RPC.STATD(8) | MidnightBSD System Manager's Manual | RPC.STATD(8) |
rpc.statd
— host
status monitoring daemon
rpc.statd |
[-d ] [-F ]
[-h bindip]
[-p port] |
The rpc.statd
utility is a daemon which
co-operates with rpc.statd
daemons on other hosts to
provide a status monitoring service. The daemon accepts requests from
programs running on the local host (typically,
rpc.lockd(8), the NFS
file locking daemon) to monitor the status of specified hosts. If a
monitored host crashes and restarts, the remote daemon will notify the local
daemon, which in turn will notify the local program(s) which requested the
monitoring service. Conversely, if this host crashes and re-starts, when the
rpc.statd
re-starts, it will notify all of the hosts
which were being monitored at the time of the crash.
The following option is available:
-d
-F
rpc.statd
in the foreground, rather than going
into daemon mode. This is useful if some other process uses
fork(2) and
exec(3) to run
rpc.statd
, and wants to monitor when and how it
exits.-h
bindip-h
option is specified,
rpc.statd
will bind to
INADDR_ANY
. Note that when specifying IP addresses
with -h
, rpc.statd
will
automatically add 127.0.0.1
and if IPv6 is
enabled, ::1
to the list.-p
-p
option allow to force the daemon to bind to
the specified port, for both AF_INET and AF_INET6
address families.The rpc.statd
utility must NOT be invoked
by inetd(8) because the
protocol assumes that the daemon will run from system start time. Instead,
it should be run from rc(8)
after the network has been started.
The implementation is based on the specification in X/Open CAE Specification C218, "Protocols for X/Open PC Interworking: XNFS, Issue 4", ISBN 1 872630 66 9
There is no means for the daemon to tell when a monitored host has disappeared permanently (e.g. catastrophic hardware failure), as opposed to transient failure of the host or an intermediate router. At present, it will re-try notification attempts at frequent intervals for 10 minutes, then hourly, and finally gives up after 24 hours.
The protocol requires that symmetric monitor requests are made to both the local and remote daemon in order to establish a monitored relationship. This is convenient for the NFS locking protocol, but probably reduces the usefulness of the monitoring system for other applications.
The current implementation uses more than 1Kbyte per monitored host in the status file (and also in VM). This may be inefficient for NFS servers with large numbers of clients.
November 21, 2019 | midnightbsd-3.1 |