summary refs log tree commit diff stats
path: root/results/classifier/accel-gemma3:12b/kvm/1926231
blob: e05b65fe7bd43eeff8a4a81b2976a32b2b1aaad7 (plain) (blame)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
SCSI passthrough of SATA cdrom -> errors & performance issues

qemu 5.0, compiled from git

I am passing through a SATA cdrom via SCSI passthrough, with this libvirt XML:

    <hostdev mode='subsystem' type='scsi' managed='no' sgio='unfiltered' rawio='yes'>
      <source>
        <adapter name='scsi_host3'/>
        <address bus='0' target='0' unit='0'/>
      </source>
      <alias name='hostdev0'/>
      <address type='drive' controller='0' bus='0' target='0' unit='0'/>
    </hostdev>

It seems to mostly work, I have written discs with it, except I am getting errors that cause reads to take about 5x as long as they should, under certain circumstances.  It appears to be based on the guest's read block size.

I found that if on the guest I run, say `dd if=$some_large_file bs=262144|pv > /dev/null`, `iostat` and `pv` disagree about how much is being read by a factor of about 2.  Also many kernel messages like this happen on the guest:

[  190.919684] sr 0:0:0:0: [sr0] tag#160 FAILED Result: hostbyte=DID_OK driverbyte=DRIVER_SENSE cmd_age=0s
[  190.919687] sr 0:0:0:0: [sr0] tag#160 Sense Key : Aborted Command [current] 
[  190.919689] sr 0:0:0:0: [sr0] tag#160 Add. Sense: I/O process terminated
[  190.919691] sr 0:0:0:0: [sr0] tag#160 CDB: Read(10) 28 00 00 18 a5 5a 00 00 80 00
[  190.919694] blk_update_request: I/O error, dev sr0, sector 6460776 op 0x0:(READ) flags 0x80700 phys_seg 5 prio class 0

If I change to bs=131072 the errors stop and performance is normal.

(262144 happens to be the block size ultimately used by md5sum, which is how I got here)

I also ran strace on the qemu process while it was happening, and noticed SG_IO calls like this:

21748 10:06:29.330910 ioctl(22, SG_IO, {interface_id='S', dxfer_direction=SG_DXFER_FROM_DEV, cmd_len=10, cmdp="\x28\x00\x00\x12\x95\x5a\x00\x00\x80\x00", mx_sb_len=252, iovec_count=0, dxfer_len=262144, timeout=4294967295, flags=SG_FLAG_DIRECT_IO <unfinished ...>
21751 10:06:29.330976 ioctl(22, SG_IO, {interface_id='S', dxfer_direction=SG_DXFER_FROM_DEV, cmd_len=10, cmdp="\x28\x00\x00\x12\x94\xda\x00\x00\x02\x00", mx_sb_len=252, iovec_count=0, dxfer_len=4096, timeout=4294967295, flags=SG_FLAG_DIRECT_IO <unfinished ...>
21749 10:06:29.331586 ioctl(22, SG_IO, {interface_id='S', dxfer_direction=SG_DXFER_FROM_DEV, cmd_len=10, cmdp="\x28\x00\x00\x12\x94\xdc\x00\x00\x02\x00", mx_sb_len=252, iovec_count=0, dxfer_len=4096, timeout=4294967295, flags=SG_FLAG_DIRECT_IO <unfinished ...>
[etc]

I suspect qemu is the culprit because I have tried a 4.19 guest kernel as well as a 5.9 one, with the same result.