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Re: LVM support


From: Tomáš Čech
Subject: Re: LVM support
Date: Thu, 16 Apr 2015 08:24:01 +0200
User-agent: Mutt/1.5.23 (2014-03-12)

On Wed, Apr 15, 2015 at 02:32:14PM +0200, Ludovic Courtès wrote:
Tomáš Čech <address@hidden> skribis:

as project for my Hackweek in SUSE I decided to spend my time on LVM
support in GuixSD - something I miss greatly. This also means that
I'll have much less time for that after this week :(

Well this is nice already!

So far I spent time on reviving my GuixSD installation and preparing
staticly linked binaries for initrd. I have now lvm2 package with
extra output "static".

Don’t worry about static linking or anything: you can use any package,
including dynamically-linked, and it will be magically added to the
initrd if needed.

Then as a second step, since that’ll probably be very big, you can work
on statically-linked variants of the relevant packages (as done for
‘e2fsck/static’.)

I did this already :)


Now the simplest way would be to simply call

vgchange --activate y

Matching configuration could be one configuration option:
(use-lvm?)


That would scan all block devices and look for LVM signature.

Pros:
- it's super simple!
Cons:
- if LVM with filesystem required at boot-time is not found, error
 is not detected or returned by LVM itself



Slightly bit more complicated way could be

vgchange --activate y <volume_group_name>

for every volume group defined in system configuration. Matching configuration 
could be
(logical-volume-groups '("system" "data"))

e.g. specify list of volume group names used by system.

Pros:
- still simple
- if group activation fails, I can detect it and report it to user

Cons:
- some block devices with LVM may not be available at boot-time (like
 iSCSI devices accessible through network only or Luks devices
 available after entering password)

That is my current approach.



I could also specify whether it should be made available at boot time or not
(logical-volume-groups '('("system" #t)
                        '("data"   #f)))

(sorry for my poor Scheme taste here :)

Pros:
- with this I could say that volume group "system" should be activated
 at boot time, but "data" should be activated later.

Cons:
- starting to be more complicated - I need both initrd stage LVM
 activation and root filesystem stage LVM activation (implemented as
 service? which dependencies it has?)

Sorry I’m not really familiar with LVM.

It's implemented using device mapper but instead of mapping one block
device to another you map one block device to whole group (like
playground where you can do anything).



Technically, if LVM volumes are mapped devices, the best would be to
define a <mapped-device-kind> structure for them, as discussed on IRC
(like ‘luks-device-mapping’ in (gnu system).)

I didn't like the idea first because it felt confusing and
unatural. Words like `mapping' and `source' and `target' are
misleading. But from programming POV it seems to be the easisest
approach in the end.

(define-record-type* <mapped-device> mapped-device
 make-mapped-device
 mapped-device?
 (source    mapped-device-source)                ;string
 (target    mapped-device-target)                ;string
 (type      mapped-device-type))                 ;<mapped-device-kind>
`source' will be ignored (I not only don't need it but I don't even
know how to pass it or what it should do). `target' will be used for
volume group name. mapped-device-kind structure is easily applicable.


On the other hand problem starts with need-for-boot?. Device mapped
device will be activated during the boot (which is desirable for LVM)
only if there is filesystem which uses such device and has
`need-for-boot?' set to #t.

I needed to tweak operating-system-boot-mapped-devices to not filter
mappings of the new type at all. Now it seems to generate initrd
capable of booting root filesystem from LVM :)

The thing is that this design is not nice. I always admired Scheme's
power in expressing things naturally. mapped-device interface is for
mapping 1 block device to 1 block device which will contain 1
filesystem.


Design I'm thinking about would follow file-system structure. For
device property (I'm not sure if this is proper word in Scheme for
item of record type) to define functions like `partition' (disk,
number), `mapped-device' (source, target, type), `logical-volume' (group,
volume) and whatever would be needed further. You could then express
your mount in more powerful way like:

(partition "sda" 1)

(mapped-device
 (partition "sda" 2)
 "encrypted_swap"
 luks-mapping-type)

(logical-volume
 "system_group"
 "root")


(mapped-device
 (logical-volume "some_group" "some_volume")
 "encrypted data"
 luks-mapping-type)

etc.


Of course, it would lead to more complicated code to handle such
configuration, but it would definitely feel more natural.

When other block device type (like iSCSI) would be required, just
another function (or whatever it is) would be implemented.

Please don't tell me 'this is not how Guix works' :)

Best regards,

S_W



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