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[Bug 1865048] Re: qemu-img --force-share does not disable file locking
From: |
Max Reitz |
Subject: |
[Bug 1865048] Re: qemu-img --force-share does not disable file locking |
Date: |
Thu, 27 Feb 2020 17:23:01 -0000 |
Hi,
That’s intentional. The man page says this:
--force-share (-U)
If specified, "qemu-img" will open the image in shared mode,
allowing other QEMU processes to open it in write mode. For
example, this can be used to get the image information (with
'info' subcommand) when the image is used by a running guest.
It says nothing about not using file locks. All it will do is cause
qemu-img to signal to other processes that it’s OK for them to use the
image in any way, or if there already is another process having opened
the image for any access, qemu-img will not complain.
For example, open a qemu-io process on some image:
$ qemu-io foo.qcow2
And in another shell, invoke qemu-img:
$ qemu-img info foo.qcow2
qemu-img: Could not open 'foo.qcow2': Failed to get shared "write" lock
Is another process using the image [foo.qcow2]?
$ qemu-img info --force-share foo.qcow2
image: foo.qcow2
file format: qcow2
[...]
force-share is evaluated in bdrv_child_perm in block.c. The file locks qemu
sets are an extension of the internal “permission” system we use for block
nodes: For example, when some guest device wants write access to an image, it
has to take the WRITE permission. That will be disallowed if there is some
other user of the image that does not allow taking the WRITE permission (we
say: it “unshares” the WRITE permission). force-share enforces sharing all
permissions, but it does not disable the permission system.
The file locks are used to transmit that internal mechanism of
taking/sharing permissions across different processes. Unshared
permissions are reflected by locks between offset 200 and 299. Taken
permissions are reflected by locks between offset 100 and 199. As you
can see, qemu-img with --force-share does not unshare any permissions
(it does not take any locks after offset 200). The only lock it takes
is offset 100, which corresponds to CONSISTENT_READ. That permission
means “I want to read from the image and get back something sane”. So
if any other process uses the image in such a way that this is
impossible (i.e., it has to unshare CONSISTENT_READ), qemu-img info will
complain, regardless of --force-share.
File locks can only be completely disabled through file-posix’s @locking option
(locking=false), e.g. like so:
$ qemu-img info --image-opts file.filename=foo.qcow2,file.locking=off
But that is strongly discouraged, and I have yet to see a case where
this would be the right thing to do.
Max
** Changed in: qemu
Status: New => Invalid
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1865048
Title:
qemu-img --force-share does not disable file locking
Status in QEMU:
Invalid
Bug description:
The new option "--force-share" for qemu-img does not disable file
locking.
I tried it with version qemu-img version 2.11.1(Debian 1:2.11+dfsg-
1ubuntu7.21~cloud0) and I traced the source code of the current git
trunk.
Sample to demonstrate:
# strace qemu-img info --force-share testfile.qcow2 2>&1 | grep F_RDLCK
fcntl(11, F_OFD_SETLK, {l_type=F_RDLCK, l_whence=SEEK_SET, l_start=100,
l_len=1}) = 0
fcntl(11, F_OFD_SETLK, {l_type=F_RDLCK, l_whence=SEEK_SET, l_start=100,
l_len=1}) = 0
fcntl(11, F_OFD_SETLK, {l_type=F_RDLCK, l_whence=SEEK_SET, l_start=100,
l_len=1}) = 0
fcntl(11, F_OFD_SETLK, {l_type=F_RDLCK, l_whence=SEEK_SET, l_start=100,
l_len=1}) = 0
fcntl(11, F_OFD_SETLK, {l_type=F_RDLCK, l_whence=SEEK_SET, l_start=100,
l_len=1}) = 0
fcntl(11, F_OFD_SETLK, {l_type=F_RDLCK, l_whence=SEEK_SET, l_start=100,
l_len=1}) = 0
fcntl(11, F_OFD_SETLK, {l_type=F_RDLCK, l_whence=SEEK_SET, l_start=100,
l_len=1}) = 0
fcntl(11, F_OFD_SETLK, {l_type=F_RDLCK, l_whence=SEEK_SET, l_start=100,
l_len=1}) = 0
fcntl(11, F_OFD_SETLK, {l_type=F_RDLCK, l_whence=SEEK_SET, l_start=100,
l_len=1}) = 0
I traced the passing of the --force-share option through the source
code (I used commit 6c599282f8 as of Mon Feb 17 13:32:25 2020 +0000)
qemu-img.c:img_info()
force_share = true;
qemu-img.c:collect_image_info_list(force_share)
qemu-img.c:img_open(force_share)
qemu-img.c:img_open_file(force_share)
qdict_put_bool(options, BDRV_OPT_FORCE_SHARE, true);
block/block-backend.c:blk_new_open(options)
block.c:bdrv_open(options)
block.c:bdrv_open_inheritoptions()
block.c:bdrv_open_common(options)
bs->force_share = qemu_opt_get_bool(opts, BDRV_OPT_FORCE_SHARE,
false);
block.c:bdrv_open_driver(bs)
include/block/block_int.h:int (*bdrv_file_open)(BlockDriverState *bs, QDict
*options, int flags,
block/file-posix.c:.bdrv_file_open = raw_open,
block/file-posix.c:raw_open_common(bs)
locking = qapi_enum_parse(&OnOffAuto_lookup,
qemu_opt_get(opts, "locking"),
ON_OFF_AUTO_AUTO, &local_err);
ignoring bs->force_share
At the end, bs->force_share is ignored in determining the locking
value.
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