dhcp support NSS file system?
kalyanasundaram S
s.kalyanasundaram at inbox.com
Thu Aug 2 13:50:49 UTC 2007
>
> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
> Hash: SHA1
>
> Just to be sure, you mean Novell Storage Services, right?
>
> kalyanasundaram S wrote:
>> It logs the message but nothing much. The initial log messages are,
>
>> Aug 2 15:59:19 test-54 dhcpd: Can't backup lease database
>> /media/nss/LOCALVOL/var/lib/dhcp/db/dhcpd.leases to
>> /media/nss/LOCALVOL/var/lib/dhcp/db/dhcpd.leases~: Invalid argument
>
> This is coming from the following code in db.c:
>
> -
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
> if (link (path_dhcpd_db, backfname) < 0) {
> log_error ("Can't backup lease database %s to %s: %m",
> path_dhcpd_db, backfname);
> goto fail;
> }
> -
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> So, either:
>
> 1. backfname is not valid for NSS, or
> 2. hard links are not working on NSS.
>
> I think it is probably the second, because the backup filename is just
> the
> normal file name with a tilde, '~', added to it.
>
> This page has a lot to say about hard links on NSS:
>
> http://tinyurl.com/2sesr3
>
> You have to do stuff with Linux users, you have to enable hard links on
> the
> system, and so on.
>
>> Aug 2 15:59:27 test-54 dhcpd: Can't create new lease file: Permission
>> denied
>
> This is coming from the following code in db.c:
>
> -
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
> if (snprintf (newfname, sizeof newfname, "%s.%d",
> path_dhcpd_db, (int)t) >= sizeof newfname)
> log_fatal("new_lease_file: lease file path too long");
>
> db_fd = open (newfname, O_WRONLY | O_TRUNC | O_CREAT, 0664);
> if (db_fd < 0) {
> log_error ("Can't create new lease file: %m");
> return 0;
> }
> -
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> The server is creating a temporary file to put leases in - that is the
> file name
> with the ".##########" at the end. (It's not random, it is the number of
> seconds
> since 1970.)
>
> I don't know how the permission structure works on NSS, so it is hard to
> diagnose. However "Permission denied" is a pretty good hint. ;) Check the
> user
> that named is running as, and the permissions on the directory.
>
> But I don't understand why the files are created and then you get the
> error. :(
> If the command fails, the file should not be there!
>
Shane! thanks a lot for your help. You saved my time. I had even played around with the rights. I had assigend even supervisor rights to those directories. I think i am missing something more on NSS. Let me explore it. Thanks a lot for your help.
-"kalyan"
More information about the dhcp-users
mailing list