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authorVladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy <vsementsov@virtuozzo.com>2021-11-04 09:58:11 +0100
committerVladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy <vsementsov@virtuozzo.com>2021-11-09 18:21:19 +0100
commit1084159b31015e003946d199cbfecaec282e0eb2 (patch)
tree68bd5ae9d818e303ef85d7c06af2296d824633f3 /docs/interop
parent24d6cc1fa17745228694a3b2c94e8a5cbd4fc4d9 (diff)
qapi: deprecate drive-backup
Modern way is using blockdev-add + blockdev-backup, which provides a lot more control on how target is opened. As example of drive-backup problems consider the following: User of drive-backup expects that target will be opened in the same cache and aio mode as source. Corresponding logic is in drive_backup_prepare(), where we take bs->open_flags of source. It works rather bad if source was added by blockdev-add. Assume source is qcow2 image. On blockdev-add we should specify aio and cache options for file child of qcow2 node. What happens next: drive_backup_prepare() looks at bs->open_flags of qcow2 source node. But there no BDRV_O_NOCAHE neither BDRV_O_NATIVE_AIO: BDRV_O_NOCAHE is places in bs->file->bs->open_flags, and BDRV_O_NATIVE_AIO is nowhere, as file-posix parse options and simply set s->use_linux_aio. The documentation is updated in a minimal way, so that drive-backup is noted only as a deprecated command, and blockdev-backup used in most of places. Signed-off-by: Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy <vsementsov@virtuozzo.com> Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/interop')
-rw-r--r--docs/interop/live-block-operations.rst47
1 files changed, 31 insertions, 16 deletions
diff --git a/docs/interop/live-block-operations.rst b/docs/interop/live-block-operations.rst
index 814c29bbe1..39e62c9915 100644
--- a/docs/interop/live-block-operations.rst
+++ b/docs/interop/live-block-operations.rst
@@ -116,8 +116,8 @@ QEMU block layer supports.
(3) ``drive-mirror`` (and ``blockdev-mirror``): Synchronize a running
disk to another image.
-(4) ``drive-backup`` (and ``blockdev-backup``): Point-in-time (live) copy
- of a block device to a destination.
+(4) ``blockdev-backup`` (and the deprecated ``drive-backup``):
+ Point-in-time (live) copy of a block device to a destination.
.. _`Interacting with a QEMU instance`:
@@ -555,13 +555,14 @@ Currently, there are four different kinds:
(3) ``none`` -- Synchronize only the new writes from this point on.
- .. note:: In the case of ``drive-backup`` (or ``blockdev-backup``),
- the behavior of ``none`` synchronization mode is different.
- Normally, a ``backup`` job consists of two parts: Anything
- that is overwritten by the guest is first copied out to
- the backup, and in the background the whole image is
- copied from start to end. With ``sync=none``, it's only
- the first part.
+ .. note:: In the case of ``blockdev-backup`` (or deprecated
+ ``drive-backup``), the behavior of ``none``
+ synchronization mode is different. Normally, a
+ ``backup`` job consists of two parts: Anything that is
+ overwritten by the guest is first copied out to the
+ backup, and in the background the whole image is copied
+ from start to end. With ``sync=none``, it's only the
+ first part.
(4) ``incremental`` -- Synchronize content that is described by the
dirty bitmap
@@ -928,19 +929,22 @@ Shutdown the guest, by issuing the ``quit`` QMP command::
}
-Live disk backup --- ``drive-backup`` and ``blockdev-backup``
--------------------------------------------------------------
+Live disk backup --- ``blockdev-backup`` and the deprecated``drive-backup``
+---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-The ``drive-backup`` (and its newer equivalent ``blockdev-backup``) allows
+The ``blockdev-backup`` (and the deprecated ``drive-backup``) allows
you to create a point-in-time snapshot.
-In this case, the point-in-time is when you *start* the ``drive-backup``
-(or its newer equivalent ``blockdev-backup``) command.
+In this case, the point-in-time is when you *start* the
+``blockdev-backup`` (or deprecated ``drive-backup``) command.
QMP invocation for ``drive-backup``
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+Note that ``drive-backup`` command is deprecated since QEMU 6.2 and
+will be removed in future.
+
Yet again, starting afresh with our example disk image chain::
[A] <-- [B] <-- [C] <-- [D]
@@ -965,11 +969,22 @@ will be issued, indicating the live block device job operation has
completed, and no further action is required.
+Moving from the deprecated ``drive-backup`` to newer ``blockdev-backup``
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+``blockdev-backup`` differs from ``drive-backup`` in how you specify
+the backup target. With ``blockdev-backup`` you can't specify filename
+as a target. Instead you use ``node-name`` of existing block node,
+which you may add by ``blockdev-add`` or ``blockdev-create`` commands.
+Correspondingly, ``blockdev-backup`` doesn't have ``mode`` and
+``format`` arguments which don't apply to an existing block node. See
+following sections for details and examples.
+
+
Notes on ``blockdev-backup``
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-The ``blockdev-backup`` command is equivalent in functionality to
-``drive-backup``, except that it operates at node-level in a Block Driver
+The ``blockdev-backup`` command operates at node-level in a Block Driver
State (BDS) graph.
E.g. the sequence of actions to create a point-in-time backup