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This minor patch fixes grammar in a few messages which get
printed to users. It also fixes the same grammar mistake in
several comments.
Signed-off-by: Rick Elrod <relrod@redhat.com>
--
The device-mapper directory now holds a copy of libdm source. At
the moment this code is identical to libdm. Over time code will
migrate out to appropriate places (see doc/refactoring.txt).
The libdm directory still exists, and contains the source for the
libdevmapper shared library, which we will continue to ship (though
not neccessarily update).
All code using libdm should now use the version in device-mapper.
Unfortunatelly on kernels <4.16 lvm2 can't user brd ramdisks
for backend device as number of test is failing with this kernel
message:
device-mapper: ioctl: can't change device type after initial table load.
caused by DAX request-based handling, and lvm2 tries to replace device
with backend 'error' bio-based device and such table reload is being
rejected.
So ATM keep ramdisk only on most recent kernel to experiment a bit,
for older machines just stay safe and keep old slower loop backend.
As we start refactoring the code to break dependencies (see doc/refactoring.txt),
I want us to use full paths in the includes (eg, #include "base/data-struct/list.h").
This makes it more obvious when we're breaking abstraction boundaries, eg, including a file in
metadata/ from base/
While newer system can detect need for 4K mkfs, on older test machines
running test suite over 4k is reporting problems.
Some more generic solution is needed thought.
When test happens to run in tmpfs, it cannot use O_DIRECT (unsupported
with tmpfs).
CHECKME: unsure if detection of tmpfs is 'valid' but kind of works and
is very simple.
As Makefiles already do use target with name 'device-mapper'
rename this new device-mapper dir to non-conflicting name.
We also seem to already use '_' in other dir names.
Also rename device_mapper/Makefile to source for generating Makefile.in
so we can use it for build in other source dirs properly.
It's very hard to use some 'non-recurive' Makefiles with
rest of system running 'recursively'.
So ATM drop inclusion of subdir makefile and add support
for 2 new top-level targets:
unit-test (builds test/unit dir)
run-unit-test (build & run test/unit/unit-test run)
Just like 52656c89fd
when now cache is compiled in 'unditionally'.
This patch is actually enforce by changes in
commit: 2bc896f2a3
where CACHE value is not set anymore.
If the test does not need root, it can use 'SKIP_ROOT_DM_CHECK'.
For such test no actions needed root to initilize DM devices and
nodes will be take and test can check i.e. functional unit tests.
Usage of dm_delay looks to be slowing not just 'delayed' portion
of device, but due to the fact it's also slows down ANY flush
operation on such device it's overal speed impact is huge.
In some case we can however user other methods to slowdown disk writes,
in case of old dm 'mirror' target we can throttle I/O of mirror
synchronisation giving the next commands enough time to test couple
race conditions.
Usage:
throttle_dm_mirror [percentage]
Thtrottle down sync speed (lowest is '1' which is also default when
unspecified)
restore_dm_mirror
Restores the value of throttling before call of 'throttle_dm_mirror'
Usually it should '100'
Currently usage of loop device over backend file in ramdisk (tmpfs)
is actually causing unnecassary memory consution, since just
reading such loop device is causing RAM provisioning.
This patch add another possible way how to use ramdisk directly
through 'brd' device when possible (and allowed).
This however has it's limitation as well - brd does not support
TRIM, so the only way how to erase is to remove brd module ??
Alse there is 4K sector size limitation imposed by ramdisk.
Anyway - for some mirror test that were using large amount of
disk space (tens of MB) this brings noticable speed boost.
(But could be worth to solve the slowness of loop in kernel?)
To prevent using 'brd' for testing set LVM_TEST_PREFER_BRD=0
like this:
make check_local LVM_TEST_PREFER_BRD=0
This test can't use brd (ramdisk) as backend since for some
weird reason lsblk is not listing these device.
TODO: test could be probably rewritten to avoid using lsblk somehow??
When the backend device supports only 4K blocks (like ramdisk)
we cannot use for testing any smaller blocksize.
So recalc test for 4K extent size.
We may possibly introduce one list extra test that
can be executed on devices with 512b sectors to
check lvm2 support those min extent sizes...
An implementation of an adaptive radix tree. Has the following nice
properties:
- At least as fast as the hash table
- Uses less memory
- You don't need to give an expected size when you create
- It scales nicely (ie. no large reallocations like the hash table).
- You can iterate the keys in lexicographical order.
Only insert and lookup are implemented so far. Plus there's a lot
more performance to come.
In case "lvconvert -mN RaidLV" was used on a degraded
raid1 LV, success was returned instead of an error.
Provide message to inform about the need to repair first
before changing number of mirrors and exit with error.
Add new lvconvert-m-raid1-degraded.sh test.
Resolves: rhbz1573960
There are likely more bits of code that can be removed,
e.g. lvm1/pool-specific bits of code that were identified
using FMT flags.
The vgconvert command can likely be reduced further.
The lvm1-specific config settings should probably have
some other fields set for proper deprecation.
When 'dmsetup' reports result with --nameprefixes it currently
incorrectly 'escapes' problematic characters.
Letting pass such string though shell 'eval' function is hard task.
So instead cut away substring.
Once dmsetup will start to properly escape backslash and apostrophe
this function may need further tuning.
Instead of using delayer device user 'zero' device and let mirror
do some real work which takes some time.
In case the test machine is too fast - mirror might need to be made bigger
to meet needed criteria.
Also move all test needed this 'zero' PV trick to the end of test
so $dev2 and $dev4 are covered with 'zero' and can take any amount of
write without consuming any real space.
For reporting commands (pvs,vgs,lvs,pvdisplay,vgdisplay,lvdisplay)
we do not need to repeat the label scan of devices in vg_read if
they all had matching metadata in the initial label scan. The
data read by label scan can just be reused for the vg_read.
This cuts the amount of device i/o in half, from two reads of
each device to one. We have to be careful to avoid repairing
the VG if we've skipped rescanning. (The VG repair code is very
poor, and will be redone soon.)
Test that no (Sub)LV remnants persist if the volume group is
not listed in configuration variable activation/volume_list,
hence not activatable thus causing initialization of rmeta
SubLVs to fail.
Related: rhbz1161347
Correct testing with format 1 and mq policy.
Add testing of 'smq'
Fix testing with clvmd - where logged message is part of clvmd log
and we can only check command status.
Use 4K chunks since some older kernels are not capable
to create striped volumes with smaller size.
TODO: lvm2 should detect this ahead and avoid kernel
reporting "Invalid chunk".
With problematic kernels raid devices can be occasionaly left with
'frozen' status - try to 'unfreeze' them with idle message on teardown.
Also replace couple greps with 'built-in' dmsetup --select feature.
Note: dmsetup --select currently reports 'No devices found' on stdout
and return success - looks like a bug to fix.
This is somewhat tricky - for test suite we keep using
'set -e -o pipefail' - the effect here is - we get error report
from any 'failing' command in whole pipeline - thus when something
like this: 'lvs | head -1' is used - and 'head' finishes before
lead 'lvs' is done - it recieves SIGPIPE and exits with error,
and somewhat misleading gets occasionally reported depending
of speed of commands.
For this case we have to avoid using standard pipes and rather
switch to using streamed results with temporary output file.
This is all nicely handled with bash feature '< <()'.
For more info:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/41516177/bash-zcat-head-causes-pipefail
Sleep a bit before checking /sys/block dir so the kernel has a moment to
actually put scsi debug device in it...
Some quite old kernels are in troubles with this plain searching grep
without sleep (namely 2.6.32)
modprobe scsi_debug
<sleep .1>
grep -H scsi_debug /sys/block/*/device/model
modprobe -r scsi_debug
Add three new raid tests with io load and table
reloads during reshape for target 1.13.2.
Add a raid0 to raid10 conversion test.
Also add more signals to trap in lvconvert-raid-reshape-load.sh.
lvmdbusd was started, but the process was not recognized by pgrep.
- configure does not make the script executable - set the flag
explicitly when running make check,
- process name changed to lvmdbusd. The previous python3 value
originated from the use of /usr/bin/env.
Avoiding "$(get first_extent_sector "$d")" in the loop
allows the test to succeed in the cluster. Further cluster
analysis needed to get to the core reason.
The lvm2 test suite aims at small test resource footprints
(few PVs, small PV sizes) to run on tmpfs backed loop device.
OTOH, lvconvert-reshape-raid.sh aims to test the maxima of
supported total stripes of 64. This patch adds a prerequisite
conditional to skip tests using more than 14 stripes.
It requires the target version 1.13.1 to avoid deadlocks.
In some cases the message could be slightly misleading so use
here rather conditional.
TODO:
In future we may possibly further tune the message in case we are
certain the level of redundancy protection has not been reduced.
The lvchange-raid[456].sh test checks that mismatches can be detected
properly. It does this by writing garbage to the back half of one of
the legs directly. When performing a "check" or "repair" of mismatches,
MD does a good job going directly to disk and bypassing any buffers that
may prevent it from seeing mismatches. However, in the case of RAID4/5/6
we have the stripe cache to contend with and this is not bypassed. Thus,
mismatches which have /just/ happened to an area that now populates the
stripe cache may be overlooked. This isn't a serious issue, however,
because the stripe cache is short-lived and reasonably small. So, while
there may be a small window of time between the disk changing underneath
the RAID array and when you run a "check"/"repair" - causing a mismatch
to be missed - that would be no worse than if a user had simply run a
"check" a few seconds before the disk changed. IOW, it simply isn't worth
making a fuss over dropping the stripe cache before beginning a "check" or
"repair" (which we actually did attempt to do a while back).
So, to get the test running smoothly, we simply deactivate and reactivate
the LV to force the stripe cache to be dropped and then proceed. We could
just as easily wait a few seconds for the stripe cache to empty also.
When a "recover" is just starting for a RAID LV, it is possible to get
"idle" for the sync action if the status is issued quickly enough. This
is fine, the MD thread just hasn't gotten things going yet. However,
the /need/ for a "recover" should be marked in md->recovery and it would
be simple enough to fix the kernel so this doesn't happen. May eventually
want a separate bug for this, but for now it fits with RHBZ 1507719.
There are two known bugs in the lvconvert-raid-status-validation.sh
test. The first one I consider to be more of an annoyance (1507719).
The second one I consider to be more serious (1507729).
RHBZ 1507719 simply documents the fact that the three RAID status
fields may not always be coherent due to the way they are set and
unset when the MD thread is shutting down and starting up. For
example, the sync ratio may be 100% but the sync action may not
yet have switched to "idle" and the health characters may not yet
all be 'A's (i.e. the devices set to InSync).
RHBZ 1507729 is more serious. The sync ratio can be 100% for a
short period of time after upconverting linear -> RAID1. It is
reset to 0 once the MD sync thread gets to work on it. It does
this because, technically, the array /is/ in-sync if the new
devices are excluded - i.e. the data is 100% available and
consistent. I'm not sure what to do about this problem, but we'd
much rather not have this state that looks exactly like the
end of the process when the sync ratio is 100% because the
"recover" process finished, but the sync action and health
characters haven't been updated yet. Put simply, the problem
is that we can't tell if a sync is starting or finished based
on the status output.
Preload reiserfs module for the case, fs is present/compiled for a
kernel but it's not present in memory.
Size reducition needs --yes confirmation to preceed for reiserfs.
Correct reported message when thin snapshot has been already merged.
So lvm2 is no longer reporting "Mergins of snapshot X will occur..."
(even with swapped names).
Just like with other vars support this:
make check_local T=xyz LVM_LOG_FILE_MAX_LINES=10000000
Allows easily to override existing line limit.
Also increase limiting size of logs per command since some of
our commands are becoming very verbose....
the bug in LUKS grow/shrink decision in fsadm was
masked due to fact that default LVM2 extent size
was larger than LUKS1 default data offset for dm-crypt
mapping. The new test address this bug.
Avoid starting test, when test dir has less then 50M of free space.
Better to crash early before letting die machine on weird crash
in OOM cases...
Also show free disk space when test starts
Fix code checking that the 2nd mda which is at the end of disk really
fits the available free space and avoid any DA and MDA interleaving when
we already have DA preallocated. This mainly applies when we're restoring
a PV from VG backup using pvcreate --restorefile where we may already have
some DA preallocated - this means the PV was in a VG before with already
allocated space from it (the LVs were created). Hence we need to avoid
stepping into DA - the MDA can never ever be inside in such case!
The code responsible for this calculation was already in
_text_pv_add_metadata_area fn, but it had a bug in the calculation where
we subtracted one more sector by mistake and then the code could still
incorrectly allocate the MDA inside existing DA. The patch also renames
the variable in the code so it doesn't confuse us in future.
Also, if the 2nd mda doesn't fit, don't silently continue with just 1
MDA (at the start of the disk). If 2nd mda was requested and we can't
create that due to unavailable space, error out correctly (the patch
also adds a test to shell/pvcreate-operation.sh for this case).
Commit 8a912d6dbc missed the wrong logic,
we use 2 vars 'dev' & 'mddev' and their usage can't be mixed.
So correctly separate them so mddev keeps name of MD device.
During test do a more close selection of visible devices.
If some test leaks a device with LVMTEST prefix, next
test should not be influnced (or parallel running one).
If the test is running in non-/dev dir - it's already protected
by full path with $PREFIX in it - however it test is running
in real /dev dir - there was no such protection and test
were confused when they have seen such leaked device.
Patch 72a58ce4b0 was wronly placing
double quotes around this variable which we want to pass expanded,
as it's just set of 'space' device args ATM.
TODO consider using array[@] to make this cleaner.
Add shellcheck directive to skip warning here
Changes:
- BASH_SOURCE index was one off.
- The first line of stacktrace was pure confusion displaying executed
script together with innermost line number (which was either 125 when
STACKTRACE or 229 when skip was called.)
- We can safely ignore innermost call, as stack trace is always produced
by stacktrace function.
- It is safer to test for array length, instead of testing FUNCNAME is
main - if main function were introduced.
- Bashishm is safe to use as this function as a whole is relying on bash.
Use 1 logic for 2 loops tearing down left device.
First loops tries to remove all closed devices with 'normal' remove.
Second loop tries to replace those left devices with 'error' target.
We can't really sleep that much in teardown as it slows test too much.
So do a nested loop (similar to 'dmsetup remove_all') and keep
removing devices with open count == 0 as long as it works.
When we want to squash as much device as possible,
it's better to give it some delay, so devices have
some time to release it's resouces for next removal.
Also drop surrounding cookie processing and let each
dmsetup call run on its own.
Add missing get_devs.
When $7 is not given use empty string.
See if we can live with less RAM disk for PVs.
Drop limitation on single core as presence 1.12 should address this.
The checking order here has happend after TESTDIR was removed
resulting in weird further error on trap path.
Properly check for unexpected dmeventd before removing TESTDIR
since 'trap' codepath is still using it.
Also try to kill this unexpected dmeventd so testing is
not skipping all next dmeventd tests.
(Downside would be - if user would be accidentally starting
dmeventd by some regular system admin work - such dmeventd
might be killd if it's unused. It can't kill dmeventd in-use.
Fix mirror_images_on() to actually report something useful (thought
it might be tuned later).
So for now the function got through all '_mimages_' and compares
where the order of them is matching given list of devices.
Possible misspelling: FAILED_MIXED_STR may not be assigned, but FAIL_MIXED_STR is.
Possible misspelling: FAILED_MULTI_STR may not be assigned, but FAIL_MULTI_STR is.
Possible misspelling: FAILED_BLACK_STR may not be assigned, but FAIL_BLACK_STR is.