- reproducer
1. stop a container;
2. reboot, or dmsetup remove its corresponding dm device;
3. start the container, it will fail like:
"""
Error: failed to start containers: {"message":"failed to create container(4f33d2760760c41518a84821153ccdf7f80980b797b783cdd75178fc6ca0bf4b) on containerd: failed to create task for container(4f33d2760760c41518a84821153ccdf7f80980b797b783cdd75178fc6ca0bf4b): failed to mount rootfs component &{ext4 /dev/mapper/vg0-mythinpool-snap-2 []}: no such file or directory: unknown"}
"""
- how the fix works
activate the dm device if necessary, and give a warn msg:
"""
time="2019-08-21T22:44:08.422695797+08:00" level=warning msg="devmapper device \"vg0-mythinpool-snap-2\" marked as \"Activated\" but not active, activating it"
"""
Signed-off-by: Eric Ren <renzhen@linux.alibaba.com>
1. reason to deactivate committed snapshot
The thin device will not be used for IO after committed,
and further thin snapshotting is OK using an inactive thin
device as origin. The benefits to deactivate are:
- device is not unneccesary visible avoiding any unexpected IO;
- save useless kernel data structs for maintaining active dm.
Quote from kernel doc (Documentation/device-mapper/provisioning.txt):
"
ii) Using an internal snapshot.
Once created, the user doesn't have to worry about any connection
between the origin and the snapshot. Indeed the snapshot is no
different from any other thinly-provisioned device and can be
snapshotted itself via the same method. It's perfectly legal to
have only one of them active, and there's no ordering requirement on
activating or removing them both. (This differs from conventional
device-mapper snapshots.)
"
2. an thinpool metadata bug is naturally removed
An problem happens when failed to suspend/resume origin thin device
when creating snapshot:
"failed to create snapshot device from parent vg0-mythinpool-snap-3"
error="failed to save initial metadata for snapshot "vg0-mythinpool-snap-19":
object already exists"
This issue occurs because when failed to create snapshot, the
snapshotter.store can be rollbacked, but the thin pool metadata
boltdb failed to rollback in PoolDevice.CreateSnapshotDevice(),
therefore metadata becomes inconsistent: the snapshotID is not
taken in snapshotter.store, but saved in pool metadata boltdb.
The cause is, in PoolDevice.CreateSnapshotDevice(), the defer calls
are invoked on "first-in-last-out" order. When the error happens
on the "resume device" defer call, the metadata is saved and
snapshot is created, which has no chance to be rollbacked.
Signed-off-by: Eric Ren <renzhen@linux.alibaba.com>