[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [RFC PATCH] blkif.h: document scsi/0x12/0x83 node
On Tue, Mar 22, 2016 at 01:41:43PM +0000, David Vrabel wrote: > On 22/03/16 12:55, Bob Liu wrote: > > > > On 03/17/2016 07:12 PM, Ian Jackson wrote: > >> David Vrabel writes ("Re: [Xen-devel] [RFC PATCH] blkif.h: document > >> scsi/0x12/0x83 node"): > >>> On 16/03/16 13:59, Bob Liu wrote: > >>>> But we'd like to get the VPD information(of underlying storage device) > >>>> also in Linux blkfront, even blkfront is not a SCSI device. > >>> > >>> Why does blkback/blkfront need to involved here? This is just some > >>> xenstore keys that can be written by the toolstack and directly read by > >>> the relevant application in the guest. > >> > > > > They want a more generic way because the application may run on all kinds > > of environment including baremetal. > > So they prefers to just call ioctl(SG_IO) against a storage device. > > > >> I'm getting rather a different picture here than at first. Previously > >> I thought you had some 3rd-party application, not under your control, > >> which expected to see this VPD data. > >> > >> But now I think that you're saying the application is under your own > >> control. I don't understand why synthetic VPD data is the best way to > >> give your application the information it needs. > >> > >> What is the application doing with this VPD data ? I mean, > >> which specific application functions, and how do they depend on the > >> VPD data ? > >> > > > > From the feedbacks I just got, they do *not* want the details to be in > > public. > > It is difficult to suggest how it should be done correctly without this > information. Just think of it as a black box. > > I also find it difficult to see a use case where running the storage > software in the guest (instead of in the backend) is sensible or desirable. Are you suggesting that doing backend drivers is not sensible? > > > Anyway, I think this is not a block of this patch. > > In Windows PV block driver, we already use the same way to get the raw > > INQUIRY data. > > * The Windows PV block driver accepts ioctl(SG_IO). > > * Then it reads this /scsi/0x12/0x83 node. > > * Then return the raw INQURIY data back to ioctl. > > > > Since Linux guest also wants to do the same thing, let's making this > > mechanism to be a generic interface! > > I'll post a patch adding ioctl(SG_IO) support to xen-blkfront together with > > a updated version of this patch soon. > > I do not think this feature is generally useful outside of this > unspecified use case. I do not think that supplying details about > underlying storage device (beyond generic properties) to guests is > sensible (e.g., what if the guest snapshot is restored on different > storage?). The restore process (xl) can update the XenStore key with the new storage. > > And thus I do not not think we should either: a) make this part of the > blkif ABI; or b) add support to xen-blkfront or xen-blkback. It is already coded in Windows PV drivers so I am not following why codyfing this in the blkif.h is harmful? > > David > > _______________________________________________ > Xen-devel mailing list > Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx > http://lists.xen.org/xen-devel _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xen.org/xen-devel
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