On Thu, Apr 26, 2018 at 08:16:54PM -0400, John Ferlan wrote:
On 04/26/2018 12:09 PM, Marc Hartmayer wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 26, 2018 at 05:06 PM +0200, John Ferlan <jferlan(a)redhat.com>
wrote:
>> On 04/12/2018 08:40 AM, Marc Hartmayer wrote:
>>> The commit 'close callback: move it to driver' (88f09b75eb99) moved
>>> the responsibility for the close callback to the driver. But if the
>>> driver doesn't support the connectRegisterCloseCallback API this
>>> function does nothing, even no unsupported error report. This behavior
>>> may lead to problems, for example memory leaks, as the caller cannot
>>> differentiate whether the close callback was 'really' registered or
>>> not.
>>>
>>> Therefore, call directly @freecb if the connectRegisterCloseCallback
>>> API is not supported by the driver used by the connection.
>>>
>>> Signed-off-by: Marc Hartmayer <mhartmay(a)linux.vnet.ibm.com>
>>> Reviewed-by: Boris Fiuczynski <fiuczy(a)linux.ibm.com>
>>> ---
>>> src/libvirt-host.c | 10 +++++++---
>>> 1 file changed, 7 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)
>>>
>>> diff --git a/src/libvirt-host.c b/src/libvirt-host.c
>>> index 7ff7407a0874..cb2ace7d9778 100644
>>> --- a/src/libvirt-host.c
>>> +++ b/src/libvirt-host.c
>>> @@ -1221,9 +1221,13 @@ virConnectRegisterCloseCallback(virConnectPtr conn,
>>> virCheckConnectReturn(conn, -1);
>>> virCheckNonNullArgGoto(cb, error);
>>>
>>> - if (conn->driver->connectRegisterCloseCallback &&
>>> - conn->driver->connectRegisterCloseCallback(conn, cb, opaque,
freecb) < 0)
>>> - goto error;
>>> + if (conn->driver->connectRegisterCloseCallback) {
>>> + if (conn->driver->connectRegisterCloseCallback(conn, cb,
opaque, freecb) < 0)
>>> + goto error;
>>> + } else {
>>> + if (freecb)
>>> + freecb(opaque);
>>> + }
>>
>> I see this follows what Daniel suggests from v1:
>>
>>
https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2018-April/msg00116.html
>>
>> but I guess it still baffles me about calling @freecb w/ @opaque. If
>> there was a @freecb routine supplied it'd be called and free @opaque
>> which may actually be used afterwards - after all this is a
>> RegisterCloseCallback which would conceptually be called after open, but
>> before perhaps using the @opaque.
>
> I understand your concerns.
>
>> E.G., the virsh code uses this - with
>> virshReconnect being called from virshInit before entering the loop
>> processing commands. So if @ctl was free'd - things wouldn't be good!
>> Running in debug using '-c test:///default' dumps you into the else.
>
> virshReconnect doesn’t pass a @freecb != NULL argument, does it? So the
> registered callback has not the responsibility to free the memory.
>
True virsh uses NULL so it's fine; however, I was thinking about more
generically - why would a Register routine with a callback to free
memory free the memory upon successful register.
Well the memory passed in 'opaque' is only required to be kept alive for
as long as the callback is registered, and only documented for use by the
callback.
If the application wants to access 'opaque' outside the context of the
callback function, it must take steps to ensure it is still alive in
whatever thread it using it. This implies the data passed for 'opaque'
should be ref-counted and they must hold a reference for their own
usage, separately from the reference assoicated with the callback that
will be released by @freecb.
That all said, we could take a slightly different approach if we want
to be paranoid about this
eg move the
virConnectCloseCallbackDataPtr closeCallback;
out of the driver specific private structs, and put it in the main
struct _virConnect instead.
The main libvirt-host.c can add the callback to this itself. THe
driver code only needs to worry about actually invoking the callback
That would allow us to have freecb() called at the right time for
all drivers, even if they don't ever use the close callback.
I'm still not sure I understand why the API cannot return a failure, but
Daniel says it cannot.
It can break existing applications using hypervisors that don't
implement this API, becasue its a change in behaviour. In retrospect
I wouldn't have written the API in this way today, but we must live
with the design we have.
Regards,
Daniel
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