Hi all!
I'd like to be sure that we know where we are going to.
In blockdev-era where qemu user is aware about block nodes, all nodes have good names and
controlled by user we can efficiently use block filters.
We already have some useful filters: copy-on-read, throttling, compress. In my parallel
series I make backup-top filter public and useful without backup block jobs. But now
filters could be inserted only together with opening their child. We can specify filters
in qemu cmdline, or filter can take place in the block node chain created by
blockdev-add.
Still, it would be good to insert/remove filters on demand.
Currently we are going to use x-blockdev-reopen for this. Still it can't be used to
insert a filter above root node (as x-blockdev-reopen can change only block node options
and their children). In my series "[PATCH 00/21] block: publish backup-top
filter" I propose (as Kevin suggested) to modify qom-set, so that it can set drive
option of running device. That's not difficult, but it means that we have different
scenario of inserting/removing filters:
1. filter above root node X:
inserting:
- do blockdev-add to add a filter (and specify X as its child)
- do qom-set to set new filter as a rood node instead of X
removing
- do qom-set to make X a root node again
- do blockdev-del to drop a filter
2. filter between two block nodes P and X. (For example, X is a backing child of P)
inserting
- do blockdev-add to add a filter (and specify X as its child)
- do blockdev-reopen to set P.backing = filter
remvoing
- do blockdev-reopen to set P.backing = X
- do blockdev-del to drop a filter
And, probably we'll want transaction support for all these things.
Is it OK? Or do we need some kind of additional blockdev-replace command, that can replace
one node by another, so in both cases we will do
inserting:
- blockdev-add filter
- blockdev-replace (make all parents of X to point to the new filter instead (except
for the filter itself of course)
removing
- blockdev-replace (make all parante of filter to be parents of X instead)
- blockdev-del filter
It's simple to implement, and it seems for me that it is simpler to use. Any
thoughts?
--
Best regards,
Vladimir