[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH] xen-blk(front|back): Handle large physical sector disks
> > >>> On 15.05.13 at 11:26, Stefan Bader <stefan.bader@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > wrote: > > On 14.05.2013 10:04, Jan Beulich wrote: > >>>>> On 13.05.13 at 19:47, Stefan Bader <stefan.bader@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > wrote: > >>> --- a/drivers/block/xen-blkback/xenbus.c > >>> +++ b/drivers/block/xen-blkback/xenbus.c > >>> @@ -704,6 +704,13 @@ again: > >>> dev->nodename); > >>> goto abort; > >>> } > >>> + err = xenbus_printf(xbt, dev->nodename, "physical-sector-size", > "%u", > >>> + bdev_physical_block_size(be->blkif->vbd.bdev)); > >>> + if (err) { > >>> + xenbus_dev_fatal(dev, err, "writing %s/physical-sector-size", > >>> + dev->nodename); > >>> + goto abort; > >> > >> Failure here should not be fatal (as with any other protocol > >> extensions). > > > > So I suppose that should be xenbus_dev_error and no abort here. Just > > wondering > > (and sorry for being thick headed here) why would a failure here be > > different in > > severity for an extension or not. Is that not just adding an element to the > > xenstore object and failure would not be related to this being an > extension? > > A driver should only bail upon encountering a problem that it can't > recover from. Failure to write a xenstore node that neither the > backend nor the frontend really require for their work is certainly > not among those. Yes, it's only a xenstore write, but it can fail at > least theoretically (or else there wouldn't be a need for error > handling here in the first place), and you shouldn't handle such > failure in undue ways (i.e. failure to write required nodes is fatal, > but failure to write nodes related to extensions isn't). > What is the recovery though? If the physical block size is unusual (eg not 512) and the write has failed, what is the outcome? I suspect that it's going to not be what the user expected - partitions could be incorrectly aligned if doing an install, etc. If it were my system then in the (vanishingly rare?) case that this write failed, I'd prefer a hard failure. If a simple write to xenstore fails then isn't the world coming to an end anyway? James _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xen.org/xen-devel
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