Commit 7a2d5fd9 authored by Valentin Vidic's avatar Valentin Vidic Committed by Sasha Levin

ipmi/watchdog: fix watchdog timeout set on reboot

[ Upstream commit 860f01e9 ]

systemd by default starts watchdog on reboot and sets the timer to
ShutdownWatchdogSec=10min.  Reboot handler in ipmi_watchdog than reduces
the timer to 120s which is not enough time to boot a Xen machine with
a lot of RAM.  As a result the machine is rebooted the second time
during the long run of (XEN) Scrubbing Free RAM.....

Fix this by setting the timer to 120s only if it was previously
set to a low value.
Signed-off-by: default avatarValentin Vidic <Valentin.Vidic@CARNet.hr>
Signed-off-by: default avatarCorey Minyard <cminyard@mvista.com>
Signed-off-by: default avatarSasha Levin <alexander.levin@verizon.com>
parent 8c3f2c01
......@@ -1156,10 +1156,11 @@ static int wdog_reboot_handler(struct notifier_block *this,
ipmi_watchdog_state = WDOG_TIMEOUT_NONE;
ipmi_set_timeout(IPMI_SET_TIMEOUT_NO_HB);
} else if (ipmi_watchdog_state != WDOG_TIMEOUT_NONE) {
/* Set a long timer to let the reboot happens, but
reboot if it hangs, but only if the watchdog
/* Set a long timer to let the reboot happen or
reset if it hangs, but only if the watchdog
timer was already running. */
timeout = 120;
if (timeout < 120)
timeout = 120;
pretimeout = 0;
ipmi_watchdog_state = WDOG_TIMEOUT_RESET;
ipmi_set_timeout(IPMI_SET_TIMEOUT_NO_HB);
......
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