xref: /openbmc/qemu/docs/devel/testing/blkverify.rst (revision ca5aa28e)
1Block driver correctness testing with ``blkverify``
2===================================================
3
4Introduction
5------------
6
7This document describes how to use the ``blkverify`` protocol to test that a block
8driver is operating correctly.
9
10It is difficult to test and debug block drivers against real guests.  Often
11processes inside the guest will crash because corrupt sectors were read as part
12of the executable.  Other times obscure errors are raised by a program inside
13the guest.  These issues are extremely hard to trace back to bugs in the block
14driver.
15
16``blkverify`` solves this problem by catching data corruption inside QEMU the first
17time bad data is read and reporting the disk sector that is corrupted.
18
19How it works
20------------
21
22The ``blkverify`` protocol has two child block devices, the "test" device and the
23"raw" device.  Read/write operations are mirrored to both devices so their
24state should always be in sync.
25
26The "raw" device is a raw image, a flat file, that has identical starting
27contents to the "test" image.  The idea is that the "raw" device will handle
28read/write operations correctly and not corrupt data.  It can be used as a
29reference for comparison against the "test" device.
30
31After a mirrored read operation completes, ``blkverify`` will compare the data and
32raise an error if it is not identical.  This makes it possible to catch the
33first instance where corrupt data is read.
34
35Example
36-------
37
38Imagine raw.img has 0xcd repeated throughout its first sector::
39
40    $ ./qemu-io -c 'read -v 0 512' raw.img
41    00000000:  cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd  ................
42    00000010:  cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd  ................
43    [...]
44    000001e0:  cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd  ................
45    000001f0:  cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd cd  ................
46    read 512/512 bytes at offset 0
47    512.000000 bytes, 1 ops; 0.0000 sec (97.656 MiB/sec and 200000.0000 ops/sec)
48
49And test.img is corrupt, its first sector is zeroed when it shouldn't be::
50
51    $ ./qemu-io -c 'read -v 0 512' test.img
52    00000000:  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00  ................
53    00000010:  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00  ................
54    [...]
55    000001e0:  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00  ................
56    000001f0:  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00  ................
57    read 512/512 bytes at offset 0
58    512.000000 bytes, 1 ops; 0.0000 sec (81.380 MiB/sec and 166666.6667 ops/sec)
59
60This error is caught by ``blkverify``::
61
62    $ ./qemu-io -c 'read 0 512' blkverify:a.img:b.img
63    blkverify: read sector_num=0 nb_sectors=4 contents mismatch in sector 0
64
65A more realistic scenario is verifying the installation of a guest OS::
66
67    $ ./qemu-img create raw.img 16G
68    $ ./qemu-img create -f qcow2 test.qcow2 16G
69    $ ./qemu-system-x86_64 -cdrom debian.iso \
70          -drive file=blkverify:raw.img:test.qcow2
71
72If the installation is aborted when ``blkverify`` detects corruption, use ``qemu-io``
73to explore the contents of the disk image at the sector in question.
74