My team mentioned adding _netdev is now acceptable (thank goodness) but
wondering if there is a way to limit the timeout when using _netdev?
On 8/27/19 8:55 AM, Tony Rodriguez wrote:
Interesting that you mentioned the following. I actually added logic
to do something like this early yesterday. Will discuss with my team
to see if this is good enough. I'd rather not bypass _netdev either.
Feels like I am re-eventing the wheel. I think the main issue
regarding using _netdev is the amount of time it takes to check/mount
iscsi devices. Believe it waits up to 90 seconds to timeout for an
iscsi device/filesystem and I am not sure this can be bypassed. Is it
possible to limit the amount of time _netdev will take? I tried
setting x-systemd.device-timeout and x-systemd.mount-timeout with
_netdev in /etc/fstab but it didn't seem to work. It also didn't
propagate to /run/systemd/generators/remote-fs-target.requires I
believe the systemd document mentioned such settings are ignored.
"I haven't been following your earlier threads too closely, but if you're
stuck with stupid fstab requirements why not just bypass them with
altogether with drop-in:
# path-to-mountpoint.mount.d/20-Options.conf
[Mount]
Options=_netdev"
On 8/27/19 2:33 AM, Michael Chapman wrote:
On Tue, 27 Aug 2019, Tony Rodriguez wrote:
Managed to detect/mount iscsi devices without using _netdev keyword in
/etc/fstab. Made changes within
src/fstab-generator/ftstab-generator.c and it
seems to work. The only problem is during shutdown/reboot, my iscsi
xfs
filesystem does not unmount cleanly before the network/iscs
service/system is
shutdown. When this happens I receive a xfs error/warning.
However this doesn't happen when _netdev is specified in /etc/fstab
for my
iscsi device. Seems _netdev handles management of mounts/unmounts
before
killing things off. How exactly does _netdev manage unmounting
filesystems
during a shutdown/reboot?
One of the "default dependencies" for a mount unit that systemd
thinks is
a network filesystem is After=network.target. During shutdown, this
ensures the filesystem is unmounted before networking is brought down:
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/blob/fef40ceb5dfbb76d4733e579846a380a224efd55/src/core/mount.c#L455-L482
If you're not using the _netdev keyword, and systemd does not otherwise
think this is a remote filesystem, you will need to add this dependency
manually. You'll probably also want:
Wants=network-online.target
After=network-online.target
to match the code linked above.
I would like to invoke that same netdev unmount
code/logic myself from within systemd source but without using the
_netdev
keyword. Unfortunately it is a requirement to not use _netdev within
/etc/fstab for iscsi. Seems _netdev takes a long time to timeout
and continue
when unable to mount.
I haven't been following your earlier threads too closely, but if you're
stuck with stupid fstab requirements why not just bypass them with
altogether with drop-in:
# path-to-mountpoint.mount.d/20-Options.conf
[Mount]
Options=_netdev
Plus any other options you may need, of course; this directive is not
"list-valued", so you can't use it to add just one option.
Checked src/core/mount.c and src/core/unmount.c but not sure what to
do to
duplicate how _netdev manages unmounting before the system is
shutdown or
rebooted. Do I need a special before and after keyword in
/etc/fstab so my
xfs filesystems is unmounted before shutting down the iscsi
service/network/system? If so, will such keywords also propagate to
/run/systemd/generator/remote-fs-target.requires?
Thanks,
Tony
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