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samba-mirror/ctdb/config/events.d/10.interface
Martin Schwenke be71a84565 ctdb-eventscripts: Don't check if $iface is empty
This is the loop variable.  It can't be empty, especially given the
way the list is built.  This must have survived from an earlier
version of the script.

Given that there are whitespace changes associated with the above,
clean-up the "virtio_net" avoidance check so that it reads less like
line-noise.

Signed-off-by: Martin Schwenke <martin@meltin.net>
Reviewed-by: Amitay Isaacs <amitay@gmail.com>
2014-05-05 03:55:08 +02:00

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#!/bin/sh
#################################
# interface event script for ctdb
# this adds/removes IPs from your
# public interface
[ -n "$CTDB_BASE" ] || \
export CTDB_BASE=$(cd -P $(dirname "$0") ; dirname "$PWD")
. $CTDB_BASE/functions
loadconfig
[ -z "$CTDB_PUBLIC_ADDRESSES" ] && {
CTDB_PUBLIC_ADDRESSES=$CTDB_BASE/public_addresses
}
[ ! -f "$CTDB_PUBLIC_ADDRESSES" ] && {
if [ "$1" = "init" ]; then
echo "No public addresses file found. Nothing to do for 10.interfaces"
fi
exit 0
}
mark_up ()
{
up_interfaces_found=true
ctdb setifacelink $1 up >/dev/null 2>&1
}
mark_down ()
{
fail=true
ctdb setifacelink $1 down >/dev/null 2>&1
}
# This sets $all_interfaces as a side-effect.
get_all_interfaces ()
{
# Get all the interfaces listed in the public_addresses file
all_interfaces=$(sed -e "s/^[^\t ]*[\t ]*//" -e "s/,/ /g" -e "s/[\t ]*$//" $CTDB_PUBLIC_ADDRESSES)
# Add some special interfaces if they're defined
[ "$CTDB_PUBLIC_INTERFACE" ] && all_interfaces="$CTDB_PUBLIC_INTERFACE $all_interfaces"
[ "$CTDB_NATGW_PUBLIC_IFACE" ] && all_interfaces="$CTDB_NATGW_PUBLIC_IFACE $all_interfaces"
# Get the interfaces for which CTDB has public IPs configured.
# That is, for all but the 1st line, get the 1st field.
ctdb_ifaces=$(ctdb -Y ifaces | sed -e '1d' -e 's@^:@@' -e 's@:.*@@')
# Add $ctdb_interfaces and uniquify
all_interfaces=$(echo $all_interfaces $ctdb_ifaces | tr ' ' '\n' | sort -u)
}
monitor_interfaces()
{
get_all_interfaces
fail=false
up_interfaces_found=false
# Note that this loop must not exit early. It must process
# all interfaces so that the correct state for each interface
# is set in CTDB using mark_up/mark_down. If there is a
# problem with an interface then set fail=true and continue.
for iface in $all_interfaces ; do
ip link show $iface 2>/dev/null >/dev/null || {
echo "ERROR: Interface $iface does not exist but it is used by public addresses."
mark_down $iface
continue
}
# These interfaces are sometimes bond devices
# When we use VLANs for bond interfaces, there will only
# be an entry in /proc for the underlying real interface
realiface=`echo $iface |sed -e 's/\..*$//'`
bi=$(get_proc "net/bonding/$realiface" 2>/dev/null) && {
echo "$bi" | grep -q 'Currently Active Slave: None' && {
echo "ERROR: No active slaves for bond device $realiface"
mark_down $iface
continue
}
echo "$bi" | grep -q '^MII Status: up' || {
echo "ERROR: public network interface $realiface is down"
mark_down $iface
continue
}
echo "$bi" | grep -q '^Bonding Mode: IEEE 802.3ad Dynamic link aggregation' && {
# This works around a bug in the driver where the
# overall bond status can be up but none of the actual
# physical interfaces have a link.
echo "$bi" | grep 'MII Status:' | tail -n +2 | grep -q '^MII Status: up' || {
echo "ERROR: No active slaves for 802.ad bond device $realiface"
mark_down $iface
continue
}
}
mark_up $iface
continue
}
case $iface in
lo*)
# loopback is always working
mark_up $iface
;;
ib*)
# we dont know how to test ib links
mark_up $iface
;;
*)
# Ignore virtio_net devices, assume they're always up
_driver_path="/sys/class/net/$iface/device/driver"
_driver=$(basename $(readlink "$_driver_path") 2>/dev/null)
[ "$_driver" = "virtio_net" ] && continue
ethtool $iface | grep -q 'Link detected: yes' || {
# On some systems, this is not successful when a
# cable is plugged but the interface has not been
# brought up previously. Bring the interface up
# and try again...
ip link set $iface up
ethtool $iface | grep -q 'Link detected: yes' || {
echo "ERROR: No link on the public network interface $iface"
mark_down $iface
continue
}
}
mark_up $iface
;;
esac
done
$fail || return 0
$up_interfaces_found && \
[ "$CTDB_PARTIALLY_ONLINE_INTERFACES" = "yes" ] && \
return 0
return 1
}
ctdb_check_args "$@"
case "$1" in
#############################
# called when ctdbd starts up
init)
# make sure that we only respond to ARP messages from the NIC where
# a particular ip address is associated.
get_proc sys/net/ipv4/conf/all/arp_filter >/dev/null 2>&1 && {
set_proc sys/net/ipv4/conf/all/arp_filter 1
}
_promote="sys/net/ipv4/conf/all/promote_secondaries"
get_proc "$_promote" >/dev/null 2>&1 || \
die "Public IPs only supported if promote_secondaries is available"
;;
#############################
# called after ctdbd has done its initial recovery
# and we start the services to become healthy
startup)
monitor_interfaces
;;
################################################
# called when ctdbd wants to claim an IP address
takeip)
iface=$2
ip=$3
maskbits=$4
add_ip_to_iface $iface $ip $maskbits || {
exit 1;
}
# cope with the script being killed while we have the interface blocked
iptables -D INPUT -i $iface -d $ip -j DROP 2> /dev/null
# flush our route cache
set_proc sys/net/ipv4/route/flush 1
;;
##################################################
# called when ctdbd wants to release an IP address
releaseip)
# releasing an IP is a bit more complex than it seems. Once the IP
# is released, any open tcp connections to that IP on this host will end
# up being stuck. Some of them (such as NFS connections) will be unkillable
# so we need to use the killtcp ctdb function to kill them off. We also
# need to make sure that no new connections get established while we are
# doing this! So what we do is this:
# 1) firewall this IP, so no new external packets arrive for it
# 2) use netstat -tn to find existing connections, and kill them
# 3) remove the IP from the interface
# 4) remove the firewall rule
iface=$2
ip=$3
maskbits=$4
failed=0
# we do an extra delete to cope with the script being killed
iptables -D INPUT -i $iface -d $ip -j DROP 2> /dev/null
iptables -I INPUT -i $iface -d $ip -j DROP
kill_tcp_connections $ip
delete_ip_from_iface $iface $ip $maskbits || {
iptables -D INPUT -i $iface -d $ip -j DROP 2> /dev/null
exit 1;
}
iptables -D INPUT -i $iface -d $ip -j DROP 2> /dev/null
# flush our route cache
set_proc sys/net/ipv4/route/flush 1
;;
##################################################
# called when ctdbd wants to update an IP address
updateip)
# moving an IP is a bit more complex than it seems.
# First we drop all traffic on the old interface.
# Then we try to add the ip to the new interface and before
# we finally remove it from the old interface.
#
# 1) firewall this IP, so no new external packets arrive for it
# 2) add the IP to the new interface
# 3) remove the IP from the old interface
# 4) remove the firewall rule
# 5) use ctdb gratiousarp to propagate the new mac address
# 6) use netstat -tn to find existing connections, and tickle them
oiface=$2
niface=$3
ip=$4
maskbits=$5
failed=0
# we do an extra delete to cope with the script being killed
iptables -D INPUT -i $oiface -d $ip -j DROP 2> /dev/null
iptables -I INPUT -i $oiface -d $ip -j DROP
delete_ip_from_iface $oiface $ip $maskbits 2>/dev/null
delete_ip_from_iface $niface $ip $maskbits 2>/dev/null
add_ip_to_iface $niface $ip $maskbits || {
iptables -D INPUT -i $oiface -d $ip -j DROP 2> /dev/null
exit 1;
}
# cope with the script being killed while we have the interface blocked
iptables -D INPUT -i $oiface -d $ip -j DROP 2> /dev/null
# flush our route cache
set_proc sys/net/ipv4/route/flush 1
# propagate the new mac address
ctdb gratiousarp $ip $niface
# tickle all existing connections, so that dropped packets
# are retransmited and the tcp streams work
tickle_tcp_connections $ip
;;
monitor)
monitor_interfaces || exit 1
;;
*)
ctdb_standard_event_handler "$@"
;;
esac
exit 0