| Block I/O error injection using blkdebug |
| ---------------------------------------- |
| Copyright (C) 2014 Red Hat Inc |
| |
| This work is licensed under the terms of the GNU GPL, version 2 or later. See |
| the COPYING file in the top-level directory. |
| |
| The blkdebug block driver is a rule-based error injection engine. It can be |
| used to exercise error code paths in block drivers including ENOSPC (out of |
| space) and EIO. |
| |
| This document gives an overview of the features available in blkdebug. |
| |
| Background |
| ---------- |
| Block drivers have many error code paths that handle I/O errors. Image formats |
| are especially complex since metadata I/O errors during cluster allocation or |
| while updating tables happen halfway through request processing and require |
| discipline to keep image files consistent. |
| |
| Error injection allows test cases to trigger I/O errors at specific points. |
| This way, all error paths can be tested to make sure they are correct. |
| |
| Rules |
| ----- |
| The blkdebug block driver takes a list of "rules" that tell the error injection |
| engine when to fail an I/O request. |
| |
| Each I/O request is evaluated against the rules. If a rule matches the request |
| then its "action" is executed. |
| |
| Rules can be placed in a configuration file; the configuration file |
| follows the same .ini-like format used by QEMU's -readconfig option, and |
| each section of the file represents a rule. |
| |
| The following configuration file defines a single rule: |
| |
| $ cat blkdebug.conf |
| [inject-error] |
| event = "read_aio" |
| errno = "28" |
| |
| This rule fails all aio read requests with ENOSPC (28). Note that the errno |
| value depends on the host. On Linux, see |
| /usr/include/asm-generic/errno-base.h for errno values. |
| |
| Invoke QEMU as follows: |
| |
| $ qemu-system-x86_64 |
| -drive if=none,cache=none,file=blkdebug:blkdebug.conf:test.img,id=drive0 \ |
| -device virtio-blk-pci,drive=drive0,id=virtio-blk-pci0 |
| |
| Rules support the following attributes: |
| |
| event - which type of operation to match (e.g. read_aio, write_aio, |
| flush_to_os, flush_to_disk). See the "Events" section for |
| information on events. |
| |
| state - (optional) the engine must be in this state number in order for this |
| rule to match. See the "State transitions" section for information |
| on states. |
| |
| errno - the numeric errno value to return when a request matches this rule. |
| The errno values depend on the host since the numeric values are not |
| standarized in the POSIX specification. |
| |
| sector - (optional) a sector number that the request must overlap in order to |
| match this rule |
| |
| once - (optional, default "off") only execute this action on the first |
| matching request |
| |
| immediately - (optional, default "off") return a NULL BlockDriverAIOCB |
| pointer and fail without an errno instead. This exercises the |
| code path where BlockDriverAIOCB fails and the caller's |
| BlockDriverCompletionFunc is not invoked. |
| |
| Events |
| ------ |
| Block drivers provide information about the type of I/O request they are about |
| to make so rules can match specific types of requests. For example, the qcow2 |
| block driver tells blkdebug when it accesses the L1 table so rules can match |
| only L1 table accesses and not other metadata or guest data requests. |
| |
| The core events are: |
| |
| read_aio - guest data read |
| |
| write_aio - guest data write |
| |
| flush_to_os - write out unwritten block driver state (e.g. cached metadata) |
| |
| flush_to_disk - flush the host block device's disk cache |
| |
| See block/blkdebug.c:event_names[] for the full list of events. You may need |
| to grep block driver source code to understand the meaning of specific events. |
| |
| State transitions |
| ----------------- |
| There are cases where more power is needed to match a particular I/O request in |
| a longer sequence of requests. For example: |
| |
| write_aio |
| flush_to_disk |
| write_aio |
| |
| How do we match the 2nd write_aio but not the first? This is where state |
| transitions come in. |
| |
| The error injection engine has an integer called the "state" that always starts |
| initialized to 1. The state integer is internal to blkdebug and cannot be |
| observed from outside but rules can interact with it for powerful matching |
| behavior. |
| |
| Rules can be conditional on the current state and they can transition to a new |
| state. |
| |
| When a rule's "state" attribute is non-zero then the current state must equal |
| the attribute in order for the rule to match. |
| |
| For example, to match the 2nd write_aio: |
| |
| [set-state] |
| event = "write_aio" |
| state = "1" |
| new_state = "2" |
| |
| [inject-error] |
| event = "write_aio" |
| state = "2" |
| errno = "5" |
| |
| The first write_aio request matches the set-state rule and transitions from |
| state 1 to state 2. Once state 2 has been entered, the set-state rule no |
| longer matches since it requires state 1. But the inject-error rule now |
| matches the next write_aio request and injects EIO (5). |
| |
| State transition rules support the following attributes: |
| |
| event - which type of operation to match (e.g. read_aio, write_aio, |
| flush_to_os, flush_to_disk). See the "Events" section for |
| information on events. |
| |
| state - (optional) the engine must be in this state number in order for this |
| rule to match |
| |
| new_state - transition to this state number |
| |
| Suspend and resume |
| ------------------ |
| Exercising code paths in block drivers may require specific ordering amongst |
| concurrent requests. The "breakpoint" feature allows requests to be halted on |
| a blkdebug event and resumed later. This makes it possible to achieve |
| deterministic ordering when multiple requests are in flight. |
| |
| Breakpoints on blkdebug events are associated with a user-defined "tag" string. |
| This tag serves as an identifier by which the request can be resumed at a later |
| point. |
| |
| See the qemu-io(1) break, resume, remove_break, and wait_break commands for |
| details. |