On Sat, Jun 19, 2021 at 01:53:24PM +0300, Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy wrote: > > +++ b/block/nbd.c > > @@ -1702,7 +1702,7 @@ static int coroutine_fn nbd_client_co_block_status( > > .type = NBD_CMD_BLOCK_STATUS, > > .from = offset, > > .len = MIN(QEMU_ALIGN_DOWN(INT_MAX, bs->bl.request_alignment), > > - MIN(bytes, s->info.size - offset)), > > + s->info.size - offset), > > .flags = NBD_CMD_FLAG_REQ_ONE, > > }; > > > > Hmm.. > > I don't that this change is correct. In contrast with file-posix you don't > get extra information for free, you just make a larger request. This means > that server will have to do more work.
Not necessarily. The fact that we have passed NBD_CMD_FLAG_REQ_ONE means that the server is still only allowed to give us one extent in its answer, and that it may not give us information beyond the length we requested. You are right that if we lose the REQ_ONE flag we may result in the server doing more work to provide us additional extents that we will then be ignoring because we aren't yet set up for avoiding REQ_ONE. Fixing that is a longer-term goal. But in the short term, I see no harm in giving a larger length to the server with REQ_ONE. > > (look at blockstatus_to_extents, it calls bdrv_block_status_above in a loop). > > For example, assume that nbd export is a qcow2 image with all clusters > allocated. With this change, nbd server will loop through the whole qcow2 > image, load all L2 tables to return big allocated extent. No, the server is allowed to reply with less length than our request, and that is particularly true if the server does NOT have free access to the full length of our request. In the case of qcow2, since bdrv_block_status is (by current design) clamped at cluster boundaries, requesting a 4G length will NOT increase the amount of the server response any further than the first cluster boundary (that is, the point where the server no longer has free access to status without loading another cluster of L2 entries). > > So, only server can decide, could it add some extra free information to > request or not. But unfortunately NBD_CMD_FLAG_REQ_ONE doesn't allow it. What the flag prohibits is the server giving us more information than the length we requested. But this patch is increasing our request length for the case where the server CAN give us more information than we need locally, on the hopes that even though the server can only reply with one extent, we aren't wasting as many network back-and-forth trips when a larger request would have worked. -- Eric Blake, Principal Software Engineer Red Hat, Inc. +1-919-301-3266 Virtualization: qemu.org | libvirt.org