2022-05-10 07:16:11 +00:00
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From 7631c5b826b5a3eddfcd22db9b80574b249794c1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
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From: David Teigland <teigland@redhat.com>
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Date: Mon, 6 Dec 2021 13:20:32 -0600
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2022-11-08 07:03:39 +00:00
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Subject: [PATCH 21/54] man: add section about static autoactivation
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2022-05-10 07:16:11 +00:00
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---
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man/lvmautoactivation.7_main | 48 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------
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1 file changed, 41 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-)
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diff --git a/man/lvmautoactivation.7_main b/man/lvmautoactivation.7_main
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index 87c15a3d1..bf885991d 100644
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--- a/man/lvmautoactivation.7_main
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+++ b/man/lvmautoactivation.7_main
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@@ -14,14 +14,16 @@ activated.
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Autoactivation of VGs, or specific LVs, can be prevented using vgchange or
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lvchange --setautoactivation n. The lvm.conf auto_activation_volume_list
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is another way to limit autoactivation.
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+.
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+.SS event autoactivation
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.P
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The most common form of autoactivation is "event based", in which complete
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VGs are activated in response to uevents which occur during system startup
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or at any time after the system has started. Another form of
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-autoactivation is "service based" in which complete VGs are activated at a
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-fixed point during system startup by a systemd service, and are not
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-activated in response to uevents. This can be controlled with the
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-lvm.conf setting event_activation.
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+autoactivation is "static" in which complete VGs are activated at a fixed
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+point during system startup by a systemd service, and not in response to
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+events. This can be controlled with the lvm.conf setting
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+event_activation.
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.P
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Event based autoactivation is driven by udev, udev rules, and systemd.
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When a device is attached to a machine, a uevent is generated by the
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@@ -30,8 +32,8 @@ rules to process the new device. Udev rules use blkid to identify the
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device as an LVM PV and then execute the lvm-specific udev rule for the
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device, which triggers autoactivation.
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.P
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-There are two variations of event based autoactivation that may be used a
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-system, depending on the LVM udev rule that is installed (found in
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+There are two variations of event baed autoactivation that may be used on
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+a system, depending on the LVM udev rule that is installed (found in
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/lib/udev/rules.d/.) The following summarizes the steps in each rule
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which lead to autoactivation:
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.P
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@@ -149,7 +151,7 @@ using the udev environment key format, i.e. NAME='value'.
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Send standard command output to the journal (when stdout
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is reserved for udev output.)
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.P
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-.SS Temp files
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+.SS run files
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.P
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Autoactivation commands use a number of temp files in /run/lvm (with the
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expectation that /run is cleared between boots.)
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@@ -175,6 +177,38 @@ The first activation command (pvscan or vgchange) to create a file here,
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named for the VG, will activate the VG. This resolves a race when
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concurrent commands attempt to activate a VG at once.
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.
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+.SS static autoactivation
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+.P
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+When event autoactivation is disabled by setting lvm.conf
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+event_activation=0, autoactivation is performed at one or more static
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+points during system startup. At these points, a vgchange -aay command is
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+run to activate complete VGs from devices that are present on the system
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+at that time. pvscan commands (and lvm2-pvscan services) do not perform
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+autoactivation in this mode. pvscan commands may still be run from
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+uevents but will do nothing when they read the event_activation=0 setting.
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+.P
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+The static vgchange -aay commands are run by three systemd services at
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+three points during startup: lvm2-activation-early, lvm2-activation, and
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+lvm2-activation-net. These static activation services are "generated
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+services", so the service files are created at run time by the
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+lvm2-activation-generator command (run by systemd).
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+lvm2-activation-generator creates the services if lvm.conf
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+event_activation=0.
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+.P
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+The limitation of this method is that devices may not be attached to the
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+system (or set up) at a reliable point in time during startup, and they
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+may not be present when the services run vgchange. In this case, the VGs
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+will not be autoactivated. So, the timing of device attachment/setup
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+determines whether static autoactivation will produce the same results as
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+event autoactivation. For this reason, static autoactivation is not
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+recommended.
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+.P
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+Sometimes, static autoactivation is mistakenly expected to disable all
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+autoactivation of particular VGs. This may appear to be effective if those
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+VGs are slow to be attached or set up. But, the only correct and reliable
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+way to disable autoactivation is using vgchange/lvchange
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+--setautoactivation n, or lvm.conf auto_activation_volume_list.
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+.
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.SH EXAMPLES
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.P
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VG "vg" contains two PVs:
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--
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2022-11-08 07:03:39 +00:00
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2.34.3
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2022-05-10 07:16:11 +00:00
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