Print zvol_id error messages to stderr rather than stdout

The zvol_id program is invoked by udev, via a PROGRAM key in the
60-zvol.rules.in rule file, to determine the "pretty" /dev/zvol/*
symlink paths paths that should be generated for each opaquely named
/dev/zd* dev node.

The udev rule uses the PROGRAM key, followed by a SYMLINK+= assignment
containing the %c substitution, to collect the program's stdout and then
"paste" it directly into the name of the symlink(s) to be created.

Unfortunately, as currently written, zvol_id outputs both its intended
output (a single string representing the symlink path that should be
created to refer to the name of the dataset whose /dev/zd* path is
given) AND its error messages (if any) to stdout.

When processing PROGRAM keys (and others, such as IMPORT{program}), udev
uses only the data written to stdout for functional purposes. Any data
written to stderr is used solely for the purposes of logging (if udev's
log_level is set to debug).

The unintended consequence of this is as follows: if zvol_id encounters
an error condition; and then udev fails to halt processing of the
current rule (either because zvol_id didn't return a nonzero exit
status, or because the PROGRAM key in the rule wasn't written properly
to result in a "non-match" condition that would stop the current rule on
a nonzero exit); then udev will create a space-delimited list of symlink
names derived directly from the words of the error message string!

I've observed this exact behavior on my own system, in a situation where
the open() syscall on /dev/zd* dev nodes was failing sporadically (for
reasons that aren't especially relevant here). Because the open() call
failed, zvol_id printed "Unable to open device file: /dev/zd736\n" to
stdout and then exited.

The udev rule finished with SYMLINK+="zvol/%c %c". Assuming a volume
name like pool/foo/bar, this would ordinarily expand to
   SYMLINK+="zvol/pool/foo/bar pool/foo/bar"
and would cause symlinks to be created like this:
   /dev/zvol/pool/foo/bar -> /dev/zd736
   /dev/pool/foo/bar      -> /dev/zd736

But because of the combination of error messages being printed to
stdout, and the udev syntax freely accepting a space-delimited sequence
of names in this context, the error message string
   "Unable to open device file: /dev/zd736\n"
in reality expanded to
   SYMLINK+="zvol/Unable to open device file: /dev/zd736"
which caused the following symlinks to actually be created:
   /dev/zvol/Unable -> /dev/zd736
   /dev/to          -> /dev/zd736
   /dev/open        -> /dev/zd736
   /dev/device      -> /dev/zd736
   /dev/file:       -> /dev/zd736
   /dev//dev/zd736  -> /dev/zd736

(And, because multiple zvols had open() syscall errors, multiple zvols
attempted to claim several of those symlink names, resulting in numerous
udev errors and timeouts and general chaos.)

This commit rectifies all this silliness by simply printing error
messages to stderr, as Dennis Ritchie originally intended.

Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Zakharov <pavel.zakharov@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Justin Gottula <justin@jgottula.com>
Closes #12302
This commit is contained in:
Justin Gottula 2021-06-29 20:14:18 -07:00 committed by Tony Hutter
parent fd2e4d143d
commit 7138fe7205

View File

@ -63,14 +63,14 @@ main(int argc, char **argv)
int rc;
if (argc < 2) {
printf("Usage: %s /dev/zvol_device_node\n", argv[0]);
fprintf(stderr, "Usage: %s /dev/zvol_device_node\n", argv[0]);
return (EINVAL);
}
dev_name = argv[1];
error = stat64(dev_name, &statbuf);
if (error != 0) {
printf("Unable to access device file: %s\n", dev_name);
fprintf(stderr, "Unable to access device file: %s\n", dev_name);
return (errno);
}
@ -79,13 +79,13 @@ main(int argc, char **argv)
fd = open(dev_name, O_RDONLY);
if (fd < 0) {
printf("Unable to open device file: %s\n", dev_name);
fprintf(stderr, "Unable to open device file: %s\n", dev_name);
return (errno);
}
error = ioctl_get_msg(zvol_name, fd);
if (error < 0) {
printf("ioctl_get_msg failed:%s\n", strerror(errno));
fprintf(stderr, "ioctl_get_msg failed: %s\n", strerror(errno));
return (errno);
}
if (dev_part > 0)