[Bug 1273462] Re: Users can mistakenly run init.d scripts and cause problems if an equivalent upstart job already exists

Simon Déziel 1273462 at bugs.launchpad.net
Tue Oct 20 20:25:20 UTC 2015


I couldn't find any regression in my testing but since it wasn't that extensive, I'm not marking it a verified just yet.
I really like the behavior improvement. Now, a regular user has a convenient way to check service statuses:

  /etc/init.d/acpid status

Instead of the obtuse old way:

  env -u UPSTART_SESSION status acpid

Note: "service acpid status" still operates on the session upstart.

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Title:
  Users can mistakenly run init.d scripts and cause problems if an
  equivalent upstart job already exists

Status in lsb package in Ubuntu:
  Fix Released
Status in mysql-5.5 package in Ubuntu:
  Invalid
Status in upstart package in Ubuntu:
  Fix Released
Status in lsb source package in Trusty:
  Fix Committed
Status in mysql-5.5 source package in Trusty:
  Invalid
Status in upstart source package in Trusty:
  Won't Fix
Status in lsb source package in Utopic:
  Fix Released
Status in mysql-5.5 source package in Utopic:
  Invalid
Status in upstart source package in Utopic:
  Fix Released
Status in upstart package in Debian:
  New

Bug description:
  [ impact ]

  Previously, init.d scripts that were replaced by upstart jobs had
  "upstart-job" symlink as a redirect in-place, which directed users at
  using upstart commands. Despite the good intentions, that never
  actually taught people about the correct interfaces. Now with the
  advent of co-installability of multiple init systems, users may have
  systemd, upstart, and sysv-init all installed on users system and have
  init.d scripts / upstart jobs / systemd units all available. To avoid
  any doubt, we should support executing /etc/init.d/ scripts which may
  call into upstart, or into systemd, or actually execute the script in
  question depending on whether there is native configuration for that
  particular job and which init system we are running under.

  [ test case ]

  Invoking init.d script should invoke upstart commands, for example:

  $ /etc/init.d/ssh status
  ssh start/running, process 4620
  $ /etc/init.d/ssh stop
  stop: Rejected send message, 1 matched rules; type="method_call", sender=":1.2469694" (uid=1000 pid=3908 comm="stop ssh ") interface="com.ubuntu.Upstart0_6.Job" member="Stop" error name="(unset)" requested_reply="0" destination="com.ubuntu.Upstart" (uid=0 pid=1 comm="/sbin/init")
  $ sudo /etc/init.d/ssh stop
  ssh stop/waiting
  $ sudo /etc/init.d/ssh start
  ssh start/running, process 5373
  $ sudo /etc/init.d/ssh restart
  ssh stop/waiting
  ssh start/running, process 5405

  Description:    Ubuntu 13.10
  Release:        13.10

  mysql-server-5.5:
    Installed: 5.5.35-0ubuntu0.13.10.1
    Candidate: 5.5.35-0ubuntu0.13.10.1
    Version table:
   *** 5.5.35-0ubuntu0.13.10.1 0
          500 http://us-east-1.ec2.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ saucy-updates/main amd64 Packages
          500 http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ saucy-security/main amd64 Packages
          100 /var/lib/dpkg/status
       5.5.32-0ubuntu7 0
          500 http://us-east-1.ec2.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ saucy/main amd64 Packages

  In Ubuntu 13.10, the Upstart job and the init.d script do not work
  properly.  In previous versions, the init.d script was a symlink to
  the wrapper script around upstart (/lib/init/upstart-job).  This
  conflict means that if the server was started using the init.d script,
  upstart does not recognize that the server is running and will attempt
  to start a second instance of mysqld.

  Also problematic is that if the upstart job is started using the
  service or start commands, the init.d script's "stop" function runs a
  mysql shutdown, but upstart simply restarts mysqld (because it's
  marked respawn in the upstart config).

  Description: Ubuntu 14.04
  Release: 14.04
  mysql:   mysql-server-5.5.43-0ubuntu0.14.04.1
  The problem in some setup was that the upgrade von 12.04 to 14.04 requres the adjustment of the InnoDB log size. Therefore the start of MySQL via upstart failed directly while the one via init started successfully and then failed as below.
  root at webserver01.kurt..ref:~# status mysql
  mysql start/running, process 5866
  root at webserver01.kurt..ref:~# /etc/init.d/mysql stop
  * Stopping MySQL database server mysqld [ OK ]
  root at webserver01.kurt..ref:~# status mysql
  mysql start/running, process 6101
  root at webserver01.kurt..ref:~# /etc/init.d/mysql status
  * /usr/bin/mysqladmin Ver 8.42 Distrib 5.5.43, for debian-linux-gnu on x86_64
  Copyright (c) 2000, 2015, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
  Oracle is a registered trademark of Oracle Corporation and/or its
  affiliates. Other names may be trademarks of their respective
  owners.
  Server version	5.5.43-0ubuntu0.14.04.1-log
  Protocol version	10
  Connection	Localhost via UNIX socket
  UNIX socket	/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock
  Uptime:	7 sec
  Threads: 1 Questions: 108 Slow queries: 0 Opens: 48 Flush tables: 1 Open tables: 41 Queries per second avg: 15.428
  root at webserver01.kurt..ref:~# stop mysql
  mysql stop/waiting
  root at webserver01.kurt..ref:~# /etc/init.d/mysql status
  * MySQL is stopped.

  This is horrible. The "status" commands report the wrong status and the start/stop commands do not work. If our operators are not super careful, our orchestration and monitoring system will go wild, report the wrong status and/or perform continuous restarts of the system as they think the service is not running. So we also fix it in trusty. the result will looks as below:
  ubuntu at maas:~/work/deb$ sudo start mysql
  mysql start/running, process 8523
  ubuntu at maas:~/work/deb$ sudo status mysql
  mysql start/running, process 8523
  ubuntu at maas:~/work/deb$ sudo /etc/init.d/mysql stop
  mysql stop/waiting
  ubuntu at maas:~/work/deb$ sudo status mysql
  mysql stop/waiting
  ubuntu at maas:~/work/deb$ sudo /etc/init.d/mysql status
  mysql stop/waiting

  [Regression Potential]

  Some scripts call '/etc/init.d/<service> reload' will not work if
  upstart script's 'reload signal' setting is incorrect and or
  /etc/init.d/<service> requires special reload handling.  We should
  enumerate all those bad scripts and make them do the correct thing.

  At the same time, '/etc/init.d/<service> reload' is not a guaranteed
  interface under Debian policy, and /etc/init.d/<service> force-reload
  will work correctly for all packages; and if using the 'service'
  command, this is already the existing behavior in trusty.

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