On 02.10.18 15:01, Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy wrote: > 28.09.2018 19:31, Max Reitz wrote: >> On 23.08.18 17:46, Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy wrote: >>> Add a new command, returning block nodes (and their users) graph. >>> >>> Signed-off-by: Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy <vsement...@virtuozzo.com> >>> --- >>> qapi/block-core.json | 91 +++++++++++++++++++++++ >>> include/block/block.h | 1 + >>> include/sysemu/block-backend.h | 2 + >>> block.c | 129 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ >>> block/block-backend.c | 5 ++ >>> blockdev.c | 5 ++ >>> 6 files changed, 233 insertions(+) >> The design looks better (that is to say, good) to me, so I mostly have >> technical remarks. (Only a bit of bike-shedding this time.) >> >>> diff --git a/qapi/block-core.json b/qapi/block-core.json >>> index 4c7a37afdc..34cdc595d7 100644 >>> --- a/qapi/block-core.json >>> +++ b/qapi/block-core.json >>> @@ -1629,6 +1629,97 @@ >>> ## >>> { 'command': 'query-named-block-nodes', 'returns': [ >>> 'BlockDeviceInfo' ] } >>> +## >>> +# @BlockGraphNodeType: >>> +# >>> +# Since: 3.1 >>> +## >>> +{ 'enum': 'BlockGraphNodeType', >>> + 'data': [ 'blk', 'job', 'bds' ] } >> I wouldn't use abbreviations here, but the full names. At least they >> should be described. > > Hmm do you have a suggestion? Do you mean something like > block-backend > block-job > block-driver-state > ?
That's what I meant, yes; though I'm not sure I was right. "block-backend" sounds good; "job" is up to you since it isn't necessarily an abbreviation. About BDSs... I guess I'll leave it up to you, too. block-driver-state doesn't tell people more than just "bds", so it isn't much more useful. Usually I'd call it "node" because that's what we like to call it in docs. Unfortunately, that won't quite work here, because in this case, all of these things are nodes. "block-node" would be the best I can come up with. But I'm not sure whether it's any better than "bds", so I'll just leave it up to you. Documentation would still be nice, but I don't even know how you'd describe @bds. "BlockDriverState"? Technically it'd be "Node of the block graph", but, er, well. That's a bad description for an element of the "BlockGraphNodeType" enum. So what I'm saying is "block-backend" would be nice, the rest is up to you. >> (Though with x-debug-, it doesn't matter too much.) >> >>> + >>> +## >>> +# @BlockGraphNode: >>> +# >> I think a description on at least what the name means for each type >> would be useful; and that @id is generated just for this request and not >> some significant value in the block layer. > > let me compose here, before sending next version: > > @id: Block graph node identifier. This @id is generated only for > x-debug-query-block-graph and don't relate to any other identifiers in s/don't/does not/ > Qemu. > @type: Type of graph node. Can be one of block-backend, block-job or > block-driver-state. > @name: Human readable name of the node. Corresponds to node-name for > block-driver-state nodes, and not guaranteed to be unique in the whole I'd prefer s/, and/; is/ (or s/, and/. Is/) > graph (with block-jobs and block-backends) Sounds good to me overall. [...] >>> +} >>> + >>> +static uint64_t graph_node_num(BlockGraphConstructor *gr, void *node) >>> +{ >>> + uint64_t ret = (uint64_t)g_hash_table_lookup(gr->hash, node); >> I'd prefer a cast to uintptr_t. Otherwise the compiler may warn that >> you cast a pointer to an integer of different size (with -m32). >> >> Storing it in a uint64_t (with an implicit cast then) is OK, though. >> But maybe you do want to store it in a uintptr_t. The only reason not >> to is because it's a uint64_t in the QAPI schema, but I think it'd be a >> bit cleaner to work with uintptr_t internally and then emit it as >> uint64_t (because that's definitely safe). It's just a bit more honest >> because this way it's clear that with -m32, we cannot even represent IDs >> larger than 32 bit (which doesn't matter). > > ok. then, why not use just "void *" ? Because you want to store integer IDs and not pointers. >>> + >>> + if (ret > 0) { >> Just for style I'd prefer != over >. That makes it more clear that this >> is a NULL check and not a check for errors (represented as negative >> integers, even though @ret is unsigned). > > hm and it will be more clear with pointer type... > >> >>> + return ret; >>> + } >>> + >>> + ret = g_hash_table_size(gr->hash) + 1; >> Maybe add a comment that you add 1 because 0 (NULL) is reserved for >> non-entries? (Yes, it's clear, or I wouldn't have figured it out, but >> I'd still find it nice.) > > hmm, I don't remember why is it reserved, looks like it doesn't matter.. > But it may be more native to count graph nodes from 1, not from 0. Because you only have a single function for adding entries to and querying entries from gr->hash. So it needs to distinguish whether a node already has an ID or not. If it does not, g_hash_table_lookup() will return NULL, so you cannot add entries with index 0, because they will look like the entry does not exist yet. (So the first call to graph_node_num() will return 0, and the second call for the same node will overwrite that value with something else. Presumably you'll then have a BlockBackend with ID 0 but not edge using the ID 0.) You can use ID 0 if instead of checking whether "ret != 0" you'd use g_hash_table_contains() or g_hash_table_lookup_extended() instead. Max
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature