linux/Documentation/admin-guide/device-mapper/dm-dust.rst

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dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
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dm-dust
=======
This target emulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary
locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the failures
at an arbitrary time.
This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time,
the user can send a message to the target to start failing read
requests on specific blocks (to emulate the behavior of a hard disk
drive with bad sectors).
When the failure behavior is enabled (i.e.: when the output of
"dmsetup status" displays "fail_read_on_bad_block"), reads of blocks
in the "bad block list" will fail with EIO ("Input/output error").
Writes of blocks in the "bad block list will result in the following:
1. Remove the block from the "bad block list".
2. Successfully complete the write.
This emulates the "remapped sector" behavior of a drive with bad
sectors.
Normally, a drive that is encountering bad sectors will most likely
encounter more bad sectors, at an unknown time or location.
With dm-dust, the user can use the "addbadblock" and "removebadblock"
messages to add arbitrary bad blocks at new locations, and the
"enable" and "disable" messages to modulate the state of whether the
configured "bad blocks" will be treated as bad, or bypassed.
This allows the pre-writing of test data and metadata prior to
simulating a "failure" event where bad sectors start to appear.
Table parameters
----------------
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
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<device_path> <offset> <blksz>
Mandatory parameters:
<device_path>:
Path to the block device.
<offset>:
Offset to data area from start of device_path
<blksz>:
Block size in bytes
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
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(minimum 512, maximum 1073741824, must be a power of 2)
Usage instructions
------------------
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
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First, find the size (in 512-byte sectors) of the device to be used::
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
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$ sudo blockdev --getsz /dev/vdb1
33552384
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
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Create the dm-dust device:
(For a device with a block size of 512 bytes)
::
$ sudo dmsetup create dust1 --table '0 33552384 dust /dev/vdb1 0 512'
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
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(For a device with a block size of 4096 bytes)
::
$ sudo dmsetup create dust1 --table '0 33552384 dust /dev/vdb1 0 4096'
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
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Check the status of the read behavior ("bypass" indicates that all I/O
will be passed through to the underlying device)::
$ sudo dmsetup status dust1
0 33552384 dust 252:17 bypass
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
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$ sudo dd if=/dev/mapper/dust1 of=/dev/null bs=512 count=128 iflag=direct
128+0 records in
128+0 records out
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
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$ sudo dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/mapper/dust1 bs=512 count=128 oflag=direct
128+0 records in
128+0 records out
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
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Adding and removing bad blocks
------------------------------
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
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At any time (i.e.: whether the device has the "bad block" emulation
enabled or disabled), bad blocks may be added or removed from the
device via the "addbadblock" and "removebadblock" messages::
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
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$ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 addbadblock 60
kernel: device-mapper: dust: badblock added at block 60
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
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$ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 addbadblock 67
kernel: device-mapper: dust: badblock added at block 67
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
$ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 addbadblock 72
kernel: device-mapper: dust: badblock added at block 72
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
These bad blocks will be stored in the "bad block list".
While the device is in "bypass" mode, reads and writes will succeed::
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
$ sudo dmsetup status dust1
0 33552384 dust 252:17 bypass
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
Enabling block read failures
----------------------------
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
To enable the "fail read on bad block" behavior, send the "enable" message::
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
$ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 enable
kernel: device-mapper: dust: enabling read failures on bad sectors
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
$ sudo dmsetup status dust1
0 33552384 dust 252:17 fail_read_on_bad_block
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
With the device in "fail read on bad block" mode, attempting to read a
block will encounter an "Input/output error"::
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
$ sudo dd if=/dev/mapper/dust1 of=/dev/null bs=512 count=1 skip=67 iflag=direct
dd: error reading '/dev/mapper/dust1': Input/output error
0+0 records in
0+0 records out
0 bytes copied, 0.00040651 s, 0.0 kB/s
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
...and writing to the bad blocks will remove the blocks from the list,
therefore emulating the "remap" behavior of hard disk drives::
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
$ sudo dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/mapper/dust1 bs=512 count=128 oflag=direct
128+0 records in
128+0 records out
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
kernel: device-mapper: dust: block 60 removed from badblocklist by write
kernel: device-mapper: dust: block 67 removed from badblocklist by write
kernel: device-mapper: dust: block 72 removed from badblocklist by write
kernel: device-mapper: dust: block 87 removed from badblocklist by write
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
Bad block add/remove error handling
-----------------------------------
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
Attempting to add a bad block that already exists in the list will
result in an "Invalid argument" error, as well as a helpful message::
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
$ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 addbadblock 88
device-mapper: message ioctl on dust1 failed: Invalid argument
kernel: device-mapper: dust: block 88 already in badblocklist
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
Attempting to remove a bad block that doesn't exist in the list will
result in an "Invalid argument" error, as well as a helpful message::
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
$ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 removebadblock 87
device-mapper: message ioctl on dust1 failed: Invalid argument
kernel: device-mapper: dust: block 87 not found in badblocklist
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
Counting the number of bad blocks in the bad block list
-------------------------------------------------------
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
To count the number of bad blocks configured in the device, run the
following message command::
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
$ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 countbadblocks
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
A message will print with the number of bad blocks currently
configured on the device::
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
kernel: device-mapper: dust: countbadblocks: 895 badblock(s) found
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
Querying for specific bad blocks
--------------------------------
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
To find out if a specific block is in the bad block list, run the
following message command::
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
$ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 queryblock 72
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
The following message will print if the block is in the list::
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
device-mapper: dust: queryblock: block 72 found in badblocklist
The following message will print if the block is not in the list::
device-mapper: dust: queryblock: block 72 not found in badblocklist
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
The "queryblock" message command will work in both the "enabled"
and "disabled" modes, allowing the verification of whether a block
will be treated as "bad" without having to issue I/O to the device,
or having to "enable" the bad block emulation.
Clearing the bad block list
---------------------------
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
To clear the bad block list (without needing to individually run
a "removebadblock" message command for every block), run the
following message command::
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
$ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 clearbadblocks
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
After clearing the bad block list, the following message will appear::
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
kernel: device-mapper: dust: clearbadblocks: badblocks cleared
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
If there were no bad blocks to clear, the following message will
appear::
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
kernel: device-mapper: dust: clearbadblocks: no badblocks found
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
Message commands list
---------------------
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
Below is a list of the messages that can be sent to a dust device:
Operations on blocks (requires a <blknum> argument)::
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
addbadblock <blknum>
queryblock <blknum>
removebadblock <blknum>
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
...where <blknum> is a block number within range of the device
(corresponding to the block size of the device.)
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
Single argument message commands::
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
countbadblocks
clearbadblocks
disable
enable
quiet
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
Device removal
--------------
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
When finished, remove the device via the "dmsetup remove" command::
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
$ sudo dmsetup remove dust1
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
Quiet mode
----------
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
On test runs with many bad blocks, it may be desirable to avoid
excessive logging (from bad blocks added, removed, or "remapped").
This can be done by enabling "quiet mode" via the following message::
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
$ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 quiet
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
This will suppress log messages from add / remove / removed by write
operations. Log messages from "countbadblocks" or "queryblock"
message commands will still print in quiet mode.
The status of quiet mode can be seen by running "dmsetup status"::
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
$ sudo dmsetup status dust1
0 33552384 dust 252:17 fail_read_on_bad_block quiet
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
To disable quiet mode, send the "quiet" message again::
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
$ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 quiet
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
$ sudo dmsetup status dust1
0 33552384 dust 252:17 fail_read_on_bad_block verbose
dm: add dust target Add the dm-dust target, which simulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the read failures at an arbitrary time. This target behaves similarly to a linear target. At a given time, the user can send a message to the target to start failing read requests on specific blocks. When the failure behavior is enabled, reads of blocks configured "bad" will fail with EIO. Writes of blocks configured "bad" will result in the following: 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list". 2. Successfully complete the write. After this point, the block will successfully contain the written data, and will service reads and writes normally. This emulates the behavior of a "remapped sector" on a hard disk drive. dm-dust provides logging of which blocks have been added or removed to the "bad block list", as well as logging when a block has been removed from the bad block list. These messages can be used alongside the messages from the driver using a dm-dust device to analyze the driver's behavior when a read fails at a given time. (This logging can be reduced via a "quiet" mode, if desired.) NOTE: If the block size is larger than 512 bytes, only the first sector of each "dust block" is detected. Placing a limiting layer above a dust target, to limit the minimum I/O size to the dust block size, will ensure proper emulation of the given large block size. Signed-off-by: Bryan Gurney <bgurney@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Joe Shimkus <jshimkus@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Dorminy <jdorminy@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: John Pittman <jpittman@redhat.com> Co-developed-by: Thomas Jaskiewicz <tjaskiew@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2019-03-07 20:42:39 +00:00
(The presence of "verbose" indicates normal logging.)
"Why not...?"
-------------
scsi_debug has a "medium error" mode that can fail reads on one
specified sector (sector 0x1234, hardcoded in the source code), but
it uses RAM for the persistent storage, which drastically decreases
the potential device size.
dm-flakey fails all I/O from all block locations at a specified time
frequency, and not a given point in time.
When a bad sector occurs on a hard disk drive, reads to that sector
are failed by the device, usually resulting in an error code of EIO
("I/O error") or ENODATA ("No data available"). However, a write to
the sector may succeed, and result in the sector becoming readable
after the device controller no longer experiences errors reading the
sector (or after a reallocation of the sector). However, there may
be bad sectors that occur on the device in the future, in a different,
unpredictable location.
This target seeks to provide a device that can exhibit the behavior
of a bad sector at a known sector location, at a known time, based
on a large storage device (at least tens of gigabytes, not occupying
system memory).