@@ -2651,10 +2651,26 @@ typedef struct SCSIBlockReq {
/* Selected bytes of the original CDB, copied into our own CDB. */
uint8_t cmd, cdb1, group_number;
+ BlockCompletionFunc *cb;
+ void *cb_opaque;
+
/* CDB passed to SG_IO. */
uint8_t cdb[16];
} SCSIBlockReq;
+static void scsi_block_sgio_cb(void *opaque, int ret)
+{
+ SCSIBlockReq *req = opaque;
+
+ if (!ret &&
+ (req->io_header.status ||
+ req->io_header.host_status ||
+ req->io_header.driver_status)) {
+ ret = -EIO;
+ }
+ req->cb(req->cb_opaque, ret);
+}
+
static BlockAIOCB *scsi_block_do_sgio(SCSIBlockReq *req,
int64_t offset, QEMUIOVector *iov,
int direction,
@@ -2734,7 +2750,9 @@ static BlockAIOCB *scsi_block_do_sgio(SCSIBlockReq *req,
io_header->usr_ptr = r;
io_header->flags |= SG_FLAG_DIRECT_IO;
- aiocb = blk_aio_ioctl(s->qdev.conf.blk, SG_IO, io_header, cb, opaque);
+ req->cb_opaque = opaque;
+ aiocb = blk_aio_ioctl(s->qdev.conf.blk, SG_IO, io_header,
+ scsi_block_sgio_cb, req);
assert(aiocb != NULL);
return aiocb;
}
The callback of blk_aio_ioctl is not sensible to SCSI errors, so werror=stop doesn't work if ioctl returns 0 but the scsi status is error. Peek at the sg_io_hdr_t fields and amend ret to fix that. Signed-off-by: Fam Zheng <famz@redhat.com> --- hw/scsi/scsi-disk.c | 20 +++++++++++++++++++- 1 file changed, 19 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)