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0aa87445 SW |
1 | uevents and GFS2 |
2 | ================== | |
3 | ||
4 | During the lifetime of a GFS2 mount, a number of uevents are generated. | |
5 | This document explains what the events are and what they are used | |
6 | for (by gfs_controld in gfs2-utils). | |
7 | ||
8 | A list of GFS2 uevents | |
9 | ----------------------- | |
10 | ||
11 | 1. ADD | |
12 | ||
13 | The ADD event occurs at mount time. It will always be the first | |
14 | uevent generated by the newly created filesystem. If the mount | |
15 | is successful, an ONLINE uevent will follow. If it is not successful | |
16 | then a REMOVE uevent will follow. | |
17 | ||
18 | The ADD uevent has two environment variables: SPECTATOR=[0|1] | |
19 | and RDONLY=[0|1] that specify the spectator status (a read-only mount | |
20 | with no journal assigned), and read-only (with journal assigned) status | |
21 | of the filesystem respectively. | |
22 | ||
23 | 2. ONLINE | |
24 | ||
25 | The ONLINE uevent is generated after a successful mount or remount. It | |
26 | has the same environment variables as the ADD uevent. The ONLINE | |
27 | uevent, along with the two environment variables for spectator and | |
28 | RDONLY are a relatively recent addition (2.6.32-rc+) and will not | |
29 | be generated by older kernels. | |
30 | ||
31 | 3. CHANGE | |
32 | ||
33 | The CHANGE uevent is used in two places. One is when reporting the | |
34 | successful mount of the filesystem by the first node (FIRSTMOUNT=Done). | |
35 | This is used as a signal by gfs_controld that it is then ok for other | |
36 | nodes in the cluster to mount the filesystem. | |
37 | ||
38 | The other CHANGE uevent is used to inform of the completion | |
39 | of journal recovery for one of the filesystems journals. It has | |
40 | two environment variables, JID= which specifies the journal id which | |
41 | has just been recovered, and RECOVERY=[Done|Failed] to indicate the | |
42 | success (or otherwise) of the operation. These uevents are generated | |
43 | for every journal recovered, whether it is during the initial mount | |
44 | process or as the result of gfs_controld requesting a specific journal | |
45 | recovery via the /sys/fs/gfs2/<fsname>/lock_module/recovery file. | |
46 | ||
47 | Because the CHANGE uevent was used (in early versions of gfs_controld) | |
48 | without checking the environment variables to discover the state, we | |
49 | cannot add any more functions to it without running the risk of | |
50 | someone using an older version of the user tools and breaking their | |
51 | cluster. For this reason the ONLINE uevent was used when adding a new | |
52 | uevent for a successful mount or remount. | |
53 | ||
54 | 4. OFFLINE | |
55 | ||
56 | The OFFLINE uevent is only generated due to filesystem errors and is used | |
57 | as part of the "withdraw" mechanism. Currently this doesn't give any | |
58 | information about what the error is, which is something that needs to | |
59 | be fixed. | |
60 | ||
61 | 5. REMOVE | |
62 | ||
63 | The REMOVE uevent is generated at the end of an unsuccessful mount | |
64 | or at the end of a umount of the filesystem. All REMOVE uevents will | |
25985edc | 65 | have been preceded by at least an ADD uevent for the same fileystem, |
0aa87445 SW |
66 | and unlike the other uevents is generated automatically by the kernel's |
67 | kobject subsystem. | |
68 | ||
69 | ||
70 | Information common to all GFS2 uevents (uevent environment variables) | |
71 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
72 | ||
73 | 1. LOCKTABLE= | |
74 | ||
75 | The LOCKTABLE is a string, as supplied on the mount command | |
76 | line (locktable=) or via fstab. It is used as a filesystem label | |
77 | as well as providing the information for a lock_dlm mount to be | |
78 | able to join the cluster. | |
79 | ||
80 | 2. LOCKPROTO= | |
81 | ||
82 | The LOCKPROTO is a string, and its value depends on what is set | |
83 | on the mount command line, or via fstab. It will be either | |
84 | lock_nolock or lock_dlm. In the future other lock managers | |
85 | may be supported. | |
86 | ||
87 | 3. JOURNALID= | |
88 | ||
89 | If a journal is in use by the filesystem (journals are not | |
90 | assigned for spectator mounts) then this will give the | |
91 | numeric journal id in all GFS2 uevents. | |
92 | ||
93 | 4. UUID= | |
94 | ||
95 | With recent versions of gfs2-utils, mkfs.gfs2 writes a UUID | |
96 | into the filesystem superblock. If it exists, this will | |
97 | be included in every uevent relating to the filesystem. | |
98 | ||
99 | ||
100 |