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Re: [Qemu-devel] [PATCH 1/6 v11] docs: spec for add-cow file format


From: Dong Xu Wang
Subject: Re: [Qemu-devel] [PATCH 1/6 v11] docs: spec for add-cow file format
Date: Thu, 2 Aug 2012 15:03:07 +0800

On Wed, Aug 1, 2012 at 9:51 PM, Eric Blake <address@hidden> wrote:
> On 07/31/2012 10:51 AM, Dong Xu Wang wrote:
>> Introduce a new file format:add-cow. The usage can be found at this patch.
>>
>> Signed-off-by: Dong Xu Wang <address@hidden>
>> ---
>> Now add-cow is still using QEMUOptionParameter, not QemuOpts,  I will send a
>> seperate patch series to convert.
>
> s/seperate/separate/
>
Yep.
>>
>>  docs/specs/add-cow.txt |  128 
>> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>>  1 files changed, 128 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)
>>  create mode 100644 docs/specs/add-cow.txt
>>
>> diff --git a/docs/specs/add-cow.txt b/docs/specs/add-cow.txt
>> new file mode 100644
>> index 0000000..4793a3e
>> --- /dev/null
>> +++ b/docs/specs/add-cow.txt
>> @@ -0,0 +1,128 @@
>> +== General ==
>> +
>> +Raw file format does not support backing file and copy on write feature.
>
> grammar:
> The raw file format does not support backing files or the copy-on-write
> feature.

Yep.

>
>> +The add-cow image format makes it possible to use backing files with raw
>> +image by keeping a separate .add-cow metadata file. Once all sectors
>> +have been written into the raw image it is safe to discard the .add-cow
>> +and backing files, then we can use the raw image directly.
>
> I'm still not sure how this series fits in with the recent discussions
> on adding drive-mirror with the capability of creating a raw file mirror
> of a qcow2 snapshot.
>
>
>> +
>> +While using add-cow, procedures may like this:
>
> grammar:
> An example usage of add-cow would look like:
>

Yep.

>> +(ubuntu.img is a disk image which has been installed OS.)
>> +    1)  Create a raw image with the same size of ubuntu.img
>> +            qemu-img create -f raw test.raw 8G
>> +    2)  Create an add-cow image which will store dirty bitmap
>> +            qemu-img create -f add-cow test.add-cow \
>> +                -o backing_file=ubuntu.img,image_file=test.raw
>> +    3)  Run qemu with add-cow image
>> +            qemu -drive if=virtio,file=test.add-cow
>> +
>> +test.raw may be larger than ubuntu.img, in that case, the size of 
>> test.add-cow
>> +will be calculated by the size of ubuntu.img, test.raw will be used from the
>> +1st byte, the rest part can be used for other purpose.
>
> Grammar was off here, but I'm not sure what you meant to suggest a
> replacement.  Maybe:
>
> the size of test.add-cow will be calculated from the size of ubuntu.img,
> and extra space at the tail of test.raw can be used for other purposes.

Yes, this is what I mean.


>
>> +(#define HEADER_SIZE (4096 * header_pages_size))
>> +    Byte    0 -  7:     magic
>> +                        add-cow magic string ("ADD_COW\xff").
>> +
>> +            8 -  11:    version
>> +                        Version number (only valid value is 1 now).
>> +
>> +            12 - 15:    backing file name offset
>> +                        Offset in the add-cow file at which the backing file
>> +                        name is stored (NB: The string is not null 
>> terminated).
>
> Nit: this should be nul-terminated (NUL is the one-byte all-0 character
> in single byte encodings that ends a string, and NULL is the four- or
> eight-byte value, typically all-0, for a pointer to nowhere).
>
>
>> +
>> +            28 - 35:    features
>> +                        Currently only 3 feature bit is used:
>> +                        Feature bits:
>> +                            The image uses a backing file:
>> +                            * ADD_COW_F_BACKING_FILE    = 0x01.
>
> Isn't this bit redundant with the earlier field at byte 12 stating
> whether a backing file is present?
>

Yes, it is redundant. I just want to make if the add-cow image is
using  backing_file more clear.

>> +                            The image uses a image file:
>> +                            * ADD_COW_F_IMAGE_FILE      = 0x02.
>
> The field at byte 20 implies that an image file name is mandatory,
> meaning this bit is always 1 and therefore pointless.
>
>> +                            All bits in bitmap have been set to 1, add-cow 
>> wrapper
>> +                            can be discarded.
>> +                            * ADD_COW_F_All_ALLOCATED   = 0x04.
>> +
>> +            36 - 43:    optional features
>> +                        Not used now. Researved for future use.
>
> s/Researved/Reserved/, mention that it must be set to 0

Okay.

>
>> +
>> +            44 - 47:    header pages size
>> +                        The header field is variable-sized. This field 
>> indicates
>> +                        how many pages(4k) will be used to store add-cow 
>> header.
>> +                        In add-cow v1, it is fixed to 1, so the header size 
>> will
>> +                        be 4k * 1 = 4096 bytes.
>> +
>> +Image file name and backing file name must NOT be the same, we prevent this
>> +while creating add-cow files.
>> +
>> +Image file and backing file are interpreted relative to the qcow2 file, not
>> +to the current working directory of the process that opened the qcow2 file.
>
> Either indent this description to match the field it is describing, or
> sink it down until after you have called out the header layout.

Okay.

>
>> +
>> +== Reserved ==
>> +
>> +    Byte    48 - 63:    backing file format
>> +                        format of backing file. It will be filled with 0 if
>> +                        backing file name offset is 0. If backing file name
>> +                        offset is none-zero, it must be non-zero.
>
> s/none-zero/non-zero/

Okay.

>
> Why are you defining these byte offsets in the Reserved section?  This
> text should occur earlier in the mandatory header format.  Is this field
> free-form ASCII?  Must the field be NUL-terminated?  For that matter, I
> think you can just delete the ==Reserved== header, as you are calling
> out every possible offset.
>

Okay. I will describle more clearly in v12.

>> +
>> +            64 - 79:    image file format
>> +                        format of image file. It must be non-zero.
>
> Same question about whether this field is ASCII, and must be NUL-terminated.
>

Okay.

>> +
>> +            80 - [HEADER_SIZE - 1]:
>> +                        It is used to make sure COW bitmap field starts at 
>> the
>> +                        HEADER_SIZE byte, backing file name and image file 
>> name
>> +                        will be stored here.
>
> Is it required that bytes not pointed to by backing file and image names
> must have any particular value?

It must be 0, I will correct it later.

>
>> +
>> +== COW bitmap ==
>> +
>> +The "COW bitmap" field starts at the 4096th byte, stores a bitmap related to
>> +backing file and image file. The bitmap will track whether the sector in
>> +backing file is dirty or not.
>> +
>> +Each bit in the bitmap indicates one cluster's status. One cluster includes 
>> 128
>> +sectors, then each bit indicates 512 * 128 = 64k bytes. the size of bitmap 
>> is
>> +calculated according to virtual size of backing file. In each byte, bit 0 
>> to 7
>> +will track the 1st to 7th cluster in sequence, bit orders in one byte look 
>> like:
>
> 1st to 7th is only 7 clusters.  You mean either '0th to 7th' or '1st to
> 8th'.  Or just simplify to:
>
> Within each byte, the least significant bit covers the first cluster.

Okay.

>
>> + +----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
>> + | b7 | b6 | b5 | b4 | b3 | b2 | b1 | b0 |
>> + +----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
>> +
>> +If the bit is 0, indicates the sector has not been allocated in image file, 
>> data
>> +should be loaded from backing file while reading; if the bit is 1, 
>> indicates the
>> +related sector has been dirty, should be loaded from image file while 
>> reading.
>> +Writing to a sector causes the corresponding bit to be set to 1.
>> +
>> +If raw image is not an even multiple of cluster bytes, bits that correspond 
>> to
>> +bytes beyond the raw file size in add-cow will be 0.
>
> Will this affect the use of the ADD_COW_F_ALL_ALLOCATED feature bit in
> the header?

No, beyond the raw file size, the related bits in bitmap will make no sense.

I mean: ADD_COW_F_ALL_ALLOCATED  will be set when:

1)  If add-cow is created only use image_file option, but no
backing_file option.
In this case, bitmap will be useless.

2) when all sectors have been allocated in image_file, we will not use
image_file.
but in this case, I think it is hard to determine whether all sectors
have been allocated
or not, scanning all bitmap will take some time, maybe we can do this
when we call
"qemu-io check"? Or before opening add-cow files, we do a check?

Any comments?

Thank you, Eric,

>
> --
> Eric Blake   address@hidden    +1-919-301-3266
> Libvirt virtualization library http://libvirt.org
>



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