953844d102
The reason for not actually canceling the I/O is because with virtualization and lots of VM running, a guest fs may mistake a overload of the host, as an IDE timeout. So rather than canceling the I/O, it's safer to wait I/O completion and simulate that the I/O has completed just before the io cancellation was requested by the guest. This way if ntfs or an app writes data without checking for -EIO retval, and it thinks the write has succeeded, it's less likely to run into troubles. Similar issues for reads. Furthermore because the DMA operation is splitted into many synchronous aio_read/write if there's more than one entry in the SG table, without this patch the DMA would be cancelled in the middle, something we've no idea if it happens on real hardware too or not. Overall this seems a great risk for zero gain. This approach is sure safer than previous code given we can't pretend all guest fs code out there to check for errors and reply the DMA if it was completed partially, given a timeout would never materialize on a real harddisk unless there are defective blocks (and defective blocks are practically only an issue for reads never for writes in any recent hardware as writing to blocks is the way to fix them) or the harddisk breaks as a whole. Signed-off-by: Izik Eidus <ieidus@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Andrea Arcangeli <aarcange@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Kevin Wolf <kwolf@redhat.com> |
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cmd646.c | ||
core.c | ||
internal.h | ||
isa.c | ||
macio.c | ||
microdrive.c | ||
mmio.c | ||
pci.c | ||
pci.h | ||
piix.c | ||
qdev.c | ||
via.c |