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A new aio context was being created, io_setup(2), in each
call to rescan labels. This is an expensive call, so keep
the aio context around to reuse in each call.
When label_scan reads metadata from independent areas, not
from the devices, set a flag on the vginfo. Use this flag
to avoid trying to rescan those devices in vg_read() since
the metadata won't be found on them, and wreck the lvmcache
data set up by the label scan.
duplicate PVs are detected during label scan and lvmetad
is disabled when they are detected. pvscan --cache can quit
after label scan if duplicates were found rather than going
through the remaining metadata reading steps.
We can read a large amount of data into label_read_data
synchronously also, and use this data in the processing path
instead of reading each bit of data from disk separately.
This command doesn't use process_each so it needs to
do a label_scan itself before trying to parse metadata,
which wants to know which PVs are on which devices.
'pvscan --cache' for scanning all devices now uses
label_scan_async and can reuse data like other commands.
'pvscan --cache dev' can't do a label_scan because it's
only allowed to read the single dev. A label_read on
that single dev is added prior to reading the VG from it.
label_scan is a primary step that a command performs,
following the standard pattern for command processing.
It was being called as a side effect of a utility/helper
function, which made it less obvious and made it easier
to be called without realizing it. Pull it up to a
prominent top level in the sequence of primary steps.
label_scan is not something that should be done in
various low level places as needed.
when using async read data.
This is the short disk read that validates VG metadata
before reading the full metadata. There's a nearly
identical function in the label scan path, as this one
in the vg_read path. The other version was already
adapted to use the label read data, but this one was
missed.
Both for rescanning labels at the start of vg_read,
and then passing and using that reread data through
the vg_read() path to avoid rereading the same data
from disk.
When vg_read() begins, it looks up the format (fmt) for
the VG name in lvmcache, telling lvmcache_fmt_from_vgname()
to reread labels on all devices in the VG.
Avoid rereading the labels on all the devices, and trust
that lvmcache has correct information. If the format of
the VG is not available, the calling code already
rescans labels and retries.
When the low levels of vg_read() are parsing VG metadata,
they see a PVID, and try to get the device for it, calling
lvmcache_device_from_pvid(). When this function found
the dev for this PVID in lvmcache, it would issue a
full label_read() on that device and verify that the
pvid/dev mapping in lvmcache is correct.
Remove this label_read() and trust that the pvid to dev
mapping in lvmcache is correct. If metadata changed
between the initial label scan performed by the command,
and the locked vg_read(), then other code exists to
rescan labels.
(The lvmetad case already trusted the contents of lvmcache.)
Copy the metadata out of the initial async read buffer
instead of performing another two synchronous reads
(first to check vgname, second to read all metadata.)
Extend the initial async read buffer size to cover all
the headers/metadata that need to be read from the device
during label scan.
Copy the mda_header from this buffer instead of performing
another synchronous read for it.
The copy of VG metadata stored in lvmcache was not being used
in general. It pretended to be a generic VG metadata cache,
but was not being used except for clvmd activation. There
it was used to avoid reading from disk while devices were
suspended, i.e. in resume.
This removes the code that attempted to make this look
like a generic metadata cache, and replaces with with
something narrowly targetted to what it's actually used for.
This is a way of passing the VG from suspend to resume in
clvmd. Since in the case of clvmd one caller can't simply
pass the same VG to both suspend and resume, suspend needs
to stash the VG somewhere that resume can grab it from.
(resume doesn't want to read it from disk since devices
are suspended.) The lvmcache vginfo struct is used as a
convenient place to stash the VG to pass it from suspend
to resume, even though it isn't related to the lvmcache
or vginfo. These suspended_vg* vginfo fields should
not be used or touched anywhere else, they are only to
be used for passing the VG data from suspend to resume
in clvmd. The VG data being passed between suspend and
resume is never modified, and will only exist in the
brief period between suspend and resume in clvmd.
suspend has both old (current) and new (precommitted)
copies of the VG metadata. It stashes both of these in
the vginfo prior to suspending devices. When vg_commit
is successful, it sets a flag in vginfo as before,
signaling the transition from old to new metadata.
resume grabs the VG stashed by suspend. If the vg_commit
happened, it grabs the new VG, and if the vg_commit didn't
happen it grabs the old VG. The VG is then used to resume
LVs.
This isolates clvmd-specific code and usage from the
normal lvm vg_read code, making the code simpler and
the behavior easier to verify.
Sequence of operations:
- lv_suspend() has both vg_old and vg_new
and stashes a copy of each onto the vginfo:
lvmcache_save_suspended_vg(vg_old);
lvmcache_save_suspended_vg(vg_new);
- vg_commit() happens, which causes all clvmd
instances to call lvmcache_commit_metadata(vg).
A flag is set in the vginfo indicating the
transition from the old to new VG:
vginfo->suspended_vg_committed = 1;
- lv_resume() needs either vg_old or vg_new
to use in resuming LVs. It doesn't want to
read the VG from disk since devices are
suspended, so it gets the VG stashed by
lv_suspend:
vg = lvmcache_get_suspended_vg(vgid);
If the vg_commit did not happen, suspended_vg_committed
will not be set, and in this case, lvmcache_get_suspended_vg()
will return the old VG instead of the new VG, and it will
resume LVs based on the old metadata.
Replaced the confusing device error message "not found (or ignored by
filtering)" by either "not found" or "excluded by a filter".
(Later we should be able to say which filter.)
Left the the liblvm code paths alone.
Fixes the following case with 3PVs and 3 legs "mirror" LV:
# lvcreate -l100%FREE --type mirror -m2 vg3
Insufficient free space for log allocation for logical volume .
Unable to allocate extents for mirror log.
Related: rhbz1269533
Activation lock has a primary purpose to serialize locking of individual
LV in case there is no other protecting mechanism for parallel
execution.
However in the case an activated LV is composed from several other LVs,
noone should be able to manipulate with those LVs as well.
This patch add a very 'naive' global VG activation locking in this case.
In the future we may introduce smarter function detecting minimal closed
graph components if this will appear as bottleneck
Patch checks if the VG Write lock is held - in this case we do not
need any more locking - command has exclusive access to VG.
In case we have clustered VG and we are activating an LV which does not
need other LVs - we also do not need any more locks.
In all other cases take respective lock - for single LV - use lvid,
for complex LVs use vgname.
Creating striped RaidLVs with lv size not divisible by region size
caused the region size to be adjusted:
# lvcreate --type raid5 -n region_check.32.00m_3 -i 3 -L 1g --nosync -R 32.00m raid_sanity
Using default stripesize 64.00 KiB.
Rounding size 1.00 GiB (256 extents) up to stripe boundary size <1.01 GiB(258 extents).
WARNING: New raid5 won't be synchronised. Don't read what you didn't write!
Using reduced mirror region size of 8.00 MiB
Logical volume region_check.32.00m_3 created.
Fix by not imposing "mirror" constraints on "raid".
Resolves: rhbz1404007
vgmerge suffers from a similar problem to the one fixed in commit
8146548d25 ("vgsplit: Fix intermediate
metadata corruption.")
When merging, splitting or renaming VGs, use a new PV status flag
PV_MOVED_VG to mark the PVs that hold metadata with the old VG name and
use this to provide PV-level granularity instead of incorrectly assuming
all PVs in the VG are the same.
Add these for dmeventd systemd unit (dm-event.service):
Before: shutdown.target
Conflicts: shutdown.target
This will cause the dmeventd to be properly stopped at shutdown (after
all the dmeventd clients unregistered their devices from monitoring)
with dm-event.service's stop action (there's no direct action defined
for the "stop" so systemd sends SIGTERM instead).
Before, we let dmeventd to get killed only as part of the very last
SIGTERM/SIGKILL for all the remaining processes late in the shutdown
sequence so we may have missed some logs if dmeventd encountered an
error during its shutdown (logging facilities are already off at this
late time in shutdown sequence).
Ref: https://www.redhat.com/archives/lvm-devel/2017-October/msg00000.html
When dmeventd receives SIGTERM/INT/HUP/QUIT it validates if exit is possible.
If there was any device still monitored, such exit request used to
be ignored/refused. This 'usually' worked reasonably well, however if there
is very short time period between last device is unmonitored and signal
reception - there was possibility such EXIT was ignored, as dmeventd has
not yet got into idle state even commands like 'vgchange -an' has already
finished.
This patch changes logic towards scheduling EXIT to the nearest
point when there is no monitored device.
EXIT is never forgotten.
NOTE: if there is only a single monitored device and someone sends
SIGTERM and later someone uses i.e. 'lvchange --refresh' after
unmonitoring dmeventd will exit and new instance needs to be
started.
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.
Changing the VG of a PV uses the same on-disk mechanism as vgrename.
This relies on recognising both the old and new VG names. Prior to this
patch the vgsplit code incorrectly provided the new VG name twice
instead of the old and new ones. This lead the low-level mechanism not
to recognise the device as already belonging to a VG and so paying no
attention to the location of its existing metadata, sometimes partly
overwriting it and then later trying to read the corrupt metadata and
issuing a checksum error.
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.
There's nothing special about /boot other than it's used during boot.
But when blkdeactivate is called either on all devices or including a
device where the /boot is on top, we should also include this mount
point when doing unmount before deactivation of supported devices.
The new blkdeactivate -r|mdraidoption wait causes blkdeactivate to wait
for any resync/recovery/reshape that is currently in progress before
deactivating the device.
If this option is used, blkdeactivate calls mdadm -W|--wait before
mdadm -S|--stop.
Revert dc50f2f4a0.
We're canonicalizing/escaping the names here and we're reusing the
variable name so the code doesn't need to use extra variables and
further assignments that may confuse us. Let's keep the code simple.
The
local name=(...$name)
is not the same as
local name
name=(...$name)
(I know various code-checking tools fuss about this and recommend
the 2nd way, but let's ignore those tools' nitpicking here please.)
There was a typo in blkdeactivate --dmoption/--lvmoption/mpathoption,
it had missing "s" at the end and it was not recognized properly, only
short names for the options (-d/-l/-m).
When certain cmd def RULE's fail, the error messages can
sometimes be confusing. This expands the error messages
to help clarify why the rule failed, especially in cases
where options are used incorrectly.
In a shared VG, only allow pvmove with a named LV,
so that only PE's used by the LV will be moved.
The LV is then activated exclusively, ensuring that
the PE's being moved are not used from another host.
Previously, pvmove was mistakenly allowed on a full PV.
This won't work when LVs using that PV are active on
other hosts.
Avoid starting test, when test dir has less then 50M of free space.
Better to crash early before letting die machine on weird crash
in OOM cases...
Also show free disk space when test starts
Enable handling of --poolmetadataspare so if user can prevent
creation of _pmspare volume during --repair operation (just
like during actual lvcreate or lvconvert) for pool volumes.
The following commands now pass the device list through a
--select|-S filter before processing:
suspend resume clear wipe_table remove deps status table
In a shared VG, lvconvert must be used to create thin pools
and cache pools, not the lvcreate variants of those commands.
Deny these cases early in lvcreate using the new command defs.
Denying these cases deeper in the code was missing some
cleanup of the partially completed command.
Revert the lvmlockd.c changes from:
commit 0bf836aa14
"tidy: prefer not using else after return"
The commit introduced at least one regression, which broke
lvcreate of a thin pool in a shared VG.
ATM we have several instances of daemonizing code.
Each has its 'special' logic so not completely easy
to unify them all into a single routine.
Start to unify them and use one strategy for rediricting
all input/outpus to /dev/null - use 'dup2' function for this
and open /dev/null before fork to make sure it's available.
When file-locking mode failed on locking, such description was leaked
(typically not an issue since command usually exists afterwards).
So shirt close() at the end of function and use it in all error paths.
Also make sure, when interrrupt is detected, it's really not holding
lock and returns 0.
lvmcache_foreach_mda() can fail for numerous reasons
and failing error code cannot be ignored (out-of-memory...)
TODO: might need more error handling tunning.
gcc warns here about storring 69 bytes in 64 byte array (losing
potentially 4 bytes from 'ls->name').
lvmlockd-core.c:2657:36: warning: ‘%s’ directive output may be truncated writing up to 64 bytes into a region of size 60 [-Wformat-truncation=]
snprintf(tmp_name, MAX_NAME, "REM:%s", ls->name);
^~
lvmlockd-core.c:2657:2: note: ‘snprintf’ output between 5 and 69 bytes into a destination of size 64
snprintf(tmp_name, MAX_NAME, "REM:%s", ls->name);
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Replaced with slightly better code - but it still misses error path what
to do if the name would be truncated... - so added FIXME.
Also using all bytes for snprintf() buffer size
(as the size is with \0 included)
After the internal lvmlock LV (holding sanlock leases) is
extended to hold more leases, it needs to be zeroed.
sanlock expects to see either zeroed blocks or blocks
initialized with leases.
currently, lvcreate for sanlock find the free lock offset
from the beginning of the lvmlock every time.
after created thousands of lvs, it will issue thousands of read
ios for lvcreate to find free lock offset.
remeber the last free lock offset will greatly reduce the impact
Signed-off-by: Zhang Huan <zhanghuan@huayun.com>
Fix code checking that the 2nd mda which is at the end of disk really
fits the available free space and avoid any DA and MDA interleaving when
we already have DA preallocated. This mainly applies when we're restoring
a PV from VG backup using pvcreate --restorefile where we may already have
some DA preallocated - this means the PV was in a VG before with already
allocated space from it (the LVs were created). Hence we need to avoid
stepping into DA - the MDA can never ever be inside in such case!
The code responsible for this calculation was already in
_text_pv_add_metadata_area fn, but it had a bug in the calculation where
we subtracted one more sector by mistake and then the code could still
incorrectly allocate the MDA inside existing DA. The patch also renames
the variable in the code so it doesn't confuse us in future.
Also, if the 2nd mda doesn't fit, don't silently continue with just 1
MDA (at the start of the disk). If 2nd mda was requested and we can't
create that due to unavailable space, error out correctly (the patch
also adds a test to shell/pvcreate-operation.sh for this case).
If the PV was originally created with a larger-than-default
metadata area the restored one wasn't and might not even be
large enough to hold the metadata!
Previously the cache remembered an existing bootloaderarea and
reinstated it (without even checking for overlap) when asked to
write out the PV. pvcreate could write out an incorrect layout.
Add the new concise format to dmsetup create, either as a single
command-line parameter or from stdin.
Based on patches submitted by
Enric Balletbo i Serra <enric.balletbo@collabora.com>.
Drop 'DMEVENT' make variable and use BUILD_DMEVENTD like with other daemons.
NOTE: by default we do not build dmeventd - maybe time to change
as lot of build targets basically do need dmeventd...
Switch to use SYSTEMD_LIBS and avoid linking systemd library with
every linked tool when dbus notification are enabled.
(TODO add missing testing for lib presence)
Check first if we need to even link -lrt - since clock functions
are normally emebeded with recent glibc (>=2.17)
Use standard RT_LIBS name.
Avoid duplicate test for realtime clock with lvmlockd
Show better error message when realtime clock support is missing or
disabled.
Link RT_LIBS explicitely with lvmlockd and lvmetad.
Avoid adding -g more then once for debug builds.
Avoid enabling DEBUG_MEM when we build multithreaded tools.
Link executables with -fPIE -pie and --export-dynamic LDFLAGS
Introduce PROGS_FLAGS to add option to pass flags for external libs.
Link lvm2 internally library only when really used.
Link DAEMON_LIBS with daemons.
Pass VALGRIND_CFLAGS internally
Set shell failure mode on couple places.
lvm2 warned about zeroing and too big chunksize (>=512KiB), but
only during lvconvert, so lvcreate was creating thin-pools
without any warning about possible slowness of thin provisioning
because of zeroing.
Create a new table output format that concisely shows multiple devices
on one line.
dmsetup table --concise [device...]
<dev_name>,<uuid>,<flags>[,<table>]*[;<dev_name>,<uuid>,<flags>[,<table>]*]*
Table lines are separated by commas.
Devices are separated by semi-colons.
Flags is currently 'ro' or 'rw' (and might be extended in a
yet-to-be-defined way in future).
Any comma, semi-colon or backslash within a field is quoted by a
preceding backslash.
The format can later be supplied as input to dmsetup or even to the
booting kernel as an alternative way to set up devices.
Based on patches submitted by
Enric Balletbo i Serra <enric.balletbo@collabora.com>.
Add an independent command definition for "vgchange --locktype",
and split the implementation out of the set of common metadata
changes. It is unlike normal metadata changes, and can only
be run by itself. (Changing the lock type is similar in
principle to changing the VG name or the VG system ID; it
effects the ability of any host to see or access the VG.)
At some point this command lost the ability to forcibly change
the lock type of a shared VG to "none" (making it a local VG).
This can be necessary to repair shared VGs (e.g. recovery steps
that occur in vg_read are disabled for shared VGs because
they are not locked properly, or recovering sanlock locks
when the PV holding them is lost.)
"vgchange --locktype none --lockopt force VG" is used as the
method of forcing the shared VG to become local so that it
can be repaired.
Since _deactivate_and_remove_lvs() is used in more then one place,
move the needed udev synchronization into this function so other
users automatically get correct fs state before next dm manipulation.
Assumption here is that this udev synchronization 'delay' may also
prevent to 'early' table reloads which might cause kernel problems
for md-core - but we may need more generic time-limited reload
frequency for raid devices.
Note: on udev-less system there will be almost no delay.
Commit 8a912d6dbc missed the wrong logic,
we use 2 vars 'dev' & 'mddev' and their usage can't be mixed.
So correctly separate them so mddev keeps name of MD device.
During test do a more close selection of visible devices.
If some test leaks a device with LVMTEST prefix, next
test should not be influnced (or parallel running one).
If the test is running in non-/dev dir - it's already protected
by full path with $PREFIX in it - however it test is running
in real /dev dir - there was no such protection and test
were confused when they have seen such leaked device.
Commit 9b4b5d449e started to accept
rather way to wide set of strings we do not want to take for size.
i.e. lvresize -t vg0/lvol0 -LNaNM
Restore check for 'digit || locales defined 'dot' | '.'
(as we tend to take '.' even if locales uses ',')
Explictely detect duplicate sing symbols and leave the rest of
double number validation on 'strtod()' function. This way
we can also accept size like:
lvcreate -L.1M
We already accept -L0.1M - but it's common to accept numbers
starting with leading '.' - just as 'strtod()' accepts it).
API for strtod() or strtoul() needs reset of errno, before it's being
called. So add missing resets in missing places and some also some
errno validation for out-of-range numbers.
Since we are reading size as (double) we can get way bigger
number then just plain int64. So to make this check actually
more valid and usable do a maxsize compare in 'double'.
Avoid reading already released memory and do a continue directly.
Invalid read of size 1
at 0x1201B0: main_loop (clvmd.c:931)
by 0x11F640: main (clvmd.c:666)
Address 0x72ddef0 is 32 bytes inside a block of size 224 free'd
at 0x4C30D18: free (vg_replace_malloc.c:530)
by 0x54D6FD1: dm_free_wrapper (dbg_malloc.c:357)
by 0x122E6E: process_work_item (clvmd.c:2034)
by 0x123003: lvm_thread_fn (clvmd.c:2085)
by 0x590A3A8: start_thread (pthread_create.c:465)
by 0x5C3C7FE: clone (in /usr/lib64/libc-2.25.90.so)
Block was alloc'd at
at 0x4C2FB6B: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:299)
by 0x54D6EF1: dm_malloc_aux (dbg_malloc.c:286)
by 0x54D6F1C: dm_zalloc_aux (dbg_malloc.c:291)
by 0x54D6F96: dm_zalloc_wrapper (dbg_malloc.c:345)
by 0x11F89C: local_rendezvous_callback (clvmd.c:731)
by 0x1203D2: main_loop (clvmd.c:964)
by 0x11F640: main (clvmd.c:666)
Initialize mutex upfront any debugging and fix this report:
Mutex reinitialization: mutex 0x485d20, recursion count 0, owner 1.
at 0x4C38480: pthread_mutex_init_intercept (drd_pthread_intercepts.c:821)
by 0x4C38480: pthread_mutex_init (drd_pthread_intercepts.c:830)
by 0x11F359: main (clvmd.c:562)
mutex 0x485d20 was first observed at:
at 0x4C38F63: pthread_mutex_lock_intercept (drd_pthread_intercepts.c:885)
by 0x4C38F63: pthread_mutex_lock (drd_pthread_intercepts.c:898)
by 0x11E920: debuglog (clvmd.c:254)
by 0x11F1D8: main (clvmd.c:527)
Switch from warn to log_error since this generated
failing return code for command so printing log_error()
is mandatory.
Happens with i.e. pvscan --cache meets crashing lvmetad.
Commit 34504855a7 introduced
flag LV_RESHAPE_DATA_OFFSET and used it to avoid incompatible
activation on older runtime.
Enhance vg_validate() raid checking functions with checks for it.
Patch 72a58ce4b0 was wronly placing
double quotes around this variable which we want to pass expanded,
as it's just set of 'space' device args ATM.
TODO consider using array[@] to make this cleaner.
Add shellcheck directive to skip warning here
Changes:
- BASH_SOURCE index was one off.
- The first line of stacktrace was pure confusion displaying executed
script together with innermost line number (which was either 125 when
STACKTRACE or 229 when skip was called.)
- We can safely ignore innermost call, as stack trace is always produced
by stacktrace function.
- It is safer to test for array length, instead of testing FUNCNAME is
main - if main function were introduced.
- Bashishm is safe to use as this function as a whole is relying on bash.
In order to reject out of place reshaping with segment data_offset
field on old runtime, add a respective segment type incompatibility
flag causing "+RESHAPE_DATA_OFFSET" to be suffixed to the segment
type name.
When reshape space is allocated anew, an update and reload is needed to
promote the new size to the cluster node with the exclusively active RaidLV
or reloading the RaidLV will fail with a size related error. Additionally,
store "data_offset <sectors>" with the RaidLV in the lvm2 metadata so that
it can be retrieved on cluster nodes.
Process allocation of reshape space on a 2-legged raid4/5 (interim layout
to convert from/to linear via raid1) properly in the cluster.
Resolves: rhbz1461562
Resolves: rhbz1448116
Use 1 logic for 2 loops tearing down left device.
First loops tries to remove all closed devices with 'normal' remove.
Second loop tries to replace those left devices with 'error' target.
We can't really sleep that much in teardown as it slows test too much.
So do a nested loop (similar to 'dmsetup remove_all') and keep
removing devices with open count == 0 as long as it works.
When we want to squash as much device as possible,
it's better to give it some delay, so devices have
some time to release it's resouces for next removal.
Also drop surrounding cookie processing and let each
dmsetup call run on its own.
Add missing get_devs.
When $7 is not given use empty string.
See if we can live with less RAM disk for PVs.
Drop limitation on single core as presence 1.12 should address this.
The checking order here has happend after TESTDIR was removed
resulting in weird further error on trap path.
Properly check for unexpected dmeventd before removing TESTDIR
since 'trap' codepath is still using it.
Also try to kill this unexpected dmeventd so testing is
not skipping all next dmeventd tests.
(Downside would be - if user would be accidentally starting
dmeventd by some regular system admin work - such dmeventd
might be killd if it's unused. It can't kill dmeventd in-use.
Fix mirror_images_on() to actually report something useful (thought
it might be tuned later).
So for now the function got through all '_mimages_' and compares
where the order of them is matching given list of devices.
Possible misspelling: FAILED_MIXED_STR may not be assigned, but FAIL_MIXED_STR is.
Possible misspelling: FAILED_MULTI_STR may not be assigned, but FAIL_MULTI_STR is.
Possible misspelling: FAILED_BLACK_STR may not be assigned, but FAIL_BLACK_STR is.
The blkid we call in 13-dm-disk.rules also returns identifiers for
partitions based on which the /dev/disk/by-part{uuid,label} and
gpt-auto-root symlinks should be created in the same manner as we
already create symlinks for filesystem labels and uuids.
This is because we handle blkid calls and symlink creation under
/dev/disk ourselves in our 13-dm-disk.rules for device-mapper devices
for us to have more control over this process.
See also https://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/systemd-devel/2017-July/039220.html
and original report http://tracker.ceph.com/issues/19489 for
the exact case where these symlinks were missing.
Fix the error messages when an unrecognized command is
run from a script. We shouldn't attempt to parse options
for an unrecognized command name, which causes misleading
errors about bad options, but rather exit right when we
know the command name is not valid. Also don't complain
about exiting without an error message when running a
script if no command didn't exist.
1. dm_uuid is 68 byte length, but buf is 64 which
will cause miss match uuid from lv lock manager
2. no lv lock_type path in dm config, use lock_args instead
Signed-off-by: Zhang Huan <zhanghuan@chinac.com>
If the activation step in lvcreate fails (e.g. the specified
minor number is already used), then the lvcreate is reverted,
but the LV lock in lvmlockd was not being unlocked or properly
freed.
Some lvconvert commands can be used directly on the data sublv:
lvconvert ... vg/pool_tdata
The correct LV lock to use in lvmlockd is the one on the pool LV.
Centralise editing of the client list into _add_client() and
_del_client(). Introduce _local_client_count to track the size of the
list for debugging purposes. Simplify and standardise the various ways
the list gets walked.
While processing one element of the list in main_loop(),
cleanup_zombie() may be called and remove a different element, so make
sure main_loop() refreshes its list state on return. Prior to this
patch, the list edits for clients disappearing could race against the
list edits for new clients connecting and corrupt the list and cause a
variety of segfaults.
An easy way to trigger such failures was by repeatedly running shell
commands such as:
lvs &; lvs &; lvs &;...;killall -9 lvs; lvs &; lvs &;...
Situations that occasionally lead to the failures can be spotted by
looking for 'EOF' with 'inprogress=1' in the clvmd debug logs.
Correctly skip the test when lvmdbusd is found already running.
For pgrep usage we need to add '-f -l' options to get python3 name
printed.
Remove no longer used 'pids' local var.
With commit 41c10034aa we actually
do require LV to be used with _vg_write_lv_suspend_commit_backup().
So write a proper separte single wrapper for write && commit && backup.
lvm_run needs to place NULL as the last element into argv[].
Otherwise we get:
Conditional jump or move depends on uninitialised value(s)
_command_required_pos_matches (lvmcmdline.c:1443)
_find_command (lvmcmdline.c:1610)
lvm_run_command (lvmcmdline.c:2770)
lvm2_run (lvmcmdlib.c:91)
Dmeventd reuses 'dm_task' struct for some STATUS operation, but due to
missing reinitization of dm_task target list, it has caused misprocesing
of recieved events as the parsed target has been simply added to the
list of existing status and cause multiple actions being called for
single event.
Since we discovered status reporting from 'md' goes from large set
of weird states we can't just decided based on this word.
So let it pass for rebuild and idle as well
and check for health devices afterwards.
Add function to adjust printing of percent values in better way.
Rounding here is going along following rules:
0% & 100% are always clearly reported with .0 decimal points.
Values slightly above 0% we make sure a nearest bigger
non zero value with given precission is printed
(i.e. 0.01 for %.2f will be shown)
For values closely approaching 100% we again detect and adjust value
that is less then 100 when printed.
(i.e. 99.99 for %.2f will be shown).
For other values we are leaving them with standard rounding mechanism
since we care mainly about corner values 0 & 100 which need to be
printed precisely.
When we want to report primary leg failure, check for intial 'a',
since otherwice 'Aa idle' is normally visible.
Also reset array of bit flags marking dead devices, once
plugin detects raid is in sync.
Functionality of ignore suspend devices is already granted by:
lvm2_disable_dmeventd_monitoring() -> init_run_by_dmeventd() ->
init_ignore_suspended_devices().
In fact plugins should never use --config because it has
some unpleasant technical issues.
When raid leg rimage device is marked as 'D'ead by mdcore,
lvm2 was not able to replace such device with allocate policy,
as device has not appared as missing.
Add detection of transiently failing devices.
Basically reverting commit 58a9f88b8c.
We can use origin_only in case we are snapshot's origin,
as we do support this stack.
So when we are 'uncaching' origin+snaps - we do need to reload only
origin and we do not need to play with snaps.
Handle change of 'region size' better and follow also standard rule
if the command can't success (i.e. size is already same) we return
error for all such cases.
Also log_pring more info about adjusted value (just like we
do for rounding)
Also avoid keep pointers on 'display_*' values - they are in
ringbuffer for immediate use - not to be kept across multiple calls
(as they could be already overwritten by later calls) - so dropped
seg_region_size_str
'lvdisplay -m' tried to go through NULL policy settings,
when such policy was not defined for CachedLV.
Patch is fixing display of cache-pool without defined settings,
as this is now a valid pool and we mostly want users to define
these settings when actually really caching a LV.
Since cache LV can be a stacked device, there is no real reason
trying to use slight optimised tree for origin_only cache reload
(it could be even wrongly implemented in this case).
We can easily go with stardard tree load here.
When user runs command like 'lvconvert --splitcache' the operation
might be actually either slow or not making any progress in kernel,
so lets give user a chance to abort such operation.
When user press 'Ctrl+C' device table is restored to pre-flushing state.
Remove explicit activation of SubLVs and let lv_update_and_reload()
perform the proper (pre-)loading sequencing of tables.
This avoids related callback functions which are removed.
Related: rhbz1448116
Related: rhbz1461526
Related: rhbz1448123
When lock-holding LV differs from actually request locked LV,
we drop origin_only flag as it has no use - it'd be applied
on completely different LV.
Example of problem:
Raid is thin-pool _tdata LV.
Raid run origin_only locking on stacked device.
As lock holder is discovered thinLV.
Whole origin_only operation is then applied only on thinLV
changing the meaning of whole operation.
NOTE: this patch does not change anything for LV that are
already top-level lock holding LVs (i.e. thinLVs, snahoshots/origins).
Disable until we have a proper fix for reshape space allocation,
switching it to begin/end of rimages and activation in the cluster.
Related: rhbz1448116
Related: rhbz1461526
Related: rhbz1448123
Commit 1fe4f80e45 in current version
introduced regression for a terminal user, as he could not enter 'n'
as answer. Add missing break for this case (No whats_new).
New tests to add checking for '100%' in-sync at start of "recover"
process (it shouldn't happen, but I've seen it before). Also,
check status over the whole cycle of various sync processes ("resync"
and "recover").
Enhance reporting code, so it does not need to do 'extra' ioctl to
get 'status' of normal raid and provide percentage directly.
When we have 'merging' snapshot into raid origin, we still need to get
this secondary number with extra status call - however, since 'raid'
is always a single segment LV - we may skip 'copy_percent' call as
we directly know the percent and also with better precision.
NOTE: for mirror we still base reported number on the percetage of
transferred extents which might get quite imprecisse if big size
of extent is used while volume itself is smaller as reporting jump
steps are much bigger the actual reported number provides.
2nd.NOTE: raid lvs line report already requires quite a few extra status
calls for the same device - but fix will be need slight code improval.
Current existing kernels reports status sometimes in weird form.
Instead of showing what is the exact progress, we need to estimate
this in-sync state from several surrounding states.
Main reason here is to never report 100% sync state for a raid device
which will be undergoing i.e. recovery.
Relative to last comit ddf2a1d656:
adjust the dm-raid target version to 1.12.0 which shows
mandatory kernel MD deadlock fixes related to reshaping
are presant in the kernel.
Related: rhbz1443999
First test in this file checks whether 'aa' is ever spotted during
a "recover" operation (it should not be). More tests should follow
in this file to look for oddities in status output - especially as
it relates to the sync_ratio, dev_health, and sync_action fields.
For the test clean-up, I was providing too many devices to the first
command - possibly allowing it to allocate in the wrong place. I was
also not providing a device for the second command - virtually ensuring
the test was not performing correctly at times.
This patch ensures that under normal conditions (i.e. not during repair
operations) that users are prevented from removing devices that would
cause data loss.
When a RAID1 is undergoing its initial sync, it is ok to remove all but
one of the images because they have all existed since creation and
contain all the data written since the array was created. OTOH, if the
RAID1 was created as a result of an up-convert from linear, it is very
important not to let the user remove the primary image (the source of
all the data). They should be allowed to remove any devices they want
and as many as they want as long as one original (primary) device is left
during a "recover" (aka up-convert).
This fixes bug 1461187 and includes the necessary regression tests.
Add the checks necessary to distiguish the state of a RAID when the primary
source for syncing fails during the "recover" process.
It has been possible to hit this condition before (like when converting from
2-way RAID1 to 3-way and having the first two devices die during the "recover"
process). However, this condition is now more likely since we treat linear ->
RAID1 conversions as "recover" now - so it is especially important we cleanly
handle this condition.
Previously, we were treating non-RAID to RAID up-converts as a "resync"
operation. (The most common example being 'linear -> RAID1'.) RAID to
RAID up-converts or rebuilds of specific RAID images are properly treated
as a "recover" operation.
Since we were treating some up-convert operations as "resync", it was
possible to have scenarios where data corruption or data loss were
possibilities if the RAID hadn't been able to sync completely before a
loss of the primary source devices. In order to ensure that the user took
the proper precautions in such scenarios, we required a '--force' option
to be present. Unfortuneately, the force option was rendered useless
because there was no way to distiguish the failure state of a potentially
destructive repair from a nominal one - making the '--force' option a
requirement for any RAID1 repair!
We now treat non-RAID to RAID up-converts properly as "recover" operations.
This eliminates the scenarios that can potentially cause data loss or
data corruption; and this eliminates the need for the '--force' requirement.
This patch removes the requirement to specify '--force' for RAID repairs.
Two of the sync actions performed by the kernel (aka MD runtime) are
"resync" and "recover". The "resync" refers to when an entirely new array
is going through the process of initializing (or resynchronizing after an
unexpected shutdown). The "recover" is the process of initializing a new
member device to the array. So, a brand new array with all new devices
will undergo "resync". An array with replaced or added sub-LVs will undergo
"recover".
These two states are treated very differently when failures happen. If any
device is lost or replaced while "resync", there are no worries. This is
because any writes created from the inception of the array have occurred to
all the devices and can be safely recovered. Even though non-initialized
portions will still be resync'ed with uninitialized data, it is ok. However,
if a pre-existing device is lost (aka, the original linear device in a
linear -> raid1 convert) during a "recover", data loss can be the result.
Thus, writes are errored by the kernel and recovery is halted. The failed
device must be restored or removed. This is the correct behavior.
Unfortunately, we were treating an up-convert from linear as a "resync"
when we should have been treating it as a "recover". This patch
removes the special case for linear upconvert. It allows each new image
sub-LV to be marked with a rebuild flag and treats the array as 'in-sync'.
This has the correct effect of causing the upconvert to be treated as a
"recover" rather than a "resync". There is no need to flag these two states
differently in LVM metadata, because they are already considered differently
by the kernel RAID metadata. (Any activation/deactivation will properly
resume the "recover" process and not a "resync" process.)
We make this behavior change based on the presense of dm-raid target
version 1.9.0+.
On conversion from raid10 to raid0 (takeover), all rmeta
devices and the rimage devices of mirrored stripes are
detached from the raid10 LV. The remaining rimage areas
are being shifted down into the slots of the detached
ones hence requiring renames to show proper _N suffix
sequences (e.g. 0,1,2,3 instead of 0,2,4,6). Only the
top-level raid10 LV has a cluster lock, not the detached
SubLVs thus their deactivation is impossible and e.g the
rename from *_rimage_6 to *_rimage_3 will fail. Fix by
activating exclusively before deactivating and removing.
Resolves: rhbz1448123
The file block count stored in the filemap_monitor was lazily
initialised at the time of the first check. This causes problems
in the case that the file has been truncated between this time and
the time the daemon started: the initial block count and current
block count match and the daemon fails to detect a change.
Separate the setting of the block count from the check and make a
call to update the value at the start of _dmfilemapd().
It's not an error to attempt to update regions from an fd that has
been truncated (or otherwise no longer has any allocated extents):
in this case, the call should remove all regions corresponding to
the group, and return an empty region table.
For proper usage of Cache kernel metadata format V2,
new cache_check tool is basically mandatory.
Print warning during configure time about this problem.
Prohibit activation of reshaping RaidLVs on incompatible
lvm2 runtime by storing e.g. 'raid5+RESHAPE' segment type
strings in the lvm2 metadata. Incompatible runtime not
supporting reshaping won't be able to activate those thus
avoiding potential data corruption.
Any new non-reshaping lvconvert command will reset the
segment type string from 'raid5+RESHAPE' to 'raid5'.
See commits
0299a7af1e and
4141409eb0
for segtype flag support.
When old snapshot is merged, lvm2 still can report some data about
merged 'snapshot' - i.e. it occupied space in VG.
This patch fixes regression from commit:
6fd20be629
and resolved RHBZ: 1460161
Avoid reporting 'checking result' as maybe - it should
clearly tell 'yes' or 'no'.
Just shuffle printed message to the place, where we
already know the 'maybe' answer.
So instead of printing 'unclear':
checking whether to enable libblkid detection of signatures when wiping... maybe
checking for BLKID... yes
checking whether to use udev-systemd protocol for jobs in background... maybe
checking for SYSTEMD... yes
show this:
checking for BLKID... yes
checking whether to enable libblkid detection of signatures when wiping... yes
checking for SYSTEMD... yes
checking whether to use udev-systemd protocol for jobs in background... yes
Code path missed validation of lvcreate --cachepool argument.
If the non cache-pool LV was passed in, code has still continued
further work and failed later on internal error. Validate this
condition at right place now.
When a combination of thin-pool chunk size and thin-pool data size
goes beyond addressable limit, such volume creation is directly
prohibited.
Maximum usable thin-pool size is calculated with use of maximal support
metadata size (even when it's created smaller) and given chunk-size.
If the value data size is found to be too big, the command reports
error and operation fails.
Previously thin-pool was created however lots of thin-pool data LV was
not usable and this space in VG has been wasted.
Only support RAID conversions on active LVs.
If we'd accept e.g. upconverting linear -> raid1 on inactive
linear LVs, any LV flags passed to the kernel aren't properly
cleared thus errouneously passing them on every activation.
Add respective check to lv_raid_change_image_count() and
move existing one in lv_raid_convert() for better messages.
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
Warn about a PV that has the in-use flag set, but appears in
the orphan VG (no VG was found referencing it.)
There are a number of conditions that could lead to this:
. The PV was created with no mdas and is used in a VG with
other PVs (with metadata) that have not yet appeared on
the system. So, no VG metadata is found by lvm which
references the in-use PV with no mdas.
. vgremove could have failed after clearing mdas but
before clearing the in-use flag. In this case, the
in-use flag needs to be manually cleared on the PV.
. The PV may have damanged/unrecognized VG metadata
that lvm could not read.
. The PV may have no mdas, and the PVs with the metadata
may have damaged/unrecognized metadata.
A PV holding VG metadata that lvm can't understand
(e.g. damaged, checksum error, unrecognized flag)
will appear as an in-use orphan, and will be cleared
by this repair code. Disable this repair until the
code can keep track of these problematic PVs, and
distinguish them from actual in-use orphans.
Reject any stripe adding/removing reshape on raid4/5/6/10 because
of related MD kernel deadlock on single core systems until
we get a proper fix in MD.
Related: rhbz1443999
Since lvmetad is using 'MISSING' in status for 'another' purpose,
we need to support ATM also flag get from this place.
Until fixed better - we accept both flags - alhough lvm2 will
only print in flags.
Switch METADATA_FORMAT flag usage to be stored via segtype
instead of 'status' flag which appeared to cause major
incompatibility troubles.
For backward compatiblity segtype flags are still accepted also
via 'status' bits which were used from version 2.02.169 so metadata
saved by this newer lvm2 version should still work nicely, although
new save version will no longer work on this older lvm2 version.
Allow storing LV status bits with segment type name field.
Switching to this since this field has better support for compatibility
with older version of lvm2 - since such unknown segtype will not cause
complete invisiblity of metadata from older lvm2 code - just the
particular LV will become unusable with unknown type of segment.
- Must reread all objects as PVs might be removed.
- Never consider testsuite provided PVs nested, or tearDown fails to
remove any outstanding VGs on them.
When 'fsadm' was running without terminal (i.e. pipe), it's been
automatically working like in '--yes'.
Detect terminal and only accept empty "" input in this mode.
Add more validation to catch mainly renamed devices, where
filesystem utils are not able to handle devices properly,
as they are not addressed by major:minor by rather via some
symbolic path names which can change over time via rename operation.
Since we add more validation to 'detect_mounted' function make sure
we always use it even with 'resize' action, so numerous validations
are not skipped.
Commit 5fe07d3574 failed to set raid5 types
properly on conversions from raid6. It always enforced raid6_ls_6
for types raid6/raid6_zr/raid6_nr/raid6_nc, thus requiring 3 conversions
instead of 2 when asking for raid5_{la,rs,ra,n}.
Related: rhbz1439403
Offer possible interim LV types and display their aliases
(e.g. raid5 and raid5_ls) for all conversions between
striped and any raid LVs in case user requests a type
not suitable to direct conversion.
E.g. running "lvconvert --type raid5 LV" on a striped
LV will replace raid5 aka raid5_ls (rotating parity)
with raid5_n (dedicated parity on last image).
User is asked to repeat the lvconvert command to get to the
requested LV type (raid5 aka raid5_ls in this example)
when such replacement occurs.
Resolves: rhbz1439403
Add an exception to not allowing lvchange to change properties
on hidden LVs. When a thin pool data LV is a cache LV, we
need to allow changing cache properties on the tdata sublv of
the thin pool.
Trap cases where the percentage calculation currently leads to an empty
LV and the message:
Internal error: Unable to create new logical volume with no extents
Additionally convert the calculated number of extents from physical to
logical when creating a mirror using a percentage that is based on
Physical Extents. Otherwise a command like 'lvcreate -m3 -l80%FREE'
can never leave any free space.
This brings the behaviour closer to that of lvresize.
(A further patch is needed to cover all the raid types.)
_check_reappeared_pv() incorrectly clears the MISSING_PV flags of
PVs with unknown devices.
While one caller avoids passing such PVs into the function, the other
doesn't. Move the check inside the function so it's not forgotten.
Without this patch, if the normal VG reading code tries to repair
inconsistent metadata while there is an unknown PV, it incorrectly
considers the missing PVs no longer to be missing and produces
incorrect 'pvs' output omitting the missing PV, for example.
Easy reproducer:
Create a VG with 3 PVs pv1, pv2, pv3.
Hide pv2.
Run vgreduce --removemissing.
Reinstate the hidden PV pv2 and at the same time hide a different PV
pv3.
Run 'pvs' - incorrect output.
Run 'pvs' again - correct output.
See https://bugzilla.redhat.com/1434054
There are certain situations (not fully understood)
where is_missing_pv() is false, but pv->dev is NULL,
so this adds a check for NULL pv->dev after is_missing_pv()
to avoid a segfault.
With recent updates for thin pool monitoring in version 169
we lost multiple WARNINGs to be printed in syslog, when
pool crossed 80%, 85%, 90%, 95%, 100%.
Restore this logic as we want to keep user informed more
then just once when 80% boundary is passed.
Fix a regression introduced in 70bb726 that allows a local variable
in the monitored file checking routine to be accessed before its
assignment when the file has already been unlinked.
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
There were a handful of references to other man
pages using the standard command(N) form which were
not in bold, so they were not turned into links
in html formats.
Many will look in 'man lvm.conf' expecting to find a
description of the lvm.conf fields, which are not there.
State at the beginning how to get this (by running
lvmconfig.)
The lvm(8) man page never said what LVM is,
it never defined what the acronym LVM stands for,
it never spelled out other common acronyms VG, PV, LV,
and never described what they are.
This adds a very minimal definition which at least defines
the acronyms and entities, but it could obviously be
expanded on, either here or elsewhere.
Clean up the handling of memory used for cmd defs
so it doesn't trip up memory debugging.
Allocate memory for commands[] from libmem.
Free temporary memory used by define_commands()
at the end of the function.
Clear all the command def state in in lvm_fin().
Using any arg with a command name in a script file
would cause the command to fail.
The name of the script file being executed was being passed
to lvm_register_commands() and define_commands(), which
prevented command defs from being defined (simple commands
were still being defined only by name which was enough for those
to still work when run trivially with no args).
The logic for suggesting the nearest valid command syntax
was missing the simplest case. If a command has only one
valid syntax, that is the one we should suggest. (We were
suggesting nothing in this case.)
If the device size does not match the size requested
by --setphysicalvolumesize, then prompt the user.
Make the pvcreate checking/prompting code handle
multiple prompts for the same device, since the
new prompt can be in addition to the existing
prompt when the PV is in a VG.
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
Unless a change of the regionsize is requested via "lvconvert -R N ...",
keep the region size when the number of images changes in a raid1 LV.
Related: rhbz1443705
Unless a change of the regionsize is requested via "lvconvert -R N ...",
keep the region size when the number of images changes in a raid1 LV.
Resolves: rhbz1443705
lvconvert parameters not causing a conversion (i.e. no type,
number of stripes, stripesize or regionsize changes) will
remove any allocated reshape space in which case the command
returns success. If reshape space does not exist though,
return error.
When metadata LV size was over DM_THIN_MAX_METADATA_SIZE sectors,
the info() routine was incorrectly trying to match bigger size,
while we do never pass any bigger device.
Fixing a case, where lvs should be displaying status for metadata
LV with 16GB size.
When a cmd def RULE fails because of a disallowed
combination of options, improve the error message
to show the option combination, not just the options
that broke the rule.
Reshape check failed when regionsize changed and current raid type
was provided with no other change requested (stripes or stripesize).
E.g. "lvconvert --type raid6 --regionsize 256K" on a raid6 LV
with != 256K regionsize.
Enable --type in test script.
Remove any newly allocated sub LV (pair) remnants in case
allocation fails due to lag of (parallel) free PV space
and keep initial raid type.
Resolves: rhbz1438013
A command def can include a specific constant option value,
but the value was not being checked for optional opts.
e.g. this is an incorrect command and does not match any
command defs:
lvconvert --type cache --cachepool vg/lv
However, it was mistakely being matched to this cmd def,
where the required options match, but the optional options
do not:
lonvert --cachepool LV_linear_striped_raid_cachepool
OO: --type cache-pool, ...
The optional options were mistakely considered matching
because 'cache' and 'cache-pool' were not being compared.
SIGINT isn't blocked properly after a sigint_allow(),
sigint_restore() cycle leading to illicit interruptable
metadata updates. These can leave corrupted metadata behind.
Issues addressed in this commit:
sigint_allow() fails to set _oldmasked[] members properly due
to an offset by one bug on indexing the members of the array.
It bails out prematurely comparing to MAX_SIGINTS causing nesting
depths to be one less than MAX_SIGINTS. Fix the comparision.
Correct the related comparison flaw in sigint_restore().
Initialize all sig_atomic_t variables consequently.
Resolves: rhbz1440766
Avoid error message
"Logical Volume *_rimage_0 already exists in volume group,,,"
on takeover conversion from a 2-legged raid1 to raid4
(aiming to reshape it adding images).
Resolves: rhbz1439398
Requesting _raid_remove_images() to commit the
metadata missed to reload the origin causing a
kernel takeover error converting a 2-legged raid1
(with previously removed images) to raid5.
Allow the combination of both arguments keeping
the raid level but changing the regionssize
(e.g. "lvconvert --type raid1 --regionsize 1M RaidLV"
on an existing raid1 LV).
Resolves: rhbz1438396
lvchange/lvconvert operations that do not require the LV
to already be active need to acquire a transient LV lock
before changing/converting the LV to ensure the LV is not
active on another host. If the LV is already active,
a persistent LV lock already exists on the host and the
transient LV lock request is a no-op.
Some lvmlockd locks in lvchange were lost in the cmd def
changes. The lvmlockd locks in lvconvert seem to have
been missed from the start.
We have to unset the LoadState variable from previous use when we check
for systemd unit state. We use this variable to check if systemd services
are loaded or not and if it is loaded, we issue systemctl commands to
enable/disable and start/stop the service. We don't issue these commands
if the unit is not loaded to avoid error messages which may confuse users.
The actual value specified by the --poll y|n option was not
being used. The way the --poll value is used is hidden
through an indirection where the value is stored in a
global variable at the start of the command, and then the
value is read from there later. Setting the global
variable early in the command had been lost with the
cmd def changes.
Fill in some gaps where old versions of lvm allowed
--poll and --monitor in combination with other operations,
but those combinations had been lost since the cmd def work.
(The new cmd def code also added some combinations that
had been missed by the old code.)
Changes:
lvchange --activate: add poll and monitor options, and
add calls to them in implementation.
lvchange --refresh: add monitor option (poll already there),
and call to monitor in implementation.
lvchange <metadata ops>: add poll and monitor options, and
add calls to them in implementation.
vgchange <metadata ops>: add poll option (call to poll
already in implementation).
vgchange --refresh: remove monitor option (not used by code)
lvchange --persistent y: add poll and monitor options, and
add calls to them, and to activate
in the implementation. (Making it
match the main lvchange metadata
command.)
Summary of current usage:
lvchange --activate: monitor, poll
vgchange --activate: monitor, poll
lvchange --refresh: monitor, poll
vgchange --refresh: poll
lvchange --monitor: ok
lvchange --poll: ok
lvchange --monitor --poll: ok
vgchange --monitor: ok
vgchange --poll: ok
vgchange --monitor --poll: ok
lvchange <metadata ops>: monitor, poll
vgchange <metadata ops>: poll
Enhance commit 25b5915c9b
to process options requiring immediate metadata commits
and reloads after those we can group together doing just
one commit and an optional reload for the whole group.
Backup metadata after processing options successfully.
Related: rhbz1437611
Don't abbreviate the --help output quite as much
when there are many command defs. Print all the
options in the cmd defs that are shown. --longhelp
output is unchanged and includes everything.
These days --partial is only used with activation in
lvchange/vgchange. It probably had another meaning
at some point in history which is no longer used,
so ignore it in those cases.
When included in the OO list, the option is advertised in
help/man output, implying it is meaningful to the command,
when in fact the command never uses it.
The IO list means the option won't cause an error if it's
used, but is not displayed as an valid option for the command.
If the option is not included in either OO or IO lists,
using the option would cause a command error, which would cause
problems for anyone is using the option for historical reasons.
_lvchange_properties_single() processes multiple command
line arguments in a loop causing metadata updates and/or
backups per argument.
Optimize to only perform one update and/or backup
(but necessary interim ones; e.g. for --resync)
per command run.
Related: rhbz1437611
Use only selected paths for finding .so in builddir.
So if builddir constains some embeded subdirs with some more
occurences of project (i.e. 'make rpm' build subdir)
those library paths will not get into list.
With monolithic kernels we can't actually modprobe
for cache modules as they are already compiled-in
and policy modules do not export version symbol.
Reported issue on list:
https://www.redhat.com/archives/dm-devel/2017-March/msg00061.html
Fix will try to look for explicit kernel symbols first before
calling modprobe.
Fix a regression introduced by new command line processing
(see starting commit 1e2420bca8)
causing activation to be rejected in combination with setting
persistent minor device numbers.
Resolves: rhbz1437611
Since _filemap_monitor_set_notify() is only called after daemon
start up it should not use the _early_log() macros. Instead, use
log_sys_error to log errors from the two syscalls in the function.
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.
Use log_sys_error rather than log_error if execvp() fails:
/mnt/redhat/xdoio.13752.XIORQ: Created new group with 2 region(s) as group ID 0.
# execvp() failed.
vs:
/var/lib/libvirt/images/rhel7-vm1.qcow2: Created new group with 884 region(s) as group ID 0.
dmfilemapd: execvp failed: No such file or directory
The function _filemap_monitor_check_file_unlinked() attempts to
test whether a fd value should be closed by comparison to zero:
if ((fd > 0) && close(fd))
log_error("Error closing fd %d", fd);
The test should be '>=' since 0 is a valid file descriptor.
Similar to 40fb91a, but for the file descriptor opened using the
link path reported by /proc/<self>/fd/<fd>.
The daemon opens a new file descriptor from /proc/<self>/fd when
checking for an unlinked file with mode=inode. Ensure that it is
always closed even if the same file test fails.
The daemon opens a new file descriptor from fm->path when checking
for an unlinked file with mode=inode. Ensure that it is always
closed even if the same file test fails.
The path argument check in dmfilemapd incorrectly tests for:
if (argv[0] == '/')
Rather than testing the 1st character in the string pointed to by
argv[0].
Removing some unused new lines and changing some incorrect "can't
release until this is fixed" comments. Rename license.txt to make
it clear its merely an included file, not itself a licence.
This patch fixed lvm2 compilation running on x32 arch.
(Using 64bit x86 cpu features but running on 32b address space,
so consuming less mem in VM).
On x32 arch 'time_t' is 64bit while 'long' is 32bit.
Commits a29bb6a14b
... 5c199d99f4
narrowed down on addressing the escaping of hyphens
in the dynamic creation of manuals whilst avoiding
them in creating help texts. This lead to a sequence
of slipping through hyphens adrressed by additional
patches in aforementioned commit series.
On the other hand, postprocessing dynamically man-generator
created and statically provided manuals catches all hyphens
in need of escaping.
Changes:
- revert the above commits whilst keeping man-generator
streamlining and the detection of any '\' when generating
help texts in order to avoid escapes to slip in
- Dynamically escape hyphens in manaual pages using sed(1)
in the respective Makefile targets
- remove any manually added escaping on hyphens from any
static manual sources or headers
raid1 doesn't allow to set all images to writemostly because at
least one image is required to receive any written data immediately.
The dm-raid target will detect such invalid request and
fail it iwith a kernel error message.
Reject such request in uspace displaying a respective error message.
The recent command definitions commit took the command
name from argv[0] without applying basename to the value,
so a pathname, e.g. /usr/sbin, would cause lvm to not
recognize the command name.
This commit supersedes reverted 1e4462dbfb
to avoid changes to liblvm and the libdm API completely.
The libdevmapper interface compares existing table line retrieved from
the kernel to new table line created to decide if it can suppress a reload.
Any difference between input and output of the table line is taken to be a
change thus causing a table reload.
The dm-raid target started to misorder the raid parameters (e.g. 'raid10_copies')
starting with dm-raid target version 1.9.0 up to (excluding) 1.11.0. This causes
runtime failures (limited to raid10 as of tests) and needs to be reversed to allow
e.g. old lvm2 uspace to run properly.
Check for the aforementioned version range in libdm and adjust creation of the table line
to the respective (mis)ordered sequence inside and correct order outside the range
(as described for the raid target in the kernels Documentation/device-mapper/dm-raid.txt).
This reverts commit 1e4462dbfb
in favour of an enhanced solution avoiding changes in liblvm
completetly by checking the target versions in libdm and emitting
the respective parameter lines.
Fixes command defs related to creating a new thin pool and
then a new thin lv in the new pool.
1. lvcreate --size --virtualsize --thinpool
Needs a cmd def, it was missing.
The def is unique by the three required
options: size, virtualsize and thinpool.
2. lvcreate --size --virtualsize --thinpool VG
Needs a cmd def, it was missing.
The def is unique by the three required
options: size, virtualsize and thinpool,
and one required positional arg: VG.
3. lvcreate --thin --virtualsize --size LV_new|VG
This existing def should not accept an optional
--type thin, which if used makes it indistinct
from another def.
4. lvcreate --size --virtualsize VG
This existing def should not accept an optional
--type thin or --thin, which if used makes it
indistinct from other defs (e.g. 3)
This reverts commit 642d682d8d.
Using the thinpool option with this cmd def makes it
indistinct from other cmd defs where thinpool is a
required option.
The libdevmapper interface compares existing table line retrieved from
the kernel to new table line created to decide if it can suppress a reload.
Any difference between input and output of the table line is taken to be a
change thus causing a table reload.
The dm-raid target started to misorder the raid parameters (e.g. 'raid10_copies')
starting with dm-raid target version 1.9.0 up to (excluding) 1.11.0. This causes
runtime failures (limited to raid10 as of tests) and needs to be reversed to allow
e.g. old lvm2 uspace to run properly.
Check for the aforementioned version range and adjust creation of the table line
to the respective (mis)ordered sequence inside and correct order outside the range
(as described for the raid target in the kernels Documentation/device-mapper/dm-raid.txt).
lvcreate --thinpool POOL1 -L 100M --virtualsize 100M snapper_thinp
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/1434027
(The general rule is that a command is accepted if it is unambiguous.
The combination -L -V --thinpool uniquely identifies the operation.)
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.
lvconvert should not leak 'error' device.
(This patch is not fix the problem, just makes it more easily visible
instead of more confusing 'clvmd' trace).
Starting with dm-raid target version 1.9.0 shrinking of mapped devices is supported.
Check for support being present in lvresize and lvreduce.
Related: rhbz1394048
Since we want to test different cache policies with profiles mq&smq
raise version to 1.8.
TODO: maybe split in more tests so older targets can test here as well.
N.B.: passthrough is also not supported with version 1.3
Quering non-thin-pool segment for discard property may lead
to intenal error if the segment had set 'out-of-range' value,
so only thin-pool is allowed, for other it returns NULL.
If SubLVs to be removed still exist after an image removing
conversion (i.e. "lvconvert --yes --force --stripes N "
with N < total stripes) any request to convert to a different
striped/raid* level has to be rejected until after those freed
SubLVs got removed by running the aforementioned lvconvert again.
Add tests to check conversion to striped/raid* gets rejected.
Enhance a test comment.
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1366296
Adjust to final target version 1.10.1 supporting reshape
properly and to recently changed report field specifications
(e.g. rehape_len_le) to allow these tests to run.
Lower mirror region size to suite the tiny test VG.
Previous commit 506d88a2ec introduced disabling lvmetad on repairs.
Avoid calling lvscan and use of any --config options altogether
in the mirror and raid DSOs.
Related: rhbz1380521
Repairing missing devices does not work reliably
with lvmetad, so disable lvmetad before repair.
A standard lvmetad refresh (pvscan --cache) will
enable lvmetad again.
Commit 07ded8059c assumed that the mirror is blocked which is not the case.
It is accessible, degraded and in need of repair because some of its legs
(partially) failed. Any auto-repair via dmeventd fails though because
of lvmetad not providing proper data about the failed PV(s). That's why
this workaround got introduced in commit 76f6951c3e until we get to
the lvmetad interaction core issue.
Mind any mirror auto-repair failure is caused by such lvmetad interaction
problems not yet solved so disabling lvmetad works as a resort as elaborated
on in the related bz.
Reintroducing the interim solution.
Resolves: rhbz1380521
Effectively revert whole 76f6951c3e.
We need to figure out some other solution.
At this moment usage of --config with 'repair' of blocked mirror
is 'freezing' combination.
For each section 8 man page, a .8_gen file is created from one of:
.8_main - Old-style man page - content used directly
.8_des and .8_end - Description and end section of a generated page
.8_pregen - Pre-generated page used if the generator fails
Other man sections are not generated and use the suffix .5_main or .7_main.
Developers should use 'make generate' to regenerate the .8_pregen files.
When a given command:
- matches command definition A based on required options,
but uses optional options that are not accepted by A.
- matches command definition B based on required options,
(but fewer required items than A), and uses no
unaccepted optional options.
then B is the correct choice. Command A would fail because
of the unaccepted optional options. The logic was mistakenly
letting A win because it had a greater number of required option
matches, without accounting for the optional option mismatches.
Systematically outline every combination of:
--type striped, --type mirror, --type raid, --mirrors, --stripes
and make sure each is assigned to one specific cmd def.
This revealed that a new command def is needed for
lvcreate that uses both --mirrors and --stripes
but no --type option.
The use of LVCREATE_RAID shortcut for an option set
resulted in mirrors/stripes being included in optional
opts set when they were already in the required list.
Sending %d as format argument in lvmetad_vg_remove_pending() will cause
segfaults in config_make_nodes_v() when va_arg() casts to int64_t. Also, it is
clearly advertised in the lvm source code that using plain %d is prohibited, so
let's switch to FMTd64.
Signed-off-by: Christian Brauner <christian.brauner@ubuntu.com>
Require that the path argument to dmfilemapd be an absolute path
and document this in tool output, libdevmapper.h and dmfilemapd.8.
The check is also enforced by dm_stats_start_filemapd() to avoid
forking a new process with an invalid path argument.
The initial check on argc incorrectly returns 1 when the wrong
number of arguments are present, causing a segfault in main()
when no arguments are given:
# dmfilemapd
Wrong number of arguments.
usage: dmfilemapd <fd> <group_id> <path> <mode> [<foreground>[<log_level>]]
Segmentation fault (core dumped)
Commit f4b30b0dae was about displaying visible LV size
when reshape space is allocated. Take parity devices
into account when displaying the user visible LV size.
As was recently done with relative signes for sizes/extents,
limit the signs used with the mirrors option, e.g.
lvcreate --mirrors now does not accept or advertise an
optional minus sign with the value. lvconvert --mirrors
accepts +|-.
Add a warning about maximum supported numbers of stripes
with striped LVs realtive to RAID conversions.
Add examples for a more elaborate, multi-step conversion
from linear to striped (and vice versa).
Shrink lvs examples output.
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
The LVCONVERT_RAID shortcut for including options ended
up including mirrors/stripes as optional opts in defs where
they were already required, or in defs where they would
not be used. Remove the option set and specify in each
case only the options wanted.
Better support for lvdisplay.
By default info about running (in kernel) cache status is printed.
To get 'segtype' info, user runs: 'lvdisplay -m', example:
--- Logical volume ---
LV Path /dev/vg/lvol0
LV Name lvol0
VG Name vg
LV UUID Y4uWuN-TBGk-duer-aPWl-yBWn-iFFR-RU1gg1
LV Write Access read/write
LV Creation host, time linux, 2017-03-01 20:52:39 +0100
LV Cache pool name lvol2
LV Cache origin name lvol0_corig
LV Status available
# open 0
LV Size 12,00 MiB
Cache used blocks 10,42%
Cache metadata blocks 0,49%
Cache dirty blocks 0,00%
Cache read hits/misses 112 / 34
Cache wrt hits/misses 133 / 0
Cache demotions 0
Cache promotions 20
Current LE 3
Segments 1
Allocation inherit
Read ahead sectors auto
- currently set to 256
Block device 253:0
--- Segments ---
Logical extents 0 to 2:
Type cache
Chunk size 64,00 KiB
Metadata format 1
Mode writethrough
Policy smq
Setting migration_threshold=100000
OO_LVCREATE_CACHE accepts --cachemetadataformat.
Support new option --cachemetadataformat auto|1|2 for caching.
Word 'auto' can be also be given as '0'.
Report CMFmt column with cache metadata format version.
Report KMFmt column with 'kernel cache metadata format version' for device.
(a value reported from status).
(Update 'CacheMode' to name 'Cache' as primary segtype).
Only cache-pool segtype may store cache_metadata_format.
Only supported values are 0,1,2
Format 2 requires LV status uses LV_METADATA_FORMAT.
Format 0 (unselected) or 1 shall not set this 'incompatible' status.
Cache pool read/writes metadata_format within its segment type..
For CachePoolLV unselected metadata format is NOT stored in metadata.
For CacheLV when metadata format is not present/selected in lvm2 metadata,
it's automatically assumed to be the version 1 (backward compatible).
To ensure older lvm2 will not 'miss-read' metadata with new version 2,
such LV is marked with METADATA_FORMAT status flag (segment is
specifying metadata format). So when cache uses metadata format 2,
it will become inaccesible on older system without such support.
(kernel dm cache < 1.10, lvm2 < 2.02.169).
Add new profilable configation setting to let user select
which metadata format of a created cache pool he wish to use.
By default the 'best' available format is autodetected at runtime,
but user may enforce format 1 or 2 ATM.
Code also detects availability for metadata2 supporting cache target.
In case of troubles user may easily Disable usage of this feature
by placing 'metadata2' into global/cache_disabled_features list.
Older library version was not detecting unknown 'feature' bits
and could let start target without needed option.
New versioned symbol now checks for supported feature bits.
_Base version keeps accepting only previously known features and
mask/ignores unknown bits.
NB: if the older binary passed in 'random' bits, it will not get
metadata2 by chance. New linked binary get new validation function.
Library user is required to not pass 'trash' for unsupported bits,
as such calls will be rejected.
Dm cache target version 1.10 introduces new cache metadata format
(upstream kernel >=4.11).
New format is enable by passing new target feature flag metadata2.
Interace side on libdm uses DM_CACHE_FEATURE_METADATA2.
This feature bit is now also recognized on status
and set in 'feature_flags' field of dm_status_cache structure.
Code also adds check for 'highest' supported feature flag bit.
So it rejects properly any 'unknown' feature bit set by application.
Better code to enforce writethrough caching for cleaner policy.
Only check for cleaner when DM_CACHE_FEATURE_PASSTHROUGH or
DM_CACHE_FEATURE_WRITEBACK is set.
As now we can properly recognize all paramerters for pool creation,
we may drop PASS_ARG_ defines and rely on '_UNSELECTED' or 0 entries
as being those without user given args.
When setting are not given on command line - 'update' function
fill them from profiles or configuration. For this 'profile' arg
was needed to be passed around and since 'VG' itself is not needed,
it's been all replaced with 'cmd, profile, extents_size' args.
Reuse same code for getting/setting cache parameters with lvcreate.
So there is single one place how to get vars from profiles and configs.
Variables declarations are moved to start of function and
there is no need to initialize them as they are always
defined by functions get_cache_params() and get_pool_params().
Since cache chunk might be huge and there is no technical need
to enforce rounding and there is actually more 'real' VG space
used then necessary - keep rounding on 'chunk' bounrary only
for thin volumes - where it's the space used anyway.
NB: we support conversion of any-size 'existing' LV into cached LV.
Fix missing reset of '*settings' pointer when no args were given.
Handle cache_chunk settings like all other settings, so it is properly
updated only with non-zero settings and the existing cache-pool
chunk_size is not being reconfigured.
User can specify metadata profile which stores important cache
geometry data for easy configuration.
Fix missing support for getting chunk_size, cache_mode, cache_policy
for a cache/cache pools volumes from configuration or metadata profile.
Split-off patch that just replaces returns with 'goto bad'
so there is single place to release policy_settings.
In the next patch we will start to use some shared
function call between lvconvert and lvcreate
(effectively restoring previous logic which has got lost).
To more easily recognize unselected state from select '0' state
add new 'THIN_ZERO_UNSELECTED' enum.
Same applies to THIN_DISCARDS_UNSELECTED.
For those we no longer need to use PASS_ARG_ZERO or PASS_ARG_DISCARDS.
Basically code moving operation to have a single place resolving
thin_pool_chunk_size_policy.
Supported are generic & performance profiles.
Function is now shared between thin manipulation code and configuration
_CFG logic to obtain defaults and handle correct reporting upward coding
stack.
Test for NULL in dm_stats_destroy() and return immediately if
the struct dm_stats pointer is NULL (similar to free(NULL)).
This simplifies cleanup code which otherwise needs to:
out:
if (dms)
dm_stats_destroy(dms);
return;
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.
Older compilers are not able to determine that although group_id
is only assigned in one branch of a conditional, it is never used
used when the other branch is taken:
libdm-stats.c:3319: warning: "group_id" may be used uninitialized in this function
Avoid this by always initialising the variable when it is
declared.
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.
In addition to the already supported conversion between 2-legged
raid1 and raid5, raid1 and raid4 can be also converted into each
other with 2 legs (raid4/5 are limited to map a 2-legged raid1).
This patch supports the missing raid4 conversion in the sequence
linear -> 2-legged raid1 -> raid4/5, then restripe to more than one
data stripes for performance and resilience reasons and optionally
convert to striped/raid0.
The other conversion sequence is also possible by converting N-way
striped/raid0 to raid4/5, then restripe to 2 legs followed by a
conversion to raid1 and optionally to linear (loosing all resilience).
Add examples for reshaping number of stripes
and converting from raid6 to striped to raid10.
Remove trailing spaces.
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
The filemap daemon takes its program_id from the regions it is
managing: use DM_STATS_ALL_PROGRAMS when retrieving an initial
listing and then obtain the correct program_id from the group
leader.
On conversion from striped to raid0, data LVs are created
and all segments and their respective areas of the striped
LV are moved across to new segments allocated for the raid0
image LVs. This can cause non-canonical segments to be added
to the image LVs.
Add a call to lv_merge_segments() once all segments have been
added to an image LV to compensate for that. This avoids
unsafe table loads on activation.
Fix comments.
Automatic dmeventd repair of mirrors with active lvmetad configured
(mirror_image_fault_policy = "allocate") fails because the lvscan
run before the repair in the mirror DSO does not update the
lvmetad cache properly thus "lvconvert --repair ..." fails.
Need to scan the mirror LV before and after the repair
to have proper cache content after the repair finished.
The cache can't be relied on or the repair will fail.
Resolves: rhbz1380521
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.
Add a daemon that can be launched to monitor a group of regions
corresponding to the extents of a file, and to update the regions as the
file's allocation changes.
The daemon is intended to be started from a library interface, but can
also be run from the command line:
dmfilemapd <fd> <group_id> <path> <mode> [<foreground>[<log_level>]]
Where fd is a file descriptor open on the mapped file, group_id is the
group identifier of the mapped group and mode is either "inode" or
"path". E.g.:
# dmfilemapd 3 0 vm.img inode 1 3 3<vm.img
...
If foreground is non-zero, the daemon will not fork to run in the
background. If verbose is non-zero, libdm and daemon log messages will
be printed.
It is possible for the group identifier to change when regions are
re-mapped: this occurs when the group leader is deleted (regroup=1 in
dm_stats_update_regions_from_fd()), and another region is created before
the daemon has a chance to recreate the leader region.
The operation is inherently racey since there is currently no way to
atomically move or resize a dm_stats region while retaining its
region_id.
Detect this condition and update the group_id value stored in the
filemap monitor.
A function is also provided in the the stats API to launch the filemap
monitoring daemon:
int dm_stats_start_filemapd(int fd, uint64_t group_id, const char *path,
dm_filemapd_mode_t mode, unsigned foreground,
unsigned verbose);
This carries out the first fork and execs dmfilemapd with the arguments
specified.
A dm_filemapd_mode_t value is specified by the mode argument: either
DM_FILEMAPD_FOLLOW_INODE, or DM_FILEMAPD_FOLLOW_PATH. A helper function,
dm_filemapd_mode_from_string(), is provided to parse a string containing
a valid mode name into the appropriate dm_filemapd_mode_t value.
It's not an error to call dm_stats_group_present() on a handle
that contains no regions.
This causes dmfilemap to log a false backtrace during shutdown
if all regions are removed from the corresponding device:
exiting _filemap_monitor_get_events() with deleted=0, check=0
waiting for FILEMAPD_WAIT
dm message (253:1) [ opencount flush ] @stats_list dmstats [32768] (*1)
<backtrace>
Filemap group removed: exiting.
Change this to only emit a backtrace if the handle is NULL.
Splitting off an image LV of a 2-legged
raid1 LV causes loss of resilience.
Ask user to avoid uninformed loss of all resilience.
Don't ask for N > 2 legged raid1 LVs.
Adjust tests.
Splitting off an image LV of a 2-legged raid1 LV tracking changes
causes loosing partial resilience for any newly written data set.
Full resilience will be provided again after the split off image LV
got merged back in and the new data set got fully synchronized.
Reason being that the data is only stored on the remaining single
writable image during the split.
Ask user to avoid uninformed loss of such partial resilience.
Don't ask for N > 2 legged raid1 LVs.
In case N images fail (N <= parity chunks) _and_
a "vgreduce --removemissing --force VG" was applied
a following repair of the RaidLV fails:
Unable to remove N images: Only 0 devices given.
Failed to remove the specified images from tb/r.
Failed to replace faulty devices in tb/r.
Fix as of this commit results in correct repair:
Faulty devices in tb/r successfully replaced.
Add new values for different sign variations, resulting in:
size_VAL no sign accepted
ssize_VAL accepts + or -
psize_VAL accepts +
nsize_VAL accpets -
extents_VAL no sign accepted
sextents_VAL accepts + or -
pextents_VAL accepts +
nextents_VAL accepts -
Depending on the command being run, change the option
values for --size, --extents, --poolmetadatasize to
use the appropriate value from above.
lvcreate uses no sign (but accepts + and ignores it).
lvresize accepts +|- for a relative change.
lvextend accepts + for a relative change.
lvreduce accepts - for a relative change.
Like opt and val arrays in previous commit, combine duplicate
arrays for lv types and props in command.c and lvmcmdline.c.
Also move the command_names array to be defined in command.c
so it's consistent with the others.
command.c and lvmcmdline.c each had a full array defining
all options and values. This duplication was not removed
when the command.c code was merged into the run time.
seg->extents_copied has to be defined properly on reducing
the size of a raid LV or conversion from raid5 with 1 stripe
to raid1 will fail.
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
Reshaping a raid5 LV to one stripe aiming to convert it to
raid1 (and optionally to linear) reports the wrong LV size
when still having reshape space allocated.
The lv_extend/_lv_reduce API doesn't cope with resizing RaidLVs
with allocated reshape space and ongoing conversions. Prohibit
resizing during conversions and remove the reshape space before
processing resize. Add missing seg->data_copies initialisation.
Fix typo/comment.
For the time being raid10 is limited to even number of total stripes
as is and 2 data copies. The number of stripes provided on creation
of a raid10(_near) LV with -i/--stripes gets doubled to define
that even total number of stripes (i.e. images).
Apply the same on disk adding conversions (reshapes) with
"lvconvert --stripes RaidLV" (e.g. 2 stripes = 4 images
total converted to 3 stripes = 6 images total).
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
Part of the UNIT description was still living in the
--size description. Move it to the Size[UNIT] description
since it is used by other options, not just --size.
In lvcreate/lvconvert, --poolmetdatasize can only be an
absolute value, but in lvresize/lvextend, --poolmetadatasize
can be given a + relative value.
The val types only currently support relative values that
go in both directions +|-. Further work is needed to add
val types that can be relative in only one direction, and
switching various option values to one those depending on
the command name. Then poolmetdatasize will not appear
with a +|- option in lvcreate/lvconvert, and will
appear with only the + option in lvresize/lvextend.
Enhance the raid report functions for the recently added LV fields
reshape_len, reshape_len_le, data_offset, new_data_offset, data_copies,
data_stripes and parity_chunks to cope with "lvs --select".
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
Clean up and correct the details around --extents and --size.
lvcreate/lvresize/lvreduce/lvextend all now display the
extents option in usages.
The Size and Number value variables for --size and --extents
are now displayed without the [+|-] prefix for lvcreate.
A special case is needed to display
--extents for lvcreate since the cmd defs
treat --extents as an automatic alternative
to --size (to avoid duplicating every cmd def).
Now that we got the "data_stripes" field key, adjust the "stripes" field description.
Enhance the "regionsize" field description to cover raids as well.
When a cmd def includes multiple sets of options (OO_FOO),
allow multiple OO_FOO sets to contain the same option and
avoid repeating it in the cmd def.
There was confusion in the code about whether or not the
--size option accepted a sign. Make it consistent and clear
that it does.
This exposes a new problem in that an option can only
accept one value type, e.g. --size can only accept a
signed number, it cannot accept a positive or negative
number for some commands and reject negative numbers for
others.
In practice, lvcreate accepts only positive --size
values and lvresize accepts positive or negative --size
values. There is currently no way to encode this
difference. Until that is fixed, the man page output
is hacked to avoid printing the [+|-] prefix for sizes
in lvcreate.
Settings specified in other command line args take precedence over
profiles and --config, which takes precedence over settings in actual
config files.
Since commit 1e2420bca8 ('commands: new
method for defining commands') commands like this:
lvchange --config 'global/test=1' -ay vg
have been printing the 'TEST MODE' message, but nevertheless making
real changes.
Commit 48778bc503 introduced new RAID reshaping related report fields.
The inclusioon of segtype.h in properties.c isn't mandatory, remove it.
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
Commit 80a6de616a versioned the dm_tree_node_add_raid_target_with_params()
and dm_tree_node_add_raid_target() APIs for compatibility reasons.
There's no user of the latter function, remove it.
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
During an ongoing reshape, the MD kernel runtime reads stripes relative
to data_offset and starts storing the reshaped stripes (with new raid
layout and/or new stripesize and/or new number of stripes) relative
to new_data_offset. This is to avoid writing over any data in place
which is non-atomic by nature and thus be recoverable without data loss
in the transition. MD uses the term out-of-place reshaping for it.
There's 2 other areas we don't have report capability for:
- number of data stripes vs. total stripes
(e.g. raid6 with 7 stripes toal has 5 data stripes)
- number of (rotating) parity/syndrome chunks
(e.g. raid6 with 7 stripes toal has 2 parity chunks; one
per stripe for P-Syndrome and another one for Q-Syndrome)
Thus, add the following reportable keys:
- reshape_len (in current units)
- reshape_len_le (in logical extents)
- data_offset (in sectors)
- new_data_offset ( " )
- data_stripes
- parity_chunks
Enhance lvchange-raid.sh, lvconvert-raid-reshape-linear_to_striped.sh,
lvconvert-raid-reshape-striped_to_linear.sh, lvconvert-raid-reshape.sh
and lvconvert-raid-takeover.sh to make use of new keys.
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
Add/remove the SECONDARY_SYNTAX flag to cmd defs.
cmd defs with this flag will be listed under the
ADVANCED USAGE man page section, so that the main
USAGE section contains the most common commands
without distraction.
- When multiple cmd defs do the same thing, one variant
can be displayed in the first list.
- Very advanced, unusual or uncommon commands should be
in the second list.
Recently added check for reshaping in this function called for
a cleanup to avoid proliferating it with more explicit conditionals.
Base the reshaping check on the given _features array.
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
An initialization was missing when converting striped to raid0(_meta)
causing unitialized reshape_len in the new component LVs first segment.
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
The imposed minimum region size can cause rejection on
disk removing reshapes. Lower it to avoid that.
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
Commit 27384c52cf lowered the maximum number of devices
back to 64 for compatibility.
Because more members have been added to the API in
'struct dm_tree_node_raid_params *', we have to version
the public libdm RAID API to not break any existing users.
Changes:
- keep the previous 'struct dm_tree_node_raid_params' and
dm_tree_node_add_raid_target_with_params()/dm_tree_node_add_raid_target()
in order to expose the already released public RAID API
- introduce 'struct dm_tree_node_raid_params_v2' and additional functions
dm_tree_node_add_raid_target_with_params_v2()/dm_tree_node_add_raid_target_v2()
to be used by the new lvm2 lib reshape extentions
With this new API, the bitfields for rebuild/writemostly legs in
'struct dm_tree_node_raid_params_v2' can be raised to 256 bits
again (253 legs maximum supported in MD kernel).
Mind that we can limit the maximum usable number via the
DEFAULT_RAID{1}_MAX_IMAGES definition in defaults.h.
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
- Combine the equivalent lvconvert --type raid defs.
(Two cmd defs must be different without relying
on LV type, which are not known at the time the
cmd def is matched.)
- Remove unused optional options from lvconvert --stripes,
and lvconvert --stripesize.
- Use Number for --stripes_long val type.
- Combine the cmd def for raid reshape cleanup into the
existing start_poll cmd def (they were duplicate defs).
Calls into the raid code from a poll opertion will be
added.
Commit 64a2fad5d6 raised the maximum number of RAID devices to 64.
Commit e2354ea344 introduced RAID_BITMAP_SIZE as 4 to have
256 bits (4 * 64 bit array members), thus changing the libdm API
unnecessarilly for the time being.
To not change the API, reduce RAID_BITMAP_SIZE to 1.
Remove an unneeded definition of it from libdm-common.h.
If we ever decide to raise past 64, we'll version the API.
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
The fedorahosted git repository shuts down tomorrow:
https://communityblog.fedoraproject.org/fedorahosted-sunset-2017-02-28/
Our upstream git repository has moved back to sourceware.org.
Mailing list hosting is not changing.
Gitweb:
https://www.sourceware.org/git/?p=lvm2
Git:
git://sourceware.org/git/lvm2.git
ssh://sourceware.org/git/lvm2.git
http://sourceware.org/git/lvm2.git
Example command to change the origin of a repository clone:
Public:
git remote set-url origin git://sourceware.org/git/lvm2.git
Committers:
git remote set-url origin git+ssh://sourceware.org/git/lvm2.git
The options list was sorted as:
- options with both long and short forms, alphabetically
- options with only long form, alphabetically
This was done only for the visual effect. Change to
sort alphabetically by long opt, without regard to
short forms.
Fixes commit 286d39ee3c, which was correct except
for a reversed strstr. Now uses strchr, and modifies
a copy of the name so the original argv is preserved.
When requesting a regionsize change during conversions, check
for constraints or the command may fail in the kernel n case
the region size is too smalle or too large thus leaving any
new SubLVs behind.
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
Allow regionsize on upconvert from linear:
fix related commit 2574d3257a to actually work
Related: rhbz1394427
Remove setting raid5_n on conversions from raid1
as of commit 932db3db53 because any raid5 mapping
may be requested.
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
Add aforementioned but forgotten new test scripts
lvconvert-raid-reshape-linear_to_striped.sh,
lvconvert-raid-reshape-striped_to_linear.sh and
lvconvert-raid-reshape.sh
Those presume dm-raid target version 1.10.2
provided by a following kernel patch.
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
Because of contraints in renaming shifted rimage/rmeta LV names
the current RaidLV limit is a maximum of 10 SubLV pairs.
With the previous introduction of reshaping infratructure that
constriant got removed.
Kernel supports 253 since dm-raid target 1.9.0, older kernels 64.
Raise the maximum number of RaidLV rimage/rmeta pairs to 64.
If we want to raise past 64, we have to introdce a check for
the kernel supporting it in lvcreate/lvconvert.
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
In order to support striped raid5/6/10 LV reshaping (change
of LV type, stripesize or number of legs), this patch
introduces the changes to call the reshaping infratructure
from lv_raid_convert().
Changes:
- add reshaping calls from lv_raid_convert()
- add command definitons for reshaping to tools/command-lines.in
- fix raid_rimage_extents()
- add 2 new test scripts lvconvert-raid-reshape-linear_to_striped.sh
and lvconvert-raid-reshape-striped_to_linear.sh to test
the linear <-> striped multi-step conversions
- add lvconvert-raid-reshape.sh reshaping tests
- enhance lvconvert-raid-takeover.sh with new raid10 tests
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
In order to support striped raid5/6/10 LV reshaping (change
of LV type, stripesize or number of legs), this patch
introduces more local infrastructure to raid_manip.c
used by followup patches.
Change:
- allow raid_rimage_extents() to calculate raid10
- remove an __unused__ attribute
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
In order to support striped raid5/6/10 LV reshaping (change
of LV type, stripesize or number of legs), this patch
introduces more local infrastructure to raid_manip.c
used by followup patches.
Change:
- add missing raid1 <-> raid5 conversions to support
linear <-> raid5 <-> raid0(_meta)/striped conversions
- rename related new takeover functions to
_takeover_from_raid1_to_raid5 and _takeover_from_raid5_to_raid1,
because a reshape to > 2 legs is only possible with
raid5 layout
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
In order to support striped raid5/6/10 LV reshaping (change
of LV type, stripesize or number of legs), this patch
introduces more local infrastructure to raid_manip.c
used by followup patches.
Change:
- enhance _clear_meta_lvs() to support raid0 allowing
raid0_meta -> raid10 conversions to succeed by clearing
the raid0 rmeta images or the kernel will fail because
of discovering reordered raid devices
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
In order to support striped raid5/6/10 LV reshaping (change
of LV type, stripesize or number of legs), this patch
introduces more local infrastructure to raid_manip.c
used by followup patches.
Changes:
- enhance _raid45610_to_raid0_or_striped_wrapper() to support
raid5_n with 2 areas to raid1 conversion to allow for
striped/raid0(_meta)/raid4/5/6 -> raid1/linear conversions;
rename it to _takeover_downconvert_wrapper to discontinue the
illegible function name
- enhance _striped_or_raid0_to_raid45610_wrapper() to support
raid1 with 2 areas to raid5* conversions to allow for
linear/raid1 -> striped/raid0(_meta)/raid4/5/6 conversions;
rename it to _takeover_upconvert_wrapper for the same reason
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
In order to support striped raid5/6/10 LV reshaping (change
of LV type, stripesize or number of legs), this patch
introduces more local infrastructure to raid_manip.c
used by followup patches.
Changes:
- add missing possible reshape conversions and conversion options
to allow/prohibit changing stripesize or number fo stripes
- enhance setting convenient riad types in reshape conversions
(e.g. raid1 with 2 legs -> radi5_n)
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
In order to support striped raid5/6/10 LV reshaping (change
of LV type, stripesize or number of legs), this patch
introduces more local infrastructure to raid_manip.c
used by followup patches.
Changes:
- add _raid_reshape() using the pre/post callbacks and
the stripes add/remove reshape functions introduced before
- and _reshape_requested function checking if a reshape
was requested
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
In order to support striped raid5/6/10 LV reshaping (change
of LV type, stripesize or number of legs), this patch
introduces more local infrastructure to raid_manip.c
used by followup patches.
Changes:
- add vg metadata update functions
- add pre and post activation callback functions for
proper sequencing of sub lv activations during reshaping
- move and enhance _lv_update_reload_fns_reset_eliminate_lvs()
to support pre and post activation callbacks
- add _reset_flags_passed_to_kernel() which resets anyxi
rebuild/reshape flags after they have been passed into the kernel
and sets the SubLV remove after reshape flags on legs to be removed
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
In order to support striped raid5/6/10 LV reshaping (change
of LV type, stripesize or number of legs), this patch
introduces more local infrastructure to raid_manip.c
used by followup patches.
Changes:
- add function to support disk adding reshapes
- add function to support disk removing reshapes
- add function to support layout (e.g. raid5ls -> raid5_rs)
or stripesize reshaping
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
In order to support striped raid5/6/10 LV reshaping (change
of LV type, stripesize or number of legs), this patch
introduces more local infrastructure to raid_manip.c
used by followup patches.
Changes:
- add function providing state of a reshaped RaidLV
- add function to adjust the size of a RaidLV was
reshaped to add/remove stripes
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
In order to support striped raid5/6/10 LV reshaping (change
of LV type, stripesize or number of legs), this patch
introduces more local infrastructure to raid_manip.c
used by followup patches.
Changes:
- add lv_raid_data_copies returning raid type specific number;
needed for raid10 with more than 2 data copies
- remove _shift_and_rename_image_components() constraint
to support more than 10 raid legs
- add function to calculate total rimage length used by out-of-place
reshape space allocation
- add out-of-place reshape space alloc/relocate/free functions
- move _data_rimages_count() used by reshape space alloc/realocate functions
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
In order to support striped raid5/6/10 LV reshaping (change
of LV type, stripesize or number of legs), this patch
introduces local infrastructure to raid_manip.c
used by followup patches.
Add functions:
- to check reshaping is supported in target attibute
- to return device health string needed to check
the raid device is ready to reshape
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
In order to support striped raid5/6/10 LV reshaping (change
of LV type, stripesize or number of legs), this patch
introduces infrastructure prerequisites to be used
by raid_manip.c extensions in followup patches.
This base is needed for allocation of out-of-place
reshape space required by the MD raid personalities to
avoid writing over data in-place when reading off the
current RAID layout or number of legs and writing out
the new layout or to a different number of legs
(i.e. restripe)
Changes:
- add members reshape_len to 'struct lv_segment' to store
out-of-place reshape length per component rimage
- add member data_copies to struct lv_segment
to support more than 2 raid10 data copies
- make alloc_lv_segment() aware of both reshape_len and data_copies
- adjust all alloc_lv_segment() callers to the new API
- add functions to retrieve the current data offset (needed for
out-of-place reshaping space allocation) and the devices count
from the kernel
- make libdm deptree code aware of reshape_len
- add LV flags for disk add/remove reshaping
- support import/export of the new 'struct lv_segment' members
- enhance lv_extend/_lv_reduce to cope with reshape_len
- add seg_is_*/segtype_is_* macros related to reshaping
- add target version check for reshaping
- grow rebuilds/writemostly bitmaps to 246 bit to support kernel maximal
- enhance libdm deptree code to support data_offset (out-of-place reshaping)
and delta_disk (legs add/remove reshaping) target arguments
Related: rhbz834579
Related: rhbz1191935
Related: rhbz1191978
(Change to recent commit 3f4ecaf8c2.)
Use --foo Number[k|UNIT] to indicate that
the default units of the number is k, but other
units listed below are also accepted.
Previously, underlined/italic Unit was used,
like other of variables, but this UNIT is more
like a shortcut than an actual variable.
The MD kernel raid1 personality does no use any writemostly leg as the primary.
In case a previous linear LV holding data gets upconverted to
raid1 it becomes the primary leg of the new raid1 LV and a full
resynchronization is started to update the new legs.
No writemostly and/or writebehind setting may be allowed during
this initial, full synchronization period of this new raid1 LV
(using the lvchange(8) command), because that would change the
primary (i.e the previous linear LV) thus causing data loss.
lvchange has a bug not preventing this scenario.
Fix rejects setting writemostly and/or writebehind on resychronizing raid1 LVs.
Once we have status in the lvm2 metadata about the linear -> raid upconversion,
we may relax this constraint for other types of resynchronization
(e.g. for user requested "lvchange --resync ").
New lvchange-raid1-writemostly.sh test is added to the test suite.
Resolves: https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=855895
We use --foo Number[k|Units] to indicate that
the default units of the number is k, but other
units listed below are also accepted.
Capitalize and underline Units so it is consistent
with other variables, and reference it at the end.
Technically, the k should be bold, but this
tends to make the text visually hard to read
because of the excessive highlights scattered
everywhere. So it's left normal text for now
(it's unlikely to confuse anyone.)
Print ... after a repeatable option in the OPTIONS section.
An alternative would be to just mention in the text description
that the option is repeatable.
When the test would need to try to write some large amount of data
we can give it 'zero' segments - for obvious reason such written data
can't be verified but in some test cases it doesn't really matter.
Usage follows 'error_dev' style.
For now test suite is not supporting any combination of
error/delay/zero segments so only 1 type could be used per PV.
Previously when lvremove tried to remove 'active' origin,
it had been asking for every 'snapshot' LV separately
and doing individual single snapshot removals first.
To be faster it now deactivates origin before removal
all connected snapshots.
This avoids multiple reloads of dm table for origin volume
which were unnecessary as origin was meant to be removed as well.
There are two kinds of common options:
1. options common to all variants of a given command name
2. options common to all lvm commands
Previously, both kinds of common options were listed together
under "Common options". Now the first are printed under
"Common options for command" (when needed), and the second
are printed under "Common options for lvm" (always).
Remove the "usage notes" which should just
live in the man pages.
When there are 3 or more variants of a command,
print all the options produces a lot of output,
so require --longhelp to print all the options
in these cases.
Check 'dmsetup version' is called before starting any more
advanced logic in $DM_DEV_DIR.
Call also replaces mkdir as it creates needed path with control node.
The --type option has previously been accepted for
lvresize/lvextend. Using it did not affect the operation
of the command. The value was simply verified as matching
the current seg type of the LV.
Commit f45b689406 caused regression
of lvresize -m and --type parameter
After fix this sequence may work when we also fix syntax description:
lvcreate -l1 -m1 -n lv1 vg
lvextend --type mirror -m1 -l+1 vg/lv1
For this syntax:
lvconvert --thinpool LV1 --poolmetadata LV2
lvconvert --cachepool LV1 --poolmetadata LV2
Restore the metadata swapping behavior in addition to
the pool creation behavior. When LV1 is already a pool,
the metadata LV will be swapped with LV2.
When LV1 is not a pool, it will be converted to a
pool using the specified LV for metadata.
This syntax is no longer advertised because of the
ambiguous behavior. The primary syntaxes for pool
creation and metadata swapping will be the advertised
methods.
As we now user binary search - it's nondeterministict
which of the same 'args' will be give - so duplicates
need 'extra' care.
So provide same hack for output for --uuidstr_ARG as
for input.
Solves 'pvscan -u'.
Since there is a lot of options and lot of searches,
use binary search to keep strcmp at minimum.
The interesting part is - alphabetically sorted array contains
duplicates and some of them are not the 'right anwer', so
after we find matching string but not matching long_ARG,
we may need to check if the surrouding strings are the right matching
one.
The single loops is used also for strictly define --foo_long
(i.e. --stripes) and just differs at final part.
TODO1: replace strstr call with some flag (just like short_opt).
TODO2: drop '--' from being stored and tests by strcmp.
When parsing command defs, track and report all
errors that are found. Add an error return case
from define_commands so the standard error exit
path is used.
When using liblvm2cmd, a process can do multiple
init/exit calls, i.e.
lvm2_init(); lvm2_run(); lvm2_exit();
lvm2_init(); lvm2_run(); lvm2_exit();
...
define_commands() needs to set up the global commands[]
definitions only the first time.
The old ad hoc arg parsing when combining a split snapshot
allowed the first lv to have a vgname, but not the second.
Since lvconvert now uses the standard arg parsing in
process_each_lv(), the old one-off behavior requires a
work around.
This reverts commit 717363bb94.
These alternate forms for swapping metadata cannot be
distinguished from the command for creating a pool.
If we were to add these alternate forms for swapping
metadata, we would need to overload the pool creation
command defs, making those definitions ambiguous.
Change run time access to the command_name struct
cmd->cname instead of indirectly through
cmd->command->cname. This removes the two run time
fields from struct command.
All lvconvert functionality has been moved out of the
previous monolithic lvconvert code, except conversions
related to raid/mirror/striped/linear. This switches
that remaining code to be based on command defs, and
standard process_each_lv arg processing. This final
switch results in quite a bit of dead code that is
also removed.
This is a new explicit version of 'lvconvert LV'
which has been an obscure way of triggering polling
to be restarted on an LV that was previously converted.
Lift all the snapshot utilities (merge, split, combine)
out of the monolithic lvconvert implementation, using
the command definitions. The old code associated with
these commands is now unused and will be removed separately.
This lifts the lvconvert --repair and --replace commands
out of the monolithic lvconvert implementation. The
previous calls into repair/replace can no longer be
reached and will be removed in a separate commit.
The new check_single_lv() function is called prior to the
existing process_single_lv(). If the check function returns 0,
the LV will not be processed.
The check_single_lv function is meant to be a standard method
to validate the combination of specific command + specific LV,
and decide if the combination is allowed. The check_single
function can be used by anything that calls process_each_lv.
As commands are migrated to take advantage of command
definitions, each command definition gets its own entry
point which calls process_each for itself, passing a
pair of check_single/process_single functions which can
be specific to the narrowly defined command def.
. Define a prototype for every lvm command.
. Match every user command with one definition.
. Generate help text and man pages from them.
The new file command-lines.in defines a prototype for every
unique lvm command. A unique lvm command is a unique
combination of: command name + required option args +
required positional args. Each of these prototypes also
includes the optional option args and optional positional
args that the command will accept, a description, and a
unique string ID for the definition. Any valid command
will match one of the prototypes.
Here's an example of the lvresize command definitions from
command-lines.in, there are three unique lvresize commands:
lvresize --size SizeMB LV
OO: --alloc Alloc, --autobackup Bool, --force,
--nofsck, --nosync, --noudevsync, --reportformat String, --resizefs,
--stripes Number, --stripesize SizeKB, --poolmetadatasize SizeMB
OP: PV ...
ID: lvresize_by_size
DESC: Resize an LV by a specified size.
lvresize LV PV ...
OO: --alloc Alloc, --autobackup Bool, --force,
--nofsck, --nosync, --noudevsync,
--reportformat String, --resizefs, --stripes Number, --stripesize SizeKB
ID: lvresize_by_pv
DESC: Resize an LV by specified PV extents.
FLAGS: SECONDARY_SYNTAX
lvresize --poolmetadatasize SizeMB LV_thinpool
OO: --alloc Alloc, --autobackup Bool, --force,
--nofsck, --nosync, --noudevsync,
--reportformat String, --stripes Number, --stripesize SizeKB
OP: PV ...
ID: lvresize_pool_metadata_by_size
DESC: Resize a pool metadata SubLV by a specified size.
The three commands have separate definitions because they have
different required parameters. Required parameters are specified
on the first line of the definition. Optional options are
listed after OO, and optional positional args are listed after OP.
This data is used to generate corresponding command definition
structures for lvm in command-lines.h. usage/help output is also
auto generated, so it is always in sync with the definitions.
Every user-entered command is compared against the set of
command structures, and matched with one. An error is
reported if an entered command does not have the required
parameters for any definition. The closest match is printed
as a suggestion, and running lvresize --help will display
the usage for each possible lvresize command.
The prototype syntax used for help/man output includes
required --option and positional args on the first line,
and optional --option and positional args enclosed in [ ]
on subsequent lines.
command_name <required_opt_args> <required_pos_args>
[ <optional_opt_args> ]
[ <optional_pos_args> ]
Command definitions that are not to be advertised/suggested
have the flag SECONDARY_SYNTAX. These commands will not be
printed in the normal help output.
Man page prototypes are also generated from the same original
command definitions, and are always in sync with the code
and help text.
Very early in command execution, a matching command definition
is found. lvm then knows the operation being done, and that
the provided args conform to the definition. This will allow
lots of ad hoc checking/validation to be removed throughout
the code.
Each command definition can also be routed to a specific
function to implement it. The function is associated with
an enum value for the command definition (generated from
the ID string.) These per-command-definition implementation
functions have not yet been created, so all commands
currently fall back to the existing per-command-name
implementation functions.
Using per-command-definition functions will allow lots of
code to be removed which tries to figure out what the
command is meant to do. This is currently based on ad hoc
and complicated option analysis. When using the new
functions, what the command is doing is already known
from the associated command definition.
Some archs can use even 64K pages and then lvm2 runs into trouble if
the stack is 'too small' to fit extra page capturing stack overwrite.
So when lvm2 limits stack - add extra mem page - be it 4K or 64K.
Relates to ppc64le bug: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/1387279
Remove allocate_pvs from raid_manip.c:_region_size_change_request() API
and lv_extend() using it added for temporary test purpose.
Related: rhbz1366296
Add:
- region size checks to raid_manip.c types array and supporting functions
- tests to lvconvert-raid-takeover.sh to check bogus
"lvconvert --type --regionsize N " requests
Related: rhbz1366296
When we preload device with smaller size, we avoid its resume,
so later suspend/resume of full device tree my process all
existing in flight bios.
Also update comment and avoid using confusing opposite meaning.
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:
- conversion support from striped/raid0/raid0_meta to/from raid10;
raid10 goes by the near format (same as used in creation of
raid10 LVs), which groups data copies together with their original
blocks (e.g. 3-way striped, 2 data copies resulting in 112233 in the
first stripe followed by 445566 in the second etc.) and is limited
to even numbers of legs for now
- related tests to lvconvert-raid-takeover.sh
- typo
Related: rhbz1366296
- support shrinking of raid0/1/4/5/6/10 LVs
- enhance lvresize-raid.sh tests: add raid0* and raid10
- fix have_raid4 in aux.sh to allow lv_resize-raid.sh
and other scripts to test raid4
Resolves: rhbz1394048
Commit cfb6ef654d introduced
support to change RAID region size.
Fix:
- don't change region_size until after prompting the user
- use log_print_unless_silent() instead of log_warn()
- avoid superfluous sigint() calls which are already
covered in yes_no_prompt()
- typo
Related: rhbz1392947
Commit cfb6ef654d introduced
support to change RAID region size.
Add:
- missing conditions to support any types to function with
it in lv_raid_convert(); temporary workaround used until
cli validation patches get merged
- tests requesting "-R " to lvconvert-raid-takeover.sh
involving a cleanup of the script
Related: rhbz1392947
Cleanups as of Jons review:
- enhance comment about mandatory raid4 <-> raid5_n activation w/o metadata SubLVs
- remove bogus segment flag setting
- fix to sync related comments on conversions to raid0/striped and amongst raid4/5
- add missing error message for non-synced conversion to raid0/striped
Related: rhbz1366296
Add:
- support to change region size of existing RaidLVs
(all RAID LV types but raid0/raid0_meta)
- lvconvert-raid-regionsize.sh with test variations
for different RAID types and region sizes
Resolves: rhbz1392947
Well waiting for zeroing may take enough time to finish 'raid' sync.
So make the test running faster without zeroing and better avoid race
to have chance to happen (i.e. lvcreate is finished after array
gets already in sync).
Add:
- support for segment types raid6_{ls,rs,la,ra}_6
(striped raid with dedicated last Q-Syndrome SubLVs)
- conversion support from raid5_{ls,rs,la,ra} to/from raid6_{ls,rs,la,ra}_6
- setting convenient segtypes on conversions from/to raid4/5/6
- related tests to lvconvert-raid-takeover.sh factoring
out _lvcreate,_lvconvert funxtions
Related: rhbz1366296
Add:
- support for segment type raid6_n_6 (striped raid with dedicated last parity/Q-Syndrome SubLVs)
- conversion support from striped/raid0/raid0_meta/raid4 to/from raid6_n_6
- related tests to lvconvert-raid-takeover.sh
Related: rhbz1366296
Add:
- support for segment type raid5_n (striped raid with dedicated last parity SubLVs)
- conversion support from striped/raid0/raid0_meta/raid4 to/from raid5_n
- related tests to lvconvert-raid-takeover.sh
Related: rhbz1366296
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.
Add a call to update the regions corresponding to a file mapped
group of regions. The regions to be updated must be grouped, to
allow us to correctly identify extents that have been deallocated
since the map was created.
Tables are built of the file extents, and the extents currently
mapped to dmstats regions: if a region no longer has a matching
file extent, it is deleted, and new regions are created for any
file extents without a matching region.
The FIEMAP call returns extents that are currently in-memory (or
journaled) and awaiting allocation in the file system. These have
the FIEMAP_EXTENT_UNKNOWN | FIEMAP_EXTENT_DELALLOC flag bits set
in the fe_flags field - these extents are skipped until they
have a known disk location.
Since it is possile for the 0th extent of the file to have been
deallocated this must also handle the possible deletion and
re-creation of the group leader: if no other region allocation
is taking place the group identifier will not change.
If the group_id passed to _stats_group_id_present is equal to the
special value DM_STATS_GROUP_NOT_PRESENT there is no need to perform
any further tests: return false immediately.
For more advanced support we need to ensure better logic for calling
external much more advanced script for maintanance of thin-pool.
So this new code ensures:
When thin-pool data or metadata is bigger then 50%,
then with each 5% increment, action is called.
This is independent from autoextend_threshold.
This action always happens when thin-pool is over threshold,
(so no action when it's exactly i.e. 60%).
The only exception is 100% full thin-pool - which invokes 'last'
action.
Since thin-pool occupancy may change also downward, code needs
to also handle possibly reduction of occupancy of thin-pool.
So when usage drop from 90% to 50%, thin-pool will start to call
again action when it will pass 55% threshold.
This give external commands lot of option i.e. to call 'fstrim'
before actual resize is needed.
Default internal logic will stop trying to do any 'rescue' action
when executed command fails.
This will be now fully in hands of external script if such
behaviour is needed.
Instead of stopping monitoring after couple failing retries,
keep monitoring forever, just make larger delays between command
retries (ATM upto ~42 minutes).
So syslog is not spammed too often, yet commands have a chance to
be retried and succeed eventually...
When dmeventd configured command does not start with 'lvm ' prefix,
it's going to be an 'external' command.
In this case we split command by spaces to argv strings.
When showing sizes with 'H|human' units we do use standard rounding.
This however is confusing users from time to time,
when the printed number uses some biger units i.e. GiB and there is just
tiny fraction of space missing.
So here is some real-life example with new 'r' unit.
$lvs
LV VG Attr LSize Pool Origin
lvol0 vg -wi-a----- 1.99g
lvol1 vg -wi-a----- <2.00g
lvol2 vg -wi-a----- <2.01g
Meaning is - lvol1 has 'slightly' less then 2.00g - from sign '<' user
can be aware the LV doesn't have full 2.00GiB in size so he
will be less surpriced allocation of 2G volume will not succeed.
$ vgs
VG #PV #LV #SN Attr VSize VFree
vg 2 2 0 wz--n- <6,00g <2,01g
For uses needing 'old' undecorated human unit simply will continue
to use 'H|h' units.
The new R|r may further change when we would recongnize some
other way how to improve readability.
With recent commit d6a74025df using
INTERNAL_ERROR while cheking layer LV - it's been noticed mirror
logic currently doesn't do a correct thing during upconversion and
does a full-try instead of checking only allocator capabilities.
This leads to invalid usage of layer.
To keep existing code running before providing a fix, relax
INTERNAL_ERROR just an error and keep the 'code' running.
Once mirror code is fixed, these all check should be switched
to internal errors.
Since we still experience occasiaonal test failure - slow
things down even more to avoid race.
Add support for 'quick' table changes between normal & delayed tables.
This was missing piece in 77997c7673.
When merging origin is inactive (while driver is loaded) we
could already report merge in progress values as there is
no way to activate 'old state' now.
Show proper internal error for failing command when there are some
inconsitencies in sizes of LV and its layer instead of rather
meaningless error code 5.
(Could be hit i.e. if user tried to 'resize' cached LV and then
uncache such LV.)
During rework of resize code this validation check
has been lost (in my resize branch). Upstream
is still not supporting resize of any cache type LV
so needs to be prevented.
When we need to clear dirty cache content of cached LV, there
is table reload which usually is shortly followed by next metadata
change. However udev can't (as of now) process udev event
while device is 'suspended'.
So whenever sequence of 'suspend/resume/suspend' is needed,
we need to wait first for finishing of 'resume' processing before
starting next 'suspend'. Otherwise there is 'race' danger of triggering
unwantend umount by systemd as such event will trigger
SYSTEMD_READY=0 state for a moment for such changed device.
Such race is pretty ugly to trace so we may need to review more
sequencies for missing 'sync'.
(Other option is to enhnace 'udev' rules processing to avoid
such dramatic actions to be happening for suspended devices).
Solves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/1280496
The only reasonable behaviour here is to error on
any number out of accepted range (i.e. now numbers
wrapping around with some hidden logic).
As this is plain bug there is no support for
backward compatibility since noone should
set numbers >UINT32_MAX and expect 0 or error
depending on how big number was used....
TODO: more fields might need to be converted.
Add simple function to wrap usage for only uint32 numbers.
Unlike 'int_arg' which accepts full range of 64bit number
this function will error on numbers out of this range:
<0, UINT32_MAX>
Add to commits 87117c2b25 and 0b8bf73a63 to avoid refreshing two
times altogether, thus avoiding issues related to clustered, remotely
activated RaidLV. Avoid need to repeat "lvchange --refresh RaidLV"
two times as a workaround to refresh a RaidLV. Fix handles removal
of temporary *-missing-* devices created for any missing segments
in RAID SubLVs during activation.
Because the kernel dm-raid target isn't able to handle transiently
failing devices properly we need
"[dm-devel][PATCH] dm raid: fix transient device failure processing"
as well.
test: add lvchange-raid-transient-failures.sh
and enhance lvconvert-raid.sh
Resolves: rhbz1025322
Related: rhbz1265191
Related: rhbz1399844
Related: rhbz1404425
When thin-pool processes event and 'lvextend --use-policies' fails
rather capture up-to-date new info as the fullness percentage may
have jumped noticable. This way we could use 'more' correct numbers
when checking for thresholds.
When there is 'merging' of an origin in progress, but metadata stil
do provide both origin and snapshot, we should show data from merged
snapshot. This is important mainly for thin case, where there was
a window, where i.e. 'lvs -o+device_id' would report information
about 'already gone' origin thin LV.
This race window is usually hard to trigger but can be ocasionally hit.
Usually shortly after activation, but before polling process manages
to update metadata after merge.
Before starting polling process, validate the merge has actually started
so there is not pointless invoke of lvmpolld.
This also fixes reported message from command, so user has
correct info whether merging has already started or
if it's delayed for next activation.
Move individual segment validation to a separate function
executed for 'complete_vg'.
Move some 'extra' validation bits from 'raid' validation to global
segtype validation (so extending existing normal validation)
TODO: still some test are left to be moved.
Reduce some duplication in validation process - there are still
some left thought so still room for improving overal speed.
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.
We can't keep 'display_lvname' for too long - it's using
ringbuffer and keeps limited number of names. So it's
safe only per few simple tests, but can't be used anymore
after some function calls..
(Fixes 00e641ef37)
Call _stats_regions_destroy() from dm_stats_list() if dms->regions
is non-NULL. This avoids leaking any pool allocations and ensures
the handle is in a known state: if an error occurs during the list,
dms->regions will be NULL and the handle will appear empty.
It could be actually better to use even cache origin in
read-only mode so there could no be some 'acidental'
change being done on this volume.
This however need further tools enhancment - where we would need
to handle whole subtree on 'lvchange -pr/-prw'.
When command calls backup() more then once (which is actually not
wanted) this warning message is shown repeatedly:
"WARNING: This metadata update is NOT backed up."
Instead now print message just once and less confuse user.
Add this functionality to lvconvert:
'lvconvert --thin cachedLV --thinpool vg/poll'
Converts cachedLV to external origin (which will be read-only).
New thin volume is created in thinpool LV and it's using external
origin as source for unprovisioned chunks.
This conversion happens online (while volume is in use).
Thin LV remains fully writable.
Cached external origin no longer could be written so cache will be used
ONLY for read operations. For this limitation we require cache mode
to be writethrough (as writeback cannot write to read-only volumes).
When thinLV is later removed cached external origin is again
fully usable, just note, LV remain in 'read-only' mode.
When read-write is needed, 'lvchange -prw' has to be used.
Single external origin could be user by multiple thinLV in
multiple differen thin pool.
When cache volume may be converted from normal to -real layer LV
we need to improve logic for call cache_check.
With this patch, we register call for cache_check only when metadata LV
is not yet present in active table slot (should match initial table
load).
This avoids unwanted checking when cache would become layer device
online.
The system is likely in some very inconsisten state.
Do not try to make it even more problematic with trying
to invoke tools like thin_check via callback.
External origin could be reloaded via more locks.
It's actually even more complex then thin-pool,
as it may be active on more nodes for linear LVs
(and maybe even more types).
External origin is always read-only thus unmodifiable
device so there should not be a problem accesing it
through multiple nodes.
Also for thin-pool check first presence of active thin-pool.
FIXME:
It's not easy to detect on which nodes this device is active
Thus manipulation with such device may require checking every
node and it active state and refresh.
But since such setup is quite complex to prepare and use,
hopefully there are not user trying to 'explore' this usage yet.
To be ready to show status of cache volume, call the status
with layer. Layer is automatically detected in this case when
cache volume is used in 'layered' form (needs -real suffix).
Avoid printing misleading message about single dirty block.
Instead properly detect condition where the 'cleaner' policy
needs to be installed without 'overloading' dirty variable.
Also print warning if we would be clearing read-only volume.
(it really shouldn't happen).
External origin could be activated as stand-alone device.
When the last thin LV is removed, external origin is no longer
the external origin and it's layer property was dropped.
Ensure dm table is correct by reloading external origin
(when it's active).
When LV is external origin, show info for LV but
status for -layer. So we expose more info to a user
as otherwise active external origin is only linear
mapping of -real layer.
We do the same for i.e. old snaphost origin.
Activation of raid has brough up also splitted image with tracing
(without taking lock for this).
So when raid is now activate - such image is not put into
table (with _rmeta). When user needs such device, just active it.
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.
The dm_bit_copy() macro uses the source (bs1) bitset size as the
limit for memcpy:
memcpy((bs1) + 1, (bs2) + 1, ((*(bs1) / DM_BITS_PER_INT) + 1)..)
This is safe if the destination bitset is smaller than the source,
or if the two bitsets are of the same size.
With a destination that is larger (e.g. when resizing a bitmap to
add more capacity), the memcpy will overrun the source bitset and
set garbage bits in the destination.
There are nine uses of the macro currently (8 in libdm/regex, and
1 in daemons/cmirrord): in each case the two bitsets are always of
equal size so the behaviour is unchanged.
Fix the macro to use bs2's size to simplify resizing bitsets and
avoid the need for another copy macro.
Commit 0690392040 revealed a problem
in raid metadata manipulation.
We do two operations in one table reload:
- raid leg/image extraction
- rename remaining raid legs
This should be made in separate steps. Otherwise we do an
uncorrectable table change on error path (leaving tables
for admin and dmsetup).
As a hotfix - restore the previous logic and use a single
new function _lv_update_and_reload_list which activates exclusively
extracted LVs on the list before resuming suspended raid LV.
This restore 'rename' functionality upon resume.
Also still preserve the 'origin_only' logic - although we know
it's not working properly for cluster and LV stacking.
Further fixes are needed.
If FIEMAP returns a single extent after the first call, no extent
boundary is detected and the first extent is not counted by the
normal mechanism.
In this case, increment nr_extents at the same time the extent is
added to the region table, before returning.
backup is not 'tested' for success and also it should
actually happen just when command is finished.
We do not target to make backups with each inter-step
metadata change.
RAID is LV property
TODO: only 2 flags are seg->status: PVMOVE & MERGING
At least the second one should be soon elimanted as again
we merge LV not a segment.
This is another place for 'common' use pattern or
reload and activation of deleted devices.
(Moving the exclusive activation to _deactivate_and_remove_lvs()).
TODO: looks like halve of raid function is reloading
just 'origin' - and the other full LV.
It's useful to be able to specify a minimum number of bits for a
new bitmap parsed from a list, for e.g. to allow for expansing a
group without needing to copy/reallocate the bitmap.
Add a backwards compatible symbol for programs linked against old
versions of the library.
It is sometimes convenient to iterate over the set bits in a dm
bitset in reverse order (from the highest set bit toward zero), or
to quickly find the last set bit.
Add dm_bit_get_last() and dm_bit_get_prev(), mirroring the existing
dm_bit_get_first() and dm_bit_get_next().
dm_bit_get_prev() uses __builtin_clz when available to efficiently
test the bitset in reverse.
Add a macro for the clz (count leading zeros) operation.
Use the GCC __builtin_clz() for clz() if it is available and fall
back to a shift based implementation on systems that do not set
HAVE___BUILTIN_CLZ.
Split out the loop that iterates over each batch of FIEMAP
extent data from the function that sets up and calls the ioctl
to reduce nesting and simplify local variable use:
_stats_get_extents_for_file()
-> _stats_map_extents()
The _stats_map_extents() function is responsible for detecting
eof and extent boundaries and adding whole, allocated extents
to the file extent table for region creation.
Check that all region_id values specified in a group bitmap are
actually present: although this should not normally happen when
using the dmstats tool, it is possible as a result of manual
changes (or bugs) for a group descriptor to contain one or more
group_id values that do not exist.
Check for this situation when reading group descriptors, warn
the user the user, and clear these bits in the bitmap when
formatting it for output.
If a region has a a DMS_GROUP tag in aux_data where the first
region_id in the bitmap is not the same as the containing region,
dmstats will segfault:
# '2' is never a valid group bitset list for region_id == 0
# dmsetup message vg_hex/root 0 "@stats_set_aux 0 DMS_GROUP=img:2#"
# dmsetup message vg_hex/root 0 "@stats_list"
0: 45383680+16384 16384 dmstats DMS_GROUP=img:2#
1: 46071808+32768 32768 dmstats -
2: 47382528+16384 16384 dmstats -
# dmstats list
Segmentation fault (core dumped)
The crash will occur in some arbitrary dm_stats_get_* property
method - this happens while processing the 1st region_id in the
bitset, because the region is marked as grouped, but there is
no group bitmap present at dms->groups[2]->regions.
Fix this by detecting a mismatch between the expected region_id
and dm_bit_get_first() for the parsed bitset during
_parse_aux_data_group().
Handle files that contain multiple logical extents in a single
physical extent properly:
- In FIEMAP terms a logical extent is a contiguous range of
sectors in the file's address space.
- One or more physically adjacent logical extents comprise a
physical extent: these are the disk areas that will be mapped
to regions.
- An extent boundary occurs when the start sector of extent
n+1 is not equal to (n.start + n.length).
This requires that we accumulate the length values of extents
returned by FIEMAP until a discontinuity is found (since each
struct fiemap_extent returned by FIEMAP only represents a single
logical extent, which may be contiguous with other logical
extents on-disk).
This avoids creating large numbers of regions for physically
adjacent (logical) extents and fixes the earlier behaviour which
would only map the first logical extent of the physical extent,
leaving gaps in the region table for these files.
To be able to detect lvm2 command is not leaking some
'unexpected' device - remove all devices before
test exits by its own command so test teardown
now can check what was 'left' unexpectedly.
Fix order of operation when converting raid1 into old mirror.
Before any later metadata modification are initiated prepare
mirror_log device with all clearing.
Then directly convert raid1 into mirror with mirror_log.
This convertion now properly see as precommitted metadata
new 'mirror' and committed old 'raid' and is able to
preload all LVs.
When mapping regions to a file descriptor, a temporary table of
extent descriptors is built using the dm_pool object building
interface.
Previously this use borrowed the dms->mem region and counter
table pool (since nothing can interleave with the allocation
while the caller is still in dm_stats_create_regions_from_fd()).
This turns out to be problematic for error recovery. When a
region creation operation fails partway through file mapping,
we need to roll back the set of already created regions and
this requires a listed handle: the dm_stats_list() will then
allocate from the same pool as the extents; we either have
to throw away valid list data, or leak the extent table, to
return the handle in a valid state.
Avoid this problem by creating a new, temporary mem pool in
_stats_create_file_regions() to hold the extent data, and
discarding it on exit from the function.
While cleaning up the table of already created regions during a
failed dm_stats_create_regions_from_fd(), list the handle once,
and call _stats_delete_region() directly. This avoids sending a
@stats_list message for each region deleted, reducing runtime
from 6s to 0.7s when cleaning up ~250 out of ~10000 regions:
# time dmstats create --filemap b.img
device-mapper: message ioctl on (253:0) failed: Cannot allocate memory
Failed to create region 246 of 309 at 9388032.
Could not create regions from file /root/b.img
<< pauses here >>
Command failed
real 0m6.267s
user 0m3.770s
sys 0m2.487s
# time dmstats create --filemap b.img
device-mapper: message ioctl on (253:0) failed: Cannot allocate memory
Failed to create region 246 of 309 at 9388032.
Could not create regions from file /root/b.img
Command failed
real 0m0.716s
user 0m0.034s
sys 0m0.581s
Testing the error path requires region creation to start to
fail part way through the operation (in order to have regions
to clean up): the simplest way is to ensure the system is
close to the kernel limit of 1/4 RAM or 1/2 vmalloc space
consumed by dmstats data.
Split dm_stats_delete_region() so that internal callers can manage
the handle state themselves.
dm_stats_delete_region() now just handles checking the state of the
handle, reporting validation errors, and calling dm_stats_list() if
necessary, before calling _stats_delete_region().
The new _stats_delete_region() function performs the actual group
member removal and region deletion, and requires a fully listed
handle to operate.
Callers that repeatedly delete regions can use a single listed
handle for many operations on the same device, avoiding one
message ioctl per region deleted: since @stats_list with many
regions is expensive, this yields large runtime improvements.
If we fail to create a region during dm_stats_create_regions_from_fd(),
we must remove all regions that were created to do this to date. This
needs to loop over the table of region_id values that were populated
by _stats_create_file_regions() before the error.
The code for this failure case in the out_remove branch incorrectly
uses the table index as the region_id:
for (--i; i != DM_STATS_REGION_NOT_PRESENT; i--) {
if (!dm_stats_delete_region(dms, i))
log_error("Could not delete region " FMTu64 ".", i);
}
This causes the cleanup code to delete a completely unrelated set
of regions (since the index here will always be nr_regions..0).
Fix it to pass the actual region_id stored in regions[i] instead.
Fix a silly bug in dm_stats_delete_region() that hugely inflates
runtimes when deleting a large number of regions.
For ~50,000 regions this change reduces the runtime from 98s to
6s on my test systems (a ~93% reduction).
The bug exists because dm_stats_delete_region() applies a truth
test to the return value of dm_stats_get_nr_areas(); this is
never correct usage - it will walk the entire region table and
calculate area counts for each region (which is roughly O(n^2)
in the number of regions, as dm_stats_delete_region() is being
called inside a region walk).
Although the individual area calculation is not that costly,
uselessly running anything 2,500,000,000 times over gets a bit
slow.
A much cheaper test (which is always true if the areas check is
true) is to just test dm_stats_get_nr_regions() or dms->regions;
if either is true it implies at least one area exists.
Old:
Performance counter stats for 'dmstats delete --allregions --alldevices':
98117.791458 task-clock (msec) # 1.000 CPUs utilized
127 context-switches # 0.001 K/sec
3 cpu-migrations # 0.000 K/sec
6,631 page-faults # 0.068 K/sec
307,711,724,562 cycles # 3.136 GHz
544,762,959,577 instructions # 1.77 insn per cycle
84,287,824,115 branches # 859.047 M/sec
2,538,875 branch-misses # 0.00% of all branches
98.119578733 seconds time elapsed
New:
Performance counter stats for 'dmstats delete --allregions --alldevices':
6427.251074 task-clock (msec) # 1.000 CPUs utilized
6 context-switches # 0.001 K/sec
0 cpu-migrations # 0.000 K/sec
6,634 page-faults # 0.001 M/sec
21,613,018,724 cycles # 3.363 GHz
3,794,755,445 instructions # 0.18 insn per cycle
852,974,026 branches # 132.712 M/sec
808,625 branch-misses # 0.09% of all branches
6.428953647 seconds time elapsed
Simplify info run for use only for INFO & STATUS.
Drop handling MKNODES within _info_run() call
and use more advanced _setup_task_run() directly.
This allows to further simplify _info_run().
Integrate also query for inactive table and
handle dm_task_run() and dm_task_get_info()
(thus switching to setup_task_run)
Add one exception case for DM_DEVICE_TARGET_MSG.
This allows further shortening and simplification of all
other users of this function.
It's actually not needed to call extra lv_has_target_type() to detect
snapshot merge is in progress - decode this right during status
capturing and save even few extra ioctl calls.
Drop LV from passed API arg - it's always segment being checked.
Also use_layer is now in full control of lv_info_with_seg_status().
It decides which device needs to be checked to get 'the most info'.
TODO: future version should be able to expose status from
Start moving selection of status taken for a LV into a single place.
The logic for showing info & status has been spread over multiple
places and were doing too complex decision going agains each other.
Unify selection of status of origin & cow scanned device.
TODO: in future we want to grab status for LV and layered LV and have
both statuses present for display - i.e. when 'old snapshot'
of thinLV is takes and there is ongoing merge - at some moment
we are not capable to show all needed info.
When lvm2 wants to see a status, it needs to validate,
segment for status reading is matching whan lvm2 expects in
metadata.
Also ensure status failure will not cause '0' from info reading
when actual info was collected properly.
Failure in 'status' reading is considered to be
a 'log_warn()' event only.
When we can't parse status, switch to warning as this is not
considered an errornous case. LVS is not supposed to return
error status code when device is not what it's been expected to
be - but it should be WARNING a user there is something unexpected.
Convert lvs -o lv_merge_failed,lv_snapshot_invalid to use
lv_info_and_status function.
This makes it equal to attr value showing this info
(as they were different since they were derived from
different data set and different logic as well).
Also saves couple extra ioctl that were needed to obtain this info.
When displaying <reporting_command> -o help, we'd like to have fields
grouped nicely, not starting having groups interleaved as it was before.
The code that displays the help output for fields takes the order as
written in columns.h file - this caused output like:
$ lvs -o help
Logical Volume Fields
---------------------
...field list...
Logical Volume Device Info and Status Combined Fields
-----------------------------------------------------
...field list...
Logical Volume Fields
---------------------
...field list...
Logical Volume Device Status Fields
-----------------------------------
...field list...
Logical Volume Fields
---------------------
...field list...
Instead, let's have it without groups interleaved which may be
a bit confusing, so:
Logical Volume Fields
---------------------
...field list...
Logical Volume Device Status Fields
-----------------------------------
...field list...
Logical Volume Device Info and Status Combined Fields
-----------------------------------------------------
...field list...
..and so on.
Use LVM_DBUSD_TEST_MODE env variable to customize what we test.
Default is the same where we try to test all combinations of all
modes. Renamed to make it consistent with the other env variables
that are used in the unit test.
- We check that all properties match the introspection data. We
don't verify values for every property as only lvm knows what they
should be.
- We are testing vg.Move
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.
In case any SubLV of a RaidLV transiently fails, it needs
two "lvchange --refresh RaidLV" runs to get it to fully
operational mode again. Reason being, that lvm reloads all
targets for the RaidLV tree but doesn't resume the SubLVs
until after the whole tree has been reloaded in the first
refresh run. Thus the live mapping table of the SubLVs
still point to an "error" mapping and the dm-raid target
can't retrieve any superblock from the MetaLV(s) in processing
the constructor during this preload thus not discovering the
again accessible SubLVs. In the second run, the SubLV targets
map proper (meta)data, hence the constructor discovers those
fine now.
Solve by resuming the SubLVs of the RaidLV before
preloading the respective top-level RaidLV target.
Resolves: rhbz1399844
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.
Avoid code duplication and use exiting commonly used
lv_update_and_reload() function.
There is still one place left where mirror is doing strange
double suspend call - needs there more thinking what's wrong with
that code.
When lvconvert adds a new leg - it's doing it free 'temporary' image
layer - however this temporary 'internal' mirror is also MIRRORED LV.
But the status bit was not properly transfered through layer.
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.
The default dbus python library mode of operation is to leverage
introspection. However, this introspection data isn't accessible
for users of the library and they have to specifically retrieve
the introspection data too. This resulted in many introspection
calls being made. This change eliminates introspection calls if
we are testing multiple concurrent test clients. If it's a single
client we will leverage a reduced amount of introspection data to
verify the introspection data is correct. Typically clients don't
leverage introspection data nearly as much as this test client.
The env variable LVM_DBUSD_PV_DEVICE_LIST when present and filled in
with at least 4 physical devices will run concurrently with other
instances running as long as they specify different devices in their
env variable.
When the env variable is not present the test runs as it did before.
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.
Looks like this isn't support across versions. Need to add functionality
to service to return the supported segment types, so we only use the
supported ones.
There are two possible errors in _dm_stats_populate_region():
* No region struct in dms->regions[region_id]
* Failure to parse data from @stats_print
These have very different causes: the first occurs where a client
program is populating one region at a time (region_id is a single
region identifier), and has not previously called dm_stats_list()
to dimension the region tables; this is an API usage error.
The second occurs when either we read unparseable data from the
kernel (kernel bug), or where various resource allocations fail.
Separate these two cases out and log separate messages for each
(allocation failures in the path already have their own distinct
message), since the "failed to parse.." message in the un-listed
handle case is confusing and misleading.
Do not emit warning message but only log debug message if
lvm2-lvmdbusd.service unit is missing and at the same time
we have global/notify_dbus=1 (which is used by default if we
configured sources with "--enable-notify-dbus"). We don't want
hard dependency between LVM2 and lvmdbusd so it's enough to log
only debug message in this case.
0 interval leads as of now to a busy loop with lvmetad and command.
Avoid testing this patological case.
TODO: Code should possibly translate zero interval into some small
sleep. With lvmpolld it's already 1/10s
Add new targets:
make check_lvmpolld
make check_cluster_lvmpolld
make check_lvmetad_lvmpolld
make check_all_lvmpolld
So check_lvmetad runs only base lvmetad test - to much
logic of remaining targets.
Previous behavior is available via check_all_lvmpolld.
Make it easier to replace missing segments with 'zero' returning
target - otherwise user would have to create some extra target
to provide zeros as /dev/zero can't be used (not a block device).
Also break code loop when segment is found and make it an INTERNAL_ERROR
where it's missing.
Instead of clearing multiple rmeta device with sequential activation
process and waiting for udev for every _rmeta device separately,
activate all _rmeta devices first and then clear them and deactivate
afterwards.
Also update some tracing messages.
When anyhing goes wrong during clearing process, always try to
deactivate as much _rmeta devices as possible before fail.
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.
Translate log_info() into log_very_verbose() which is macro
supposed to be used by our code.
log_info() is internal macro with eventually some 'symbolic' meaning
in syslogging daemons.
Instead of compiling 2 log call for 2 different logging functions,
and runtime decide which version to use - use only 'newer' function
and when user sets his own OLD dm_log logging translate it runtime
for old arg list set.
The positive part is - we get shorter generated library,
on the negative part this translation means, we always have evaluate
all args and print the message into local on stack buffer, before
we can pass this buffer to the users' logging function with proper
expected parameters (and such function may later decide to discard
logging based on message level so whole printing was unnecessary).
Ensure different logging function for dmeventd.c logging
and dm and lvm library.
We can recognize we want to show every log_info() and
log_notice() message from dmeventd.c code while not
exposing those from libdm/libdevmapper-event
Also switch to use log with errno - it's not changing
anything and doesn't bring any more features yet to dmeventd
logging but we just properly pass dm_errno_or_class properly
through the whole code stack for possible future use
(i.e. support of class logging for dmeventd).
Reword the logging logic and try to restore previous logging
behavior for 'standalone' running daemon while preserving
debuggable feautures it has gained.
So actual rules:
dmeventd without any '-d' option will syslog all messages
from dmeventd.c it dmeventd plugins.
log_notice()==log_verbose()
log_info()==log_very_verbose()
But to show also log_debug() used has to give '-ddd'.
When user specified '-d, -dd, -ddd, -dddd' it
will also enable tracing of messages from libdm & lib
executed code - which is mainly useful for testing
i.e.: 'dmeventd -fldddd'
Introduce macros:
log_level(), log_stderr(), log_once(), log_bypass_report()
For easier and more consisten way how to 'decoder' bits
of info from passed 'level'.
This patch fixes potential problem when 'level' of message
might not have always masked right bits.
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
pvscan --cache -aay was activating LVs in exported VGs
when it should not.
It appears that this was a regression from commit 9b640c3684
"pvscan: use process_each_vg for autoactivate".
If blkdeactivate finds out that the device on top of device stack
is already unmounted, it still proceeds with device stack deactivation
underneath now.
This situation can happen if blkdeactivate is started and the mount
point is unmounted in parallel by chance (so when blkdeactivate
gets the the actual umount call, the device is not mounted anymore).
Before, the blkdeactivate added such device to skip list which caused
all the stack underneath to be skipped too on deactivation. Now, we
proceed just as if blkdeactivate did the umount itself.
For example, in the example below, the vg-lvol0 is mounted on /mnt/test
when blkdeactivate is called, but it gets unmounted in parallel later
on when blkdeactivate gets to the actual umount call.
Before this patch (vg-lvol0 underneath not deactivated):
$ blkdeactivate -u
Deactivating block devices:
[UMOUNT]: unmounting vg-lvol0 (dm-2) mounted on /mnt/test... skipping
With this patch applied (vg-lvol0 underneath still deactivated):
$ blkdeactivate -u
Deactivating block devices:
[UMOUNT]: unmounting vg-lvol0 (dm-2) mounted on /mnt/test... already unmounted
[LVM]: deactivating Logical Volume vg/lvol0... done
(Automatic) repair may not be allowed during the initial sync of an upconverted
linear LV, because the data on the failing, primary leg hasn't been completely
synchronized to the N-1 other legs of the raid1 LV (replacing failed legs during
repair involves discontinuing access to any replaced legs data, thus preventing
data recovery on the primary leg e.g. via dd_rescue).
Even though repair would not cause data loss when adding legs to a fully synced
raid1 LV, we don't have information yet defining this state yet (e.g. a raid1
LV flag telling the fully synchronized status before any legs were added),
hence can't automatically decide to allow to repair.
If nonetheless a repair on a non-synced raid1 LVs is intended, the "--force"
option has to be provided.
Resolves: rhbz1311765
Validate kernel support for raid0/raid4 on given and
requested segtype before requesting conversions on them.
Because raid10 wasn't present in old RAID targets, add
the same validation to be prepared once we support them.
Check for dm-raid target version with non-standard raid4 mapping expecting the dedicated
parity device in the last rather than the first slot and prohibit to create, activate or
convert to such LVs from striped/raid0* or vice-versa in order to avoid data corruption.
Add related tests to lvconvert-raid-takeover.sh
Resolves: rhbz1388962
On conversions between striped/raid0* and raid4, the kernel expects
the dedicated raid4 parity SubLVs in the first segment area rather than
in the last it's been allocated to, thus the data mapping ain't proper.
Enhance lvconvert (lib/metadata/raid_manip.c) to shift the dedicated
parity SubLVs on conversions from striped/raid0* to raid4 and vice-versa.
In case of raid0_meta -> raid4 where the MD raid0 personality already has
stored RAID array device positions in the superblocks, the MetaLVs have to
be cleared so that the kernel doesn't fail validating the array positions
after lvm has shifted them up by one.
Add more tests to lvconvert-raid-takeover.sh including one to check for
mapping flaws by converting a created raid4 with filesystem -> striped
and fsck it.
Whilst on it:
- add missing direct striped -> raid4 conversion to the takeover array
to avoid an intermim conversion from striped -> raid0*
- clean up the takeover array
- allow lvconvert to actually call lv_raid_convert() on all takeover requests
in order to check parameters and display messages provided by takeover
functions rather than just "...not supported" from within lvconvert
- fix a typo
Resolves: rhbz1386148
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.
Keep for now function logic making its decision on string content.
We need bigger patch converting all things to bit-checks later.
This needs however bigger refactoring.
So this commit reverts some changes from:
c8b6c13015
Commit 088b3d036a allowed repair on cache origin RAID LVs
and restricted lvconvert actions on RAID SubLVs to change number of mirrors, repair,
replace and type changes in order to avoid unsuitable coversions on them.
This introduced a regression prohibiting --splitmirrors on any RAID SubLVs
(e.g. of cache or thin LVs; lvconvert-{cache,thin}-raid.sh tests failing).
Fix allows split mirrors again.
Fix some indenting whilst on it.
When we have already decoded arg_is_set into a local var
or already set segment type - already use these
values instead of repeating calls and string checks.
Seems some error path where not converted to 'new' ECMD return value.
Fix them to always 'goto out'.
Also drop unneeded 'ret = 0' when ret already is 0.
This test never passes on loop back, so we will skip unless the
pv devices are real devices which contain `/dev/sd`.
We always fail because we need lvm to run slow to get a timer to
pop, and loopback are too fast.
If you run multiple runs of unittest.main, unless you don't pass exit=true
the test case always ends with a 0 exit code. Add ability to store the
result of each invocation of the test and exit with a non-zero exit code
if anyone of them fail.
In case a RAID orig LV is being cached and fails, repair is impossible because
"lvconvert --repair" gets rejected.
Fix by allowing repair on cache orig RAID LVs and
"lvconvert --replace/--mirrors/--type {raid*|mirror|striped|linear}" as well.
Allow the same lvconvert actions on any cache pool and metadata RAID SubLVs.
Resolves: rhbz1380532
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
Fix missing wait so we have paired waiting.
Also 'wait' for precise PID to get 'exit' code.
Test for 'error' replacing only with newer snapshot targets.
The old one will wait for resume.
Note: 'wait -n' is not always available so can't be used..
Integrate back _unblock_sigalrm() and check for error code of
pthread_sigmask() function so we do not use uninitialized
sigmask_t on error path (Coverity).
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
Works if the pool is inactive.
Activation code doesn't notice a new raid dependency in on-disk metadata
when a thin LV is already active.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/1365286
The dm_stats_delete_region() call removes a region from the bound
device, and, if the region is grouped, from the group leader
group descriptor stored in aux_data.
To do this requires a listed handle: previous versions of the
library do not since no dependencies exist between regions without
grouping.
This leads to strange behaviour when a command built against an old
version of the library is used with one supporting groups. Deleting
a region with dmstats succeeds, but logs errors:
# dmstats list
Name RgID RgSta RgSiz #Areas ArSize ProgID
vg_hex-root 0 0 1.00g 1 1.00g dmstats
vg_hex-root 1 1.00g 1.00g 1 1.00g dmstats
vg_hex-root 2 2.00g 1.00g 1 1.00g dmstats
# dmstats delete --regionid 2 vg_hex/root
Region ID 2 does not exist
Could not delete statistics region.
Command failed
# dmstats list
Name RgID RgSta RgSiz #Areas ArSize ProgID
vg_hex-root 0 0 1.00g 1 1.00g dmstats
vg_hex-root 1 1.00g 1.00g 1 1.00g dmstats
This happens because the call to dm_stats_delete_region() is inside
a dm_stats_walk_*() iterator: upon entry to the call, the iterator
is at its end conditions and about to terminate. Due to the call to
dm_stats_list() inside the function, it returns with an iterator at
the beginning of a walk and performs a further iteration before
exiting. This final loop makes a further attempt to delete the
(already deleted) region, leading to the confusing error messages.
The current dmsetup.c handles DR_STATS and DR_STATS_META reports
separately in _display_info_cols(), meaning that the stats walk
functions are never called for these report types.
Versions before v2.02.159 have a loop using dm_stats_walk_do() and
dm_stats_walk_while(), that executes once for non-stats reports,
and once per region, or area, for DR_STATS/DR_STATS_META reports.
This older behaviour relies on the documented behaviour that the
walk functions will accept a NULL pointer as the struct dm_stats*
argument.
This was broken by commit f1f2df7b: the NULL test on dms and
dms->regions were incorrectly moved from the dm_stats_walk_end()
wrapper to the internal '_stats_walk_end()' helper.
Since the pointer is dereferenced in between these points, using
an older dmsetup with current libdm results in a segfault when
running a non-stats report:
# dmsetup info -c vg00/lvol0
Segmentation fault (core dumped)
Restore the NULL checks to the wrapper function as intended.
We shouldn't be losing pvscans just because of the fact that the
underlying device (PV) appears and disappears quickly in the system,
otherwise lvmetad may not see the device if it appears again (or it may
still keep the device in cache even it's already gone).
We added lightweight toolcontext handle to avoid useless initialization
of some parts of the context and also to avoid problems when using the
handle very soon at system boot, like in lvm2-activation-generator
through lvm2app interface. However, we missed reading all the other
config sources like lvmlocal.conf as well as any tag config - we need to
read these too to get the final config value which may be overriden in
any of these additional config sources.
Currently, we use this lightweight toolcontext handle to read
global/use_lvmetad and global/use_lvmpolld config values in
lvm2-activation-generator using lvm2app interface (lvm_config_find_bool
lvm2app function).
Pre 1.9 dm-raid targets status output was racy, which caused
the device status chars to be unreliable _during_ synchronization.
This shows paritcularly with tiny test devices used.
Enhance lvchange-rebuild-raid.sh to not check status
chars _during_ synchronization. Just check afterwards.
Though I'm not quite sure why we push this limit on user,
current --repair logic requires user to wait outside of command.
TODO: I'm not quite sure this repair logic is 'the most wanted'.
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 dm-raid target now rejects device rebuild requests during ongoing
resynchronization thus causing 'lvconvert --repair ...' to fail with
a kernel error message. This regresses with respect to failing automatic
repair via the dmeventd RAID plugin in case raid_fault_policy="allocate"
is configured in lvm.conf as well.
Previously allowing such repair request required cancelling the
resynchronization of any still accessible DataLVs, hence reasoning
potential data loss.
Patch allows the resynchronization of still accessible DataLVs to
finish up by rejecting any 'lvconvert --repair ...'.
It enhances the dmeventd RAID plugin to be able to automatically repair
by postponing the repair after synchronization ended.
More tests are added to lvconvert-rebuild-raid.sh to cover single
and multiple DataLV failure cases for the different RAID levels.
- resolves: rhbz1371717
Commit 199697accf rerouted funtion
for priting cache volume origin to lvm2app app function - which
however had a bug. So restore the original functionality
and print correct LV as cache origin LV.
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.
Because of the different code paths we need to test job handling with
all operations. Test now runs virtually everything with timeout == 0
and timeout == 15 so that we test both use cases.
Note: If a client passes -1 for the timeout value they need to make
sure that their connection time out is also infinite. Otherwise, if the client
times out the service side hangs any new dbus calls until the job
that is in progress completes. Not sure why this behavior is occuring
at this time, but it appears a limitation/bug of the dbus-python library.
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.
Add simple helper/wrapper check function to check result
of dmsetup call i.e.:
check grep_dmsetup table vg-lv "grep_expected"
check grep_dmsetup status vg-lv -v "grep_unexpected"
Reload of thin-pool origin_only is designed to only post messages
to a thin-pool. It's not intended to be used for reload of thin-pool
table. Fix it by using standard call 'lv_update_and_reload()'.
Unconditionally guard there is at least 1/4 of metadata volume
free (<16Mib) or 4MiB - whichever value is smaller.
In case there is not enough free space do not let operation proceed and
recommend thin-pool metadata resize (in case user has not
enabled autoresize, manual 'lvextend --poolmetadatasize' is needed).
In the case there is no active thin volume, report thin pool
as lock holder. This fixed function like lvextend
which either expecte lock holder LV is some active thin
or 'possibly' inactive thin pool.
The existing code doesn't understand that mirror logs should cling to
parallel LVs (like extending them) instead of avoiding them.
As a quick workaround to avoid lvcreate failures, hard-code
--alloc normal for mirror logs even if the rest of the allocation
used a stricter policy.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1376532
When rescanning a VG from disk, the metadata read from
each PV was compared as a sanity check. The comparison
is done by exporting the vg metadata from each dev to
a config tree, and then comparing the config trees.
The function to create the config tree inserts
extraneous information along with the actual VG metadata.
This extra info includes creation_time. The config
trees for two devs can easily be created one second
apart in which case the different creation_times would
cause the metadata comparison to fail. The fix is to
exclude the extraneous info from the metadata comparison.
Correction for aux test result ([] -> if;then;fi)
Use issue_discard to lower memory demands on discardable test devices
Use large devices directly through prepare_pvs
I'm still observing more then 0.5G of data usage through.
Particullary:
'lvcreate' followed by 'lvconvert' (which doesn't yet support --nosync
option) is quite demanging, and resume returns quite 'late' when
a lot of data has been already written on PV.
Reinstantiate reporting of metadata percent usage for cache volumes.
Also show the same percentage with hidden cache-pool LV.
This regression was caused by optimization for a single-ioctl in
2.02.155.
Allow RAID scrubbing on cache origin sub-LV
This patch adds the ability to perform RAID scrubbing on the cache
origin sub-LV (https://bugzilla.redhat.com/1169495). Cache origin
operations are restricted to non-clustered RAID LVs until there can
be further testing in a cluster (even for exclusive activation).
User can either specify directly _corig LV
or he can specify cache LV and operation --syncation is
passed ONLY to _corig LV.
If users wants to manipulation with cache-pool devices - he
needs to specify this object name.
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Brassow <jbrassow@redhat.com>
Older udev versions (udev < v165), don't have the official
udev_device_get_is_initialized function available to query for
device initialization state in udev database. Also, devices don't
have USEC_INITIALIZED udev db variable set - this is bound to the
udev_device_get_is_initialized fn functionality.
In this case, check for "DEVLINKS" variable instead - all block devices
have at least one symlink set for the node (the "/dev/block/<major:minor>".
This symlink is set by default basic udev rules provided by udev directly.
We'll use this as an alternative for the check that initial udev
processing for a device has already finished.
It's possible (mainly during boot) that udev has not finished
processing the device and hence the udev database record for that
device is still marked as uninitialized when we're trying to look
at it as part of multipath component check in pvscan --cache code.
So check several times with a short delay to wait for the udev db
record to be initialized before giving up completely.
When scanning devs to populate lvmetad during system startup,
filter-mpath with native sysfs multipath component detection
may not detect that a dev is multipath component. This is
because the multipath devices may not be set up yet.
Because of this, pvscan will scan multipath components during
startup, will see them as duplicate PVs, and will disable
lvmetad. This will leave lvmetad disabled on systems using
multipath, unless something or someone runs pvscan --cache
to rescan.
To avoid this problem, the code that is scanning devices to
populate lvmetad will now check the udev db to see if a
dev is a multipath component that should be skipped.
(This may not be perfect due to inherent udev races, but will
cover most cases and will be at least as good as it's ever
been.)
The lsblk is just a nice helper here - it's not crucial for lvmdump so
do best effort here and use the most we can from current version of
lsblk that is installed on system. The lsblk -s option was added a bit
later after lsblk introduction and lsblk -O support even more later -
so if these are not available, use only pure lsblk output without any
extras.
- 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.
Avoid monitoring of activated cache-pool - where the only purpose ATM
is to clear metadata volume which is actually activate in place
of cache-pool name (using public LV name).
Since VG lock is held across whole clear operation, dmeventd cannot
be used anyway - however in case of appliction crash we may
leave unmonitored device.
In future we may provide better mechanism as the current name
replacemnet is creating 'uncommon' table setups in case the metadata
LV is more complex type like raid (needs some futher thinking about
error path results).
Another point to think about is the fact we should not clear device
while holding lock (i.e. dmeventd mirror repair cannot work in cases
like this).
Introduce 'hard limit' for max number of cache chunks.
When cache target operates with too many chunks (>10e6).
When user is aware of related possible troubles he
may increase the limit in lvm.conf.
Also verbosely inform user about possible solution.
Code works for both lvcreate and lvconvert.
Lvconvert fully supports change of chunk_size when caching LV
(and validates for compatible settings).
Commit e947c362dd introduced
config_settings.h file for central place to store all definitions for
config options. By mistake, it used report/colums_as_rows instead
of report/columns_as_rows (missing "n" in "columns").
If the number of stripes requested is incompatible with the requested
type of raid, give an error instead of adjusting it.
If no stripes argument is supplied, continue to use an appropriate
default.
a579ba2ac2 fixed a regression causing a segfault if no external
origin existed but broke the logic leading to erroneous error
messages and creations of split off exported VGs in case the
external origin and the pool LVs were allocated on different PVs.
- resolves rhbz1367459
Creating a RaidLV in VGs with very small extent sizes caused
late failure in the kernel giving a not very informative error
message. Catch the attempt early and display failure message
'Unable to create RAID LV: requires minimum VG extent size 4.00 KiB'.
- resoves rhbz1179970
'pvmove -n name pv1 pv2' called with the name of a top-level LV
failed with mentioned commit.
Enhance pvmove-raid-segtypes.sh to test for prohibited RAID SubLV moves.
'pvmove -n name pv1 pv2' allows to collocate multiple RAID SubLVs
on pv2 (e.g. results in collocated raidlv_rimage_0 and raidlv_rimage_1),
thus causing loss of resilence and/or performance of the RaidLV.
Fix this pvmove flaw leading to potential data loss in case of PV failure
by preventing any SubLVs from collocation on any PVs of the RaidLV.
Still allow to collocate any DataLVs of a RaidLV with their sibling MetaLVs
and vice-versa though (e.g. raidlv_rmeta_0 on pv1 may still be moved to pv2
already holding raidlv_rimage_0).
Because access to the top-level RaidLV name is needed,
promote local _top_level_lv_name() from raid_manip.c
to global top_level_lv_name().
- resolves rhbz1202497
Adding MetaLVs to given DataLVs (e.g. raid0 -> raid0_meta takeover),
_avoid_pvs_with_other_images_of_lv() was missing code to prohibit
allocation when called with a just allocated MetaLV to prohibit
collaocation of the next allocated MetaLV on the same PV.
- resolves rhbz1366738
When lvm is compiled with --enable-notify-dbus and a user uses lvm
shell, after they issue 200+ commands the lvm shell will hang for
~30 seconds trying to notify the lvm dbus service that a change
has occurred. This appears to be caused by resource exhaustion,
because the sockets used for dbus communication are not be closed.
Enforce mirror/raid0/1/10/4/5/6 type specific maximum images when
creating LVs or converting them from mirror <-> raid1.
Document those maxima in the lvcreate/lvconvert man pages.
- resolves rhbz1366060
Some settings are not suitable for override in interactive/shell
mode because such settings may confuse the code and it may end
up with unexpected behaviour. This is because of the fact that
once we're in the interactive/shell mode, we have already applied
some settings for the shell itself and we can't override them
further because we're already using those settings to drive the
interactive/shell mode. Such settings would get ignored silently
or, in worse case, they would mess up the existing configuration.
When lvm commands are executed in lvm shell, we cover the whole lvm
command execution within this shell now. That means, all messages logged
and status caught during each command execution is now recorded in the
log report, including overall command's return code.
The dm_report_group_output_and_pop_all calls dm_report_output and
dm_report_group_pop for all the items that are currently in report
group. This is just a shortcut that makes it easier to output and
pop group's content so the group handle can be reused again without
a need to initialize and configure it again.
The functionality of dm_report_group_output_and_pop_all is the
same as dm_report_destroy but without destroying the report group
handle.
This patch moves printing of starting '{' character for JSON output up
untili it's known there's any further output following - either the
content or ending '}' character.
Also, remove unnecessary switch for different report group types and
calling individual functions to handle dm_report_group_create as that
code is shared for all existing types at the moment.
Calling dm_report_destroy_rows makes it possible to destroy any report
content we have but at the same time it doesn't destroy the report
handle itself, thus it's possible to reuse that handle again for new
report content.
Functionally, this is the same as calling dm_report_output with the
report handle but omitting the output iself. This functionality may
be useful if we, for whatever reason, need to discard the report
content and start a fresh new one but with the same report configuration
and initialization and thus we can just reuse the existing handle.
We may call arg_count/grouped_arg_count/arg_value soon enough that
cmd->arg_values is not set yet.
Normally, when running a command, we execute lvm_run_command which in
turn calls _process_command_line to allocate and parse the command line
values and stores them in cmd->arg_values.
However, if we run lvm shell, this one doesn't accept any command line
options and we parse the command line for each command that is executed
within the lvm shell then. If we used any code that tries to access
cmd->arg_values through any of the the arg handling functions too
early, we could end up with a segfault due to uninitialized (NULL)
cmd->arg_values.
This patch just saves extra checks in all the code where arg handling
may be called too early so that the cmd->arg_values is not set up yet.
This does not apply to any of existing code, but subsequent patches
will need that.
With patches that will follow, this will make it possible to widen log
report coverage when commands are executed from lvm shell so the amount
of messages that may end up in stderr/stdout instead of log report are
minimized.
Add new log_context=shell and with log_object_type=cmd and
log_object_name=<command_name> for command log report to collect
overall return code from last command (this is reported under
log_type=status).
Currently, the output is separated in 3 parts and each part can go into
a separate and user-defined file descriptor:
- common output (stdout by default, customizable by LVM_OUT_FD environment variable)
- error output (stderr by default, customizable by LVM_ERR_FD environment variable)
- report output (stdout by default, customizable by LVM_REPORT_FD environment variable)
For example, each type of output goes to different output file:
[0] fedora/~ # export LVM_REPORT_FD=3
[0] fedora/~ # lvs fedora vg/abc 1>out 2>err 3>report
[0] fedora/~ # cat out
[0] fedora/~ # cat err
Volume group "vg" not found
Cannot process volume group vg
[0] fedora/~ # cat report
LV VG Attr LSize Layout Role CTime
root fedora -wi-ao---- 19.00g linear public Wed May 27 2015 08:09:21
swap fedora -wi-ao---- 500.00m linear public Wed May 27 2015 08:09:21
Another example in LVM shell where the report goes to "report" file:
[0] fedora/~ # export LVM_REPORT_FD=3
[0] fedora/~ # lvm 3>report
(in lvm shell)
lvm> vgs
(content of "report" file)
[1] fedora/~ # cat report
VG #PV #LV #SN Attr VSize VFree
fedora 1 2 0 wz--n- 19.49g 0
(in lvm shell)
lvm> lvs
(content of "report" file)
[1] fedora/~ # cat report
VG #PV #LV #SN Attr VSize VFree
fedora 1 2 0 wz--n- 19.49g 0
LV VG Attr LSize Layout Role CTime
root fedora -wi-ao---- 19.00g linear public Wed May 27 2015 08:09:21
swap fedora -wi-ao---- 500.00m linear public Wed May 27 2015 08:09:21
RAID6 LVs may not be created with --nosync or data corruption
may occur in case of device failures. The underlying MD raid6
personality used to drive the RaidLV performs read-modify-write
updates on stripes and thus relies on properly written parity
(P and Q Syndromes) during initial synchronization.
Once on it, enhance test to create/extend more and
larger RaidLVs and check sync/nosync status.
Commit 76ef2d15d8 introduced
raid0 <-> raid4 takeover and full mirror <-> raid1 support.
Add tests for these conversions.
Tests exposed a kernel semantics change freezing resynchronization
on conversions from raid0[_meta] -> raid4 or adding raid1 legs
because kernel kept the RAID mapped device in 'frozen' state unless
an 'idle' message was sent or the table was reloaded (kernel patch pending).
Although the use of the first region_id in a group to store the
DMS_GROUP=... aux_data tag is an internal implementation detail,
it has a user visible consequence in that deleting this region will
cause the group to disappear: add an explanation of this to the
'group' command and 'Regions, areas, and groups' section.
The MD raid6 personality being used to drive lvm raid6 LVs does
read-modify-write updates to any stripes and thus relies on correct
P and Q Syndromes being written during initial synchronization or
it may fail reconstructing proper user data in case of SubLVs failing.
We may not allow the '--nosync' option on
creation of raid6 LVs for that reason.
Update/fix 'man lvcreate' in that regard.
add lvcreate-raid-nosync.sh test script.
- Resolves rhbz1358532
We don't need to refresh whole cmd context if we drop profile after
processing LVM command - just like we don't refresh cmd context when
we're applying the profile. It's because profiles contain only safe
subset of settings which do not require complete cmd context refresh.
This patch calls process_profilable_config instead of
refresh_toolcontext if there was profile applied for the LVM
command only, not --config which requires toolcontext refresh.
The process_profilable_config just sets proper values based on
values of profilable settings, but it does not do complete
reinitialization of various parts (e.g. filters, logging etc.).
'lvchange --resync LV' or 'lvchange --syncaction repair LV' request the
RAID layout specific parity blocks in raid4/5/6 to be recreated or the
mirrored blocks to be copied again from the master leg/copy for raid1/10,
thus not allowing a rebuild of a particular PV.
Introduce repeatable option '--[raid]rebuild PV' to allow to request
rebuilds of specific PVs in a RaidLV which are known to contain corrupt
data (e.g. rebuild a raid1 master leg).
Add test lvchange-rebuild-raid.sh to test/shell doing rebuild
variations on raid1/10 and 5; add aux function check_status_chars
to support the new test.
- Resolves rhbz1064592
Prepare for new segment type conversion functionality in cases that
currently fail. In the short-term, we need to do this while limiting
the changes to the code paths for the conversions that are already
supported.
introduced with commit 8f62b7bfe5 rely on complete
defintions of the relations between the LVs of a VG.
Hence only run these checks when the complete_vg flag
is set on calls to check_lv_segments().
lvconvert failed in test lvconvert-thin-raid.sh when
calling check_lv_segments() from _read_segments() without
providing a complete definition.
on any thin snap external origin LV which caused a segfault
when none existed as exposed by the vgsplit-thin.sh test.
Only call lv_is_on_pvs() if an external origin LV actually
exists and correct the related splitting logic.
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.
with respect to the changed, configurable default behaviour
introduced with commit 7eb7909193.
E.g. raid default of 2 stripes rather than number of PVs in the VG
or on the command line minus one.
The syntax for converting an LV to a thin LV
included an unnecessary --thin option. I was
probably still confused about these options
when writing this.
General RAID and RAID segment type specific checks are added
to merge.c. New static _check_raid_seg() is called on each segment
of a RaidLV (which have just one) from check_lv_segments().
New checks caught some unititialized segment members
which are addressed here as well:
- initialize seg->region_size to 0 in lvcreate.c for raid0/raid0_meta
- initialize list seg->origin_list in lv_manip.c
Add matching support for -Z option also we doing full conversion
to cache-pool.
Extending coversion message to show which pool type is created
and whether the metadata will be wiped or remain unmodified.
Follow-up to 27a767d5e8.
Tunning behavior in a way we always prompt when option --zero is NOT specified.
Without -Z lvm expects user wants to 'reset' cache-pool metadata
(they could have been splitted from some cached LV)
If user doesn't want to zero metadata he needs to specify -Zn.
User may also avoid prompting for zeroing by using -Zy for
cache-pool (basically equals using --yes without -Z being given)
(unlike full convert case, there is no cache-pool being converted,
so there is not 'uncoditional' prompt in this case).
When volume was lvconvert-ed to a thin-volume with external origin,
then in case thin-pool was in non-zeroing mode
it's been printing WARNING about not zeroing thin volume - but
this is wanted and expected - so nothing to warn about.
So in this particular use case WARNING needs to be suppressed.
Adding parameter support for lvcreate_params.
So now lvconvert creates 'normal thin LV' in read-only mode
(so any read will 'return 0' for a moment)
then deactivate regular thin LV and reacreate in 'final R/RW' mode
thin LV with external origin and activate again.
Before, the automatic update from older to newer version of PV extension
header happened within vg_write call. This may have caused problems under
some circumnstances where there's a code in between vg_write and vg_commit
which may have failed. In such situation, we reverted precommitted metadata
and put back the state to working version of VG metadata.
However, we don't have revert for PV write operation at the moment. So
if we updated PV headers already and we reverted vg_write due to failure
in subsequent code (before vg_commit), we ended up with lost VG metadata
(because old metadata pointers got reset by the PV write operation).
To minimize problematic situations here, we should put vg_write and
vg_commit that is done after PV header rewrites as close to each
other as possible.
This patch moves the automatic PV header rewrite for new extension
header part from vg_write to _vg_read where it's done the same way
as we do any other VG repairs if detected during VG read operation
(under VG write lock).
If the VG holding the global lock is removed, we can indicate
that as the reason for not being able to acquire the global
lock in subsequent error messages, and can suggest enabling
the global lock in another VG. (This helpful error message
will go away if the global lock is enabled in another VG,
or if lvmlockd is restarted.)
When cache pool is reused for a new cached volume, there is
normally no need to 'keep' old cache-pool metadata as this
could cause major data lose.
Unlike with 'lvcreate -H -LX --cachepool' conversion, this lvconvert
path left the metadata unzeroed - partly for making easier some
debugging, but this was rather a bug.
So to keep possible reattach of 'unzeroed' metadata, user
now has to use 'lvconvert -Zn' for such conversion. In this case
the prompt will appear about possibe data loss and to proceed,
user has to confirm such operation. Without -Zn metadata are wiped.
In some cases, the command will update VG metadata
in lvmetad without writing it. In these cases there
is no vg->vg_committed and it should use 'vg' directly.
This happens when the command finds that the lvmetad
VG has been invalidated, rereads the metadata from disk,
then updates lvmetad with that metadata. This happens
often with lvmlockd or foreign VGs, and can happen without
lvmlockd if a previous command fails after invalidating
the VG in lvmetad.
Commit 3928c96a37 introduced
new defaults for raid number of stripes, which may cause
backwards compatibility issues with customer scripts.
Adding configurable option 'raid_stripe_all_devices' defaulting
to '0' (i.e. off = new behaviour) to select the old behaviour
of using all PVs in the VG or those provided on the command line.
In case any scripts rely on the old behaviour, just set
'raid_strip_all_devices = 1'.
- resolves rhbz1354650
This fixes a regression from commit a7c45ddc5, which moved
the lvmetad VG update from vg_commit() to unlock_vg().
The lvmetad VG update needs to send the version of metadata
that was committed rather than sending the state of struct 'vg'.
The 'vg' may have been partially modified since vg_commit(),
and contain non-committed metadata that shouldn't be sent
to lvmetad.
Any failing stripes in raid0/raid0_meta type LVs cause data loss,
thus replacement via 'lvconvert --replace...' does not make sense.
Patch prohibits replacement on raid0/raid0_meta LVs.
- resolves rhbz1356734
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.
Including major and minor numbers in pvs and lvs output when calling
lvmdump -a makes it a bit easier to match these items with possible
system log/journal.
Commit ca878a3426 changed behavior
or resize operation. Later the code has been futher changed
to skip fs resize completely when size of LV is already matching
and finaly at the most recent resize changeset for resize the
check for matching size has been eliminated as well so we ended
with a request call to resize fs to 0 size in some cases.
This commit reoders some test so the prompt happens just once before
resize of possibly 2 related volumes.
Also extra test for having LV already given size is added, and
whole metadata update is skipped for this case as the only
result would be an increment of seqno.
However the filesystem is still resized when requested,
so if the LV has some size and the resize is resolved to
the same size, the filesystem resize is called so in case FS
would not match, the resize will happen.
raid0/raid0_meta type LVs don't have a default number of stripes when
created without '-i/--stripes Stripes' whereas other raid types have one.
Patch sets the default for raid0/raid0_meta to 2 stripes.
The default amount of stripes for raid4/5/10 is changed to 2 and for raid6 to 3
rather than using all PVs in the VG or those provided on the command line.
This is to avoid unintended high number of stripes in case of many PVs.
To select a different amount of stripes from the default,
use 'lvcreate -i/--stripes Stripes'.
- resolves rhbz1354650
A livelock occurs on extension in lv_manip when adjusting the region size,
which doesn't apply to any raid0/raid0_meta LVs (these don't have a bitmap).
Fix by prohibiting the region size adjustment on any such LVs.
- resolves rhbz1354604
An unconditional access to the non-existing MetaLV of a raid0 LV in
lv_raid_remove_missing() was causing the segfault.
Only call log_debug() on replacements of existing MetaLVs.
- resolves rhbz1354646
Resync attempts on raid0/raid0_meta via 'lvchange --resync ...'
cause segfaults.
'lvchange --syncaction ...' doesn't get rejected either.
Prohibit both on raid0/raid0_meta LVs.
- resolves rhbz1354656
4420d41fea introduced recursive split of lvs which
splits a top-level LV together with it's sub LVs.
This lead to invalid temporary list pointers
causing hangs/OOM situations.
Patch updates the temporary list pointer
referencing a moved sub LV.
- resolves rhbz1354686
Synopsis are very useful for quick orientation and also
we provide then for all remaining command.
Also list ALL supported options in a single ordered list,
user should not seek for them.
blkdeactivate -m disablequeueing causes "multipathd disablequeueing maps"
call inside blkdeactivate script before deactivating devices. This
avoids a situation where blkdeactivate may wait for paths to appear if
multipath is set to queueing and there's a stack of other devices and/or
mount points on top of such multipath device.
See also https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1344381.
Reduce number of evualted pvcreate commands.
Since 0 is default value used to fill missing params,
and 0 is also 1st. value in array, it's being tested.
Drop unused data_alignment_offset.
When logging to epoch files we would like to prevent creating too large
log files otherwise a spining command could fulfill available space
very easily and quickly.
Limit for to 100000 per command.
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.
lvconvert --splitcache VG/CachePool_corig
Allow the split via the hidden/used cache pool for the time being,
since the new lvconvert code did intend to allow it, but was just
missing the exception in the list of hidden LVs that were allowed.
The preferred method for splitcache is to run it on the visible
cache LV, not the hidden cache pool. That may eventually become
the only method since we try to avoid running commands on
hidden LVs.
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.
Support aggregate group and region histograms by allocating a new
histogram from the pool and populating it with a sum of the histogram
data for the areas contained in the region or group.
To avoid repeatedly summing the same histogram data, cache the pointer
in the group and regions structs for subsequent access. The aggregate
histograms are allocated from the same pool as the area histograms in
the corresponding handle and will be discarded at each list or populate
operation.
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.
Add a call to create dmstats regions that correspond to the extents
present in a file descriptor open on a file in a local file system.
The file must reside on a file system type that correctly supports
physical extent location data in the FIEMAP ioctl.
Regions are optionally placed into a group with a user-defined alias.
File systems that do not support physical offsets in FIEMAP (btrfs
currently) are detected via fstatfs() - although attempting to map
a --filemap group on btrfs will fail anyway with the generic error
"Not on a device-mapper device" this is confusing; the file system
mount is on a device-mapper device, but btrfs' volume layer masks
this in the returned st_dev field since the returned logical file
extents may span multiple physical devices.
The function _stats_remove_region_id_from_group() incorecctly set
the group_id to DM_STATS_GROUP_NOT_PRESENT _before_ the call to
_stats_group_destroy(). This will cause the destroy function to
return immediately without doing anything:
339 static void _stats_group_destroy(struct dm_stats_group *group)
340 {
341 if (!_stats_group_present(group))
342 return;
Invalidating the ID in _stats_region_region_id_from_group() is
redundant anyway; it is rightly done as the last operation in
_stats_group_destroy (and it is not possible for anything to see
the old value between the two calls).
Remove the change to group_id to ensure that the alias and bitset
resources are correctly freed.
The call to dm_stats_walk_start() before the do statement makes
dm_stats_walk_do() behave inconsistently depending on context;
wrap them in an additional do { } while (0) so that the macro
always expands to a valid statement.
The code could perform this conversion but ironically
did not recognize the standard command form, only the
the unpreferred "implication-based" command form.
"lvconvert --type linear VG/RaidLV" would fail, but
"lvconvert --mirrors 0 VG/RaidLV" would succeed.
The code could perform this conversion but ironically
did not recognize the standard command form, only the
the unpreferred "implication-based" command form.
"lvconvert --type linear VG/MirrorLV" would fail, but
"lvconvert --mirrors 0 VG/MirrorLV" would succeed.
If after extracting stats arguments and group tags nothing remains
of aux_data but '-' set the region->aux_data field to the empty
string to match behaviour for non-grouped regions.
Although not harmful do not allow a group containing regions with
histograms since it is not currently possible to present histogram
data aggregated for the group.
Although a non-zero value for the number of ticks spent doing IO
should imply a non-zero number of IOs in the interval test for
this explicitly to avoid a divide-by-zero in the event of bad
counter data.
It's possible for interval_ns to be zero if the interval is not
set or the clock is misconfigured. Test for this before using the
value as the divisor in the utilisation calculation.
Walk flags are ULL constants; cast the result to a uint64_t before
logging with a FMTx64 format specifier to avoid a compiler warning:
warning: format ‘%lx’ expects argument of type ‘long unsigned int’,
but argument 5 has type ‘long long unsigned int’
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".
Make it clear in libdevmapper.h, and in function argument names, that
libdm-stats uses the aux_data field internally and that any values set
for user_data are appended to the library values before being stored
with a region, and similarly, that internal data fields will be stripped
prior to returning any previously stored user_data.
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.
Walk avaiable groups and regions (in addition to areas) and report
aggregate statistics and properties.
A new switch is added to filter the type of obects inclued in the
report:
--statstype={all,area,region,group}
The type of the current row is also available in a new
DR_STATS_META field 'type'.
To allow the names used to describe statistics report objects to
change (for e.g to support groups and region and group aliases)
introduce a new "stats_name" field that evaluates to the correct
name for the object being reported.
Add a pair of commands to create and delete stats groups:
dmstats group --regions REGIONS
dmstats ungroup --groupid ID
REGIONS specifies a list of regions to be included in the group.
Regions are specified as a comma separated list in order of
increasing region ID. Ranges may be specified as a hypen separated
pair of values giving the first and last member of the range.
Add support do dm_stats_walk*() to walk over the set of
available groups using the cursor embedded in the dm_stats
handle, and to obtain the type of the object at the current
stats cursor location. A set of flags is introduced to
control which objects are visited:
DM_STATS_WALK_AREA
DM_STATS_WALK_REGION
DM_STATS_WALK_GROUP
DM_STATS_WALK_ALL
A final flag suppresses visits to regions that contain only a
single area - since the aggregate of such a region is idential
to the area it contains this allows these duplicates to be
filtered out:
DM_STATS_WALK_SKIP_SINGLE_AREA
If flags are not initialised before beginning a walk the default
set matches the behaviour of previous versions of the library.
Also accept group identifiers as immediate arguments to the
counter, metric, and property functions by adding control
flags to the region and area identifiers passed in.
Region and area properties are mapped to their equivalents for
the group (for example: group size is reported as the sum of
all regions contained in the group). Counter and metric values
are aggregated for the region or group.
Introduce constants for the buffer sizes that libdm-stats uses:
one for messages sent to the kernel, one for rows of response data
returned, and a pair for the "start+len" range and histogram bounds
strings.
Add a grouping facility to the libdm-stats library that allows the
user to bind several regions together as a group. Groups may be
used to aggregate data from several regions for reporting, or to
select and sort among large sets of regions.
A textual descriptor ("group tag") is associated with each group
and is stored in the first group member's aux_data field. The
tag contains the group member list and an optional alias for the
group, allowing the user to assign meaningful names to groups of
regions.
These descriptors are parsed in @stats_list message responses and
populate the resulting region and area tables with the group
structure.
Groups with overlapping regions are permitted but since this will
result in some events being counted more than once a warning is
printed in this case.
Nested and overlapping groups are not currently supported and
attempting to create these configurations results in error.
Add a new enum based interface for accessing counter and metric
values that uses a single function for each:
uint64_t dm_stats_get_counter(const struct dm_stats *dms,
dm_stats_counter_t counter
uint64_t region_id, uint64_t area_id);
int dm_stats_get_metric(const struct dm_stats *dms, int metric,
uint64_t region_id, uint64_t area_id,
double *value);
This simplifies the implementation of value aggregation for
groups of regions. The named function interface now calls the
enum interface internally so that all new functionality is
available regardless of the method used to retrieve values.
Cache the device-mapper name of a bound device in the dm_stats
handle.
This will be used by stats groups to report a device name or
user defined alias for groups.
The device-mapper name, device numbers and uuid stored in the
dm_stats handle are used only to bind the handle to a specific
device in order to issue ioctls.
Rename them to "bind_*" to reflect this usage in preparation
for caching the device-mapper name of the bound device in the
dm_stats handle.
This will be used to allow optional aliases to be set for
dmstats groups.
Add a function to parse a list of integer values and ranges into
a dm_bitset representation. Individual values signify that that bit
is set in the resulting mask and ranges are given as a pair of
start and end values, M-N, such that M and N are the first and
last members of the range (inclusive).
The implementation is based on the kernel's __bitmap_parselist()
that is used for cpumasks and other set configuration passed in
string form from user space.
TODO: it might be better to log dmeventd messages with test output
just like we do with clvmd - maybe we will switch to this one
instead of extra DMEVENTD log file in future....
Add config for mkfs to get more predicatable results
when using mkfs across variety of distributions.
In future maybe use this per all tests as default.
For now user has to specify in a test MKE2FS_CONFIG envvar to use it.
When force removing thin-pool we loose 'real' access to hidden device,
and if such pool is in suspended state, any thin volume cannot be
dropped. It likely should be also checked by dmsetup, but meanwhile
apply simple logic - try to force remove first all higher minors first
with assumption we first create thin-pool and then thin volume
and there are usually not being released lower dm numbers to
get the order wrong.
With a single report (--count=1) no timerfd is set up and the cycle
and current timestamps should be freed during the single call to
_update_interval_times().
This patch fixes link validation for used thin-pool.
Udev rules correctly creates symlinks only for unused new thin-pool.
Such thin-pool can be used by foreing apps (like Docker) thus
has /dev/vg/lv link.
However when thin-pool becomes used by thinLV - this link is no
longer exposed to user - but internal verfication missed this
and caused messages like this to be printed upon 'vgchange -ay':
The link /dev/vg/pool should have been created by udev but it was not
found. Falling back to direct link creation.
And same with 'vgchange -an':
The link /dev/vg/pool should have been removed by udev but it is still
present. Falling back to direct link removal.
This patch ensures only unused thin-pool has this link.
Run umount code only when either thin data or metadata are
above 95% - so if there are resize failures with 60%.
system fill keep running.
Also umount will only be tried with lvm2 LVs.
Foreign users are ATM unsuppored.
Add new logic to identify each unique operation and route
it to the correct function to perform it. The functions
that perform the conversions remain unchanged.
This new code checks every allowed combination of LV type
and requested operation, and for each valid combination
calls the function that performs that conversion.
The first stage of option validation which checks for
incompatible combinations of command line options, is done
done before process_each is called. This is unchanged.
(This new code will allow that first stage validation to
be simplified in a future commit.)
The second stage of checking options against the specific
LV type is done by this new code. For each valid combination
of operation + LV type, the new code calls an existing
function that implements it.
With this in place, the ad hoc checks for valid combinations
of LV types and operations can be removed from the existing
code in a future commit.
(The #if 0 is used to keep the patch clean, and the
disabled code will be removed by a following patch.)
There are detailed messages inside _create_dir_recursive that
dm_create_dir calls (except EROFS which where the message is not
generated, like anywhere else in the code).
When we test Vg.LvCreateRaid some of the hidden LVs volume type go from
'I' to 'i' between the time it takes us to create the LV and
the time it takes to call into refresh to verify the service is up to date.
This is a fairly rare occurance.
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.
Apply the same idea as vg_update.
Before doing the VG remove on disk, invalidate
the VG in lvmetad. After the VG is removed,
remove the VG in lvmetad. If the command fails
after removing the VG on disk, but before removing
the VG metadata from lvmetad, then a subsequent
command will see the INVALID flag and not use the
stale metadata from lvmetad.
Previously, a command sent lvmetad new VG metadata in vg_commit().
In vg_commit(), devices are suspended, so any memory allocation
done by the command while sending to lvmetad, or by lvmetad while
updating its cache could deadlock if memory reclaim was triggered.
Now lvmetad is updated in unlock_vg(), after devices are resumed.
The new method for updating VG metadata in lvmetad is in two phases:
1. In vg_write(), before devices are suspended, the command sends
lvmetad a short message ("set_vg_info") telling it what the new
VG seqno will be. lvmetad sees that the seqno is newer than
the seqno of its cached VG, so it sets the INVALID flag for the
cached VG. If sending the message to lvmetad fails, the command
fails before the metadata is committed and the change is not made.
If sending the message succeeds, vg_commit() is called.
2. In unlock_vg(), after devices are resumed, the command sends
lvmetad the standard vg_update message with the new metadata.
lvmetad sees that the seqno in the new metadata matches the
seqno it saved from set_vg_info, and knows it has the latest
copy, so it clears the INVALID flag for the cached VG.
If a command fails between 1 and 2 (after committing the VG on disk,
but before sending lvmetad the new metadata), the cached VG retains
the INVALID flag in lvmetad. A subsequent command will read the
cached VG from lvmetad, see the INVALID flag, ignore the cached
copy, read the VG from disk instead, update the lvmetad copy
with the latest copy from disk, (this clears the INVALID flag
in lvmetad), and use the correct VG metadata for the command.
(This INVALID mechanism already existed for use by lvmlockd.)
This fixes commit 0ba5f4b8e9 which moved
field recalculation (field width and sort position) from
dm_report_object to dm_report_output but it didn't handle the case when
dm_report_column_headings was used separately to report headings (before
dm_report_outpout call) and hence we ended up with intial widths for
fields in the headings.
If we're using dm_report_column_headings, we need to recalculate
fields if we haven't done so yet, the same way as we do in
dm_report_output.
Simplify code around _do_get_report_selection - remove "expected_idxs[]"
argument which is superfluous and add "allow_single" switch instead to
allow for recognition of "--configreport <report_name> -S" as well as
single "-S" if needed.
Null pointer dereferences (FORWARD_NULL) /safe/guest2/covscan/LVM2.2.02.158/tools/reporter.c: 961 in _do_report_get_selection()
Null pointer dereferences (FORWARD_NULL) Dereferencing null pointer "single_args".
Uninitialized variables (UNINIT) /safe/guest2/covscan/LVM2.2.02.158/tools/toollib.c: 3520 in _process_pvs_in_vgs()
Uninitialized variables (UNINIT) Using uninitialized value "do_report_ret_code".
Null pointer dereferences (REVERSE_INULL) /safe/guest2/covscan/LVM2.2.02.158/libdm/libdm-report.c: 4745 in dm_report_output()
Null pointer dereferences (REVERSE_INULL) Null-checking "rh" suggests that it may be null, but it has already been dereferenced on all paths leading to the check.
Incorrect expression (MISSING_COMMA) /safe/guest2/covscan/LVM2.2.02.158/lib/log/log.c: 280 in _get_log_level_name()
Incorrect expression (MISSING_COMMA) In the initialization of "log_level_names", a suspicious concatenated string ""noticeinfo"" is produced.
Null pointer dereferences (FORWARD_NULL) /safe/guest2/covscan/LVM2.2.02.158/tools/reporter.c: 816 in_get_report_options()
Null pointer dereferences (FORWARD_NULL) Comparing "mem" to null implies that "mem" might be null.
This reverts commit fa69ed0bc8.
This code sometimes expects to be presented with a read-only filesystem
(during some boot sequences for example) and copes appropriately with
this and it should not lead to expected error messages that might cause
unnecessary alarm.
lv_name arg is only used without known LV for resolving '*lv'.
Once we know *lv, never use lv_name ever again.
So setting it when passing *lv has not needed.
Add code to support more LVs to be resized through a same code path
using a single lvresize_params struct.
(Now it's used for thin-pool metadata resize,
next user will be snapshot virtual resize).
Update code to adjust percent amount resize for use_policies.
Properly activate inactive thin-pool in case of any pool resize
as the command should not 'deffer' this operation to next activation.
Use common API design and pass just LV pointer to lv_manip.c functions.
Read cmd struct via lv->vg->cmd when needed.
Also do not try to return EINVALID_CMD_LINE error when we
have already openned VG - this error code can only be returned before
locking VG.
We have only 2 users of _lv_active() - one was already checking for ==1
while the other use (_lv_is_active()) could have take '-1' as a sign of having
an LV active. So return 0 and log_debug also the reason while detection
has failed (i.e. in case --driverload n - it's kind of expectable,
but might have confused user seeing just <backtrace>).
This fixes commit f50d4011cd which
introduced a problem when using older lvm2 code with newer libdm.
In this case, the old LVM didn't recognize new _LOG_BYPASS_REPORT flag
that libdm-report code used. This ended up with no output at all
from libdm where log_print_bypass_report was called because the
_LOG_BYPASS_REPORT was not masked properly in lvm2's print_log fn
which was called as callback function for logging.
With this patch, the lvm2 registers separate print_log_libdm logging
function for libdm instead. The print_log_libdm is exactly the same
as print_log (used throughout lvm2 code) but it checks whether we're
printing common line on output where "common" means not going to stderr,
not a warning and not an error and if we are, it adds the
_LOG_BYPASS_REPORT flag so the log_print goes directly to output, not
to any log report.
So this achieves the same goal as in f50d4011cd,
just doing it in a way that newer libdm is still compatible with older
lvm2 code (libdm-report is the only code using log_print).
Looking at the opposite mixture - older libdm with newer lvm2 code,
that won't be compilable because the new log report functionality
that is in lvm2 also requires new dm_report_group_* libdm functions
so we don't need to care here.
Move code from original print_log fn to a separate _vprint_log function
that accepts va_list and make print_log a wrapper over _vprint_log.
The print_log just initializes the va_list and uses it for _vprint_log
call now. This way, we can reuse _vprint_log if needed.
In commit 6ae22125, vgcfgrestore began disabling lvmetad
while running, and rescanned to enable it again at the end,
but missed the rescanning/enabling in the error case.
Reconnect to lvmetad if either the send fails (e.g. lvmetad
was restarted since lvmlockd last connected), or if no
lvmetad connection exists (e.g. lvmetad was started after
lvmlockd so no previous connection existed.)
Currently, a shutdown signal will cause lvmetad to quit
responding to new connections, but not actually exit until
all connections are gone. If a program is maintaining a
long running connection (e.g. lvmlockd, or even an lvm
command) when lvmetad gets a shutdown signal, then all
further commands will hang indefinately waiting for a
response that won't be sent.
With this patch, make lvmetad continue handling new
connections even after a shutdown signal. It will exit
once all connections are gone.
Previously, vgcfgrestore would attempt to vg_remove the
existing VG from lvmetad and then vg_update to add the
restored VG. But, if there was a failure in the command
or with vg_update, the lvmetad cache would be left incorrect.
Now, disable lvmetad before the restore begins, and then
rescan to populate lvmetad from disk after restore has
written the new VG to disk.
Reporting commands can be of different types (even if the command name
is the same):
- pvs command can be either of PVS, PVSEGS or LABEL report type,
- vgs command is of VGS report type,
- lvs command is of LVS or SEGS report type.
Use basic report type when looking for report prefix used for
--configreport option.
This means that:
- 'pvs --configreport pv' applies to PVS, PVSEGS or LABEL report type
- 'vgs --configreport vg' applies to VGS report type
- 'lvs --configreport lv' applies to LVS and SEGS report type
The DM_REPORT_OUTPUT_MULTIPLE_TIMES instructs reporting code to
keep rows even after dm_report_output call - the rows are not
destroyed in this case which makes it possible to call dm_report_output
multiple times.
This allows for moving parts of the code from dm_report_object to
dm_report_output which is important for subsequent patches that allow
for repeated dm_report_output, not destroying rows on each
dm_report_output call.
log_print is used during cmd line processing to log the result of the
operation (e.g. "Volume group vg successfully changed" and similar).
We don't want output from log_print to be interleaved with current
reports from group where log is reported as well. Also, the information
printed by log_print belongs to the log report too, so it should be
rerouted to log report if it's set.
Since the code in libdm-report which is responsible for doing the report
output uses log_print too, we need to use a different kind of log_print
which bypasses any log report currently used for logging (...simply,
we can't call log_print to output the log report itself which in turn
would again reroute to report - the report would never get on output
this way).
This patch adds structures and functions to reroute error and warning
logs to log report, if it's set.
There are 5 new functions:
- log_set_report
Set log report where logging will be rerouted.
- log_set_report_context
Set context globally so any report_cmdlog call will use it.
- log_set_report_object_type
Set object type globally so any report_cmdlog call will use it.
- log_set_report_object_name_and_id
Set object ID and name globally so any report_cmdlog call will use it.
- log_set_report_object_group_and_group_id
Set object group ID and name globally so any report_cmdlog call will use it.
These functions will be called during LVM command processing so any logs
which are rerouted to log report contain proper information about current
processing state.
The lvm fullreport works per VG and as such, the vg, lv, pv, seg and
pvseg subreport is done for each VG. However, if the PV is not part of
any VG yet, we still want to display pv and pvseg subreports for these
"orphan" PVs - so enable this for lvm fullreport's process_each_vg call.
If we have fullreport, make sure that the options/sort keys used for
each report doesn't change its type - we want to preserve the original
type so it's always 5 different subreports within fullreport (vg, lv, pv,
seg, pvseg). Since we have all report types within fullreport, users
should add fields under proper subreport type - this minimizes
duplication of info displayed on output.
Groupable args (the ones marked with ARG_GROUPABLE flag) start a new
group of args if:
- this is the first time we hit such a groupable arg,
- or if non-countable arg is repeated.
However, there may be cases where we want to give priorities when
forming groups and hence force new group creation if we hit an arg
with higher grouping priority.
For example, let's assume (for now) hypothetical sequence of args used:
lvs -o lv_name --configreport log -o log_type --configreport lv -o +vg_name
Without giving any priorites, we end up with:
lvs -o lv_name --configreport log -o log_type --configreport lv -o +vg_name
| | | | | |
\__________GROUP1___________/ \________GROUP2___________/ \_GROUP3_/
This is because we hit "-o" as the first groupable arg. The --configreport,
even though it's groupable too, it falls into the previous "-o" group.
While we may need to give priority to the --configreport arg that should
always start a new group in this scenario instead:
lvs -o lv_name --configreport log -o log_type --configreport lv -o +vg_name
| | | | | |
\_GROUP1_/ \_________GROUP2___________/ \_________GROUP3__________/
So here "-o" started a new group but since "--configreport" has higher
priority than "-o", it starts fresh new group now and hence the rest of
the command line's args are grouped by --configreport now.
lvm fullreport executes 5 subreports (vg, pv, lv, pvseg, seg) per each VG
(and so taking one VG lock each time) within one command which makes it
easier to produce full report about LVM entities.
Since all 5 subreports for a VG are done under a VG lock, the output is
more consistent mainly in cases where LVM entities may be changed in
parallel.
Add any report (pvs/vgs/lvs) currently processed to current report group
which is part of processing handle and which already contains log
report. This way both log report and pvs/vgs/lvs report will be
reported as a whole within a group, thus having same output format as
selected by --reportformat option.
If there's parent processing handle, we don't need to create completely
new report group and status report - we'll just reuse the one already
initialized for the parent.
Currently, the situation where this matter is when doing internal report
to do the selection for processing commands where we have parent processing
handle for the command itself and processing handle for the selection
part (that is selection for non-reporting tools).
Wire up report group creation with log report in struct
processing_handle and call report_format_init during processing handle
initialization (init_processing_handle fn) and destroy it while
destroing processing handle (destroy_processing_handle fn).
This way, all the LVM command processing using processing handle
has access to log report via which the current command log
can be reported as items are processed.
Separating common report and per-report arguments prepares the code for
handling several reports per one command (for example, the command log
report and LVM command report itself).
Each report can have sort keys, options (fields), list of fields to
compact and selection criteria set individually. Hooks for setting these
per report within one command will be a part of subsequent patches, this
patch only separates new struct single_report_args out of existing
struct report_args.
New report/output_format configuration sets the output format used
for all LVM commands globally. Currently, there are 2 formats
recognized:
- basic (the classical basic output with columns and rows, used by default)
- json (output is in json format)
Add new --reportformat option and new report_format_init function that
checks this option and creates new report group accordingly, also
preparing log report handle and adding it to the report group just
created.
This is a preparation for new CMDLOG report type which is going to be
used for reporting LVM command log.
The new report type introduces several new fields (log_seq_num, log_type,
log_context, log_object_type, log_object_group, log_object_id, object_name,
log_message, log_errno, log_ret_code) as well as new configuration settings
to set this report type (report/command_log_sort and report/command_log_cols
lvm.conf settings).
This patch also introduces internal report_cmdlog helper function
which is a wrapper over dm_report_object to report command log via
CMDLOG report type and which is going to be used throughout the code
to report the log items.
This patch introduces DM_REPORT_GROUP_JSON report group type. When using
this group type and when pushing a report to such a group, these flags
are automatically unset:
DM_REPORT_OUTPUT_ALIGNED
DM_REPORT_OUTPUT_HEADINGS
DM_REPORT_OUTPUT_COLUMNS_AS_ROWS
...and this flag is set:
DM_REPORT_OUTPUT_BUFFERED
The whole group is encapsulated in { } for the outermost JSON object
and then each report is reported on output as array of objects where
each object is the row from report:
{
"report_name1": [
{field1="value", field2="value",...},
{field1="value", field2="value",...}
...
],
"report_name2": [
{field1="value", field2="value",...},
{field1="value", field2="value",...}
...
]
...
}
This patch introduces DM_REPORT_GROUP_BASIC report group type. This
type has exactly the classical output format as we know from before
introduction of report groups. However, in addition to that, it allows
to put several reports into a group - this is the very basic grouping
scheme that doesn't change the output format itself:
Report: report1_name
Header1 Header2 ...
value value ...
value value ...
... ... ...
Report: report2_name
Header1 Header2 ...
value value ...
value value ...
... ... ...
There's no change in output for this report group type - with this type,
we only make sure there's always only one report in a group at a time,
not more.
This patch introduces DM report group (represented by dm_report_group
structure) that is used to group several reports to make a whole. As a
whole, all the reports in the group follow the same settings and/or
formatting used on output and it controls that the output is properly
ordered (e.g. the output from different reports is not interleaved
which would break readability and/or syntax of target output format
used for the whole group).
To support this feature, there are 4 new functions:
- dm_report_group_create
- dm_report_group_push
- dm_report_group_pop
- dm_report_group_destroy
From the naming used (dm_report_group_push/pop), it's clear the reports
are pushed onto a stack. The rule then is that only the report on top
of the stack can be reported (that means calling dm_report_output).
This way we make sure that the output is not interleaved and provides
determinism and control over the output.
Different formats may allow or disallow some of the existing report
flags controlling output itself (DM_REPORT_OUTPUT_*) to be set or not so
once the report is pushed to a group, the grouping code makes sure that
all the reports have compatible flags set and then these flags are
restored once each report is popped from the report group stack.
We also allow to push/pop non-report item in which case such an item
creates a structure (e.g. to put several reports together with any
opening and/or closing lines needed on output which pose as extra
formatting structure besides formatting the reports).
The dm_report_group_push function accepts an argument to pass any
format-specific data needed (e.g. handle, name, structures passed
along while working with reports...).
We can call dm_report_output directly anytime we need (with the only
restriction that we can call dm_report_output only for the report that
is currently on top of the group's stack). Or we don't need to call
dm_report_output explicitly in which case all the reports in a stack are
reported on output automatically once we call dm_report_group_destroy.
This fixes a problem in commit ae0a8740c. The problem
in that commit was that all existing PVs are initially
dropped from lvmetad. This works if the VG is updated
at the end, which replaces the dropped PVs, but if the
rescan finds that the VG seqno is unchanged, it leaves
the cached VG in place. So, we should only drop the
existing PVs in lvmetad when the VG is going to be updated.
commit 15da467b was meant to address the case where
use_lvmetad=1 in lvm.conf, and lvmetad is not available,
in which case, pvscan --cache -aay should activate LVs.
But the commit unintentionally also changed the case
where use_lvmetad=0 in lvm.conf, in which case
pvscan --cache -aay should not activate LVs, so fix
that here.
When pvscan --cache -aay fails to connect to lvmetad it will
simply exit and do nothing. Change this so that it will
skip the lvmetad cache step and do the activation step from
disk.
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.
Original code missed to catch all apperances of SIGINT.
Also enhance logging when running in shell without tty.
Accept this regex as valid input:
'^[ ^t]*([Yy]([Ee]([Ss]|)|)|[Nn]([Oo]|))[ ^t]*$'
Some commands scan labels to populate lvmcache multiple
times, i.e. lvmcache_init, scan labels to fill lvmcache,
lvmcache_destroy, then later repeat
Each time labels are scanned, duplicates are detected,
and preferred devices are chosen. Each time this is done
within a single command, we want to choose the same
preferred devices. So, check for existing preferences
when choosing preferred devices.
This also fixes a problem with the list of unused duplicate
devs when run in an lvm shell. The devs had been allocated
from cmd memory, resulting in invalid list entries between
commands.
A number of places are working on a specific dev when they
call lvmcache_info_from_pvid() to look up an info struct
based on a pvid. In those cases, pass the dev being used
to lvmcache_info_from_pvid(). When a dev is specified,
lvmcache_info_from_pvid() will verify that the cached
info it's using matches the dev being processed before
returning the info. Calling code will not mistakenly
get info for the wrong dev when duplicate devs exist.
This confusion was happening when scanning labels when
duplicate devs existed. label_read for the first dev
would add an info struct to lvmcache for that dev/pvid.
label_read for the second dev would see the pvid in
lvmcache from first dev, and mistakenly conclude that
the label_read from the second dev can be skipped
because it's already been done. By verifying that the
dev for the cached pvid matches the dev being read,
this mismatch is avoided and the label is actually read
from the second duplicate.
If a command gets stuck during an lvmetad update, lvmetad
will cancel that update after the timeout. The next command
to check the lvmetad will see that lvmetad needs to be
populated because lvmetad will return token of "none" after
a timed out update (same as when lvmetad is not populated
at all after starting.)
If a command gets an error during an lvmetad update, it
will now just quit and leave its updating token in place.
That update will be cancelled after the timeout.
Commit #5b3a4a9 caused the "name" variable to be cleared if
declaration and assignment is on two lines so put it back
so it's on one line for it to work again.
pvmove began processing tags unintentionally from commit,
6d7dc87cb pvmove: use toollib
pvmove works on a single PV, but tags can match multiple PVs.
If we allowed tags, but processed only the first matching PV,
then the resulting PV would be unpredictable.
Also, the current processing code does not allow us to simply
report an error and do nothing if more than one PV matches the tag,
because the command starts processing PVs as they are found,
so it's too late to do nothing if a second PV matches.
If configuration consists of several sources in config cascade
("config cascade" defined in man lvmconfig(8)), lvmconfig displayed
only difference from defaults of the topmost config in the cascade.
Fix lvmconfig to display complete difference, considering all
the configuration in the cascade.
For example, before this patch:
(use_lvmetad=0 set in lvm.conf which differs from defaults)
$ lvmconfig --type diff
global {
use_lvmetad=0
}
(compact_output=1 set on cmd line)
$ lvmconfig --type diff --config report/compact_output=1
report {
compact_output=1
}
(headings=0 set in profile)
$ lvmconfig --type diff --commandprofile test
report {
headings=0
}
(difference in topmost configuration source is displayed)
$ lvmconfig --type diff --commandprofile test --config report/compact_output=1
report {
compact_output=1
}
With this patch applied (the config cascade is merged before looking for
difference from defaults in configuration):
$ lvmconfig --type diff
global {
use_lvmetad=0
}
$ lvmconfig --type diff --config report/compact_output=1
report {
compact_output=1
}
global {
use_lvmetad=0
}
$ lvmconfig --type diff --profile test
report {
headings=0
}
global {
use_lvmetad=0
}
$ lvmconfig --type diff --profile test --config report/compact_output=1
report {
headings=0
compact_output=1
}
global {
use_lvmetad=0
}
Treat loop device created with 'losetup -P' as regular
partitioned device - so if it has partition table,
prevent its usage in commands like 'pvcreate'.
Before 'pvcreate /dev/loop0' could have erased and formated as PV,
after this patch, device is filtered out and cannot be used.
All the variables for sscanf in lvmlockctl.c and lvmlockd-sanlock.c are
zeroed before sscanf call so the failure is detected by seeing the zero
value instead of proper one in subsequent code - so use (void) for
sscanf calls to ignore return value here.
Before this fix, when reporting 'lvm devtypes', the report was
initialized with incorrect reserved values - the ones used for
pvs/vgs/lvs report were used instead of NULL value (because devtypes
doesn't have any reserved values).
For example, trying to (incorrectly) use lv_name for the -S|--select
with lvm devtypes which doesn't have this field at all:
Before this patch (internal error issued):
$ lvm devtypes -S 'lv_name=lvol0'
Internal error: _check_reserved_values_supported: field-specific reserved value of type 0x0 for field not supported
Internal error: dm_report_init_with_selection: trying to register unsupported reserved value type, skipping report selection
DevType MaxParts Description
aoe 16 ATA over Ethernet
ataraid 16 ATA Raid
bcache 1 bcache block device cache
...
With this patch applied (correct error displayed about
unrecognized selection field):
$ lvm devtypes -S 'lv_name=lvol0'
Device Types Fields
-------------------
devtype_name - Name of Device Type exactly as it appears in /proc/devices. [string]
devtype_max_partitions - Maximum number of partitions. (How many device minor numbers get reserved for each device.) [number]
devtype_description - Description of Device Type. [string]
Special Fields
--------------
selected - Set if item passes selection criteria. [number]
help - Show help. [unselectable number]
? - Show help. [unselectable number]
Unrecognised selection field: lv_name
Selection syntax error at 'lv_name=lvol0'.
Use 'help' for selection to get more help.
Convert fields into using a single status ioctl call per LV.
This is a bit tricky since when there are more complicated
stacks, at this moment its undefined which values should be shown.
It's clear we need to cache more then single ioctl per LV,
but also we need to define more explicitely relation between
reported values for snapshots.
This patch is not a final state, rather a transitional step.
It should not be giving more 'worst' values then previous
many-ioctl-calls-per-lv solution.
Add function to obtain percentage value for cache lv_seg_status.
This API is rather evolving 'middle' step as the ultimate goal
is segment API fuctionality.
But first we need to be clear at reporting level which values
are needed to be reported for which LVs and segments.
Add more code to properly store status for snapshot segment
maintaining lvm2 fiction of COW and snapshot internal volumes.
The key issue here is however not though-through reporting
logic - as there is no single answer for whole line state.
It not counting with layer and we may need few more ioctl to
cover all reporting needs depending upon what is actually
needed.
In reality we need to 'cache' more ioctl status queries for
individual LVs and their segments (so they checked at most once).
The other 'hard' topic for conversion is mirror segment handling.
Also we definitelly need to relocate some logic into segment's methods,
yet it might be complex as we have not clear border between targets.
TODO: define more clearly how are reporting fields defined in case
we 'stack' volumes like - cache of stacked thin LV snapshot origin.
lv_refresh_suspend_resume() has escaped with fail ret code
after failing suspend and could have left many volumes in suspend state.
So always unconditionally call resume also when suspend has failed.
To get better control when flushing is used add extra arg when
setting up dm task.
By default now check dm device status without flush.
(At this moment this should effect only thin and cache volumes).
Also switch dev_manager_thin_pool_status() to use more
readable 'flush' parameter instead of 'no_flush'.
Check first the LV is cow before even checking it's a merging COW.
Note: previosly merging_cow was also merging origin, so without
this explicit check it used to return '1' also when passed
LV has been merging origin.
When mirror/raid called copy_percent function to return,
when 100% was supposed to be returned, wrong float 100.0 value
could have been reported back instead of dm_percent_t DM_PERCENT_100.
There is broken API somewhere, since the function here rely on
actively being modifid VG content even when doing 'lvs' operation.
(extents_copies)
This reverts commit 8fd886f735.
This was a deliberate omission because logging token-by-token metadata
parsing greatly increases the amount of logging for hardly any benefit.
In general, only LVM config file settings need to be logged, and in
places where it's considered important to log particular elements of
metadata that should be done using specific log_* lines.
This area can be revisited.
In the same way that process_each_vg() can be passed
a single VG name to process, also allow process_each_lv()
to be passed a single VG name and LV name to process.
This refactors the code for autoactivation. Previously,
as each PV was found, it would be sent to lvmetad, and
the VG would be autoactivated using a non-standard VG
processing function (the "activation_handler") called via
a function pointer from within the lvmetad notification path.
Now, any scanning that the command needs to do (scanning
only the named device args, or scanning all devices when
there are no args), is done first, before any activation
is attempted. During the scans, the VG names are saved.
After scanning is complete, process_each_vg is used to do
autoactivation of the saved VG names. This makes pvscan
activation much more similar to activation done with
vgchange or lvchange.
The separate autoactivate phase also means that if lvmetad
is disabled (either before or during the scan), the command
can continue with the activation step by simply not using
lvmetad and reverting to disk scanning to do the
activation.
Add support for active cache LV.
Handle --cachemode args validation during command line processing.
Rework some lvm2 internal to use lvm2 defined CACHE_MODE enums
indepently on libdm defines and use enum around the code instead
of passing and comparing strings.
Don't use lvm_init() to create a full command context, which
does a lot of command setup (like connecting to daemons), which
is unnecessary for simply reading a value from lvm.conf.
Passing a NULL context arg to the lvm_config_ function is now
allowed, in which case lvm.conf is read without doing lvm
command setup.
A program may be using liblvm2app for simply checking a config
setting in lvm.conf. In this case, a full lvm context is not
needed, only cmd->cft (which are the config settings read from
lvm.conf).
lvm_config_find_bool() can now be passed a NULL lvm context
in which case it will only create cmd->cft, check the config
setting asked for, and destroy the cmd.
Only call lvm_init() when it's needed so that simply
loading the lvm python code in another program doesn't
make that program do lvm initialization.
The version call doesn't need a handle.
The garbage collection can just do lvm_quit to destroy
the command. The next call that needs lvm_init will
do it first.
When setting up a toolcontext, the lib init function
was detecting an error when there was none, and then
it was returning an incompletely initialized cmd struct
instead of NULL. The effect was that the lib would try
to use the uninitialized cmd struct and segfault.
This would happen if a non-fatal error occurred during
cmd setup, e.g. user permission failed on lvmetad socket,
causing cmd to fall back to scanning and not use lvmetad.
The only real error condition is when create_toolcontext
returns NULL. If cmd is returned, the lib can use it.
The _report fn is getting big - separate it in two:
- _report fn to get all the options and arguments
- _do_report fn for reporting itself
Also, place all the variables/arguments in one structure for easier
handling of the variables around.
If a command begins repopulating the lvmetad cache,
and fails part way through, it should set the disabled
state in lvmetad so other commands don't use bad data.
If a subsequent scan succeeds, the disabled state is
cleared.
If duplicate devices exist for a PV, and one device's
size matches the PV size, but the other doesn't, then
prefer the matching device.
If one device is used by an active LV, prefer that device.
When there are duplicate devices for a PV, one device
is preferred and chosen to exist in the VG. The other
devices are not used by lvm, but are displayed by pvs
with a new PV attr "d", indicating that they are
unchosen duplicate PVs.
The "duplicate" reporting field is set to "duplicate"
when the PV is an unchosen duplicate, and that field
is blank for the chosen PV.
Previously, duplicate PVs were processed as a side effect
of processing the "chosen" PV in lvmcache. The duplicate
PV would be hacked into lvmcache temporarily in place of
the chosen PV.
In the old way, we had to always process the "chosen" PV
device, even if a duplicate of it was named on the command
line. This meant we were processing a different device than
was asked for. This could be worked around by naming
multiple duplicate devs on the command line in which case
they were swapped in and out of lvmcache for processing.
Now, the duplicate devs are processed directly in their
own processing loop. This means we can remove the old
hacks related to processing dups as a side effect of
processing the chosen device. We can now simply process
the device that was named on the command line.
When the same PVID exists on two or more devices, one device
is preferred and used in the VG, and the others are duplicates
and are not used in the VG. The preferred device exists in
lvmcache as usual. The duplicates exist in a specical list
of unused duplicate devices.
The duplicate devs have the "d" attribute and the "duplicate"
reporting field displays "duplicate" for them.
'pvs' warns about duplicates, but the formal output only
includes the single preferred PV.
'pvs -a' has the same warnings, and the duplicate devs are
included in the output.
'pvs <path>' has the same warnings, and displays the named
device, whether it is preferred or a duplicate.
Wait to compare and choose alternate duplicate devices until
after all devices are scanned. During scanning, the first
duplicate dev is kept in lvmcache, and others are kept in a
new list (_found_duplicate_devs).
After all devices are scanned, compare all the duplicates
available for a given PVID and decide which is best.
If the dev used in lvmcache is changed, drop the old dev
from lvmcache entirely and rescan the replacement dev.
Previously the VG metadata from the old dev was kept in
lvmcache and only the dev was replaced.
A new config setting devices/allow_changes_with_duplicate_pvs
can be set to 0 which disallows modifying a VG or activating
LVs in it when the VG contains PVs with duplicate devices.
Set to 1 is the old behavior which allowed the VG to be
changed.
The logic for which of two devs is preferred has changed.
The primary goal is to choose a device that is currently
in use if the other isn't, e.g. by an active LV.
. prefer dev with fs mounted if the other doesn't, else
. prefer dev that is dm if the other isn't, else
. prefer dev in subsystem if the other isn't
If neither device is preferred by these rules, then don't
change devices in lvmcache, leaving the one that was found
first.
The previous logic for preferring a device was:
. prefer dev in subsystem if the other isn't, else
. prefer dev without holders if the other has holders, else
. prefer dev that is dm if the other isn't
When duplicate PVs are detected, set the disabled
flag so that commands will disable use of lvmetad.
This duplicate detection is done by lvmetad itself
when it's told about a single new PV with a PVID
that matches an existing PV on another device.
(This is different from the case where the command
is scanning all devices and detects the duplicate.)
Remove the "altdev" logic that attempted to keep
track of multiple devices for a single PV. It
is no longer used since lvmetad is disabled in
this case.
For raid1 use chunksize as bitmap-chunk specification.
Always enforce usage of bitmap - getting comparable outcome
as lvm2 raid support uses.
Add udev_wait after stopping md array - as in fact leg-device
are still in use by target even command has finished.
(mdadm --stop causes WATCH rule wakeup, and
ioctl(STOP_ARRAY) returns IMHO to early - it should finish
and fsync work on leg devices first).
Support parsing --chunksize option also when converting.
Now user can use cache pool created with i.e. 32K chunksize,
while in caching user can select 512K blocks.
Tool is supposed to validate cache metadata size is big enough
to support such chunk size. Otherwise error is shown.
When creating LV - in some case we change created segment type
(ATM for cache and snapshot) and we then manipulate with
lv segment according to 'lp' segtype.
Fix this by checking for proper type before accessing segment members.
This makes command like:
lvcreate --type cache-pool -L10 vg/cpool
lvcreate -H -L10 --cachesettings migtation_threshold=10000 vg/cpool
to pass since now tool correctly selects default cache policy.
Rather than doing repeated translations from name to
device when comparing args to existing PVs, do one
translation of the arg names and saving the device,
before checking existing PVs.
If there's an activation volume_filter, it might not be possible
to activate the rmeta LVs to wipe them. At least inherit any
LV tags from the parent LV while attempting this.
pvscan autoactivation has its own VG processing implementation,
so it can't properly handle things like foreign or shared VGs,
so make it ignore those VG types (or errors from them) as best
as possible.
Add a FIXME stating that pvscan autoactivation must really be
moved to the standard VG processing by calling process_each_vg
to do activation once the scanning / cache update is finished.
Checking for devices uses is_missing_pv() to check
if there is a device for the PV. is_missing_pv()
is based on the MISSING_PV flag, which does not
always correspond to !pv->dev. When using lvmetad,
a command like:
pvs --config 'devices/filter=["a|/dev/sdb|", "r|.*|"]'
will cause a number of PVs to have NULL pv->dev, but
not the MISSING_PV flag. So, NULL pv->dev needs to
also be checked.
Before executing modprobe for given module name, just check
if the module is not already present in /sys/module.
Useful when checking dm-cache-policy modules as we do not
having matching interface like for targets.
[0] fedora/~ # pvs --config 'devices/filter=["a|/dev/sda|", "r|.*|"]'
WARNING: Device for PV Qcxpcy-XgtP-UD3s-PmG0-qLyE-Z0ho-DYsxoz not found or rejected by a filter.
WARNING: Device for PV Qcxpcy-XgtP-UD3s-PmG0-qLyE-Z0ho-DYsxoz not found or rejected by a filter.
WARNING: Couldn't find device for segment belonging to fedora/root while checking used and assumed devices.
WARNING: Couldn't find device for segment belonging to fedora/swap while checking used and assumed devices.
PV VG Fmt Attr PSize PFree
/dev/sda lvm2 --- 128.00m 128.00m
[unknown] fedora lvm2 a-m 19.49g 0
Probably not worth mentioning "segments" here, just state that devices
for an LV can't be all found during the check - it's less mysterious for
user then:
[0] fedora/~ # pvs --config 'devices/filter=["a|/dev/sda|", "r|.*|"]'
WARNING: Device for PV Qcxpcy-XgtP-UD3s-PmG0-qLyE-Z0ho-DYsxoz not found or rejected by a filter.
WARNING: Device for PV Qcxpcy-XgtP-UD3s-PmG0-qLyE-Z0ho-DYsxoz not found or rejected by a filter.
WARNING: Couldn't find all devices for LV fedora/root while checking used and assumed devices.
WARNING: Couldn't find all devices for LV fedora/swap while checking used and assumed devices.
PV VG Fmt Attr PSize PFree
/dev/sda lvm2 --- 128.00m 128.00m
[unknown] fedora lvm2 a-m 19.49g 0
When checking assumed PVs against real devices used for LVs and if
there's no device assigned for an assumed PV (e.g. due to filters),
do log_warn instead of log_error and continue checking LV segments
and associated assumed PVs further, just like we do log_warn elsewhere
in this situation.
This way user will see the warning for each LV which couldn't be
checked completely against real PVs used. Before, we logged only
the very first occurence of missing device for an LV in a VG and we
returned from the function doing this check for all the LVs in VG
immediately which may be a bit misleading because it didn't tell
user about all the other LVs and whether they could be checked
or not.
For example, we have this setup:
[0] fedora/~ # pvs
PV VG Fmt Attr PSize PFree
/dev/sda lvm2 --- 128.00m 128.00m
/dev/vda2 fedora lvm2 a-- 19.49g 0
[0] fedora/~ # lvs -o+devices
LV VG Attr LSize Devices
root fedora -wi-ao---- 19.00g /dev/vda2(0)
swap fedora -wi-ao---- 500.00m /dev/vda2(4864)
Before this patch (only the very first LV in a VG is logged to have a
problem while checking used and assumed devices):
[0] fedora/~ # pvs --config 'devices/filter=["a|/dev/sda|", "r|.*|"]'
WARNING: Device for PV Qcxpcy-XgtP-UD3s-PmG0-qLyE-Z0ho-DYsxoz not found or rejected by a filter.
WARNING: Device for PV Qcxpcy-XgtP-UD3s-PmG0-qLyE-Z0ho-DYsxoz not found or rejected by a filter.
Couldn't find device for segment belonging to fedora/root while checking used and assumed devices.
PV VG Fmt Attr PSize PFree
/dev/sda lvm2 --- 128.00m 128.00m
[unknown] fedora lvm2 a-m 19.49g 0
With this patch applied (all LVs where we hit problem while checking
used and assumed devices are logged and it's warning, not error):
[0] fedora/~ # pvs --config 'devices/filter=["a|/dev/sda|", "r|.*|"]'
WARNING: Device for PV Qcxpcy-XgtP-UD3s-PmG0-qLyE-Z0ho-DYsxoz not found or rejected by a filter.
WARNING: Device for PV Qcxpcy-XgtP-UD3s-PmG0-qLyE-Z0ho-DYsxoz not found or rejected by a filter.
WARNING: Couldn't find device for segment belonging to fedora/root while checking used and assumed devices.
WARNING: Couldn't find device for segment belonging to fedora/swap while checking used and assumed devices.
PV VG Fmt Attr PSize PFree
/dev/sda lvm2 --- 128.00m 128.00m
[unknown] fedora lvm2 a-m 19.49g 0
Check that @stats_list and @stats_print returned data in the
_stats_parse_list() and _stats_parse_region() functions before
attempting to operate on region and area values.
This avoids a coverity warning since fgets() could potentially
return no data from the memory buffer returned by the ioctl.
In both cases the ioctl would return an error, preventing these
functions from running, however it is cleaner to test for the
condition explicitly and fail in those cases.
If lvmetad is running, and a command opts to not use it
(--config global/use_lvmetad=0), and the command changes
metadata, then the metadata change is not visible to
lvmetad. Subsequent commands using lvmetad to change
metadata may cause corruption based on the invalid
lvmetad state.
Eventually we can set the disabled state in lvmetad
to prevent this problem, but for now print a warning
about the possibility.
When command is not using lvmetad because
use_lvmetad=0 in the config, but the lvmetad
pidfile exists, print a warning (previously
this checked for the socket existing instead
of the pidfile existing.)
vg/snapshotN should not appear anywhere.
No code should be showing this, but it was noticed in some logs last
week and we can deal with it in display_lvname().
When user requested on cmdline disabling of lvmetad/lvmpoll,
respect it and when lvmlockd requires these daemon,
Error configure with clear message about misconfiguration.
The lvmetad connection is created within the
init_connections() path during command startup,
rather than via the old lvmetad_active() check.
The old lvmetad_active() checks are replaced
with lvmetad_used() which is a simple check that
tests if the command is using/connected to lvmetad.
The old lvmetad_set_active(cmd, 0) calls, which
stopped the command from using lvmetad (to revert to
disk scanning), are replaced with lvmetad_make_unused(cmd).
The test was a weak attempt at verifying the special
combination of lvchange/vgchange -aay --sysinit, but
was only looking for lvmetad connection warnings.
Update the warning checks, and check the LV activation
state directly which is the main point.
Rename the test to reflect its purpose of checking
the -aay --sysinit combination.
Update the check about lvmetad running but not used.
Also add tests related to the new lvmetad disabled state.
lvm1 metadata is used here to test the disabled state
because lvm1 metadata is the first condition using the
disabled state.
After a device rescan that repopulates lvmetad,
if no reason for disabling lvmetad was seen
(lvm1 metadata or duplicate PVs), then clear
the disabled flag in lvmetad. This allows
commands to resume using the lvmetad cache
after the cause for disabling it has been removed.
Commands already check if the lvmetad token is valid,
and if not, they rescan devices to repopulate lvmetad
before running. Now, in addition to checking the
lvmetad token, they also check if the lvmetad disabled
flag is set. If so, they do not use the lvmetad cache
and revert to disk scanning.
A global flag in lvmetad indicates it has been disabled.
Other flags indicate the reason it was disabled.
These flags can be queried using get_global_info.
The lvmetactl debugging utility can set and clear the
disabled flag in lvmetad. Nothing else sets the
disabled flag yet.
Commands will check these flags after connecting to
lvmetad. If the disabled flag is set, the command
will not use the lvmetad cache, but revert to disk
scanning.
To test this feature:
$ lvmetactl get_global_info
response = "OK"
global_invalid = 0
global_disable = 0
disable_reason = "none"
token = "filter:3041577944"
$ vgs
(should report VGs from lvmetad)
$ lvmetactl set_global_disable 1
$ lvmetactl get_global_info
response = "OK"
global_invalid = 0
global_disable = 1
disable_reason = "DIRECT"
token = "filter:3041577944"
$ vgs
WARNING: Not using lvmetad because the disable flag was set directly.
(should report VGs without contacting lvmetad)
$ lvmetactl set_global_disable 0
$ vgs
(should report VGs from lvmetad)
process_each_pv was doing:
1. lvmcache_seed_infos_from_lvmetad()
sends pv_list request to lvmetad.
2. get_vgnameids()
sends vg_list request to lvmetad.
3. _get_all_devices()
first calls lvmcache_seed_infos_from_lvmetad(),
which is a no-op if it's already been called.
Because get_vgnameids() does not use the information
from lvmcache_seed_infos_from_lvmetad(), it does not
need to be called prior to get_all_devices where
it is actually needed.
Improve code for snapshot merge for readabilty
and also reduce number of tests needed to decide
if merging can or cannot be started.
(Further improving 9cccf5245a)
When dm_tree_find_node_by_uuid() fails to find passed uuid,
report in lof_debug the complete original uuid,
not the one stripped of LVM- prefix.
TODO: inspect manipulation with LVM- prefix here.
To recognize in runtime if we are merging or not
to make consistent decision between suspend and resume
add function to parse thin table line when add
merging thin device to the table.
A snapshot merge into its origin cannot be initiated while the devices
are in use. If there is outside interference (such as from udev),
the suspend (preload) and resume stages can reach conflicting decisions
about whether or not to proceed.
Try to make the logic more robust by checking the inactive or live
table during resume. (This is still not perfect.)
Commit 971ab733b7 ("thin: activation of
merging thin snapshot") also added an incorrect deactivation attempt
for non-thin LVs: find_snapshot(lv)->lv is not designed to be
activated and any attempt to deactivate it is incorrect.
Move checking the lvmetad state, and the possible rescan,
out of lvmetad_send() to the start of the command.
Previously, the token mismatch and rescan would occur
within lvmetad_send() for some other request. Now,
the token mismatch is detected earlier, so the
rescan can be done before the main command is in
progress. Rescanning deep within the processing of
another command will disturb the lvmcache state of
that other command.
A rescan already exists at the start of the command
for the case where foreign VGs are going to be read.
This same rescan is now also performed when there is
an lvmetad token mismatch (from a changed global_filter).
The commands pvscan/vgscan/lvscan/vgimport are excluded
from this preemptive checking/rescanning for lvmetad
because they want to do rescanning themselves explicitly.
If rescanning devices fails, then lvmetad has not been
correctly repopulated and should not be used, so make
the command revert to not using lvmetad.
When not obtaining device from udev, we are doing deep devdir scan,
and at the same time we try to insert everything what /sys/dev/block
knows about. However in case lvm2 is configured to use nonstardard
devdir this way it will see (and scan) devices from a real system.
lvm2 test suite is using its own test devdir with its
own device nodes. To avoid touching real /dev devices, validate
the device node exist in give dir and do not insert such device
into a cache.
With obtain list from udev this patch has no effect
(the normal user path).
We have _insert_dirs() for udev and non-udev compilation.
Compiling without udev missed to call dev_cache_index_devs().
Move the call after _insert_dirs() call so both compilation
gets it.
When scanning if device is being usable as PV,
we call STATUS - but this status should not cause
any flushing.
Skip also open_count information as it's not needed.
We don't have any report field of this type yet. Return this patch into
the play if we really need that. Currenly we always report status
(result of "status" dm ioctl) for an LV as a whole where we choose
segment which represents the LV, not calling status for each possible
segment it contains - we don't need this now so I'm removing it to
not make the code more complex uselessly.
Devices without "LVM-" uuid prefix have been generated by very old
version of lvm2 2.00 and 2.01.
Since version 2.02 all lvm2 devices are using prefix "LVM-".
However checking for present of ancient non prefixed devices does
take extra IOCTL per every call and for majority of todays user
it will not find anything new.
So use the assumption that users with kernel 3.X and newer are not
really using such old versions of lvm2 (year <2005) and with their
new kernel they are also using new version of lvm2 and skip
checking for them.
This change also makes trace logs more readable.
This is hotfix for RHBZ: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/1324537
However already the %FREE is not a good fit and we need something
better. Meanwhile make -l%PVS work at least as good as %FREE
for thin-pool.
TODO: this needs rework - it should be allocator to do all the size
decisions at one place.
Improved test script to verify lost mirror image does not
cause mirror corruption while mirror is in use.
TODO: add more cases (lost mlog...), lost image from 3leg mirror...
When leaving preload routine it should not altet state of flush required
when it's been already set to 1 and drop it to 0.
The API here is unclean, but current usage expects the same
variable pointer is for all preload calls and combines 'flush_required'
across all of them.
Commit 844b009584 tried to move
limit for usage of noflush to 'preload' however this was not
correctly processed.
Intead explicitly check for which types we do not want noflush
and also add debug message in this case.
Fix regression caused by commit ba41ee1dc9.
The idea was to use no_flush for changed device only for thin volumes
and thin pools but also to merge this with change made in commit
844b009584.
However the resulting condition has caused misbehavior for the mirror
suspend - as that has been before the ONLY allowed target type
that could have been suspended with noflush.
Result was badly working repair for --type mirror that has been
passing 'flush' to the repaired mirror target whenever preload
wrongly set flush_required.
The origin code has required the flush_required to be set whenever
deivce size is changed.
Now it first detects if device size got smaller
'dm_tree_node_size_changed(root) < 0' - this requires flush.
Otherwise it checks device is not thin volume nor thin pool and its
size has changed (got bigger) and requires flush.
This mean upsize of thin-pool or thin volume will not require flush.
# lvmdbusd relies on command log report to inspect LVM command's execution status
report_command_log=1
# display only outermost LVM shell-related log that lvmdbusd inspects first after LVM command execution (it calls 'lastlog' for more detailed log afterwards if needed)
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