Sds-hd nfs: Difference between revisions

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To enable the mounting after a restart, you have to add the following line to the file "/etc/fstab"
To enable the mounting after a restart, you have to add the following line to the file "/etc/fstab"
<pre>
<pre>
lsdf02.urz.uni-heidelberg.de:/gpfs/lsdf02/ <mountpoint> nfs4 sec=krb5 0 0
lsdf02.urz.uni-heidelberg.de:/gpfs/lsdf02/ <mountpoint> nfs4 sec=krb5,vers=4.0 0 0
</pre>
</pre>



Revision as of 11:40, 21 April 2020

Prerequisites

  • Attention: To access data served by SDS@hd, You need a Service Password. See details Sds-hd_user_access.
  • Additionally the access to SDS@hd is currently only available inside the belwue-Network. This means you have to use the VPN Service of your HomeOrganization, if you want to access SDS@hd from outside the bwHPC-Clusters (e.g. via edoroam or from your personal Laptop)
  • The access via nfs protocol is machine-based, which means new nfs-Clients have to be registered on SDS@hd. During this registration each machine gets a keytab file, which allows mounting SDS@hd.
  • Currently you have to send an email for Clientregistration to SDS@hd Team with the following information:
    • hostname of the new nfs-Client
    • IP address
    • short description
    • location
    • acronym of the Speichervorhabens which should be available on this machine
  • For Kerberos authentication to work, a correctly synchronized system time must be set on each nfs client (e.g. via ntpdate ntp01.urz.uni-heidelberg.de or chrony)

Using NFSv4 for UNIX client

The authentication for data access via NFSv4 is performed using Kerberostickets. This requires a functioning Kerberos environment on the client!

The following parameters of kerberos tickets are set on server side:

  • max. Lifetime of a Serviceticket: 10 hours
  • max. Lifetime of a Userticket: 24 hours
  • max. Renewaltime for Usertickets: 10 days

The properties (e.g. lifetimes, encryption, ...) of the kerberos tickets can be changed on client site with different kinit parameters (see manpages of kinit) or via /etc/krb5.conf.

mount a nfs share

The usual restrictions for mounting drives under Linux apply. Usually this can only be done by the superuser "root". For detailed information, please contact the system administrator of your system.

After successfull configuration (s. Prequisites) you can mount your SDS@hd share with the following commands:

> mkdir <mountpoint>
> mount -t nfs4 -o sec=krb5 lsdf02.urz.uni-heidelberg.de:/gpfs/lsdf02/ <mountpoint>

To enable the mounting after a restart, you have to add the following line to the file "/etc/fstab"

   lsdf02.urz.uni-heidelberg.de:/gpfs/lsdf02/   <mountpoint>   nfs4     sec=krb5,vers=4.0     0 0

access your data

Attention! The access can not be done as root user, because root uses the Kerberosticket of the machine, which does not have data access!

To access your data on SDS@hd you have to fetch a valid kerberos ticket with your SDS@hd user and Servicepassword:

> kinit hd_xy123
Password for hd_xy123@BWSERVICES.UNI-HEIDELBERG.DE: 

You can check afterwards your kerberos ticket with:

> klist
Ticket cache: FILE:/tmp/krb5cc_1000
Default principal: hd_xy123@BWSERVICES.UNI-HEIDELBERG.DE

Valid starting       Expires              Service principal
20.09.2017 04:00:01  21.09.2017 04:00:01  krbtgt/BWSERVICES.UNI-HEIDELBERG.DE@BWSERVICES.UNI-HEIDELBERG.DE
        renew until 29.09.2017 13:38:49

Afterwards you should be able to access the mountpoint, which contain all Speichervorhaben exported to your machine:

> ls <mountpoint>
sd16j007  sd17c010  sd17d005

renew a kerberos ticket

Because a kerberos ticket has a limited lifetime (default: 10 hours, maximum 24 hours) for security reasons, you have to renew your ticket before it expires to prevent access loss.

> kinit -R

This renewal could only be done for maximum time of 10 Days and as long as the current kerberos ticket is still valid. For renewal of an expired ticket, you have to use again your Servicepassword.

destroy kerberos ticket

Even if kerberos tickets are only valid for a limited period of time, a ticket should be destroyed as soon as access is no longer needed to prevent misuse on multi-user systems:

kdestroy

automated kerberos tickets

Attention! Keep this generated Keytab safe and use it only in trusted environments!

If your workflow needs a permanent access to SDS@hd for longer than 10 Days, you can use ktutil to encrypt your Service Password into a keytab file:

interactive way:

ktutil
ktutil: addent -password -p hd_xy123@BWSERVICES.UNI-HEIDELBERG.DE -k 1 -e rc4-hmac
    Password for hd_xy123@BWSERVICES.UNI-HEIDELBERG.DE:
ktutil:  addent -password -p hd_xy123@BWSERVICES.UNI-HEIDELBERG.DE -k 1 -e aes256-cts
    Password for hd_xy123@BWSERVICES.UNI-HEIDELBERG.DE:
ktutil:  wkt xy123.keytab
ktuitl: quit

non-interactive way:

echo -e "addent -password -p hd_xy123@BWSERVICES.UNI-HEIDELBERG.DE -k 1 -e rc4-hmac\n<your_servicepasword>\n
addent -password -p hd_xy123@BWSERVICES.UNI-HEIDELBERG.DE -k 1 -e aes256-cts\n<your_servicepasword>\nwkt xy123.keytab" | ktutil

With this keytab, you can fetch a kerberos ticket without an interactive password:

kinit -k -t xy123.keytab hd_xy123