[libvirt] [PATCH] Add "io" option to virsh attach-disk sub-command.
John Ferlan
jferlan at redhat.com
Thu May 11 22:10:03 UTC 2017
On 05/07/2017 05:44 PM, Gordon Messmer wrote:
> ---
> tools/virsh-domain.c | 14 +++++++++++---
> tools/virsh.pod | 2 ++
> 2 files changed, 13 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)
>
Well for some reason I cannot apply this patch using "git am -3"...
I think what you should do is rebase to the current git head and then
git send-email the patch again after applying some changes. When you
send it, be sure to note it's "v2"... I keep a template for that in a
file and use:
git send-email --confirm=always --no-chain-reply-to --annotate \
--cover-letter \
--to=libvir-list at redhat.com master
[ --subject-prefix="PATCH v#" ]
where --subject-prefix would be necessary for v2, v3, v4, etc. Also the
--cover-letter is only necessary for a 1 patch (so for this one it
wouldn't be).
You should take the text from your follow up emails and write a commit
message to describe the patch does. It should "look like" other patches
on the list - there's also the :
http://libvirt.org/hacking.html
to help you out. Also be sure to run "make check syntax-check"
As for the patch itself...
> diff --git a/tools/virsh-domain.c b/tools/virsh-domain.c
> index 0d19d0e..d2a2a05 100644
> --- a/tools/virsh-domain.c
> +++ b/tools/virsh-domain.c
> @@ -267,6 +267,10 @@ static const vshCmdOptDef opts_attach_disk[] = {
> .type = VSH_OT_STRING,
> .help = N_("cache mode of disk device")
> },
> + {.name = "io",
> + .type = VSH_OT_STRING,
> + .help = N_("io mode of disk device")
> + },
I'd say this is not so much io mode, but rather io policy for thread
model used by the driver (or something like that).
> {.name = "type",
> .type = VSH_OT_STRING,
> .help = N_("target device type")
> @@ -504,8 +508,9 @@ cmdAttachDisk(vshControl *ctl, const vshCmd *cmd)
> virDomainPtr dom = NULL;
> const char *source = NULL, *target = NULL, *driver = NULL,
> *subdriver = NULL, *type = NULL, *mode = NULL,
> - *iothread = NULL, *cache = NULL, *serial = NULL,
> - *straddr = NULL, *wwn = NULL, *targetbus = NULL;
> + *iothread = NULL, *cache = NULL, *io = NULL,
> + *serial = NULL, *straddr = NULL, *wwn = NULL,
> + *targetbus = NULL;
> struct DiskAddress diskAddr;
> bool isFile = false, functionReturn = false;
> int ret;
> @@ -537,6 +542,7 @@ cmdAttachDisk(vshControl *ctl, const vshCmd *cmd)
> vshCommandOptStringReq(ctl, cmd, "mode", &mode) < 0 ||
> vshCommandOptStringReq(ctl, cmd, "iothread", &iothread) < 0 ||
> vshCommandOptStringReq(ctl, cmd, "cache", &cache) < 0 ||
> + vshCommandOptStringReq(ctl, cmd, "io", &io) < 0 ||
> vshCommandOptStringReq(ctl, cmd, "serial", &serial) < 0 ||
> vshCommandOptStringReq(ctl, cmd, "wwn", &wwn) < 0 ||
> vshCommandOptStringReq(ctl, cmd, "address", &straddr) < 0 ||
> @@ -579,7 +585,7 @@ cmdAttachDisk(vshControl *ctl, const vshCmd *cmd)
> virBufferAddLit(&buf, ">\n");
> virBufferAdjustIndent(&buf, 2);
>
> - if (driver || subdriver || iothread || cache) {
> + if (driver || subdriver || iothread || cache || io) {
> virBufferAddLit(&buf, "<driver");
>
> if (driver)
> @@ -590,6 +596,8 @@ cmdAttachDisk(vshControl *ctl, const vshCmd *cmd)
> virBufferAsprintf(&buf, " iothread='%s'", iothread);
> if (cache)
> virBufferAsprintf(&buf, " cache='%s'", cache);
> + if (io)
> + virBufferAsprintf(&buf, " io='%s'", io);
>
> virBufferAddLit(&buf, "/>\n");
> }
> diff --git a/tools/virsh.pod b/tools/virsh.pod
> index cd1f25f..9656411 100644
> --- a/tools/virsh.pod
> +++ b/tools/virsh.pod
above here... there's the :
=item B<attach-disk> I<domain> I<source> I<target> [[[I<--live>]
[I<--config>]
...
You'll need to an "[I<--io io>]" within the list somewhere.
> @@ -2860,6 +2860,8 @@ I<mode> can specify the two specific mode
> I<readonly> or I<shareable>.
> I<sourcetype> can indicate the type of source (block|file)
> I<cache> can be one of "default", "none", "writethrough", "writeback",
> "directsync" or "unsafe".
> +I<io> io is "threads", or "native" and selects between pthread based disk
> +I/O and native Linux AIO.
> I<iothread> is the number within the range of domain IOThreads to which
> this disk may be attached (QEMU only).
> I<serial> is the serial of disk device. I<wwn> is the wwn of disk device.
Feel free to liberally borrow from the formatdomain description:
The optional io attribute controls specific policies on I/O; qemu guests
support "threads" and "native".
John
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