md: don't set md arrays to readonly on shutdown.
It seems that with recent kernel, writeback can still be happening while shutdown is happening, and consequently data can be written after the md reboot notifier switches all arrays to read-only. This causes a BUG. So don't switch them to read-only - just mark them clean and set 'safemode' to '2' which mean that immediately after any write the array will be switch back to 'clean'. This could result in the shutdown happening when array is marked dirty, thus forcing a resync on reboot. However if you reboot without performing a "sync" first, you get to keep both halves. This is suitable for any stable kernel (though there might be some conflicts with obvious fixes in earlier kernels). Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org Signed-off-by: NeilBrown <neilb@suse.de>
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@ -8157,30 +8157,23 @@ static int md_notify_reboot(struct notifier_block *this,
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struct mddev *mddev;
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int need_delay = 0;
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if ((code == SYS_DOWN) || (code == SYS_HALT) || (code == SYS_POWER_OFF)) {
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printk(KERN_INFO "md: stopping all md devices.\n");
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for_each_mddev(mddev, tmp) {
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if (mddev_trylock(mddev)) {
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/* Force a switch to readonly even array
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* appears to still be in use. Hence
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* the '100'.
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*/
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md_set_readonly(mddev, 100);
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mddev_unlock(mddev);
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}
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need_delay = 1;
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for_each_mddev(mddev, tmp) {
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if (mddev_trylock(mddev)) {
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__md_stop_writes(mddev);
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mddev->safemode = 2;
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mddev_unlock(mddev);
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}
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/*
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* certain more exotic SCSI devices are known to be
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* volatile wrt too early system reboots. While the
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* right place to handle this issue is the given
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* driver, we do want to have a safe RAID driver ...
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*/
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if (need_delay)
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mdelay(1000*1);
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need_delay = 1;
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}
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/*
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* certain more exotic SCSI devices are known to be
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* volatile wrt too early system reboots. While the
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* right place to handle this issue is the given
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* driver, we do want to have a safe RAID driver ...
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*/
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if (need_delay)
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mdelay(1000*1);
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return NOTIFY_DONE;
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}
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