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c9d168bbe4
The startup event intends to mark interfaces up. However, it doesn't actually do that because $INTERFACES is empty. This uses the function get_all_interfaces() to list the interfaces... and then mark them up. Signed-off-by: Martin Schwenke <martin@meltin.net> (This used to be ctdb commit fc62bf0975c6059ee467285565d0dc3b4daaf238)
294 lines
7.7 KiB
Bash
Executable File
294 lines
7.7 KiB
Bash
Executable File
#!/bin/sh
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#################################
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# interface event script for ctdb
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# this adds/removes IPs from your
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# public interface
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. $CTDB_BASE/functions
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loadconfig
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[ -z "$CTDB_PUBLIC_ADDRESSES" ] && {
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CTDB_PUBLIC_ADDRESSES=$CTDB_BASE/public_addresses
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}
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[ ! -f "$CTDB_PUBLIC_ADDRESSES" ] && {
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exit 0
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}
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mark_up ()
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{
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up_interfaces_found=true
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ctdb setifacelink $1 up >/dev/null 2>&1
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}
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mark_down ()
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{
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fail=true
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ctdb setifacelink $1 down >/dev/null 2>&1
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}
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# This sets $all_interfaces as a side-effect.
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get_all_interfaces ()
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{
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# Get all the interfaces listed in the public_addresses file
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all_interfaces=$(sed -e "s/^[^\t ]*[\t ]*//" -e "s/,/ /g" -e "s/[\t ]*$//" $CTDB_PUBLIC_ADDRESSES)
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# Add some special interfaces if they're defined
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[ "$CTDB_PUBLIC_INTERFACE" ] && all_interfaces="$CTDB_PUBLIC_INTERFACE $all_interfaces"
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[ "$CTDB_NATGW_PUBLIC_IFACE" ] && all_interfaces="$CTDB_NATGW_PUBLIC_IFACE $all_interfaces"
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# For all but the 1st line, get the 2nd last field with commas
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# changes to spaces.
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ctdb_ifaces=$(ctdb -Y ip -v | sed -e '1d' -e 's/:[^:]*:$//' -e 's/^.*://' -e 's/,/ /g')
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# Add $ctdb_interfaces and uniquify
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all_interfaces=$(echo $all_interfaces $ctdb_ifaces | tr ' ' '\n' | sort -u)
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}
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monitor_interfaces()
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{
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get_all_interfaces
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fail=false
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up_interfaces_found=false
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for iface in $all_interfaces ; do
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ip addr show $iface 2>/dev/null >/dev/null || {
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echo Interface $iface does not exist but it is used by public addresses.
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continue
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}
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# These interfaces are sometimes bond devices
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# When we use VLANs for bond interfaces, there will only
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# be an entry in /proc for the underlying real interface
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realiface=`echo $iface |sed -e 's/\..*$//'`
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bi=$(get_proc "net/bonding/$realiface" 2>/dev/null) && {
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echo "$bi" | grep -q 'Currently Active Slave: None' && {
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echo "ERROR: No active slaves for bond device $realiface"
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mark_down $iface
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continue
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}
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echo "$bi" | grep -q '^MII Status: up' || {
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echo "ERROR: public network interface $realiface is down"
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mark_down $iface
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continue
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}
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echo "$bi" | grep -q '^Bonding Mode: IEEE 802.3ad Dynamic link aggregation' && {
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# This works around a bug in the driver where the
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# overall bond status can be up but none of the actual
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# physical interfaces have a link.
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echo "$bi" | grep 'MII Status:' | tail -n +2 | grep -q '^MII Status: up' || {
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echo No active slaves for 802.ad bond device $realiface
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mark_down $iface
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continue
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}
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}
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mark_up $iface
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continue
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}
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case $iface in
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lo*)
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# loopback is always working
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mark_up $iface
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;;
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ib*)
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# we dont know how to test ib links
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mark_up $iface
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;;
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*)
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[ -z "$iface" ] || {
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[ "$(basename $(readlink /sys/class/net/$iface/device/driver) 2>/dev/null)" = virtio_net ] ||
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ethtool $iface | grep -q 'Link detected: yes' || {
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# On some systems, this is not successful when a
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# cable is plugged but the interface has not been
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# brought up previously. Bring the interface up and
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# try again...
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ip link set $iface up
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ethtool $iface | grep -q 'Link detected: yes' || {
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echo "ERROR: No link on the public network interface $iface"
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mark_down $iface
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continue
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}
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}
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mark_up $iface
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}
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;;
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esac
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done
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$fail || return 0
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$up_interfaces_found && \
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[ "$CTDB_PARTIALLY_ONLINE_INTERFACES" = "yes" ] && \
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return 0
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return 1
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}
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case "$1" in
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#############################
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# called when ctdbd starts up
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init)
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# make sure that we only respond to ARP messages from the NIC where
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# a particular ip address is associated.
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get_proc sys/net/ipv4/conf/all/arp_filter >/dev/null 2>&1 && {
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set_proc sys/net/ipv4/conf/all/arp_filter 1
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}
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;;
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#############################
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# called after ctdbd has done its initial recovery
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# and we start the services to become healthy
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startup)
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# Assume all links are good initially
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get_all_interfaces
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for iface in $all_interfaces ; do
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ctdb setifacelink $iface up >/dev/null 2>/dev/null
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done
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monitor_interfaces
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;;
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################################################
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# called when ctdbd wants to claim an IP address
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takeip)
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if [ $# != 4 ]; then
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echo "must supply interface, IP and maskbits"
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exit 1
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fi
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iface=$2
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ip=$3
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maskbits=$4
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add_ip_to_iface $iface $ip $maskbits || {
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exit 1;
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}
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# cope with the script being killed while we have the interface blocked
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iptables -D INPUT -i $iface -d $ip -j DROP 2> /dev/null
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# flush our route cache
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set_proc sys/net/ipv4/route/flush 1
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;;
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##################################################
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# called when ctdbd wants to release an IP address
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releaseip)
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if [ $# != 4 ]; then
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echo "must supply interface, IP and maskbits"
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exit 1
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fi
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# releasing an IP is a bit more complex than it seems. Once the IP
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# is released, any open tcp connections to that IP on this host will end
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# up being stuck. Some of them (such as NFS connections) will be unkillable
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# so we need to use the killtcp ctdb function to kill them off. We also
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# need to make sure that no new connections get established while we are
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# doing this! So what we do is this:
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# 1) firewall this IP, so no new external packets arrive for it
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# 2) use netstat -tn to find existing connections, and kill them
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# 3) remove the IP from the interface
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# 4) remove the firewall rule
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iface=$2
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ip=$3
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maskbits=$4
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failed=0
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# we do an extra delete to cope with the script being killed
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iptables -D INPUT -i $iface -d $ip -j DROP 2> /dev/null
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iptables -I INPUT -i $iface -d $ip -j DROP
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kill_tcp_connections $ip
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delete_ip_from_iface $iface $ip $maskbits || {
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iptables -D INPUT -i $iface -d $ip -j DROP 2> /dev/null
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exit 1;
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}
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iptables -D INPUT -i $iface -d $ip -j DROP 2> /dev/null
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# flush our route cache
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set_proc sys/net/ipv4/route/flush 1
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;;
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##################################################
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# called when ctdbd wants to update an IP address
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updateip)
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if [ $# != 5 ]; then
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echo "must supply old interface, new interface, IP and maskbits"
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exit 1
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fi
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# moving an IP is a bit more complex than it seems.
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# First we drop all traffic on the old interface.
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# Then we try to add the ip to the new interface and before
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# we finally remove it from the old interface.
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#
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# 1) firewall this IP, so no new external packets arrive for it
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# 2) add the IP to the new interface
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# 3) remove the IP from the old interface
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# 4) remove the firewall rule
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# 5) use ctdb gratiousarp to propagate the new mac address
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# 6) use netstat -tn to find existing connections, and tickle them
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oiface=$2
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niface=$3
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ip=$4
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maskbits=$5
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failed=0
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# we do an extra delete to cope with the script being killed
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iptables -D INPUT -i $oiface -d $ip -j DROP 2> /dev/null
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iptables -I INPUT -i $oiface -d $ip -j DROP
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delete_ip_from_iface $oiface $ip $maskbits 2>/dev/null
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delete_ip_from_iface $niface $ip $maskbits 2>/dev/null
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add_ip_to_iface $niface $ip $maskbits || {
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iptables -D INPUT -i $oiface -d $ip -j DROP 2> /dev/null
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exit 1;
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}
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# cope with the script being killed while we have the interface blocked
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iptables -D INPUT -i $oiface -d $ip -j DROP 2> /dev/null
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# flush our route cache
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set_proc sys/net/ipv4/route/flush 1
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# propagate the new mac address
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ctdb gratiousarp $ip $niface
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# tickle all existing connections, so that dropped packets
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# are retransmited and the tcp streams work
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tickle_tcp_connections $ip
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;;
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###########################################
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# called when ctdbd has finished a recovery
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recovered)
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;;
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####################################
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# called when ctdbd is shutting down
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shutdown)
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;;
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monitor)
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monitor_interfaces || exit 1
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;;
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*)
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ctdb_standard_event_handler "$@"
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;;
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esac
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exit 0
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