-
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 104
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
99-systemd.rules: rework SYSTEMD_READY logic for device mapper (v252) #413
base: v252-stable
Are you sure you want to change the base?
Conversation
Device mapper devices are set up in multiple steps. The first step, which generates the initial "add" event, only creates an empty container, which is useless for higher layers. SYSTEMD_READY should be set to 0 on this event to avoid premature device activation. The event that matters is the "activation" event: the first "change" event on which DM_UDEV_DISABLE_OTHER_RULES_FLAG=1 is not set. When this event arrives, the device is ready for being scanned by blkid and similar tools, and for being activated by systemd. Intermittent events with DM_UDEV_DISABLE_OTHER_RULES_FLAG=1 should be ignored as far as systemd or higher-level block layers are concerned. Previous device properties and symlinks should be preserved: the device shouldn't be scanned or activated, but shouldn't be deactivated, either. In particular, SYSTEM_READY shouldn't be set to 0 if it wasn't set before, because that might cause mounted file systems to be unmounted. Such intermittent events may occur any time, before or after the "activation" event. DM_UDEV_DISABLE_OTHER_RULES_FLAG=1 can have multiple reasons. One possible reason is that the device is suspended. There are other reasons that depend on the device-mapper subsystem (LVM, multipath, dm-crypt, etc.). The current systemd rule set 1) sets SYSTEMD_READY=0 if DM_UDEV_DISABLE_OTHER_RULES_FLAG is set in "add" events; 2) imports SYSTEMD_READY from the udev db if DM_SUSPENDED is set, and jumps to systemd_end; 3) sets SYSTEMD_READY=1, otherwise. This logic has several flaws: * 1) can cause file systems to be unmounted if an coldplug event arrives while a file system is suspended. This rule shouldn't be applied for coldplug events or in general, "synthetic" add events; * 2) evaluates DM_SUSPENDED=1, which is a device-mapper internal property. It's wrong to infer that a device is accessible if DM_SUSPENDED=0. The jump to systemd_end may cause properties and/or symlinks to be lost; * 3) is superfluous, because SYSTEMD_READY=1 is equivalent with SYSTEMD_READY being unset, and can create the wrong impression that the device was explicitly activated. This patch fixes the logic as follows: - apply 1) only if DM_NAME is empty, which is only the case for the first "genuine add" event; - change 2) to use DM_UDEV_DISABLE_OTHER_RULES_FLAG instead of DM_SUSPENDED, and remove the GOTO directive; - remove 3). Fixes: b7cf1b6 ("udev: use SYSTEMD_READY to mask uninitialized DM devices") Fixes: 35a6750 ("rules: set SYSTEMD_READY=0 on DM_UDEV_DISABLE_OTHER_RULES_FLAG=1 only with ADD event (#2747)") Signed-off-by: Martin Wilck <[email protected]> (cherry picked from commit c072860)
We were not able to find or create Copr project
Please check your configuration for:
|
Backport of systemd/systemd#31661. There has been some confusion about the dependency between this change in the systemd udev rules and the related change in LVM2 2.03.24. The systemd/udev change (this PR) is a fix for the logic with which systemd handles OTOH, updating to LVM 2.03.24 without applying the changes from this PR comes with a slight regression risk as explained in this comment, because the updated device-mapper rules don't set Therefore it's better and safer for everyone to backport this PR to the systemd-stable branches. For information: @prajnoha, @bluca, @yuwata, @fbui, @bmarzins, @msekletar |
Device mapper devices are set up in multiple steps. The first step, which
generates the initial "add" event, only creates an empty container, which is
useless for higher layers. SYSTEMD_READY should be set to 0 on this event to
avoid premature device activation.
The event that matters is the "activation" event: the first "change" event on
which DM_UDEV_DISABLE_OTHER_RULES_FLAG=1 is not set. When this event arrives,
the device is ready for being scanned by blkid and similar tools, and for being
activated by systemd.
Intermittent events with DM_UDEV_DISABLE_OTHER_RULES_FLAG=1 should be ignored
as far as systemd or higher-level block layers are concerned. Previous device
properties and symlinks should be preserved: the device shouldn't be scanned or
activated, but shouldn't be deactivated, either. In particular, SYSTEM_READY
shouldn't be set to 0 if it wasn't set before, because that might cause mounted
file systems to be unmounted. Such intermittent events may occur any time,
before or after the "activation" event.
DM_UDEV_DISABLE_OTHER_RULES_FLAG=1 can have multiple reasons. One possible reason
is that the device is suspended. There are other reasons that depend on the
device-mapper subsystem (LVM, multipath, dm-crypt, etc.).
The current systemd rule set
events;
This logic has several flaws:
a file system is suspended. This rule shouldn't be applied for coldplug events
or in general, "synthetic" add events;
It's wrong to infer that a device is accessible if DM_SUSPENDED=0.
The jump to systemd_end may cause properties and/or symlinks to be lost;
being unset, and can create the wrong impression that the device was explicitly
activated.
This patch fixes the logic as follows:
"genuine add" event;
and remove the GOTO directive;
Fixes: b7cf1b6 ("udev: use SYSTEMD_READY to mask uninitialized DM devices")
Fixes: 35a6750 ("rules: set SYSTEMD_READY=0 on DM_UDEV_DISABLE_OTHER_RULES_FLAG=1 only with ADD event (#2747)")
Signed-off-by: Martin Wilck [email protected]
(cherry picked from commit c072860)