On 03/03/2021 12.35, Cornelia Huck wrote:
On Tue, 2 Mar 2021 20:02:34 +0100
David Hildenbrand <da...@redhat.com> wrote:

On 02.03.21 18:32, Peter Xu wrote:
On Tue, Feb 09, 2021 at 02:49:37PM +0100, David Hildenbrand wrote:
@@ -899,13 +899,17 @@ int kvm_s390_mem_op_pv(S390CPU *cpu, uint64_t offset, 
void *hostbuf,
    * to grow. We also have to use MAP parameters that avoid
    * read-only mapping of guest pages.
    */
-static void *legacy_s390_alloc(size_t size, uint64_t *align, bool shared)
+static void *legacy_s390_alloc(size_t size, uint64_t *align, bool shared,
+                               bool noreserve)
   {
       static void *mem;
if (mem) {
           /* we only support one allocation, which is enough for initial ram */
           return NULL;
+    } else if (noreserve) {
+        error_report("Skipping reservation of swap space is not supported.");
+        return NULL

Semicolon missing.

Thanks for catching that!

Regardless of that (and this patch set), can we finally get rid of
legacy_s390_alloc? We already fence off running with a kernel prior to
3.15, and KVM_CAP_S390_COW depends on ESOP -- are non-ESOP kvm hosts
still relevant? This seems to be a generation 10 feature; do we
realistically expect anyone running this on e.g. a z/VM host that
doesn't provide ESOP?

Looking at the support charts ( https://www.ibm.com/support/pages/ibm-mainframe-life-cycle-history ), the z10 is already unsupported. So if all newer mainframes have ESOP, I guess it should be fine to get rid of this code now.

 Thomas


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