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When we have two logical volumes which switch their names at the
same time we are left with incorrect lookups. Anytime we find
an entry by doing a lookup by UUID or by name we will ensure
that the lookups are indeed correct.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1642176
When a VG is exported, the 'fullreport' returns an exit code of 5, but
otherwise returns the data we are wanting.
Signed-off-by: Tony Asleson <tasleson@redhat.com>
In some cases we get stuck where we are unable to retrieve the current
state of lvm as we are encountering an error. When the error is
persistent we will log and exit the daemon instead of consuming vast
amounts of resources.
Signed-off-by: Tony Asleson <tasleson@redhat.com>
If we don't know the meaning we will return the key with default text
instead of raising an exception and taking the daemon out in the
process.
Resolves: rhbz1657950
When we get bug reports we may not get the entire log, so lets
dump the fight recorder from newest to oldest as the one we
are interested in was likely to be the last command run.
lvmdbusd executable script must use python3 interpreter detected by
configure script, as site-packages directory used for library is only
used by that interpreter.
If you send a SIGUSR1 (10) to the daemon it will dump all the
threads current stacks to stdout. This will be useful when the
daemon is apparently hung and not processing requests.
eg.
$ sudo kill -10 <daemon pid>
Make sure that any and all code that executes in the main thread is
wrapped with a try/except block to ensure that at the very least
we log when things are going wrong.
In some cases we are seeing where there are no VGs, but the data returned from
lvm shows that the PVs have the following for the VG:
"vg_name":"[unknown]", "vg_uuid":""
The code was only checking for the exitence of the VG name and we called into
the function get_object_path_by_uuid_lvm_id which requires both the VG name and
the LV name to exist (asserts this) which results in the following stack trace:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/home/tasleson/lvm2/daemons/lvmdbusd/utils.py", line 563, in runner
obj._run()
File "/home/tasleson/lvm2/daemons/lvmdbusd/utils.py", line 584, in _run
self.rc = self.f(*self.args)
File "/home/tasleson/lvm2/daemons/lvmdbusd/fetch.py", line 26, in
_main_thread_load
cache_refresh=False)[1]
File "/home/tasleson/lvm2/daemons/lvmdbusd/pv.py", line 48, in load_pvs
emit_signal, cache_refresh)
File "/home/tasleson/lvm2/daemons/lvmdbusd/loader.py", line 37, in common
objects = retrieve(search_keys, cache_refresh=False)
File "/home/tasleson/lvm2/daemons/lvmdbusd/pv.py", line 40, in
pvs_state_retrieve
p["pv_attr"], p["pv_tags"], p["vg_name"], p["vg_uuid"]))
File "/home/tasleson/lvm2/daemons/lvmdbusd/pv.py", line 84, in __init__
vg_uuid, vg_name, vg_obj_path_generate)
File "/home/tasleson/lvm2/daemons/lvmdbusd/objectmanager.py", line 318,
in get_object_path_by_uuid_lvm_id
assert uuid
AssertionError
When executing in the main thread, if we encounter an exception we
will bypass the notify_all call on the condition and the calling thread
never wakes up.
@staticmethod
def runner(obj):
# noinspection PyProtectedMember
Exception thrown here
----> obj._run()
So the following code doesn't run, which causes calling thread to hang
with obj.cond:
obj.function_complete = True
obj.cond.notify_all()
Additionally for some unknown reason the stderr is lost.
Best guess is it's something to do with scheduling a python function
into the GLib.idle_add. That made finding issue quite difficult.
If during the process of fetching current lvm state we experience an
exception we fail to call set_result on the queued_requests we were
processing. When this happens those threads block forever which causes
the service to stall infinitely. Only clear the queued_requests after
we have called set_result.
We were not adding background tasks to flight recorder. Add the meta
data to the flight recorder when we start the command and update the meta
data when the command is finished. Locking was added to meta data to
prevent concurrent update and returning string representation as these can
happen in two different threads.
vgreduce previously allowed --all and --removemissing together even though
it only actual did the remove missing. The lvm dbus daemon was passing
--all anytime there was no entries in pv_object_paths. This change supplies
--all if and only if we are not removing missing and the pv_object_paths
is empty.
Vgreduce has and continues to enforce the invalid combination of supplying a
device list when you specify --all or --removemissing so we do not need
to check for that invalid combination explicitly in the lvm dbus service as
it's already covered.
Ref: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1455471
When a user does a Manager.PvCreate they can specify the block device using a
device path that may be different than what lvm reports is the device path. For
example a user could use:
/dev/disk/by-id/wwn-0x5002538500000000 instead of /dev/sdc
In this case the pvcreate will succeed, but when we query lvm we don't find the
newly created PV. We fail because it's device path is returned as /dev/sdc. This
change re-uses an internal lookup which can accommodate this and correctly find
the newly created PV.
Corrects https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1445654
Adding qualifier makes the only unqualified log_debug occurence
consistent with other uses in the same file.
Other possible ways to fix this:
- using `from .utils import log_debug`
- moving the line below `from . import utils` line
Udev events can come in like a flood when something changes. It really
doesn't do us any good to refresh the state of the service numerous times
when 1 would suffice. We had something like this before, but it was
removed when we added the refresh thread. However, we have since learned
that we need to sequence events in the correct order and block dbus
operations if we believe the state has been affected, thus udev events are
being processed on the main work queue. This change limits spurious
work items from getting to the queue.
If we always disable the sending of notify dbus events then in the case
where all the users are lvm dbus users we will be in udev handling mode
until at least 1 external lvm command occurs. Instead we will not disable
notify dbus until after we get at least 1 external event. This makes the
service get into the correct mode of operation faster.
Utilizing the --config option we will utilize global/notify_dbus=0 so
that the service itself doesn't generate change events which it then needs to
process.
We need to place query operations in the queue to prevent the case where
a client knows of something before the service does. For example if a
client creates a PV/VG/LV outside of the dbus API and then immediately
tries to lookup and use that resource in the lvm dbus service it should
be present. By placing the queries in the work queue any previous
refresh operation will complete before we process the query.
The function timeout_add_seconds has quite a bit of variability. Using
timeout_add which specifies the timeout in ms instead of seconds. Testing
shows that this is much more consistent which should improve clients that
are using shorter timeouts for the API and the connection.
Added a properties changed signal on the job dbus object so that client
can wait for a signal that the job is complete instead of polling or
blocking on the wait method.
Allows the user to override the number of commands that get dumped
to the log when we encounter a lvm error. Also useful during
development when you don't want to see the blackbox output.
When reading data from stdout & stderr we were reading until the
reading until we got None back which really isn't needed as the
read will return everything that is available.
We need to acquire a lock which can block us which in turn causes
the dbus request handling to block as well. Place the request on
the work queue instead.
Our expectation was that when using the lvm shell that when the lvm prompt
was read from stdout, that all other ouput had been written and flushed.
However, this doesn't appear to be the case. Add extra read passes to
retrieve delayed report data.
In preparation to have more than one thread issuing commands to lvm
at the same time we need to serialize updates to the dbus state and
retrieving the global lvm state. To achieve this we have one thread
handling this with a thread safe queue taking and coalescing requests.
This code is no longer needed because the back ground task has been
removed. Will add back if we change the design and end up utilizing
multiple worker threads.
There is no reason to create another background task when the task that
created it is going to block waiting for it to finish. Instead we will
just execute the logic in the worker thread that is servicing the worker
queue.
Instead of creating a thread to handle the case where a client
is calling job.Wait, we will utilize a timer. This significantly
reduces the number of threads that get created and destroyed while
the service is running.
We will fetch the lvm state in non-main thread and only process the new
data with the main thread to prevent hanging the main thread event loop.
ref. https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=98521
The following LvCommon properties were added so that the API
would have the same functionality as lvm2app has.
LvCommon.MetaDataSizeBytes
LvCommon.Attr
LvCommon.MetaDataPercent
LvCommon.CopyPercent
LvCommon.SnapPercent
LvCommon.SyncPercent
When a PV device is missing lvm will return '[unknown]' for the device
path. The object manager keeps a hash table lookup for uuid and for PV's
device name. When we had multiple PVs with the same device path we
we only had 1 key in the table for the lvm id (device path). This caused
a problem when the PV device transitioned from '[unknown]' to known as any
subsequent transitions would cause an exception:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/usr/lib/python3.5/site-packages/lvmdbusd/request.py", line 66, in run_cmd
result = self.method(*self.arguments)
File "/usr/lib/python3.5/site-packages/lvmdbusd/manager.py", line 205, in _pv_scan
cfg.load()
File "/usr/lib/python3.5/site-packages/lvmdbusd/fetch.py", line 24, in load
cache_refresh=False)[1]
File "/usr/lib/python3.5/site-packages/lvmdbusd/pv.py", line 48, in load_pvs
emit_signal, cache_refresh)
File "/usr/lib/python3.5/site-packages/lvmdbusd/loader.py", line 80, in common
cfg.om.remove_object(cfg.om.get_object_by_path(k), True)
File "/usr/lib/python3.5/site-packages/lvmdbusd/objectmanager.py", line 153, in remove_object
self._lookup_remove(path)
File "/usr/lib/python3.5/site-packages/lvmdbusd/objectmanager.py", line 97, in _lookup_remove
del self._id_to_object_path[lvm_id]
KeyError: '[unknown]'
when trying to delete a key that wasn't present. In this case we don't add a
lookup key for the device path and the PV can only be located by UUID.
Ref: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1379357
Gris debugged that when we don't have a method the introspection
data is missing the interface itself eg.
<interface name="<your_obj_iface_name>" />
When adding the properties to the dbus object introspection we will
add the interface too if it's missing. This now allows us the
ability to have a dbus object with only properties.
When we register a failure we need to use a valid value which will be
returned with the object manager. Otherwise we will raise an Exception
because we are trying to construct an object path from None.
The methods were returning an instance of the object instead of the
object path which was causing an exception when the result was returned
with the job object as we are explicity trying to return an object path.
Unit test added which re-creates the issue and verifies the fix.
- Prevent --lvmshell with --nojson, not a valid combination
- If user is preventing json, then no lvmshell usage
- Return boolean on Manager.UseLvmShell
The normal mode of operation will be to monitor for udev events until an
ExternalEvent occurs. In that case the service will disable monitoring
for udev events and use ExternalEvent exclusively.
Note: User specifies --udev the service will always monitor udev regardless
if ExternalEvent is being called too.
With the addition of JSON and the ability to get output which is known to
not contain any extraneous text we can now leverage lvm shell, so that we
don't fork and exec lvm command line repeatedly.
When we are running in a terminal it's useful to have a date & ts on log
output like you get when output goes to the journal. Check if we are
running on a tty and if we are, add it in.
When converting to a cache lv, tests were hanging with a prompt for
"Do you want wipe existing metadata of cache pool volume
To preserve cache metadata add option "--zero n".
WARNING: Reusing mismatched cache pool metadata MAY DESTROY YOUR DATA!"
This is new.
When a client is doing a wait on a job, any other clients will hang
when trying to do anything with the service. This is caused by
the wait code which was placing the thread that handles
incoming dbus requests to sleep until either the timeout expired or
the job operation completed.
This change creates a thread for the wait request, so that the thread
processing incoming requests can continue to run.
We call 'lvm help' to find out if fullreport is supported. Lvm
dumps help to stderr. Common code prints a warning if we exit
with 0, but have something in stderr so we are skipping the warning
message.
The following operations would hang if lvm was compiled with
'enable-notify-dbus' and the client specified -1 for the timeout:
* LV snapshot merge
* VG move
* LV move
This was caused because the implementation of these three dbus methods is
different. Most of the dbus method calls are executed by gathering information
needed to fulfill it, placing that information on a thread safe queue and
returning. The results later to be returned to the client with callbacks.
With this approach we can process an arbitrary number of commands without any
of them blocking other dbus commands. However, the 3 dbus methods listed
above did not utilize this functionality because they were implemented with a
separate thread that handles the fork & exec of lvm. This is done because these
operations can be very slow to complete. However, because of this the lvm
command that we were waiting on is trying to call back into the dbus service to
notify it that something changed. Because the code was blocking the process
that handles the incoming dbus activity the lvm command blocked. We were stuck
until the client timed-out the connection, which then causes the service to
unblock and continue. If the client did not have a timeout, we would have been
hung indefinitely.
The fix is to always utilize the worker queue on all dbus methods. We need to
ensure that lvm is tested with 'enable-notify-dbus' enabled and disabled.
We were initially looking to see if an LV was hidden and if it was we were
creating an instance of a LvCommon object to represent it. Thus if we
had a hidden cache pool for example we were missing the methods and
properties for the cache pool. However, when we create the object path,
any hidden LVs, regardless of type/functionality will be placed in the
hidden path.
The object manager method get_object_by_lvm_id was used in many cases for
the sole reason of getting the object path for the object. Instead of
retrieving the object and then calling 'dbus_object_path' on the object, we
are adding a method which returns the object path.
When we are processing the LVs we need to build up dbus objects from least
dependent to most dependent, so that we have information available when
constructing.
To help out with debug, when an exception is thrown in the dbus service we
will dump all the information we have on the last 16 commands that were
executed along with the stack strace.
Signed-off-by: Tony Asleson <tasleson@redhat.com>
While running on F24 a number of warnings were being emitted from using the
deprecated GObject instead of GLib. Tested on python 3.4 and 3.5.
Signed-off-by: Tony Asleson <tasleson@redhat.com>
Python 3.5 in F24 was throwing the following exception:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/usr/lib/python3.5/site-packages/lvmdbusd/main.py", line 73, in process_request
req.run_cmd()
File "/usr/lib/python3.5/site-packages/lvmdbusd/request.py", line 73, in run_cmd
self.register_error(-1, st)
File "/usr/lib/python3.5/site-packages/lvmdbusd/request.py", line 123, in register_error
self._reg_ending(None, error_rc, error)
File "/usr/lib/python3.5/site-packages/lvmdbusd/request.py", line 115, in _reg_ending
self.cb_error(self._rc_error)
File "/usr/lib64/python3.5/site-packages/dbus/service.py", line 669, in <lambda>
keywords[error_callback] = lambda exception: _method_reply_error(connection, message, exception)
File "/usr/lib64/python3.5/site-packages/dbus/service.py", line 293, in _method_reply_error
exception))
File "/usr/lib64/python3.5/traceback.py", line 136, in format_exception_only
return list(TracebackException(etype, value, None).format_exception_only())
File "/usr/lib64/python3.5/traceback.py", line 442, in __init__
if (exc_value and exc_value.__cause__ is not None
AttributeError: 'str' object has no attribute '__cause__'
This was caused because we were calling the dbus error callback with a
string instead of an actual exception. On python 3.4 this was apparently
OK, but not with 3.5. Corrected to pass the exception to error callback.
Change tested on both python 3.4 and 3.5.
Reported-by: Vratislav Podzimek <vpodzime@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Tony Asleson <tasleson@redhat.com>