On Mon, Mar 04, 2013 at 03:38:54PM +0100, Kevin Wolf wrote:
Am 04.03.2013 um 15:27 hat Daniel P. Berrange geschrieben:
> On Mon, Mar 04, 2013 at 03:04:53PM +0100, Kevin Wolf wrote:
> > Am 04.03.2013 um 14:09 hat Daniel P. Berrange geschrieben:
> > I think it makes much more sense to deal with it the way qemu does
> > instead of inventing new names. This has much more of an (incompatible)
> > feature flag than of a different image format. So to fit it in your
> > proposed syntax:
>
> The issue is that QEMU is not the only thing that implements the qcow
> format. There are a number of other impls out there, and we can't just
> assume that they will all be providing a qcow2 driver that automagically
> opens a qcow3 image format. Just in the same way we didn't assume that
> a 'qcow' (version 1) driver would open a version 2 image.
That's true. Other implementation actually tend to have a 'qcow' driver
that deals with both qcow1 and qcow2. But these two are actually
different enough that calling them two different formats might be
acceptable.
In contrast, version 3 images share _exactly_ the same structure with
version 2 images, the just have additional header fields and support
some new flags in some structures (that were previously reserved).
If you call this a different image format, then scratch that whole
<feature> idea, because then each newly added feature is a new image
format by your standards.
No, that's not what I'm saying. The version 3 image format introduces
the ability to set a variety of features in an extensible way. Adding
new features to that list doesn't mean the version has changed.
> It so happens that with QEMU if you specify format=qcow2 and give it
> a qcow3 image, QEMU will open it, but libvirt can't assume that, since
> this is a mere implementation detail. Hence libvirt must explicitly
> refer to 'qcow3' in the XML and map it to qcow2 if applicable when
> talking to QEMU.
If you need this information, sure, save it. I'm just requesting that
you don't abuse the format name for it.
The key distinction is that libvirt XML is recording an generic image
format, while the QEMU cli args are referring to a specific driver
implementation, which are support multiple formats. Typically these
map 1-to-1, but there's no such requirement in general. Hence will
refer to 'qcow3' in all its XML descriptions, and map to 'qcow2' when
talking to QEMU, or even just to 'qcow' if talking to a different impl
which supports all 3 versions in one driver.
> > But I guess you call all VMDKs just "vmdk",
despite the fact that they
> > are really just a collection of different subformats. Right?
>
> Yes, but that is really a bug in our representation of vmdk.
How are you going to fix it? Do you think having ten different format
names all starting with "vmdk" will make tools user friendly?
Well we can't really fix it now, given we've got tools relying on
this naming, but use we ought to have numbered the vmdk formats in
retrospect.
Regards,
Daniel
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