166 lines
7.1 KiB
Plaintext
166 lines
7.1 KiB
Plaintext
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Delicate Device Locking Protocol
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(a joint sub project of cdrkit and libburnia)
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(contact: scdbackup@gmx.net )
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DDLP shall help to avoid collisions between programs in the process of
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recording to a CD or DVD drive and other programs which access that drive.
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The protocol intends to provide advisory locking. So any good-willing program
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has to take some extra precautions to participate.
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If a program does not feel vulnerable to disturbance, then the precautions
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impose much less effort than if the program feels the need for protection.
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Two locking strategies are specified:
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DDLP-A operates on device files only. It is very Linux specific.
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DDLP-B adds proxy lock files, inspired by FHS /var/lock standard.
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DDLP-A
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This protocol relies on the hardly documented feature open(O_EXCL | O_RDWR)
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with Linux device files and on POSIX compliant fcntl(F_SETLK).
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Other than the original meaning of O_EXCL with creating regular files, the
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effect on device files is mutual exclusion of access. I.e. if one
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filedescriptor is open on that combination of major-minor device number, then
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no other open(O_EXCL) will succeed. But open() without O_EXCL would succeed.
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So this is advisory and exclusive locking.
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With kernel 2.6 it seems to work on all device drivers which might get used
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to access a CD/DVD drive.
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The vulnerable programs shall not start their operation before they occupied a
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wide collection of drive representations.
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Non-vulnerable programs shall take care to detect the occupation of _one_ such
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representation.
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So for Friendly Programs
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A program which does not feel vulnerable to disturbance is urged to access
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CD/DVD drives by opening a file descriptor which will uphold the lock
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as long as it does not get closed. There are two alternative ways to achieve
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this.
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Very reliable is
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open( some_path , O_EXCL | ...)
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But: O_EXCL | O_RDONLY does not succeed with /dev/sg* on several systems.
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So it may be necessary to use a cautious open() without O_EXCL and to aquire
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a POSIX lock via fcntl().
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With this gesture it is important to use the standard paths because
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fcntl(F_SETLK) does not lock the device but only a device-inode.
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std_path = one of the standard device files:
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/dev/sr[0..255] /dev/scd[0..255] /dev/sg[0..255] /dev/hd[a..z]
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or a symbolic link pointing to one of them.
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open( std_path , ... | O_NDELAY)
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fcntl(F_SETLK) and close() on failure
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... eventually disable O_NDELAY by fcntl(F_SETFL) ...
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There is a pitfall mentioned in man 2 fcntl :
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"locks are automatically released [...] if it closes any file descriptor
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referring to a file on which locks are held. This is bad [...]"
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So you may have to re-lock after some temporary fd got closed.
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Vulnerable Programs
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For programs which do feel vulnerable, O_EXCL would suffice for the /dev/hd*
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device file family and their driver. But USB and SATA recorders appear with
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at least two different major-minor combinations simultaneously.
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One as /dev/sr* alias /dev/scd*, the other as /dev/sg*.
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The same is true for ide-scsi or recorders attached to SCSI controllers.
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So, in order to lock any access to the recorder, one has to open(O_EXCL)
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not only the device file that is intended for accessing the recorder but also
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a device file of any other major-minor representation of the recorder.
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This is done via the SCSI address parameter vector (Host,Channel,Id,Lun)
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and a search on standard device file paths /dev/sr* /dev/scd* /dev/sg*.
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In this text the alternative device representations are called "siblings".
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For finding them, it is necessary to apply open() to many device files which
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might be occupied by delicate operations. On the other hand it is very
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important to occupy all reasonable representations of the drive.
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So the reading of the (Host,Channel,Id,Lun) parameters demands an
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open(O_RDONLY | O_NDELAY) _without_ fcntl() in order to find the outmost
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number of representations among the standard device files. Only ioctls
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SCSI_IOCTL_GET_IDLUN and SCSI_IOCTL_GET_BUS_NUMBER are applied.
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Hopefully this gesture is unable to cause harmful side effects on kernel 2.6.
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At least one file of each class sr, scd and sg should be found to regard
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the occupation as satisfying. Thus corresponding sr-scd-sg triplets should have
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matching ownerships and access permissions.
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One will have to help the sysadmins to find those triplets.
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A spicy detail is that sr and scd may be distinct device files for the same
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major-minor combination. In this case fcntl() locks on both are needed
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but O_EXCL can only be applied to one of them.
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An open and free implementation ddlpa.[ch] is provided as
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http://libburnia.pykix.org/browser/libburn/trunk/libburn/ddlpa.h?format=txt
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http://libburnia.pykix.org/browser/libburn/trunk/libburn/ddlpa.c?format=txt
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The current version of this text is
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http://libburnia.pykix.org/browser/libburn/trunk/doc/ddlp.txt?format=txt
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Put ddlpa.h and ddlpa.c into the same directory and compile as test program by
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cc -g -Wall -DDDLPA_C_STANDALONE -o ddlpa ddlpa.c
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Use it to occupy a drive's representations for a given number of seconds
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./ddlpa /dev/sr0 300
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It should do no harm to any of your running activities.
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If it does: Please, please alert us.
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Your own programs should not be able to circumvent the occupation if they
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obey above rules for Friendly Programs.
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Of course ./ddlpa should be unable to circumvent itself.
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A successfull occupation looks like
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DDLPA_DEBUG: ddlpa_std_by_rdev("/dev/scd0") = "/dev/sr0"
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DDLPA_DEBUG: ddlpa_collect_siblings() found "/dev/sr0"
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DDLPA_DEBUG: ddlpa_collect_siblings() found "/dev/scd0"
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DDLPA_DEBUG: ddlpa_collect_siblings() found "/dev/sg0"
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DDLPA_DEBUG: ddlpa_occupy() : '/dev/scd0'
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DDLPA_DEBUG: ddlpa_occupy() O_EXCL : '/dev/sg0'
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DDLPA_DEBUG: ddlpa_occupy() O_EXCL : '/dev/sr0'
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---------------------------------------------- Lock gained
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ddlpa: opened /dev/sr0
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ddlpa: opened siblings: /dev/scd0 /dev/sg0
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slept 1 seconds of 300
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Now an attempt via device file alias /dev/NEC must fail:
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DDLPA_DEBUG: ddlpa_std_by_rdev("/dev/NEC") = "/dev/sg0"
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DDLPA_DEBUG: ddlpa_collect_siblings() found "/dev/sr0"
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DDLPA_DEBUG: ddlpa_collect_siblings() found "/dev/scd0"
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DDLPA_DEBUG: ddlpa_collect_siblings() found "/dev/sg0"
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Cannot exclusively open '/dev/sg0'
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Reason given : Failed to open O_RDWR | O_NDELAY | O_EXCL : '/dev/sr0'
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Error condition : 16 'Device or resource busy'
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With hdc, of course, things are trivial
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DDLPA_DEBUG: ddlpa_std_by_rdev("/dev/hdc") = "/dev/hdc"
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DDLPA_DEBUG: ddlpa_occupy() O_EXCL : '/dev/hdc'
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---------------------------------------------- Lock gained
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ddlpa: opened /dev/hdc
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slept 1 seconds of 1
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----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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DDLP-B
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>>> Proxy lock file protocol embedded in DDLP-A which itself might be a
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>>> generic dummy on non-Linux systems (i.e. without O_EXCL or SCSI sibling
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>>> search).
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>>> Definition to come soon. Implementation possibly to come never.
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----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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