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Keeps NFS mounts active. Also enables cross-mounts between servers. NFSv4 compatible.

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nfs_automount

Version 1.1.1 (2022-02-14)

Edits/changes for 1.1.1

  • Version 1.1 and below used an RPC check via the showmount command to check available remote host mountpoints, which works great with NFSv2 and NFSv3. This does NOT work with NFSv4 (see this article), so if an RPC error is detected, it now presumes that NFSv4 is being used and attempts the mount anyway if the server exists. If mounting does not occur (e.g. "backgrounding" due to a misconfiguration) it immediately unmounts the mountpoint instead of leaving it in the "backgrounded" state. No configuration changes are needed.

The goal of this script is to provide static (i.e. /etc/fstab-like) NFS mounts, while at the same time supporting cross-mounts between servers.

The other non-fstab alternative is to lazy-mount NFS shares with autofs (where available), but with it NFS shares are not continually maintained. When a remote share is accessed, it takes a few moments for it to become accessible as autofs mounts the share on-demand. While autofs times out a mounted share after some time of inactivity, it does not unmount the share before the timeout has lapsed in the event the remote server becomes inaccessible. While on-demand mounting may save some bandwidth, it is not suitable for all applications. Furthermore, when a system has one or more active mounted shares off of a server that goes offline, unexpected behavior is often observed on the client server until the now-defunct NFS shares are unmounted, or the remote server becomes available once again.

nfs_automount offers a solution:

  • The NFS shares are not statically defined in /etc/fstab so that the system startup is not delayed even when the remote server is not available. As soon as the shares become available they're automatically mounted. If multiple servers cross-mount NFS shares from each other, and the servers are turned on at the same time, nfs_automount ensures that all mounts are established as soon as the shares become available.

  • The shares are monitored at a frequency you define, for example, every 60 seconds. If a share has become dismounted, stale, or their exporting server has become inaccessible, nfs_automount takes action to correct the situation: dismounted and stale shares are attempted to be remounted (stale shares are first immediately unmounted), and shares whose remote NFS service has disappeared are unmounted to prevent impact on the client system stability. Once a remote NFS service returns online, or definition of a previously stale share is reinstated, any shares that were unmounted as a result of those conditions are remounted.

  • The script is intended to run as a daemon (an upstart job script is provided for Ubuntu), and it reads its configuration from /etc/nfs-automount.conf where you can conveniently define the shares to be mounted and monitored along with some other options. You can also set 'RUNTYPE' option to 'cron', and run the script from crontab if you so choose.

  • You can define the shares to be mounted either as Read/Write, or Read Only. Of course, a share will be Read Only regardless of this setting if it has been exported as Read Only on the remote server.

  • An option to define a remote check file is provided. If provided in the configuration for a share, its unreachability can alert of a problem on the exporting server, such as a failed filesystem mount, even when the NFS share is otherwise working correctly. You can easily expand this feature to add additional functionality.

  • Provides clear logging which provides alerts by default, and more informative detail if you turn 'DEBUGLOG' setting to 'true'.

  • Written in bash script with modular and clear syntax.

  • Tested on Ubuntu 12.x (also tested on Debian Bullseye as a cronjob) and CentOS 6.x (should also work on RedHat).

  • Distributed under MIT license.

This complete rewrite of nfs_automount is based on older versions I wrote (July 2010, May 2011, and December 2011). When I started making further changes to the script in July 2013 I was unhappy with the original script's deeply nested structure which made it problmatic to extend it as I wanted. I also came across AutoNFS script on Ubuntu's Community Wiki which gave me further ideas and inspiration.

Please let me know if you come across any problems! Pull requests are welcome.

Installation

** NOTE: The service installation instructions have been written for Ubuntu, so if you're installing the script for CentOS/RedHat, you will need to alter the installation steps somewhat.

** NOTE: The provided configuration file and the provided upstart job file are both named nfs_automount.conf; they are provided in separate directories mirroring the actual locations in the cloned folder, i.e. [cloned folder]/etc/init/nfs_automount.conf and [cloned folder]/etc/nfs_automount.conf.

Clone nfs_automount to the location of your choice (here '/opt/nfs_automount'), assign the ownership of the file nfs_automount to the root, and set its permissions to 700. Finally, either symlink the file from /usr/local/bin, or simply copy it there.

sudo su
cd /opt
git clone https://github.com/vwal/nfs_automount.git
cd nfs_automount
chmod 700 nfs_automount
chown root:root nfs_automount

ln -s /opt/nfs_automount/nfs_automount /usr/local/bin/nfs_automount
 -or-
cp /opt/nfs_automount/nfs_automount /usr/local/bin/nfs_automount

Save the configuration file ./etc/nfs_automount.conf to the /etc folder, assign its ownership to the root, and set its permissions to 640.

sudo su
cd /etc
cp /opt/nfs_automount/etc/nfs_automount.conf .
chmod 640 nfs_automount.conf
chown root:root nfs_automount.conf

Modify the configuration in nfs_automount.conf. Specifically you want to replace the example "MOUNTS" entries with those of your own. You may also want to adjust the INTERVAL which determines the frequency the NFS the defined NFS shares are checked.

At this point you can test the script by running it at the console. Setting 'RUNTYPE' to 'cron' will result in the script running once and then terminating, while 'service' setting runs continuously, checking the shares every X seconds (as defined by the 'INTERVAL' option). Extended logging is enabled by default in the nfs_automount.conf, so you will full details on screen while the script is running in the console.

Next, in order to install the script as a daemon, give the upstart job file ./etc/init/nfs_automount the proper permissions, assign the ownership to the root, and copy it from the cloned directory to /etc/init. Finally add a reference link in /etc/init.d so that the service can be controlled like a normal service:

sudo su
cd /opt/nfs_automount/etc/init
chown root:root nfs_automount.conf
cp nfs_automount.conf /etc/init
cd /etc/init.d
ln -s /lib/init/upstart-job nfs_automount

Start the service with start nfs_automount. Note that the log will be written to /var/log/upstart/nfs_automount.log unless you have changed 'LOGTYPE' from 'echo' to 'log' (in which case log is written to the location of your choice, by default /var/log/nfs_automount.log).

Also note that whenever you modify the configuration file at /etc/nfs_automount.conf, you'll need to issue service nfs_automount restart in order for the changes to become effective.

Version History

2013-07-26 - version 1.1, bumped the version number to indicate numerous minor improvements, semantic changes, and a few bug fixes

2013-07-18 - version 1.0, initial code commit

License

Copyright (c) 2013 Ville Walveranta

http://my.galagzee.com

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

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Keeps NFS mounts active. Also enables cross-mounts between servers. NFSv4 compatible.

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