* Max Reitz (mre...@redhat.com) wrote:
> On 2018-06-06 13:37, Dr. David Alan Gilbert wrote:
> > * Max Reitz (mre...@redhat.com) wrote:
> >> On 2018-06-06 13:19, Michal Suchánek wrote:
> >>> On Wed, 6 Jun 2018 13:02:53 +0200
> >>> Max Reitz <mre...@redhat.com> wrote:
> >>>
> >>>> On 2018-06-06 12:32, Michal Suchánek wrote:
> >>>>> On Tue, 29 May 2018 12:14:15 +0200
> >>>>> Max Reitz <mre...@redhat.com> wrote:
> 
> [...]
> 
> >>>>>> Unless I have got something terribly wrong (which is indeed a
> >>>>>> possibility!), to me this proposal means basically to turn qcow2
> >>>>>> into (1) a VM description format for qemu, and (2) to turn it into
> >>>>>> an archive format on the way.  
> >>>>>
> >>>>> And if you go all the way you can store multiple disks along with
> >>>>> the VM definition so you can have the whole appliance in one file.
> >>>>> It conveniently solves the problem of synchronizing snapshots across
> >>>>> multiple disk images and the question where to store the machine
> >>>>> state if you want to suspend it.   
> >>>>
> >>>> Yeah, but why make qcow2 that format?  That's what I completely fail
> >>>> to understand.
> >>>>
> >>>> If you want to have a single VM description file that contains the VM
> >>>> configuration and some qcow2/raw/whatever files along with it for the
> >>>> guest disk data, sure, go ahead.  But why does the format of the whole
> >>>> thing need to be qcow2?
> >>>
> >>> Because then qemu can access the disk data from the image directly
> >>> without any need for extraction, copying to different file, etc.
> >>
> >> This does not explain why it needs to be qcow2.  There is absolutely no
> >> reason why you couldn't use qcow2 files in-place inside of another file.
> > 
> > Because then we'd have to change the whole stack to take advantage of
> > that.  Adding a feature into qcow2 means nothing else changes.
> 
> Because it's a hack, right.  Storing binary data in a qcow2 file,
> completely ignoring it in qemu (and being completely unusable to any
> potential other users of the qcow2 format[1]) and only interpreting it
> somewhere up the stack is a hack.

It's not a hack!
Seriously it's not.
There's nothing wrong with it being aimed higher up the stack than qemu,
the problem we started off with was what happens when a user downloads
a VM image and tries to import it into their VM system; weve already
got 2+ layers of management stuff in there - I want the information to
guide those layers, not form a complete set of configuration.

> That is not necessarily a negative point, hacks can work wonderfully
> well, and they usually are simple, that is correct.  But the thing is
> that I feel like people have grand visions of what to get out of this.
> Imagine, a single file that can configure all and any VM!
> 
> But hacks usually only solve a single issue.  Once you try to extend a
> hack, it breaks down and becomes insufficient.
> 
> If we want a grand vision where a single file stores the whole VM, why
> not invest the work and make it right from the start?

Because we won't get it right; however much we bikeshed about it
we'll just end up with a mess.   The right thing is to put in something
to hold configuration and then review the items of configuration we
add properly as we define them.

> Max
> 
> [1] Yes, I concede that there are probably no other users of qcow2.  But
> please forgive me for assuming that qcow2 was in a sense designed to be
> a rather general image format that not only qemu could use.

What makes it QEMU specific?  It's basically just the same key/value
setup as OVA, except putting them inside the qcow2.
We could use the same keys/value definitions as OVA in the blob,
although their definitions aren't very portable either.

Dave



--
Dr. David Alan Gilbert / dgilb...@redhat.com / Manchester, UK

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