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From: | Viktor Mihajlovski |
Subject: | Re: [PATCH 1/1] s390/ipl: sync back loadparm |
Date: | Tue, 25 Feb 2020 15:35:47 +0100 |
User-agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:68.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/68.4.1 |
On 2/25/20 12:56 PM, Halil Pasic wrote:
On Tue, 25 Feb 2020 10:39:40 +0100 David Hildenbrand <address@hidden> wrote:On 24.02.20 16:02, Halil Pasic wrote:We expose loadparm as a r/w machine property, but if loadparm is set by the guest via DIAG 308, we don't update the property. Having a disconnect between the guest view and the QEMU property is not nice in itself, but things get even worse for SCSI, where under certain circumstances (see 789b5a401b "s390: Ensure IPL from SCSI works as expected" for details) we call s390_gen_initial_iplb() on resets effectively overwriting the guest/user supplied loadparm with the stale value. Signed-off-by: Halil Pasic <address@hidden> Fixes: 7104bae9de "hw/s390x: provide loadparm property for the machine" Reported-by: Marc Hartmayer <address@hidden> Reviewed-by: Janosch Frank <address@hidden> Reviewed-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <address@hidden> Tested-by: Marc Hartmayer <address@hidden> --- hw/s390x/ipl.c | 21 +++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 21 insertions(+) diff --git a/hw/s390x/ipl.c b/hw/s390x/ipl.c
[...]
We might consider to return 0x0402 (invalid parameter) from the diag308 "set", which is less drastic and would allow the OS to do whatever it finds appropriate to deal with the failure. Not that Linux would care about that today :-).+ + /* Sync loadparm */ + if (iplb->flags & DIAG308_FLAGS_LP_VALID) { + char ascii_loadparm[8]; + uint8_t *ebcdic_loadparm = iplb->loadparm; + int i; + + for (i = 0; i < 8 && ebcdic_loadparm[i]; i++) { + ascii_loadparm[i] = ebcdic2ascii[(uint8_t) ebcdic_loadparm[i]]; + } + ascii_loadparm[i] = 0; + object_property_set_str(mo, ascii_loadparm, "loadparm", NULL); + } else { + object_property_set_str(mo, "", "loadparm", NULL); + }&error_abort instead of NULL, we certainly want to know if this would ever surprisingly fail.IMHO this is a typical assert() situation where one would like to have a fast and obvious failure when testing, but not in production. AFAIU the guest can trigger this code at any time, and crashing the whole (production) system seems a bit heavy handed to me. The setter should only fail if something is buggy. But if the majority says &error_abort I can certainly do. Other opinions?
[...] -- Kind Regards, Viktor
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