libvirt/include
Eric Blake 0282ca45a0 qemu: fix bugs in blockstats
The documentation for virDomainBlockInfo was confusing: it stated
that 'physical' was the size of the container, then gave an example
of it being the amount of storage used by a sparse file (that is,
for a sparse raw image on a regular file, the wording implied
capacity==physical, while allocation was smaller; but the example
instead claimed physical==allocation).  Since we use 'physical' for
the last offset of a block device, we should do likewise for
regular files.

Furthermore, the example claimed that for a qcow2 regular file,
allocation==physical.  At the time the code was first written,
this was true (qcow2 files were allocated sequentially, and were
never sparse, so the last sector written happened to also match
the disk space occupied); but modern qemu does much better and
can punch holes for a qcow2 with allocation < physical.

Basically, after this patch, the three fields are now reliably
mapped as:
 'capacity' - how much storage the guest can see (equal to
physical for raw images, determined by image metadata otherwise)
 'allocation' - how much storage the image occupies (similar to
what 'du' would report)
 'physical' - the last offset of the image (similar to what 'ls'
would report)

'capacity' can be larger than 'physical' (such as for a qcow2
image that does not vary much from a backing file) or smaller
(such as for a qcow2 file with lots of internal snapshots).
Likewise, 'allocation' can be (slightly) larger than 'physical'
(such as counting the tail of cluster allocations required to
round a file size up to filesystem granularity) or smaller
(for a sparse file).  A block-resize operation changes capacity
(which, for raw images, also changes physical); many non-raw
images automatically grow physical and allocation as necessary
when starting with an allocation smaller than capacity; and even
when capacity and physical stay unchanged, allocation can change
when converting sectors from holes to data or back.

Note that this does not change semantics for qcow2 images stored
on block devices; there, we still rely on qemu to report the
highest written extent for allocation.  So using this API to
track when to extend a block device because a qcow2 image is
about to exceed a threshold will not see any changes.

Also, note that virStorageVolInfo is unfortunately limited to
just 'capacity' and 'allocation' (we can't expand it to add
'physical', although we can expand the XML to add it there);
historically, that struct's 'allocation' value has reported
file size for qcow2 files (what this patch terms 'physical'
for a domain block device), but disk usage for raw files (what
this patch terms 'allocation').  So follow-up patches will be
needed to make storage volumes report the same allocation
values and get at physical values, where those differ.

* include/libvirt/libvirt-domain.h (_virDomainBlockInfo): Tweak
documentation to match saner definition.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainGetBlockInfo): For regular
files, physical size is capacity, not allocation.

Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
2014-12-16 23:19:08 -07:00
..
libvirt qemu: fix bugs in blockstats 2014-12-16 23:19:08 -07:00
Makefile.am maint: use LGPL correctly 2013-05-20 14:03:48 -06:00