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path: root/tests/bugs/bug-873962.t
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#!/bin/bash

#AFR TEST-IDENTIFIER SPLIT-BRAIN
. $(dirname $0)/../include.rc
. $(dirname $0)/../volume.rc

cleanup;

TEST glusterd
TEST pidof glusterd
TEST $CLI volume info;

B0_hiphenated=`echo $B0 | tr '/' '-'`
TEST $CLI volume create $V0 replica 2 $H0:$B0/${V0}{1,2}

# If we allow self-heal to happen in the background, we'll get spurious
# failures - especially at the point labeled "FAIL HERE" but
# occasionally elsewhere.  This behavior is very timing-dependent.  It
# doesn't show up in Jenkins, but it does on JD's and KP's machines, and
# it got sharply worse because of an unrelated fsync change (6ae6f3d)
# which changed timing.  Putting anything at the FAIL HERE marker tends
# to make it go away most of the time on affected machines, even if the
# "anything" is unrelated.
#
# What's going on is that the I/O on the first mountpoint is allowed to
# complete even though self-heal is still in progress and the state on
# disk does not reflect its result.  In fact, the state changes during
# self-heal create the appearance of split brain when the second I/O
# comes in, so that fails even though we haven't actually been in split
# brain since the manual xattr operations.  By disallowing background
# self-heal, we ensure that the second I/O can't happen before self-heal
# is complete, because it has to follow the first I/O which now has to
# follow self-heal.
TEST $CLI volume set $V0 cluster.background-self-heal-count 0

#Make sure self-heal is not triggered when the bricks are re-started
TEST $CLI volume set $V0 cluster.self-heal-daemon off
TEST $CLI volume set $V0 performance.stat-prefetch off
TEST $CLI volume start $V0
TEST glusterfs --entry-timeout=0 --attribute-timeout=0 -s $H0 --volfile-id=$V0 $M0 --direct-io-mode=enable
TEST touch $M0/a
TEST touch $M0/b
TEST touch $M0/c
TEST touch $M0/d
echo "1" > $M0/b
echo "1" > $M0/d
TEST kill_brick $V0 $H0 $B0/${V0}2
echo "1" > $M0/a
echo "1" > $M0/c
TEST setfattr -n trusted.mdata -v abc $M0/b
TEST setfattr -n trusted.mdata -v abc $M0/d
TEST $CLI volume start $V0 force
EXPECT_WITHIN 20 "1" afr_child_up_status $V0 1
TEST kill_brick $V0 $H0 $B0/${V0}1
echo "2" > $M0/a
echo "2" > $M0/c
TEST setfattr -n trusted.mdata -v def $M0/b
TEST setfattr -n trusted.mdata -v def $M0/d
TEST $CLI volume start $V0 force
EXPECT_WITHIN 20 "1" afr_child_up_status $V0 0
EXPECT_WITHIN 20 "1" afr_child_up_status $V0 1

TEST glusterfs --entry-timeout=0 --attribute-timeout=0 -s $H0 --volfile-id=$V0 $M1 --direct-io-mode=enable
#Files are in split-brain, so open should fail
TEST ! cat $M0/a;
TEST ! cat $M1/a;
TEST ! cat $M0/b;
TEST ! cat $M1/b;

#Reset split-brain status
TEST setfattr -n trusted.afr.$V0-client-1 -v 0x000000000000000000000000 $B0/${V0}1/a;
TEST setfattr -n trusted.afr.$V0-client-1 -v 0x000000000000000000000000 $B0/${V0}1/b;

#The operations should do self-heal and give correct output
EXPECT "2" cat $M0/a;
# FAIL HERE - see comment about cluster.self-heal-background-count above.
EXPECT "2" cat $M1/a;
EXPECT "def" getfattr -n trusted.mdata --only-values $M0/b 2>/dev/null
EXPECT "def" getfattr -n trusted.mdata --only-values $M1/b 2>/dev/null

TEST umount $M0
TEST umount $M1

TEST $CLI volume set $V0 cluster.data-self-heal off
TEST $CLI volume set $V0 cluster.metadata-self-heal off

TEST glusterfs --entry-timeout=0 --attribute-timeout=0 -s $H0 --volfile-id=$V0 $M0 --direct-io-mode=enable
TEST glusterfs --entry-timeout=0 --attribute-timeout=0 -s $H0 --volfile-id=$V0 $M1 --direct-io-mode=enable

#Files are in split-brain, so open should fail
TEST ! cat $M0/c
TEST ! cat $M1/c
TEST ! cat $M0/d
TEST ! cat $M1/d

TEST setfattr -n trusted.afr.$V0-client-1 -v 0x000000000000000000000000 $B0/${V0}1/c
TEST setfattr -n trusted.afr.$V0-client-1 -v 0x000000000000000000000000 $B0/${V0}1/d

#The operations should NOT do self-heal but give correct output
EXPECT "2" cat $M0/c
EXPECT "2" cat $M1/c
EXPECT "1" cat $M0/d
EXPECT "1" cat $M1/d

#Check that the self-heal is not triggered.
EXPECT "1" cat $B0/${V0}1/c
EXPECT "abc" getfattr -n trusted.mdata --only-values $B0/${V0}1/d 2>/dev/null
cleanup;