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Date:      Mon, 17 Dec 2001 20:45:05 +0000
From:      Ian Dowse <iedowse@maths.tcd.ie>
To:        "Marius M. Rex" <marius@malkav.snowmoon.com>
Cc:        questions@FreeBSD.org, stable@FreeBSD.org
Subject:   Re: on/off NFS connection errors 
Message-ID:   <200112172045.aa49374@salmon.maths.tcd.ie>
In-Reply-To: Your message of "Mon, 17 Dec 2001 13:59:23 EST." <20011217120545.D48149-100000@malkav.snowmoon.com> 

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In message <20011217120545.D48149-100000@malkav.snowmoon.com>, "Marius M. Rex" 
writes:
>
>><118>Dec 15 22:40:19 cc117 /kernel: nfs server netapp1:/vol/members: not
>>responding
>><118>Dec 15 22:40:19 cc117 /kernel: nfs server netapp1:/vol/members: is
>>alive again
...
>Has anyone else seen these kinds of persistent NFS errors is the 4.x
>branch?

These are a side-effect of the operation of the NFS dynamic retransmit
timeout code. The NFS client measures the request response time for
various types of operations and it sets a timeout based on the mean
and deviation of observed times.

The time taken by the server to perform some operations can vary
wildly though, so occasionally when a large number of operations
complete with very little delay, the response time estimate and
hence the timeout become very small. Then when one request is
unusually slow to complete (such as when the disk on the server is
busy), the client thinks that the server isn't responding and prints
those warnings. A fraction of a second later the request completes
and the client prints a an 'is alive again' message.

On non-soft mounts these messages are completely harmless because
the client will just wait for the server to eventually reply. On
soft mounts, the effect can cause problems because applications
occasionally see an EINTR error.

The dynamic retransmit timeout code can be disabled with the `-d'
flag to mount_nfs; this is often recommended for fast networks that
see very little packet loss.

Ian

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