kubernetes/pkg/volume/util/device_util_unsupported.go
Ben Swartzlander 6d23d8edbb Avoid deleted iSCSI LUNs in the kernel
This change ensures that iSCSI block devices are deleted after
unmounting, and implements scanning of individual LUNs rather
than scanning the whole iSCSI bus.

In cases where an iSCSI bus is in use by more than one attachment,
detaching used to leave behind phantom block devices, which could
cause I/O errors, long timeouts, or even corruption in the case
when the underlying LUN number was recycled. This change makes
sure to flush references to the block devices after unmounting.

The original iSCSI code scanned the whole target every time a LUN
was attached. On storage controllers that export multiple LUNs on
the same target IQN, this led to a situation where nodes would
see SCSI disks that they weren't supposed to -- possibly dozens or
hundreds of extra SCSI disks. This caused 3 significant problems:

1) The large number of disks wasted resources on the node and
caused a minor drag on performance.
2) The scanning of all the devices caused a huge number of uevents
from the kernel, causing udev to bog down for multiple minutes in
some cases, triggering timeouts and other transient failures.
3) Because Kubernetes was not tracking all the "extra" LUNs that
got discovered, they would not get cleaned up until the last LUN
on a particular target was detached, causing a logout. This led
to significant complications:

In the time window between when a LUN was unintentially scanned,
and when it was removed due to a logout, if it was deleted on the
backend, a phantom reference remained on the node. In the best
case, the phantom LUN would cause I/O errors and timeouts in the
udev system. In the worst case, the backend could reuse the LUN
number for a new volume, and if that new volume were to be
scheduled to a pod with a phantom reference to the old LUN by the
same number, the initiator could get confused and possibly corrupt
data on that volume.

To avoid these problems, the new implementation only scans for
the specific LUN number it expects to see. It's worth noting that
the default behavior of iscsiadm is to automatically scan the
whole bus on login. That behavior can be disabled by setting
node.session.scan = manual
in iscsid.conf, and for the reasons mentioned above, it is
strongly recommended to set that option. This change still works
regardless of the setting in iscsid.conf, and while automatic
scanning will cause some problems, this change doesn't make the
problems any worse, and can make things better in some cases.
2018-07-24 23:58:19 -04:00

43 lines
1.3 KiB
Go

// +build !linux
/*
Copyright 2016 The Kubernetes Authors.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.
*/
package util
// FindMultipathDeviceForDevice unsupported returns ""
func (handler *deviceHandler) FindMultipathDeviceForDevice(device string) string {
return ""
}
// FindSlaveDevicesOnMultipath unsupported returns ""
func (handler *deviceHandler) FindSlaveDevicesOnMultipath(disk string) []string {
out := []string{}
return out
}
// GetISCSIPortalHostMapForTarget unsupported returns nil
func (handler *deviceHandler) GetISCSIPortalHostMapForTarget(targetIqn string) (map[string]int, error) {
portalHostMap := make(map[string]int)
return portalHostMap, nil
}
// FindDevicesForISCSILun unsupported returns nil
func (handler *deviceHandler) FindDevicesForISCSILun(targetIqn string, lun int) ([]string, error) {
devices := []string{}
return devices, nil
}