#!/bin/sh # This script only works on Linux. Please modify (and submit patches) # for other operating systems. [ -n "$CTDB_BASE" ] || \ CTDB_BASE=$(d=$(dirname "$0") ; cd -P "$d" ; echo "$PWD") . "${CTDB_BASE}/functions" load_script_options # Testing hook if [ -n "$CTDB_DEBUG_HUNG_SCRIPT_LOGFILE" ] ; then tmp="${CTDB_DEBUG_HUNG_SCRIPT_LOGFILE}.part" exec >>"$tmp" 2>&1 fi ( # No use running several of these in parallel if, say, "releaseip" # event hangs for multiple IPs. In that case the output would be # interleaved in the log and would just be confusing. flock --wait 2 9 || exit 1 echo "===== Start of hung script debug for PID=\"$1\", event=\"$2\" =====" echo "pstree -p -a ${1}:" out=$(pstree -p -a "$1") echo "$out" # Check for processes matching a regular expression and print # stack staces. This could help confirm that certain processes # are stuck in certain places such as the cluster filesystem. The # regexp must separate items with "|" and must not contain # parentheses. The default pattern can be replaced for testing. default_pat='exportfs|rpcinfo' pat="${CTDB_DEBUG_HUNG_SCRIPT_STACKPAT:-${default_pat}}" echo "$out" | sed -r -n "s@.*-(.*(${pat}).*),([0-9]*).*@\\3 \\1@p" | while read pid name ; do trace=$(cat "/proc/${pid}/stack" 2>/dev/null) # No! Checking the exit code afterwards is actually clearer... # shellcheck disable=SC2181 if [ $? -eq 0 ] ; then echo "---- Stack trace of interesting process ${pid}[${name}] ----" echo "$trace" fi done if [ "$2" != "init" ] ; then echo "---- ctdb scriptstatus ${2}: ----" $CTDB scriptstatus "$2" fi echo "===== End of hung script debug for PID=\"$1\", event=\"$2\" =====" if [ -n "$CTDB_DEBUG_HUNG_SCRIPT_LOGFILE" ] ; then mv "$tmp" "$CTDB_DEBUG_HUNG_SCRIPT_LOGFILE" fi ) 9>"${CTDB_SCRIPT_VARDIR}/debug-hung-script.lock"