Commit Graph

320 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Brian Behlendorf 9a6d4c547a Merge commit 'refs/top-bases/linux-user-disk' into linux-user-disk 2010-05-27 13:51:51 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 028e42b692 Merge commit 'refs/top-bases/zfs-branch' into zfs-branch 2010-05-27 13:42:00 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf d8e5eb56b8 Merge branch 'feature-branch' into refs/top-bases/zfs-branch 2010-05-27 13:42:00 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf cde6e6fec8 Merge commit 'refs/top-bases/feature-branch' into feature-branch 2010-05-27 13:40:15 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 1e32b3c781 Revert feature-commit-cb feature upstream
We can drop this feature and we will pick up the lastest version
during the b141 update.
2010-05-27 13:39:17 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 9f83c4b546 Merge commit 'refs/top-bases/linux-user-disk' into linux-user-disk
Conflicts:
	lib/libzpool/kernel.c
2010-05-27 13:36:18 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 51536ea5f4 Merge commit 'refs/top-bases/zfs-branch' into zfs-branch 2010-05-27 13:32:58 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf c17d3e05eb Merge branch 'feature-branch' into refs/top-bases/zfs-branch 2010-05-27 13:32:58 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf a082023842 Merge commit 'refs/top-bases/feature-branch' into feature-branch
Conflicts:
	cmd/ztest/ztest.c
	lib/libzpool/include/sys/zfs_context.h
	lib/libzpool/kernel.c
	lib/libzpool/taskq.c
2010-05-27 13:30:48 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 099e8e493a Remove feature-pthreads prior to b141 update.
The pthreads change will need to be reworked and reapplied.
This will be easier to do from scratch rather than sort out
the merge.
2010-05-27 13:23:58 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 9d8124099b Merge commit 'refs/top-bases/linux-user-disk' into linux-user-disk 2010-05-14 12:54:14 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 98d5d8bd50 Add missing include path for FMA aware zpool command. 2010-05-14 11:57:48 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf aafdbe5d6e Check all partitions with check_file() even when no libblkid is found
When creating a new pool on a block device we need to check all the
partitions even if we don't have liblkdid support.  In this case
we can't consult the blkid cache but we still can call check_file()
and attempt to read a valid label from each partition.

Additionally, the O_EXCL flag was removed because the device will
be opened multiple times and this was causing the check the file.
The device is only opened read-only anyway so this is still safe.

$ sudo zpool create tank /dev/sdz
invalid vdev specification
use '-f' to override the following errors:
/dev/sdz1 is part of potentially active pool 'tank'
2010-04-23 10:59:31 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 4b2b113239 Merge commit 'refs/top-bases/linux-user-disk' into linux-user-disk 2010-03-09 12:31:18 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 8f63d438cd Merge commit 'refs/top-bases/zfs-branch' into zfs-branch 2010-03-09 12:30:18 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 48e74ed68b Merge branch 'feature-branch' into refs/top-bases/zfs-branch
Conflicts:

	cmd/ztest/ztest.c
2010-03-09 12:30:03 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 9a3d5378c6 Clean up emulation of kernel threads in userspace.
Updated to use pthread thread specific data rather than keeping
a global list.  This also fixes at least one easily reproducible
crash in ztest
2010-03-09 12:25:28 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 44d8092c2c Merge commit 'refs/top-bases/linux-user-disk' into linux-user-disk 2010-03-02 10:05:09 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 7df02c0f57 Split the udev rule from a specific configuration
While I completely agree the udev is the lesser of many possibles
evils when solving the device issue... it is still evil.  After
attempting to craft a single rule which will work for various
versions of udev in various distros.  I've come to the conclusion
the only maintainable way to solve this issue is to split the rule
from any particular configuration.

This commit provides a generic 60-zpool.rules file which use a
small helper util 'zpool_id' to parse a configuration file by
default located in /etc/zfs/zdev.conf.  The helper script maps
a by-path udev name to a more friendly name of <channel><rank>
for large configurations.

As part of this change all of the support scripts why rely on
this udev naming convention have been updated as needed.  Example
zdev.conf files have also been added for 3 different systems by
you will always need to add one for your exact hardware.

Finally, included in these changes are the proper tweaks to the
build system to ensure everything still get's packaged properly
in the rpms and can run in or out of tree.
2010-03-01 16:51:21 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 60c9121dd2 Merge commit 'refs/top-bases/linux-user-disk' into linux-user-disk 2010-01-08 11:40:14 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 303d9f010d Merge commit 'refs/top-bases/zfs-branch' into zfs-branch 2010-01-08 11:39:31 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 710e779a08 Merge commit 'refs/top-bases/feature-pthreads' into feature-pthreads 2010-01-08 11:39:30 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf a240c39095 Merge commit 'refs/top-bases/feature-commit-cb' into feature-commit-cb 2010-01-08 11:39:29 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf eaf2e3231c Merge branch 'feature-zap-cursor-to-key' into refs/top-bases/feature-branch 2010-01-08 11:39:28 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 6cb71e1dec Merge branch 'gcc-branch' into refs/top-bases/zfs-branch 2010-01-08 11:39:14 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf e69572c1b5 Merge branch 'gcc-c90' into refs/top-bases/gcc-branch 2010-01-08 11:39:00 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 69804965e9 Merge commit 'refs/top-bases/gcc-c90' into gcc-c90 2010-01-08 11:39:00 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 4cd8e49a69 Add .gitignore files to exclude build products 2010-01-08 11:35:17 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf aebe6818a9 Linux ZVOL implementation; user-side changes
At last a useful user space interface for the Linux ZFS port arrives.
With the addition of the ZVOL real ZFS based block devices are available
and can be compared head to head with Linux's MD and LVM block drivers.
The Linux ZVOL has not yet had any performance work done but from a user
perspective it should be functionally complete and behave like any other
Linux block device.

The ZVOL has so far been tested using zconfig.sh on the following x86_64
based platforms: FC11, CHAOS4, RHEL5, RHEL6, and SLES11.  However, more
testing is required to ensure everything is working as designed.

What follows in a somewhat detailed list of changes includes in this
commit to make ZVOL's possible.  A few other issues were addressed in
the context of these changes which will also be mentioned.

* zvol_create_link_common() simplified to simply issue to ioctl to
create the device and then wait up to 10 seconds for it to appear.
The device will be created within a few miliseconds by udev under
/dev/<pool>/<volume>.  Note this naming convention is slightly
different than on Solaris by I feel is more Linuxy.

* Removed support for dump vdevs.  This concept is specific to Solaris
and done not map cleanly to Linux.  Under Linux generating system cores
is perferably done over the network via netdump, or alternately to a
block device via O_DIRECT.
2009-11-20 12:00:08 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf a9accbcb57 Always open using O_EXCL to ensure the device is not in use.
Allow partition tables on md devices but not dm- devices.
2009-10-27 14:58:12 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 29c9a2518c Properly handle block devices other the IDE and SCSI disks.
Based on the block device type we can expect a specific naming
convention.  With this in mind update efi_get_info() to be more
aware of the type when parsing out the partition number.  In,
addition be aware that all block device types are not partitionable.
Finally, when attempting to lookup a device partition by appending
the partition number to the whole device take in to account the
kernel naming scheme.  If the last character of the device name
is a digit the partition will always be 'p#' instead of just '#'.
2009-10-23 16:25:16 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 8a34963bec Merge commit 'refs/top-bases/linux-user-disk' into linux-user-disk 2009-10-23 12:28:10 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 74b67983f1 Merge commit 'refs/top-bases/zfs-branch' into zfs-branch 2009-10-23 12:24:39 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf edb22b6a3e Merge branch 'gcc-branch' into refs/top-bases/zfs-branch 2009-10-23 12:24:38 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf d8d360724d Merge branch 'gcc-uninit' into refs/top-bases/gcc-branch 2009-10-23 12:24:37 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 24f3d6e49e Misc fixed based on testing with the dragon config.
In check_disk() we should only check the entire device if it
not a whole disk.  It is a whole disk with an EFI label on it,
it is possible that libblkid will misidentify the device as a
filesystem.  I had a case yesterday where 2 bytes in the EFI
GUID happened we set to the right values such that libblkid
decided there was a minux filesystem there.  If it's a whole
device we look for a EFI label.

If we are able to read the backup EFI label from a device but
the primary is corrupt.  Then don't bother trying to stat
the partitions in /dev/ the kernel will not create devices
using the backup label when the primary is damaged.

Add code to determine if we have a udev path instead of a
normal device path.  In this case use the -part# partition
naming scheme instead of the /dev/disk# scheme.  This is
important because we always want to access devices using
the full path provided at configuration time.

Readded support for zpool_relabel_disk() now that we have
the full libefi library in place we do have access to this
functionality.

Lots of additional paranoia to ensure EFI label are written
correctly.  These changes include:

1) Removing the O_NDELAY flag when opening a file descriptor
for libefi.  This flag should really only be used when you
do not intend to do any file IO.  Under Solaris only ioctl()'s
were performed under linux we do perform reads and writes.

2) Use O_DIRECT to ensure any caching is bypassed while
writing or reading the EFI labels.  This change forces the
use of sector aligned memory buffers which are allocated
using posix_memalign().

3) Add additional efi_debug error messages to efi_ioctl().

4) While doing a fsync is good to ensure the EFI label is on
disk we can, and should go one step futher by issuing the
BLKFLSBUF ioctl().  This signals the kernel to instruct the
drive to flush it's on-disk cache.

5) Because of some initial strangeness I observed in testing
with some flakey drives be extra paranoid in zpool_label_disk().
After we've written the device without error, flushed the drive
caches, correctly detected the new partitions created by the
kernel.  Then additionally read back the EFI label from user
space to make sure it is intact and correct.  I don't think we
can ever be to careful here.

NOTE: The was recently some concern expressed that writing EFI
labels from user space on Linux was not the right way to do this.
That instead two kernel ioctl()s should be used to create and
remove partitions.  After some investigation it's clear to me
using those ioctl() would be a bad idea.  The in fact don't
actually write partition tables to the disk, they only create
the partition devices in the kernel.  So what you really want
to do is write the label out from user space, then prompt the
kernel to re-read the partition from disk to create the partitions.
This is in fact exactly what newer version of parted do.
2009-10-23 11:57:59 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 5972702242 Add two more possible uninit vars flagged by gcc. 2009-10-23 11:43:09 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf aec988734b Command 'zpool create' needs to wait on correct partition names.
When creating partition tables we always need to wait until not
only the /dev/<disk><part> device appears.  But just as importantly
if we were originally given a udev path we need to wait for the
/dev/disk/*/<name>-part<part> symlink to be created.  However,
since the partition naming convention differs between /dev/ and
/dev/disk we determine based on the path which convention to
expect and then wait (for a few seconds) for the device to be
created.  Based on my experience with udev on my test nodes it
takes about 300ms for the devices to be created after being
prompted by the kernel.  This time will vary somehwat based
on how complicated your udev rules are, so for safety I threw
in a factor of 10.  We wait 3 seconds for the devices to appears
before erroring out with a failure.

An additional minor fix includes checking the force flag in the
EFI_GPT_PRIMARY_CORRUPT case.  This allows you to force the
update even in the corrupt partition case.

Finally, since these are Linux only changes I've dropped the
devid code entirely here because I still can't think of why we
would need or want it on a Linux system.
2009-10-21 11:50:42 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 5be28776fb Always preserve the passed path at creation time so udev may be used
After spending considerable time thinking about this I've come to the
conclusion that on Linux systems we don't need Solaris style devid
support.  Instead was can simply use udev if we are careful, there
are even some advantages.

The Solaris style devid's are designed to provide a mechanism by which
a device can be opened reliably regardless of it's location in the system.
This is exactly what udev provides us on Linux, a flexible mechanism for
consistently identifing the same devices regardless of probing order.
We just need to be careful to always open the device by the path provided
at creation time, this path must be stored in ZPOOL_CONFIG_PATH.  This
in fact has certain advantages.

For example, if in your system you always want the zpool to be able to
locate the disk regardless of physical location you can create the pool
using /dev/disk/by-id/.  This is perhaps what you'ld want on a desktop
system where the exact location is not that important.  It's more
critical that all the disks can be found.

However, in an enterprise setup there's a good chace that the physical
location of each drive is important.  You have like set things up such
that your raid groups span multiple hosts adapters, such that you can
lose an adapter without downtime.  In this case you would want to use
the /dev/disk/by-path/ path to ensure the path information is preserved
and you always open the disks at the right physical locations.  This
would ensure your system never gets accidently misconfigured and still
just works because the zpool was still able to locate the disk.

Finally, if you want to get really fancy you can always create your
own udev rules.  This way you could implement whatever lookup sceme
you wanted in user space for your drives.  This would include nice
cosmetic things like being able to control the device names in tools
like zpool status, since the name as just based of the device names.

I've yet to come up with a good reason to implement devid support on
Linux since we have udev.  But I've still just commented it out for now
because somebody might come up with a really good I forgot.
2009-10-19 13:46:48 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 58d6f53677 Minor bug wholedisk is only valid for VDEV_DISK types. 2009-10-16 10:41:40 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 3d24809465 Merge commit 'refs/top-bases/linux-user-disk' into linux-user-disk 2009-10-15 16:45:11 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 48d1b0c5ab Cleanly integrate ZFS tools with libblkid.
The majority of this this patch concerns itself with doing a direct
replacement of Solaris's libdiskmgt library with libblkid+libefi.
You'll notice that this patch removes all libdiskmgt code instead of
ifdef'ing it out.  This was done to minimize any confusion when reading
the code because it seems unlikely we will ever port libdiskmgt to Linux.

Despite the replacement the behavior of the tools should have remained
the same with one exception.  For the moment, we are unable to check
the partitions of devices which have an MBR style partition table when
creating a filesystem.  If a non-efi partition sceme is detected on a
whole disk device we prompt the user to explicity use the force option.
It would not be a ton of work to make the tool aware of MBR style
partitions if this becomes a problem.

I've done basic sanity checking for various configurations and all
the issues I'm aware of have been addressed.  Even things like blkid
misidentifing a disk as ext3 when it is added to a zfs pool.  I'm
careful to always zero out the first 4k of any new zfs partition.  That
all said this is all new code and while it looks like it's working right
for me we should keep an eye on it for any strange behavior.
2009-10-15 16:28:47 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf a09d33e929 Update build system for libblkid integration 2009-10-15 16:25:18 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 992be351d5 Changes required to integrate libefi in to Linux.
The major change here is to fix up libefi to be linux aware.  For
the most part this wasn't too hard but there were a few major issues.

First off I needed to handle the DKIOCGMEDIAINFO and DKIOCINFO ioctls.
There is no direct equivilant for these ioctls under linux.  To handle
this I added wrapper functions which under Solaris simple call the ioctls.
But under Linux dig around the system a little bit getting the needed
info to fill in the requested structures.

Secondly the efi_ioctl() call was adapted such that under linux it directly
read or writes out the partition table.  Under Solaris this work was
handed off to the kernel via an ioctl.  In the efi_write() case we also
ensure we prompt the kernel via BLKRRPART to re-scan the new partition
table.  The libefi generated partition tables are correct but older
versions of ~parted-1.8.1 can not read them without a small patch.
The kernel and fdisk are able to read them just fine.

Thirdly efi_alloc_and_init() which is used by zpool to determine if a
device is a 'wholedisk' was updated to be linux aware.  This check is
performed by using the partition number for the device, which the
partition number is 0 on linux it is a 'wholedisk'.  However, certain
device type such as the loopback and ram disks needed to be excluded
because they do not support partitioning.

Forthly the zpool command was made symlink aware so it can correctly
resolve udev entries such as /dev/disk/by-*/*.  This symlinks are
fully expanded ensuring all block devices are recognized.  When a
when a 'wholedisk' block device is detected we now properly write
out an efi label and place zfs in the first partition (0th slice).
This partition is created 1MiB in to the disk to ensure it is aligned
nicely with all high end block devices I'm aware of.

This all works for me now but it did take quite a bit of work to get
it all sorted out.  It would not surprise me if certain special cases
were missed so we should keep any eye of for any odd behavior.
2009-10-14 16:07:48 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 245e7692f7 Merge commit 'refs/top-bases/linux-user-disk' into linux-user-disk 2009-10-14 15:58:55 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 09a8c99097 Additional build system update for libefi library.
This include updating all the Makefile.am to have the correct
include paths and libraries.  In addition, the zlib m4 macro was
updated to more correctly integrate with the Makefiles.  And I
added two new macros libblkid and libuuid which will be needed by
subsequent commits for blkid and uuid support respectively.  The
blkid support is optional, the uuid support is mandatory for libefi.
2009-10-14 15:47:41 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 81ec3f8951 Merge commit 'refs/top-bases/linux-user-disk' into linux-user-disk 2009-10-09 16:43:53 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf cb91bbe6ce Additional set of build system tweaks for libefi library. 2009-10-09 16:37:32 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 7c073d0a7d Merge commit 'refs/top-bases/linux-user-disk' into linux-user-disk 2009-10-09 16:09:54 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf a0337cfcd8 Add libefi library in to the build system. 2009-10-09 15:58:45 -07:00