On Tue, Aug 21, 2012 at 1:08 PM, Stephen Warren swarren@wwwdotorg.org wrote:
On 08/20/2012 10:47 PM, Will Drewry wrote:
On Mon, Aug 20, 2012 at 1:30 PM, Stephen Warren swarren@wwwdotorg.org wrote:
On 08/20/2012 12:22 PM, Tejun Heo wrote:
Hello,
On Fri, Aug 17, 2012 at 04:10:52PM -0600, Stephen Warren wrote:
I was considering extending the kernel command-line option root=PARTUUID= to also support MBR (NT disk signatures). I was thinking of a syntax along the lines of:
root=PARTUUID=UUUUUUUU-PP[/PARTNROFF=%d]
... where UUUUUUUU is the hex representation of the NT disk signature, and PP is the hex representation of the partition number. Like GPT, /PARTNROFF could be used too if desired.
Related, I was thinking of changing struct partition_meta_info's uuid field to be a string, so that it could simply be strcmp'd against the UUID value on the kernel command-line. That way, the type of the UUID is irrelevant.
Does anyone have any objection to that?
Wouldn't that be able to break setups which work currently?
I don't believe so:
Since the newly supported UUID syntax wouldn't ever match any EFI UUID (the lengths differ in all cases), I don't believe the new syntax would affect behavior for any existing usage.
Obviously, part_efi.c would be modified to initialize struct partition_meta_info's uuid field to the appropriate string representation of the UUID so that the str(case)cmp would still succeed for existing command-lines. I ended up coding up that part of the change late Friday, and the feature was certainly still working OK.
Functionally, I suspect this will work fine, but I am concerned that it is a bad move from an efficiency perspective (not unfixable though). Right now, the user-supplied value is converted from string-uuid to packed-uuid. This is then memcmp'd across any and all partitions - be it 2 or 200 - across all attached storage. If we move to a pure string, then we end up needing to unpack every packed UUID at disk scan time (or search, depending on impl) rather than just the one user supplied value.
The EFI partition code actually does the following already:
- Unpack the UUID from the binary on-disk representation to a temporary
string. 2) Repack the temporary string into the internal UUID buffer.
The comments imply this is in order to do endian conversions.
Switching the internal representation to a string avoids step (2) above, plus avoids having to pack the string on the kernel command-line into a binary UUID before the comparison. I doubt the difference between memcmp vs. strcasecmp is worth considering. So, I think it's overall a win.
Sounds reasonable to me then.
Thanks! will