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author | Kevin Wolf <kwolf@redhat.com> | 2018-06-21 17:54:35 +0200 |
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committer | Kevin Wolf <kwolf@redhat.com> | 2018-06-29 14:20:56 +0200 |
commit | 061ca8a368165fae300748c17971824a089f521f (patch) | |
tree | 94e2fb34999021ead20698bf7399ae151d13047b /default-configs | |
parent | ae5475e82fd1ebb24f4f77cf28f59ca6548c6136 (diff) |
block: Convert .bdrv_truncate callback to coroutine_fn
bdrv_truncate() is an operation that can block (even for a quite long
time, depending on the PreallocMode) in I/O paths that shouldn't block.
Convert it to a coroutine_fn so that we have the infrastructure for
drivers to make their .bdrv_co_truncate implementation asynchronous.
This change could potentially introduce new race conditions because
bdrv_truncate() isn't necessarily executed atomically any more. Whether
this is a problem needs to be evaluated for each block driver that
supports truncate:
* file-posix/win32, gluster, iscsi, nfs, rbd, ssh, sheepdog: The
protocol drivers are trivially safe because they don't actually yield
yet, so there is no change in behaviour.
* copy-on-read, crypto, raw-format: Essentially just filter drivers that
pass the request to a child node, no problem.
* qcow2: The implementation modifies metadata, so it needs to hold
s->lock to be safe with concurrent I/O requests. In order to avoid
double locking, this requires pulling the locking out into
preallocate_co() and using qcow2_write_caches() instead of
bdrv_flush().
* qed: Does a single header update, this is fine without locking.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Wolf <kwolf@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@redhat.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'default-configs')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions