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[Qemu-devel] Re: [RFC] qed: Add QEMU Enhanced Disk format


From: Kevin Wolf
Subject: [Qemu-devel] Re: [RFC] qed: Add QEMU Enhanced Disk format
Date: Mon, 06 Sep 2010 12:27:31 +0200
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux x86_64; en-US; rv:1.9.1.11) Gecko/20100720 Fedora/3.0.6-1.fc12 Thunderbird/3.0.6

Am 06.09.2010 12:04, schrieb Stefan Hajnoczi:
> QEMU Enhanced Disk format is a disk image format that forgoes features
> found in qcow2 in favor of better levels of performance and data
> integrity.  Due to its simpler on-disk layout, it is possible to safely
> perform metadata updates more efficiently.
> 
> Installations, suspend-to-disk, and other allocation-heavy I/O workloads
> will see increased performance due to fewer I/Os and syncs.  Workloads
> that do not cause new clusters to be allocated will perform similar to
> raw images due to in-memory metadata caching.
> 
> The format supports sparse disk images.  It does not rely on the host
> filesystem holes feature, making it a good choice for sparse disk images
> that need to be transferred over channels where holes are not supported.
> 
> Backing files are supported so only deltas against a base image can be
> stored.
> 
> The file format is extensible so that additional features can be added
> later with graceful compatibility handling.
> 
> Internal snapshots are not supported.  This eliminates the need for
> additional metadata to track copy-on-write clusters.
> 
> Compression and encryption are not supported.  They add complexity and
> can be implemented at other layers in the stack (i.e. inside the guest
> or on the host).
> 
> The format is currently functional with the following features missing:
>  * Resizing the disk image.  The capability has been designed in but the
>    code has not been written yet.
>  * Resetting the image after backing file commit completes.
>  * Changing the backing filename.
>  * Consistency check (fsck).  This is simple due to the on-disk layout.
> 
> Signed-off-by: Anthony Liguori <address@hidden>
> Signed-off-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <address@hidden>

Okay, so before I actually look at the patch longer than a couple of
seconds let me just ask the obvious question...

Before inventing yet another image format, you certainly have checked
the existing ones. Except for not implementing compression and
encryption this looks a lot like qcow1 to me. I see that you even
retained the two-level cluster tables.

So if we ignore the implementation for a moment and just compare the
formats, what's the crucial difference between qcow1 and qed that I'm
missing? And if it's not qcow1, why not improving our support for
another existing format like VHD?

Kevin



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