On Fri, Dec 20, 2013 at 3:43 PM, Peter Lieven <p...@kamp.de> wrote: > On 20.12.2013 15:38, Stefan Hajnoczi wrote: >> >> On Fri, Dec 20, 2013 at 3:07 PM, Peter Lieven <p...@kamp.de> wrote: >>> >>> On 20.12.2013 14:57, Stefan Hajnoczi wrote: >>>> >>>> On Fri, Dec 20, 2013 at 1:53 PM, Peter Lieven <p...@kamp.de> wrote: >>>>> >>>>> On 20.12.2013 13:19, Stefan Hajnoczi wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>> On Fri, Dec 20, 2013 at 10:48:41AM +0100, Peter Lieven wrote: >>>>>>> >>>>>>> On 17.12.2013 17:47, Stefan Hajnoczi wrote: >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> On Tue, Dec 17, 2013 at 10:15:25AM +0100, Peter Lieven wrote: >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> + /* set to -ENOTSUP since bdrv_allocated_file_size is only used >>>>>>>>> + * in qemu-img open. So we can use the cached value for >>>>>>>>> allocate >>>>>>>>> + * filesize obtained from fstat at open time */ >>>>>>>>> + client->allocated_file_size = -ENOTSUP; >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Can you implement this fully? By stubbing it out like this we won't >>>>>>>> be >>>>>>>> able to call get_allocated_file_size() at runtime in the future >>>>>>>> without >>>>>>>> updating the nfs block driver code. It's just an fstat call, >>>>>>>> shouldn't >>>>>>>> be too hard to implement properly :). >>>>>>> >>>>>>> It seems I have to leave it as is currently. >>>>>>> bdrv_get_allocated_file_size >>>>>>> is not in a coroutine context. I get coroutine yields to no one. >>>>>> >>>>>> Create a coroutine and pump the event loop until it has reached >>>>>> completion: >>>>>> >>>>>> co = qemu_coroutine_create(my_coroutine_fn, ...); >>>>>> qemu_coroutine_enter(co, foo); >>>>>> while (!complete) { >>>>>> qemu_aio_wait(); >>>>>> } >>>>>> >>>>>> See block.c for similar examples. >>>>> >>>>> Wouldn't it make sense to make this modification to >>>>> bdrv_get_allocated_file_size in >>>>> block.c rather than in client/nfs.c and in the future potentially other >>>>> drivers? >>>>> >>>>> If yes, I would ask you to take v3 of the NFS protocol patch and I >>>>> promise >>>>> to send >>>>> a follow up early next year to make this modification to block.c and >>>>> change >>>>> block/nfs.c >>>>> and other implementations to be a coroutine_fn. >>>> >>>> .bdrv_get_allocated_file_size() implementations in other block drivers >>>> are synchronous. Making the block driver interface use coroutines >>>> would be wrong unless all the block drivers were updated to use >>>> coroutines too. >>> >>> I can do that. I think its not too complicated because all those >>> implementations do not rely on callbacks. It should be possible >>> to just rename the existing implemenations to lets say >>> .bdrv_co_get_allocated_file_size and call them inside a coroutine. >> >> No, that would be wrong because coroutine functions should not block. >> The point of coroutines is that if they cannot proceed they must yield >> so the event loop regains control. If you simply rename the function >> to _co_ then they will block the event loop and not be true coroutine >> functions. >> >>>> Can you just call nfs_fstat() (the sync libnfs interface)? >>> >>> I can only do that if its guaranteed that no other requests are in flight >>> otherwise it will mess up. >> >> How will it mess up? > > The sync calls into libnfs are just wrappers around the async calls. > The problem is that this wrapper will handle all the callbacks for the > in-flight requests and they will never return.
So back to my original suggestion to use a qemu_aio_wait() loop in block/nfs.c? Stefan