1.5.7.89: partclone doesn't capture an image in dd mode: wrong options in fog.upload
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OK,
partclone.imager
seems to not have the-c
option either. My trick works when capturing just one partition (or the whole disk) in dd mode, but to capture only the LVM volume in dd mode while allowing other modes for the rest of the disk, we’ll probably need something like:diff --git a/Buildroot/board/FOG/FOS/rootfs_overlay/usr/share/fog/lib/funcs.sh b/Buildroot/board/FOG/FOS/rootfs_overlay/usr/share/fog/lib/funcs.sh index 5d6054f..050ace9 100644 --- a/Buildroot/board/FOG/FOS/rootfs_overlay/usr/share/fog/lib/funcs.sh +++ b/Buildroot/board/FOG/FOS/rootfs_overlay/usr/share/fog/lib/funcs.sh @@ -2049,6 +2049,13 @@ savePartition() { getPartType "$part" local ebrfilename="" local swapuuidfilename="" + local clone="-c" + local checksum_mode="-a0" + if [ "0x8e" == "$parttype" ]; then + fstype=imager + clone= + checksum_mode= + fi case $fstype in swap) echo " * Saving swap partition UUID" @@ -2068,7 +2075,7 @@ savePartition() { debugPause imgpart="$imagePath/d${disk_number}p${part_number}.img" uploadFormat "$fifoname" "$imgpart" - partclone.$fstype -n "Storage Location $storage, Image name $img" -cs $part -O $fifoname -Nf 1 -a0 + partclone.$fstype -n "Storage Location $storage, Image name $img" $clone -s $part -O $fifoname -N -f1 $checksum_mode exitcode=$? case $exitcode in 0)
Will test it tomorrow.
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To clarify
-a0
disables the checksum; junkhacker in the original thread made a small mistake with-aX0
as the X was a placeholder that needed to be replaced with either a 0 or 1 for it to work. It shouldn’t cause any issues and removing it will break compatibility with images made under older versions of partclone.partclone.dd not having a in its short options is actually a bug in my opinion as per
https://github.com/Thomas-Tsai/partclone/blob/master/src/partclone.c#L352 clearly listing several options that are for some reason not included in the sopt list for dd.
That said; for dd specifically it turns out we can ignore that potential bug and remove a0 as per https://github.com/Thomas-Tsai/partclone/blob/master/src/partclone.c#L402 setting the checksum_mode to 0 anyway.
And you are right that c is not an option for dd (anymore); I’m guesssing it was removed since a raw copy is always a clone so it makes no sense to specify it.
All that said, I think proper handling of LVM as per what Tom said should be the way forward.
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@Tom-Elliott Thanks heaps for pointing out that LVM support was prepared for some time ago! Didn’t know that.
However, the inits downloaded by default are still using 0.2.89 partclone which did not have this argument available.
That’s only true for 1.5.7 but people installing
dev-branch
(as posted here) already use inits with partclone version 0.3.12 (see here).@shruggy Though I am not exactly sure I would imagine that switching from partclone 0.2.89 to 0.3.12 broke LVM raw capture.
@Quazz said:
All that said, I think proper handling of LVM as per what Tom said should be the way forward.
I’d think so too! The code being prepared for LVM already will make things easier I suppose and we might even add this “feature” before the next release as it turns out that newer versions break LVM (raw!) capture.
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@Quazz @shruggy Ok, after a major debugging session I am fairly sure I found why
partclone.imager
doesn’t work anymore the way we are used to it. Find new details here: https://github.com/FOGProject/fos/issues/35On the question why we use
partclone.imager
instead ofpartclone.dd
- also discussed in the other forum topic but just to give you the full picture: Intially partclone only had the dd mode that would save sector-per-sector (dd style) images that you’d need to restore usingpartclone.dd
as well. But aspartclone.imager
was added it made things for us a bit easier to simply usepartclone.restore
for all images. -
I’ve built a new (or rather old)
init.xz
. It’s here. I didn’t have time and wanted to get things done quickly, so as a stop-gap measure I just replaced partclone 0.3.12 with the old version0.2.890.2.91. Besides, the image also has some other differences (that hopefully will speed up testing it):- Buildroot 2019.11
- Processor architecture set to Westmere
- Partclone at
0.2.890.2.91 - Zstd 1.4.4 (it’s really fast just as release notes promised)
- MDadm 4.1
- GPTfdisk 1.0.4
The whole diff is somewhat misleading, but nevertheless can be found here.
With it, I captured the disk from my master (still using FOG 1.5.7.89) and successfully restored it to another machine.
As @Sebastian-Roth has already found the root of the problem it’s probably unneeded anymore, but after this I was planning to update partclone on the image to the latest git snapshot on the release branch (that reports itself as 0.2.91). Done.
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@shruggy Thanks for sharing your work here! You might even think about joining the team and working on the official builds if you are keen.
Just a few comments:
Buildroot 2019.11
We usually stick to the LTS versions for the official builds. Just FYI.
Processor architecture set to Westmere
Do you know if this would run on good old 486 PCs as well? I guess we still have users with fairly old hardware around.
Partclone at 0.2.89
You might want to use the proper patch file for that version for the web UI status bar to work properly.
Zstd 1.4.4 (it’s really fast just as release notes promised)
MDadm 4.1
GPTfdisk 1.0.4Nice, will take a look at those and update our official builds as well.
BR2_KERNEL_HEADERS_4_19=y
Using this will make your init fail to run with older versions of the Linux kernel. Not a problem for you I suppose but we try to keep compatibility as good as possible.
As @Sebastian-Roth has already found the root of the problem it’s probably unneeded anymore, but after this I planned to update partclone on the image to the latest git snapshot on the release branch (that reports itself as 0.2.91).
I didn’t know the release branch is still on going… I thought it would be 0.2.89 -> 0.3.x
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Processor architecture set to Westmere
Do you know if this would run on good old 486 PCs as well? I guess we still have users with fairly old hardware around.
It definitely wouldn’t: Westmere are Intel Core processors from year 2010 IIRC.
Partclone at 0.2.89
You might want to use the proper patch file for that version for the web UI status bar to work properly.
Yes, i found and applied it, just failed to mention (or rather did it very clumsily: that bit about misleading diff).
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@Sebastian-Roth said in 1.5.7.89: partclone doesn't capture an image in dd mode: wrong options in fog.upload:
o you know if this would run on good old 486 PCs as well? I guess we still have users with fairly old hardware around.
FWIW: I had to build a one off kernel to image a 486 for a fog admin. So even with the stock bzImage32 anything less than a 586 isn’t supported.
We really don’t have any data on if there is a performance boost from making the minimum processor requirements to a specific model. It would be an interesting test. But the kernel and the inits would need to be in sync.
My gut reaction would be that it would cause more help desk calls about incompatible processors than any performance boost we might get from using newer instruction calls. But as they say, without data its only an opinion.
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Uploaded new version of the FOS image in my post: replaced partclone 0.2.89 with partclone 0.2.91 (aka the latest commit in release branch).
- checks for image version (currently 0001) and displays it on progress screen
- updates translations
- fixes compile issue on CentOS 6.8
- fixes
--disable-*
options behavior forconfigure
- updates Makefile
- additional checks for
malloc
as well as different sizes recorded in an image (used blocks, total blocks, device size)
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I tested and uploaded another version: this time it’s the latest Partclone with the fix suggested by @Sebastian-Roth, i.e.
diff --git a/src/ddclone.c b/src/ddclone.c index 04f8775..cab5386 100644 --- a/src/ddclone.c +++ b/src/ddclone.c @@ -30,7 +30,9 @@ void read_super_blocks(char* device, file_system_info* fs_info) } strncpy(fs_info->fs, raw_MAGIC, FS_MAGIC_SIZE); fs_info->block_size = PART_SECTOR_SIZE; - //fs_info->device_size = get_partition_size(&src); +#ifdef IMG + fs_info->device_size = get_partition_size(&src); +#endif fs_info->totalblock = fs_info->device_size / PART_SECTOR_SIZE; fs_info->usedblocks = fs_info->device_size / PART_SECTOR_SIZE; close(src);
The symbol
IMG
is defined inMakefile
when buildingpartclone.imager
and prevents this change from being built intopartclone.dd
. For now, I’ve successfully captured a disk from one machine and restored it to another one. After the coming Microsoft Patch Day (probably over the next weekend) I am planning to capture another disk image with this and deploy it to my pool in multi-cast mode.This time, I also built the 64-bit kernel 4.19.94 and used it together with this image. It’s here.
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Marking as fixed as we have this added to
dev-branch
and it will be in the next release.