Allows specifying blockdevs in the OSD and OSD-DB addition commands as
detect strings rather than actual block device paths. This provides
greater flexibility for automation with pvcbootstrapd (which originates
the concept of detect strings) and in general usage as well.
Use a power off (and then make the power on a requirement) during a node
fence. Removes some potential ambiguity in the power state, since we
will know for certain if it is off.
Refactors some of the code in VXNetworkInterface to handle MTUs in a
more streamlined fashion. Also fixes a bug whereby bridge client
networks were being explicitly given the cluster dev MTU which might not
be correct. Now adds support for this option explicitly in the configs,
and defaults to 1500 for safety (the standard Ethernet MTU).
Addresses #144
Ensure that all keepalive timeouts are set (prevent the queue.get()
actions from blocking forever) and set the thread timeouts to line up as
well. Everything here is thus limited to keepalive_interval seconds
(default 5s) to keep it uniform.
Remove two superfluous synchronization steps which are not needed here,
since the exclusive lock handles that situation anyways.
Still does not fix the weird flush->unflush lock timeout bug, but is
better worked-around now due to the cancelling of the other wait freeing
this up and continuing.
Make the block on stage C only wait for 900 seconds (15 minutes) to
prevent indefinite blocking.
The issue comes if a VM is being received, and the current unflush is
cancelled for a flush. When this happens, this lock acquisition seems to
block for no obvious reason, and no other changes seem to affect it.
This is certainly some sort of locking bug within Kazoo but I can't
diagnose it as-is. Leave a TODO to look into this again in the future.
Rather than using a cumbersome and overly complex ping-pong of read and
write locks, instead move to a much simpler process using exclusive
locks.
Describing the process in ASCII or narrative is cumbersome, but the
process ping-pongs via a set of exclusive locks and wait timers, so that
the two sides are able to synchronize via blocking the exclusive lock.
The end result is a much more streamlined migration (takes about half
the time all things considered) which should be less error-prone.
1. Output from ipmitool was not being stripped, and stray newlines were
throwing off the comparisons. Fixes this.
2. Several stages were lacking meaningful messages. Adds these in so the
output is more clear about what is going on.
3. Reduce the sleep time after a fence to just 1x the
keepalive_interval, rather than 2x, because this seemed like excessively
long even for slow IPMI interfaces, especially since we're checking the
power state now anyways.
4. Set the node daemon state to an explicit 'fenced' state after a
successful fence to indicate to users that the node was indeed fenced
successfully and not still 'dead'.