#!/usr/bin/env bash # Copyright (C) 2021 Red Hat, Inc. All rights reserved. # # This copyrighted material is made available to anyone wishing to use, # modify, copy, or redistribute it subject to the terms and conditions # of the GNU General Public License v.2. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License # along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, # Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA SKIP_WITH_LVMPOLLD=1 . lib/inittest aux have_cache 1 10 0 || skip aux prepare_vg 3 # # This lvconvert command will deactivate LV1, then internally create a new # lv, lvol0, as a poolmetadataspare, then activate lvol0 to zero it. # lvol0 will get the same major:minor that LV1 had. When the code gets # the struct dev for lvol0, the new path to lvol0 is added to the # dev-cache with it's major:minor. That major:minor already exists in # dev-cache and has the stale LV1 as an alias. So the path to lvol0 is # added as an alias to the existing struct dev (with the correct # major:minor), but that struct dev has the stale LV1 path on its aliases # list. The code will now validate all the aliases before returning the # dev for lvol0, and will find that the LV1 path is stale and remove it # from the aliases. That will prevent the stale path from being used for # the dev in place of the new path. # # The preferred_name is set to /dev/mapper so that if the stale path still # exists, that stale path would be used as the name for the dev, and the # wiping code would fail to open that stale name. # lvcreate -n $lv1 -L32M $vg "$dev1" lvcreate -n $lv2 -L16M $vg "$dev2" lvconvert -y --type cache-pool --poolmetadata $lv2 --cachemode writeback $vg/$lv1 --config='devices { preferred_names=["/dev/mapper/"] }' lvremove -y $vg/$lv1 lvcreate -n $lv1 -L32M $vg "$dev1" lvcreate -n $lv2 -L16M $vg "$dev2" lvconvert -y --type cache-pool --poolmetadata $lv2 $vg/$lv1 lvremove -y $vg/$lv1 # TODO: add more validation of dev aliases being specified as command # args in combination with various preferred_names settings. vgremove -ff $vg