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The fallback branch in _stats_update_file() is redundant (since the
branch taken when the daemon starts successfully must jump to the
'out' label anyway): remove it and re-order the conditions to
improve readability.
Older compilers cannot tell that the 'mode' variable is only
used in branches in which it is assigned:
dmsetup.c:5651: warning: "mode" may be used uninitialized in this function
dmsetup.c:5023: warning: "mode" may be used uninitialized in this function
Avoid this by always assigning the variable a value.
Launch an instance of the filemap monitoring daemon when creating,
or updating, a file mapped group, unless the --nomonitor switch is
given.
Unless --foreground is given the daemon will detach from the
terminal and run in the background until it is signaled or the
daemon termination conditions are met.
The --follow={inode|path} switch is added to control the daemon
behaviour when files are moved, unlinked, or renamed while they
are being monitored.
The daemon runs with the same verbosity as the dmstats command
that starts it.
Kernel 4.10 (dm-crypt v1.15.0) and later supports loading device
tables with crypt segment having key in kernel keyring retention
service.
dmsetup hid key section of tables output. With this patch dmsetup
no longer hides key section if it detects kernel key description
instead of hex byte representation of key itself.
Add a new update_filemap command to dmstats that allows a filemap
group to be updated:
# dmstats update_filemap --groupid 0 vm.img
/var/lib/libvirt/images/vm.img: Updated group ID 0 with 137 region(s).
This will update the set of regions mapped to the file to reflect
the current file system allocation.
Currently this needs to be run manually - a future update will add
support for monitoring file maps via a daemon, allowing them to be
automatically updated when the underlying file is modified.
When --count=0 interval numbers are miscalculated:
Interval #18446744069414584325 time delta: 999920887ns
Interval #18446744069414584325 current err: -79113ns
End interval #18446744069414584325 duration: 999920887ns
This is because the command line argument is cast through the
uint32_t type, and fixed to UINT32_MAX:
_count = ((uint32_t)_int_args[COUNT_ARG]) ? : UINT32_MAX;
We also need to handle --count=0 specially when calculating the
interval number: since intervals count from #1, this must account
for the implicit "minus one" when converting from zero to the
UINT64_MAX value used (which is too large to store in _int_args).
The time management code mixes tests of the _timer_fd value with
code that should be timer agnostic: this causes problems for users
of the usleep() timer, since it cannot properly detect the start
of a new interval:
Beginning first interval
Interval #18446744069414584348 time delta: 1000000000ns
Interval #18446744069414584348 current err: 0ns
End interval #18446744069414584348 duration: 1000000000ns
Adjusted sample interval duration: 1000000000ns
[...]
Beginning first interval
Interval #18446744069414584349 time delta: 1000000000ns
Interval #18446744069414584349 current err: 0ns
End interval #18446744069414584349 duration: 1000000000ns
Adjusted sample interval duration: 1000000000ns
Separate these out, by defining a _timer_running() call that each
timer implements, and only define _timer_fd if we are compiling
with TIMERFD enabled.
Although the usleep() interval timer is not used if the Linux
TIMERFD interface is available it should still provide reasonably
good timing.
Instead of trying to estimate the error from the duration of the
last sleep, peg it to the start time of the program, and use the
value of ((start_time - now) % interval) to correct the current
interval duration.
This always pulls us back into sync at the end of each interval,
rather than relying on trying to incrementally adjust the time
duration at each interval start.
This greatly reduces drift when the usleep() clock is used.
If a device disappears after obtaining the list of devices but before
processing it as a member of that list, dmsetup exits with a failure code.
Most commands still produce what output they can in these circumstances,
but 'ls --tree' and 'info -c' with fields depending on device dependencies
didn't. Change this.
Make sure that the temporary dm_histogram used for the bounds
argument is freed in the case that the user provided a --bounds
argument on the command line.
The --uuid, --major and --alldevices arguments were incorrectly tested
after confirming argc is > 0, in a branch that only executes if argc
== 0 (i.e. they were unreachable).
Move all device checks before the test for argc and log an appropriate
error before returning.
Make the --filemap switch take no arguments and instead accept one
or more files on the command line to be mapped and placed into
groups.
This allows --filemap to be used with a glob:
# dmstats create --filemap *
rhel5.10-1.qcow2: Created new group with 87 region(s) as group ID 1564.
rhel5.10.qcow2: Created new group with 8 region(s) as group ID 1651.
rhel7.0-1.qcow2: Created new group with 11 region(s) as group ID 1659.
rhel7.0.qcow2: Created new group with 1454 region(s) as group ID 1670.
vm.img: Created new group with 2 region(s) as group ID 3124.
When a 'dmstats create --filemap' operation fails (e.g. during
open(2), close(2), or dm_stats_create_regions_from_fd()), use the
canonical version of the path. This avoids cryptic/confusing error
messages when symbolic links exist in the path argument given:
# findmnt /var/lib/libvirt/images -otarget,source
TARGET SOURCE
/var/lib/libvirt/images /dev/mapper/vg_hex-lv_images
# readlink /var/lib/libvirt/images/my.img
/boot/my.img
# dmstats create --filemap /var/lib/libvirt/images/my.img
Cannot map file: not a device-mapper device.
Could not create regions from file /var/lib/libvirt/images/my.img
Command failed
Using the canonical path the error is immediately obvious:
# dmstats create --filemap /var/lib/libvirt/images/my.img
Cannot map file: not a device-mapper device.
Could not create regions from file /boot/my.img
Command failed
Grouping is also useful in combination with --segments: creating a
group allows both individual segment data and data for the device
as a whole to be presented in the same report.
Support grouping for 'create --segments' in the same manner as for
'create --filemap'; group regions by default, applying an optional
alias specified with --alias, unless the user specifies --nogroup.
Add a new option to the create command to create regions that map the
extents of a file:
# dmstats create --filemap /path/to/file
/path/to/file: Created new group with 10 region(s) as group ID 0.
When performing a --filemap no device argument is required (and
supplying one results in error) since the device to bind to is implied
by the file path and is obtained directly from an fstat().
Grouping may be optionally disabled by the --nogroup switch: in this
case the command will report each region individually:
# dmstats create --nogroup --filemap /path/to/file
/path/to/file: Created new region with 1 area as region ID 0.
/path/to/file: Created new region with 1 area as region ID 1.
/path/to/file: Created new region with 1 area as region ID 2.
When grouping regions the group alias is automatically set to the
basename (as returned by dm_basename()) of the provided file.
This can be overridden to a user-defined value at the command line by
use of the --alias option.
If grouping is disabled no alias can be set.
Use of offset and subdivision options (--start, --length, --segments,
--areas, --areasize).
Setting aux_data and histograms for groups is possible but is not
currently implemented.
Make it clear that the "aux data" presented in reports is the user
data stored in the field (and does not include any library-internal
state such as group descriptors) by renaming the field to user_data
and changing the heading to "UserData".
Replace --statstype=area,region,group with a separate switch for
each object type: --area, --region, --group. Omitting any object
type switch will use the defaults for the current command (regions
and groups for list, and regions, groups and areas for verbose list).
Replace the 'name' field with 'statsname' in order to report alias
names for groups, and include the 'group_id' field between statsname
and the 'region_id' field to make it clear to the user when groups
are in use.