On 04.09.2024 10:21, Roger Pau Monné wrote:
> On Tue, Sep 03, 2024 at 04:36:37PM +0200, Jan Beulich wrote:
>> On 03.09.2024 16:19, Roger Pau Monne wrote:
>>> Current blkif implementations (both backends and frontends) have all slight
>>> differences about how they handle the 'sector-size' xenstore node, and how
>>> other fields are derived from this value or hardcoded to be expressed in 
>>> units
>>> of 512 bytes.
>>>
>>> To give some context, this is an excerpt of how different implementations 
>>> use
>>> the value in 'sector-size' as the base unit for to other fields rather than
>>> just to set the logical sector size of the block device:
>>>
>>>                         │ sectors xenbus node │ requests sector_number │ 
>>> requests {first,last}_sect
>>> ────────────────────────┼─────────────────────┼────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────
>>> FreeBSD blk{front,back} │     sector-size     │      sector-size       │    
>>>        512
>>> ────────────────────────┼─────────────────────┼────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────
>>> Linux blk{front,back}   │         512         │          512           │    
>>>        512
>>> ────────────────────────┼─────────────────────┼────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────
>>> QEMU blkback            │     sector-size     │      sector-size       │    
>>>    sector-size
>>> ────────────────────────┼─────────────────────┼────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────
>>> Windows blkfront        │     sector-size     │      sector-size       │    
>>>    sector-size
>>> ────────────────────────┼─────────────────────┼────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────
>>> MiniOS                  │     sector-size     │          512           │    
>>>        512
>>>
>>> An attempt was made by 67e1c050e36b in order to change the base units of the
>>> request fields and the xenstore 'sectors' node.  That however only lead to 
>>> more
>>> confusion, as the specification now clearly diverged from the reference
>>> implementation in Linux.  Such change was only implemented for QEMU Qdisk
>>> and Windows PV blkfront.
>>>
>>> Partially revert to the state before 67e1c050e36b:
>>>
>>>  * Declare 'feature-large-sector-size' deprecated.  Frontends should not 
>>> expose
>>>    the node, backends should not make decisions based on its presence.
>>>
>>>  * Clarify that 'sectors' xenstore node and the requests fields are always 
>>> in
>>>    512-byte units, like it was previous to 67e1c050e36b.
>>>
>>> All base units for the fields used in the protocol are 512-byte based, the
>>> xenbus 'sector-size' field is only used to signal the logic block size.  
>>> When
>>> 'sector-size' is greater than 512, blkfront implementations must make sure 
>>> that
>>> the offsets and sizes (even when expressed in 512-byte units) are aligned to
>>> the logical block size specified in 'sector-size', otherwise the backend 
>>> will
>>> fail to process the requests.
>>>
>>> This will require changes to some of the frontends and backends in order to
>>> properly support 'sector-size' nodes greater than 512.
>>>
>>> Fixes: 67e1c050e36b ('public/io/blkif.h: try to fix the semantics of sector 
>>> based quantities')
>>> Signed-off-by: Roger Pau Monné <[email protected]>
>>
>> Following the earlier discussion, I was kind of hoping that there would be
>> at least an outline of some plan here as to (efficiently) dealing with 4k-
>> sector disks.
> 
> What do you mean with efficiently?
> 
> 4K disks will set 'sector-size' to 4096, so the segments setup by the
> frontends in the requests will all be 4K aligned (both address and
> size).

Will they, despite granularity then being 512b?

Perhaps I misunderstood the proposal then, and you're retaining the
ability to have "sector-size" != 512, just that any I/O done is not
supposed to consider that setting. I guess I mis-read the 2nd to last
paragraph of the description; I'm sorry. "even when expressed in 512-
byte units" reads to me as if other units are permissible. Maybe it
was really meant to be "despite being expressed in 512-byte units"?

Jan

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