Call udevadm trigger more safely

Some udev hooks are not designed to be idempotent, so calling udevadm
trigger outside of the distribution's initialization scripts can have
unexpected (and potentially dangerous) side effects.  For example, the
system time may change or devices may appear multiple times.  See Ubuntu
launchpad bug 320200 and this mailing list post for more details:

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-devel/2009-January/027260.html

To avoid these problems we call udevadm trigger with --action=change
--subsystem-match=block.  The first argument tells udev just to refresh
devices, and make sure everything's as it should be.  The second
argument limits the scope to block devices, so devices belonging to
other subsystems cannot be affected.

This doesn't fix the problem on older udev implementations that don't
provide udevadm but instead have udevtrigger as a standalone program.
In this case the above options aren't available so there's no way to
call call udevtrigger safely.  But we can live with that since this
issue only exists in optional test and helper scripts, and most
zfs-on-linux users are running newer systems anyways.
This commit is contained in:
Ned Bass 2011-04-01 09:47:05 -07:00 committed by Brian Behlendorf
parent 34e4864009
commit fa417e57a6
2 changed files with 2 additions and 2 deletions

View File

@ -153,7 +153,7 @@ exec 1>&8 8>&-
popd >/dev/null
if [ ${TRIGGER} = "yes" ]; then
udevadm trigger
udevadm trigger --action=change --subsystem-match=block
udevadm settle
fi

View File

@ -430,7 +430,7 @@ scsi_rescan() {
#
udev_trigger() {
if [ -f ${UDEVADM} ]; then
${UDEVADM} trigger
${UDEVADM} trigger --action=change --subsystem-match=block
${UDEVADM} settle
else
/sbin/udevtrigger