diff options
author | Steven Whitehouse <swhiteho@redhat.com> | 2009-08-14 15:24:46 +0100 |
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committer | Steven Whitehouse <swhiteho@redhat.com> | 2009-08-17 11:11:41 +0100 |
commit | 0aa87445842036f88b53db7f377ad8376bd94ab8 (patch) | |
tree | d1a8f3bce8197c5047f61793c0c950dfc22feba2 | |
parent | 31e54b01f3f00b595aac02e887960e5dcc575844 (diff) |
GFS2: Add a document explaining GFS2's uevents
This will be essential reading for anybody who wants to
understand how GFS2 interacts with the userland gfs_controld,
and the details of recovery.
Signed-off-by: Steven Whitehouse <swhiteho@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Bob Peterson <rpeterso@redhat.com>
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/filesystems/gfs2-uevents.txt | 100 |
1 files changed, 100 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/filesystems/gfs2-uevents.txt b/Documentation/filesystems/gfs2-uevents.txt new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..fd966dc9979 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/filesystems/gfs2-uevents.txt @@ -0,0 +1,100 @@ + uevents and GFS2 + ================== + +During the lifetime of a GFS2 mount, a number of uevents are generated. +This document explains what the events are and what they are used +for (by gfs_controld in gfs2-utils). + +A list of GFS2 uevents +----------------------- + +1. ADD + +The ADD event occurs at mount time. It will always be the first +uevent generated by the newly created filesystem. If the mount +is successful, an ONLINE uevent will follow. If it is not successful +then a REMOVE uevent will follow. + +The ADD uevent has two environment variables: SPECTATOR=[0|1] +and RDONLY=[0|1] that specify the spectator status (a read-only mount +with no journal assigned), and read-only (with journal assigned) status +of the filesystem respectively. + +2. ONLINE + +The ONLINE uevent is generated after a successful mount or remount. It +has the same environment variables as the ADD uevent. The ONLINE +uevent, along with the two environment variables for spectator and +RDONLY are a relatively recent addition (2.6.32-rc+) and will not +be generated by older kernels. + +3. CHANGE + +The CHANGE uevent is used in two places. One is when reporting the +successful mount of the filesystem by the first node (FIRSTMOUNT=Done). +This is used as a signal by gfs_controld that it is then ok for other +nodes in the cluster to mount the filesystem. + +The other CHANGE uevent is used to inform of the completion +of journal recovery for one of the filesystems journals. It has +two environment variables, JID= which specifies the journal id which +has just been recovered, and RECOVERY=[Done|Failed] to indicate the +success (or otherwise) of the operation. These uevents are generated +for every journal recovered, whether it is during the initial mount +process or as the result of gfs_controld requesting a specific journal +recovery via the /sys/fs/gfs2/<fsname>/lock_module/recovery file. + +Because the CHANGE uevent was used (in early versions of gfs_controld) +without checking the environment variables to discover the state, we +cannot add any more functions to it without running the risk of +someone using an older version of the user tools and breaking their +cluster. For this reason the ONLINE uevent was used when adding a new +uevent for a successful mount or remount. + +4. OFFLINE + +The OFFLINE uevent is only generated due to filesystem errors and is used +as part of the "withdraw" mechanism. Currently this doesn't give any +information about what the error is, which is something that needs to +be fixed. + +5. REMOVE + +The REMOVE uevent is generated at the end of an unsuccessful mount +or at the end of a umount of the filesystem. All REMOVE uevents will +have been preceeded by at least an ADD uevent for the same fileystem, +and unlike the other uevents is generated automatically by the kernel's +kobject subsystem. + + +Information common to all GFS2 uevents (uevent environment variables) +---------------------------------------------------------------------- + +1. LOCKTABLE= + +The LOCKTABLE is a string, as supplied on the mount command +line (locktable=) or via fstab. It is used as a filesystem label +as well as providing the information for a lock_dlm mount to be +able to join the cluster. + +2. LOCKPROTO= + +The LOCKPROTO is a string, and its value depends on what is set +on the mount command line, or via fstab. It will be either +lock_nolock or lock_dlm. In the future other lock managers +may be supported. + +3. JOURNALID= + +If a journal is in use by the filesystem (journals are not +assigned for spectator mounts) then this will give the +numeric journal id in all GFS2 uevents. + +4. UUID= + +With recent versions of gfs2-utils, mkfs.gfs2 writes a UUID +into the filesystem superblock. If it exists, this will +be included in every uevent relating to the filesystem. + + + |