freebsd-dev/etc/rc.d/zfs
Pawel Jakub Dawidek d5d7e76d2b Currently there is a problem with fscking UFS file systems created on
top of ZVOLs. The problem is that rc.d/fsck runs before rc.d/zfs. The
latter makes ZVOLs to appear in /dev/. In such case rc.d/fsck cannot
find devfs entry and aborts. We cannot simply move rc.d/zfs before
rc.d/fsck, because we first want kern.hostid to be configured (by
rc.d/hostid). If we won't wait (hostid will be 0) we can reuse disks
which are in use by different systems (eg. in SAN/NAS environment).
We also cannot move rc.d/hostid before rc.d/fsck, because rc.d/hostid on
first system start stores generated kern.hostuuid in /etc/hostid file,
so it needs root file system to be mounted read-write.

The fix is to split rc.d/hostid so that rc.d/hostid (which will now run
before rc.d/fsck) only generates hostid and sets up sysctls, but doesn't
touch root file system and rc.d/hostid_save (which is run after
rc.d/root) and only creates /etc/hostid file.

With that in place, we can move ZVOL initialization to dedicated
rc.d/zvol script which runs before rc.d/fsck.

PR:		conf/120194
Reported by:	James Snow <snow@teardrop.org>
Reviewed by:	brooks
Approved by:	re (kib)
MFC after:	2 weeks
2009-07-29 05:23:52 +00:00

66 lines
818 B
Bash
Executable File

#!/bin/sh
#
# $FreeBSD$
#
# PROVIDE: zfs
# REQUIRE: mountcritlocal
. /etc/rc.subr
name="zfs"
rcvar="zfs_enable"
start_cmd="zfs_start"
stop_cmd="zfs_stop"
required_modules="zfs"
zfs_start_jail()
{
if [ `$SYSCTL_N security.jail.mount_allowed` -eq 1 ]; then
zfs mount -a
fi
}
zfs_start_main()
{
zfs mount -a
zfs share -a
if [ ! -r /etc/zfs/exports ]; then
touch /etc/zfs/exports
fi
}
zfs_start()
{
if [ `$SYSCTL_N security.jail.jailed` -eq 1 ]; then
zfs_start_jail
else
zfs_start_main
fi
}
zfs_stop_jail()
{
if [ `$SYSCTL_N security.jail.mount_allowed` -eq 1 ]; then
zfs unmount -a
fi
}
zfs_stop_main()
{
zfs unshare -a
zfs unmount -a
}
zfs_stop()
{
if [ `$SYSCTL_N security.jail.jailed` -eq 1 ]; then
zfs_stop_jail
else
zfs_stop_main
fi
}
load_rc_config $name
run_rc_command "$1"