Shows information about mounted NFS shares
nfsstat Shows statistics of exported resources
nfsiostat Shows statistics of NFS mounted shares.

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