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authorEric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>2016-07-21 13:34:46 -0600
committerPaolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>2016-08-03 18:44:56 +0200
commit7423f417827146f956df820f172d0bf80a489495 (patch)
treec344d494cc4fab46a7bb1daacb0088bc35e9ee1f /scripts/qemu.py
parent5bee0f4717c4c67394aaade0c5a9cee3d42cc614 (diff)
downloadfocaccia-qemu-7423f417827146f956df820f172d0bf80a489495.tar.gz
focaccia-qemu-7423f417827146f956df820f172d0bf80a489495.zip
nbd: Limit nbdflags to 16 bits
Rather than asserting that nbdflags is within range, just give
it the correct type to begin with :)  nbdflags corresponds to
the per-export portion of NBD Protocol "transmission flags", which
is 16 bits in response to NBD_OPT_EXPORT_NAME and NBD_OPT_GO.

Furthermore, upstream NBD has never passed the global flags to
the kernel via ioctl(NBD_SET_FLAGS) (the ioctl was first
introduced in NBD 2.9.22; then a latent bug in NBD 3.1 actually
tried to OR the global flags with the transmission flags, with
the disaster that the addition of NBD_FLAG_NO_ZEROES in 3.9
caused all earlier NBD 3.x clients to treat every export as
read-only; NBD 3.10 and later intentionally clip things to 16
bits to pass only transmission flags).  Qemu should follow suit,
since the current two global flags (NBD_FLAG_FIXED_NEWSTYLE
and NBD_FLAG_NO_ZEROES) have no impact on the kernel's behavior
during transmission.

CC: qemu-stable@nongnu.org
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>

Message-Id: <1469129688-22848-3-git-send-email-eblake@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
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