From: Launchpad Bug Tracker <721825@bugs.launchpad.net>
To: qemu-devel@nongnu.org
Subject: [Bug 721825] Re: VDI block driver bugs
Date: Mon, 26 Jul 2021 04:17:19 -0000 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <162727303927.6411.18092802211446842666.malone@loganberry.canonical.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: 20110219161957.9055.80104.malonedeb@gandwana.canonical.com
[Expired for QEMU because there has been no activity for 60 days.]
** Changed in: qemu
Status: Incomplete => Expired
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/721825
Title:
VDI block driver bugs
Status in QEMU:
Expired
Bug description:
Chunqiang Tang reports the following issues with the VDI block driver,
these are present in QEMU 0.14:
"Bug 1. The most serious bug is caused by race condition in updating a new
bmap entry in memory and on disk. Considering the following operation
sequence.
O1: VM issues a write to sector X
O2: VDI allocates a new bmap entry and updates in-memory s->bmap
O3: VDI writes data to disk
O4: The disk I/O for writing sector X fails
O5: VDI reports error to VM and returns.
Note that the bmap entry is updated in memory, but not persisted on disk.
Now consider another write that immediately follows:
P1: VM issues a write to sector X+1, which locates in the same block as
the previously used sector X.
P2: s->bmap already has one entry for the block, and hence VDI writes
data directly without persisting the new s->bmap entry on disk.
P3: The write disk I/O succeeds
P4: VDI report success to VM, but the bitmap entry is still not
persisted on disk.
Now suppose the VM powers off gracefully (i.e., the QEMU process quits)
and reboots. The second write to sector X+1, which is reported as finished
successfully, is simply lost, because the corresponding in-memory s->bmap
entry is never persisted on disk. This is exactly what FVD's testing tool
discovers. After the block device is closed and then re-opened, disk
content verification fails.
This is just one example of the problem. Race condition plus host crash
also causes problems. Consider another example below.
Q1: VM issues a write to sector X
Q2: VDI allocates a new bmap entry and updates in-memory s->bmap
Q3: VDI writes sector X to disk and waits for the callback
Q4: VM issues a write to another sector X+1, which is in the same block
as sector X.
Q5: VDI sees the bitmap entry in s->bmap is already allocated, and
writes sector X+1 to disk.
Q6: Write to sector X+1 finishes, and VDI's callback is invoked.
Q7: VDI acknowledges to the VM the completion of writing sector X+1
Q8: After observing the completion of writing sector X+1, VM issues a
flush to ensure that sector X+1 is persisted on disk.
Q9: VDI finishes the flush and acknowledge the completion of the
operation.
Q10: ... (some other arbitrary operations, but the disk I/O for writing
sector X is still not finished....)
Q11: The host crashes
Now the new bitmap entry is not persisted on disk, while both writing to
sector X+1 and the flush has been acknowledged as finished. Sector X+1 is
lost, which is a corruption. This problem exists even if it uses O_DSYNC.
The root cause of the problem is that, if a request updates in-memory
s->bmap, another request that sees this update assumes that the update is
already persisted on disk, which is not.
Bug 2: Similar to the bugs the FVD testing tool found for QCOW2, there are
several cases of the code below on failure handling path without setting
error return code, which mistakenly reports failure as success. This
mistake is caught by FVD when doing image content validation.
if (acb->hd_aiocb == NULL) {
/* missing ret = -EIO; */
goto done;
}
Bug 3: Similar to the bugs the FVD testing tool found for QCOW2,
vdi_aio_cancel does not perform a complete clean up and there are several
related bugs. First, memory buffer is not freed, acb->orig_buf and
acb->block_buffer. Second, acb->bh is not cancelled. Third,
vdi_aio_setup() does not initialize acb->bh to NULL so that when a request
acb is cancelled and then later reused for another request, its acb->bh !=
NULL and the new request fails in vdi_schedule_bh(). This is caught by
FVD's testing tool, when it observes that no I/O failure is injected but
VDI reports a failed I/O request, which indicates a bug in the driver."
http://permalink.gmane.org/gmane.comp.emulators.qemu/94340
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prev parent reply other threads:[~2021-07-26 4:27 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 9+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2011-02-19 16:19 [Qemu-devel] [Bug 721825] [NEW] VDI block driver bugs Stefan Hajnoczi
2011-02-20 18:29 ` [Qemu-devel] [Bug 721825] " Stefan Weil
2017-05-19 19:36 ` Thomas Huth
2017-05-19 20:08 ` Stefan Hajnoczi
2017-05-19 23:25 ` Thomas Huth
2018-08-31 4:35 ` Thomas Huth
2021-05-03 9:58 ` Thomas Huth
2021-05-26 14:46 ` Thomas Huth
2021-07-26 4:17 ` Launchpad Bug Tracker [this message]
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