qga/commands-posix: Fix bug in guest-fstrim

The FITRIM ioctl updates the fstrim_range structure it receives. This
way the caller can determine how many bytes were trimmed. The
guest-fstrim logic reuses the same fstrim_range for each filesystem,
effectively limiting each filesystem to trim at most as much as the
previous was able to trim.

If a previous filesystem would have trimmed 0 bytes, than the next
filesystem would report an error 'Invalid argument' because a FITRIM
request with length 0 is not valid.

This change resets the fstrim_range structure for each filesystem.

Signed-off-by: Justin Ossevoort <justin@quarantainenet.nl>
Reviewed-by: Thomas Huth <thuth@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Roth <mdroth@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
master
Justin Ossevoort 2015-05-11 08:58:44 +02:00 committed by Michael Roth
parent 7ce0f7dc87
commit 73a652a1b0
1 changed files with 4 additions and 5 deletions

View File

@ -1332,11 +1332,7 @@ void qmp_guest_fstrim(bool has_minimum, int64_t minimum, Error **errp)
struct FsMount *mount;
int fd;
Error *local_err = NULL;
struct fstrim_range r = {
.start = 0,
.len = -1,
.minlen = has_minimum ? minimum : 0,
};
struct fstrim_range r;
slog("guest-fstrim called");
@ -1360,6 +1356,9 @@ void qmp_guest_fstrim(bool has_minimum, int64_t minimum, Error **errp)
* error means an unexpected error, so return it in those cases. In
* some other cases ENOTTY will be reported (e.g. CD-ROMs).
*/
r.start = 0;
r.len = -1;
r.minlen = has_minimum ? minimum : 0;
ret = ioctl(fd, FITRIM, &r);
if (ret == -1) {
if (errno != ENOTTY && errno != EOPNOTSUPP) {