Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy <[email protected]> writes: > On 04.02.26 15:38, Markus Armbruster wrote: >> Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy <[email protected]> writes: >> >>> Now we have blockdev-replace QMP command, which depend on a possibility >>> to select any block parent (block node, block export, or qdev) by one >>> unique name. The command fails, if name is ambiguous (i.e., match >>> several parents of different types). In future we want to rid of this >>> ambiguity. >>> >>> Signed-off-by: Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy <[email protected]> >> >> We have numerous kinds of IDs, i.e. names chosen by the user than need >> to be unique, but only among the same kind. For instance, you can't >> name two block nodes "foo", but you can name a block node, a block >> export, a qdev, and a network backend "foo". Using the same ID for >> multiple things is of course a bad idea. Permitting it was also a bad >> idea. >> >> Your patch rectifies this design mistake, but only partially. Consider: >> >> * IDs need to be unique with their kind. This is what we have now. I >> don't like it. >> >> * IDs need to be unique among their kind and possibly some set of >> additional kinds. This is where your patch takes us. I like it even >> less, to be honest. >> >> * IDs need to be unique, period. This is what I'd like to have. > > I like it. Is it enough to write it so simple in deprecation doc? Or should > we still list all such ids we have in QEMU? > > It may be something like: > > Any kind of IDs you use to reference objects in QEMU must be unique, any > used ID must reference exactly one object. This includes, but is not limited > to qdev full and relative to "/peripheral/" paths, block-node and block-export > names.
This would serve as a declaration of intent. Better than nothing, I guess. To enforce uniqueness, we'll have to create a single table of IDs. If we make it a set, we can reject duplicate IDs, but can't point to the other ID. Meh. If we make it map to the kind of ID, we can report the kind. Something like "block node name 'foo' clashes with block export ID 'foo'". Feels adequate. If we make it map the the object the ID identifies, we can get rid of existing means to map from ID to object. May or may not be worthwhile. If we create the single table of IDs now rather than later, we can warn. Something like "duplicate IDs are deprecated: block node name 'foo' clashes with block export ID 'foo'". Much more likely to get users' attention than a note in docs/about/deprecated.rst. We could even wire it to the "-compat deprecated-input=..." machinery (I'd assist with that). This would let people test their software is ready for enforced unique IDs. Thoughts?
