pc-bios/s390-ccw: Fix booting with logical block size < physical block size

For accessing single blocks during boot, it's the logical block size that
matters. (Physical block sizes are rather interesting e.g. for creating
file systems with the correct alignment for speed reasons etc.).
So the s390-ccw bios has to use the logical block size for calculating
sector numbers during the boot phase, the "physical_block_exp" shift
value must not be taken into account. This change fixes the boot process
when the guest hast been installed on a disk where the logical block size
differs from the physical one, e.g. if the guest has been installed
like this:

 qemu-system-s390x -nographic -accel kvm -m 2G \
  -drive if=none,id=d1,file=fedora.iso,format=raw,media=cdrom \
  -device virtio-scsi -device scsi-cd,drive=d1 \
  -drive if=none,id=d2,file=test.qcow2,format=qcow2
  -device virtio-blk,drive=d2,physical_block_size=4096,logical_block_size=512

Linux correctly uses the logical block size of 512 for the installation,
but the s390-ccw bios tries to boot from a disk with 4096 block size so
far, as long as this patch has not been applied yet (well, it used to work
by accident in the past due to the virtio_assume_scsi() hack that used to
enforce 512 byte sectors on all virtio-block disks, but that hack has been
well removed in commit 5447de2619 to fix other scenarios).

Fixes: 5447de2619 ("pc-bios/s390-ccw/virtio-blkdev: Remove virtio_assume_scsi()")
Buglink: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=2112303
Message-Id: <20220805094214.285223-1-thuth@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Cornelia Huck <cohuck@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Farman <farman@linux.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Huth <thuth@redhat.com>
This commit is contained in:
Thomas Huth 2022-08-05 11:42:14 +02:00
parent c669f22f1a
commit 393296de19

View file

@ -173,7 +173,7 @@ int virtio_get_block_size(void)
switch (vdev->senseid.cu_model) {
case VIRTIO_ID_BLOCK:
return vdev->config.blk.blk_size << vdev->config.blk.physical_block_exp;
return vdev->config.blk.blk_size;
case VIRTIO_ID_SCSI:
return vdev->scsi_block_size;
}