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Re: [Qemu-devel] [PATCH 1/2] Make cow_co_is_allocated and cow_update_bit
From: |
Paolo Bonzini |
Subject: |
Re: [Qemu-devel] [PATCH 1/2] Make cow_co_is_allocated and cow_update_bitmap more efficient |
Date: |
Wed, 21 Aug 2013 10:14:37 +0200 |
User-agent: |
Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:17.0) Gecko/20130805 Thunderbird/17.0.8 |
Il 21/08/2013 00:53, Charlie Shepherd ha scritto:
> On 20/08/2013 21:48, Paolo Bonzini wrote:
>> Il 20/08/2013 20:34, Charlie Shepherd ha scritto:
>>> /* Return true if first block has been changed (ie. current version is
>>> @@ -146,40 +114,82 @@ static inline int is_bit_set(BlockDriverState
>>> *bs, int64_t bitnum)
>>> static int coroutine_fn cow_co_is_allocated(BlockDriverState *bs,
>>> int64_t sector_num, int nb_sectors, int *num_same)
>>> {
>>> - int changed;
>>> + int ret, changed;
>>> + uint64_t offset = sizeof(struct cow_header_v2) + sector_num / 8;
>>> +
>>> + int init_bits = (sector_num % 8) ? (8 - (sector_num % 8)) : 0;
>>> + int remaining = sector_num - init_bits;
>>> + int full_bytes = remaining / 8;
>>> + int trail = remaining % 8;
>>> +
>>> + int len = !!init_bits + full_bytes + !!trail;
>>> + uint8_t bitmap[len];
>> This is a basically unbounded allocation on the stack. You should split
>> this in smaller ranges using the "num_same" argument, which is what I
>> did in my patch.
>
> So if I understand your patch correctly, you read the next 512 bytes
> (ie, one BDRV_SECTOR_SIZE) after offset into bitmap? Is this guaranteed
> to be safe (like if the file isn't that long)?
Yes, because the bitmap is always before the data, and always rounded to
full sector size so that the data stays aligned:
bitmap_size = ((bs->total_sectors + 7) >> 3) + sizeof(cow_header);
s->cow_sectors_offset = (bitmap_size + 511) & ~511;
> What if nb_sectors > 512 * 8?
For cow_co_is_allocated, you have the luxury of returning information
only for the fewer than nb_sectors. That is, you can set *num_same to a
smaller value than nb_sectors, even if sector_num + *num_same has the
same state as the [sector_num, sector_num + *num_same) range. It will
cause extra calls to is_allocated in the callers, but that's it.
> I think it's best to use your version of cow_co_is_allocated(), but
> those are the questions that come to mind when trying to convert the
> stack allocation in cow_update_bitmap()
Good point.
>>> + ret = bdrv_pread(bs->file, offset, buf, len);
>>> + if (ret < 0) {
>>> + return ret;
>>> + }
>>> +
>>> + /* Do sector_num -> nearest byte boundary */
>>> + if (init_bits) {
>>> + /* This sets the highest init_bits bits in the byte */
>>> + uint8_t bits = ((1 << init_bits) - 1) << (8 - init_bits);
>>> + buf[0] |= bits;
>>> + }
>>> +
>>> + if (full_bytes) {
>>> + memset(&buf[!!init_bits], ~0, full_bytes);
>>> + }
>>> +
>>> + /* Set the trailing bits in the final byte */
>>> + if (trail) {
>>> + /* This sets the lowest trail bits in the byte */
>>> + uint8_t bits = (1 << trail) - 1;
>>> + buf[len - 1] |= bits;
>>> + }
>> ... and you should also check if there is a change in the bits, and skip
>> the flush if there is no change. Flushing a multi-megabyte write is
>> very expensive. It basically makes format=cow as slow as
>> format=raw,cache=writethrough.
>
> So if ORing the allocation makes no difference, don't flush?
Yep! This means if an image is fully COW-ed, there will be no extra
flush (only extra reads).
I already did this, but in a very inefficient way because each bit would
be read separately.
Paolo
>
> Charlie
>>> + ret = bdrv_pwrite(bs->file, offset, buf, len);
>>> + if (ret < 0) {
>>> + return ret;
>>> }
>>> - return error;
>>> + return 0;
>>> }
>>> static int coroutine_fn cow_read(BlockDriverState *bs, int64_t
>>> sector_num,
>>> @@ -237,6 +247,13 @@ static int cow_write(BlockDriverState *bs,
>>> int64_t sector_num,
>>> return ret;
>>> }
>>> + /* We need to flush the data before writing the metadata so
>>> that there is
>>> + * no chance of metadata referring to data that doesn't exist. */
>>> + ret = bdrv_flush(bs->file);
>>> + if (ret < 0) {
>>> + return ret;
>>> + }
>> See above about this flush.
>>
>> Paolo
>>
>>> return cow_update_bitmap(bs, sector_num, nb_sectors);
>>> }
>>>
>
>
>