On 08/17/2011 08:59 AM, Daniel P. Berrange wrote:
On Wed, Aug 17, 2011 at 09:10:41PM +0800, Osier Yang wrote:
If one tries to restore a domain from a corrupt save image, we blindly
goes forward to restore from it, this can cause many different errors,
depending on how much the image is saved. E.g.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=730750
So I'm thinking if we can introduce a new feild to struct qemud_save_header,
such as "bool complete;", and set it true if succeeded to save the image,
false if not. So that could do some checking while trying to open the image
(qemuDomainSaveImageOpen), and quit early if "complete" is false, with
a sensiable error message.
Thought?
I assume you mean that when saving the guest, we'd do the following sequence
1. Write out basic header with complete=false
2. Write out XML doc
3. Run 'migrate' in QEMU to write save state
4. If success, update header with complete=true
And then on restore we'd do
1. If complete == false, then quit with error
2. Run QEMU with -incoming to restore
Yes, I think we need that.
At which point I wonder what's wrong with:
1. Write out basic header
2. Write out XML doc
3. Run 'migrate' in QEMU to write save state
4. If not success, unlink save fail
The only case where there's any difference, is if libvirtd itself crashes
between steps 1& 4.
Remember, that 'migrate' is a long-running async job command, and can be
interrupted. That is, 'service libvirtd restart' is a legal action to
take during step 3, and it is not as severe as a libvirtd crash, and we
have already recently added patches to remember async job status across
libvirtd restarts with the intention of making it legal to restart
libvirtd in the middle of an async job (whether the async job should
still succeed, or should remove the save file, is a slightly different
question; but removing the save file would require that we save in the
XML the name of the file to remove if libvirtd is restarted).
Also, in the case of 'virsh save', the file is user-visible, and there's
no telling if a user does 'virsh save' in one window, then
asynchronously types 'cp file elsewhere; virsh restore elsewhere' in
another window before the first one has finished. Using the longer
algorithm of marking 'complete=false' then revisiting it to write
'complete=true' provides more protection against users accessing their
file system asynchronously, where they can otherwise get a corrupt image
even without a libvirtd crash or restart.
--
Eric Blake eblake@xxxxxxxxxx +1-801-349-2682
Libvirt virtualization library http://libvirt.org
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