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* A question about how to calculate the "Maximum transfer length" in case of its absence in the Block Limits VPD device response from the hardware
@ 2025-04-17 11:27 lma
  2025-04-18 15:34 ` Stefan Hajnoczi
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread
From: lma @ 2025-04-17 11:27 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: qemu-devel; +Cc: pbonzini, stefanha

Hi all,

In case of SCSI passthrough, If the Block Limits VPD device response is 
absent from hardware, QEMU handles it.

There are several variables involved in this process as follows:
* The bl.max_transfer
* The bl.max_iov that is associated with IOV_MAX.
* The bl.max_hw_iov that is associated with the max_segments sysfs 
setting for the relevant block device on the host.
* The bl.max_hw_transfer that is associated with the BLKSECTGET ioctl, 
in other words related to the current max_sectors_kb sysfs setting of 
the relevant block device on the host.

Then take the smallest value and return it as the result of "Maximum 
transfer length" after relevant calculation, See:
static uint64_t calculate_max_transfer(SCSIDevice *s)
{
     uint64_t max_transfer = blk_get_max_hw_transfer(s->conf.blk);
     uint32_t max_iov = blk_get_max_hw_iov(s->conf.blk);

     assert(max_transfer);
     max_transfer = MIN_NON_ZERO(max_transfer,
                                 max_iov * qemu_real_host_page_size());

     return max_transfer / s->blocksize;
}


However, due to the limitation of IOV_MAX, no matter how powerful the 
host scsi hardware is, the "Maximum transfer length" that qemu emulates 
in bl vpd page is capped at 8192 sectors in case of 4kb page size and 
512 bytes logical block size.
For example:
host:~ # sg_vpd -p bl /dev/sda
Block limits VPD page (SBC)
   ......
   Maximum transfer length: 0 blocks [not reported]
   ......


host:~ # cat /sys/class/block/sda/queue/max_sectors_kb
16384

host:~ # cat /sys/class/block/sda/queue/max_hw_sectors_kb
32767

host:~ # cat /sys/class/block/sda/queue/max_segments
4096


Expected:
guest:~ # sg_vpd -p bl /dev/sda
Block limits VPD page (SBC)
   ......
   Maximum transfer length: 0x8000
   ......

guest:~ # cat /sys/class/block/sda/queue/max_sectors_kb
16384

guest:~ # cat /sys/class/block/sda/queue/max_hw_sectors_kb
32767


Actual:
guest:~ # sg_vpd -p bl /dev/sda
Block limits VPD page (SBC)
   ......
   Maximum transfer length: 0x2000
   ......

guest:~ # cat /sys/class/block/sda/queue/max_sectors_kb
4096

guest:~ # cat /sys/class/block/sda/queue/max_hw_sectors_kb
32767


It seems the current design logic is not able to fully utilize the 
performance of the scsi hardware. I have two questions:
1. I'm curious that is it reasonable to drop the logic about IOV_MAX 
limitation, directly use the return value of BLKSECTGET as the maximum 
transfer length when QEMU emulates the block limit page of scsi vpd?
    If we doing so, we will have maximum transfer length in the guest 
that is consistent with the capabilities of the host hardware。

2. Besides, Assume I set a value(eg: 8192 in kb) to max_sectors_kb in 
guest which doesn't exceed the capabilities of the host hardware(eg: 
16384 in kb) but exceeds the limit(eg: 4096 in kb) caused by IOV_MAX,
    Any risks in readv()/writev() of raw-posix?

Lin


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2025-04-25  3:22 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 6+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2025-04-17 11:27 A question about how to calculate the "Maximum transfer length" in case of its absence in the Block Limits VPD device response from the hardware lma
2025-04-18 15:34 ` Stefan Hajnoczi
2025-04-23  9:47   ` lma
2025-04-23 13:24     ` Stefan Hajnoczi
     [not found]       ` <32c2072d6fc017786f4d6ef0dd681ae7@suse.de>
2025-04-24 14:51         ` Stefan Hajnoczi
2025-04-25  3:21           ` lma

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