This fixes the last place where we degraded from AIO to actual blocking synchronous I/O requests. Putting it into a coroutine means that instead of blocking, the coroutine simply yields while doing I/O.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Wolf <kw...@redhat.com> --- block/qed.c | 33 +++++++++++++++++---------------- 1 file changed, 17 insertions(+), 16 deletions(-) diff --git a/block/qed.c b/block/qed.c index d3f7d0c..20e81a0 100644 --- a/block/qed.c +++ b/block/qed.c @@ -264,11 +264,23 @@ static void qed_unplug_allocating_write_reqs(BDRVQEDState *s) qemu_co_enter_next(&s->allocating_write_reqs); } -static void qed_clear_need_check(void *opaque, int ret) +static void qed_need_check_timer_entry(void *opaque) { BDRVQEDState *s = opaque; + int ret; - if (ret) { + /* The timer should only fire when allocating writes have drained */ + assert(!s->allocating_acb); + + trace_qed_need_check_timer_cb(s); + + qed_acquire(s); + qed_plug_allocating_write_reqs(s); + + /* Ensure writes are on disk before clearing flag */ + ret = bdrv_co_flush(s->bs->file->bs); + qed_release(s); + if (ret < 0) { goto out; } @@ -276,7 +288,7 @@ static void qed_clear_need_check(void *opaque, int ret) ret = qed_write_header(s); (void) ret; - ret = bdrv_flush(s->bs); + ret = bdrv_co_flush(s->bs); (void) ret; out: @@ -285,19 +297,8 @@ out: static void qed_need_check_timer_cb(void *opaque) { - BDRVQEDState *s = opaque; - - /* The timer should only fire when allocating writes have drained */ - assert(!s->allocating_acb); - - trace_qed_need_check_timer_cb(s); - - qed_acquire(s); - qed_plug_allocating_write_reqs(s); - - /* Ensure writes are on disk before clearing flag */ - bdrv_aio_flush(s->bs->file->bs, qed_clear_need_check, s); - qed_release(s); + Coroutine *co = qemu_coroutine_create(qed_need_check_timer_entry, opaque); + qemu_coroutine_enter(co); } void qed_acquire(BDRVQEDState *s) -- 1.8.3.1