Revision 347e0899b1c75d907f01ac883ca38d37fe9bfa42 authored by Andy King on 07 March 2013, 15:29:08 UTC, committed by Greg Kroah-Hartman on 15 March 2013, 19:58:12 UTC
When sending between processes, we always schedule a work item.  Our work info
struct has the message embedded in the middle, which means that we end up
overwriting subsequent fields when we copy the (variable-length) message into
it.  Move it to the end of the struct.

Acked-by: Dmitry Torokhov <dtor@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Andy King <acking@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
1 parent 61ec7e7
Raw File
dm-flakey.txt
dm-flakey
=========

This target is the same as the linear target except that it exhibits
unreliable behaviour periodically.  It's been found useful in simulating
failing devices for testing purposes.

Starting from the time the table is loaded, the device is available for
<up interval> seconds, then exhibits unreliable behaviour for <down
interval> seconds, and then this cycle repeats.

Also, consider using this in combination with the dm-delay target too,
which can delay reads and writes and/or send them to different
underlying devices.

Table parameters
----------------
  <dev path> <offset> <up interval> <down interval> \
    [<num_features> [<feature arguments>]]

Mandatory parameters:
    <dev path>: Full pathname to the underlying block-device, or a
                "major:minor" device-number.
    <offset>: Starting sector within the device.
    <up interval>: Number of seconds device is available.
    <down interval>: Number of seconds device returns errors.

Optional feature parameters:
  If no feature parameters are present, during the periods of
  unreliability, all I/O returns errors.

  drop_writes:
	All write I/O is silently ignored.
	Read I/O is handled correctly.

  corrupt_bio_byte <Nth_byte> <direction> <value> <flags>:
	During <down interval>, replace <Nth_byte> of the data of
	each matching bio with <value>.

    <Nth_byte>: The offset of the byte to replace.
		Counting starts at 1, to replace the first byte.
    <direction>: Either 'r' to corrupt reads or 'w' to corrupt writes.
		 'w' is incompatible with drop_writes.
    <value>: The value (from 0-255) to write.
    <flags>: Perform the replacement only if bio->bi_rw has all the
	     selected flags set.

Examples:
  corrupt_bio_byte 32 r 1 0
	- replaces the 32nd byte of READ bios with the value 1

  corrupt_bio_byte 224 w 0 32
	- replaces the 224th byte of REQ_META (=32) bios with the value 0
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