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-rw-r--r--Documentation/filesystems/nfs/index.rst1
-rw-r--r--Documentation/filesystems/nfs/nfsd-io-modes.rst153
-rw-r--r--Documentation/filesystems/nfs/nfsd-maintainer-entry-profile.rst547
3 files changed, 701 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/filesystems/nfs/index.rst b/Documentation/filesystems/nfs/index.rst
index 95c2c009874c..a29a212b5b4d 100644
--- a/Documentation/filesystems/nfs/index.rst
+++ b/Documentation/filesystems/nfs/index.rst
@@ -13,5 +13,6 @@ NFS
rpc-cache
rpc-server-gss
nfs41-server
+ nfsd-io-modes
knfsd-stats
reexport
diff --git a/Documentation/filesystems/nfs/nfsd-io-modes.rst b/Documentation/filesystems/nfs/nfsd-io-modes.rst
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..0fd6e82478fe
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/filesystems/nfs/nfsd-io-modes.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,153 @@
+.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
+
+=============
+NFSD IO MODES
+=============
+
+Overview
+========
+
+NFSD has historically always used buffered IO when servicing READ and
+WRITE operations. BUFFERED is NFSD's default IO mode, but it is possible
+to override that default to use either DONTCACHE or DIRECT IO modes.
+
+Experimental NFSD debugfs interfaces are available to allow the NFSD IO
+mode used for READ and WRITE to be configured independently. See both:
+
+- /sys/kernel/debug/nfsd/io_cache_read
+- /sys/kernel/debug/nfsd/io_cache_write
+
+The default value for both io_cache_read and io_cache_write reflects
+NFSD's default IO mode (which is NFSD_IO_BUFFERED=0).
+
+Based on the configured settings, NFSD's IO will either be:
+
+- cached using page cache (NFSD_IO_BUFFERED=0)
+- cached but removed from page cache on completion (NFSD_IO_DONTCACHE=1)
+- not cached stable_how=NFS_UNSTABLE (NFSD_IO_DIRECT=2)
+
+To set an NFSD IO mode, write a supported value (0 - 2) to the
+corresponding IO operation's debugfs interface, e.g.::
+
+ echo 2 > /sys/kernel/debug/nfsd/io_cache_read
+ echo 2 > /sys/kernel/debug/nfsd/io_cache_write
+
+To check which IO mode NFSD is using for READ or WRITE, simply read the
+corresponding IO operation's debugfs interface, e.g.::
+
+ cat /sys/kernel/debug/nfsd/io_cache_read
+ cat /sys/kernel/debug/nfsd/io_cache_write
+
+If you experiment with NFSD's IO modes on a recent kernel and have
+interesting results, please report them to linux-nfs@vger.kernel.org
+
+NFSD DONTCACHE
+==============
+
+DONTCACHE offers a hybrid approach to servicing IO that aims to offer
+the benefits of using DIRECT IO without any of the strict alignment
+requirements that DIRECT IO imposes. To achieve this buffered IO is used
+but the IO is flagged to "drop behind" (meaning associated pages are
+dropped from the page cache) when IO completes.
+
+DONTCACHE aims to avoid what has proven to be a fairly significant
+limition of Linux's memory management subsystem if/when large amounts of
+data is infrequently accessed (e.g. read once _or_ written once but not
+read until much later). Such use-cases are particularly problematic
+because the page cache will eventually become a bottleneck to servicing
+new IO requests.
+
+For more context on DONTCACHE, please see these Linux commit headers:
+
+- Overview: 9ad6344568cc3 ("mm/filemap: change filemap_create_folio()
+ to take a struct kiocb")
+- for READ: 8026e49bff9b1 ("mm/filemap: add read support for
+ RWF_DONTCACHE")
+- for WRITE: 974c5e6139db3 ("xfs: flag as supporting FOP_DONTCACHE")
+
+NFSD_IO_DONTCACHE will fall back to NFSD_IO_BUFFERED if the underlying
+filesystem doesn't indicate support by setting FOP_DONTCACHE.
+
+NFSD DIRECT
+===========
+
+DIRECT IO doesn't make use of the page cache, as such it is able to
+avoid the Linux memory management's page reclaim scalability problems
+without resorting to the hybrid use of page cache that DONTCACHE does.
+
+Some workloads benefit from NFSD avoiding the page cache, particularly
+those with a working set that is significantly larger than available
+system memory. The pathological worst-case workload that NFSD DIRECT has
+proven to help most is: NFS client issuing large sequential IO to a file
+that is 2-3 times larger than the NFS server's available system memory.
+The reason for such improvement is NFSD DIRECT eliminates a lot of work
+that the memory management subsystem would otherwise be required to
+perform (e.g. page allocation, dirty writeback, page reclaim). When
+using NFSD DIRECT, kswapd and kcompactd are no longer commanding CPU
+time trying to find adequate free pages so that forward IO progress can
+be made.
+
+The performance win associated with using NFSD DIRECT was previously
+discussed on linux-nfs, see:
+https://lore.kernel.org/linux-nfs/aEslwqa9iMeZjjlV@kernel.org/
+
+But in summary:
+
+- NFSD DIRECT can significantly reduce memory requirements
+- NFSD DIRECT can reduce CPU load by avoiding costly page reclaim work
+- NFSD DIRECT can offer more deterministic IO performance
+
+As always, your mileage may vary and so it is important to carefully
+consider if/when it is beneficial to make use of NFSD DIRECT. When
+assessing comparative performance of your workload please be sure to log
+relevant performance metrics during testing (e.g. memory usage, cpu
+usage, IO performance). Using perf to collect perf data that may be used
+to generate a "flamegraph" for work Linux must perform on behalf of your
+test is a really meaningful way to compare the relative health of the
+system and how switching NFSD's IO mode changes what is observed.
+
+If NFSD_IO_DIRECT is specified by writing 2 (or 3 and 4 for WRITE) to
+NFSD's debugfs interfaces, ideally the IO will be aligned relative to
+the underlying block device's logical_block_size. Also the memory buffer
+used to store the READ or WRITE payload must be aligned relative to the
+underlying block device's dma_alignment.
+
+But NFSD DIRECT does handle misaligned IO in terms of O_DIRECT as best
+it can:
+
+Misaligned READ:
+ If NFSD_IO_DIRECT is used, expand any misaligned READ to the next
+ DIO-aligned block (on either end of the READ). The expanded READ is
+ verified to have proper offset/len (logical_block_size) and
+ dma_alignment checking.
+
+Misaligned WRITE:
+ If NFSD_IO_DIRECT is used, split any misaligned WRITE into a start,
+ middle and end as needed. The large middle segment is DIO-aligned
+ and the start and/or end are misaligned. Buffered IO is used for the
+ misaligned segments and O_DIRECT is used for the middle DIO-aligned
+ segment. DONTCACHE buffered IO is _not_ used for the misaligned
+ segments because using normal buffered IO offers significant RMW
+ performance benefit when handling streaming misaligned WRITEs.
+
+Tracing:
+ The nfsd_read_direct trace event shows how NFSD expands any
+ misaligned READ to the next DIO-aligned block (on either end of the
+ original READ, as needed).
+
+ This combination of trace events is useful for READs::
+
+ echo 1 > /sys/kernel/tracing/events/nfsd/nfsd_read_vector/enable
+ echo 1 > /sys/kernel/tracing/events/nfsd/nfsd_read_direct/enable
+ echo 1 > /sys/kernel/tracing/events/nfsd/nfsd_read_io_done/enable
+ echo 1 > /sys/kernel/tracing/events/xfs/xfs_file_direct_read/enable
+
+ The nfsd_write_direct trace event shows how NFSD splits a given
+ misaligned WRITE into a DIO-aligned middle segment.
+
+ This combination of trace events is useful for WRITEs::
+
+ echo 1 > /sys/kernel/tracing/events/nfsd/nfsd_write_opened/enable
+ echo 1 > /sys/kernel/tracing/events/nfsd/nfsd_write_direct/enable
+ echo 1 > /sys/kernel/tracing/events/nfsd/nfsd_write_io_done/enable
+ echo 1 > /sys/kernel/tracing/events/xfs/xfs_file_direct_write/enable
diff --git a/Documentation/filesystems/nfs/nfsd-maintainer-entry-profile.rst b/Documentation/filesystems/nfs/nfsd-maintainer-entry-profile.rst
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..4d6b57dbab2a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/filesystems/nfs/nfsd-maintainer-entry-profile.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,547 @@
+NFSD Maintainer Entry Profile
+=============================
+
+A Maintainer Entry Profile supplements the top-level process
+documents (found in Documentation/process/) with customs that are
+specific to a subsystem and its maintainers. A contributor may use
+this document to set their expectations and avoid common mistakes.
+A maintainer may use these profiles to look across subsystems for
+opportunities to converge on best common practices.
+
+Overview
+--------
+The Network File System (NFS) is a standardized family of network
+protocols that enable access to files across a set of network-
+connected peer hosts. Applications on NFS clients access files that
+reside on file systems that are shared by NFS servers. A single
+network peer can act as both an NFS client and an NFS server.
+
+NFSD refers to the NFS server implementation included in the Linux
+kernel. An in-kernel NFS server has fast access to files stored
+in file systems local to that server. NFSD can share files stored
+on most of the file system types native to Linux, including xfs,
+ext4, btrfs, and tmpfs.
+
+Mailing list
+------------
+The linux-nfs@vger.kernel.org mailing list is a public list. Its
+purpose is to enable collaboration among developers working on the
+Linux NFS stack, both client and server. It is not a place for
+conversations that are not related directly to the Linux NFS stack.
+
+The linux-nfs mailing list is archived on `lore.kernel.org <https://lore.kernel.org/linux-nfs/>`_.
+
+The Linux NFS community does not have any chat room.
+
+Reporting bugs
+--------------
+If you experience an NFSD-related bug on a distribution-built
+kernel, please start by working with your Linux distributor.
+
+Bug reports against upstream Linux code bases are welcome on the
+linux-nfs@vger.kernel.org mailing list, where some active triage
+can be done. NFSD bugs may also be reported in the Linux kernel
+community's bugzilla at:
+
+ https://bugzilla.kernel.org
+
+Please file NFSD-related bugs under the "Filesystems/NFSD"
+component. In general, including as much detail as possible is a
+good start, including pertinent system log messages from both
+the client and server.
+
+User space software related to NFSD, such as mountd or the exportfs
+command, is contained in the nfs-utils package. Report problems
+with those components to linux-nfs@vger.kernel.org. You might be
+directed to move the report to a specific bug tracker.
+
+Contributor's Guide
+-------------------
+
+Standards compliance
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+The priority is for NFSD to interoperate fully with the Linux NFS
+client. We also test against other popular NFS client implementa-
+tions regularly at NFS bake-a-thon events (also known as plug-
+fests). Non-Linux NFS clients are not part of upstream NFSD CI/CD.
+
+The NFSD community strives to provide an NFS server implementation
+that interoperates with all standards-compliant NFS client
+implementations. This is done by staying as close as is sensible to
+the normative mandates in the IETF's published NFS, RPC, and GSS-API
+standards.
+
+It is always useful to reference an RFC and section number in a code
+comment where behavior deviates from the standard (and even when the
+behavior is compliant but the implementation is obfuscatory).
+
+On the rare occasion when a deviation from standard-mandated
+behavior is needed, brief documentation of the use case or
+deficiencies in the standard is a required part of in-code
+documentation.
+
+Care must always be taken to avoid leaking local error codes (ie,
+errnos) to clients of NFSD. A proper NFS status code is always
+required in NFS protocol replies.
+
+NFSD administrative interfaces
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+NFSD administrative interfaces include:
+
+- an NFSD or SUNRPC module parameter
+
+- export options in /etc/exports
+
+- files under /proc/fs/nfsd/ or /proc/sys/sunrpc/
+
+- the NFSD netlink protocol
+
+Frequently, a request is made to introduce or modify one of NFSD's
+traditional administrative interfaces. Certainly it is technically
+easy to introduce a new administrative setting. However, there are
+good reasons why the NFSD maintainers prefer to leave that as a last
+resort:
+
+- As with any API, administrative interfaces are difficult to get
+ right.
+
+- Once they are documented and have a legacy of use, administrative
+ interfaces become difficult to modify or remove.
+
+- Every new administrative setting multiplies the NFSD test matrix.
+
+- The cost of one administrative interface is incremental, but costs
+ add up across all of the existing interfaces.
+
+It is often better for everyone if effort is made up front to
+understanding the underlying requirement of the new setting, and
+then trying to make it tune itself (or to become otherwise
+unnecessary).
+
+If a new setting is indeed necessary, first consider adding it to
+the NFSD netlink protocol. Or if it doesn't need to be a reliable
+long term user space feature, it can be added to NFSD's menagerie of
+experimental settings which reside under /sys/kernel/debug/nfsd/ .
+
+Field observability
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+NFSD employs several different mechanisms for observing operation,
+including counters, printks, WARNings, and static trace points. Each
+have their strengths and weaknesses. Contributors should select the
+most appropriate tool for their task.
+
+- BUG must be avoided if at all possible, as it will frequently
+ result in a full system crash.
+
+- WARN is appropriate only when a full stack trace is useful.
+
+- printk can show detailed information. These must not be used
+ in code paths where they can be triggered repeatedly by remote
+ users.
+
+- dprintk can show detailed information, but can be enabled only
+ in pre-set groups. The overhead of emitting output makes dprintk
+ inappropriate for frequent operations like I/O.
+
+- Counters are always on, but provide little information about
+ individual events other than how frequently they occur.
+
+- static trace points can be enabled individually or in groups
+ (via a glob). These are generally low overhead, and thus are
+ favored for use in hot paths.
+
+- dynamic tracing, such as kprobes or eBPF, are quite flexible but
+ cannot be used in certain environments (eg, full kernel lock-
+ down).
+
+Testing
+~~~~~~~
+The kdevops project
+
+ https://github.com/linux-kdevops/kdevops
+
+contains several NFS-specific workflows, as well as the community
+standard fstests suite. These workflows are based on open source
+testing tools such as ltp and fio. Contributors are encouraged to
+use these tools without kdevops, or contributors should install and
+use kdevops themselves to verify their patches before submission.
+
+Coding style
+~~~~~~~~~~~~
+Follow the coding style preferences described in
+
+ Documentation/process/coding-style.rst
+
+with the following exceptions:
+
+- Add new local variables to a function in reverse Christmas tree
+ order
+
+- Use the kdoc comment style for
+ + non-static functions
+ + static inline functions
+ + static functions that are callbacks/virtual functions
+
+- All new function names start with ``nfsd_`` for non-NFS-version-
+ specific functions.
+
+- New function names that are specific to NFSv2 or NFSv3, or are
+ used by all minor versions of NFSv4, use ``nfsdN_`` where N is
+ the version.
+
+- New function names specific to an NFSv4 minor version can be
+ named with ``nfsd4M_`` where M is the minor version.
+
+Patch preparation
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+Read and follow all guidelines in
+
+ Documentation/process/submitting-patches.rst
+
+Use tagging to identify all patch authors. However, reviewers and
+testers should be added by replying to the email patch submission.
+Email is extensively used in order to publicly archive review and
+testing attributions. These tags are automatically inserted into
+your patches when they are applied.
+
+The code in the body of the diff already shows /what/ is being
+changed. Thus it is not necessary to repeat that in the patch
+description. Instead, the description should contain one or more
+of:
+
+- A brief problem statement ("what is this patch trying to fix?")
+ with a root-cause analysis.
+
+- End-user visible symptoms or items that a support engineer might
+ use to search for the patch, like stack traces.
+
+- A brief explanation of why the patch is the best way to address
+ the problem.
+
+- Any context that reviewers might need to understand the changes
+ made by the patch.
+
+- Any relevant benchmarking results, and/or functional test results.
+
+As detailed in Documentation/process/submitting-patches.rst,
+identify the point in history that the issue being addressed was
+introduced by using a Fixes: tag.
+
+Mention in the patch description if that point in history cannot be
+determined -- that is, no Fixes: tag can be provided. In this case,
+please make it clear to maintainers whether an LTS backport is
+needed even though there is no Fixes: tag.
+
+The NFSD maintainers prefer to add stable tagging themselves, after
+public discussion in response to the patch submission. Contributors
+may suggest stable tagging, but be aware that many version
+management tools add such stable Cc's when you post your patches.
+Don't add "Cc: stable" unless you are absolutely sure the patch
+needs to go to stable during the initial submission process.
+
+Patch submission
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+Patches to NFSD are submitted via the kernel's email-based review
+process that is common to most other kernel subsystems.
+
+Just before each submission, rebase your patch or series on the
+nfsd-testing branch at
+
+ https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/cel/linux.git
+
+The NFSD subsystem is maintained separately from the Linux in-kernel
+NFS client. The NFSD maintainers do not normally take submissions
+for client changes, nor can they respond authoritatively to bug
+reports or feature requests for NFS client code.
+
+This means that contributors might be asked to resubmit patches if
+they were emailed to the incorrect set of maintainers and reviewers.
+This is not a rejection, but simply a correction of the submission
+process.
+
+When in doubt, consult the NFSD entry in the MAINTAINERS file to
+see which files and directories fall under the NFSD subsystem.
+
+The proper set of email addresses for NFSD patches are:
+
+To: the NFSD maintainers and reviewers listed in MAINTAINERS
+Cc: linux-nfs@vger.kernel.org and optionally linux-kernel@
+
+If there are other subsystems involved in the patches (for example
+MM or RDMA) their primary mailing list address can be included in
+the Cc: field. Other contributors and interested parties may be
+included there as well.
+
+In general we prefer that contributors use common patch email tools
+such as "git send-email" or "stg email format/send", which tend to
+get the details right without a lot of fuss.
+
+A series consisting of a single patch is not required to have a
+cover letter. However, a cover letter can be included if there is
+substantial context that is not appropriate to include in the
+patch description.
+
+Please note that, with an e-mail based submission process, series
+cover letters are not part of the work that is committed to the
+kernel source code base or its commit history. Therefore always try
+to keep pertinent information in the patch descriptions.
+
+Design documentation is welcome, but as cover letters are not
+preserved, a perhaps better option is to include a patch that adds
+such documentation under Documentation/filesystems/nfs/.
+
+Reviewers will ask about test coverage and what use cases the
+patches are expected to address. Please be prepared to answer these
+questions.
+
+Review comments from maintainers might be politely stated, but in
+general, these are not optional to address when they are actionable.
+If necessary, the maintainers retain the right to not apply patches
+when contributors refuse to address reasonable requests.
+
+Post changes to kernel source code and user space source code as
+separate series. You can connect the two series with comments in
+your cover letters.
+
+Generally the NFSD maintainers ask for a reposts even for simple
+modifications in order to publicly archive the request and the
+resulting repost before it is pulled into the NFSD trees. This
+also enables us to rebuild a patch series quickly without missing
+changes that might have been discussed via email.
+
+Avoid frequently reposting large series with only small changes. As
+a rule of thumb, posting substantial changes more than once a week
+will result in reviewer overload.
+
+Remember, there are only a handful of subsystem maintainers and
+reviewers, but potentially many sources of contributions. The
+maintainers and reviewers, therefore, are always the less scalable
+resource. Be kind to your friendly neighborhood maintainer.
+
+Patch Acceptance
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+There isn't a formal review process for NFSD, but we like to see
+at least two Reviewed-by: notices for patches that are more than
+simple clean-ups. Reviews are done in public on
+linux-nfs@vger.kernel.org and are archived on lore.kernel.org.
+
+Currently the NFSD patch queues are maintained in branches here:
+
+ https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/cel/linux.git
+
+The NFSD maintainers apply patches initially to the nfsd-testing
+branch, which is always open to new submissions. Patches can be
+applied while review is ongoing. nfsd-testing is a topic branch,
+so it can change frequently, it will be rebased, and your patch
+might get dropped if there is a problem with it.
+
+Generally a script-generated "thank you" email will indicate when
+your patch has been added to the nfsd-testing branch. You can track
+the progress of your patch using the linux-nfs patchworks instance:
+
+ https://patchwork.kernel.org/project/linux-nfs/list/
+
+While your patch is in nfsd-testing, it is exposed to a variety of
+test environments, including community zero-day bots, static
+analysis tools, and NFSD continuous integration testing. The soak
+period is three to four weeks.
+
+Each patch that survives in nfsd-testing for the soak period without
+changes is moved to the nfsd-next branch.
+
+The nfsd-next branch is automatically merged into linux-next and
+fs-next on a nightly basis.
+
+Patches that survive in nfsd-next are included in the next NFSD
+merge window pull request. These windows typically occur once every
+63 days (nine weeks).
+
+When the upstream merge window closes, the nfsd-next branch is
+renamed nfsd-fixes, and a new nfsd-next branch is created, based on
+the upstream -rc1 tag.
+
+Fixes that are destined for an upstream -rc release also run the
+nfsd-testing gauntlet, but are then applied to the nfsd-fixes
+branch. That branch is made available for Linus to pull after a
+short time. In order to limit the risk of introducing regressions,
+we limit such fixes to emergency situations or fixes to breakage
+that occurred during the most recent upstream merge.
+
+Please make it clear when submitting an emergency patch that
+immediate action (either application to -rc or LTS backport) is
+needed.
+
+Sensitive patch submissions and bug reports
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+CVEs are generated by specific members of the Linux kernel community
+and several external entities. The Linux NFS community does not emit
+or assign CVEs. CVEs are assigned after an issue and its fix are
+known.
+
+However, the NFSD maintainers sometimes receive sensitive security
+reports, and at times these are significant enough to need to be
+embargoed. In such rare cases, fixes can be developed and reviewed
+out of the public eye.
+
+Please be aware that many version management tools add the stable
+Cc's when you post your patches. This is generally a nuisance, but
+it can result in outing an embargoed security issue accidentally.
+Don't add "Cc: stable" unless you are absolutely sure the patch
+needs to go to stable@ during the initial submission process.
+
+Patches that are merged without ever appearing on any list, and
+which carry a Reported-by: or Fixes: tag are detected as suspicious
+by security-focused people. We encourage that, after any private
+review, security-sensitive patches should be posted to linux-nfs@
+for the usual public review, archiving, and test period.
+
+LLM-generated submissions
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+The Linux kernel community as a whole is still exploring the new
+world of LLM-generated code. The NFSD maintainers will entertain
+submission of patches that are partially or wholly generated by
+LLM-based development tools. Such submissions are held to the
+same standards as submissions created entirely by human authors:
+
+- The human contributor identifies themselves via a Signed-off-by:
+ tag. This tag counts as a DoC.
+
+- The human contributor is solely responsible for code provenance
+ and any contamination by inadvertently-included code with a
+ conflicting license, as usual.
+
+- The human contributor must be able to answer and address review
+ questions. A patch description such as "This fixed my problem
+ but I don't know why" is not acceptable.
+
+- The contribution is subjected to the same test regimen as all
+ other submissions.
+
+- An indication (via a Generated-by: tag or otherwise) that the
+ contribution is LLM-generated is not required.
+
+It is easy to address review comments and fix requests in LLM
+generated code. So easy, in fact, that it becomes tempting to repost
+refreshed code immediately. Please resist that temptation.
+
+As always, please avoid reposting series revisions more than once
+every 24 hours.
+
+Clean-up patches
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+The NFSD maintainers discourage patches which perform simple clean-
+ups, which are not in the context of other work. For example:
+
+* Addressing ``checkpatch.pl`` warnings after merge
+* Addressing :ref:`Local variable ordering<rcs>` issues
+* Addressing long-standing whitespace damage
+
+This is because it is felt that the churn that such changes produce
+comes at a greater cost than the value of such clean-ups.
+
+Conversely, spelling and grammar fixes are encouraged.
+
+Stable and LTS support
+----------------------
+Upstream NFSD continuous integration testing runs against LTS trees
+whenever they are updated.
+
+Please indicate when a patch containing a fix needs to be considered
+for LTS kernels, either via a Fixes: tag or explicit mention.
+
+Feature requests
+----------------
+There is no one way to make an official feature request, but
+discussion about the request should eventually make its way to
+the linux-nfs@vger.kernel.org mailing list for public review by
+the community.
+
+Subsystem boundaries
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+NFSD itself is not much more than a protocol engine. This means its
+primary responsibility is to translate the NFS protocol into API
+calls in the Linux kernel. For example, NFSD is not responsible for
+knowing exactly how bytes or file attributes are managed on a block
+device. It relies on other kernel subsystems for that.
+
+If the subsystems on which NFSD relies do not implement a particular
+feature, even if the standard NFS protocols do support that feature,
+that usually means NFSD cannot provide that feature without
+substantial development work in other areas of the kernel.
+
+Specificity
+~~~~~~~~~~~
+Feature requests can come from anywhere, and thus can often be
+nebulous. A requester might not understand what a "use case" or
+"user story" is. These descriptive paradigms are often used by
+developers and architects to understand what is required of a
+design, but are terms of art in the software trade, not used in
+the everyday world.
+
+In order to prevent contributors and maintainers from becoming
+overwhelmed, we won't be afraid of saying "no" politely to
+underspecified requests.
+
+Community roles and their authority
+-----------------------------------
+The purpose of Linux subsystem communities is to provide expertise
+and active stewardship of a narrow set of source files in the Linux
+kernel. This can include managing user space tooling as well.
+
+To contextualize the structure of the Linux NFS community that
+is responsible for stewardship of the NFS server code base, we
+define the community roles here.
+
+- **Contributor** : Anyone who submits a code change, bug fix,
+ recommendation, documentation fix, and so on. A contributor can
+ submit regularly or infrequently.
+
+- **Outside Contributor** : A contributor who is not a regular actor
+ in the Linux NFS community. This can mean someone who contributes
+ to other parts of the kernel, or someone who just noticed a
+ misspelling in a comment and sent a patch.
+
+- **Reviewer** : Someone who is named in the MAINTAINERS file as a
+ reviewer is an area expert who can request changes to contributed
+ code, and expects that contributors will address the request.
+
+- **External Reviewer** : Someone who is not named in the
+ MAINTAINERS file as a reviewer, but who is an area expert.
+ Examples include Linux kernel contributors with networking,
+ security, or persistent storage expertise, or developers who
+ contribute primarily to other NFS implementations.
+
+One or more people will take on the following roles. These people
+are often generically referred to as "maintainers", and are
+identified in the MAINTAINERS file with the "M:" tag under the NFSD
+subsystem.
+
+- **Upstream Release Manager** : This role is responsible for
+ curating contributions into a branch, reviewing test results, and
+ then sending a pull request during merge windows. There is a
+ trust relationship between the release manager and Linus.
+
+- **Bug Triager** : Someone who is a first responder to bug reports
+ submitted to the linux-nfs mailing list or bug trackers, and helps
+ troubleshoot and identify next steps.
+
+- **Security Lead** : The security lead handles contacts from the
+ security community to resolve immediate issues, as well as dealing
+ with long-term security issues such as supply chain concerns. For
+ upstream, that's usually whether contributions violate licensing
+ or other intellectual property agreements.
+
+- **Testing Lead** : The testing lead builds and runs the test
+ infrastructure for the subsystem. The testing lead may ask for
+ patches to be dropped because of ongoing high defect rates.
+
+- **LTS Maintainer** : The LTS maintainer is responsible for managing
+ the Fixes: and Cc: stable annotations on patches, and seeing that
+ patches that cannot be automatically applied to LTS kernels get
+ proper manual backports as necessary.
+
+- **Community Manager** : This umpire role can be asked to call balls
+ and strikes during conflicts, but is also responsible for ensuring
+ the health of the relationships within the community and for
+ facilitating discussions on long-term topics such as how to manage
+ growing technical debt.