[32892] in Kerberos

home help back first fref pref prev next nref lref last post

Re: Problems with kprop and incremental propagation

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Matej Zagiba)
Wed Nov 10 19:33:38 2010

Message-ID: <4CDB39D2.7010503@fmph.uniba.sk>
Date: Thu, 11 Nov 2010 01:33:22 +0100
From: Matej Zagiba <zagiba@fmph.uniba.sk>
MIME-Version: 1.0
To: "kerberos@mit.edu" <kerberos@mit.edu>
In-Reply-To: <27344639.1289429299836.JavaMail.root@safetgram>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Errors-To: kerberos-bounces@mit.edu

Thanks for reply,

  according to strace kprop is reading /etc/krb5.conf
setting default_realm as global parameter did not help.

The other two settings (iprop_master_ulogsize = 2048, iprop_slave_poll = 30) shoud not have negative impact,
according to documentation, default values are 1500 entries in log and 2 minutes poll intervall.

I commented out those settings, restarted but no change. kproplog on master returns cca 550 entries,
starting from 1, so it not the problem of too short logfile. What isstrange is this log sequence:

Nov 10 10:49:09 kdc1 kadmind[9394](Notice): Request: iprop_get_updates_1, UPDATE_OK; Incoming SerialNo=210; Outgoing SerialNo=212, success, client=kiprop/kdc2.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN,service=kiprop/kdc1.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN, addr=kdc2_ip
Nov 10 10:49:39 kdc1 kadmind[9394](Notice): Request: iprop_get_updates_1, UPDATE_FULL_RESYNC_NEEDED; Incoming SerialNo=0; Outgoing SerialNo=N/A, success, client=kiprop/kdc2.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN,service=kiprop/kdc1.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN, addr=kdc2_ip
Nov 10 10:49:39 kdc1 kadmind[9394](Notice): Request: iprop_full_resync_1, spawned resync process 15002, client=kiprop/kdc2.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN, service=kiprop/kdc1.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN, addr=kdc2_ip
Nov 10 10:50:45 kdc1 kadmind[9394](Notice): Request: iprop_get_updates_1, UPDATE_OK; Incoming SerialNo=213; Outgoing SerialNo=214, success, client=kiprop/kdc2.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN,service=kiprop/kdc1.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN, addr=kdc2_ip

In master's kadmin logs, there are UPDATE_OK entries folowed by full_resync. After full_resync, slave's kproplog lookslike this:

root@kdc2:~# kproplog

Kerberos update log (/var/lib/krb5kdc/principal.ulog)
Update log dump :
	Log version # : 1
	Log state : Stable
	Entry block size : 2048
	Number of entries : 0
	First serial # : None
	Last serial # : 548
	First time stamp : None
	Last time stamp : Thu Nov 11 01:00:40 2010


But after UPDATE_OK event,it change to this:
root@kdc2:~# kproplog

Kerberos update log (/var/lib/krb5kdc/principal.ulog)
Update log dump :
	Log version # : 1
	Log state : Stable
	Entry block size : 2048
	Number of entries : 0
	Last serial # : None
	Last time stamp : None


So it's no wonder, next try triggers full resync.
Any ideas?

  Matej



On 11/10/2010 11:48 PM, Jeremy Hunt wrote:
> Hi Matej,
>
> Try setting default_realm = KRB.MY.DOMAIN as a global parameter at the top of your krb5.conf file. That should fix problem one.
>
> Secondly, you only need iprop_enable and iprop_port to get the incremental propagation going.
>
> Your other two settings are nice to have tuning parameters. Until you get incremental proagation working you don't really know what they should be set to. I am guessing they are set too low and the propagation mechanism is spinning out trying to catch up.
>
> How incremental propagation works is that it compares the log files on all servers and propagates updates as it can while it can keep the two logs in a synchronised state. You appear to have your log size set too low and so I suspect you are truncating your driver file which sets the flag for full propagation. I am surprised you say that full propagation takes too long, but if so then it probably attempts a full propagation while it is busy. Because it is busy it fails the full propagation and throws away the replica's updates. Then it tries again next cycle. I bet it can do a full propagation in a quiet period.
>
> All of my iprop settings are in my kdc.conf file, but obviously your incremental propagation is attempting to work, so I learned something.
>
> Apart from that your configuration appears okay.
>
> After changing  your configuration files, restart all you kerberos daemons.
>
> If kprop is still not picking up your domain, run strace or truss on it and see if it is reading the correct file.
>
> I hope that helps,
>
> Jeremy
>
> On 10/11/2010 9:04 PM, Matej Zagiba wrote:
>> [safeTgram (safetgram-in) receive status: NOT encrypted, NOT signed.]
>>
>>
>> Hello,
>>
>>     I have two problems with kprop/kpropd. At out site we are using (tying to use) two KDCs both version are 1.8.3 (1.8.3-dfsg-2 from debian repositories). One of them is production server with over 85k proncipals, second shoud be slave server.
>> I followed install manualhttp://web.mit.edu/kerberos/krb5-1.8/krb5-1.8.3/doc/krb5-install.html#Install%20the%20Slave%20KDCs.
>> Exact configuration details areat the end of post.
>>
>>
>> First problem with kprop is, it=s not recognize defaut realm:
>>
>> root@kdc1:~# /usr/sbin/kprop -f /var/lib/krb5kdc/slave_datatrans kdc2.my.domain
>> /usr/sbin/kprop: Cannot resolve network address for KDC in requested realm while getting initial ticket
>>
>> if I force realm with -r option, everything goes as expected:
>>
>> root@kdc1:~# time /usr/sbin/kdb5_util dump /var/lib/krb5kdc/slave_datatrans
>> real  0m11.119s
>> user  0m10.685s
>> sys   0m0.404s
>> root@kdc1:~# /usr/sbin/kprop.orig -r KRB.MY.DOMAIN -f /var/lib/krb5kdc/slave_datatrans kdc2.my.domain
>> Database propagation to kdc2.my.domain: SUCCEEDED
>>
>> While in usual cron synchronization it is not a big deal, in incremental propagation it means that full resync never
>> succeed. I wrote a little wrapper aroun kprobe, so full resync now works, but I wonder, if there is anything wrong in my configuration, or if it is bug.
>>
>>
>> Second problem is that kpropd allways asks for full resync. In kadmin logs it looks like this:
>> === start of kpropd on slave ===
>> Nov 10 10:43:34 kdc1 kadmind[9394](Notice): Request: iprop_get_updates_1, UPDATE_BUSY; Incoming SerialNo=0; Outgoing SerialNo=N/A, success, client=kiprop/kdc2.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN,service=kiprop/kdc1.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN, addr=kdc2_ip
>> Nov 10 10:43:38 kdc1 kadmind[9394](Notice): Request: iprop_get_updates_1, UPDATE_BUSY; Incoming SerialNo=0; Outgoing SerialNo=N/A, success, client=kiprop/kdc2.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN,service=kiprop/kdc1.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN, addr=kdc2_ip
>> Nov 10 10:43:46 kdc1 kadmind[9394](Notice): Request: iprop_get_updates_1, UPDATE_FULL_RESYNC_NEEDED; Incoming SerialNo=0; Outgoing SerialNo=N/A, success, client=kiprop/kdc2.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN,service=kiprop/kdc1.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN, addr=kdc2_ip
>> Nov 10 10:43:46 kdc1 kadmind[9394](Notice): Request: iprop_full_resync_1, spawned resync process 14944, client=kiprop/kdc2.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN, service=kiprop/kdc1.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN, addr=kdc2_ip
>> Nov 10 10:44:51 kdc1 kadmind[9394](Notice): Request: iprop_get_updates_1, UPDATE_NIL; Incoming SerialNo=208; Outgoing SerialNo=N/A, success, client=kiprop/kdc2.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN,service=kiprop/kdc1.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN, addr=kdc2_ip
>> Nov 10 10:45:21 kdc1 kadmind[9394](Notice): Request: iprop_get_updates_1, UPDATE_OK; Incoming SerialNo=208; Outgoing SerialNo=209, success, client=kiprop/kdc2.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN,service=kiprop/kdc1.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN, addr=kdc2_ip
>> Nov 10 10:45:51 kdc1 kadmind[9394](Notice): Request: iprop_get_updates_1, UPDATE_FULL_RESYNC_NEEDED; Incoming SerialNo=0; Outgoing SerialNo=N/A, success, client=kiprop/kdc2.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN,service=kiprop/kdc1.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN, addr=kdc2_ip
>> Nov 10 10:45:51 kdc1 kadmind[9394](Notice): Request: iprop_full_resync_1, spawned resync process 14968, client=kiprop/kdc2.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN, service=kiprop/kdc1.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN, addr=kdc2_ip
>> Nov 10 10:46:57 kdc1 kadmind[9394](Notice): Request: iprop_get_updates_1, UPDATE_NIL; Incoming SerialNo=210; Outgoing SerialNo=N/A, success, client=kiprop/kdc2.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN,service=kiprop/kdc1.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN, addr=kdc2_ip
>> Nov 10 10:47:27 kdc1 kadmind[9394](Notice): Request: iprop_get_updates_1, UPDATE_NIL; Incoming SerialNo=210; Outgoing SerialNo=N/A, success, client=kiprop/kdc2.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN,service=kiprop/kdc1.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN, addr=kdc2_ip
>> Nov 10 10:47:57 kdc1 kadmind[9394](Notice): Request: iprop_get_updates_1, UPDATE_NIL; Incoming SerialNo=210; Outgoing SerialNo=N/A, success, client=kiprop/kdc2.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN,service=kiprop/kdc1.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN, addr=kdc2_ip
>> Nov 10 10:48:27 kdc1 kadmind[9394](Notice): Request: iprop_get_updates_1, UPDATE_NIL; Incoming SerialNo=210; Outgoing SerialNo=N/A, success, client=kiprop/kdc2.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN,service=kiprop/kdc1.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN, addr=kdc2_ip
>> Nov 10 10:48:57 kdc1 kadmind[9394](Notice): Request: iprop_get_updates_1, UPDATE_BUSY; Incoming SerialNo=210; Outgoing SerialNo=N/A, success, client=kiprop/kdc2.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN,service=kiprop/kdc1.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN, addr=kdc2_ip
>> Nov 10 10:49:01 kdc1 kadmind[9394](Notice): Request: iprop_get_updates_1, UPDATE_BUSY; Incoming SerialNo=210; Outgoing SerialNo=N/A, success, client=kiprop/kdc2.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN,service=kiprop/kdc1.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN, addr=kdc2_ip
>> Nov 10 10:49:09 kdc1 kadmind[9394](Notice): Request: iprop_get_updates_1, UPDATE_OK; Incoming SerialNo=210; Outgoing SerialNo=212, success, client=kiprop/kdc2.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN,service=kiprop/kdc1.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN, addr=kdc2_ip
>> Nov 10 10:49:39 kdc1 kadmind[9394](Notice): Request: iprop_get_updates_1, UPDATE_FULL_RESYNC_NEEDED; Incoming SerialNo=0; Outgoing SerialNo=N/A, success, client=kiprop/kdc2.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN,service=kiprop/kdc1.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN, addr=kdc2_ip
>> Nov 10 10:49:39 kdc1 kadmind[9394](Notice): Request: iprop_full_resync_1, spawned resync process 15002, client=kiprop/kdc2.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN, service=kiprop/kdc1.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN, addr=kdc2_ip
>> Nov 10 10:50:45 kdc1 kadmind[9394](Notice): Request: iprop_get_updates_1, UPDATE_OK; Incoming SerialNo=213; Outgoing SerialNo=214, success, client=kiprop/kdc2.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN,service=kiprop/kdc1.my.domain@KRB.MY.DOMAIN, addr=kdc2_ip
>>
>>
>> Please help me solve this problem, because this way incrementall propagation has no meaning, and conventional use of kprop take too long.
>>
>>     thanks
>>
>>       Matej Zagiba
>>
>>
>> configuration:
>> /etc/krb5.conf (both master and slave):
>>
>> [libdefaults]
>>        default_realm = KRB.MY.DOMAIN
>>        kdc_timesync = 1
>>        ccache_type = 4
>>        forwardable = true
>>        proxiable = true
>>
>>
>> [realms]
>>        KRB.MY.DOMAIN = {
>>                kdc = kdc1.my.domain
>>                kdc = kdc2.my.domain
>>                admin_server = kdc1.my.domain
>>                iprop_enable = true
>>                iprop_master_ulogsize = 2048
>>                iprop_slave_poll = 30
>>                iprop_port = 755
>>        }
>>
>> [domain_realm]
>>        .my.domain. = KRB.MY.DOMAIN
>>        my.domain. = KRB.MY.DOMAIN
>>
>> [logging]
>>        kdc = FILE:/var/log/kdc5.log
>>        admin_server = FILE:/var/log/kadm5.log
>>        default = FILE:/var/log/krb5.log
>> ________________________________________________
>> Kerberos mailing list           Kerberos@mit.edu
>> https://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/kerberos
>>
>
>
> --
>
> "The whole modern world has divided itself into Conservatives and Progressives. The business of Progressives is to go on making mistakes. The business of the Conservatives is to prevent the mistakes from being corrected." -- G. K. Chesterton
>
________________________________________________
Kerberos mailing list           Kerberos@mit.edu
https://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/kerberos

home help back first fref pref prev next nref lref last post