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(for example when CLVMD_CMD_LOCK_VG for is called during vgscan).
If clvmd calls LV lock, it calls
/* clean the pool for another command */
dm_pool_empty(cmd->mem);
to clean up memory pool after command.
Unfortunately, do_refresh_cache() do not call this
and because during it operation it allocates some memory,
the pool increases.
Also do_refresh_cache should use lvm_lock
(it manipulates with lvm internal data).
The same applies for lvm_backup command.
Signed-off-by: Milan Broz <mbroz@redhat.com>
There is a rudimentary make file in place so people can build by hand
from 'LVM2/daemons/clogd'. It is not hooked into the main build system
yet. I am checking this in to provide people better access to the
source code.
There is still work to be done to make better use of existing code in
the LVM repository. (list.h could be removed in favor of existing list
implementations, for example. Logging might also be removed in favor
of what is already in the tree.)
I will probably defer updating WHATS_NEW_DM until this code is linked
into the main build system (unless otherwise instructed).
Very simple / crude method of removing 'is_static' from initialization.
Why should we require an application tell us whether it is linked
statically or dynamically to libLVM? If the application is linked
statically, but libraries exist and dlopen() calls succeed, why
do we care if it's statically linked?
This allows us to remove one argument from create_toolcontext() and
moves it closer to a generic library init function.
In the arg_*() functions, we just use _the_args() directly.
For now we leave the first parameter to these
arg_*() functions (struct cmd_context *) because
of the number of files involved in removing the
parameter.
Very similar argument to removal of init_debug() and other calls.
create_toolcontext() calls _process_config() which sets
cmd->default_settings.activation, then calls
set_activation(cmd->default_settings.activation). Later, create_toolcontext()
sets cmd->current_settings = cmd->default_settings. So these calls
set_activation(cmd->current_settings.activation) are redundant.
Identical argument to previous patch which removed archive_enable() calls.
We add a new parameter to backup_init() which sets the enable value based
on the cmd->default_settings.backup value. This value was used to set
cmd->current_settings.backup, used in the removed backup_enable() call.
_init_backup() calls archive_init(), which originally set 'enabled' to
a hardcoded '1' value. This seems incorrect based on my read of other
areas of the code so here we add a 'enabled' paramter to archive_init().
We pass in cmd->default_settings.archive, which is obtained from the
config tree. Later in create_toolcontext, cmd->current_settings is
set to cmd->default_settings. The archive_enable() call we remove
here was using cmd->current_settings to set the 'archive' enable
value. The final value of cmd->archive_params->enabled should thus
be equivalent to the original code.
The rationale for removing init_verbose() call is very similar to removing
init_debug() call. create_toolcontext() calls _init_logging() which
makes these calls:
/* Verbose level for tty output */
cmd->default_settings.verbose =
find_config_tree_int(cmd, "log/verbose", DEFAULT_VERBOSE);
init_verbose(cmd->default_settings.verbose + VERBOSE_BASE_LEVEL);
And being that create_toolcontext() copies default_settings into
current_settings at the bottom, the init_verbose() call we are removing:
init_verbose(cmd->current_settings.verbose + VERBOSE_BASE_LEVEL);
is redundant.
We can safely remove because create_toolcontext() calls _init_logging(),
which makes these calls:
/* Debug level for log file output */
cmd->default_settings.debug =
find_config_tree_int(cmd, "log/level", DEFAULT_LOGLEVEL);
init_debug(cmd->default_settings.debug);
Then at the bottom of create_toolcontext() we do this:
cmd->current_settings = cmd->default_settings;
So the call we are removing from init_lvm() functions (clvmd and lvmcmdline):
init_debug(cmd->current_settings.debug);
Just sets the value of debug based on 'cmd->current_settings.debug'.
Since cmd->current_settings is equivalent to cmd->default_settings, and
init_debug() was called with cmd->default_settings, the call we remove is
redundant.
snapshot DSO unregistered itself when snapshot changed state to invalid.
This can cause a race (and several timeouts), when for example another snapshot
is added and in the middle of operation (suspend/resume) the monitoring thread
unregister itself.
Fix it by keeping the snapshot monitored after invalidation - just reset
threshold to not really print any messages to syslog.
failed to link against liblvm2cmd.
Dmeventd DSOs *require* lvm2cmd to be linked in.
For the future:
1) AC_SUBST does not create Makefile variables, only @foo@-style substitutions
2) When using `test', whitespace around `=' is essential:
test a=b is true, as is test a=a
* configure.in (LVM2CMD_LIB): Define if --enable-cmdlib.
* dmeventd/mirror/Makefile.in (CLDFLAGS): Use $(LVM2CMD_LIB) rather
than hard-coding -llvm2cmd.
* dmeventd/snapshot/Makefile.in (CLDFLAGS): Likewise.
which is not used since the switch away from async version saLck
. num_nodes should equal to member_list_entries, i.e.
joined_list_entires is 0 when a node leaves the group.
Thanks to Xinwei Hu for the patch.
It does 2 things.
1. The cpg_deliver_callback make a compare between target_nodeid and our_nodeid.
It turns out openais set target_nodeid to 0 sometimes. for broadcasting ? I change the behavior so that lvm will process_remote also on target_nodeid == 0
2. The joined_list passed to cpg_confchg_callback doesn't include the already exist nodes in the group, which leads to an incomplete node_hash. I simply add all other nodes in member_list to node_hash also.
Thanks to Xinwei Hu for this patch.
* dmeventd/dmeventd.c (_set_oom_adj): When writing to /proc/self/oom_adj,
detect failure even if it's hidden behind ferror. [Using dm_fclose's
extra ferror test here is probably not needed, since the amount written
is nowhere near BUFSIZ, but use it regardless, for consistency. ]
* lib/fs/libdevmapper.c (do_suspend): Detect fclose failure when
writing to suspend.