On Wed, 09/16 17:29, Paolo Bonzini wrote: > Passed-through SCSI devices can be opened with the readonly=on option. > When this happens, Linux filters away write commands so that the guest > cannot overwrite the contents of the device. > > However, the guest does not know that the device is read-only, and > accepts writes. The writes only fail later when the page cache is > flushed. > > This patch modifies scsi-generic to modify the MODE SENSE data and > set the read-only bit in the device-specific parameters, so that > the guest OS treats the disk as write protected. > > Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonz...@redhat.com> > --- > hw/scsi/scsi-generic.c | 14 ++++++++++++++ > 1 file changed, 14 insertions(+) > > diff --git a/hw/scsi/scsi-generic.c b/hw/scsi/scsi-generic.c > index 1b6350b..a4626f7 100644 > --- a/hw/scsi/scsi-generic.c > +++ b/hw/scsi/scsi-generic.c > @@ -210,6 +210,20 @@ static void scsi_read_complete(void * opaque, int ret) > } > blk_set_guest_block_size(s->conf.blk, s->blocksize); > > + /* Patch MODE SENSE device specific parameters if the BDS is opened > + * readonly. > + */ > + if ((s->type == TYPE_DISK || s->type == TYPE_TAPE) && > + blk_is_read_only(s->conf.blk) && > + (r->req.cmd.buf[0] == MODE_SENSE || > + r->req.cmd.buf[0] == MODE_SENSE_10) && > + (r->req.cmd.buf[1] & 0x8) == 0) { > + if (r->req.cmd.buf[0] == MODE_SENSE) { > + r->buf[2] |= 0x80; > + } else { > + r->buf[3] |= 0x80; > + } > + } > scsi_req_data(&r->req, len); > scsi_req_unref(&r->req); > } > -- > 2.5.0 > >
Reviewed-by: Fam Zheng <f...@redhat.com>