mdadm/mdadm.h

1911 lines
62 KiB
C
Raw Normal View History

2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
/*
2002-03-08 01:03:52 +01:00
* mdadm - manage Linux "md" devices aka RAID arrays.
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
*
* Copyright (C) 2001-2009 Neil Brown <neilb@suse.de>
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
*
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
* the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
* (at your option) any later version.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
* GNU General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
* along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
* Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
*
* Author: Neil Brown
* Email: <neilb@suse.de>
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
*/
#define _GNU_SOURCE
#define _FILE_OFFSET_BITS 64
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
#include <unistd.h>
#ifdef __GLIBC__
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
extern __off64_t lseek64 __P ((int __fd, __off64_t __offset, int __whence));
#elif !defined(lseek64)
2007-05-21 06:25:53 +02:00
# if defined(__NO_STAT64) || __WORDSIZE != 32
# define lseek64 lseek
# endif
2004-01-22 03:10:29 +01:00
#endif
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <stdint.h>
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <time.h>
#include <sys/time.h>
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
#include <getopt.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <syslog.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
#include <signal.h>
/* Newer glibc requires sys/sysmacros.h directly for makedev() */
#include <sys/sysmacros.h>
#ifdef __dietlibc__
#include <strings.h>
/* dietlibc has deprecated random and srandom!! */
#define random rand
#define srandom srand
2004-01-22 03:10:29 +01:00
#endif
#ifdef NO_COROSYNC
#define CS_OK 1
typedef uint64_t cmap_handle_t;
#else
#include <corosync/cmap.h>
#endif
#ifndef NO_DLM
#include <libdlm.h>
#include <errno.h>
#else
#define LKF_NOQUEUE 0x00000001
#define LKM_PWMODE 4
#define EUNLOCK 0x10002
typedef void *dlm_lshandle_t;
struct dlm_lksb {
int sb_status;
uint32_t sb_lkid;
char sb_flags;
char *sb_lvbptr;
};
#endif
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
#include <linux/kdev_t.h>
2002-04-04 03:58:32 +02:00
/*#include <linux/fs.h> */
#include <sys/mount.h>
#include <asm/types.h>
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
#include <sys/ioctl.h>
#define MD_MAJOR 9
2004-06-04 14:03:19 +02:00
#define MdpMinorShift 6
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
2002-04-04 03:58:32 +02:00
#ifndef BLKGETSIZE64
2004-01-22 03:10:29 +01:00
#define BLKGETSIZE64 _IOR(0x12,114,size_t) /* return device size in bytes (u64 *arg) */
2002-04-04 03:58:32 +02:00
#endif
2002-03-15 06:21:36 +01:00
#define DEFAULT_CHUNK 512
#define DEFAULT_BITMAP_CHUNK 4096
#define DEFAULT_BITMAP_DELAY 5
#define DEFAULT_MAX_WRITE_BEHIND 256
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
Fix all the confusion over directories once and for all. We now have 3 directory definitions: mdmon directory for its pid and sock files (compile time define, not changable at run time), mdmonitor directory which is for the mdadm monitor mode pid file (can only be passed in via command line at the time mdadm is invoked in monitor mode), and the directory for the mdadm incremental assembly map file (compile time define, not changable at run time). Only the mdadm map file still hunts multiple locations, and the number of locations has been reduced to /var/run and the compile time specified location. Re-use of similar sounding defines that actually didn't denote their actual usage at compile time made it more difficult for a person to know what affect changing the compile time defines would have on the resulting programs. This patch renames the various defines to clearly identify which item the define affects. It also reduces the number of various directories which will be searched for these files as this has lead to confusion in mdadm and mdmon in terms of which files should take precedence when files exist in multiple locations, etc. It's best if the person compiling the program intentionally and with planning selects the right directories to be used for the various purposes. Which directory is right depends on which items you are talking about and what boot loader your system uses and what initramfs generation program your system uses. Because of the inter-dependency of all these items it would typically be up to the distribution that mdadm is being integrated into to select the correct values for these defines. Signed-off-by: Doug Ledford <dledford@redhat.com>
2010-07-20 18:15:37 +02:00
/* MAP_DIR should be somewhere that persists across the pivotroot
* from early boot to late boot.
* /run seems to have emerged as the best standard.
*/
Fix all the confusion over directories once and for all. We now have 3 directory definitions: mdmon directory for its pid and sock files (compile time define, not changable at run time), mdmonitor directory which is for the mdadm monitor mode pid file (can only be passed in via command line at the time mdadm is invoked in monitor mode), and the directory for the mdadm incremental assembly map file (compile time define, not changable at run time). Only the mdadm map file still hunts multiple locations, and the number of locations has been reduced to /var/run and the compile time specified location. Re-use of similar sounding defines that actually didn't denote their actual usage at compile time made it more difficult for a person to know what affect changing the compile time defines would have on the resulting programs. This patch renames the various defines to clearly identify which item the define affects. It also reduces the number of various directories which will be searched for these files as this has lead to confusion in mdadm and mdmon in terms of which files should take precedence when files exist in multiple locations, etc. It's best if the person compiling the program intentionally and with planning selects the right directories to be used for the various purposes. Which directory is right depends on which items you are talking about and what boot loader your system uses and what initramfs generation program your system uses. Because of the inter-dependency of all these items it would typically be up to the distribution that mdadm is being integrated into to select the correct values for these defines. Signed-off-by: Doug Ledford <dledford@redhat.com>
2010-07-20 18:15:37 +02:00
#ifndef MAP_DIR
#define MAP_DIR "/run/mdadm"
Fix all the confusion over directories once and for all. We now have 3 directory definitions: mdmon directory for its pid and sock files (compile time define, not changable at run time), mdmonitor directory which is for the mdadm monitor mode pid file (can only be passed in via command line at the time mdadm is invoked in monitor mode), and the directory for the mdadm incremental assembly map file (compile time define, not changable at run time). Only the mdadm map file still hunts multiple locations, and the number of locations has been reduced to /var/run and the compile time specified location. Re-use of similar sounding defines that actually didn't denote their actual usage at compile time made it more difficult for a person to know what affect changing the compile time defines would have on the resulting programs. This patch renames the various defines to clearly identify which item the define affects. It also reduces the number of various directories which will be searched for these files as this has lead to confusion in mdadm and mdmon in terms of which files should take precedence when files exist in multiple locations, etc. It's best if the person compiling the program intentionally and with planning selects the right directories to be used for the various purposes. Which directory is right depends on which items you are talking about and what boot loader your system uses and what initramfs generation program your system uses. Because of the inter-dependency of all these items it would typically be up to the distribution that mdadm is being integrated into to select the correct values for these defines. Signed-off-by: Doug Ledford <dledford@redhat.com>
2010-07-20 18:15:37 +02:00
#endif /* MAP_DIR */
/* MAP_FILE is what we name the map file we put in MAP_DIR, in case you
* want something other than the default of "map"
*/
#ifndef MAP_FILE
#define MAP_FILE "map"
#endif /* MAP_FILE */
/* MDMON_DIR is where pid and socket files used for communicating
* with mdmon normally live. Best is /var/run/mdadm as
Fix all the confusion over directories once and for all. We now have 3 directory definitions: mdmon directory for its pid and sock files (compile time define, not changable at run time), mdmonitor directory which is for the mdadm monitor mode pid file (can only be passed in via command line at the time mdadm is invoked in monitor mode), and the directory for the mdadm incremental assembly map file (compile time define, not changable at run time). Only the mdadm map file still hunts multiple locations, and the number of locations has been reduced to /var/run and the compile time specified location. Re-use of similar sounding defines that actually didn't denote their actual usage at compile time made it more difficult for a person to know what affect changing the compile time defines would have on the resulting programs. This patch renames the various defines to clearly identify which item the define affects. It also reduces the number of various directories which will be searched for these files as this has lead to confusion in mdadm and mdmon in terms of which files should take precedence when files exist in multiple locations, etc. It's best if the person compiling the program intentionally and with planning selects the right directories to be used for the various purposes. Which directory is right depends on which items you are talking about and what boot loader your system uses and what initramfs generation program your system uses. Because of the inter-dependency of all these items it would typically be up to the distribution that mdadm is being integrated into to select the correct values for these defines. Signed-off-by: Doug Ledford <dledford@redhat.com>
2010-07-20 18:15:37 +02:00
* mdmon is needed at early boot then it needs to write there prior
* to /var/run being mounted read/write, and it also then needs to
* persist beyond when /var/run is mounter read-only. So, to be
* safe, the default is somewhere that is read/write early in the
* boot process and stays up as long as possible during shutdown.
*/
#ifndef MDMON_DIR
#define MDMON_DIR "/run/mdadm"
Fix all the confusion over directories once and for all. We now have 3 directory definitions: mdmon directory for its pid and sock files (compile time define, not changable at run time), mdmonitor directory which is for the mdadm monitor mode pid file (can only be passed in via command line at the time mdadm is invoked in monitor mode), and the directory for the mdadm incremental assembly map file (compile time define, not changable at run time). Only the mdadm map file still hunts multiple locations, and the number of locations has been reduced to /var/run and the compile time specified location. Re-use of similar sounding defines that actually didn't denote their actual usage at compile time made it more difficult for a person to know what affect changing the compile time defines would have on the resulting programs. This patch renames the various defines to clearly identify which item the define affects. It also reduces the number of various directories which will be searched for these files as this has lead to confusion in mdadm and mdmon in terms of which files should take precedence when files exist in multiple locations, etc. It's best if the person compiling the program intentionally and with planning selects the right directories to be used for the various purposes. Which directory is right depends on which items you are talking about and what boot loader your system uses and what initramfs generation program your system uses. Because of the inter-dependency of all these items it would typically be up to the distribution that mdadm is being integrated into to select the correct values for these defines. Signed-off-by: Doug Ledford <dledford@redhat.com>
2010-07-20 18:15:37 +02:00
#endif /* MDMON_DIR */
/* FAILED_SLOTS is where to save files storing recent removal of array
* member in order to allow future reuse of disk inserted in the same
* slot for array recovery
*/
#ifndef FAILED_SLOTS_DIR
#define FAILED_SLOTS_DIR "/run/mdadm/failed-slots"
#endif /* FAILED_SLOTS */
#ifndef MDMON_SERVICE
#define MDMON_SERVICE "mdmon"
#endif /* MDMON_SERVICE */
#ifndef GROW_SERVICE
#define GROW_SERVICE "mdadm-grow-continue"
#endif /* GROW_SERVICE */
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
#include "md_u.h"
2002-04-04 03:58:32 +02:00
#include "md_p.h"
#include "bitmap.h"
#include "msg.h"
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
#include <endian.h>
/* Redhat don't like to #include <asm/byteorder.h>, and
* some time include <linux/byteorder/xxx_endian.h> isn't enough,
* and there is no standard conversion function so... */
/* And dietlibc doesn't think byteswap is ok, so.. */
/* #include <byteswap.h> */
#define __mdadm_bswap_16(x) (((x) & 0x00ffU) << 8 | \
((x) & 0xff00U) >> 8)
#define __mdadm_bswap_32(x) (((x) & 0x000000ffU) << 24 | \
((x) & 0xff000000U) >> 24 | \
((x) & 0x0000ff00U) << 8 | \
((x) & 0x00ff0000U) >> 8)
#define __mdadm_bswap_64(x) (((x) & 0x00000000000000ffULL) << 56 | \
((x) & 0xff00000000000000ULL) >> 56 | \
((x) & 0x000000000000ff00ULL) << 40 | \
((x) & 0x00ff000000000000ULL) >> 40 | \
((x) & 0x0000000000ff0000ULL) << 24 | \
((x) & 0x0000ff0000000000ULL) >> 24 | \
((x) & 0x00000000ff000000ULL) << 8 | \
((x) & 0x000000ff00000000ULL) >> 8)
#if !defined(__KLIBC__)
#if BYTE_ORDER == LITTLE_ENDIAN
#define __cpu_to_le16(_x) (unsigned int)(_x)
#define __cpu_to_le32(_x) (unsigned int)(_x)
#define __cpu_to_le64(_x) (unsigned long long)(_x)
#define __le16_to_cpu(_x) (unsigned int)(_x)
#define __le32_to_cpu(_x) (unsigned int)(_x)
#define __le64_to_cpu(_x) (unsigned long long)(_x)
#define __cpu_to_be16(_x) __mdadm_bswap_16(_x)
#define __cpu_to_be32(_x) __mdadm_bswap_32(_x)
#define __cpu_to_be64(_x) __mdadm_bswap_64(_x)
#define __be16_to_cpu(_x) __mdadm_bswap_16(_x)
#define __be32_to_cpu(_x) __mdadm_bswap_32(_x)
#define __be64_to_cpu(_x) __mdadm_bswap_64(_x)
#elif BYTE_ORDER == BIG_ENDIAN
#define __cpu_to_le16(_x) __mdadm_bswap_16(_x)
#define __cpu_to_le32(_x) __mdadm_bswap_32(_x)
#define __cpu_to_le64(_x) __mdadm_bswap_64(_x)
#define __le16_to_cpu(_x) __mdadm_bswap_16(_x)
#define __le32_to_cpu(_x) __mdadm_bswap_32(_x)
#define __le64_to_cpu(_x) __mdadm_bswap_64(_x)
#define __cpu_to_be16(_x) (unsigned int)(_x)
#define __cpu_to_be32(_x) (unsigned int)(_x)
#define __cpu_to_be64(_x) (unsigned long long)(_x)
#define __be16_to_cpu(_x) (unsigned int)(_x)
#define __be32_to_cpu(_x) (unsigned int)(_x)
#define __be64_to_cpu(_x) (unsigned long long)(_x)
#else
# error "unknown endianness."
#endif
#endif /* __KLIBC__ */
/*
* Partially stolen from include/linux/unaligned/packed_struct.h
*/
struct __una_u16 { __u16 x; } __attribute__ ((packed));
struct __una_u32 { __u32 x; } __attribute__ ((packed));
static inline __u16 __get_unaligned16(const void *p)
{
const struct __una_u16 *ptr = (const struct __una_u16 *)p;
return ptr->x;
}
static inline __u32 __get_unaligned32(const void *p)
{
const struct __una_u32 *ptr = (const struct __una_u32 *)p;
return ptr->x;
}
static inline void __put_unaligned16(__u16 val, void *p)
{
struct __una_u16 *ptr = (struct __una_u16 *)p;
ptr->x = val;
}
static inline void __put_unaligned32(__u32 val, void *p)
{
struct __una_u32 *ptr = (struct __una_u32 *)p;
ptr->x = val;
}
/*
* Check at compile time that something is of a particular type.
* Always evaluates to 1 so you may use it easily in comparisons.
*/
#define typecheck(type,x) \
({ type __dummy; \
typeof(x) __dummy2; \
(void)(&__dummy == &__dummy2); \
1; \
})
/*
* These inlines deal with timer wrapping correctly.
*
* time_after(a,b) returns true if the time a is after time b.
*/
#define time_after(a,b) \
(typecheck(unsigned int, a) && \
typecheck(unsigned int, b) && \
((int)((b) - (a)) < 0))
#define time_before(a,b) time_after(b,a)
/*
* min()/max()/clamp() macros that also do
* strict type-checking.. See the
* "unnecessary" pointer comparison.
*/
#define min(x, y) ({ \
typeof(x) _min1 = (x); \
typeof(y) _min2 = (y); \
(void) (&_min1 == &_min2); \
_min1 < _min2 ? _min1 : _min2; })
#define max(x, y) ({ \
typeof(x) _max1 = (x); \
typeof(y) _max2 = (y); \
(void) (&_max1 == &_max2); \
_max1 > _max2 ? _max1 : _max2; })
#define ARRAY_SIZE(x) (sizeof(x)/sizeof(x[0]))
extern const char Name[];
struct md_bb_entry {
unsigned long long sector;
int length;
};
struct md_bb {
int supported;
int count;
struct md_bb_entry *entries;
};
/* general information that might be extracted from a superblock */
struct mdinfo {
mdu_array_info_t array;
mdu_disk_info_t disk;
__u64 events;
int uuid[4];
char name[33];
unsigned long long data_offset;
unsigned long long new_data_offset;
2008-05-15 08:48:19 +02:00
unsigned long long component_size; /* same as array.size, except in
* sectors and up to 64bits.
*/
unsigned long long custom_array_size; /* size for non-default sized
* arrays (in sectors)
*/
kill-subarray: fix, IMSM cannot kill-subarray with unsupported metadata container_content retrieves volume information from disks in the container. For unsupported volumes the function was not returning mdinfo. When all volumes were unsupported the function was returning NULL pointer to block actions on the volumes. Therefore, such volumes were not activated in Incremental and Assembly. As side effect they also could not be deleted using kill-subarray since "kill" function requires to obtain a valid mdinfo from container_content. This patch fixes the kill-subarray problem by allowing to obtain mdinfo of all volumes types including unsupported and introducing new array.status flags. There are following changes: 1. Added MD_SB_BLOCK_VOLUME for blocking an array, other arrays in the container can be activated. 2. Added MD_SB_BLOCK_CONTAINER_RESHAPE block container wide reshapes (like changing disk numbers in arrays). 3. IMSM container_content handler is to load mdinfo for all volumes and set both blocking flags in array.state field in mdinfo of unsupported volumes. In case of some errors, all volumes can be affected. Only blocked array is not activated (also reshaped as result). The container wide reshapes are also blocked since by metadata definition they require modifications of both arrays. 4. Incremental_container and Assemble functions check array.state and do not activate volumes with blocking bits set. 5. assemble_container_content is changed to check container wide reshapes before activating reshapes of assembled containers. 6. Grow_reshape and Grow_continue_command checks blocking bits before starting reshapes or continueing (-G --continue) reshapes. 7. kill-subarray ignores array.state info and can remove requested array. Signed-off-by: Marcin Labun <marcin.labun@intel.com> Signed-off-by: NeilBrown <neilb@suse.de>
2011-10-31 01:29:46 +01:00
#define NO_RESHAPE 0
#define VOLUME_RESHAPE 1
#define CONTAINER_RESHAPE 2
#define RESHAPE_NO_BACKUP 16 /* Mask 'or'ed in */
int reshape_active;
unsigned long long reshape_progress;
int recovery_blocked; /* for external metadata it
* indicates that there is
* reshape in progress in
* container,
* for native metadata it is
* reshape_active field mirror
*/
int journal_device_required;
int journal_clean;
enum {
CONSISTENCY_POLICY_UNKNOWN,
CONSISTENCY_POLICY_NONE,
CONSISTENCY_POLICY_RESYNC,
CONSISTENCY_POLICY_BITMAP,
CONSISTENCY_POLICY_JOURNAL,
CONSISTENCY_POLICY_PPL,
} consistency_policy;
/* During reshape we can sometimes change the data_offset to avoid
* over-writing still-valid data. We need to know if there is space.
* So getinfo_super will fill in space_before and space_after in sectors.
* data_offset can be increased or decreased by this amount.
*/
unsigned long long space_before, space_after;
union {
unsigned long long resync_start; /* per-array resync position */
unsigned long long recovery_start; /* per-device rebuild position */
#define MaxSector (~0ULL) /* resync/recovery complete position */
};
long bitmap_offset; /* 0 == none, 1 == a file */
unsigned int ppl_size;
int ppl_offset;
unsigned long long ppl_sector;
unsigned long safe_mode_delay; /* ms delay to mark clean */
int new_level, delta_disks, new_layout, new_chunk;
int errors;
unsigned long cache_size; /* size of raid456 stripe cache*/
int mismatch_cnt;
char text_version[50];
int container_member; /* for assembling external-metatdata arrays
* This is to be used internally by metadata
* handler only */
int container_enough; /* flag external handlers can set to
* indicate that subarrays have not enough (-1),
* enough to start (0), or all expected disks (1) */
char sys_name[32];
struct mdinfo *devs;
struct mdinfo *next;
2008-05-15 08:48:37 +02:00
/* Device info for mdmon: */
int recovery_fd;
2008-05-15 08:48:37 +02:00
int state_fd;
int bb_fd;
int ubb_fd;
#define DS_FAULTY 1
#define DS_INSYNC 2
#define DS_WRITE_MOSTLY 4
#define DS_SPARE 8
#define DS_BLOCKED 16
#define DS_REMOVE 1024
#define DS_UNBLOCK 2048
2008-05-15 08:48:37 +02:00
int prev_state, curr_state, next_state;
/* info read from sysfs */
enum {
ARRAY_CLEAR,
ARRAY_INACTIVE,
ARRAY_SUSPENDED,
ARRAY_READONLY,
ARRAY_READ_AUTO,
ARRAY_CLEAN,
ARRAY_ACTIVE,
ARRAY_WRITE_PENDING,
ARRAY_ACTIVE_IDLE,
mdadm: Introduce new array state 'broken' for raid0/linear Currently if a md raid0/linear array gets one or more members removed while being mounted, kernel keeps showing state 'clean' in the 'array_state' sysfs attribute. Despite udev signaling the member device is gone, 'mdadm' cannot issue the STOP_ARRAY ioctl successfully, given the array is mounted. Nothing else hints that something is wrong (except that the removed devices don't show properly in the output of mdadm 'detail' command). There is no other property to be checked, and if user is not performing reads/writes to the array, even kernel log is quiet and doesn't give a clue about the missing member. This patch is the mdadm counterpart of kernel new array state 'broken'. The 'broken' state mimics the state 'clean' in every aspect, being useful only to distinguish if an array has some member missing. All necessary paths in mdadm were changed to deal with 'broken' state, and in case the tool runs in a kernel that is not updated, it'll work normally, i.e., it doesn't require the 'broken' state in order to work. Also, this patch changes the way the array state is showed in the 'detail' command (for raid0/linear only) - now it takes the 'array_state' sysfs attribute into account instead of only rely in the MD_SB_CLEAN flag. Cc: Jes Sorensen <jes.sorensen@gmail.com> Cc: NeilBrown <neilb@suse.de> Cc: Song Liu <songliubraving@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Guilherme G. Piccoli <gpiccoli@canonical.com> Signed-off-by: Jes Sorensen <jsorensen@fb.com>
2019-09-03 21:49:01 +02:00
ARRAY_BROKEN,
ARRAY_UNKNOWN_STATE,
} array_state;
struct md_bb bb;
};
struct createinfo {
int uid;
int gid;
int autof;
int mode;
int symlinks;
int names;
int bblist;
struct supertype *supertype;
};
struct spare_criteria {
unsigned long long min_size;
unsigned int sector_size;
};
2002-04-04 03:58:32 +02:00
enum mode {
ASSEMBLE=1,
BUILD,
CREATE,
MANAGE,
MISC,
MONITOR,
2004-06-04 14:03:19 +02:00
GROW,
INCREMENTAL,
AUTODETECT,
mode_count
2002-04-04 03:58:32 +02:00
};
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
extern char short_options[];
extern char short_bitmap_options[];
extern char short_bitmap_auto_options[];
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
extern struct option long_options[];
2003-03-12 23:24:39 +01:00
extern char Version[], Usage[], Help[], OptionHelp[],
*mode_help[],
2004-06-04 14:03:19 +02:00
Help_create[], Help_build[], Help_assemble[], Help_grow[],
Help_incr[],
2002-04-04 03:58:32 +02:00
Help_manage[], Help_misc[], Help_monitor[], Help_config[];
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
/* for option that don't have short equivilents, we assign arbitrary
* numbers later than any 'short' character option.
*/
enum special_options {
AssumeClean = 300,
BitmapChunk,
WriteBehind,
ReAdd,
NoDegraded,
Sparc22,
BackupFile,
HomeHost,
AutoHomeHost,
Symlinks,
AutoDetect,
Waitclean,
DetailPlatform,
KillSubarray,
UpdateSubarray,
IncrementalPath,
NoSharing,
HelpOptions,
Brief,
mdadm: add --no-devices to avoid component devices detail information When people assemble a md raid device with a large number of component deivces (e.g. 1500 DASD disks), the raid device detail information generated by 'mdadm --detail --export $devnode' is very large. It is because the detail information contains information of all the component disks (even the missing/failed ones). In such condition, when udev-md-raid-arrays.rules is triggered and internally calls "mdadm --detail --no-devices --export $devnode", user may observe systemd error message ""invalid message length". It is because the following on-stack raw message buffer in systemd code is not big enough, systemd/src/libudev/libudev-monitor.c _public_ struct udev_device *udev_monito ... struct ucred *cred; union { struct udev_monitor_netlink_header nlh; char raw[8192]; } buf; Even change size of raw[] from 8KB to larger size, it may still be not enough for detail message of a md raid device with much larger number of component devices. To fix this problem, an extra option '--no-devices' is added (the original idea is proposed by Neil Brown). When printing detailed information of a md raid device, if '--no-devices' is specified, then all component devices information will not be printed, then the output message size can be restricted to a small number, even with the systemd only has 8KB on-disk raw buffer, the md raid array udev rules can work correctly without failure message. Signed-off-by: Coly Li <colyli@suse.de> Reviewed-by: NeilBrown <neilb@suse.com> Signed-off-by: Jes Sorensen <jsorensen@fb.com>
2019-07-31 07:29:29 +02:00
NoDevices,
ManageOpt,
Add,
AddSpare,
AddJournal,
Remove,
Fail,
Replace,
With,
MiscOpt,
WaitOpt,
ConfigFile,
ChunkSize,
WriteMostly,
FailFast,
NoFailFast,
Layout,
Auto,
Force,
SuperMinor,
EMail,
ProgramOpt,
Increment,
Fork,
Bitmap,
RebuildMapOpt,
InvalidBackup,
Dynamic hot-plug udev rules for policies Neil, Please consider this patch that once was discussed and I think agreed with in general direction. It was sent a while ago but somehow did not merged into your devel3-2. This patch enables hot-plug of so called bare devices (as understand by domain policies rules in mdadm.conf). Without this patch we do NOT serve hot-plug of bare devices at all. Thanks, Marcin Labun Subject was: FW: Autorebuild, new dynamic udev rules for hot-plugs >>From c0aecd4dd96691e8bfa6f2dc187261ec8bb2c5a2 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Przemyslaw Czarnowski <przemyslaw.hawrylewicz.czarnowski@intel.com> Date: Thu, 23 Dec 2010 16:35:01 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] Dynamic hot-plug udev rules for policies Cc: linux-raid@vger.kernel.org, Williams, Dan J <dan.j.williams@intel.com>, Ciechanowski, Ed <ed.ciechanowski@intel.com> When introducing policies, new hot-plug rules were added to support bare disks. Mdadm was started for each hot plugged block device to determine if it could be used as spare or as a replacement member for degraded array. This patch introduces limitation of range of devices that are handled by mdadm. It limits them to the ones specified in domains associated with the actions: spare-same-port, spare and spare-force. In order to enable hot-plug for bare disks one must update udev rules with command mdadm --activate-domains[=filename] Above command writes udev rule configuration to stdout. If 'filename' is given output is written to the file provided as parameter. It is up to system administrator what should be done later. To make such rule permanent (i.e. remain after reboot) rule should be writen to /lib/udev/rules.d directory. Other cases will just need to write it to /dev/.udev/rules.d directory where temporary rules lies. One should be aware of the meaning of names/priorities of the udev rules. After mdadm.conf is changed one is obliged to re-run "mdadm --activate-domains" command in order to bring the system configuration up to date. All hot-plugged disks containing metadata are still handled by existing rules. Signed-off-by: Przemyslaw Czarnowski <przemyslaw.hawrylewicz.czarnowski@intel.com> Signed-off-by: NeilBrown <neilb@suse.de>
2011-01-25 16:59:32 +01:00
UdevRules,
FreezeReshape,
Continue,
OffRootOpt,
Prefer,
KillOpt,
DataOffset,
ExamineBB,
Dump,
Restore,
Action,
Nodes,
ClusterName,
ClusterConfirm,
WriteJournal,
ConsistencyPolicy,
};
enum prefix_standard {
JEDEC,
IEC
};
enum bitmap_update {
NoUpdate,
NameUpdate,
NodeNumUpdate,
};
enum flag_mode {
FlagDefault, FlagSet, FlagClear,
};
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
/* structures read from config file */
2001-08-23 04:33:20 +02:00
/* List of mddevice names and identifiers
* Identifiers can be:
* uuid=128-hex-uuid
* super-minor=decimal-minor-number-from-superblock
* devices=comma,separated,list,of,device,names,with,wildcards
*
* If multiple fields are present, the intersection of all matching
* devices is considered
*/
2004-01-22 03:10:29 +01:00
#define UnSet (0xfffe)
struct mddev_ident {
2004-06-04 14:03:19 +02:00
char *devname;
2007-12-14 10:13:43 +01:00
2004-06-04 14:03:19 +02:00
int uuid_set;
int uuid[4];
char name[33];
2001-08-23 04:33:20 +02:00
int super_minor;
2001-08-23 04:33:20 +02:00
2004-06-04 14:03:19 +02:00
char *devices; /* comma separated list of device
2001-08-23 04:33:20 +02:00
* names with wild cards
*/
2004-06-04 14:03:19 +02:00
int level;
int raid_disks;
int spare_disks;
struct supertype *st;
2004-06-04 14:03:19 +02:00
int autof; /* 1 for normal, 2 for partitioned */
char *spare_group;
char *bitmap_file;
int bitmap_fd;
2004-06-04 14:03:19 +02:00
char *container; /* /dev/whatever name of container, or
* uuid of container. You would expect
* this to be the 'devname' or UUID
* of some other entry.
*/
char *member; /* subarray within a container */
struct mddev_ident *next;
union {
/* fields needed by different users of this structure */
int assembled; /* set when assembly succeeds */
};
};
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
struct context {
int readonly;
int runstop;
int verbose;
int brief;
mdadm: add --no-devices to avoid component devices detail information When people assemble a md raid device with a large number of component deivces (e.g. 1500 DASD disks), the raid device detail information generated by 'mdadm --detail --export $devnode' is very large. It is because the detail information contains information of all the component disks (even the missing/failed ones). In such condition, when udev-md-raid-arrays.rules is triggered and internally calls "mdadm --detail --no-devices --export $devnode", user may observe systemd error message ""invalid message length". It is because the following on-stack raw message buffer in systemd code is not big enough, systemd/src/libudev/libudev-monitor.c _public_ struct udev_device *udev_monito ... struct ucred *cred; union { struct udev_monitor_netlink_header nlh; char raw[8192]; } buf; Even change size of raw[] from 8KB to larger size, it may still be not enough for detail message of a md raid device with much larger number of component devices. To fix this problem, an extra option '--no-devices' is added (the original idea is proposed by Neil Brown). When printing detailed information of a md raid device, if '--no-devices' is specified, then all component devices information will not be printed, then the output message size can be restricted to a small number, even with the systemd only has 8KB on-disk raw buffer, the md raid array udev rules can work correctly without failure message. Signed-off-by: Coly Li <colyli@suse.de> Reviewed-by: NeilBrown <neilb@suse.com> Signed-off-by: Jes Sorensen <jsorensen@fb.com>
2019-07-31 07:29:29 +02:00
int no_devices;
int force;
char *homehost;
int require_homehost;
char *prefer;
int export;
int test;
char *subarray;
char *update;
int scan;
int SparcAdjust;
int autof;
int delay;
int freeze_reshape;
char *backup_file;
int invalid_backup;
char *action;
int nodes;
char *homecluster;
};
struct shape {
int raiddisks;
int sparedisks;
int journaldisks;
int level;
int layout;
char *layout_str;
int chunk;
int bitmap_chunk;
char *bitmap_file;
int assume_clean;
int write_behind;
unsigned long long size;
int consistency_policy;
};
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
/* List of device names - wildcards expanded */
struct mddev_dev {
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
char *devname;
int disposition; /* 'a' for add, 'r' for remove, 'f' for fail,
* 'A' for re_add.
2002-03-07 00:17:40 +01:00
* Not set for names read from .config
*/
enum flag_mode writemostly;
enum flag_mode failfast;
int used; /* set when used */
long long data_offset;
struct mddev_dev *next;
};
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
2001-06-14 07:33:53 +02:00
typedef struct mapping {
char *name;
int num;
} mapping_t;
2002-04-04 03:58:32 +02:00
struct mdstat_ent {
char devnm[32];
2002-04-04 03:58:32 +02:00
int active;
char *level;
char *pattern; /* U for up, _ for down */
2002-04-04 03:58:32 +02:00
int percent; /* -1 if no resync */
int resync; /* 3 if check, 2 if reshape, 1 if resync, 0 if recovery */
2008-05-15 08:48:37 +02:00
int devcnt;
int raid_disks;
char * metadata_version;
struct dev_member {
char *name;
struct dev_member *next;
} *members;
2002-04-04 03:58:32 +02:00
struct mdstat_ent *next;
};
extern struct mdstat_ent *mdstat_read(int hold, int start);
extern void mdstat_close(void);
2002-04-04 03:58:32 +02:00
extern void free_mdstat(struct mdstat_ent *ms);
extern int mdstat_wait(int seconds);
extern void mdstat_wait_fd(int fd, const sigset_t *sigmask);
extern int mddev_busy(char *devnm);
extern struct mdstat_ent *mdstat_by_component(char *name);
extern struct mdstat_ent *mdstat_by_subdev(char *subdev, char *container);
struct map_ent {
struct map_ent *next;
char devnm[32];
char metadata[20];
int uuid[4];
int bad;
char *path;
};
extern int map_update(struct map_ent **mpp, char *devnm, char *metadata,
int uuid[4], char *path);
extern void map_remove(struct map_ent **map, char *devnm);
extern struct map_ent *map_by_uuid(struct map_ent **map, int uuid[4]);
extern struct map_ent *map_by_devnm(struct map_ent **map, char *devnm);
extern void map_free(struct map_ent *map);
extern struct map_ent *map_by_name(struct map_ent **map, char *name);
extern void map_read(struct map_ent **melp);
extern int map_write(struct map_ent *mel);
extern void map_delete(struct map_ent **mapp, char *devnm);
extern void map_add(struct map_ent **melp,
char *devnm, char *metadata, int uuid[4], char *path);
extern int map_lock(struct map_ent **melp);
extern void map_unlock(struct map_ent **melp);
extern void map_fork(void);
2002-04-04 03:58:32 +02:00
/* various details can be requested */
enum sysfs_read_flags {
GET_LEVEL = (1 << 0),
GET_LAYOUT = (1 << 1),
GET_COMPONENT = (1 << 2),
GET_CHUNK = (1 << 3),
GET_CACHE = (1 << 4),
GET_MISMATCH = (1 << 5),
GET_VERSION = (1 << 6),
GET_DISKS = (1 << 7),
GET_SAFEMODE = (1 << 9),
GET_BITMAP_LOCATION = (1 << 10),
GET_DEVS = (1 << 20), /* gets role, major, minor */
GET_OFFSET = (1 << 21),
GET_SIZE = (1 << 22),
GET_STATE = (1 << 23),
GET_ERROR = (1 << 24),
GET_ARRAY_STATE = (1 << 25),
GET_CONSISTENCY_POLICY = (1 << 26),
GET_DEVS_ALL = (1 << 27),
};
/* If fd >= 0, get the array it is open on,
* else use devnm.
*/
extern int sysfs_open(char *devnm, char *devname, char *attr);
extern int sysfs_init(struct mdinfo *mdi, int fd, char *devnm);
extern void sysfs_init_dev(struct mdinfo *mdi, dev_t devid);
extern void sysfs_free(struct mdinfo *sra);
extern struct mdinfo *sysfs_read(int fd, char *devnm, unsigned long options);
extern int sysfs_attr_match(const char *attr, const char *str);
extern int sysfs_match_word(const char *word, char **list);
extern int sysfs_set_str(struct mdinfo *sra, struct mdinfo *dev,
char *name, char *val);
extern int sysfs_set_num(struct mdinfo *sra, struct mdinfo *dev,
char *name, unsigned long long val);
extern int sysfs_set_num_signed(struct mdinfo *sra, struct mdinfo *dev,
char *name, long long val);
extern int sysfs_uevent(struct mdinfo *sra, char *event);
extern int sysfs_get_fd(struct mdinfo *sra, struct mdinfo *dev,
char *name);
extern int sysfs_fd_get_ll(int fd, unsigned long long *val);
extern int sysfs_get_ll(struct mdinfo *sra, struct mdinfo *dev,
char *name, unsigned long long *val);
extern int sysfs_fd_get_two(int fd, unsigned long long *v1, unsigned long long *v2);
extern int sysfs_get_two(struct mdinfo *sra, struct mdinfo *dev,
char *name, unsigned long long *v1, unsigned long long *v2);
extern int sysfs_fd_get_str(int fd, char *val, int size);
extern int sysfs_attribute_available(struct mdinfo *sra, struct mdinfo *dev,
char *name);
extern int sysfs_get_str(struct mdinfo *sra, struct mdinfo *dev,
char *name, char *val, int size);
extern int sysfs_set_safemode(struct mdinfo *sra, unsigned long ms);
extern int sysfs_set_array(struct mdinfo *info, int vers);
extern int sysfs_add_disk(struct mdinfo *sra, struct mdinfo *sd, int resume);
extern int sysfs_disk_to_scsi_id(int fd, __u32 *id);
extern int sysfs_unique_holder(char *devnm, long rdev);
extern int sysfs_freeze_array(struct mdinfo *sra);
extern int sysfs_wait(int fd, int *msec);
extern int load_sys(char *path, char *buf, int len);
extern int zero_disk_range(int fd, unsigned long long sector, size_t count);
extern int reshape_prepare_fdlist(char *devname,
struct mdinfo *sra,
int raid_disks,
int nrdisks,
unsigned long blocks,
char *backup_file,
int *fdlist,
unsigned long long *offsets);
extern void reshape_free_fdlist(int *fdlist,
unsigned long long *offsets,
int size);
extern int reshape_open_backup_file(char *backup,
int fd,
char *devname,
long blocks,
int *fdlist,
unsigned long long *offsets,
char *sysfs_name,
int restart);
extern unsigned long compute_backup_blocks(int nchunk, int ochunk,
unsigned int ndata, unsigned int odata);
extern char *locate_backup(char *name);
extern char *make_backup(char *name);
extern int save_stripes(int *source, unsigned long long *offsets,
int raid_disks, int chunk_size, int level, int layout,
int nwrites, int *dest,
unsigned long long start, unsigned long long length,
char *buf);
extern int restore_stripes(int *dest, unsigned long long *offsets,
int raid_disks, int chunk_size, int level, int layout,
int source, unsigned long long read_offset,
unsigned long long start, unsigned long long length,
char *src_buf);
2001-08-23 04:33:20 +02:00
#ifndef Sendmail
#define Sendmail "/usr/lib/sendmail -t"
#endif
#define SYSLOG_FACILITY LOG_DAEMON
extern char *map_num_s(mapping_t *map, int num);
2001-06-14 07:33:53 +02:00
extern char *map_num(mapping_t *map, int num);
extern int map_name(mapping_t *map, char *name);
extern mapping_t r0layout[], r5layout[], r6layout[],
pers[], modes[], faultylayout[];
extern mapping_t consistency_policies[], sysfs_array_states[];
2001-06-14 07:33:53 +02:00
extern char *map_dev_preferred(int major, int minor, int create,
char *prefer);
static inline char *map_dev(int major, int minor, int create)
{
return map_dev_preferred(major, minor, create, NULL);
}
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
/**
* is_fd_valid() - check file descriptor.
* @fd: file descriptor.
*
* The function checks if @fd is nonnegative integer and shall be used only
* to verify open() result.
*/
static inline int is_fd_valid(int fd)
{
return (fd > -1);
}
/**
* close_fd() - verify, close and unset file descriptor.
* @fd: pointer to file descriptor.
*
* The function closes and invalidates file descriptor if appropriative. It
* ignores incorrect file descriptor quitely to simplify error handling.
*/
static inline void close_fd(int *fd)
{
if (is_fd_valid(*fd) && close(*fd) == 0)
*fd = -1;
}
2008-05-15 08:48:37 +02:00
struct active_array;
struct metadata_update;
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
/* 'struct reshape' records the intermediate states of
* a general reshape.
* The starting geometry is converted to the 'before' geometry
* by at most an atomic level change. They could be the same.
* Similarly the 'after' geometry is converted to the final
* geometry by at most a level change.
* Note that 'before' and 'after' must have the same level.
* 'blocks' is the minimum number of sectors for a reshape unit.
* This will be a multiple of the stripe size in each of the
* 'before' and 'after' geometries.
* If 'blocks' is 0, no restriping is necessary.
* 'min_offset_change' is the minimum change to data_offset to
* allow the reshape to happen. It is at least the larger of
* the old and new chunk sizes, and typically the same as 'blocks'
* divided by number of data disks.
*/
struct reshape {
int level;
int parity; /* number of parity blocks/devices */
struct {
int layout;
int data_disks;
} before, after;
unsigned long long backup_blocks;
unsigned long long min_offset_change;
unsigned long long stripes; /* number of old stripes that comprise 'blocks'*/
unsigned long long new_size; /* New size of array in sectors */
};
/* A superswitch provides entry point to a metadata handler.
*
* The superswitch primarily operates on some "metadata" that
* is accessed via the 'supertype'.
* This metadata has one of three possible sources.
* 1/ It is read from a single device. In this case it may not completely
* describe the array or arrays as some information might be on other
* devices.
* 2/ It is read from all devices in a container. In this case all
* information is present.
* 3/ It is created by ->init_super / ->add_to_super. In this case it will
* be complete once enough ->add_to_super calls have completed.
*
* When creating an array inside a container, the metadata will be
* formed by a combination of 2 and 3. The metadata or the array is read,
* then new information is added.
*
* The metadata must sometimes have a concept of a 'current' array
* and a 'current' device.
* The 'current' array is set by init_super to be the newly created array,
* or is set by super_by_fd when it finds it is looking at an array inside
* a container.
*
* The 'current' device is either the device that the metadata was read from
* in case 1, or the last device added by add_to_super in case 3.
* Case 2 does not identify a 'current' device.
*/
extern struct superswitch {
/* Used to report details of metadata read from a component
* device. ->load_super has been called.
*/
void (*examine_super)(struct supertype *st, char *homehost);
void (*brief_examine_super)(struct supertype *st, int verbose);
void (*brief_examine_subarrays)(struct supertype *st, int verbose);
void (*export_examine_super)(struct supertype *st);
int (*examine_badblocks)(struct supertype *st, int fd, char *devname);
int (*copy_metadata)(struct supertype *st, int from, int to);
/* Used to report details of an active array.
* ->load_super was possibly given a 'component' string.
*/
void (*detail_super)(struct supertype *st, char *homehost,
char *subarray);
void (*brief_detail_super)(struct supertype *st, char *subarray);
void (*export_detail_super)(struct supertype *st);
/* Optional: platform hardware / firmware details */
imsm: Allow to specify controller for --detail-platform. Usually, 'mdadm --detail-platform -e imsm' scans all the controllers looking for IMSM capabilities. This patch provides the possibility to specify a controller to scan, enabling custom usage by other processes - especially with the --export switch. $ mdadm --detail-platform Platform : Intel(R) Matrix Storage Manager Version : 9.5.0.1037 RAID Levels : raid0 raid1 raid10 raid5 Chunk Sizes : 4k 8k 16k 32k 64k 128k 2TB volumes : supported 2TB disks : not supported Max Disks : 7 Max Volumes : 2 per array, 4 per controller I/O Controller : /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1f.2 (SATA) $ mdadm --detail-platform /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1f.2 Platform : Intel(R) Matrix Storage Manager Version : 9.5.0.1037 RAID Levels : raid0 raid1 raid10 raid5 Chunk Sizes : 4k 8k 16k 32k 64k 128k 2TB volumes : supported 2TB disks : not supported Max Disks : 7 Max Volumes : 2 per array, 4 per controller I/O Controller : /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1f.2 (SATA) $ mdadm --detail-platform /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1f.2 --export MD_FIRMWARE_TYPE=imsm IMSM_VERSION=9.5.0.1037 IMSM_SUPPORTED_RAID_LEVELS=raid0 raid1 raid10 raid5 IMSM_SUPPORTED_CHUNK_SIZES=4k 8k 16k 32k 64k 128k IMSM_2TB_VOLUMES=yes IMSM_2TB_DISKS=no IMSM_MAX_DISKS=7 IMSM_MAX_VOLUMES_PER_ARRAY=2 IMSM_MAX_VOLUMES_PER_CONTROLLER=4 $ mdadm --detail-platform /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1f.0 # This isn't an IMSM-capable controller mdadm: no active Intel(R) RAID controller found under /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1f.0 Signed-off-by: Maciej Naruszewicz <maciej.naruszewicz@intel.com> Signed-off-by: NeilBrown <neilb@suse.de>
2012-10-04 08:34:11 +02:00
int (*detail_platform)(int verbose, int enumerate_only, char *controller_path);
int (*export_detail_platform)(int verbose, char *controller_path);
/* Used:
* to get uuid to storing in bitmap metadata
* and 'reshape' backup-data metadata
* To see if a device is being re-added to an array it was part of.
*/
void (*uuid_from_super)(struct supertype *st, int uuid[4]);
/* Extract generic details from metadata. This could be details about
* the container, or about an individual array within the container.
* The determination is made either by:
* load_super being given a 'component' string.
* validate_geometry determining what to create.
* The info includes both array information and device information.
* The particular device should be:
* The last device added by add_to_super
* The device the metadata was loaded from by load_super
* If 'map' is present, then it is an array raid_disks long
* (raid_disk must already be set and correct) and it is filled
* with 1 for slots that are thought to be active and 0 for slots which
* appear to be failed/missing.
* *info is zeroed out before data is added.
*/
void (*getinfo_super)(struct supertype *st, struct mdinfo *info, char *map);
struct mdinfo *(*getinfo_super_disks)(struct supertype *st);
/* Check if the given metadata is flagged as belonging to "this"
* host. 0 for 'no', 1 for 'yes', -1 for "Don't record homehost"
*/
int (*match_home)(struct supertype *st, char *homehost);
/* Make one of several generic modifications to metadata
* prior to assembly (or other times).
* sparc2.2 - first bug in early 0.90 metadata
* super-minor - change name of 0.90 metadata
* summaries - 'correct' any redundant data
* resync - mark array as dirty to trigger a resync.
* uuid - set new uuid - only 0.90 or 1.x
* name - change the name of the array (where supported)
* homehost - change which host this array is tied to.
* devicesize - If metadata is at start of device, change recorded
* device size to match actual device size
* byteorder - swap bytes for 0.90 metadata
*
* force-one - mark that device as uptodate, not old or failed.
* force-array - mark array as clean if it would not otherwise
* assemble
* assemble - not sure how this is different from force-one...
* linear-grow-new - add a new device to a linear array, but don't
* change the size: so superblock still matches
* linear-grow-update - now change the size of the array.
* writemostly - set the WriteMostly1 bit in the superblock devflags
* readwrite - clear the WriteMostly1 bit in the superblock devflags
* failfast - set the FailFast1 bit in the superblock
* nofailfast - clear the FailFast1 bit
* no-bitmap - clear any record that a bitmap is present.
* bbl - add a bad-block-log if possible
* no-bbl - remove any bad-block-log is it is empty.
* force-no-bbl - remove any bad-block-log even if empty.
* revert-reshape - If a reshape is in progress, modify metadata so
* it will resume going in the opposite direction.
*/
int (*update_super)(struct supertype *st, struct mdinfo *info,
char *update,
char *devname, int verbose,
int uuid_set, char *homehost);
/* Create new metadata for new array as described. This could
* be a new container, or an array in a pre-existing container.
* Also used to zero metadata prior to writing it to invalidate old
* metadata.
*/
int (*init_super)(struct supertype *st, mdu_array_info_t *info,
struct shape *s, char *name,
char *homehost, int *uuid,
unsigned long long data_offset);
/* update the metadata to include new device, either at create or
* when hot-adding a spare.
*/
int (*add_to_super)(struct supertype *st, mdu_disk_info_t *dinfo,
int fd, char *devname,
unsigned long long data_offset);
/* update the metadata to delete a device,
* when hot-removing.
*/
int (*remove_from_super)(struct supertype *st, mdu_disk_info_t *dinfo);
/* Write metadata to one device when fixing problems or adding
* a new device.
*/
int (*store_super)(struct supertype *st, int fd);
/* Write all metadata for this array.
*/
int (*write_init_super)(struct supertype *st);
/* Check if metadata read from one device is compatible with an array,
* used when assembling an array, or pseudo-assembling was with
* "--examine --brief"
* If "st" has not yet been loaded the superblock from, "tst" is
* moved in, otherwise the superblock in 'st' is compared with
* 'tst'.
*/
int (*compare_super)(struct supertype *st, struct supertype *tst,
int verbose);
/* Load metadata from a single device. If 'devname' is not NULL
* print error messages as appropriate */
int (*load_super)(struct supertype *st, int fd, char *devname);
/* 'fd' is a 'container' md array - load array metadata from the
* whole container.
*/
int (*load_container)(struct supertype *st, int fd, char *devname);
/* If 'arg' is a valid name of this metadata type, allocate and
* return a 'supertype' for the particular minor version */
struct supertype * (*match_metadata_desc)(char *arg);
/* If a device has the given size, and the data_offset has been
* requested - work out how much space is available for data.
* This involves adjusting for reserved space (e.g. bitmaps)
* and for any rounding.
* 'mdadm' only calls this for existing arrays where a possible
* spare is being added. However some super-handlers call it
* internally from validate_geometry when creating an array.
*/
__u64 (*avail_size)(struct supertype *st, __u64 size,
unsigned long long data_offset);
/*
* Return spare criteria for array:
* - minimum disk size can be used in array;
* - sector size can be used in array.
* Return values: 0 - for success and -EINVAL on error.
*/
int (*get_spare_criteria)(struct supertype *st,
struct spare_criteria *sc);
/* Find somewhere to put a bitmap - possibly auto-size it - and
* update the metadata to record this. The array may be newly
* created, in which case data_size may be updated, or it might
* already exist. Metadata handler can know if init_super
* has been called, but not write_init_super.
* 0: Success
* -Exxxx: On error
*/
int (*add_internal_bitmap)(struct supertype *st, int *chunkp,
int delay, int write_behind,
unsigned long long size, int may_change, int major);
/* Perform additional setup required to activate a bitmap.
*/
int (*set_bitmap)(struct supertype *st, struct mdinfo *info);
/* Seek 'fd' to start of write-intent-bitmap. Must be an
* md-native format bitmap
*/
int (*locate_bitmap)(struct supertype *st, int fd, int node_num);
/* if add_internal_bitmap succeeded for existing array, this
* writes it out.
*/
int (*write_bitmap)(struct supertype *st, int fd, enum bitmap_update update);
/* Free the superblock and any other allocated data */
void (*free_super)(struct supertype *st);
/* validate_geometry is called with an st returned by
* match_metadata_desc.
* It should check that the geometry described is compatible with
* the metadata type. It will be called repeatedly as devices
* added to validate changing size and new devices. If there are
* inter-device dependencies, it should record sufficient details
* so these can be validated.
* Both 'size' and '*freesize' are in sectors. chunk is KiB.
* Return value is:
* 1: everything is OK
* 0: not OK for some reason - if 'verbose', then error was reported.
* -1: st->sb was NULL, 'subdev' is a member of a container of this
* type, but array is not acceptable for some reason
* message was reported even if verbose is 0.
*/
int (*validate_geometry)(struct supertype *st, int level, int layout,
int raiddisks,
int *chunk, unsigned long long size,
unsigned long long data_offset,
char *subdev, unsigned long long *freesize,
int consistency_policy, int verbose);
2008-05-15 08:48:19 +02:00
/* Return a linked list of 'mdinfo' structures for all arrays
* in the container. For non-containers, it is like
* getinfo_super with an allocated mdinfo.*/
struct mdinfo *(*container_content)(struct supertype *st, char *subarray);
/* query the supertype for default geometry */
void (*default_geometry)(struct supertype *st, int *level, int *layout, int *chunk); /* optional */
/* Permit subarray's to be deleted from inactive containers */
int (*kill_subarray)(struct supertype *st,
char *subarray_id); /* optional */
/* Permit subarray's to be modified */
int (*update_subarray)(struct supertype *st, char *subarray,
char *update, struct mddev_ident *ident); /* optional */
/* Check if reshape is supported for this external format.
* st is obtained from super_by_fd() where st->subarray[0] is
* initialized to indicate if reshape is being performed at the
* container or subarray level
*/
#define APPLY_METADATA_CHANGES 1
#define ROLLBACK_METADATA_CHANGES 0
int (*reshape_super)(struct supertype *st,
unsigned long long size, int level,
int layout, int chunksize, int raid_disks,
int delta_disks, char *backup, char *dev,
int direction,
int verbose); /* optional */
int (*manage_reshape)( /* optional */
int afd, struct mdinfo *sra, struct reshape *reshape,
struct supertype *st, unsigned long blocks,
int *fds, unsigned long long *offsets,
int dests, int *destfd, unsigned long long *destoffsets);
2008-05-15 08:48:19 +02:00
2008-05-15 08:48:37 +02:00
/* for mdmon */
int (*open_new)(struct supertype *c, struct active_array *a,
int inst);
/* Tell the metadata handler the current state of the array.
* This covers whether it is known to be consistent (no pending writes)
* and how far along a resync is known to have progressed
* (in a->resync_start).
* resync status is really irrelevant if the array is not consistent,
* but some metadata (DDF!) have a place to record the distinction.
* If 'consistent' is '2', then the array can mark it dirty if a
* resync/recovery/whatever is required, or leave it clean if not.
* Return value is 0 dirty (not consistent) and 1 if clean.
* it is only really important if consistent is passed in as '2'.
*/
int (*set_array_state)(struct active_array *a, int consistent);
/* When the state of a device might have changed, we call set_disk to
* tell the metadata what the current state is.
* Typically this happens on spare->in_sync and (spare|in_sync)->faulty
* transitions.
* set_disk might be called when the state of the particular disk has
* not in fact changed.
*/
void (*set_disk)(struct active_array *a, int n, int state);
void (*sync_metadata)(struct supertype *st);
void (*process_update)(struct supertype *st,
struct metadata_update *update);
/* Prepare updates allocates extra memory that might be
* needed. If the update cannot be understood, return 0.
*/
int (*prepare_update)(struct supertype *st,
struct metadata_update *update);
2008-05-15 08:48:37 +02:00
/* activate_spare will check if the array is degraded and, if it
* is, try to find some spare space in the container.
* On success, it add appropriate updates (For process_update) to
* to the 'updates' list and returns a list of 'mdinfo' identifying
* the device, or devices as there might be multiple missing
* devices and multiple spares available.
*/
struct mdinfo *(*activate_spare)(struct active_array *a,
struct metadata_update **updates);
/*
* Return statically allocated string that represents metadata specific
* controller domain of the disk. The domain is used in disk domain
* matching functions. Disks belong to the same domain if the they have
* the same domain from mdadm.conf and belong the same metadata domain.
* Returning NULL or not providing this handler means that metadata
* does not distinguish the differences between disks that belong to
* different controllers. They are in the domain specified by
* configuration file (mdadm.conf).
* In case when the metadata has the notion of domains based on disk
* it shall return NULL for disks that do not belong to the controller
* the supported domains. Such disks will form another domain and won't
* be mixed with supported ones.
*/
const char *(*get_disk_controller_domain)(const char *path);
2008-05-15 08:48:37 +02:00
/* for external backup area */
int (*recover_backup)(struct supertype *st, struct mdinfo *info);
/* validate container after assemble */
int (*validate_container)(struct mdinfo *info);
/* write initial empty PPL on device */
int (*write_init_ppl)(struct supertype *st, struct mdinfo *info, int fd);
/* validate ppl before assemble */
int (*validate_ppl)(struct supertype *st, struct mdinfo *info,
struct mdinfo *disk);
/* records new bad block in metadata */
int (*record_bad_block)(struct active_array *a, int n,
unsigned long long sector, int length);
/* clears bad block from metadata */
int (*clear_bad_block)(struct active_array *a, int n,
unsigned long long sector, int length);
/* get list of bad blocks from metadata */
struct md_bb *(*get_bad_blocks)(struct active_array *a, int n);
int swapuuid; /* true if uuid is bigending rather than hostendian */
int external;
const char *name; /* canonical metadata name */
} *superlist[];
extern struct superswitch super0, super1;
extern struct superswitch super_imsm, super_ddf;
extern struct superswitch mbr, gpt;
struct metadata_update {
int len;
char *buf;
void *space; /* allocated space that monitor will use */
void **space_list; /* list of allocated spaces that monitor can
* use or that it returned.
*/
struct metadata_update *next;
};
/* A supertype holds a particular collection of metadata.
* It identifies the metadata type by the superswitch, and the particular
* sub-version of that metadata type.
* metadata read in or created is stored in 'sb' and 'info'.
* There are also fields used by mdmon to track containers.
*
* A supertype may refer to:
* Just an array, possibly in a container
* A container, not identifying any particular array
* Info read from just one device, not yet fully describing the array/container.
*
*
* A supertype is created by:
* super_by_fd
* guess_super
* dup_super
*/
struct supertype {
struct superswitch *ss;
int minor_version;
int max_devs;
char container_devnm[32]; /* devnm of container */
void *sb;
void *info;
void *other; /* Hack used to convert v0.90 to v1.0 */
unsigned long long devsize;
unsigned long long data_offset; /* used by v1.x only */
int ignore_hw_compat; /* used to inform metadata handlers that it should ignore
HW/firmware related incompatability to load metadata.
Used when examining metadata to display content of disk
when user has no hw/firmare compatible system.
*/
struct metadata_update *updates;
struct metadata_update **update_tail;
2008-05-15 08:48:37 +02:00
/* extra stuff used by mdmon */
struct active_array *arrays;
int sock; /* listen to external programs */
char devnm[32]; /* e.g. md0. This appears in metadata_version:
* external:/md0/12
*/
2008-05-15 08:48:37 +02:00
int devcnt;
int retry_soon;
int nodes;
char *cluster_name;
2008-05-15 08:48:37 +02:00
struct mdinfo *devs;
};
extern struct supertype *super_by_fd(int fd, char **subarray);
enum guess_types { guess_any, guess_array, guess_partitions };
extern struct supertype *guess_super_type(int fd, enum guess_types guess_type);
static inline struct supertype *guess_super(int fd) {
return guess_super_type(fd, guess_any);
}
extern struct supertype *dup_super(struct supertype *st);
extern int get_dev_size(int fd, char *dname, unsigned long long *sizep);
extern int get_dev_sector_size(int fd, char *dname, unsigned int *sectsizep);
extern int must_be_container(int fd);
extern int dev_size_from_id(dev_t id, unsigned long long *size);
extern int dev_sector_size_from_id(dev_t id, unsigned int *size);
void wait_for(char *dev, int fd);
/*
* Data structures for policy management.
* Each device can have a policy structure that lists
* various name/value pairs each possibly with a metadata associated.
* The policy list is sorted by name/value/metadata
*/
struct dev_policy {
struct dev_policy *next;
char *name; /* None of these strings are allocated. They are
* all just references to strings which are known
* to exist elsewhere.
* name and metadata can be compared by address equality.
*/
const char *metadata;
const char *value;
};
extern char pol_act[], pol_domain[], pol_metadata[], pol_auto[];
/* iterate over the sublist starting at list, having the same
* 'name' as 'list', and matching the given metadata (Where
* NULL matches anything
*/
#define pol_for_each(item, list, _metadata) \
for (item = list; \
item && item->name == list->name; \
item = item->next) \
if (!(!_metadata || !item->metadata || _metadata == item->metadata)) \
; else
/*
* policy records read from mdadm are largely just name-value pairs.
* The names are constants, not strdupped
*/
struct pol_rule {
struct pol_rule *next;
char *type; /* rule_policy or rule_part */
struct rule {
struct rule *next;
char *name;
char *value;
char *dups; /* duplicates of 'value' with a partNN appended */
} *rule;
};
extern char rule_policy[], rule_part[];
extern char rule_path[], rule_type[];
extern char type_part[], type_disk[];
extern void policyline(char *line, char *type);
extern void policy_add(char *type, ...);
extern void policy_free(void);
extern struct dev_policy *path_policy(char **paths, char *type);
extern struct dev_policy *disk_policy(struct mdinfo *disk);
extern struct dev_policy *devid_policy(int devid);
extern void dev_policy_free(struct dev_policy *p);
//extern void pol_new(struct dev_policy **pol, char *name, char *val, char *metadata);
extern void pol_add(struct dev_policy **pol, char *name, char *val, char *metadata);
extern struct dev_policy *pol_find(struct dev_policy *pol, char *name);
enum policy_action {
act_default,
act_include,
act_re_add,
act_spare, /* This only applies to bare devices */
act_spare_same_slot, /* this allows non-bare devices,
* but only if recent removal */
act_force_spare, /* this allow non-bare devices in any case */
act_err
};
extern int policy_action_allows(struct dev_policy *plist, const char *metadata,
enum policy_action want);
extern int disk_action_allows(struct mdinfo *disk, const char *metadata,
enum policy_action want);
struct domainlist {
struct domainlist *next;
const char *dom;
};
extern int domain_test(struct domainlist *dom, struct dev_policy *pol,
const char *metadata);
extern struct domainlist *domain_from_array(struct mdinfo *mdi,
const char *metadata);
extern void domainlist_add_dev(struct domainlist **dom, int devid,
const char *metadata);
extern void domain_free(struct domainlist *dl);
extern void domain_merge(struct domainlist **domp, struct dev_policy *pol,
const char *metadata);
void domain_add(struct domainlist **domp, char *domain);
extern void policy_save_path(char *id_path, struct map_ent *array);
extern int policy_check_path(struct mdinfo *disk, struct map_ent *array);
extern void sysfs_rules_apply(char *devnm, struct mdinfo *dev);
extern void sysfsline(char *line);
#if __GNUC__ < 3
struct stat64;
#endif
#define HAVE_NFTW we assume
#define HAVE_FTW
#ifdef __UCLIBC__
# include <features.h>
# ifndef __UCLIBC_HAS_LFS__
# define lseek64 lseek
# endif
# ifndef __UCLIBC_HAS_FTW__
# undef HAVE_FTW
# undef HAVE_NFTW
# endif
#endif
#ifdef __dietlibc__
# undef HAVE_NFTW
#endif
#if defined(__KLIBC__)
# undef HAVE_NFTW
# undef HAVE_FTW
#endif
#ifndef HAVE_NFTW
# define FTW_PHYS 1
# ifndef HAVE_FTW
struct FTW {};
# endif
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_FTW
# include <ftw.h>
#endif
extern int add_dev(const char *name, const struct stat *stb, int flag, struct FTW *s);
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
extern int Manage_ro(char *devname, int fd, int readonly);
extern int Manage_run(char *devname, int fd, struct context *c);
extern int Manage_stop(char *devname, int fd, int quiet,
int will_retry);
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
extern int Manage_subdevs(char *devname, int fd,
struct mddev_dev *devlist, int verbose, int test,
char *update, int force);
extern int autodetect(void);
2004-08-11 04:16:01 +02:00
extern int Grow_Add_device(char *devname, int fd, char *newdev);
extern int Grow_addbitmap(char *devname, int fd,
struct context *c, struct shape *s);
extern int Grow_reshape(char *devname, int fd,
struct mddev_dev *devlist,
unsigned long long data_offset,
struct context *c, struct shape *s);
extern int Grow_restart(struct supertype *st, struct mdinfo *info,
int *fdlist, int cnt, char *backup_file, int verbose);
extern int Grow_continue(int mdfd, struct supertype *st,
struct mdinfo *info, char *backup_file,
int forked, int freeze_reshape);
extern int Grow_consistency_policy(char *devname, int fd,
struct context *c, struct shape *s);
extern int restore_backup(struct supertype *st,
struct mdinfo *content,
int working_disks,
int spares,
char **backup_filep,
int verbose);
extern int Grow_continue_command(char *devname, int fd,
char *backup_file, int verbose);
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
extern int Assemble(struct supertype *st, char *mddev,
struct mddev_ident *ident,
struct mddev_dev *devlist,
struct context *c);
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
extern int Build(char *mddev, struct mddev_dev *devlist,
struct shape *s, struct context *c);
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
extern int Create(struct supertype *st, char *mddev,
char *name, int *uuid,
int subdevs, struct mddev_dev *devlist,
struct shape *s,
struct context *c,
unsigned long long data_offset);
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
extern int Detail(char *dev, struct context *c);
imsm: Allow to specify controller for --detail-platform. Usually, 'mdadm --detail-platform -e imsm' scans all the controllers looking for IMSM capabilities. This patch provides the possibility to specify a controller to scan, enabling custom usage by other processes - especially with the --export switch. $ mdadm --detail-platform Platform : Intel(R) Matrix Storage Manager Version : 9.5.0.1037 RAID Levels : raid0 raid1 raid10 raid5 Chunk Sizes : 4k 8k 16k 32k 64k 128k 2TB volumes : supported 2TB disks : not supported Max Disks : 7 Max Volumes : 2 per array, 4 per controller I/O Controller : /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1f.2 (SATA) $ mdadm --detail-platform /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1f.2 Platform : Intel(R) Matrix Storage Manager Version : 9.5.0.1037 RAID Levels : raid0 raid1 raid10 raid5 Chunk Sizes : 4k 8k 16k 32k 64k 128k 2TB volumes : supported 2TB disks : not supported Max Disks : 7 Max Volumes : 2 per array, 4 per controller I/O Controller : /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1f.2 (SATA) $ mdadm --detail-platform /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1f.2 --export MD_FIRMWARE_TYPE=imsm IMSM_VERSION=9.5.0.1037 IMSM_SUPPORTED_RAID_LEVELS=raid0 raid1 raid10 raid5 IMSM_SUPPORTED_CHUNK_SIZES=4k 8k 16k 32k 64k 128k IMSM_2TB_VOLUMES=yes IMSM_2TB_DISKS=no IMSM_MAX_DISKS=7 IMSM_MAX_VOLUMES_PER_ARRAY=2 IMSM_MAX_VOLUMES_PER_CONTROLLER=4 $ mdadm --detail-platform /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1f.0 # This isn't an IMSM-capable controller mdadm: no active Intel(R) RAID controller found under /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1f.0 Signed-off-by: Maciej Naruszewicz <maciej.naruszewicz@intel.com> Signed-off-by: NeilBrown <neilb@suse.de>
2012-10-04 08:34:11 +02:00
extern int Detail_Platform(struct superswitch *ss, int scan, int verbose, int export, char *controller_path);
2002-04-04 03:58:32 +02:00
extern int Query(char *dev);
extern int ExamineBadblocks(char *devname, int brief, struct supertype *forcest);
extern int Examine(struct mddev_dev *devlist, struct context *c,
struct supertype *forcest);
extern int Monitor(struct mddev_dev *devlist,
2002-04-04 03:58:32 +02:00
char *mailaddr, char *alert_cmd,
struct context *c,
int daemonise, int oneshot,
int dosyslog, char *pidfile, int increments,
int share);
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
extern int Kill(char *dev, struct supertype *st, int force, int verbose, int noexcl);
extern int Kill_subarray(char *dev, char *subarray, int verbose);
extern int Update_subarray(char *dev, char *subarray, char *update, struct mddev_ident *ident, int quiet);
extern int Wait(char *dev);
extern int WaitClean(char *dev, int verbose);
extern int SetAction(char *dev, char *action);
2002-03-08 01:03:52 +01:00
extern int Incremental(struct mddev_dev *devlist, struct context *c,
struct supertype *st);
extern void RebuildMap(void);
extern int IncrementalScan(struct context *c, char *devnm);
extern int IncrementalRemove(char *devname, char *path, int verbose);
extern int CreateBitmap(char *filename, int force, char uuid[16],
unsigned long chunksize, unsigned long daemon_sleep,
unsigned long write_behind,
unsigned long long array_size,
int major);
extern int ExamineBitmap(char *filename, int brief, struct supertype *st);
extern int IsBitmapDirty(char *filename);
Dynamic hot-plug udev rules for policies Neil, Please consider this patch that once was discussed and I think agreed with in general direction. It was sent a while ago but somehow did not merged into your devel3-2. This patch enables hot-plug of so called bare devices (as understand by domain policies rules in mdadm.conf). Without this patch we do NOT serve hot-plug of bare devices at all. Thanks, Marcin Labun Subject was: FW: Autorebuild, new dynamic udev rules for hot-plugs >>From c0aecd4dd96691e8bfa6f2dc187261ec8bb2c5a2 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Przemyslaw Czarnowski <przemyslaw.hawrylewicz.czarnowski@intel.com> Date: Thu, 23 Dec 2010 16:35:01 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] Dynamic hot-plug udev rules for policies Cc: linux-raid@vger.kernel.org, Williams, Dan J <dan.j.williams@intel.com>, Ciechanowski, Ed <ed.ciechanowski@intel.com> When introducing policies, new hot-plug rules were added to support bare disks. Mdadm was started for each hot plugged block device to determine if it could be used as spare or as a replacement member for degraded array. This patch introduces limitation of range of devices that are handled by mdadm. It limits them to the ones specified in domains associated with the actions: spare-same-port, spare and spare-force. In order to enable hot-plug for bare disks one must update udev rules with command mdadm --activate-domains[=filename] Above command writes udev rule configuration to stdout. If 'filename' is given output is written to the file provided as parameter. It is up to system administrator what should be done later. To make such rule permanent (i.e. remain after reboot) rule should be writen to /lib/udev/rules.d directory. Other cases will just need to write it to /dev/.udev/rules.d directory where temporary rules lies. One should be aware of the meaning of names/priorities of the udev rules. After mdadm.conf is changed one is obliged to re-run "mdadm --activate-domains" command in order to bring the system configuration up to date. All hot-plugged disks containing metadata are still handled by existing rules. Signed-off-by: Przemyslaw Czarnowski <przemyslaw.hawrylewicz.czarnowski@intel.com> Signed-off-by: NeilBrown <neilb@suse.de>
2011-01-25 16:59:32 +01:00
extern int Write_rules(char *rule_name);
extern int bitmap_update_uuid(int fd, int *uuid, int swap);
/* calculate the size of the bitmap given the array size and bitmap chunksize */
static inline unsigned long long
bitmap_bits(unsigned long long array_size, unsigned long chunksize)
{
return (array_size * 512 + chunksize - 1) / chunksize;
}
extern int Dump_metadata(char *dev, char *dir, struct context *c,
struct supertype *st);
extern int Restore_metadata(char *dev, char *dir, struct context *c,
struct supertype *st, int only);
int md_array_valid(int fd);
int md_array_active(int fd);
int md_array_is_active(struct mdinfo *info);
int md_get_array_info(int fd, struct mdu_array_info_s *array);
int md_set_array_info(int fd, struct mdu_array_info_s *array);
int md_get_disk_info(int fd, struct mdu_disk_info_s *disk);
2002-04-04 03:58:32 +02:00
extern int get_linux_version(void);
extern int mdadm_version(char *version);
extern unsigned long long parse_size(char *size);
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
extern int parse_uuid(char *str, int uuid[4]);
int default_layout(struct supertype *st, int level, int verbose);
extern int is_near_layout_10(int layout);
extern int parse_layout_10(char *layout);
extern int parse_layout_faulty(char *layout);
extern int parse_num(int *dest, char *num);
extern int parse_cluster_confirm_arg(char *inp, char **devname, int *slot);
2001-06-14 07:33:53 +02:00
extern int check_ext2(int fd, char *name);
extern int check_reiser(int fd, char *name);
extern int check_raid(int fd, char *name);
extern int check_partitions(int fd, char *dname,
unsigned long long freesize,
unsigned long long size);
extern int fstat_is_blkdev(int fd, char *devname, dev_t *rdev);
extern int stat_is_blkdev(char *devname, dev_t *rdev);
2001-06-08 04:36:23 +02:00
extern bool is_dev_alive(char *path);
2004-06-04 14:03:19 +02:00
extern int get_mdp_major(void);
extern int get_maj_min(char *dev, int *major, int *minor);
extern int dev_open(char *dev, int flags);
extern int open_dev(char *devnm);
extern void reopen_mddev(int mdfd);
extern int open_dev_flags(char *devnm, int flags);
extern int open_dev_excl(char *devnm);
extern int is_standard(char *dev, int *nump);
extern int same_dev(char *one, char *two);
imsm: Allow to specify controller for --detail-platform. Usually, 'mdadm --detail-platform -e imsm' scans all the controllers looking for IMSM capabilities. This patch provides the possibility to specify a controller to scan, enabling custom usage by other processes - especially with the --export switch. $ mdadm --detail-platform Platform : Intel(R) Matrix Storage Manager Version : 9.5.0.1037 RAID Levels : raid0 raid1 raid10 raid5 Chunk Sizes : 4k 8k 16k 32k 64k 128k 2TB volumes : supported 2TB disks : not supported Max Disks : 7 Max Volumes : 2 per array, 4 per controller I/O Controller : /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1f.2 (SATA) $ mdadm --detail-platform /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1f.2 Platform : Intel(R) Matrix Storage Manager Version : 9.5.0.1037 RAID Levels : raid0 raid1 raid10 raid5 Chunk Sizes : 4k 8k 16k 32k 64k 128k 2TB volumes : supported 2TB disks : not supported Max Disks : 7 Max Volumes : 2 per array, 4 per controller I/O Controller : /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1f.2 (SATA) $ mdadm --detail-platform /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1f.2 --export MD_FIRMWARE_TYPE=imsm IMSM_VERSION=9.5.0.1037 IMSM_SUPPORTED_RAID_LEVELS=raid0 raid1 raid10 raid5 IMSM_SUPPORTED_CHUNK_SIZES=4k 8k 16k 32k 64k 128k IMSM_2TB_VOLUMES=yes IMSM_2TB_DISKS=no IMSM_MAX_DISKS=7 IMSM_MAX_VOLUMES_PER_ARRAY=2 IMSM_MAX_VOLUMES_PER_CONTROLLER=4 $ mdadm --detail-platform /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1f.0 # This isn't an IMSM-capable controller mdadm: no active Intel(R) RAID controller found under /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1f.0 Signed-off-by: Maciej Naruszewicz <maciej.naruszewicz@intel.com> Signed-off-by: NeilBrown <neilb@suse.de>
2012-10-04 08:34:11 +02:00
extern int compare_paths (char* path1,char* path2);
extern void enable_fds(int devices);
extern void manage_fork_fds(int close_all);
extern int continue_via_systemd(char *devnm, char *service_name);
2004-06-04 14:03:19 +02:00
extern int parse_auto(char *str, char *msg, int config);
extern struct mddev_ident *conf_get_ident(char *dev);
extern struct mddev_dev *conf_get_devs(void);
extern int conf_test_dev(char *devname);
extern int conf_test_metadata(const char *version, struct dev_policy *pol, int is_homehost);
extern struct createinfo *conf_get_create_info(void);
extern void set_conffile(char *file);
extern char *conf_get_mailaddr(void);
extern char *conf_get_mailfrom(void);
extern char *conf_get_program(void);
extern char *conf_get_homehost(int *require_homehostp);
extern char *conf_get_homecluster(void);
extern int conf_get_monitor_delay(void);
2002-04-04 03:58:32 +02:00
extern char *conf_line(FILE *file);
2004-01-22 03:10:29 +01:00
extern char *conf_word(FILE *file, int allow_key);
extern void print_quoted(char *str);
extern void print_escape(char *str);
extern int use_udev(void);
extern unsigned long GCD(unsigned long a, unsigned long b);
extern int conf_name_is_free(char *name);
extern int conf_verify_devnames(struct mddev_ident *array_list);
extern int devname_matches(char *name, char *match);
extern struct mddev_ident *conf_match(struct supertype *st,
struct mdinfo *info,
char *devname,
int verbose, int *rvp);
2002-04-04 03:58:32 +02:00
extern void free_line(char *line);
extern int match_oneof(char *devices, char *devname);
extern void uuid_from_super(int uuid[4], mdp_super_t *super);
extern const int uuid_zero[4];
extern int same_uuid(int a[4], int b[4], int swapuuid);
extern void copy_uuid(void *a, int b[4], int swapuuid);
extern char *__fname_from_uuid(int id[4], int swap, char *buf, char sep);
extern char *fname_from_uuid(struct supertype *st,
struct mdinfo *info, char *buf, char sep);
extern unsigned long calc_csum(void *super, int bytes);
extern int enough(int level, int raid_disks, int layout, int clean,
char *avail);
2002-04-04 03:58:32 +02:00
extern int ask(char *mesg);
extern unsigned long long get_component_size(int fd);
extern void remove_partitions(int fd);
extern int test_partition(int fd);
extern int test_partition_from_id(dev_t id);
extern int get_data_disks(int level, int layout, int raid_disks);
extern unsigned long long calc_array_size(int level, int raid_disks, int layout,
int chunksize, unsigned long long devsize);
extern int flush_metadata_updates(struct supertype *st);
extern void append_metadata_update(struct supertype *st, void *buf, int len);
extern int assemble_container_content(struct supertype *st, int mdfd,
struct mdinfo *content,
struct context *c,
char *chosen_name, int *result);
#define INCR_NO 1
#define INCR_UNSAFE 2
#define INCR_ALREADY 4
#define INCR_YES 8
extern struct mdinfo *container_choose_spares(struct supertype *st,
struct spare_criteria *criteria,
struct domainlist *domlist,
char *spare_group,
const char *metadata, int get_one);
extern int move_spare(char *from_devname, char *to_devname, dev_t devid);
extern int add_disk(int mdfd, struct supertype *st,
struct mdinfo *sra, struct mdinfo *info);
extern int remove_disk(int mdfd, struct supertype *st,
struct mdinfo *sra, struct mdinfo *info);
extern int hot_remove_disk(int mdfd, unsigned long dev, int force);
extern int sys_hot_remove_disk(int statefd, int force);
extern int set_array_info(int mdfd, struct supertype *st, struct mdinfo *info);
unsigned long long min_recovery_start(struct mdinfo *array);
2002-03-07 00:17:40 +01:00
2002-03-15 06:21:36 +01:00
extern char *human_size(long long bytes);
extern char *human_size_brief(long long bytes, int prefix);
extern void print_r10_layout(int layout);
2002-04-04 03:58:32 +02:00
extern char *find_free_devnm(int use_partitions);
2002-04-04 03:58:32 +02:00
extern void put_md_name(char *name);
extern char *devid2kname(dev_t devid);
extern char *devid2devnm(dev_t devid);
extern dev_t devnm2devid(char *devnm);
extern char *get_md_name(char *devnm);
2002-04-04 03:58:32 +02:00
2002-04-06 00:00:28 +02:00
extern char DefaultConfFile[];
2004-11-01 05:49:34 +01:00
extern int create_mddev(char *dev, char *name, int autof, int trustworthy,
char *chosen, int block_udev);
/* values for 'trustworthy' */
#define LOCAL 1
#define LOCAL_ANY 10
#define FOREIGN 2
#define METADATA 3
extern int open_mddev(char *dev, int report_errors);
extern int open_container(int fd);
extern int metadata_container_matches(char *metadata, char *devnm);
extern int metadata_subdev_matches(char *metadata, char *devnm);
extern int is_container_member(struct mdstat_ent *ent, char *devname);
extern int is_subarray_active(char *subarray, char *devname);
extern int open_subarray(char *dev, char *subarray, struct supertype *st, int quiet);
extern struct superswitch *version_to_superswitch(char *vers);
2004-11-01 05:49:34 +01:00
extern int mdmon_running(char *devnm);
extern int mdmon_pid(char *devnm);
extern int check_env(char *name);
extern __u32 random32(void);
extern void random_uuid(__u8 *buf);
extern int start_mdmon(char *devnm);
extern int child_monitor(int afd, struct mdinfo *sra, struct reshape *reshape,
struct supertype *st, unsigned long stripes,
int *fds, unsigned long long *offsets,
int dests, int *destfd, unsigned long long *destoffsets);
void abort_reshape(struct mdinfo *sra);
void *super1_make_v0(struct supertype *st, struct mdinfo *info, mdp_super_t *sb0);
extern char *stat2kname(struct stat *st);
extern char *fd2kname(int fd);
extern char *stat2devnm(struct stat *st);
extern char *fd2devnm(int fd);
extern void udev_block(char *devnm);
extern void udev_unblock(void);
extern int in_initrd(void);
struct cmap_hooks {
void *cmap_handle; /* corosync lib related */
int (*initialize)(cmap_handle_t *handle);
int (*get_string)(cmap_handle_t handle,
const char *string,
char **name);
int (*finalize)(cmap_handle_t handle);
};
extern void set_cmap_hooks(void);
extern void set_hooks(void);
struct dlm_hooks {
void *dlm_handle; /* dlm lib related */
dlm_lshandle_t (*create_lockspace)(const char *name,
unsigned int mode);
dlm_lshandle_t (*open_lockspace)(const char *name);
int (*release_lockspace)(const char *name, dlm_lshandle_t ls,
int force);
int (*ls_lock)(dlm_lshandle_t lockspace, uint32_t mode,
struct dlm_lksb *lksb, uint32_t flags,
const void *name, unsigned int namelen,
uint32_t parent, void (*astaddr) (void *astarg),
void *astarg, void (*bastaddr) (void *astarg),
void *range);
int (*ls_unlock_wait)(dlm_lshandle_t lockspace, uint32_t lkid,
uint32_t flags, struct dlm_lksb *lksb);
int (*ls_get_fd)(dlm_lshandle_t ls);
int (*dispatch)(int fd);
};
extern int get_cluster_name(char **name);
extern int dlm_funs_ready(void);
extern int cluster_get_dlmlock(void);
extern int cluster_release_dlmlock(void);
extern void set_dlm_hooks(void);
#define _ROUND_UP(val, base) (((val) + (base) - 1) & ~(base - 1))
#define ROUND_UP(val, base) _ROUND_UP(val, (typeof(val))(base))
#define ROUND_UP_PTR(ptr, base) ((typeof(ptr)) \
(ROUND_UP((unsigned long)(ptr), base)))
static inline int is_subarray(char *vers)
{
/* The version string for a 'subarray' (an array in a container)
* is
* /containername/componentname for normal read-write arrays
* -containername/componentname for arrays which mdmon must not
* reconfigure. They might be read-only
* or might be undergoing reshape etc.
* containername is e.g. md0, md_d1
* componentname is dependant on the metadata. e.g. '1' 'S1' ...
*/
return (*vers == '/' || *vers == '-');
}
static inline char *to_subarray(struct mdstat_ent *ent, char *container)
{
return &ent->metadata_version[10+strlen(container)+1];
}
/**
* signal_s() - Wrapper for sigaction() with signal()-like interface.
* @sig: The signal to set the signal handler to.
* @handler: The signal handler.
*
* Return: previous handler or SIG_ERR on failure.
*/
static inline sighandler_t signal_s(int sig, sighandler_t handler)
{
struct sigaction new_act;
struct sigaction old_act;
new_act.sa_handler = handler;
new_act.sa_flags = 0;
if (sigaction(sig, &new_act, &old_act) == 0)
return old_act.sa_handler;
return SIG_ERR;
}
#ifdef DEBUG
#define dprintf(fmt, arg...) \
fprintf(stderr, "%s: %s: "fmt, Name, __func__, ##arg)
#define dprintf_cont(fmt, arg...) \
fprintf(stderr, fmt, ##arg)
#else
#define dprintf(fmt, arg...) \
({ if (0) fprintf(stderr, "%s: %s: " fmt, Name, __func__, ##arg); 0; })
#define dprintf_cont(fmt, arg...) \
({ if (0) fprintf(stderr, fmt, ##arg); 0; })
#endif
#include <assert.h>
#include <stdarg.h>
static inline int xasprintf(char **strp, const char *fmt, ...) {
va_list ap;
int ret;
va_start(ap, fmt);
ret = vasprintf(strp, fmt, ap);
va_end(ap);
assert(ret >= 0);
return ret;
}
#ifdef DEBUG
#define pr_err(fmt, args...) fprintf(stderr, "%s: %s: "fmt, Name, __func__, ##args)
#else
#define pr_err(fmt, args...) fprintf(stderr, "%s: "fmt, Name, ##args)
#endif
#define cont_err(fmt ...) fprintf(stderr, " " fmt)
void *xmalloc(size_t len);
void *xrealloc(void *ptr, size_t len);
void *xcalloc(size_t num, size_t size);
char *xstrdup(const char *str);
2004-11-01 05:49:34 +01:00
#define LEVEL_MULTIPATH (-4)
#define LEVEL_LINEAR (-1)
#define LEVEL_FAULTY (-5)
/* kernel module doesn't know about these */
#define LEVEL_CONTAINER (-100)
#define LEVEL_UNSUPPORTED (-200)
/* the kernel does know about this one ... */
#define LEVEL_NONE (-1000000)
2004-11-01 05:49:34 +01:00
/* faulty stuff */
#define WriteTransient 0
#define ReadTransient 1
#define WritePersistent 2
#define ReadPersistent 3
#define WriteAll 4 /* doesn't go to device */
#define ReadFixable 5
#define Modes 6
#define ClearErrors 31
#define ClearFaults 30
#define AllPersist 100 /* internal use only */
#define NoPersist 101
#define ModeMask 0x1f
#define ModeShift 5
#ifdef __TINYC__
#undef minor
#undef major
#undef makedev
#define minor(x) ((x)&0xff)
#define major(x) (((x)>>8)&0xff)
#define makedev(M,m) (((M)<<8) | (m))
#endif
enum r0layout {
RAID0_ORIG_LAYOUT = 1,
RAID0_ALT_MULTIZONE_LAYOUT = 2,
};
/* for raid4/5/6 */
#define ALGORITHM_LEFT_ASYMMETRIC 0
#define ALGORITHM_RIGHT_ASYMMETRIC 1
#define ALGORITHM_LEFT_SYMMETRIC 2
#define ALGORITHM_RIGHT_SYMMETRIC 3
/* Define non-rotating (raid4) algorithms. These allow
* conversion of raid4 to raid5.
*/
#define ALGORITHM_PARITY_0 4 /* P or P,Q are initial devices */
#define ALGORITHM_PARITY_N 5 /* P or P,Q are final devices. */
/* DDF RAID6 layouts differ from md/raid6 layouts in two ways.
* Firstly, the exact positioning of the parity block is slightly
* different between the 'LEFT_*' modes of md and the "_N_*" modes
* of DDF.
* Secondly, or order of datablocks over which the Q syndrome is computed
* is different.
* Consequently we have different layouts for DDF/raid6 than md/raid6.
* These layouts are from the DDFv1.2 spec.
* Interestingly DDFv1.2-Errata-A does not specify N_CONTINUE but
* leaves RLQ=3 as 'Vendor Specific'
*/
#define ALGORITHM_ROTATING_ZERO_RESTART 8 /* DDF PRL=6 RLQ=1 */
#define ALGORITHM_ROTATING_N_RESTART 9 /* DDF PRL=6 RLQ=2 */
#define ALGORITHM_ROTATING_N_CONTINUE 10 /*DDF PRL=6 RLQ=3 */
/* For every RAID5 algorithm we define a RAID6 algorithm
* with exactly the same layout for data and parity, and
* with the Q block always on the last device (N-1).
* This allows trivial conversion from RAID5 to RAID6
*/
#define ALGORITHM_LEFT_ASYMMETRIC_6 16
#define ALGORITHM_RIGHT_ASYMMETRIC_6 17
#define ALGORITHM_LEFT_SYMMETRIC_6 18
#define ALGORITHM_RIGHT_SYMMETRIC_6 19
#define ALGORITHM_PARITY_0_6 20
#define ALGORITHM_PARITY_N_6 ALGORITHM_PARITY_N
/* Define PATH_MAX in case we don't use glibc or standard library does
* not have PATH_MAX defined. Assume max path length is 4K characters.
*/
#ifndef PATH_MAX
#define PATH_MAX 4096
#endif
#define RESYNC_NONE -1
#define RESYNC_DELAYED -2
#define RESYNC_PENDING -3
#define RESYNC_REMOTE -4
#define RESYNC_UNKNOWN -5
/* When using "GET_DISK_INFO" it isn't certain how high
* we need to check. So we impose an absolute limit of
* MAX_DISKS. This needs to be much more than the largest
* number of devices any metadata can support. Currently
* v1.x can support 1920
*/
#define MAX_DISKS 4096
/* Sometimes the 'size' value passed needs to mean "Maximum".
* In those cases with use MAX_SIZE
*/
#define MAX_SIZE 1
/* We want to use unsigned numbers for sector counts, but need
* a value for 'invalid'. Use '1'.
*/
#define INVALID_SECTORS 1
/* And another special number needed for --data_offset=variable */
#define VARIABLE_OFFSET 3
/**
* This is true for native and DDF, IMSM allows 16.
*/
#define MD_NAME_MAX 32