Am 10.01.2014 16:46, schrieb Kevin Wolf: > Am 10.01.2014 um 16:05 hat Peter Lieven geschrieben: >> On 10.01.2014 15:49, ronnie sahlberg wrote: >>> On Fri, Jan 10, 2014 at 4:30 AM, Paolo Bonzini <pbonz...@redhat.com> wrote: >>>> Il 10/01/2014 13:12, Peter Lieven ha scritto: >>>>> Then I shall convert everything to a qapi schema whereby the current >>>>> design of libnfs is designed to work with plain URLs. >>>> No, no one is asking you to do this. URLs are fine, but I agree with >>>> Kevin that parsing them in QEMU is better. >>>> >>>> Also because the QEMU parser is known to be based on RFCs and good code >>> >from libxml2. For example, the iSCSI URL parser, when introduced, >>>> didn't even have percent-escape parsing, causing libvirt to fail with >>>> old libiscsi (and actually not that old too: IIRC libiscsi 1.7 will >>>> still fail). Unless the libnfs parser is as good as libxml2's, I think >>>> there's value in using the QEMU URI parser. >>> I think that is fair enough. >>> >>> The arguments we are talking about are the type of arguments that only >>> affect the interface between libnfs and the nfs server itself >>> and is not strictly all that interesting to the application that links >>> to libnfs. >>> >>> Since parsing a URL does require a fair amount of code, a hundred >>> lines or more, it is a bit annoying having to re-implement the parsing >>> code for every single small utility. For example nfs-ls nfs-cp >>> nfs-cp or for the parsing, that is still done, in the sg-utils >>> patch. >>> For a lot of these small and semi-trivial applications we don't really >>> care all that much about what the options are but we might care a lot >>> about making it easier to use libnfs and to avoid having to write a >>> parser each time. >>> >>> For those use cases, I definitely think that having a built in >>> function to parse a url, and automatically update the nfs context with >>> connection related tweaks is a good thing. It eliminates the need to >>> re-implement the parsing functions in every single trivial >>> application. >>> >>> >>> For QEMU and libvirt things may be different. These are non-trivial >>> applications and may have needs to be able to control the settings >>> explicitely in the QEMU code. >>> That is still possible to do. All the url arguments so far tweak >>> arguments that can also be controlled through explicit existing APIs. >>> So for QEMU, there are functions available in libnfs now that will >>> automatically update the nfs context with things like UID/GID to use >>> when talking to the server, passed via the URL and QEMU can use them. >>> On the other hand, if QEMU rather wants to parse the URL itself >>> and make calls into the libnfs API to tweak these settings directly >> >from the QEMU codebase, that is also possible. >>> >>> For example: nfs://1.2.3.4/path/file?uid=10&gid=10 >>> When parsing these using the libnfs functions, the parsing functions >>> will automatically update the nfs context so that it will use these >>> values when it fills in the rpc header to send to the server. >>> But if you want to parse the url yourself, you can do that too, by >>> just calling nfs_set_auth(nfs, libnfs_authunix_create(..., 10, 10, >>> ... >> >> Proposal: >> I revert the URL parsing code to v4 of the patch: >> [...] > Agreed. > >> And then pipe all the URL params (in QueryParams) through a (to be defined >> public) function in libnfs >> >> nfs_set_context_args(struct nfs_context *nfs, char *arg, char *val); > I wouldn't do that. We should use specific functions like Ronnie > suggested in his nfs_set_auth() example. Ronnie, I would map to the following functions. Especially for uid,gid because we would have to add all that specific what to do on windows and what to do if a user specifies only a uid and no gid stuff again:
uid => rpc_set_uid gid => rpc_set_gid tcp-syncnt => rpc_set_tcp_syncnt autoreconnect => rpc_{set,unset}_autoreconnect Ronnie, can you also give a short advise on Kevin's question about short reads. I think they can happen if we read beyond past EOF or not? > >> And we leave all the >> >> QemuOptsList >> >> and qapi-schema.json stuff for a later version when we touch all the other >> protocols. > Okay, I'll take care of it. For the time being, please include the TODO > comment that the other network-based drivers have. Thanks. Kevin, can you please give an advice how to proceed with the qemu-iotests. Peter