-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 12
A single tool to manage your storage.
License
system-storage-manager/ssm
Folders and files
Name | Name | Last commit message | Last commit date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
 |  | |||
 |  | |||
 |  | |||
 |  | |||
 |  | |||
 |  | |||
 |  | |||
 |  | |||
 |  | |||
 |  | |||
 |  | |||
 |  | |||
 |  | |||
 |  | |||
 |  | |||
 |  | |||
 |  | |||
Repository files navigation
System Storage Manager ********************** A single tool to manage your storage. This document in HTML form also at: https://system-storage-manager.github.io/ Description *********** System Storage Manager provides an easy to use command line interface to manage your storage using various technologies like lvm, btrfs, encrypted volumes and more. In more sophisticated enterprise storage environments, management with Device Mapper (dm), Logical Volume Manager (LVM), or Multiple Devices (md) is becoming increasingly more difficult. With file systems added to the mix, the number of tools needed to configure and manage storage has grown so large that it is simply not user friendly. With so many options for a system administrator to consider, the opportunity for errors and problems is large. The btrfs administration tools have shown us that storage management can be simplified, and we are working to bring that ease of use to Linux filesystems in general. Licence ******* (C)2017 Red Hat, Inc., Jan Tulak <[email protected]> (C)2011 Red Hat, Inc., Lukas Czerner <[email protected]> This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. Commands ******** Introduction ************ System Storage Manager has several commands that you can specify on the command line as a first argument to ssm. They all have a specific use and their own arguments, but global ssm arguments are propagated to all commands. Create command ************** This command creates a new volume with defined parameters. If a **device** is provided it will be used to create the volume, hence it will be added into the **pool** prior to volume creation (See *Add command section*). More than one device can be used to create a volume. If the **device** is already being used in a different pool, then **ssm** will ask you whether you want to remove it from the original pool. If you decline, or the removal fails, then the **volume** creation fails if the *SIZE* was not provided. On the other hand, if the *SIZE* is provided and some devices can not be added to the **pool**, the volume creation might still succeed if there is enough space in the **pool**. In addition to specifying size of the volume directly, percentage can be specified as well. Specify **--size 70%** to indicate the volume size to be 70% of total pool size. Additionally, percentage of the used, or free pool space can be specified as well using keywords FREE, or USED respectively. The *POOL* name can be specified as well. If the pool exists, a new volume will be created from that pool (optionally adding **device** into the pool). However if the *POOL* does not exist, then **ssm** will attempt to create a new pool with the provided **device**, and then create a new volume from this pool. If the **--backend** argument is omitted, the default **ssm** backend will be used. The default backend is *lvm*. **ssm** also supports creating a RAID configuration, however some back-ends might not support all RAID levels, or may not even support RAID at all. In this case, volume creation will fail. If a **mount** point is provided, **ssm** will attempt to mount the volume after it is created. However it will fail if mountable file system is not present on the volume. If the backend allows it (currently only supported with **lvm** backend), **ssm** can be used to create **thinly provisioned volumes** by specifying **--virtual-size** option. This will automatically create a **thin pool** of a given size provided with **--size** option and **thin volume** of a given size provided with **--virtual-size** option and name provided with **--name** option. Virtual size can be much bigger than available space in the **pool**. List command ************ Lists information about all detected devices, pools, volumes and snapshots found on the system. The **list** command can be used either alone to list all of the information, or you can request specific sections only. The following sections can be specified: {volumes | vol} List information about all **volumes** found in the system. {devices | dev} List information about all **devices** found on the system. Some devices are intentionally hidden, like for example cdrom or DM/MD devices since those are actually listed as volumes. {pools | pool} List information about all **pools** found in the system. {filesystems | fs} List information about all volumes containing **filesystems** found in the system. {snapshots | snap} List information about all **snapshots** found in the system. Note that some back-ends do not support snapshotting and some cannot distinguish snapshot from regular volumes. In this case, **ssm** will try to recognize the volume name in order to identify a **snapshot**, but if the **ssm** regular expression does not match the snapshot pattern, the problematic snapshot will not be recognized. Info command ************ **EXPERIMENTAL** This feature is currently experimental. The output format can change and fields can be added or removed. Show detailed information about all detected devices, pools, volumes and snapshots found on the system. The **info** command can be used either alone to show all available items, or you can specify a device, pool, or any other identifier to see information about the specific item. Remove command ************** This command removes an **item** from the system. Multiple items can be specified. If the **item** cannot be removed for some reason, it will be skipped. An **item** can be any of the following: device Remove a **device** from the pool. Note that this cannot be done in some cases where the device is being used by the pool. You can use the **-f** argument to *force* removal. If the device does not belong to any pool, it will be skipped. pool Remove a **pool** from the system. This will also remove all volumes created from that pool. volume Remove a **volume** from the system. Note that this will fail if the **volume** is mounted and cannot be *forced* with **-f**. Resize command ************** Change size of the **volume** and file system. If there is no file system, only the **volume** itself will be resized. You can specify a **device** to add into the **volume** pool prior the resize. Note that the **device** will only be added into the pool if the **volume** size is going to grow. If the **device** is already used in a different pool, then **ssm** will ask you whether or not you want to remove it from the original pool. In some cases, the file system has to be mounted in order to resize. This will be handled by **ssm** automatically by mounting the **volume** temporarily. In addition to specifying new size of the volume directly, percentage can be specified as well. Specify **--size 70%** to resize the volume to 70% of it's original size. Additionally, percentage of the used, or free pool space can be specified as well using keywords FREE, or USED respectively. Note that resizing btrfs subvolume is not supported, only the whole file system can be resized. Check command ************* Check the file system consistency on the **volume**. You can specify multiple volumes to check. If there is no file system on the **volume**, this **volume** will be skipped. In some cases the file system has to be mounted in order to check the file system. This will be handled by **ssm** automatically by mounting the **volume** temporarily. Snapshot command **************** Take a snapshot of an existing **volume**. This operation will fail if the back-end to which the **volume** belongs to does not support snapshotting. Note that you cannot specify both *NAME* and *DEST* since those options are mutually exclusive. In addition to specifying new size of the volume directly, percentage can be specified as well. Specify **--size 70%** to indicate the new snapshot size to be 70% of the origin volume size. Additionally, percentage of the used, or free pool space can be specified as well using keywords FREE, or USED respectively. In some cases the file system has to be mounted in order to take a snapshot of the **volume**. This will be handled by **ssm** automatically by mounting the **volume** temporarily. Add command *********** This command adds a **device** into the pool. By default, the **device** will not be added if it's already a part of a different pool, but the user will be asked whether or not to remove the device from its pool. When multiple devices are provided, all of them are added into the pool. If one of the devices cannot be added into the pool for any reason, the add command will fail. If no pool is specified, the default pool will be chosen. In the case of a non existing pool, it will be created using the provided devices. Mount command ************* This command will mount the **volume** at the specified **directory**. The **volume** can be specified in the same way as with **mount(8)**, however in addition, one can also specify a **volume** in the format as it appears in the **ssm list** table. For example, instead of finding out what the device and subvolume id of the btrfs subvolume "btrfs_pool:vol001" is in order to mount it, one can simply call **ssm mount btrfs_pool:vol001 /mnt/test**. One can also specify *OPTIONS* in the same way as with **mount(8)**. Migrate command *************** Move data from one device to another. For btrfs and lvm their specialized utilities are used, so the data are moved in an all-or- nothing fashion and no other operation is needed to add/remove the devices or rebalance the pool. Devices that do not belong to a **backend** that supports specialized device migration tools will be migrated using **dd**. This operation is not intended to be used for duplication, because the process can change metadata and an access to the data may be difficult. Backends ******** Introduction ************ Ssm aims to create a unified user interface for various technologies like Device Mapper (dm), Btrfs file system, Multiple Devices (md) and possibly more. In order to do so we have a core abstraction layer in "ssmlib/main.py". This abstraction layer should ideally know nothing about the underlying technology, but rather comply with **device**, **pool** and **volume** abstractions. Various backends can be registered in "ssmlib/main.py" in order to handle specific storage technology, implementing methods like *create*, *snapshot*, or *remove* volumes and pools. The core will then call these methods to manage the storage without needing to know what lies underneath it. There are already several backends registered in ssm. Btrfs backend ************* Btrfs is the file system with many advanced features including volume management. This is the reason why btrfs is handled differently than other *conventional* file systems in **ssm**. It is used as a volume management back-end. Pools, volumes and snapshots can be created with btrfs backend and here is what it means from the btrfs point of view: pool A pool is actually a btrfs file system itself, because it can be extended by adding more devices, or shrunk by removing devices from it. Subvolumes and snapshots can also be created. When the new btrfs pool should be created, **ssm** simply creates a btrfs file system, which means that every new btrfs pool has one volume of the same name as the pool itself which can not be removed without removing the entire pool. The default btrfs pool name is **btrfs_pool**. When creating a new btrfs pool, the name of the pool is used as the file system label. If there is an already existing btrfs file system in the system without a label, a btrfs pool name will be generated for internal use in the following format "btrfs_{device base name}". A btrfs pool is created when the **create** or **add** command is used with specified devices and non existing pool name. volume A volume in the btrfs back-end is actually just btrfs subvolume with the exception of the first volume created on btrfs pool creation, which is the file system itself. Subvolumes can only be created on the btrfs file system when it is mounted, but the user does not have to worry about that since **ssm** will automatically mount the file system temporarily in order to create a new subvolume. The volume name is used as subvolume path in the btrfs file system and every object in this path must exist in order to create a volume. The volume name for internal tracking and that is visible to the user is generated in the format "{pool_name}:{volume name}", but volumes can be also referenced by its mount point. The btrfs volumes are only shown in the *list* output, when the file system is mounted, with the exception of the main btrfs volume - the file system itself. Also note that btrfs volumes and subvolumes cannot be resized. This is mainly limitation of the btrfs tools which currently do not work reliably. A new btrfs volume can be created with the **create** command. snapshot The btrfs file system supports subvolume snapshotting, so you can take a snapshot of any btrfs volume in the system with **ssm**. However btrfs does not distinguish between subvolumes and snapshots, because a snapshot is actually just a subvolume with some blocks shared with a different subvolume. This means, that **ssm** is not able to directly recognize a btrfs snapshot. Instead, **ssm** will try to recognize a special name format of the btrfs volume that denotes it is a snapshot. However, if the *NAME* is specified when creating snapshot which does not match the special pattern, snapshot will not be recognized by the **ssm** and it will be listed as regular btrfs volume. A new btrfs snapshot can be created with the **snapshot** command. device Btrfs does not require a special device to be created on. Lvm backend *********** Pools, volumes and snapshots can be created with lvm, which pretty much match the lvm abstraction. pool An lvm pool is just a *volume group* in lvm language. It means that it is grouping devices and new logical volumes can be created out of the lvm pool. The default lvm pool name is **lvm_pool**. An lvm pool is created when the **create** or **add** commands are used with specified devices and a non existing pool name. Alternatively a **thin pool** can be created as a result of using **--virtual-size** option to create **thin volume**. volume An lvm volume is just a *logical volume* in lvm language. An lvm volume can be created with the **create** command. snapshot Lvm volumes can be snapshotted as well. When a snapshot is created from the lvm volume, a new *snapshot* volume is created, which can be handled as any other lvm volume. Unlike *btrfs* lvm is able to distinguish snapshot from regular volume, so there is no need for a snapshot name to match special pattern. device Lvm requires a *physical device* to be created on the device, but with **ssm** this is transparent for the user. Crypt backend ************* The crypt backend in **ssm** uses cryptsetup and dm-crypt target to manage encrypted volumes. The crypt backend can be used as a regular backend for creating encrypted volumes on top of regular block devices, or even other volumes (lvm or md volumes for example). Or it can be used to create encrypted lvm volumes right away in a single step. Only volumes can be created with crypt backend. This backend does not support pooling and does not require special devices. pool The crypt backend does not support pooling, and it is not possible to create crypt pool or add a device into a pool. volume A volume in the crypt backend is the volume created by dm-crypt which represents the data on the original encrypted device in unencrypted form. The crypt backend does not support pooling, so only one device can be used to create crypt volume. It also does not support raid or any device concatenation. Currently two modes, or extensions are supported: luks and plain. Luks is used by default. For more information about the extensions, please see **cryptsetup** manual page. snapshot The crypt backend does not support snapshotting, however if the encrypted volume is created on top of an lvm volume, the lvm volume itself can be snapshotted. The snapshot can be then opened by using **cryptsetup**. It is possible that this might change in the future so that **ssm** will be able to activate the volume directly without the extra step. device The crypt backend does not require a special device to be created on. Multipath backend ***************** Multipath backend in **ssm** is currently limited to only gather the information about multipath volumes in the system. You can not create or manage multipath volumes or pools, but this functionality will be extended in the future. Environment variables ********************* SSM_DEFAULT_BACKEND Specify which backend will be used by default. This can be overridden by specifying the **-b** or **--backend** argument. Currently only *lvm* and *btrfs* are supported. SSM_LVM_DEFAULT_POOL Name of the default lvm pool to be used if the **-p** or **--pool** argument is omitted. SSM_BTRFS_DEFAULT_POOL Name of the default btrfs pool to be used if the **-p** or **--pool** argument is omitted. SSM_PREFIX_FILTER When this is set, **ssm** will filter out all devices, volumes and pools whose name does not start with this prefix. It is used mainly in the **ssm** test suite to make sure that we do not scramble the local system configuration. Quick examples ************** List system storage: # ssm list ---------------------------------- Device Total Mount point ---------------------------------- /dev/loop0 5.00 GB /dev/loop1 5.00 GB /dev/loop2 5.00 GB /dev/loop3 5.00 GB /dev/loop4 5.00 GB /dev/sda 149.05 GB PARTITIONED /dev/sda1 19.53 GB / /dev/sda2 78.12 GB /dev/sda3 1.95 GB SWAP /dev/sda4 1.00 KB /dev/sda5 49.44 GB /mnt/test ---------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Volume Pool Volume size FS FS size Free Type Mount point ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ /dev/dm-0 dm-crypt 78.12 GB ext4 78.12 GB 45.01 GB crypt /home /dev/sda1 19.53 GB ext4 19.53 GB 12.67 GB part / /dev/sda5 49.44 GB ext4 49.44 GB 29.77 GB part /mnt/test ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Create a volume of the defined size with the defined file system. The default back-end is set to lvm and the lvm default pool name (volume group) is lvm_pool: # ssm create --fs ext4 -s 15G /dev/loop0 /dev/loop1 The name of the new volume is '/dev/lvm_pool/lvol001'. Resize the volume to 10GB: # ssm resize -s-5G /dev/lvm_pool/lvol001 Resize the volume to 100G, but it may require adding more devices into the pool: # ssm resize -s 100G /dev/lvm_pool/lvol001 /dev/loop2 Now we can try to create a new lvm volume named 'myvolume' from the remaining pool space with the xfs file system and mount it to /mnt/test1: # ssm create --fs xfs --name myvolume /mnt/test1 List all volumes with file systems: # ssm list filesystems ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Volume Pool Volume size FS FS size Free Type Mount point ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /dev/lvm_pool/lvol001 lvm_pool 25.00 GB ext4 25.00 GB 23.19 GB linear /dev/lvm_pool/myvolume lvm_pool 4.99 GB xfs 4.98 GB 4.98 GB linear /mnt/test1 /dev/dm-0 dm-crypt 78.12 GB ext4 78.12 GB 45.33 GB crypt /home /dev/sda1 19.53 GB ext4 19.53 GB 12.67 GB part / /dev/sda5 49.44 GB ext4 49.44 GB 29.77 GB part /mnt/test ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- You can then easily remove the old volume with: # ssm remove /dev/lvm_pool/lvol001 Now let's try to create a btrfs volume. Btrfs is a separate backend, not just a file system. That is because btrfs itself has an integrated volume manager. The default btrfs pool name is btrfs_pool.: # ssm -b btrfs create /dev/loop3 /dev/loop4 Now we create btrfs subvolumes. Note that the btrfs file system has to be mounted in order to create subvolumes. However ssm will handle this for you.: # ssm create -p btrfs_pool # ssm create -n new_subvolume -p btrfs_pool # ssm list filesystems ----------------------------------------------------------------- Device Free Used Total Pool Mount point ----------------------------------------------------------------- /dev/loop0 0.00 KB 10.00 GB 10.00 GB lvm_pool /dev/loop1 0.00 KB 10.00 GB 10.00 GB lvm_pool /dev/loop2 0.00 KB 10.00 GB 10.00 GB lvm_pool /dev/loop3 8.05 GB 1.95 GB 10.00 GB btrfs_pool /dev/loop4 6.54 GB 1.93 GB 8.47 GB btrfs_pool /dev/sda 149.05 GB PARTITIONED /dev/sda1 19.53 GB / /dev/sda2 78.12 GB /dev/sda3 1.95 GB SWAP /dev/sda4 1.00 KB /dev/sda5 49.44 GB /mnt/test ----------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------- Pool Type Devices Free Used Total ------------------------------------------------------- lvm_pool lvm 3 0.00 KB 29.99 GB 29.99 GB btrfs_pool btrfs 2 3.84 MB 18.47 GB 18.47 GB ------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Volume Pool Volume size FS FS size Free Type Mount point ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /dev/lvm_pool/lvol001 lvm_pool 25.00 GB ext4 25.00 GB 23.19 GB linear /dev/lvm_pool/myvolume lvm_pool 4.99 GB xfs 4.98 GB 4.98 GB linear /mnt/test1 /dev/dm-0 dm-crypt 78.12 GB ext4 78.12 GB 45.33 GB crypt /home btrfs_pool btrfs_pool 18.47 GB btrfs 18.47 GB 18.47 GB btrfs /dev/sda1 19.53 GB ext4 19.53 GB 12.67 GB part / /dev/sda5 49.44 GB ext4 49.44 GB 29.77 GB part /mnt/test ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Now let's free up some of the loop devices so that we can try to add them into the btrfs_pool. So we'll simply remove lvm myvolume and resize lvol001 so we can remove /dev/loop2. Note that myvolume is mounted so we have to unmount it first.: # umount /mnt/test1 # ssm remove /dev/lvm_pool/myvolume # ssm resize -s-10G /dev/lvm_pool/lvol001 # ssm remove /dev/loop2 Add device to the btrfs file system: # ssm add /dev/loop2 -p btrfs_pool Now let's see what happened. Note that to actually see btrfs subvolumes you have to mount the file system first: # mount -L btrfs_pool /mnt/test1/ # ssm list volumes ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Volume Pool Volume size FS FS size Free Type Mount point ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ /dev/lvm_pool/lvol001 lvm_pool 15.00 GB ext4 15.00 GB 13.85 GB linear /dev/dm-0 dm-crypt 78.12 GB ext4 78.12 GB 45.33 GB crypt /home btrfs_pool btrfs_pool 28.47 GB btrfs 28.47 GB 28.47 GB btrfs /mnt/test1 btrfs_pool:2012-05-09-T113426 btrfs_pool 28.47 GB btrfs 28.47 GB 28.47 GB btrfs /mnt/test1/2012-05-09-T113426 btrfs_pool:new_subvolume btrfs_pool 28.47 GB btrfs 28.47 GB 28.47 GB btrfs /mnt/test1/new_subvolume /dev/sda1 19.53 GB ext4 19.53 GB 12.67 GB part / /dev/sda5 49.44 GB ext4 49.44 GB 29.77 GB part /mnt/test ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Remove the whole lvm pool, one of the btrfs subvolumes, and one unused device from the btrfs pool btrfs_loop3. Note that with btrfs, pools have the same name as their volumes: # ssm remove lvm_pool /dev/loop2 /mnt/test1/new_subvolume/ Snapshots can also be done with ssm: # ssm snapshot btrfs_pool # ssm snapshot -n btrfs_snapshot btrfs_pool With lvm, you can also create snapshots: # ssm create -s 10G /dev/loop[01] # ssm snapshot /dev/lvm_pool/lvol001 Now list all snapshots. Note that btrfs snapshots are actually just subvolumes with some blocks shared with the original subvolume, so there is currently no way to distinguish between those. ssm is using a little trick to search for name patterns to recognize snapshots, so if you specify your own name for the snapshot, ssm will not recognize it as snapshot, but rather as regular volume (subvolume). This problem does not exist with lvm.: # ssm list snapshots ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Snapshot Origin Volume size Size Type Mount point ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /dev/lvm_pool/snap20120509T121611 lvol001 2.00 GB 0.00 KB linear btrfs_pool:snap-2012-05-09-T121313 18.47 GB btrfs /mnt/test1/snap-2012-05-09-T121313 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Installation ************ To install System Storage Manager into your system simply run: python setup.py install as root in the System Storage Manager directory. Make sure that your system configuration meets the *requirements* in order for ssm to work correctly. Note that you can run **ssm** even without installation by using the local sources with: bin/ssm.local Requirements ************ Python 2.6 or higher is required to run this tool. System Storage Manager can only be run as root since most of the commands require root privileges. There are other requirements listed below, but note that you do not necessarily need all dependencies for all backends. However if some of the tools required by a backend are missing, that backend will not work. Python modules ============== * argparse * atexit * base64 * datetime * fcntl * getpass * os * pwquality * re * socket * stat * struct * subprocess * sys * tempfile * termios * threading * tty System tools ============ * tune2fs * fsck.SUPPORTED_FS * resize2fs * xfs_db * xfs_check * xfs_growfs * mkfs.SUPPORTED_FS * which * mount * blkid * wipefs * dd Lvm backend =========== * lvm2 binaries Some distributions (e.g. Debian) have thin provisioning tools for LVM as an optional dependency, while others install it automatically. Thin provisioning without these tools installed is not supported by SSM. Btrfs backend ============= * btrfs progs Crypt backend ============= * dmsetup * cryptsetup Multipath backend ================= * multipath For developers ************** We are accepting patches! If you're interested in contributing to the System Storage Manager code, just checkout the git repository located on SourceForge. Please, base all of your work on the "devel" branch since it is more up-to-date and it will save us some work when merging your patches: git clone --branch devel [email protected]:system-storage-manager/ssm.git storagemanager-code Any form of contribution - patches, documentation, reviews or rants are appreciated. See *Mailing list section* section. Tests ===== System Storage Manager contains a regression testing suite to make sure that we do not break things that should already work. We recommend that every developer run these tests before sending patches: python test.py Tests in System Storage Manager are divided into four levels. 1. First the doctest is executed. 2. Then we have unittests in "tests/unittests/test_ssm.py" which is testing the core of ssm "ssmlib/main.py". It is checking for basic things like required backend methods and variables, flag propagations, proper class initialization and finally whether commands actually result in the proper backend callbacks. It does not require root permissions and it does not touch your system configuration in any way. It actually should not invoke any shell command, and if it does it's a bug. 3. Second part of unittests is backend testing. We are mainly testing whether ssm commands result in proper backend operations. It does not require root permissions and it does not touch your system configuration in any way. It actually should not invoke any shell command and if it does it's a bug. 4. And finally there are real bash tests located in "tests/bashtests". Bash tests are divided into files. Each file tests one command for one backend and it contains a series of test cases followed by checks as to whether the command created the expected result. In order to test real system commands we have to create a system device to test on and not touch the existing system configuration. Before each test a number of devices are created using *dmsetup* in the test directory. These devices will be used in test cases instead of real devices. Real operations are performed in those devices as they would be on the real system devices. This phase requires root privileges and it will not be run otherwise. In order to make sure that **ssm** does not touch any existing system configuration, each device, pool and volume name includes a special prefix, and the SSM_PREFIX_FILTER environment variable is set to make **ssm** to exclude all items which does not match this special prefix. The standard place for temporary files is within SSM tests directory. However, if for some reason you don't want/can't use this location, set the SSM_TEST_DIR environment variable to any other path. Even though we tried hard to make sure that the bash tests do not change your system configuration, we recommend you **not** to run tests with root privileges on your work or production system, but rather to run them on your testing machine. If you change or create new functionality, please make sure that it is covered by the System Storage Manager regression test suite to make sure that we do not break it unintentionally. Important: Please, make sure to run full tests before you send a patch to the mailing list. To do so, simply run "python test.py" as root on your test machine. Documentation ============= System Storage Manager documentation is stored in the "doc/" directory. The documentation is built using **sphinx** software which helps us not to duplicate text for different types of documentation (man page, html pages, readme). If you are going to modify documentation, please make sure not to modify manual page, html pages or README directly, but rather modify the "doc/*.rst" and "doc/src/*.rst" files accordingly so that the change is propagated to all documents. Moreover, parts of the documentation such as *synopsis* or ssm command *options* are parsed directly from the ssm help output. This means that when you're going to add or change arguments into **ssm** the only thing you have to do is to add or change it in the "ssmlib/main.py" source code and then run "make dist" in the "doc/" directory and all the documents should be updated automatically. Important: Please make sure you update the documentation when you add or change **ssm** functionality if the format of the change requires it. Then regenerate all the documents using "make dist" and include changes in the patch. Mailing list ============ System Storage Manager developers communicate via the mailing list. The address of our mailing list is storagemanager- [email protected] and you can subscribe on the SourceForge project page https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo /storagemanager-devel. Mailing list archives can be found here http://sourceforge.net/mailarchive/forum.php?forum_name =storagemanager-devel. This is also the list where patches are sent and where the review process is happening. We do not have a separate *user* mailing list, so feel free to drop your questions there as well. Posting patches =============== As already mentioned, we are accepting patches! And we are very happy for every contribution. If you're going to send a patch in, please make sure to follow some simple rules: 1. Before you're going to post a patch, please run our regression testing suite to make sure that your change does not break someone else's work. See *Tests section* 2. If you're making a change that might require documentation update, please update the documentation as well. See *Documentation section* 3. Make sure your patch has all the requisites such as a *short description* preferably 50 characters long at max describing the main idea of the change. *Long description* describing what was changed with and why and finally Signed-off-by tag. 4. The preferred way of accepting patches is through pull requests on GitHub, but it is possible to send them to the mailing list if you don't have GitHub account. 5. If you're going to send a patch to the mailing list, please send the patch inlined in the email body. It is much better for review process. Hint: You can use **git** to do all the work for you. "git format-patch" and "git send-email" will help you with creating and sending the patch to the mailing list.
About
A single tool to manage your storage.
Resources
License
Stars
Watchers
Forks
Packages 0
No packages published