Re: Qemu block filter insertion/removal API
21.05.2021 21:32, Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy wrote: 19.05.2021 17:14, Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy wrote: 19.05.2021 16:02, Kevin Wolf wrote: Am 19.05.2021 um 14:19 hat Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy geschrieben: 19.05.2021 14:44, Kevin Wolf wrote: Am 17.05.2021 um 14:44 hat Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy geschrieben: Hi all! I'd like to be sure that we know where we are going to. In blockdev-era where qemu user is aware about block nodes, all nodes have good names and controlled by user we can efficiently use block filters. We already have some useful filters: copy-on-read, throttling, compress. In my parallel series I make backup-top filter public and useful without backup block jobs. But now filters could be inserted only together with opening their child. We can specify filters in qemu cmdline, or filter can take place in the block node chain created by blockdev-add. Still, it would be good to insert/remove filters on demand. Currently we are going to use x-blockdev-reopen for this. Still it can't be used to insert a filter above root node (as x-blockdev-reopen can change only block node options and their children). In my series "[PATCH 00/21] block: publish backup-top filter" I propose (as Kevin suggested) to modify qom-set, so that it can set drive option of running device. That's not difficult, but it means that we have different scenario of inserting/removing filters: 1. filter above root node X: inserting: - do blockdev-add to add a filter (and specify X as its child) - do qom-set to set new filter as a rood node instead of X removing - do qom-set to make X a root node again - do blockdev-del to drop a filter 2. filter between two block nodes P and X. (For example, X is a backing child of P) inserting - do blockdev-add to add a filter (and specify X as its child) - do blockdev-reopen to set P.backing = filter remvoing - do blockdev-reopen to set P.backing = X - do blockdev-del to drop a filter And, probably we'll want transaction support for all these things. Is it OK? Or do we need some kind of additional blockdev-replace command, that can replace one node by another, so in both cases we will do inserting: - blockdev-add filter - blockdev-replace (make all parents of X to point to the new filter instead (except for the filter itself of course) removing - blockdev-replace (make all parante of filter to be parents of X instead) - blockdev-del filter It's simple to implement, and it seems for me that it is simpler to use. Any thoughts? One reason I remember why we didn't decide to go this way in the many "dynamic graph reconfiguration" discussions we had, is that it's not generic enough to cover all cases. But I'm not sure if we ever considered root nodes as a separate case. I acknowledge that having two different interfaces is inconvenient, and integrating qom-set in a transaction is rather unlikely to happen. The reason why it's not generic is that it restricts you to doing the same thing for all parents. Imagine this: +- virtio-blk | file <- qcow2 <-+ | +- NBD export Now you want to throttle the NBD export so that it doesn't interfere with your VM too much. With your simple blockdev-replace this isn't possible. You would have to add the filter to both users or to none. In theory, blockdev-replace could take a list of the edges that should be changed to the new node. The problem is that edges don't have names, and even the parents don't necessarily have one (and if they do, they are in separate namespaces, so a BlockBackend, a job and an export could all have the same name), so finding a good way to refer to them in QMP doesn't sound trivial. Hm. I like the idea. And it seems feasible to me: Both export and block jobs works through BlockBackend. So, for block-jobs, we can add optional parameters like source-blk-name, and target-blk-name. If parameters specified, blk's will be named, and user will be able to do blockdev-replace. I'm not sure if giving them a name is a good idea. Wouldn't it make the BlockBackend accessible for the user who could then make a device use it? For export it's a bit trickier: it would be strange to add separate argument for export blk, as export already has id. So, I'd do the following: 1. make blk named (with same name as the export itself) iff name does not conflict with other blks 2. deprecate duplicating existing blk names by export name. Yes, if we decide that giving them a name is a good idea, it's possible, but still a change that requires deprecation, as you say. The third one is devices (which is what I actually meant when I said BlockBackend), which also have anonymous BlockBackends in the -blockdev world. The same approach could work, but it would essentially mean unifying the QOM and the block namespace, which sounds more likely to produce conflicts than
Re: Qemu block filter insertion/removal API
19.05.2021 17:14, Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy wrote: 19.05.2021 16:02, Kevin Wolf wrote: Am 19.05.2021 um 14:19 hat Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy geschrieben: 19.05.2021 14:44, Kevin Wolf wrote: Am 17.05.2021 um 14:44 hat Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy geschrieben: Hi all! I'd like to be sure that we know where we are going to. In blockdev-era where qemu user is aware about block nodes, all nodes have good names and controlled by user we can efficiently use block filters. We already have some useful filters: copy-on-read, throttling, compress. In my parallel series I make backup-top filter public and useful without backup block jobs. But now filters could be inserted only together with opening their child. We can specify filters in qemu cmdline, or filter can take place in the block node chain created by blockdev-add. Still, it would be good to insert/remove filters on demand. Currently we are going to use x-blockdev-reopen for this. Still it can't be used to insert a filter above root node (as x-blockdev-reopen can change only block node options and their children). In my series "[PATCH 00/21] block: publish backup-top filter" I propose (as Kevin suggested) to modify qom-set, so that it can set drive option of running device. That's not difficult, but it means that we have different scenario of inserting/removing filters: 1. filter above root node X: inserting: - do blockdev-add to add a filter (and specify X as its child) - do qom-set to set new filter as a rood node instead of X removing - do qom-set to make X a root node again - do blockdev-del to drop a filter 2. filter between two block nodes P and X. (For example, X is a backing child of P) inserting - do blockdev-add to add a filter (and specify X as its child) - do blockdev-reopen to set P.backing = filter remvoing - do blockdev-reopen to set P.backing = X - do blockdev-del to drop a filter And, probably we'll want transaction support for all these things. Is it OK? Or do we need some kind of additional blockdev-replace command, that can replace one node by another, so in both cases we will do inserting: - blockdev-add filter - blockdev-replace (make all parents of X to point to the new filter instead (except for the filter itself of course) removing - blockdev-replace (make all parante of filter to be parents of X instead) - blockdev-del filter It's simple to implement, and it seems for me that it is simpler to use. Any thoughts? One reason I remember why we didn't decide to go this way in the many "dynamic graph reconfiguration" discussions we had, is that it's not generic enough to cover all cases. But I'm not sure if we ever considered root nodes as a separate case. I acknowledge that having two different interfaces is inconvenient, and integrating qom-set in a transaction is rather unlikely to happen. The reason why it's not generic is that it restricts you to doing the same thing for all parents. Imagine this: +- virtio-blk | file <- qcow2 <-+ | +- NBD export Now you want to throttle the NBD export so that it doesn't interfere with your VM too much. With your simple blockdev-replace this isn't possible. You would have to add the filter to both users or to none. In theory, blockdev-replace could take a list of the edges that should be changed to the new node. The problem is that edges don't have names, and even the parents don't necessarily have one (and if they do, they are in separate namespaces, so a BlockBackend, a job and an export could all have the same name), so finding a good way to refer to them in QMP doesn't sound trivial. Hm. I like the idea. And it seems feasible to me: Both export and block jobs works through BlockBackend. So, for block-jobs, we can add optional parameters like source-blk-name, and target-blk-name. If parameters specified, blk's will be named, and user will be able to do blockdev-replace. I'm not sure if giving them a name is a good idea. Wouldn't it make the BlockBackend accessible for the user who could then make a device use it? For export it's a bit trickier: it would be strange to add separate argument for export blk, as export already has id. So, I'd do the following: 1. make blk named (with same name as the export itself) iff name does not conflict with other blks 2. deprecate duplicating existing blk names by export name. Yes, if we decide that giving them a name is a good idea, it's possible, but still a change that requires deprecation, as you say. The third one is devices (which is what I actually meant when I said BlockBackend), which also have anonymous BlockBackends in the -blockdev world. The same approach could work, but it would essentially mean unifying the QOM and the block namespace, which sounds more likely to produce conflicts than exports. Then, blockdev-replace take a parents list,
Re: Qemu block filter insertion/removal API
19.05.2021 16:02, Kevin Wolf wrote: Am 19.05.2021 um 14:19 hat Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy geschrieben: 19.05.2021 14:44, Kevin Wolf wrote: Am 17.05.2021 um 14:44 hat Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy geschrieben: Hi all! I'd like to be sure that we know where we are going to. In blockdev-era where qemu user is aware about block nodes, all nodes have good names and controlled by user we can efficiently use block filters. We already have some useful filters: copy-on-read, throttling, compress. In my parallel series I make backup-top filter public and useful without backup block jobs. But now filters could be inserted only together with opening their child. We can specify filters in qemu cmdline, or filter can take place in the block node chain created by blockdev-add. Still, it would be good to insert/remove filters on demand. Currently we are going to use x-blockdev-reopen for this. Still it can't be used to insert a filter above root node (as x-blockdev-reopen can change only block node options and their children). In my series "[PATCH 00/21] block: publish backup-top filter" I propose (as Kevin suggested) to modify qom-set, so that it can set drive option of running device. That's not difficult, but it means that we have different scenario of inserting/removing filters: 1. filter above root node X: inserting: - do blockdev-add to add a filter (and specify X as its child) - do qom-set to set new filter as a rood node instead of X removing - do qom-set to make X a root node again - do blockdev-del to drop a filter 2. filter between two block nodes P and X. (For example, X is a backing child of P) inserting - do blockdev-add to add a filter (and specify X as its child) - do blockdev-reopen to set P.backing = filter remvoing - do blockdev-reopen to set P.backing = X - do blockdev-del to drop a filter And, probably we'll want transaction support for all these things. Is it OK? Or do we need some kind of additional blockdev-replace command, that can replace one node by another, so in both cases we will do inserting: - blockdev-add filter - blockdev-replace (make all parents of X to point to the new filter instead (except for the filter itself of course) removing - blockdev-replace (make all parante of filter to be parents of X instead) - blockdev-del filter It's simple to implement, and it seems for me that it is simpler to use. Any thoughts? One reason I remember why we didn't decide to go this way in the many "dynamic graph reconfiguration" discussions we had, is that it's not generic enough to cover all cases. But I'm not sure if we ever considered root nodes as a separate case. I acknowledge that having two different interfaces is inconvenient, and integrating qom-set in a transaction is rather unlikely to happen. The reason why it's not generic is that it restricts you to doing the same thing for all parents. Imagine this: +- virtio-blk | file <- qcow2 <-+ | +- NBD export Now you want to throttle the NBD export so that it doesn't interfere with your VM too much. With your simple blockdev-replace this isn't possible. You would have to add the filter to both users or to none. In theory, blockdev-replace could take a list of the edges that should be changed to the new node. The problem is that edges don't have names, and even the parents don't necessarily have one (and if they do, they are in separate namespaces, so a BlockBackend, a job and an export could all have the same name), so finding a good way to refer to them in QMP doesn't sound trivial. Hm. I like the idea. And it seems feasible to me: Both export and block jobs works through BlockBackend. So, for block-jobs, we can add optional parameters like source-blk-name, and target-blk-name. If parameters specified, blk's will be named, and user will be able to do blockdev-replace. I'm not sure if giving them a name is a good idea. Wouldn't it make the BlockBackend accessible for the user who could then make a device use it? For export it's a bit trickier: it would be strange to add separate argument for export blk, as export already has id. So, I'd do the following: 1. make blk named (with same name as the export itself) iff name does not conflict with other blks 2. deprecate duplicating existing blk names by export name. Yes, if we decide that giving them a name is a good idea, it's possible, but still a change that requires deprecation, as you say. The third one is devices (which is what I actually meant when I said BlockBackend), which also have anonymous BlockBackends in the -blockdev world. The same approach could work, but it would essentially mean unifying the QOM and the block namespace, which sounds more likely to produce conflicts than exports. Then, blockdev-replace take a parents list, where parent is either node-name or blk name. Note
Re: Qemu block filter insertion/removal API
Am 19.05.2021 um 14:19 hat Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy geschrieben: > 19.05.2021 14:44, Kevin Wolf wrote: > > Am 17.05.2021 um 14:44 hat Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy geschrieben: > > > Hi all! > > > > > > I'd like to be sure that we know where we are going to. > > > > > > In blockdev-era where qemu user is aware about block nodes, all nodes > > > have good names and controlled by user we can efficiently use block > > > filters. > > > > > > We already have some useful filters: copy-on-read, throttling, compress. > > > In my parallel series I make backup-top filter public and useful without > > > backup block jobs. But now filters could be inserted only together with > > > opening their child. We can specify filters in qemu cmdline, or filter > > > can take place in the block node chain created by blockdev-add. > > > > > > Still, it would be good to insert/remove filters on demand. > > > > > > Currently we are going to use x-blockdev-reopen for this. Still it can't > > > be used to insert a filter above root node (as x-blockdev-reopen can > > > change only block node options and their children). In my series "[PATCH > > > 00/21] block: publish backup-top filter" I propose (as Kevin suggested) > > > to modify qom-set, so that it can set drive option of running device. > > > That's not difficult, but it means that we have different scenario of > > > inserting/removing filters: > > > > > > 1. filter above root node X: > > > > > > inserting: > > > > > >- do blockdev-add to add a filter (and specify X as its child) > > >- do qom-set to set new filter as a rood node instead of X > > > > > > removing > > > > > >- do qom-set to make X a root node again > > >- do blockdev-del to drop a filter > > > > > > 2. filter between two block nodes P and X. (For example, X is a backing > > > child of P) > > > > > > inserting > > > > > >- do blockdev-add to add a filter (and specify X as its child) > > >- do blockdev-reopen to set P.backing = filter > > > > > > remvoing > > > > > >- do blockdev-reopen to set P.backing = X > > >- do blockdev-del to drop a filter > > > > > > > > > And, probably we'll want transaction support for all these things. > > > > > > > > > Is it OK? Or do we need some kind of additional blockdev-replace command, > > > that can replace one node by another, so in both cases we will do > > > > > > inserting: > > >- blockdev-add filter > > >- blockdev-replace (make all parents of X to point to the new filter > > > instead (except for the filter itself of course) > > > > > > removing > > >- blockdev-replace (make all parante of filter to be parents of X > > > instead) > > >- blockdev-del filter > > > > > > It's simple to implement, and it seems for me that it is simpler to use. > > > Any thoughts? > > > > One reason I remember why we didn't decide to go this way in the many > > "dynamic graph reconfiguration" discussions we had, is that it's not > > generic enough to cover all cases. But I'm not sure if we ever > > considered root nodes as a separate case. I acknowledge that having two > > different interfaces is inconvenient, and integrating qom-set in a > > transaction is rather unlikely to happen. > > > > The reason why it's not generic is that it restricts you to doing the > > same thing for all parents. Imagine this: > > > > +- virtio-blk > > | > > file <- qcow2 <-+ > > | > > +- NBD export > > > > Now you want to throttle the NBD export so that it doesn't interfere > > with your VM too much. With your simple blockdev-replace this isn't > > possible. You would have to add the filter to both users or to none. > > > > In theory, blockdev-replace could take a list of the edges that should > > be changed to the new node. The problem is that edges don't have names, > > and even the parents don't necessarily have one (and if they do, they > > are in separate namespaces, so a BlockBackend, a job and an export could > > all have the same name), so finding a good way to refer to them in QMP > > doesn't sound trivial. > > > > Hm. I like the idea. And it seems feasible to me: > > Both export and block jobs works through BlockBackend. > > So, for block-jobs, we can add optional parameters like > source-blk-name, and target-blk-name. If parameters specified, blk's > will be named, and user will be able to do blockdev-replace. I'm not sure if giving them a name is a good idea. Wouldn't it make the BlockBackend accessible for the user who could then make a device use it? > For export it's a bit trickier: it would be strange to add separate > argument for export blk, as export already has id. So, I'd do the > following: > > 1. make blk named (with same name as the export itself) iff name does >not conflict with other blks > 2. deprecate duplicating existing blk names by export name. Yes, if we decide that giving them a name is a
Re: Qemu block filter insertion/removal API
19.05.2021 14:44, Kevin Wolf wrote: Am 17.05.2021 um 14:44 hat Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy geschrieben: Hi all! I'd like to be sure that we know where we are going to. In blockdev-era where qemu user is aware about block nodes, all nodes have good names and controlled by user we can efficiently use block filters. We already have some useful filters: copy-on-read, throttling, compress. In my parallel series I make backup-top filter public and useful without backup block jobs. But now filters could be inserted only together with opening their child. We can specify filters in qemu cmdline, or filter can take place in the block node chain created by blockdev-add. Still, it would be good to insert/remove filters on demand. Currently we are going to use x-blockdev-reopen for this. Still it can't be used to insert a filter above root node (as x-blockdev-reopen can change only block node options and their children). In my series "[PATCH 00/21] block: publish backup-top filter" I propose (as Kevin suggested) to modify qom-set, so that it can set drive option of running device. That's not difficult, but it means that we have different scenario of inserting/removing filters: 1. filter above root node X: inserting: - do blockdev-add to add a filter (and specify X as its child) - do qom-set to set new filter as a rood node instead of X removing - do qom-set to make X a root node again - do blockdev-del to drop a filter 2. filter between two block nodes P and X. (For example, X is a backing child of P) inserting - do blockdev-add to add a filter (and specify X as its child) - do blockdev-reopen to set P.backing = filter remvoing - do blockdev-reopen to set P.backing = X - do blockdev-del to drop a filter And, probably we'll want transaction support for all these things. Is it OK? Or do we need some kind of additional blockdev-replace command, that can replace one node by another, so in both cases we will do inserting: - blockdev-add filter - blockdev-replace (make all parents of X to point to the new filter instead (except for the filter itself of course) removing - blockdev-replace (make all parante of filter to be parents of X instead) - blockdev-del filter It's simple to implement, and it seems for me that it is simpler to use. Any thoughts? One reason I remember why we didn't decide to go this way in the many "dynamic graph reconfiguration" discussions we had, is that it's not generic enough to cover all cases. But I'm not sure if we ever considered root nodes as a separate case. I acknowledge that having two different interfaces is inconvenient, and integrating qom-set in a transaction is rather unlikely to happen. The reason why it's not generic is that it restricts you to doing the same thing for all parents. Imagine this: +- virtio-blk | file <- qcow2 <-+ | +- NBD export Now you want to throttle the NBD export so that it doesn't interfere with your VM too much. With your simple blockdev-replace this isn't possible. You would have to add the filter to both users or to none. In theory, blockdev-replace could take a list of the edges that should be changed to the new node. The problem is that edges don't have names, and even the parents don't necessarily have one (and if they do, they are in separate namespaces, so a BlockBackend, a job and an export could all have the same name), so finding a good way to refer to them in QMP doesn't sound trivial. Hm. I like the idea. And it seems feasible to me: Both export and block jobs works through BlockBackend. So, for block-jobs, we can add optional parameters like source-blk-name, and target-blk-name. If parameters specified, blk's will be named, and user will be able to do blockdev-replace. For export it's a bit trickier: it would be strange to add separate argument for export blk, as export already has id. So, I'd do the following: 1. make blk named (with same name as the export itself) iff name does not conflict with other blks 2. deprecate duplicating existing blk names by export name. Then, blockdev-replace take a parents list, where parent is either node-name or blk name. -- Best regards, Vladimir
Re: Qemu block filter insertion/removal API
Am 17.05.2021 um 14:44 hat Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy geschrieben: > Hi all! > > I'd like to be sure that we know where we are going to. > > In blockdev-era where qemu user is aware about block nodes, all nodes have > good names and controlled by user we can efficiently use block filters. > > We already have some useful filters: copy-on-read, throttling, compress. In > my parallel series I make backup-top filter public and useful without backup > block jobs. But now filters could be inserted only together with opening > their child. We can specify filters in qemu cmdline, or filter can take place > in the block node chain created by blockdev-add. > > Still, it would be good to insert/remove filters on demand. > > Currently we are going to use x-blockdev-reopen for this. Still it can't be > used to insert a filter above root node (as x-blockdev-reopen can change only > block node options and their children). In my series "[PATCH 00/21] block: > publish backup-top filter" I propose (as Kevin suggested) to modify qom-set, > so that it can set drive option of running device. That's not difficult, but > it means that we have different scenario of inserting/removing filters: > > 1. filter above root node X: > > inserting: > > - do blockdev-add to add a filter (and specify X as its child) > - do qom-set to set new filter as a rood node instead of X > > removing > > - do qom-set to make X a root node again > - do blockdev-del to drop a filter > > 2. filter between two block nodes P and X. (For example, X is a backing child > of P) > > inserting > > - do blockdev-add to add a filter (and specify X as its child) > - do blockdev-reopen to set P.backing = filter > > remvoing > > - do blockdev-reopen to set P.backing = X > - do blockdev-del to drop a filter > > > And, probably we'll want transaction support for all these things. > > > Is it OK? Or do we need some kind of additional blockdev-replace command, > that can replace one node by another, so in both cases we will do > > inserting: > - blockdev-add filter > - blockdev-replace (make all parents of X to point to the new filter > instead (except for the filter itself of course) > > removing > - blockdev-replace (make all parante of filter to be parents of X instead) > - blockdev-del filter > > It's simple to implement, and it seems for me that it is simpler to use. Any > thoughts? One reason I remember why we didn't decide to go this way in the many "dynamic graph reconfiguration" discussions we had, is that it's not generic enough to cover all cases. But I'm not sure if we ever considered root nodes as a separate case. I acknowledge that having two different interfaces is inconvenient, and integrating qom-set in a transaction is rather unlikely to happen. The reason why it's not generic is that it restricts you to doing the same thing for all parents. Imagine this: +- virtio-blk | file <- qcow2 <-+ | +- NBD export Now you want to throttle the NBD export so that it doesn't interfere with your VM too much. With your simple blockdev-replace this isn't possible. You would have to add the filter to both users or to none. In theory, blockdev-replace could take a list of the edges that should be changed to the new node. The problem is that edges don't have names, and even the parents don't necessarily have one (and if they do, they are in separate namespaces, so a BlockBackend, a job and an export could all have the same name), so finding a good way to refer to them in QMP doesn't sound trivial. Kevin
Re: Qemu block filter insertion/removal API
18.05.2021 19:49, Max Reitz wrote: On 17.05.21 14:44, Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy wrote: Hi all! I'd like to be sure that we know where we are going to. In blockdev-era where qemu user is aware about block nodes, all nodes have good names and controlled by user we can efficiently use block filters. We already have some useful filters: copy-on-read, throttling, compress. In my parallel series I make backup-top filter public and useful without backup block jobs. But now filters could be inserted only together with opening their child. We can specify filters in qemu cmdline, or filter can take place in the block node chain created by blockdev-add. Still, it would be good to insert/remove filters on demand. Currently we are going to use x-blockdev-reopen for this. Still it can't be used to insert a filter above root node (as x-blockdev-reopen can change only block node options and their children). In my series "[PATCH 00/21] block: publish backup-top filter" I propose (as Kevin suggested) to modify qom-set, so that it can set drive option of running device. That's not difficult, but it means that we have different scenario of inserting/removing filters: 1. filter above root node X: inserting: - do blockdev-add to add a filter (and specify X as its child) - do qom-set to set new filter as a rood node instead of X removing - do qom-set to make X a root node again - do blockdev-del to drop a filter 2. filter between two block nodes P and X. (For example, X is a backing child of P) inserting - do blockdev-add to add a filter (and specify X as its child) - do blockdev-reopen to set P.backing = filter remvoing - do blockdev-reopen to set P.backing = X - do blockdev-del to drop a filter And, probably we'll want transaction support for all these things. Is it OK? Or do we need some kind of additional blockdev-replace command, that can replace one node by another, so in both cases we will do inserting: - blockdev-add filter - blockdev-replace (make all parents of X to point to the new filter instead (except for the filter itself of course) removing - blockdev-replace (make all parante of filter to be parents of X instead) - blockdev-del filter It's simple to implement, and it seems for me that it is simpler to use. Any thoughts? I’m afraid as a non-user of the blockdev interface, I can’t give a valuable opinion that would have some actual weight. Doesn’t stop me from giving my personal and potentially invaluable opinion, though, obviously: I think we expect all users to know the block graph, so they should be able to distinguish between cases 1 and 2. However, I can imagine having to distinguish still is kind of a pain, especially if it were trivial for qemu to let the user not having to worry about it at all. I discussed it yesterday with my colleagues from Virtuozzo, who will have to be users of that interface. And they of course prefer one command for all the cases :) Also, if you want a filter unconditionally above some node, all the qom-set and blockdev-reopen operations for all of the original node’s parents would need to happen atomically. As you say, those operations should perhaps be transactionable anyway, but... Implementing blockdev-replace would provide this for much less cost now, I suppose? I guess it can be argued that the downside is that having blockdev-replace means less pressure to make qom-set for drive and blockdev-reopen transactionable. But well. I don’t really have anything against a blockdev-replace, but again, I don’t know whether my opinion on this topic really has weight. Thanks, actually my opinion is the same. I think, I'll prepare a patch a day later if no answers here, and we'll be able to continue discussion on top of new patch. Hmm I have one additional (weak, but still) argument for blockdev-replace: it just seems good to avoid touching extra subsystem in block-graph operations. For block-jobs we don't need to touch qdev guest block devices, we are good now with node-names and blockdev-add. So, it's good to save this bit of interface beauty if we don't have strict reason to drop it. -- Best regards, Vladimir
Re: Qemu block filter insertion/removal API
On 17.05.21 14:44, Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy wrote: Hi all! I'd like to be sure that we know where we are going to. In blockdev-era where qemu user is aware about block nodes, all nodes have good names and controlled by user we can efficiently use block filters. We already have some useful filters: copy-on-read, throttling, compress. In my parallel series I make backup-top filter public and useful without backup block jobs. But now filters could be inserted only together with opening their child. We can specify filters in qemu cmdline, or filter can take place in the block node chain created by blockdev-add. Still, it would be good to insert/remove filters on demand. Currently we are going to use x-blockdev-reopen for this. Still it can't be used to insert a filter above root node (as x-blockdev-reopen can change only block node options and their children). In my series "[PATCH 00/21] block: publish backup-top filter" I propose (as Kevin suggested) to modify qom-set, so that it can set drive option of running device. That's not difficult, but it means that we have different scenario of inserting/removing filters: 1. filter above root node X: inserting: - do blockdev-add to add a filter (and specify X as its child) - do qom-set to set new filter as a rood node instead of X removing - do qom-set to make X a root node again - do blockdev-del to drop a filter 2. filter between two block nodes P and X. (For example, X is a backing child of P) inserting - do blockdev-add to add a filter (and specify X as its child) - do blockdev-reopen to set P.backing = filter remvoing - do blockdev-reopen to set P.backing = X - do blockdev-del to drop a filter And, probably we'll want transaction support for all these things. Is it OK? Or do we need some kind of additional blockdev-replace command, that can replace one node by another, so in both cases we will do inserting: - blockdev-add filter - blockdev-replace (make all parents of X to point to the new filter instead (except for the filter itself of course) removing - blockdev-replace (make all parante of filter to be parents of X instead) - blockdev-del filter It's simple to implement, and it seems for me that it is simpler to use. Any thoughts? I’m afraid as a non-user of the blockdev interface, I can’t give a valuable opinion that would have some actual weight. Doesn’t stop me from giving my personal and potentially invaluable opinion, though, obviously: I think we expect all users to know the block graph, so they should be able to distinguish between cases 1 and 2. However, I can imagine having to distinguish still is kind of a pain, especially if it were trivial for qemu to let the user not having to worry about it at all. Also, if you want a filter unconditionally above some node, all the qom-set and blockdev-reopen operations for all of the original node’s parents would need to happen atomically. As you say, those operations should perhaps be transactionable anyway, but... Implementing blockdev-replace would provide this for much less cost now, I suppose? I guess it can be argued that the downside is that having blockdev-replace means less pressure to make qom-set for drive and blockdev-reopen transactionable. But well. I don’t really have anything against a blockdev-replace, but again, I don’t know whether my opinion on this topic really has weight. Max
Qemu block filter insertion/removal API
Hi all! I'd like to be sure that we know where we are going to. In blockdev-era where qemu user is aware about block nodes, all nodes have good names and controlled by user we can efficiently use block filters. We already have some useful filters: copy-on-read, throttling, compress. In my parallel series I make backup-top filter public and useful without backup block jobs. But now filters could be inserted only together with opening their child. We can specify filters in qemu cmdline, or filter can take place in the block node chain created by blockdev-add. Still, it would be good to insert/remove filters on demand. Currently we are going to use x-blockdev-reopen for this. Still it can't be used to insert a filter above root node (as x-blockdev-reopen can change only block node options and their children). In my series "[PATCH 00/21] block: publish backup-top filter" I propose (as Kevin suggested) to modify qom-set, so that it can set drive option of running device. That's not difficult, but it means that we have different scenario of inserting/removing filters: 1. filter above root node X: inserting: - do blockdev-add to add a filter (and specify X as its child) - do qom-set to set new filter as a rood node instead of X removing - do qom-set to make X a root node again - do blockdev-del to drop a filter 2. filter between two block nodes P and X. (For example, X is a backing child of P) inserting - do blockdev-add to add a filter (and specify X as its child) - do blockdev-reopen to set P.backing = filter remvoing - do blockdev-reopen to set P.backing = X - do blockdev-del to drop a filter And, probably we'll want transaction support for all these things. Is it OK? Or do we need some kind of additional blockdev-replace command, that can replace one node by another, so in both cases we will do inserting: - blockdev-add filter - blockdev-replace (make all parents of X to point to the new filter instead (except for the filter itself of course) removing - blockdev-replace (make all parante of filter to be parents of X instead) - blockdev-del filter It's simple to implement, and it seems for me that it is simpler to use. Any thoughts? -- Best regards, Vladimir