7.37. device-mapper-multipath


Updated device-mapper-multipath packages that fix several bugs and add various enhancements are now available for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.
The device-mapper-multipath packages provide tools that use the device-mapper multipath kernel module to manage multipath devices.

Bug Fixes

BZ#880121
If the multipathd daemon failed to add a multipath device, in some circumstances, it was freeing the alias and then accessing it and attempting to free it again. Consequently, multipathd terminated unexpectedly. With this update, multipathd no longer frees the alias twice, or attempts to access the freed alias, and thus no longer crashes in the described situation.
BZ#1120047
Previously, any target port with the ALUA preference bit set was given a higher priority than all other target ports. Consequently, when a target port had the preference bit set, multipath did not balance load between it and other ports that were equally optimized. With this update, the preference bit only increases the priority of paths that are not already optimized. Now, if the preference bit is set on a non-optimized port, the port is used. However, if the preference bit is set on an optimized port, all optimized ports are used, and multipath loads balance across them.
BZ#1136966
When the parted utility created partitions on an existing multipath device, it raced with the kpartx utility to create the partitions. This could cause device or resource busy errors. Now, kpartx only creates partition devices when the multipath device is activated, and no longer automatically creates partitions when parted is run on existing multipath devices.
BZ#1148096
Previously, a multipath device was not assigned a user_friendly_name by initramfs, which caused a conflict with the name already assigned by the normal system. Because of the name conflict, multipath could try to update the wrong device, and thus cause data corruption. To fix this bug, multipath checks paths to see if a device's user_friendly_name is already assigned, and assigns a new one if it is.
BZ#1171862
Previously, the libmultipath utility was keeping a global cache of sysfs data for all programs, even though this was only necessary for the multipathd daemon. As a consequence, a memory error could occur when multiple threads were using libmultipath without locking. This led to unexpected termination of multithreaded programs using the mpath_persistent_reserve_in() or mpath_persistent_reserve_out() functions. With this update, only multipathd uses the global sysfs data cache, and the described crashes are thus avoided.
BZ#1175888
Previously, the first time the multipath utility recognized a path device, the path device was not claimed in the udev utility, and other programs could race multipath to claim it. As a consequence, multipath systems could fail to boot during installation. With this update, the multipathd daemon now checks the kernel command line on startup. If it has recognized any parameters with a World Wide Identifier (WWID) value, it adds those WWIDs to the list of multipath WWIDs. Devices with those WWIDs are thus claimed the first time they are recognized. As a result, if multipath systems do not boot successfully during installation, users can add mpath.wwid=[WWID] to the kernel command line to work around the problem.

Enhancements

BZ#978947
This update adds new built-in configuration for Dell MD36xxf storage arrays.
BZ#997028
With this udpate, multipath autodetects whether an EMC CLARiiON array is set up in ALUA or PNR mode, and correctly configures itself to match.
BZ#1072081
Now, the multipathd daemon has two new configuration options "delay_watch_checks" and "delay_wait_checks". The user is recommended to refer to the multipath(8) man page for more information.
Users of device-mapper-multipath are advised to upgrade to these updated packages, which fix these bugs and add these enhancements.
Red Hat logoGithubRedditYoutubeTwitter

Learn

Try, buy, & sell

Communities

About Red Hat Documentation

We help Red Hat users innovate and achieve their goals with our products and services with content they can trust.

Making open source more inclusive

Red Hat is committed to replacing problematic language in our code, documentation, and web properties. For more details, see the Red Hat Blog.

About Red Hat

We deliver hardened solutions that make it easier for enterprises to work across platforms and environments, from the core datacenter to the network edge.

© 2024 Red Hat, Inc.