qemu-devel
[Top][All Lists]
Advanced

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: [Qemu-devel] [PATCH] util/hbitmap: fix unaligned reset


From: Max Reitz
Subject: Re: [Qemu-devel] [PATCH] util/hbitmap: fix unaligned reset
Date: Mon, 5 Aug 2019 13:26:02 +0200
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:60.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/60.8.0

On 05.08.19 11:45, Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy wrote:
> 03.08.2019 0:19, Max Reitz wrote:
>> On 02.08.19 20:58, Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy wrote:
>>> hbitmap_reset is broken: it rounds up the requested region. It leads to
>>> the following bug, which is shown by fixed test:
>>>
>>> assume granularity = 2
>>> set(0, 3) # count becomes 4
>>> reset(0, 1) # count becomes 2
>>>
>>> But user of the interface assume that virtual bit 1 should be still
>>> dirty, so hbitmap should report count to be 4!
>>>
>>> In other words, because of granularity, when we set one "virtual" bit,
>>> yes, we make all "virtual" bits in same chunk to be dirty. But this
>>> should not be so for reset.
>>>
>>> Fix this, aligning bound correctly.
>>>
>>> Signed-off-by: Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy <address@hidden>
>>> ---
>>>
>>> Hi all!
>>>
>>> Hmm, is it a bug or feature? :)
>>> I don't have a test for mirror yet, but I think that sync mirror may be 
>>> broken
>>> because of this, as do_sync_target_write() seems to be using unaligned 
>>> reset.
>>
>> Crap.
>>
>>
>> Yes, you’re right.  This would fix it, and it wouldn’t fix it in the
>> worst way.
>>
>> But I don’t know whether this patch is the best way forward still.  I
>> think call hbitmap_reset() with unaligned boundaries generally calls for
>> trouble, as John has laid out.  If mirror’s do_sync_target_write() is
>> the only offender right now, I’d prefer for hbitmap_reset() to assert
>> that the boundaries are aligned (for 4.2),
> 
> OK, agree that asserting this is better.
> 
>   and for
>> do_sync_target_write() to be fixed (for 4.1? :-/).
>>
>> (A practical problem with this patch is that do_sync_target_write() will
>> still do the write, but it won’t change anything in the bitmap, so the
>> copy operation was effectively useless.)
>>
>> I don’t know how to fix mirror exactly, though.  I have four ideas:
>>
>> (A) Quick fix 1: do_sync_target_write() should shrink [offset, offset +
>> bytes) such that it is aligned.  This would make it skip writes that
>> don’t fill one whole chunk.
>>
>> +: Simple fix.  Could go into 4.1.
>> -: Makes copy-mode=write-blocking equal to copy-mode=background unless
>>     you set the granularity to like 512. (Still beats just being
>>     completely broken.)
>>
>> (B) Quick fix 2: Setting the request_alignment block limit to the job’s
>> granularity when in write-blocking mode.
>>
>> +: Very simple fix.  Could go into 4.1.
>> +: Every write will trigger a RMW cycle, which copies the whole chunk to
>>     the target, so write-blocking will do what it’s supposed to do.
>> -: request_alignment forces everything to have the same granularity, so
>>     this slows down reads needlessly.  (But only for write-blocking.)
>>
>> (C) Maybe the right fix 1: Let do_sync_target_write() expand [offset,
>> offset + bytes) such that it is aligned and read head and tail from the
>> source node.  (So it would do the RMW itself.)
>>
>> + Doesn’t slow reads down.
>> + Writes to dirty areas will make them clean – which is what
>>    write-blocking is for.
>> - Probably more complicated.  Nothing for 4.1.
> 
> This is how backup works.
> 
>>
>> (D) Maybe the right fix 2: Split BlockLimits.request_alignment into
>> read_alignment and write_alignment.  Then do (B).
> 
> Now it's OK, but if we implement bitmap mode for mirror (which is upcoming
> anyway, I think), it will slow down all writes, when we are interested only
> in which are touching dirty parts.

Ah, yes.  OK, (C) it is, then.  With what Kevin has said, just taking
this patch for now seems good to me; but I can see a small problem still
(will send in a separate mail).

Max

>> In effect, this is more or less the same as (C), but probably in a
>> simpler way.  Still not simple enough for 4.1, though.
>>
>>
>> So...  I tend to do either (A) or (B) now, and then probably (D) for
>> 4.2?  (And because (D) is an extension to (B), it would make sense to do
>> (B) now, unless you’d prefer (A).)
>>
>> Max
>>
> 
> 


Attachment: signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature


reply via email to

[Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread]