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If lvm.conf has use_devicesfile=0 and /etc/lvm/device/system.devices
exists, then rename it to system.devices-unused.YYYYMMDD.HHMMSS.
This prevents an old, incorrect system.devices from being used in
the future if lvm.conf is changed to use_devicesfile=1.
Create backup copies of system.devices in /etc/lvm/devices/backup
named system.devices-YYYYMMDD.HHMMSS.NNNN. NNNN is the version
counter from the file.
Each time that an lvm command writes a new system.devices file,
it also writes the same file in the backup directory.
A new comment line is added to system.devices with HASH=<num>
where <num> is a crc calculated from the uncommented lines in
system.devices. This lets lvm detect if the file has been
modified outside of lvm itself.
If system.devices is edited directly, the next time a command
reads the file, the crc will not match the HASH value. The
command will then rewrite system.devices with the correct HASH
value, and create a backup reflecting the edits.
A default limit of 50 backup files is kept, configurable by
lvm.conf devicesfile_backup_limit (set to 0 to disable backups.)
- add new comparison between old and new entries, and use this
as the basis for new dedicated output for check and update
- add new --refresh option to search for missing PVIDs on all
devices, and possibly update the device ID
- internally, only use the term "refresh" for cases where a
new device ID may be found and assigned for a missing PVID
During vdo testing with smaller block devices the test needs to determine
which PVs in a VG are unused. This was leveraging LvCommon.Devices, but
that isn't populated when a LV is resides on a LV pool instead of a PV.
This is a known limitation of the code at this time. For now we will walk
all the PVs in the VG looking for ones that don't have any associated LVs
and use them instead.
Signed-off-by: Tony Asleson <tasleson@redhat.com>
It looks like there is some kernel bug/limitation
that may cause invalid table load processing:
dmsetup load LVMTEST-LV1
device-mapper: reload ioctl on LVMTEST-LV1 failed: Invalid argument
md/raid:mdX: reshape_position too early for auto-recovery - aborting.
md: pers->run() failed ...
device-mapper: table: 253:38: raid: Failed to run raid array (-EINVAL)
device-mapper: ioctl: error adding target to table
However ATM there is not much we can do then make delays bigger.
TODO: fixing md core...
Extend the test a bit futher so we can keep logic of resize
working similarly well for older and newer systems.
Test uses new 'aux have_fsinfo'function to regnize compiled
version of lvm.
Fix a bug in _stats_set_aux() that causes bogus data to appear
in the 'userdata' field of stats reports when previously grouped
regions are ungrouped:
/var/tmp/File With Spaces: Created new group with 1 region(s) as group ID 0.
Removed group ID 0 on fedora-root
Name GrpID RgID ObjType RgStart RgSize #Areas ArSize ProgID UserData
fedora-root - 0 region 6.39g 100.00m 1 100.00m dmstats #-
^^
This is the aux_data separator character followed by empty user data.
The _stats_set_aux() function should only emit the separator if
there is a valid group descriptor for the region.
Search for a PV on other devices if it's a devname entry
and the name doesn't exist on the system. This restores
code that should not have been removed in commit 1901a47df
"device_id: fix conditions for device_ids_refresh"
throtling mirror device is becoming useless with faster CPUS,
as way to many data can be transferred before throttling steps-in.
So prefer using dm-delay for test and keep throttling as fallback.
Detection of how the command is supposed to behave actually depends on
the configure.h compilation and whether binary is compiled with
HAVE_BLKID_SUBLKS_FSINFO.
This makes it somewhat complicated in a way how to recognize which
behavior is expected.
Currently we can eventually recognize by checking error output
of some 'random' lvresize command and see if the --fs checksize is
actually recognized and rejected. If this changes - test needs
to be updated.
After umout we may race with system udevd rule - so
just retry once again after 1s sleep - that should be
enough - otherwise we would need some loop here...
Multi-line echo command are problemat across variety of bash version
and may have produce shorter results.
Convert to stable heredoc string with 'tab' skipping <<- for better
formating.