On 06/10/2017 20:13, Willem Jan Withagen wrote:
On 9-6-2017 16:20, Miroslav Lachman wrote:
Willem Jan Withagen wrote on 2017/06/09 15:48:
On 9-6-2017 11:23, Steven Hartland wrote:
You could do effectively this by using dedicated zfs filesystems per
jail
Hi Steven,
That is how I'm going to do it, when nothing else works.
But then I don't get to test the part of building the ceph-cluster from
raw disk...
I was more thinking along the lines of tinkering with the devd.conf or
something. And would appreciate opinions on how to (not) do it.
I totally skipped devd.conf in my mind in previous reply. So maybe you
can really use devd.conf to allow access to /dev/adaX devices or you can
use ZFS zvol if you have big pool and need some smaller devices to test
with.
I want the jail to look as much as a normal system would, and then run
ceph-tools on them. And they would like to see /dev/{disk}....
Now I have found /sbin/devfs which allows to add/remove devices to an
already existing devfs-mount.
So I can 'rule add type disk unhide' and see the disks.
Gpart can then list partitions.
But any of the other commands is met with an unwilling system:
root@ceph-1:/ # gpart delete -i 1 ada0
gpart: No such file or directory
So there is still some protection in place in the jail....
However dd-ing to the device does overwrite some stuff.
Since after the 'dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/ada0' gpart reports a corrupt
gpartition.
But I don't see any sysctl options to toggle that on or off
--WjW
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To use GEOM tools like gpart, I think you'll need to unhide
/dev/geom.ctl in the jail
--
Allan Jude
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