Am 07.05.2015 um 16:50 hat Paolo Bonzini geschrieben: > On 07/05/2015 16:34, Kevin Wolf wrote: > > Am 07.05.2015 um 16:16 hat Paolo Bonzini geschrieben: > >> > >> > >> On 07/05/2015 16:07, Kevin Wolf wrote: > >>> This is not right for two reasons: The first is that this is > >>> BlockBackend code > >> > >> I think it would take effect for the qemu-nbd case though. > > > > Oh, you want to change the server code rather than the client? > > Yes.
Actually, considering all the information in this thread, I'm inclined that we should change both sides. qemu-nbd because ENOSPC might be what clients expect by analogy with Linux block devices, even if the behaviour for accesses beyond the device size isn't specified in the NBD protocol and the server might just do anything. As long as the behaviour is undefined, it's nice to do what most people may expect. And as the real fix change the nbd client, because even if new qemu-nbd versions will be nice, we shouldn't rely on undefined behaviour. We know that old qemu-nbd servers won't produce ENOSPC and I'm not sure what other NBD servers do. > > Wait... Are you saying that NBD sends a (platform specific) errno value > > over the network? :-/ > > Yes. :/ That said, at least the error codes that Linux places in > /usr/include/asm/errno-base.h seem to be pretty much standard---at least > Windows and most Unices share them---with the exception of EAGAIN. > > I'll send a patch to NBD to standardize the set of error codes that it > sends. Thanks, that will be helpful in the future. Is this the right place to look up the spec? http://sourceforge.net/p/nbd/code/ci/master/tree/doc/proto.txt If so, the commands seem to be hopelessly underspecified, especially with respect to error conditions. And where it says something about errors, it doesn't make sense: The server is forbidden to reply to a NBD_CMD_FLUSH if it failed... (qemu-nbd ignores this, obviously) > > In theory, what error code the NBD server needs to send should be > > specified by the NBD protocol. Am I right to assume that it doesn't do > > that? > > Nope. > > > In any case, I'm not sure whether qemu's internal error code > > should change just for NBD. Producing the right error code for the > > protocol is the job of nbd_co_receive_request(). > > Ok, so it shouldn't reach blk_check_request at all. But then, we should > aim at making blk_check_request's checks assertions. Sounds fair as a goal, but I don't think all devices have such checks yet. We've fixed the most common devices (IDE, scsi-disk and virtio-blk) just a while ago. > >>> and it wouldn't even take effect for the qcow2 case > >>> where we're writing past EOF only on the protocol layer. The second is > >>> that -ENOSPC is only for writes and not for reads. > >> > >> This is right. > >> > >> Reads in the kernel return 0, but in QEMU we do not want that. The code > >> currently returns -EIO, but perhaps -EINVAL is a better match. It also > >> happens to be what Linux returns for discards. > > > > Perhaps it is, yes. It shouldn't make a difference for guests anyway. > > (Unlike -ENOSPC for writes, which would trigger werror=enospc! That's > > most likely not what we want.) > > Yes, we want the check duplicated in all BlockBackend users. Most of > them already do it, see the work that Markus did last year I think. I wouldn't call it duplicated because the action to take is different for each device, but yes, the check belongs there. Kevin