Reputation: 19027
I've recently created a dropbox system using inotify, watching for files created in a particular directory. The directory I'm watching is mounted from an NFS server, and inotify is behaving differently than I'd expect. Consider the following scenario in which an inotify script is run on machine A, watching /some/nfs/dir/also/visible/to/B.
-Using machine A to create a file in /some/nfs/dir/also/visible/to/B, the script behaves as expected. Using machine B to carry out the same action, the script is not notified about a new file dropped in the directory.
-When the script is run on the NFS server, it gets notified when files are created from both machine A and machine B.
Is this a bug in the bug in the package I'm using to access inotofy, or is this expected behaviour?
Upvotes: 70
Views: 71027
Reputation: 10057
The question is old, but continues to be at the top of search results and deserves a more correct answer.
From the inotify docs:
Inotify monitoring is inode-based: when monitoring a file (but not when monitoring the directory containing a file), an event can be generated for activity on any link to the file (in the same or a different directory).
"Inotify monitoring is inode-based" means inotify is only capable of monitoring file system changes coming from the same machine as the process that is watching the files for changes.
So if you have Machine A and Machine B and B makes a change, only processes watching changes on B can see the change. If a process on A is watching the files, it will not see any changes that B makes.
This is a fundamental limitation of how inotify works: it's watching each mounted filesystem's inode table for calls coming into the kernel wishing to operate on those inodes. It's not a historical artifact as implied by @SingleNegationElimination in his answer, not is it something that "can be fixed" given enough time, as implied by @JamesBlackburn's comment.
The FAM route suggested by @cmchao seems interesting, but the link is broken to the original FAM website. There is this page I found, but it still seems like libfam is very old and unmaintained. I wouldn't feel comfortable using it at this point.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 27
improved the script with action on click and icon
#!/bin/bash
DAT=$(date +%Y%m%d)
CAM="cam1 "
CHEMIN=/mnt/cams/cam1/$DAT/
first="$CHEMIN"
if [ -d "$CHEMIN" ];then
first=`ls -1rt $CHEMIN | tail -n 1`
fi
echo $first
while true
do
if [ -d "$CHEMIN" ];then
last=`ls -1rt $CHEMIN | tail -n 1`
if [ $first != $last ]
then
first=$last
echo $last created
#notify-send -h string:desktop-entry:nautilus -c "transfer.complete" -u critical -i $PWD../QtVsPlayer.png $CAM $last"\n\r"$CHEMIN
reply=$(dunstify -a QtVsPlayer -A 'open,ouvrir' -i "QtVsPlayer" "$CAM $last"\n\r"$CHEMIN")
if [[ "$reply" == "open" ]]; then
QtVsPlayer -s $CHEMIN$last
fi
fi
fi
sleep 5m
done
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 606
the problem with notify-forwarder
is that it does not trigger an inotify
event. It uses utime
to update the timestamp for the file on the remote system but inotify
fails to see this.
AFAIK, the timestamp already gets updated when using an NFS mount. I have verified this myself between a Synology NAS NFS server and a Raspbian NFS mount (client).
Here's my solution / hack on the client:
#!/bin/bash
path=$1
firstmd5=`ls -laR $path | md5sum | awk ' { print $1 }'`
while true
do
lastmd5=`ls -laR $path | md5sum | awk ' { print $1 }'`
if [ $firstmd5 != $lastmd5 ]
then
firstmd5=$lastmd5
echo files changed
fi
sleep 1
done
Granted, this doesn't report on the specific file being changed, but does provide a general notification hook that something's changed.
It's annoying / kludgy but if I needed more details I would do some additional hacking to isolate the actual files changed.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 7220
I second @SingleNegationElimination.
Also, you can try notify-forwarder.
If you use vagrant, use vagrant-notify-forwarder.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 97
To anyone who has come across this question in the search for an answer of why bind mounting on Docker will not detect file changes from host directory (for hot reloading of an app), it's because the propagation of file changes between host and container is not communicated to the container kernel.
Only changes from the container itself is communicated to the kernel. Solution for this is to have your live reload utility turn on "polling mode" instead of using fsnotify.
Upvotes: 8
Reputation: 31
I agree with SingleNegationElimination's explanation, and would like to add that iSCSI targets will work, since they alert the kernel.
So things on "real" file systems (relative to the system, that is) will trigger Inotify to alert. Like Rsync'ing, net-catting something into a mounted partition.
If you have to get notifications via inotify (or have to use inotify) you can make a cron to rsync -avz over to the file system. Drawbacks of course are that you are using real system hdd space.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 86
I found an SGI FAM using an supervisor daemon to monitor file modification. It supports NFS and you can see some description on wiki
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 156138
inotify requires support from the kernel to work. When an application tracks a directory, it asks the kernel to inform it when those changes occur. When the change occurs, in addition to writing those changes to disk, the kernel also notifies the watching process.
On a remote NFS machine, the change is not visible to the kernel; it happens entirely remotely. NFS predates inotify and there is no network level support for it in NFS, or anything equivalent.
If you want to get around this, You can run a service on the storage server (since that kernel will always see changes to the filesystem) that brokers inotify requests for remote machines, and forward the data to the remote clients.
Edit: It seems odd to me that NFS should be blamed for its lack of support for inotify.
Network File System (NFS) is a distributed file system protocol originally developed by Sun Microsystems in 1984, wikipedia article
However:
Inotify (inode notify) is a Linux kernel subsystem that acts to extend filesystems to notice changes to the filesystem. [...] It has been included in the mainline Linux kernel from release 2.6.13 (June 18, 2005 ) [...]. wikipedia article
It's hard to expect a portable network protocol/application to support a specific kernel feature developed for a different operating system and that appeared more than twenty years later. Even if it did include extensions for it, they would not be available or useful on other operating systems.
*emphasis mine in all cases
Another problem with this; Lets suppose we are not using a network at all, but rather, a local filesystem with good inotify support: ext3 (suppose its mounted at /mnt/foo
). But instead of a real disk, the filesystem is mounted from a loopback device ; and the underlying file is in turn accessible at a different location in the vfs (say, /var/images/foo.img
).
Now, you're not supposed to modify mounted ext3 filesystems, But it's still reasonably safe to do so if the change is to file contents instead of metadata.
So suppose a clever user modifies the file system image (/var/images/foo.img
) in a hex editor, replacing a file's contents with some other data, while at the same time an inotify watch is observing the same file on the mounted filesystem.
There's no reasonable way one can arrange for inotify to always inform the watching process of this sort of change. Although there are probably some gyrations that could be take to make ext3 notice and honor the change, none of that would apply to, say, the xfs drtiver, which is otherwise quite similar.
Nor should it. You're cheating!. inotify can only inform you of changes that occured through the vfs at the actual mountpoint being watched. If the changes occured outside that VFS, because of a change to the underlying data, inotify can't help you and isn't designed to solve that problem.
Have you considered using a message queue for network notification?
Upvotes: 87