[Bug 1432062] [NEW] Ship the default /etc/multipath.conf on multipath-tools-boot (for user_friendly_names)
Mauricio Faria de Oliveira
mauricfo at linux.vnet.ibm.com
Fri Mar 13 21:46:18 UTC 2015
Public bug reported:
If a system is not installed w/ multipath support (i.e., no disk-detect/multipath/enable=true), the /etc/multipath.conf file is not installed.
If an user later installs multipath-tools-boot, it will enable the udev rules for multipath support.
Those rules don't handle disk devices w/ spaces on their names/uuids/models very well..
That's because of udev's SYMLINK command using spaces to separate
multiple links, and the kernel sysfs/dm informing \x20 instead, which is
not correctly interpreted by some commands, resulting in file not found
errors, for example.
Thus, the system fails to boot.
There's no problem, however, if user_friendly_names is enabled in
multipath.conf (which is enabled in the default multipath.conf from the
installer, if it has multipath enabled).
Notice it's an acceptable case to install w/out multipath support, and
enable it later for booting.
Disk devices w/ spaces in naming is not common over SAN/storage systems, but that happens often for conventional disks; for example:
- IBM IPR ( IBM IPR-0 5DB6F40000000080 )
- IBM VDASD ( AIX VDASD 00c96f0700004c000000014bb8e713f0.14 )
- QEMU HARDDISK ( QEMU QEMU HARDDISK <serial> )
So, please, is it possible to ship the default multipath.conf (e.g.,
from installer) w/ multipath-tools-boot?
For users not to their systems failing to boot after installing
multipath-tools-boot manually, after a non-multipath install.
** Affects: multipath-tools (Ubuntu)
Importance: Undecided
Status: New
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1432062
Title:
Ship the default /etc/multipath.conf on multipath-tools-boot (for
user_friendly_names)
Status in multipath-tools package in Ubuntu:
New
Bug description:
If a system is not installed w/ multipath support (i.e., no disk-detect/multipath/enable=true), the /etc/multipath.conf file is not installed.
If an user later installs multipath-tools-boot, it will enable the udev rules for multipath support.
Those rules don't handle disk devices w/ spaces on their names/uuids/models very well..
That's because of udev's SYMLINK command using spaces to separate
multiple links, and the kernel sysfs/dm informing \x20 instead, which
is not correctly interpreted by some commands, resulting in file not
found errors, for example.
Thus, the system fails to boot.
There's no problem, however, if user_friendly_names is enabled in
multipath.conf (which is enabled in the default multipath.conf from
the installer, if it has multipath enabled).
Notice it's an acceptable case to install w/out multipath support, and
enable it later for booting.
Disk devices w/ spaces in naming is not common over SAN/storage systems, but that happens often for conventional disks; for example:
- IBM IPR ( IBM IPR-0 5DB6F40000000080 )
- IBM VDASD ( AIX VDASD 00c96f0700004c000000014bb8e713f0.14 )
- QEMU HARDDISK ( QEMU QEMU HARDDISK <serial> )
So, please, is it possible to ship the default multipath.conf (e.g.,
from installer) w/ multipath-tools-boot?
For users not to their systems failing to boot after installing
multipath-tools-boot manually, after a non-multipath install.
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