From: Kevin Wolf Date: Fri, 12 Apr 2024 14:42:02 +0000 (+0200) Subject: usb-storage: Fix BlockConf defaults X-Git-Url: http://git.maquefel.me/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=a12214d1c4204d2f51d8724993b8dfcf50dd7d94;p=qemu.git usb-storage: Fix BlockConf defaults Commit 30896374 started to pass the full BlockConf from usb-storage to scsi-disk, while previously only a few select properties would be forwarded. This enables the user to set more properties, e.g. the block size, that are actually taking effect. However, now the calls to blkconf_apply_backend_options() and blkconf_blocksizes() in usb_msd_storage_realize() that modify some of these properties take effect, too, instead of being silently ignored. This means at least that the block sizes get an unconditional default of 512 bytes before the configuration is passed to scsi-disk. Before commit 30896374, the property wouldn't be set for scsi-disk and therefore the device dependent defaults would apply - 512 for scsi-hd, but 2048 for scsi-cd. The latter default has now become 512, too, which makes at least Windows 11 installation fail when installing from usb-storage. Fix this by simply not calling these functions any more in usb-storage and passing BlockConf on unmodified (except for the BlockBackend). The same functions are called by the SCSI code anyway and it sets the right defaults for the actual media type. Fixes: 308963746169 ('scsi: Don't ignore most usb-storage properties') Resolves: https://gitlab.com/qemu-project/qemu/-/issues/2260 Reported-by: Jonas Svensson Signed-off-by: Kevin Wolf Reviewed-by: Hanna Czenczek Message-id: 20240412144202.13786-1-kwolf@redhat.com Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell --- diff --git a/hw/usb/dev-storage-classic.c b/hw/usb/dev-storage-classic.c index 50a3ad6285..6147387dc6 100644 --- a/hw/usb/dev-storage-classic.c +++ b/hw/usb/dev-storage-classic.c @@ -38,15 +38,6 @@ static void usb_msd_storage_realize(USBDevice *dev, Error **errp) return; } - if (!blkconf_blocksizes(&s->conf, errp)) { - return; - } - - if (!blkconf_apply_backend_options(&s->conf, !blk_supports_write_perm(blk), - true, errp)) { - return; - } - /* * Hack alert: this pretends to be a block device, but it's really * a SCSI bus that can serve only a single device, which it