On Feb 14, 2006, at 16:13, Phillip Susi wrote:
Because you can not go yanking devices out from under the kernel
without it's knowledge or consent. This is no more acceptable than
ejecting a floppy without first unmounting it; the only difference
is that the floppy drive doesn't erroneously inform the kernel that
you have done this simply because you suspend.
Yes, but causing it to overwrite data over random blockdevs when the
unexpected happens is _not_ OK.
Did you read what I wrote? People don't generally expect to
randomly plug and unplug SCSI drives whenever they feel like it.
They _do_ expect to randomly plug and unplug USB drives, mice,
keyboards, tablets, network adapters, etc, because _everything_
supports such random plugging.
No, they don't. Users do not expect ( or should not and are told
not to by admins ) to be able to yank out their usb memory stick
while it is mounted. They are told to always unmount first. If
they fail to do so, then they get what they asked for. It doesn't
matter if the disk is SCSI or USB; you don't go yanking it out
without unmounting it first, or you will loose data.
You've obviously never administrated any kind of large scale linux
lab. We had so many people just saving files on their USB sticks and
pulling them that we would daily get people reporting that they
couldn't _mount_ their USB stick because the last user hadn't
unmounted it first. At one point we had to write a Perl script run
from cron that ran every 10 minutes and verified if USB-stick mounts
were still good, and if not it forcefully unmounted them. Now
obviously this is the kind of behavior that we want to avoid, but end-
users are bound to do stupid stuff until it comes back and bites them
at least twice (except on Linux with -o sync mounts it usually
doesn't). Think about how most linux distros automatically turn on -
o sync on USB keys and the like; they do it for precisely this reason.
Maybe it does make sense to have hibernation scripts unmount
removable media for the common silly user who can't remember to
unmount disks before ejecting/unplugging them, but you should be
able to suspend a system with its root on a usb disk and not have
the kernel panic for no good reason when it resumes.
I described a workable method to handle root-on-USB (and I'm not
sure, but I doubt it works now). You would have early userspace find
your USB filesystems again and pass device information to the
resuming kernel, which would then restore RAM and then use the passed
information to attach its filesystems again.
One other alternative that just occurs to me now is to have a special
stackable filesystem that can suspend all IO and unmount the
filesystem underneath it then have the filesystem be easily
reattachable later on (the stackable layer would look up paths again
on remount. You would have an mlocked program start during suspend
that would create a new namespace with a basic tmpfs, procfs, and
sysfs. It would be able to rescan all removable devices on resume
and reattach them to the stackable mounts in the primary namespace
through /proc/<pid>/root. This seems to me to be the most race-free
and most flexible solution. It will even handle network suspend and
resume without too much extra effort.
Cheers,
Kyle Moffett
--
Simple things should be simple and complex things should be possible
-- Alan Kay
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