On Tue, Aug 26, 2014 at 12:42:04PM +0800, Fam Zheng wrote: > On Mon, 08/25 12:12, Benoît Canet wrote: > > On Mon, Aug 25, 2014 at 05:37:37PM +0800, Fam Zheng wrote: > > > On Mon, 08/25 09:06, Benoît Canet wrote: > > > > On Mon, Aug 25, 2014 at 02:04:24PM +0800, Fam Zheng wrote: > > > > > On Fri, 08/22 18:11, Benoît Canet wrote: > > > > > > Since the block layer code is starting to modify the BDS graph > > > > > > right in the > > > > > > middle of BDS chains (block-mirror's replace parameter for example) > > > > > > QEMU needs > > > > > > to properly block and unblock whole BDS subtrees; recursion is a > > > > > > neat way to > > > > > > achieve this task. > > > > > > > > > > > > This patch also takes care of modifying the op blockers users. > > > > > > > > > > Is this going to replace backing_blocker? > > > > > > > > > > I think it is too general an approach to control the operation > > > > > properly, > > > > > because the op blocker may not work in the same way for all types of > > > > > BDS > > > > > connections. In other words, the choosing of op blockers are likely > > > > > conditional on graph edge types, that's why backing_blocker was added > > > > > here. For > > > > > example, A VMDK extent connection will probably need a different set > > > > > of > > > > > blockers than bs->file connection. > > > > > > > > > > So could you explain in which cases is the recursive > > > > > blocking/unblocking > > > > > useful? > > > > > > > > It's designed for the new crop of block operations operating on BDS > > > > located in > > > > the middle of the backing chain: Jeff's patches, intermediate live > > > > streaming or > > > > intermediate mirroring. > > > > Recursively blocking BDS allows to do these operations safely. > > > > > > Sorry I may be slow on this, but it's still not clear to me. > > > > > > That doesn't immediately show how backing_blocker doesn't work. These > > > operations are in the category of operations that update graph topology, > > > meaning that they drop, add or swap some nodes in the middle of the > > > chain. It > > > is not safe because there are used by the other nodes, but they are > > > supposed to > > > be protected by backing_blocker. Could you be more specific? > > > > I don't know particularly about the backing blocker case. > > > > > > > > I can think of something more than backing_hd: there are also link types > > > other > > > than backing_hd, for example ->file, (vmdk)->extents or (quorum)->qcrs, > > > etc. > > > They should be protected as well. > > > > This patch takes cares of recursing everywhere. > > > > I can give you an example for quorum. > > > > If a streaming operation is running on a quorum block backend the recursive > > blocking will help to block any operation done directly on any of the > > children. > > At what points should block layer recursively block/unblock the operations in > this quorum case?
When the streaming starts it should block all the top bs children. So after when an operation tries to operate on a child of the top bs it will be forbidden. The beauty of it is that recursive blockers can easily replace regular blockers. > > Fam > > > > > It's usefull since we introduced drive-mirror replace which will replace an > > arbitrary > > node of a quorum at the end of the mirroring operation.