diff --git a/heartbeat/Filesystem b/heartbeat/Filesystem index aa99c327b..9c9a66483 100755 --- a/heartbeat/Filesystem +++ b/heartbeat/Filesystem @@ -1,1122 +1,1122 @@ #!/bin/sh # # Support: linux-ha@lists.linux-ha.org # License: GNU General Public License (GPL) # # Filesystem # Description: Manages a Filesystem on a shared storage medium. # Original Author: Eric Z. Ayers (eric.ayers@compgen.com) # Original Release: 25 Oct 2000 # # usage: ./Filesystem {start|stop|status|monitor|validate-all|meta-data} # # OCF parameters are as below: # OCF_RESKEY_device # OCF_RESKEY_directory # OCF_RESKEY_fstype # OCF_RESKEY_options # OCF_RESKEY_statusfile_prefix # OCF_RESKEY_run_fsck # OCF_RESKEY_fast_stop # OCF_RESKEY_force_clones # #OCF_RESKEY_device : name of block device for the filesystem. e.g. /dev/sda1, /dev/md0 # Or a -U or -L option for mount, or an NFS mount specification #OCF_RESKEY_directory : the mount point for the filesystem #OCF_RESKEY_fstype : optional name of the filesystem type. e.g. ext2 #OCF_RESKEY_options : options to be given to the mount command via -o #OCF_RESKEY_statusfile_prefix : the prefix used for a status file for monitoring #OCF_RESKEY_run_fsck : fsck execution mode: auto(default)/force/no #OCF_RESKEY_fast_stop : fast stop: yes(default)/no #OCF_RESKEY_force_clones : allow running the resource as clone. e.g. local xfs mounts # for each brick in a glusterfs setup # # # This assumes you want to manage a filesystem on a shared (SCSI) bus, # on a replicated device (such as DRBD), or a network filesystem (such # as NFS or Samba). # # Do not put this filesystem in /etc/fstab. This script manages all of # that for you. # # NOTE: If 2 or more nodes mount the same file system read-write, and # that file system is not designed for that specific purpose # (such as GFS or OCFS2), and is not a network file system like # NFS or Samba, then the filesystem is going to become # corrupted. # # As a result, you should use this together with the stonith # option and redundant, independent communications paths. # # If you don't do this, don't blame us when you scramble your # disk. ####################################################################### # Initialization: : ${OCF_FUNCTIONS_DIR=${OCF_ROOT}/lib/heartbeat} . ${OCF_FUNCTIONS_DIR}/ocf-shellfuncs # Defaults DFLT_STATUSDIR=".Filesystem_status/" # Variables used by multiple methods HOSTOS=`uname` # The status file is going to an extra directory, by default # prefix=${OCF_RESKEY_statusfile_prefix} : ${prefix:=$DFLT_STATUSDIR} suffix="${OCF_RESOURCE_INSTANCE}" [ "$OCF_RESKEY_CRM_meta_clone" ] && suffix="${suffix}_$OCF_RESKEY_CRM_meta_clone" suffix="${suffix}_`uname -n`" STATUSFILE=${OCF_RESKEY_directory}/$prefix$suffix ####################################################################### usage() { cat <<-EOT usage: $0 {start|stop|status|monitor|validate-all|meta-data} EOT } meta_data() { cat < 1.1 Resource script for Filesystem. It manages a Filesystem on a shared storage medium. The standard monitor operation of depth 0 (also known as probe) checks if the filesystem is mounted. If you want deeper tests, set OCF_CHECK_LEVEL to one of the following values: 10: read first 16 blocks of the device (raw read) This doesn't exercise the filesystem at all, but the device on which the filesystem lives. This is noop for non-block devices such as NFS, SMBFS, or bind mounts. 20: test if a status file can be written and read The status file must be writable by root. This is not always the case with an NFS mount, as NFS exports usually have the "root_squash" option set. In such a setup, you must either use read-only monitoring (depth=10), export with "no_root_squash" on your NFS server, or grant world write permissions on the directory where the status file is to be placed. Manages filesystem mounts The name of block device for the filesystem, or -U, -L options for mount, or NFS mount specification. block device The mount point for the filesystem. mount point The type of filesystem to be mounted. filesystem type Any extra options to be given as -o options to mount. For bind mounts, add "bind" here and set fstype to "none". We will do the right thing for options such as "bind,ro". options The prefix to be used for a status file for resource monitoring with depth 20. If you don't specify this parameter, all status files will be created in a separate directory. status file prefix Specify how to decide whether to run fsck or not. "auto" : decide to run fsck depending on the fstype(default) "force" : always run fsck regardless of the fstype "no" : do not run fsck ever. run_fsck Normally, we expect no users of the filesystem and the stop operation to finish quickly. If you cannot control the filesystem users easily and want to prevent the stop action from failing, then set this parameter to "no" and add an appropriate timeout for the stop operation. fast stop The usage of a clone setup for local filesystems is forbidden by default. For special setups like glusterfs, cloning a mount of a local device with a filesystem like ext4 or xfs, independently on several nodes is a valid use-case. Only set this to "true" if you know what you are doing! allow running as a clone, regardless of filesystem type END } # # Make sure the kernel does the right thing with the FS buffers # This function should be called after unmounting and before mounting # It may not be necessary in 2.4 and later kernels, but it shouldn't hurt # anything either... # # It's really a bug that you have to do this at all... # flushbufs() { if have_binary $BLOCKDEV ; then if [ "$blockdevice" = "yes" ] ; then $BLOCKDEV --flushbufs $1 return $? fi fi return 0 } # Take advantage of /etc/mtab if present, use portable mount command # otherwise. Normalize format to "dev mountpoint fstype". is_bind_mount() { echo "$options" | grep -w bind >/dev/null 2>&1 } list_mounts() { local inpf="" if [ -e "/proc/mounts" ] && ! is_bind_mount; then inpf=/proc/mounts elif [ -f "/etc/mtab" -a -r "/etc/mtab" ]; then inpf=/etc/mtab fi if [ "$inpf" ]; then cut -d' ' -f1,2,3 < $inpf else $MOUNT | cut -d' ' -f1,3,5 fi } determine_blockdevice() { if [ $blockdevice = "yes" ]; then return fi # Get the current real device name, if possible. # (specified devname could be -L or -U...) case "$FSTYPE" in nfs|smbfs|cifs|glusterfs|ceph|tmpfs|none) ;; *) DEVICE=`list_mounts | grep " $MOUNTPOINT " | cut -d' ' -f1` if [ -b "$DEVICE" ]; then blockdevice=yes fi ;; esac } # Lists all filesystems potentially mounted under a given path, # excluding the path itself. list_submounts() { list_mounts | grep " $1/" | cut -d' ' -f2 | sort -r } ocfs2_del_cache() { if [ -e "$_OCFS2_uuid_cache" ]; then rm -f $_OCFS2_uuid_cache fi } ocfs2_cleanup() { # We'll never see the post-stop notification. We're gone now, # have unmounted, and thus should remove the membership. # # (Do so regardless of whether we were unmounted already, # because the admin might have manually unmounted but not # cleared up the membership directory. Bad admin, no cookie.) # if [ ! -d "$OCFS2_FS_ROOT" ]; then ocf_log info "$OCFS2_FS_ROOT: Filesystem membership already gone." else ocf_log info "$OCFS2_FS_ROOT: Removing membership directory." rm -rf $OCFS2_FS_ROOT/ fi ocfs2_del_cache } ocfs2_fetch_uuid() { mounted.ocfs2 -d $DEVICE|tail -1|awk '{print $3}'|tr -d -- -|tr '[a-z]' '[A-Z]' } ocfs2_set_uuid() { _OCFS2_uuid_cache="$HA_RSCTMP/Filesystem.ocfs2_uuid.$(echo $DEVICE|tr / .)" if [ "$OP" != "start" -a -e "$_OCFS2_uuid_cache" ]; then # Trust the cache. OCFS2_UUID=$(cat $_OCFS2_uuid_cache 2>/dev/null) return 0 fi OCFS2_UUID=$(ocfs2_fetch_uuid) if [ -n "$OCFS2_UUID" -a "$OCFS2_UUID" != "UUID" ]; then # UUID valid: echo $OCFS2_UUID > $_OCFS2_uuid_cache return 0 fi # Ok, no UUID still, but that's alright for stop, because it # very likely means we never got started - if [ "$OP" = "stop" ]; then ocf_log warn "$DEVICE: No UUID; assuming never started!" OCFS2_UUID="UUID_NOT_SET" return 0 fi # Everything else - wrong: ocf_log err "$DEVICE: Could not determine ocfs2 UUID for device." exit $OCF_ERR_GENERIC } ocfs2_init() { # Check & initialize the OCFS2 specific variables. # This check detects whether the special/legacy hooks to # integrate OCFS2 with user-space clustering on SLES10 need to # be activated. # Newer kernels >= 2.6.28, with OCFS2+openAIS+Pacemaker, do # not need this: OCFS2_SLES10="" if [ "X$HA_cluster_type" = "Xcman" ]; then return elif [ "X$HA_cluster_type" != "Xopenais" ]; then if grep -q "SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 10" /etc/SuSE-release >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then OCFS2_SLES10="yes" ocf_log info "$DEVICE: Enabling SLES10 compatibility mode for OCFS2." else ocf_log err "$DEVICE: ocfs2 is not compatible with your environment." exit $OCF_ERR_CONFIGURED fi else return fi if [ $OP != "stop" ]; then if [ -z "$OCF_RESKEY_CRM_meta_clone" ]; then ocf_log err "ocfs2 must be run as a clone." exit $OCF_ERR_GENERIC fi fi if [ $blockdevice = "no" ]; then ocf_log err "$DEVICE: ocfs2 needs a block device instead." exit $OCF_ERR_GENERIC fi for f in "$OCF_RESKEY_ocfs2_configfs" /sys/kernel/config/cluster /configfs/cluster ; do if [ -n "$f" -a -d "$f" ]; then OCFS2_CONFIGFS="$f" break fi done if [ ! -d "$OCFS2_CONFIGFS" ]; then ocf_log err "ocfs2 needs configfs mounted." exit $OCF_ERR_GENERIC fi ocfs2_set_uuid if [ -n "$OCF_RESKEY_ocfs2_cluster" ]; then OCFS2_CLUSTER=$(echo $OCF_RESKEY_ocfs2_cluster) else OCFS2_CLUSTER=$(find "$OCFS2_CONFIGFS" -maxdepth 1 -mindepth 1 -type d -printf %f 2>/dev/null) set -- $OCFS2_CLUSTER local n; n="$#" if [ $n -gt 1 ]; then ocf_log err "$OCFS2_CLUSTER: several clusters found." exit $OCF_ERR_GENERIC fi if [ $n -eq 0 ]; then ocf_log err "$OCFS2_CONFIGFS: no clusters found." exit $OCF_ERR_GENERIC fi fi OCFS2_CLUSTER_ROOT="$OCFS2_CONFIGFS/$OCFS2_CLUSTER" if [ ! -d "$OCFS2_CLUSTER_ROOT" ]; then ocf_log err "$OCFS2_CLUSTER: Cluster doesn't exist. Maybe o2cb hasn't been run?" exit $OCF_ERR_GENERIC fi OCFS2_FS_ROOT=$OCFS2_CLUSTER_ROOT/heartbeat/$OCFS2_UUID } # kernels < 2.6.26 can't handle bind remounts bind_kernel_check() { echo "$options" | grep -w ro >/dev/null 2>&1 || return uname -r | awk -F. ' $1==2 && $2==6 { sub("[^0-9].*","",$3); if ($3<26) exit(1); }' [ $? -ne 0 ] && ocf_log warn "kernel `uname -r` cannot handle read only bind mounts" } bind_mount() { if is_bind_mount && [ "$options" != "-o bind" ] then bind_kernel_check bind_opts=`echo $options | sed 's/bind/remount/'` $MOUNT $bind_opts $MOUNTPOINT else true # make sure to return OK fi } is_option() { echo $OCF_RESKEY_options | grep -w "$1" >/dev/null 2>&1 } is_fsck_needed() { case $OCF_RESKEY_run_fsck in force) true;; no) false;; ""|auto) case $FSTYPE in ext4|ext4dev|ext3|reiserfs|reiser4|nss|xfs|jfs|vfat|fat|nfs|cifs|smbfs|ocfs2|gfs2|none|lustre|glusterfs|ceph|tmpfs) false;; *) true;; esac;; *) ocf_log warn "Invalid parameter value for fsck: '$OCF_RESKEY_run_fsck'; setting to 'auto'" OCF_RESKEY_run_fsck="auto" is_fsck_needed;; esac } # # START: Start up the filesystem # Filesystem_start() { if [ -n "$OCFS2_SLES10" ]; then # "start" now has the notification data available; that # we're being started means we didn't get the # pre-notification, because we weren't running, so # process the information now first. ocf_log info "$OCFS2_UUID: Faking pre-notification on start." OCF_RESKEY_CRM_meta_notify_type="pre" OCF_RESKEY_CRM_meta_notify_operation="start" Filesystem_notify fi # See if the device is already mounted. if Filesystem_status >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then ocf_log info "Filesystem $MOUNTPOINT is already mounted." return $OCF_SUCCESS fi if [ "X${HOSTOS}" != "XOpenBSD" ];then if [ -z "$FSTYPE" -o "$FSTYPE" = none ]; then : No FSTYPE specified, rely on the system has the right file-system support already else local support="$FSTYPE" # support fuse-filesystems (e.g. GlusterFS) case $FSTYPE in glusterfs) support="fuse";; esac grep -w "$support"'$' /proc/filesystems >/dev/null || $MODPROBE $support >/dev/null grep -w "$support"'$' /proc/filesystems >/dev/null if [ $? -ne 0 ] ; then ocf_log err "Couldn't find filesystem $FSTYPE in /proc/filesystems" return $OCF_ERR_INSTALLED fi fi fi # Check the filesystem & auto repair. # NOTE: Some filesystem types don't need this step... Please modify # accordingly if [ $blockdevice = "yes" ]; then if [ "$DEVICE" != "/dev/null" -a ! -b "$DEVICE" ] ; then ocf_log err "Couldn't find device [$DEVICE]. Expected /dev/??? to exist" exit $OCF_ERR_INSTALLED fi if is_fsck_needed; then ocf_log info "Starting filesystem check on $DEVICE" if [ -z "$FSTYPE" ]; then $FSCK -p $DEVICE else $FSCK -t $FSTYPE -p $DEVICE fi # NOTE: if any errors at all are detected, it returns non-zero # if the error is >= 4 then there is a big problem if [ $? -ge 4 ]; then ocf_log err "Couldn't sucessfully fsck filesystem for $DEVICE" return $OCF_ERR_GENERIC fi fi fi if [ ! -d "$MOUNTPOINT" ] ; then ocf_log err "Couldn't find directory [$MOUNTPOINT] to use as a mount point" exit $OCF_ERR_INSTALLED fi flushbufs $DEVICE # Mount the filesystem. case "$FSTYPE" in none) $MOUNT $options $DEVICE $MOUNTPOINT && bind_mount ;; "") $MOUNT $options $DEVICE $MOUNTPOINT ;; *) $MOUNT -t $FSTYPE $options $DEVICE $MOUNTPOINT ;; esac if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then ocf_log err "Couldn't mount filesystem $DEVICE on $MOUNTPOINT" if [ -n "$OCFS2_SLES10" ]; then ocfs2_cleanup fi return $OCF_ERR_GENERIC fi return $OCF_SUCCESS } # end of Filesystem_start Filesystem_notify() { # Process notifications; this is the essential glue level for # giving user-space membership events to a cluster-aware # filesystem. Right now, only OCFS2 is supported. # # When we get a pre-start notification, we set up all the nodes # which will be active in our membership for the filesystem. # (For the resource to be started, this happens at the time of # the actual 'start' operation.) # # At a post-start, actually there's nothing to do for us really, # but no harm done in re-syncing either. # # pre-stop is meaningless; we can't remove any node yet, it # first needs to unmount. # # post-stop: the node is removed from the membership of the # other nodes. # # Note that this expects that the base cluster is already # active; ie o2cb has been started and populated # $OCFS2_CLUSTER_ROOT/node/ already. This can be achieved by # simply having o2cb run on all nodes by the CRM too. This # probably ought to be mentioned somewhere in the to be written # documentation. ;-) # if [ -z "$OCFS2_SLES10" ]; then # One of the cases which shouldn't occur; it should have # been caught much earlier. Still, you know ... ocf_log err "$DEVICE: Please only enable notifications for SLES10 OCFS2 mounts." # Yes, in theory this is a configuration error, but # simply discarding them allows users to switch from the # SLES10 stack to the new one w/o downtime. # Ignoring the notifications is harmless, afterall, and # they can simply disable them in their own time. return $OCF_SUCCESS fi local n_type; n_type="$OCF_RESKEY_CRM_meta_notify_type" local n_op; n_op="$OCF_RESKEY_CRM_meta_notify_operation" local n_active; n_active="$OCF_RESKEY_CRM_meta_notify_active_uname" local n_stop; n_stop="$OCF_RESKEY_CRM_meta_notify_stop_uname" local n_start; n_start="$OCF_RESKEY_CRM_meta_notify_start_uname" ocf_log info "$OCFS2_UUID: notify: $n_type for $n_op" ocf_log info "$OCFS2_UUID: notify active: $n_active" ocf_log info "$OCFS2_UUID: notify stop: $n_stop" ocf_log info "$OCFS2_UUID: notify start: $n_start" case "$n_type" in pre) case "$n_op" in stop) ocf_log info "$OCFS2_UUID: ignoring pre-notify for stop." return $OCF_SUCCESS ;; start) # These are about to become active; prepare to # communicate with them. # Duplicate removal - start can contain nodes # already on the active list, confusing the # script later on: for UNAME in $n_active; do n_start=`echo ${n_start} | sed s/$UNAME//` done # Merge pruned lists again: n_active="$n_active $n_start" ;; esac ;; post) case "$n_op" in stop) # remove unames from notify_stop_uname; these have been # stopped and can no longer be considered active. for UNAME in $n_stop; do n_active=`echo ${n_active} | sed s/$UNAME//` done ;; start) if [ "$n_op" = "start" ]; then ocf_log info "$OCFS2_UUID: ignoring post-notify for start." return $OCF_SUCCESS fi ;; esac ;; esac ocf_log info "$OCFS2_UUID: post-processed active: $n_active" local n_myself; n_myself=${HA_CURHOST:-$(uname -n | tr '[A-Z]' '[a-z]')} ocf_log info "$OCFS2_UUID: I am node $n_myself." case " $n_active " in *" $n_myself "*) ;; *) ocf_log err "$OCFS2_UUID: $n_myself (local) not on active list!" return $OCF_ERR_GENERIC ;; esac if [ -d "$OCFS2_FS_ROOT" ]; then entry_prefix=$OCFS2_FS_ROOT/ for entry in $OCFS2_FS_ROOT/* ; do n_fs="${entry##$entry_prefix}" # ocf_log info "$OCFS2_UUID: Found current node $n_fs" case " $n_active " in *" $n_fs "*) # Construct a list of nodes which are present # already in the membership. n_exists="$n_exists $n_fs" ocf_log info "$OCFS2_UUID: Keeping node: $n_fs" ;; *) # Node is in the membership currently, but not on our # active list. Must be removed. if [ "$n_op" = "start" ]; then ocf_log warn "$OCFS2_UUID: Removing nodes on start" fi ocf_log info "$OCFS2_UUID: Removing dead node: $n_fs" if ! rm -f $entry ; then ocf_log err "$OCFS2_UUID: Removal of $n_fs failed!" fi ;; esac done else ocf_log info "$OCFS2_UUID: heartbeat directory doesn't exist yet, creating." mkdir -p $OCFS2_FS_ROOT fi ocf_log info "$OCFS2_UUID: Existing node list: $n_exists" # (2) for entry in $n_active ; do # ocf_log info "$OCFS2_UUID: Expected active node: $entry" case " $n_exists " in *" $entry "*) ocf_log info "$OCFS2_UUID: Already active: $entry" ;; *) if [ "$n_op" = "stop" ]; then ocf_log warn "$OCFS2_UUID: Adding nodes on stop" fi ocf_log info "$OCFS2_UUID: Activating node: $entry" if ! ln -s $OCFS2_CLUSTER_ROOT/node/$entry $OCFS2_FS_ROOT/$entry ; then ocf_log err "$OCFS2_CLUSTER_ROOT/node/$entry: failed to link" fi ;; esac done } signal_processes() { local dir=$1 local sig=$2 # fuser returns a non-zero return code if none of the # specified files is accessed or in case of a fatal # error. if [ "X${HOSTOS}" = "XOpenBSD" ];then PIDS=`fstat | grep $dir | awk '{print $3}'` for PID in ${PIDS};do kill -s $sig ${PID} ocf_log info "Sent signal $sig to ${PID}" done else if $FUSER -$sig -m -k $dir ; then ocf_log info "Some processes on $dir were signalled" else ocf_log info "No processes on $dir were signalled" fi fi } try_umount() { local SUB=$1 $UMOUNT $umount_force $SUB list_mounts | grep -q " $SUB " >/dev/null 2>&1 || { ocf_log info "unmounted $SUB successfully" return $OCF_SUCCESS } return $OCF_ERR_GENERIC } fs_stop() { local SUB=$1 timeout=$2 sig cnt for sig in TERM KILL; do cnt=$((timeout/2)) # try half time with TERM while [ $cnt -gt 0 ]; do try_umount $SUB && return $OCF_SUCCESS ocf_log err "Couldn't unmount $SUB; trying cleanup with $sig" signal_processes $SUB $sig cnt=$((cnt-1)) sleep 1 done done return $OCF_ERR_GENERIC } # # STOP: Unmount the filesystem # Filesystem_stop() { # See if the device is currently mounted Filesystem_status >/dev/null 2>&1 if [ $? -eq $OCF_NOT_RUNNING ]; then # Already unmounted, wonderful. rc=$OCF_SUCCESS else # Wipe the status file, but continue with a warning if # removal fails -- the file system might be read only if [ -f "$STATUSFILE" ]; then rm -f ${STATUSFILE} if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then ocf_log warn "Failed to remove status file ${STATUSFILE}." fi fi # Determine the real blockdevice this is mounted on (if # possible) prior to unmounting. determine_blockdevice # For networked filesystems, there's merit in trying -f: case "$FSTYPE" in nfs|cifs|smbfs) umount_force="-f" ;; esac # Umount all sub-filesystems mounted under $MOUNTPOINT/ too. local timeout for SUB in `list_submounts $MOUNTPOINT` $MOUNTPOINT; do ocf_log info "Trying to unmount $SUB" if ocf_is_true "$FAST_STOP"; then timeout=6 else timeout=${OCF_RESKEY_CRM_meta_timeout:="20000"} timeout=$((timeout/1000)) fi fs_stop $SUB $timeout rc=$? if [ $rc -ne $OCF_SUCCESS ]; then ocf_log err "Couldn't unmount $SUB, giving up!" fi done fi flushbufs $DEVICE # Yes I know the next blob is ugly, sorry. if [ $rc -eq $OCF_SUCCESS ]; then if [ "$FSTYPE" = "ocfs2" ]; then ocfs2_init if [ -n "$OCFS2_SLES10" ]; then ocfs2_cleanup fi fi fi return $rc } # end of Filesystem_stop # # STATUS: is the filesystem mounted or not? # Filesystem_status() { if list_mounts | grep -q " $MOUNTPOINT " >/dev/null 2>&1; then rc=$OCF_SUCCESS msg="$MOUNTPOINT is mounted (running)" else rc=$OCF_NOT_RUNNING msg="$MOUNTPOINT is unmounted (stopped)" fi # TODO: For ocfs2, or other cluster filesystems, should we be # checking connectivity to other nodes here, or the IO path to # the storage? # Special case "monitor" to check whether the UUID cached and # on-disk still match? case "$OP" in status) ocf_log info "$msg";; esac return $rc } # end of Filesystem_status # Note: the read/write tests below will stall in case the # underlying block device (or in the case of a NAS mount, the # NAS server) has gone away. In that case, if I/O does not # return to normal in time, the operation hits its timeout # and it is up to the CRM to initiate appropriate recovery # actions (such as fencing the node). # # MONITOR 10: read the device # Filesystem_monitor_10() { if [ "$blockdevice" = "no" ] ; then ocf_log warn "$DEVICE is not a block device, monitor 10 is noop" return $OCF_SUCCESS fi dd_opts="iflag=direct bs=4k count=1" err_output=`dd if=$DEVICE $dd_opts 2>&1 >/dev/null` if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then ocf_log err "Failed to read device $DEVICE" ocf_log err "dd said: $err_output" return $OCF_ERR_GENERIC fi return $OCF_SUCCESS } # # MONITOR 20: write and read a status file # Filesystem_monitor_20() { if [ "$blockdevice" = "no" ] ; then # O_DIRECT not supported on cifs/smbfs dd_opts="oflag=sync bs=4k conv=fsync,sync" else # Writing to the device in O_DIRECT mode is imperative # to bypass caches. dd_opts="oflag=direct,sync bs=4k conv=fsync,sync" fi status_dir=`dirname $STATUSFILE` [ -d "$status_dir" ] || mkdir -p "$status_dir" err_output=` echo "${OCF_RESOURCE_INSTANCE}" | dd of=${STATUSFILE} $dd_opts 2>&1` if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then ocf_log err "Failed to write status file ${STATUSFILE}" ocf_log err "dd said: $err_output" return $OCF_ERR_GENERIC fi test -f ${STATUSFILE} if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then ocf_log err "Cannot stat the status file ${STATUSFILE}" return $OCF_ERR_GENERIC fi cat ${STATUSFILE} > /dev/null if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then ocf_log err "Cannot read the status file ${STATUSFILE}" return $OCF_ERR_GENERIC fi return $OCF_SUCCESS } Filesystem_monitor() { Filesystem_status rc=$? if [ $rc -ne $OCF_SUCCESS ]; then return $rc fi if [ $rc -eq $OCF_SUCCESS -a $OCF_CHECK_LEVEL -gt 0 ]; then case "$OCF_CHECK_LEVEL" in 10) Filesystem_monitor_10; rc=$?;; 20) Filesystem_monitor_20; rc=$?;; *) ocf_log err "unsupported monitor level $OCF_CHECK_LEVEL" rc=$OCF_ERR_CONFIGURED ;; esac fi return $rc } # end of Filesystem_monitor # # VALIDATE_ALL: Are the instance parameters valid? # FIXME!! The only part that's useful is the return code. # This code always returns $OCF_SUCCESS (!) # Filesystem_validate_all() { if [ -n $MOUNTPOINT -a ! -d $MOUNTPOINT ]; then ocf_log warn "Mountpoint $MOUNTPOINT does not exist" fi # Check if the $FSTYPE is workable # NOTE: Without inserting the $FSTYPE module, this step may be imprecise # TODO: This is Linux specific crap. if [ ! -z "$FSTYPE" -a "$FSTYPE" != none ]; then cut -f2 /proc/filesystems |grep -q ^$FSTYPE$ if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then modpath=/lib/modules/`uname -r` moddep=$modpath/modules.dep # Do we have $FSTYPE in modules.dep? cut -d' ' -f1 $moddep |grep -q "^$modpath.*$FSTYPE\.k\?o:$" if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then ocf_log info "It seems we do not have $FSTYPE support" fi fi fi # If we are supposed to do monitoring with status files, then # we need a utility to write in O_DIRECT mode. if [ $OCF_CHECK_LEVEL -gt 0 ]; then check_binary dd # Note: really old coreutils version do not support # the "oflag" option for dd. We don't check for that # here. In case dd does not support oflag, monitor is # bound to fail, with dd spewing an error message to # the logs. On such systems, we must do without status # file monitoring. fi #TODO: How to check the $options ? return $OCF_SUCCESS } # # set the blockdevice variable to "no" or "yes" # set_blockdevice_var() { blockdevice=no # these are definitely not block devices case $FSTYPE in nfs|smbfs|cifs|none|glusterfs) return;; esac case $DEVICE in -*) # Oh... An option to mount instead... Typically -U or -L ;; /dev/null) # Special case for BSC blockdevice=yes ;; *) if [ ! -b "$DEVICE" -a ! -d "$DEVICE" -a "X$OP" != Xstart ] ; then ocf_log warn "Couldn't find device [$DEVICE]. Expected /dev/??? to exist" fi if [ ! -d "$DEVICE" ]; then blockdevice=yes fi ;; esac } # Check the arguments passed to this script if [ $# -ne 1 ]; then usage exit $OCF_ERR_ARGS fi # Check the OCF_RESKEY_ environment variables... DEVICE=$OCF_RESKEY_device FSTYPE=$OCF_RESKEY_fstype if [ ! -z "$OCF_RESKEY_options" ]; then options="-o $OCF_RESKEY_options" fi FAST_STOP=${OCF_RESKEY_fast_stop:="yes"} OP=$1 # These operations do not require instance parameters case $OP in meta-data) meta_data exit $OCF_SUCCESS ;; usage) usage exit $OCF_SUCCESS ;; esac if [ x = x"$DEVICE" ]; then ocf_log err "Please set OCF_RESKEY_device to the device to be managed" exit $OCF_ERR_CONFIGURED fi set_blockdevice_var # Normalize instance parameters: # It is possible that OCF_RESKEY_directory has one or even multiple trailing "/". # But the output of `mount` and /proc/mounts do not. if [ -z "$OCF_RESKEY_directory" ]; then if [ X$OP = "Xstart" -o $blockdevice = "no" ]; then ocf_log err "Please specify the directory" exit $OCF_ERR_CONFIGURED fi else MOUNTPOINT=$(echo $OCF_RESKEY_directory | sed 's/\/*$//') : ${MOUNTPOINT:=/} # At this stage, $MOUNTPOINT does not contain trailing "/" unless it is "/" # TODO: / mounted via Filesystem sounds dangerous. On stop, we'll # kill the whole system. Is that a good idea? fi # Check to make sure the utilites are found if [ "X${HOSTOS}" != "XOpenBSD" ];then check_binary $MODPROBE check_binary $FUSER fi check_binary $FSCK check_binary $MOUNT check_binary $UMOUNT if [ "$OP" != "monitor" ]; then ocf_log info "Running $OP for $DEVICE on $MOUNTPOINT" fi # These operations do not require the clone checking + OCFS2 # initialization. case $OP in status) Filesystem_status exit $? ;; monitor) Filesystem_monitor exit $? ;; validate-all) Filesystem_validate_all exit $? ;; stop) Filesystem_stop exit $? ;; esac CLUSTERSAFE=0 is_option "ro" && CLUSTERSAFE=2 case $FSTYPE in ocfs2) ocfs2_init CLUSTERSAFE=1 ;; nfs|smbfs|cifs|none|gfs2|glusterfs|ceph) CLUSTERSAFE=1 # this is kind of safe too ;; # add here CLUSTERSAFE=0 for all filesystems which are not # cluster aware and which, even if when mounted read-only, # could still modify parts of it such as journal/metadata ext4|ext4dev|ext3|reiserfs|reiser4|xfs|jfs) if ocf_is_true "$OCF_RESKEY_force_clones"; then CLUSTERSAFE=2 else CLUSTERSAFE=0 # these are not allowed fi ;; esac if [ -n "$OCF_RESKEY_CRM_meta_clone" ]; then case $CLUSTERSAFE in 0) ocf_log err "DANGER! $FSTYPE on $DEVICE is NOT cluster-aware!" ocf_log err "DO NOT RUN IT AS A CLONE!" ocf_log err "Politely refusing to proceed to avoid data corruption." exit $OCF_ERR_CONFIGURED ;; 2) ocf_log warn "$FSTYPE on $DEVICE is NOT cluster-aware!" if ocf_is_true "$OCF_RESKEY_force_clones"; then - ocf_log_warn "But we'll let it run because we trust _YOU_ verified it's safe to do so." + ocf_log warn "But we'll let it run because we trust _YOU_ verified it's safe to do so." else ocf_log warn "But we'll let it run because it is mounted read-only." ocf_log warn "Please make sure that it's meta data is read-only too!" fi ;; esac fi case $OP in start) Filesystem_start ;; notify) Filesystem_notify ;; *) usage exit $OCF_ERR_UNIMPLEMENTED ;; esac exit $?