#!/bin/sh # Copyright (C) 2009 Red Hat, Inc. All rights reserved. # # This copyrighted material is made available to anyone wishing to use, # modify, copy, or redistribute it subject to the terms and conditions # of the GNU General Public License v.2. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License # along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, # Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA . lib/test # skip this test if mdadm or sfdisk (or others) aren't available which mdadm || skip which sfdisk || skip which perl || skip which awk || skip which cut || skip test -f /proc/mdstat && grep -q raid0 /proc/mdstat || \ modprobe raid0 || skip aux lvmconf 'devices/md_component_detection = 1' aux extend_filter_LVMTEST aux extend_filter "a|/dev/md.*|" aux prepare_devs 2 # Have MD use a non-standard name to avoid colliding with an existing MD device # - mdadm >= 3.0 requires that non-standard device names be in /dev/md/ # - newer mdadm _completely_ defers to udev to create the associated device node mdadm_maj=$(mdadm --version 2>&1 | perl -pi -e 's|.* v(\d+).*|\1|') [ $mdadm_maj -ge 3 ] && \ mddev=/dev/md/md_lvm_test0 || \ mddev=/dev/md_lvm_test0 cleanup_md() { # sleeps offer hack to defeat: 'md: md127 still in use' # see: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=509908#c25 aux udev_wait mdadm --stop "$mddev" || true aux udev_wait if [ -b "$mddev" ]; then # mdadm doesn't always cleanup the device node sleep 2 rm -f "$mddev" fi } cleanup_md_and_teardown() { cleanup_md aux teardown } # create 2 disk MD raid0 array (stripe_width=128K) test -b "$mddev" && skip mdadm --create --metadata=1.0 "$mddev" --auto=md --level 0 --raid-devices=2 --chunk 64 "$dev1" "$dev2" trap 'cleanup_md_and_teardown' EXIT # cleanup this MD device at the end of the test test -b "$mddev" || skip cp -LR "$mddev" "$DM_DEV_DIR" # so that LVM/DM can see the device lvmdev="$DM_DEV_DIR/md_lvm_test0" # Test alignment of PV on MD without any MD-aware or topology-aware detection # - should treat $mddev just like any other block device pv_align="1.00m" pvcreate --metadatasize 128k \ --config 'devices {md_chunk_alignment=0 data_alignment_detection=0 data_alignment_offset_detection=0}' \ "$lvmdev" check pv_field "$lvmdev" pe_start $pv_align # Test md_chunk_alignment independent of topology-aware detection pv_align="1.00m" pvcreate --metadatasize 128k \ --config 'devices {data_alignment_detection=0 data_alignment_offset_detection=0}' \ "$lvmdev" check pv_field "$lvmdev" pe_start $pv_align # Test newer topology-aware alignment detection # - first added to 2.6.31 but not "reliable" until 2.6.33 if kernel_at_least 2 6 33 ; then pv_align="1.00m" # optimal_io_size=131072, minimum_io_size=65536 pvcreate --metadatasize 128k \ --config 'devices { md_chunk_alignment=0 }' "$lvmdev" check pv_field "$lvmdev" pe_start $pv_align fi # partition MD array directly, depends on blkext in Linux >= 2.6.28 if kernel_at_least 2 6 28 ; then # create one partition sfdisk "$mddev" < parent lookup via sysfs paths not pvcreate --metadatasize 128k "$lvmdev" # verify alignment_offset is accounted for in pe_start # - topology infrastructure is available in Linux >= 2.6.31 # - also tests partition -> parent lookup via sysfs paths # Oh joy: need to lookup /sys/block/md127 rather than /sys/block/md_lvm_test0 mddev_maj_min=$(ls -lL "$mddev" | awk '{ print $5 $6 }' | perl -pi -e 's|,|:|') mddev_p_sysfs_name=$(echo /sys/dev/block/${mddev_maj_min}/*p1) base_mddev_p=`basename $mddev_p_sysfs_name` mddev_p=/dev/${base_mddev_p} # in case the system is running without devtmpfs /dev # wait here for created device node on tmpfs aux udev_wait "$mddev_p" test -b "$mddev_p" || skip cp -LR "$mddev_p" "$DM_DEV_DIR" lvmdev_p="$DM_DEV_DIR/$base_mddev_p" # Checking for 'alignment_offset' in sysfs implies Linux >= 2.6.31 # but reliable alignment_offset support requires kernel.org Linux >= 2.6.33 sysfs_alignment_offset=/sys/dev/block/${mddev_maj_min}/${base_mddev_p}/alignment_offset [ -f $sysfs_alignment_offset ] && kernel_at_least 2 6 33 && \ alignment_offset=`cat $sysfs_alignment_offset` || \ alignment_offset=0 if [ $alignment_offset -gt 0 ]; then # default alignment is 1M, add alignment_offset pv_align=$((1048576+$alignment_offset))B pvcreate --metadatasize 128k "$lvmdev_p" check pv_field "$lvmdev_p" pe_start $pv_align --units b pvremove "$lvmdev_p" fi fi # Test newer topology-aware alignment detection w/ --dataalignment override if kernel_at_least 2 6 33 ; then cleanup_md pvcreate -f "$dev1" pvcreate -f "$dev2" # create 2 disk MD raid0 array (stripe_width=2M) test -b "$mddev" && skip mdadm --create --metadata=1.0 "$mddev" --auto=md --level 0 --raid-devices=2 --chunk 1024 "$dev1" "$dev2" test -b "$mddev" || skip # optimal_io_size=2097152, minimum_io_size=1048576 pv_align="2.00m" pvcreate --metadatasize 128k \ --config 'devices { md_chunk_alignment=0 }' "$lvmdev" pvscan # Something is seriously broken. check pv_field "$lvmdev" pe_start $pv_align # now verify pe_start alignment override using --dataalignment pv_align="192.00k" pvcreate --dataalignment 64k --metadatasize 128k \ --config 'devices { md_chunk_alignment=0 }' "$lvmdev" check pv_field "$lvmdev" pe_start $pv_align fi