On Wed, Sep 05, 2018 at 04:41:01PM +0100, Daniel P. Berrangé wrote: > On Wed, Sep 05, 2018 at 04:37:05PM +0100, Richard W.M. Jones wrote: > > > > Here's a fun one: > > > > + guestfish -N test-virt-sparsify-in-place-fstrim-unsupported.img=fs:vfat > > exit > > + virt-sparsify --in-place > > test-virt-sparsify-in-place-fstrim-unsupported.img > > + tee test-virt-sparsify-in-place-fstrim-unsupported.log > > [ 2.4] Trimming /dev/sda1 > > [ 7.5] Sparsify in-place operation completed with no errors > > + grep 'warning:.*fstrim' test-virt-sparsify-in-place-fstrim-unsupported.log > > FAIL test-virt-sparsify-in-place-fstrim-unsupported.sh (exit status: 1) > > > > We expect (for the purposes of the regression test) that vfat > > filesystems cannot be trimmed. It turns out that fstrim for vfat has > > now been implemented in Linux (commit f663b5b38fff) :-) Thanks > > Wentao Wang (this is actually great for virt-v2v). > > > > So we need to find another filesystem which doesn't support fstrim. > > Or maybe just delete this regression test. > > > > Thoughts? > > Presumably something ancient like ext2 will not support it, and is unlikely > to be given it given that its ancient with no active development.
I think it does because we're using the ext4 driver for ext2/3 ... Rich. -- Richard Jones, Virtualization Group, Red Hat http://people.redhat.com/~rjones Read my programming and virtualization blog: http://rwmj.wordpress.com libguestfs lets you edit virtual machines. Supports shell scripting, bindings from many languages. http://libguestfs.org _______________________________________________ Libguestfs mailing list Libguestfs@redhat.com https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/libguestfs