similar to: [nbdkit PATCH 0/4] Spec compliance patches

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 2000 matches similar to: "[nbdkit PATCH 0/4] Spec compliance patches"

2019 Sep 28
11
[nbdkit PATCH v2 0/7] Spec compliance patches
Since the v1 series (0/4, at [1]), I've applied patches 1 and 2, rewritten patch 3 [Forbid NUL in export and context names] into patch 4 here, patch 4 there turned into patch 6 here, and everything else here is new. [1]https://www.redhat.com/archives/libguestfs/2019-September/msg00180.html I don't know if there is a handy reusable function for checking whether a string contains valid
2020 Feb 11
4
[PATCH nbdkit v2 0/3] server: Remove explicit connection parameter.
v1 was here: https://www.redhat.com/archives/libguestfs/2020-February/msg00081.html v2 replaces struct connection *conn = GET_CONN; with GET_CONN; which sets conn implicitly and asserts that it is non-NULL. If we actually want to test if conn is non-NULL or behave differently, then you must use threadlocal_get_conn() instead, and some existing uses do that. Rich.
2020 Feb 11
5
[PATCH nbdkit 0/3] server: Remove explicit connection parameter.
The third patch is a large but mechanical change which gets rid of passing around struct connection * entirely within the server, preferring instead to reference the connection through thread-local storage. I hope this is a gateway to simplifying other parts of the code. Rich.
2019 Mar 18
3
[PATCH nbdkit 0/2] server: Split out NBD protocol code from connections code.
These are a couple of patches in preparation for the Block Status implementation. While the patches (especially the second one) are very large they are really just elementary code motion. Rich.
2018 Nov 29
2
[nbdkit PATCH] connections: Implement NBD_OPT_INFO
qemu is about to add 'qemu-nbd --list', which exercises NBD_OPT_LIST and NBD_OPT_INFO to give the user as much detail as possible about an export without actually connecting to it. For that to display more than the export name when nbdkit is the server, we need to implement NBD_OPT_INFO. Thankfully, the NBD spec intentionally made the command very similar to NBD_OPT_GO, to the point that
2020 Jul 21
4
[PATCH nbdkit] server: Pass the export name through filter .open calls.
To allow filters to modify the export name as it passes through the layers this commit makes several changes: The filter .open callback now takes an extra parameter, the export name. This is always non-NULL (for oldstyle it is ""). This string has a short lifetime and filters that need to hang on to it must take a copy. The filter must pass the exportname parameter down to the next
2019 Sep 10
2
[PATCH nbdkit] server: Add nbdkit_export_name() to allow export name to be read.
This is the sort of thing I had in mind for option (1) here: https://www.redhat.com/archives/libguestfs/2019-September/msg00047.html It does reveal that the way we currently list exports is naive to say the least ... Rich.
2019 Sep 12
4
[PATCH nbdkit v2 0/3] Access export name from plugins.
The previous incomplete patch was here: https://www.redhat.com/archives/libguestfs/2019-September/msg00049.html based on earlier discussion here: https://www.redhat.com/archives/libguestfs/2019-September/msg00047.html In v2: - The previous patch was incomplete. This version completes it by adding tests and extending nbdkit-sh-plugin. - nbdkit_export_name now returns NULL for error,
2020 Aug 25
9
[nbdkit PATCH 0/5] Implement .default_export, nbdkit_string_intern
More patches on the way for improving .list_exports signature and adding .export_description, but this is the promised code showing why nbdkit_string_intern is useful. Patch 4 is somewhat RFC: we could either add new API to take the boilerplate from: foo_config(const char *key, const char *value) { if (strcmp (key, "file") == 0) { CLEANUP_FREE char *tmp = nbdkit_realpath (value);
2020 Aug 27
10
[nbdkit PATCH v2 0/8] exportname filter
This is a revision of my .default_export work, plus new work on .export_descriptions and a new exportname filter. I think it is now ready to check in. Things I'd still like in 1.22: - the file plugin should implement .list_exports (patch already posted, but it needs rebasing on this series) - the ext2 filter should override .list_exports when in exportname mode - the nbd plugin should be
2018 Aug 06
3
[PATCH nbdkit v2] protocol: Implement NBD_OPT_GO.
There's no substantial difference over v1, I simply fixed a few whitespace issues, moved one struct around and tidied up the comments. Rich.
2020 Sep 21
18
[nbdkit PATCH v3 00/14] exportname filter
It's been several weeks since I posted v2 (I got distracted by improving libnbd to better test things, which in turn surfaced some major memory leak problems in nbdsh that are now fixed). Many of the patches are minor rebases from v2, with the biggest changes being fallout from: - patch 2: rename nbdkit_add_default_export to nbdkit_use_default_export - overall: this missed 1.22, so update
2019 Sep 19
0
[nbdkit PATCH 4/4] server: Fix OPT_GO on different export than SET_META_CONTEXT
The NBD spec says that if a client requests SET_META_CONTEXT for exportA, but later requests NBD_OPT_GO/EXPORT_NAME for exportB, then the server should reject NBD_CMD_BLOCK_STATUS requests (that is, the context returned for exportA need not apply to exportB). When we originally added base:allocation, our argument was that we always ignore export names, so it was easier to just treat any two
2019 Sep 19
0
[nbdkit PATCH 1/4] server: Fix regression for NBD_OPT_INFO before NBD_OPT_GO
Most known NBD clients do not bother with NBD_OPT_INFO (except for clients like 'qemu-nbd --list' that don't ever intend to connect), but go straight to NBD_OPT_GO. However, it's not too hard to hack up qemu to add in an extra client step (whether info on the same name, or more interestingly, info on a different name), as a patch against qemu commit 6f214b30445: | diff --git
2018 Aug 04
3
[PATCH nbdkit] protocol: Implement NBD_OPT_GO.
This is only lightly tested (against just qemu NBD client), and the code might be structured a little better as the _negotiate_handshake_newstyle_options function has now grown to be huge. Anyway works for me. Rich.
2020 Aug 19
3
[libnbd PATCH 0/2] NBD_OPT_INFO support
This replaces 13/13 of my v2 series; and now that it has pretty good testsuite coverage and demonstrable performance improvement to nbdinfo, I'm going ahead and pushing this now. We may still want to add further nbd_opt_* commands for other fine-grained tuning of negotiation, but for now, I think things have stabilized on this end, and I can return to polishing .list_exports on the nbdkit
2019 Oct 04
6
[nbdkit PATCH 0/5] Another round of retry fixes
I still don't have .prepare/.finalize working cleanly across reopen, but did find a nasty bug where a botched assertion means we failed to notice reads beyond EOF in both the xz and retry filter. Refactoring backend.c will make .finalize work easier. Eric Blake (5): xz: Avoid reading beyond EOF retry: Check size before transactions tests: Test retry when get_size values change
2019 Sep 28
0
[nbdkit PATCH v2 6/7] server: Fix OPT_GO on different export than SET_META_CONTEXT
The NBD spec says that if a client requests SET_META_CONTEXT for exportA, but later requests NBD_OPT_GO/EXPORT_NAME for exportB, then the server should reject NBD_CMD_BLOCK_STATUS requests (that is, the context returned for exportA need not apply to exportB). When we originally added base:allocation, our argument was that we always ignore export names, so it was easier to just treat any two
2018 Dec 06
10
[PATCH nbdkit 0/5] protocol: Generate map functions from NBD protocol flags to printable strings.
With some crufty sed scripts we can generate functions that map from NBD protocol flags (eg. NBD_CMD_READ) to strings ("NBD_CMD_READ"). This works on GNU sed and with FreeBSD, also with GNU sed's --posix option, so I guess the sed code is POSIX-compatible. Rich.
2019 Sep 12
3
[nbdkit PATCH 0/2] Make client fallback testing easier
This is similar to the recent --no-sr option - it's a change that is unlikely to ever be used except by someone testing whether a client is compliant to the protocol, but in that niche case, it can be quite handy (it's a lot nicer to be able to purposefully cripple a server from the command line than from a one-off compile, when testing if a client's fallback for a spec-compliant but