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This patch adds --profile arg to lvm cmds and adds config/profile_dir
configuration setting to select the directory where profiles are stored
By default it's /etc/lvm/profile.
The profiles are added by using new "add_profile" fn and then loaded
using the "load_profile" fn. All profiles are stored in a cmd context
within the new "struct profile_params":
struct profile_params {
const char *dir;
struct profile *global_profile;
struct dm_list profiles_to_load;
struct dm_list profiles;
};
...where "dir" is the directory with profiles, "global_profile" is
the profile that is set globally via the --profile arg (IOW, not
set per VG/LV basis based on metadata record) and the "profiles"
is the list with loaded profiles.
If the dm_realloc would fail, the already allocate _maps_buffer
memory would have been lost (overwritten with NULL).
Fix this by using temporary line buffer.
Also add a minor cleanup to set end of buffer to '\0',
only when we really know the file size fits the preallocated buffer.
For example, the old call and reference:
find_config_tree_str(cmd, "devices/dir", DEFAULT_DEV_DIR)
...now becomes:
find_config_tree_str(cmd, devices_dir_CFG)
So we're referring to the named configuration ID instead
of passing the configuration path and the default value
is taken from central config definition in config_settings.h
automatically.
If the user would set bigger reserved stack size then what
is allowed in resources (ulimit -s), then he would get coredump
So avoid coredump and ignore creation of such large stack size
(lvm should work properly, with just 64KB, so the option could
be eliminated).
If the user specifies number in the range of [4G/1024, 4G>,
the used value would wrap around (32bit math).
So keep the math 64bit.
Note, using such large lvm.conf values is pointless with lvm2.
leaving behind the LVM-specific parts of the code (convenience wrappers that
handle `struct device` and `struct cmd_context`, basically). A number of
functions have been renamed (in addition to getting a dm_ prefix) -- namely,
all of the config interface now has a dm_config_ prefix.
and use this for the LVM critical section logic. Also report an error if
code tries to load a table while any device is known to be in the
suspended state.
(If the variety of problems these changes are showing up can't be fixed
before the next release, the error messages can be reduced to debug
level.)
are affected by the move. (Currently it's possible for I/O to become
trapped between suspended devices amongst other problems.
The current fix was selected so as to minimise the testing surface. I
hope eventually to replace it with a cleaner one that extends the
deptree code.
Some lvconvert scenarios still suffer from related problems.
Avoid locking sum testing with valgrind compilation.
Make memory unaccessible in the valgrind for dm_pool_abadon_object.
Valgrind hinting should not be needed in _free_chunk for dm_free.
As the kernel seems to be doing weird things during
mlock -> munlock - allow 1 page locking difference without
warning - and log just debug message for a 1 page difference.
Allocation happens outside critical section probably during
log_warn printing.
Should make tests passing for now.
New strategy for memory locking to decrease the number of call to
to un/lock memory when processing critical lvm functions.
Introducing functions for critical section.
Inside the critical section - memory is always locked.
When leaving the critical section, the memory stays locked
until memlock_unlock() is called - this happens with
sync_local_dev_names() and sync_dev_names() function call.
memlock_reset() is needed to reset locking numbers after fork
(polldaemon).
The patch itself is mostly rename:
memlock_inc -> critical_section_inc
memlock_dec -> critical_section_dec
memlock -> critical_section
Daemons (clmvd, dmevent) are using memlock_daemon_inc&dec
(mlockall()) thus they will never release or relock memory they've
already locked memory.
Macros sync_local_dev_names() and sync_dev_names() are functions.
It's better for debugging - and also we do not need to add memlock.h
to locking.h header (for memlock_unlock() prototyp).
To have better control were the config tree could be modified use more
const pointers and very carefully downcast them back to non-const
(for config tree merge).
Read complete content of /proc/self/maps into one buffer without
realocation in the middle of reading and before doing any m/unlock
operation with these lines - as some of them gets change.
With previous implementation we've read some mappings twice ([stack])
Preload libc.mo file for localized lvm before taking memory lock - this way
we prevent disk access for some error paths in libdm, that prints localized
errno messages while they are still in memory locked state.
Code moves initilization of stats values to _memlock_maps().
For dmeventd we need to use mlockall() - so avoid reading config value
and go with _use_mlockall code path.
Patch assumes dmeventd uses C locales!
Patch needs the call or memlock_inc_daemon() before memlock_inc()
(which is our common use case).
Some minor code cleanup patch for _un/_lock_mem_if_needed().
(VDSO on 32bit is VSyscall on 64bit)
It seems it could be locked on 64bit kernels running 32bit binaries,
but it makes troubles on real 32bit machines where mlock() returns
error when trying to lock such map area. (0xffffe000)
Behavior of mlockall() seems to be similar.
This patch adds a new implementation of locking function instead
of mlockall() that may lock way too much memory (>100MB).
New function instead uses mlock() system call and selectively locks
memory areas from /proc/self/maps trying to avoid locking areas
unused during lock-ed state.
Patch also adds struct cmd_context to all memlock() calls to have
access to configuration.
For backward compatibility functionality of mlockall()
is preserved with "activation/use_mlockall" flag.
As a simple check, locking and unlocking counts the amount of memory
and compares whether values are matching.