NAME
rpc.statd
—
host status monitoring
daemon
SYNOPSIS
rpc.statd |
[-d ] |
rpc.statd |
[-d ] -n |
rpc.statd |
[-d ] [-l |
-L | -N
hostname] |
DESCRIPTION
The rpc.statd
utility is a daemon which
cooperates 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
restarts, the statd.notify
service will be started
to notify all of the hosts which were being monitored at the time of the
crash.
The rpc.statd
utility consists of two
launchd(8)-controlled services. The
statd.notify
service is run whenever the system
needs to notify remote hosts of a restart. The statd
service is controlled by
rpc.lockd(8) so that the rpc.statd
daemon is
running whenever rpc.lockd(8) is running.
The following is a list of command line options that are
available. Note that since rpc.statd
is normally
started by launchd(8), configuration of these options should be controlled using
the equivalent settings in the NFS configuration file. See
nfs.conf(5) for a list of tunable parameters.
-d
- Sets the logging level to the maximum. Note that finer grain control is
available via the
nfs.statd.verbose
option in nfs.conf(5).Logging is performed via syslog(3) using the LOG_DAEMON facility. By default, only messages up to priority LOG_WARNING are logged. Setting the verbose level to one will add LOG_NOTICE messages which includes logging failed mount attempts. A verbose level of two will increase the log level to LOG_INFO which includes logging successful mount attempts. A log level of three or more will add LOG_DEBUG messages and cause increasing amounts of debug information to be logged. The debug information exposes lots of information about
rpc.statd
's inner workings which is typically only useful to developers. Note: the syslog(8) configuration may need to be adjusted in order to see the increased verbosity.
The following command line option causes the daemon to run in the
statd.notify
notification service mode:
-n
- Send SM_NOTIFY messages to notify any hosts of a restart.
The remaining command line options may be useful for viewing or modifying the contents of the status file. They do not start up any daemon or service.
-l
- List each host (and its status) in the status file.
-L
- List each host (and its status) in the status file and then continue to watch the file and report changes.
-N
- Clear the "needs notification" status for
hostname so the
statd.notify
service will no longer try to notify it.
FILES
- /var/db/statd.status
- non-volatile record of monitored hosts.
- /var/run/statd.pid
- The pid of the current
statd
daemon. - /var/run/statd.notify.pid
- The pid of the current
statd.notify
daemon. - /System/Library/LaunchDaemons/com.apple.statd.notify.plist
- The
statd.notify
service's property list file for launchd(8). - /usr/include/rpcsvc/sm_inter.x
- RPC protocol specification used by local applications to register monitoring requests.
SEE ALSO
BUGS
There is no means for the daemon to tell when a monitored host has
disappeared permanently (eg. catastrophic hardware failure), as opposed to
transient failure of the host or an intermediate router. At present, it will
pause and re-try notification at frequent intervals for 10 minutes, then
hourly, and finally gives up after 24 hours. The -N
option may be used to remove the "needs notification" status from
such hosts.
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.
STANDARDS
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