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Previous fix was invalid (after some in-place shuffling)
'dd' copied goes to 'stderr' so we need to catch all output.
Grep needs to check output of tee tool.
Ensure 'C' locales are in use with 'dd'.
Pass more args with some 'aux' commands:
wipefs_a, enable_dev, disable_dev
(so it's a bit more efficient using single udev_wait call).
Use prepare_vg instead of prepare_pvs.
Keep using test directory for created files.
Trap errors and remove brd in this case.
Use some shell builtins to reduce fork count.
Use "$VAR".
Run 'pvs' with devlist (so not acceing other system devices).
New dmpd tools return version string in different format,
so update code to understand both variant.
Also hide some shell var setting to local functions.
With 3596558861 it's been introduced
a more fine grained description.
However 'disabled' might be actually more confusing then empty field,
so keep only the info about 'not enabled'aka dmevend is not allowed
to monitor LV which otherwise could be monitored.
Fix the testing logic.
With raid5 device the layout of files on a filesystem does not define
which leg will actually contain the block we try to damage.
So test will now figure out which device has damaged block.
Use 'check' functionality and also drop unneeded random write as we
now can identify easily in other way.
The command "lvcreate --type thin --snapshot ..." to create a thin
snapshot would fail.
commit d651b340e6 removed the optional
"--type thin" from the command definition "lvcreate --snapshot LV_thin",
and added --type thin as AUTOTYPE. This was correct and should not have
changed anything if all the command defs were correct, but it broke
the "lvcreate --type thin --snapshot" case. It reveals a problem in a
different command definintion: "lvcreate --type thin LV_thin" that was
missing --snapshot in its OO list.
Fix in the code that matches devices to system.devices entries when
the devices have the same serial number. A non-PV device in
system.devices has no pvid value, and the code was segfaulting
when checking the null pvid value.
In previous lvm versions, trailing spaces at the end of a t10 wwid would
be replaced with underscores, so the IDNAME string in system.devices
would look something like "t10.123_". Current versions of lvm ignore
trailing spaces in a t10 wwid, so the IDNAME string used would be
"t10.123". The different values would cause lvm to not recognize a
device in system.devices with the trailing _. Fix this by ignoring
trailing underscores in the IDNAME string from system.devices.
The recent fix 05c2b10c5d ensures that raid LV images are not
using the same devices. This was happening in the lvextend commands
used by this test, so fix the test to use more devices to ensue
redundancy.
Check for running (possibly leftover) lvmdbusd running in the
system - as this daemon may interfere with this test as in this
case both be operating on same 'live' data in /run/lvm.
Make test faster by agregating sets of operation to work on a single
created filesystem yet checking all the variants of extension and reduction.
Split 'xfs' part into separate test and convert it for use of the
minimal size 300M nowdays required by mkfs.xfs.
Previous commit cause the pvmove could actually be started in unexpected
order - so make sure, we are not starting new pvmove in same VG until
the previous one is started.
aux wait_pvmove_lv_ready() now handles multiple pvmove LVs
at one go - which allows a bit fast checking - although
at some point we may need to switch to use delayed devs
since mirror throttling seems to be no longer working well,
as CPU are getting so fast, that most of data are already
pvmoved before throttling has any chance to do something...
Convert test to use only ext4 instead of 300M demanding XFS.
Shorten 'B' files to 4K and use 4K strip size with >raid1 arrays
so we do not risk spreading of the file across stripe.
Also use easier 'aux corrupt_dev()' method to introduce a bit
corruption into a block device with integrity.
TODO: shorten _wait_recalc (should't be needed).
Convert test to use a single skeleton and only different pieces
keep in separate tests.
Lower raid disk usage to smaller size and switch to ext4
as way less demanding fileystem.
Different sequences of steps that could be used to handle raid LVs
after VG takeover (what would happen in cluster failover) combined
with the loss of a disk.
Replace spaces with \040 in directory paths from getmntent (mtab).
The recent commit 5374a44c57 compares mount point directory paths
from /etc/mtab and /proc/mounts, in order to detect when a mounted
LV has been renamed. The directory path comparison does not work
correctly when the path contains spaces because getmntent uses
ascii space chars and proc replaces spaces with \040.
Fix hang of vgimportclone command when:
the PV(s) being imported are not actually clones/duplicates, and
the -n vgname arg is the same as the current vgname.
(Not the intended use of the command, but it should still work.)
In this case, the old and new vgnames ended up being the same, when
the code expected they would be different. A file lock on both the
old and new vgnames is used, so when both flocks are on the same
file, the second blocks indefinitely.
Fix the new vgname to be the old name plus a numeric suffix, which
is the expected result.
There were a couple of cases where lvresize, without --fs resize,
was resizing the crypt layer above the LV. Resizing the crypt
layer should only be done when fs resizing is enabled (even if the
fs is already small enough due to being independently reduced.)
Also, check the size of the crypt device to see if it's already
been reduced independently, and skip the cryptsetup resize if
it's not needed.
The recent change that verifies sys_serial system.devices entries
using the PVID did not exclude non-PV devices from being checked.
The verification code would attempt to use du->pvid which was null
for the non-PVs causing a segfault.
Since now we change deduplication with V4 table line change,
the modification tends to be faster and we can capture for a few ms
also 'status' about opening or closing deduplication index.
Use 'grep -E' to handle both words.
Handle multiple devices using the same serial number as
their device id. After matching devices to devices file
entries, if there is a discrepency between the ondisk PVID
and the devices file PVID, then rematch devices to
devices file entries using PVID, looking at all disks
on the system with the same serial number.