/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/bmaptools/BmapCopy.py is in bmap-tools 3.4-1.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
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# vim: ts=4 sw=4 et ai si
#
# Copyright (c) 2012-2014 Intel, Inc.
# License: GPLv2
# Author: Artem Bityutskiy <artem.bityutskiy@linux.intel.com>
#
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License, version 2,
# as published by the Free Software Foundation.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
# WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
# General Public License for more details.
"""
This module implements copying of images with bmap and provides the following
API.
1. BmapCopy class - implements copying to any kind of file, be that a block
device or a regular file.
2. BmapBdevCopy class - based on BmapCopy and specializes on copying to block
devices. It does some more sanity checks and some block device performance
tuning.
The bmap file is an XML file which contains a list of mapped blocks of the
image. Mapped blocks are the blocks which have disk sectors associated with
them, as opposed to holes, which are blocks with no associated disk sectors. In
other words, the image is considered to be a sparse file, and bmap basically
contains a list of mapped blocks of this sparse file. The bmap additionally
contains some useful information like block size (usually 4KiB), image size,
mapped blocks count, etc.
The bmap is used for copying the image to a block device or to a regular file.
The idea is that we copy quickly with bmap because we copy only mapped blocks
and ignore the holes, because they are useless. And if the image is generated
properly (starting with a huge hole and writing all the data), it usually
contains only little mapped blocks, comparing to the overall image size. And
such an image compresses very well (because holes are read as all zeroes), so
it is beneficial to distributor them as compressed files along with the bmap.
Here is an example. Suppose you have a 4GiB image which contains only 100MiB of
user data and you need to flash it to a slow USB stick. With bmap you end up
copying only a little bit more than 100MiB of data from the image to the USB
stick (namely, you copy only mapped blocks). This is a lot faster than copying
all 4GiB of data. We say that it is a bit more than 100MiB because things like
file-system meta-data (inode tables, superblocks, etc), partition table, etc
also contribute to the mapped blocks and are also copied.
"""
# Disable the following pylint recommendations:
# * Too many instance attributes (R0902)
# * Too many arguments - R0913
# * Too many statements (R0915)
# pylint: disable=R0902
# pylint: disable=R0913
# pylint: disable=R0915
import os
import stat
import sys
import hashlib
import logging
import datetime
if sys.version[0] == '2':
import Queue
import thread
else:
import queue as Queue
import _thread as thread
from xml.etree import ElementTree
from bmaptools.BmapHelpers import human_size
_log = logging.getLogger(__name__) # pylint: disable=C0103
# The highest supported bmap format version
SUPPORTED_BMAP_VERSION = "2.0"
class Error(Exception):
"""
A class for exceptions generated by the 'BmapCopy' module. We currently
support only one type of exceptions, and we basically throw human-readable
problem description in case of errors.
"""
pass
class BmapCopy(object):
"""
This class implements the bmap-based copying functionality. To copy an
image with bmap you should create an instance of this class, which requires
the following:
* full path or a file-like object of the image to copy
* full path or a file object of the destination file copy the image to
* full path or a file object of the bmap file (optional)
* image size in bytes (optional)
Although the main purpose of this class is to use bmap, the bmap is not
required, and if it was not provided then the entire image will be copied
to the destination file.
When the bmap is provided, it is not necessary to specify image size,
because the size is contained in the bmap. Otherwise, it is benefitial to
specify the size because it enables extra sanity checks and makes it
possible to provide the progress bar.
When the image size is known either from the bmap or the caller specified
it to the class constructor, all the image geometry description attributes
('blocks_cnt', etc) are initialized by the class constructor and available
for the user.
However, when the size is not known, some of the image geometry
description attributes are not initialized by the class constructor.
Instead, they are initialized only by the 'copy()' method.
The 'copy()' method implements image copying. You may choose whether to
verify the checksum while copying or not. Note, this is done only in case
of bmap-based copying and only if bmap contains checksums (e.g., bmap
version 1.0 did not have checksums support).
You may choose whether to synchronize the destination file after writing or
not. To explicitly synchronize it, use the 'sync()' method.
This class supports all the bmap format versions up version
'SUPPORTED_BMAP_VERSION'.
It is possible to have a simple progress indicator while copying the image.
Use the 'set_progress_indicator()' method.
You can copy only once with an instance of this class. This means that in
order to copy the image for the second time, you have to create a new class
instance.
"""
def __init__(self, image, dest, bmap=None, image_size=None):
"""
The class constructor. The parameters are:
image - file-like object of the image which should be copied,
should only support 'read()' and 'seek()' methods,
and only seeking forward has to be supported.
dest - file object of the destination file to copy the image
to.
bmap - file object of the bmap file to use for copying.
image_size - size of the image in bytes.
"""
self._xml = None
self._dest_fsync_watermark = None
self._batch_blocks = None
self._batch_queue = None
self._batch_bytes = 1024 * 1024
self._batch_queue_len = 6
self.bmap_version = None
self.bmap_version_major = None
self.bmap_version_minor = None
self.block_size = None
self.blocks_cnt = None
self.mapped_cnt = None
self.image_size = None
self.image_size_human = None
self.mapped_size = None
self.mapped_size_human = None
self.mapped_percent = None
self._f_bmap = None
self._f_bmap_path = None
self._progress_started = None
self._progress_index = None
self._progress_time = None
self._progress_file = None
self._progress_format = None
self.set_progress_indicator(None, None)
self._f_image = image
self._image_path = image.name
self._f_dest = dest
self._dest_path = dest.name
st_data = os.fstat(self._f_dest.fileno())
self._dest_is_regfile = stat.S_ISREG(st_data.st_mode)
# The bmap file checksum type and length
self._cs_type = None
self._cs_len = None
self._cs_attrib_name = None
self._bmap_cs_attrib_name = None
# Special quirk for /dev/null which does not support fsync()
if stat.S_ISCHR(st_data.st_mode) and \
os.major(st_data.st_rdev) == 1 and \
os.minor(st_data.st_rdev) == 3:
self._dest_supports_fsync = False
else:
self._dest_supports_fsync = True
if bmap:
self._f_bmap = bmap
self._bmap_path = bmap.name
self._parse_bmap()
else:
# There is no bmap. Initialize user-visible attributes to something
# sensible with an assumption that we just have all blocks mapped.
self.bmap_version = 0
self.block_size = 4096
self.mapped_percent = 100
if image_size:
self._set_image_size(image_size)
self._batch_blocks = self._batch_bytes // self.block_size
def set_progress_indicator(self, file_obj, format_string):
"""
Setup the progress indicator which shows how much data has been copied
in percent.
The 'file_obj' argument is the console file object where the progress
has to be printed to. Pass 'None' to disable the progress indicator.
The 'format_string' argument is the format string for the progress
indicator. It has to contain a single '%d' placeholder which will be
substitutes with copied data in percent.
"""
self._progress_file = file_obj
if format_string:
self._progress_format = format_string
else:
self._progress_format = "Copied %d%%"
def _set_image_size(self, image_size):
"""
Set image size and initialize various other geometry-related attributes.
"""
if self.image_size is not None and self.image_size != image_size:
raise Error("cannot set image size to %d bytes, it is known to "
"be %d bytes (%s)" % (image_size, self.image_size,
self.image_size_human))
self.image_size = image_size
self.image_size_human = human_size(image_size)
self.blocks_cnt = (self.image_size + self.block_size - 1) // self.block_size
if self.mapped_cnt is None:
self.mapped_cnt = self.blocks_cnt
self.mapped_size = self.image_size
self.mapped_size_human = self.image_size_human
def _verify_bmap_checksum(self):
"""
This is a helper function which verifies the bmap file checksum.
"""
import mmap
correct_chksum = self._xml.find(self._bmap_cs_attrib_name).text.strip()
# Before verifying the shecksum, we have to substitute the checksum
# value stored in the file with all zeroes. For these purposes we
# create private memory mapping of the bmap file.
mapped_bmap = mmap.mmap(self._f_bmap.fileno(), 0,
access=mmap.ACCESS_COPY)
chksum_pos = mapped_bmap.find(correct_chksum.encode())
assert chksum_pos != -1
mapped_bmap[chksum_pos:chksum_pos + self._cs_len] = b'0' * self._cs_len
hash_obj = hashlib.new(self._cs_type)
hash_obj.update(mapped_bmap)
calculated_chksum = hash_obj.hexdigest()
mapped_bmap.close()
if calculated_chksum != correct_chksum:
raise Error("checksum mismatch for bmap file '%s': calculated "
"'%s', should be '%s'"
% (self._bmap_path, calculated_chksum, correct_chksum))
def _parse_bmap(self):
"""
Parse the bmap file and initialize corresponding class instance attributs.
"""
try:
self._xml = ElementTree.parse(self._f_bmap)
except ElementTree.ParseError as err:
# Extrace the erroneous line with some context
self._f_bmap.seek(0)
xml_extract = ""
for num, line in enumerate(self._f_bmap):
if num >= err.position[0] - 4 and num <= err.position[0] + 4:
xml_extract += "Line %d: %s" % (num, line)
raise Error("cannot parse the bmap file '%s' which should be a "
"proper XML file: %s, the XML extract:\n%s" %
(self._bmap_path, err, xml_extract))
xml = self._xml
self.bmap_version = str(xml.getroot().attrib.get('version'))
# Make sure we support this version
self.bmap_version_major = int(self.bmap_version.split('.', 1)[0])
self.bmap_version_minor = int(self.bmap_version.split('.', 1)[1])
if self.bmap_version_major > int(SUPPORTED_BMAP_VERSION.split('.', 1)[0]):
raise Error("only bmap format version up to %d is supported, "
"version %d is not supported"
% (SUPPORTED_BMAP_VERSION, self.bmap_version_major))
# Fetch interesting data from the bmap XML file
self.block_size = int(xml.find("BlockSize").text.strip())
self.blocks_cnt = int(xml.find("BlocksCount").text.strip())
self.mapped_cnt = int(xml.find("MappedBlocksCount").text.strip())
self.image_size = int(xml.find("ImageSize").text.strip())
self.image_size_human = human_size(self.image_size)
self.mapped_size = self.mapped_cnt * self.block_size
self.mapped_size_human = human_size(self.mapped_size)
self.mapped_percent = (self.mapped_cnt * 100.0) / self.blocks_cnt
blocks_cnt = (self.image_size + self.block_size - 1) // self.block_size
if self.blocks_cnt != blocks_cnt:
raise Error("Inconsistent bmap - image size does not match "
"blocks count (%d bytes != %d blocks * %d bytes)"
% (self.image_size, self.blocks_cnt, self.block_size))
if self.bmap_version_major > 1 or \
(self.bmap_version_major == 1 and self.bmap_version_minor == 4):
# In bmap format version 1.0-1.3 the only supported checksum type
# was SHA1. Version 2.0 started supporting arbitrary checksum
# types. A new "ChecksumType" tag was introduce to specify the
# checksum function name. And all XML tags which contained "sha1"
# in their name were renamed to something more neutral. This was an
# change incompatible with previous formats.
#
# There is a special format version 1.4, which should not have been
# ever issued, but was released by a mistake. The mistake was that
# when implementing version 2.0 support we mistakenly gave it
# version number 1.4. This was later on fixed and format version
# 1.4 became version 2.0. So 1.4 and 2.0 formats are identical.
#
# Note, bmap files did not contain checksums prior to version 1.3.
self._cs_type = xml.find("ChecksumType").text.strip()
self._cs_attrib_name = "chksum"
self._bmap_cs_attrib_name = "BmapFileChecksum"
elif self.bmap_version_minor == 3:
self._cs_type = "sha1"
self._cs_attrib_name = "sha1"
self._bmap_cs_attrib_name = "BmapFileSHA1"
if self._cs_type:
try:
self._cs_len = len(hashlib.new(self._cs_type).hexdigest())
except ValueError as err:
raise Error("cannot initialize hash function \"%s\": %s" %
(self._cs_type, err))
self._verify_bmap_checksum()
def _update_progress(self, blocks_written):
"""
Print the progress indicator if the mapped area size is known and if
the indicator has been enabled by assigning a console file object to
the 'progress_file' attribute.
"""
if self.mapped_cnt:
assert blocks_written <= self.mapped_cnt
percent = int((float(blocks_written) / self.mapped_cnt) * 100)
_log.debug("wrote %d blocks out of %d (%d%%)" %
(blocks_written, self.mapped_cnt, percent))
else:
_log.debug("wrote %d blocks" % blocks_written)
if not self._progress_file:
return
if self.mapped_cnt:
progress = '\r' + self._progress_format % percent + '\n'
else:
# Do not rotate the wheel too fast
now = datetime.datetime.now()
min_delta = datetime.timedelta(milliseconds=250)
if now - self._progress_time < min_delta:
return
self._progress_time = now
progress_wheel = ('-', '\\', '|', '/')
progress = '\r' + progress_wheel[self._progress_index % 4] + '\n'
self._progress_index += 1
# This is a little trick we do in order to make sure that the next
# message will always start from a new line - we switch to the new
# line after each progress update and move the cursor up. As an
# example, this is useful when the copying is interrupted by an
# exception - the error message will start form new line.
if self._progress_started:
# The "move cursor up" escape sequence
self._progress_file.write('\033[1A') # pylint: disable=W1401
else:
self._progress_started = True
self._progress_file.write(progress)
self._progress_file.flush()
def _get_block_ranges(self):
"""
This is a helper generator that parses the bmap XML file and for each
block range in the XML file it yields ('first', 'last', 'chksum')
tuples, where:
* 'first' is the first block of the range;
* 'last' is the last block of the range;
* 'chksum' is the checksum of the range ('None' is used if it is
missing).
If there is no bmap file, the generator just yields a single range
for entire image file. If the image size is unknown, the generator
infinitely yields continuous ranges of size '_batch_blocks'.
"""
if not self._f_bmap:
# We do not have the bmap, yield a tuple with all blocks
if self.blocks_cnt:
yield (0, self.blocks_cnt - 1, None)
else:
# We do not know image size, keep yielding tuples with many
# blocks infinitely.
first = 0
while True:
yield (first, first + self._batch_blocks - 1, None)
first += self._batch_blocks
return
# We have the bmap, just read it and yield block ranges
xml = self._xml
xml_bmap = xml.find("BlockMap")
for xml_element in xml_bmap.findall("Range"):
blocks_range = xml_element.text.strip()
# The range of blocks has the "X - Y" format, or it can be just "X"
# in old bmap format versions. First, split the blocks range string
# and strip white-spaces.
split = [x.strip() for x in blocks_range.split('-', 1)]
first = int(split[0])
if len(split) > 1:
last = int(split[1])
if first > last:
raise Error("bad range (first > last): '%s'" % blocks_range)
else:
last = first
if self._cs_attrib_name in xml_element.attrib:
chksum = xml_element.attrib[self._cs_attrib_name]
else:
chksum = None
yield (first, last, chksum)
def _get_batches(self, first, last):
"""
This is a helper generator which splits block ranges from the bmap file
to smaller batches. Indeed, we cannot read and write entire block
ranges from the image file, because a range can be very large. So we
perform the I/O in batches. Batch size is defined by the
'_batch_blocks' attribute. Thus, for each (first, last) block range,
the generator yields smaller (start, end, length) batch ranges, where:
* 'start' is the starting batch block number;
* 'last' is the ending batch block number;
* 'length' is the batch length in blocks (same as
'end' - 'start' + 1).
"""
batch_blocks = self._batch_blocks
while first + batch_blocks - 1 <= last:
yield (first, first + batch_blocks - 1, batch_blocks)
first += batch_blocks
batch_blocks = last - first + 1
if batch_blocks:
yield (first, first + batch_blocks - 1, batch_blocks)
def _get_data(self, verify):
"""
This is generator which reads the image file in '_batch_blocks' chunks
and yields ('type', 'start', 'end', 'buf) tuples, where:
* 'start' is the starting block number of the batch;
* 'end' is the last block of the batch;
* 'buf' a buffer containing the batch data.
"""
try:
for (first, last, chksum) in self._get_block_ranges():
if verify and chksum:
hash_obj = hashlib.new(self._cs_type)
self._f_image.seek(first * self.block_size)
iterator = self._get_batches(first, last)
for (start, end, length) in iterator:
try:
buf = self._f_image.read(length * self.block_size)
except IOError as err:
raise Error("error while reading blocks %d-%d of the "
"image file '%s': %s"
% (start, end, self._image_path, err))
if not buf:
self._batch_queue.put(None)
return
if verify and chksum:
hash_obj.update(buf)
blocks = (len(buf) + self.block_size - 1) // self.block_size
_log.debug("queueing %d blocks, queue length is %d" %
(blocks, self._batch_queue.qsize()))
self._batch_queue.put(("range", start, start + blocks - 1,
buf))
if verify and chksum and hash_obj.hexdigest() != chksum:
raise Error("checksum mismatch for blocks range %d-%d: "
"calculated %s, should be %s (image file %s)"
% (first, last, hash_obj.hexdigest(),
chksum, self._image_path))
# Silence pylint warning about catching too general exception
# pylint: disable=W0703
except Exception:
# pylint: enable=W0703
# In case of any exception - just pass it to the main thread
# through the queue.
self._batch_queue.put(("error", sys.exc_info()))
self._batch_queue.put(None)
def copy(self, sync=True, verify=True):
"""
Copy the image to the destination file using bmap. The 'sync' argument
defines whether the destination file has to be synchronized upon
return. The 'verify' argument defines whether the checksum has to be
verified while copying.
"""
# Create the queue for block batches and start the reader thread, which
# will read the image in batches and put the results to '_batch_queue'.
self._batch_queue = Queue.Queue(self._batch_queue_len)
thread.start_new_thread(self._get_data, (verify, ))
blocks_written = 0
bytes_written = 0
fsync_last = 0
self._progress_started = False
self._progress_index = 0
self._progress_time = datetime.datetime.now()
if self.image_size and self._dest_is_regfile:
# If we already know image size, make sure that destination file
# has the same size as the image
try:
os.ftruncate(self._f_dest.fileno(), self.image_size)
except OSError as err:
raise Error("cannot truncate file '%s': %s"
% (self._dest_path, err))
# Read the image in '_batch_blocks' chunks and write them to the
# destination file
while True:
batch = self._batch_queue.get()
if batch is None:
# No more data, the image is written
break
elif batch[0] == "error":
# The reader thread encountered an error and passed us the
# exception.
exc_info = batch[1]
raise exc_info[1].with_traceback(exc_info[2])
(start, end, buf) = batch[1:4]
assert len(buf) <= (end - start + 1) * self.block_size
assert len(buf) > (end - start) * self.block_size
self._f_dest.seek(start * self.block_size)
# Synchronize the destination file if we reached the watermark
if self._dest_fsync_watermark:
if blocks_written >= fsync_last + self._dest_fsync_watermark:
fsync_last = blocks_written
self.sync()
try:
self._f_dest.write(buf)
except IOError as err:
raise Error("error while writing blocks %d-%d of '%s': %s"
% (start, end, self._dest_path, err))
self._batch_queue.task_done()
blocks_written += (end - start + 1)
bytes_written += len(buf)
self._update_progress(blocks_written)
if not self.image_size:
# The image size was unknown up until now, set it
self._set_image_size(bytes_written)
# This is just a sanity check - we should have written exactly
# 'mapped_cnt' blocks.
if blocks_written != self.mapped_cnt:
raise Error("wrote %u blocks from image '%s' to '%s', but should "
"have %u - bmap file '%s' does not belong to this "
"image"
% (blocks_written, self._image_path, self._dest_path,
self.mapped_cnt, self._bmap_path))
if self._dest_is_regfile:
# Make sure the destination file has the same size as the image
try:
os.ftruncate(self._f_dest.fileno(), self.image_size)
except OSError as err:
raise Error("cannot truncate file '%s': %s"
% (self._dest_path, err))
try:
self._f_dest.flush()
except IOError as err:
raise Error("cannot flush '%s': %s" % (self._dest_path, err))
if sync:
self.sync()
def sync(self):
"""
Synchronize the destination file to make sure all the data are actually
written to the disk.
"""
if self._dest_supports_fsync:
try:
os.fsync(self._f_dest.fileno()),
except OSError as err:
raise Error("cannot synchronize '%s': %s "
% (self._dest_path, err.strerror))
class BmapBdevCopy(BmapCopy):
"""
This class is a specialized version of 'BmapCopy' which copies the image to
a block device. Unlike the base 'BmapCopy' class, this class does various
optimizations specific to block devices, e.g., switching to the 'noop' I/O
scheduler.
"""
def __init__(self, image, dest, bmap=None, image_size=None):
"""
The same as the constructor of the 'BmapCopy' base class, but adds
useful guard-checks specific to block devices.
"""
# Call the base class constructor first
BmapCopy.__init__(self, image, dest, bmap, image_size)
self._dest_fsync_watermark = (6 * 1024 * 1024) // self.block_size
self._sysfs_base = None
self._sysfs_scheduler_path = None
self._sysfs_max_ratio_path = None
self._old_scheduler_value = None
self._old_max_ratio_value = None
# If the image size is known, check that it fits the block device
if self.image_size:
try:
bdev_size = os.lseek(self._f_dest.fileno(), 0, os.SEEK_END)
os.lseek(self._f_dest.fileno(), 0, os.SEEK_SET)
except OSError as err:
raise Error("cannot seed block device '%s': %s "
% (self._dest_path, err.strerror))
if bdev_size < self.image_size:
raise Error("the image file '%s' has size %s and it will not "
"fit the block device '%s' which has %s capacity"
% (self._image_path, self.image_size_human,
self._dest_path, human_size(bdev_size)))
# Construct the path to the sysfs directory of our block device
st_rdev = os.fstat(self._f_dest.fileno()).st_rdev
self._sysfs_base = "/sys/dev/block/%s:%s/" % \
(os.major(st_rdev), os.minor(st_rdev))
# Check if the 'queue' sub-directory exists. If yes, then our block
# device is entire disk. Otherwise, it is a partition, in which case we
# need to go one level up in the sysfs hierarchy.
if not os.path.exists(self._sysfs_base + "queue"):
self._sysfs_base = self._sysfs_base + "../"
self._sysfs_scheduler_path = self._sysfs_base + "queue/scheduler"
self._sysfs_max_ratio_path = self._sysfs_base + "bdi/max_ratio"
def _tune_block_device(self):
"""
Tune the block device for better performance:
1. Switch to the 'noop' I/O scheduler if it is available - sequential
write to the block device becomes a lot faster comparing to CFQ.
2. Limit the write buffering - we do not need the kernel to buffer a
lot of the data we send to the block device, because we write
sequentially. Limit the buffering.
The old settings are saved in order to be able to restore them later.
"""
# Switch to the 'noop' I/O scheduler
try:
with open(self._sysfs_scheduler_path, "r+") as f_scheduler:
contents = f_scheduler.read()
f_scheduler.seek(0)
f_scheduler.write("noop")
except IOError as err:
_log.warning("failed to enable I/O optimization, expect "
"suboptimal speed (reason: cannot switch to the "
"'noop' I/O scheduler: %s)" % err)
else:
# The file contains a list of schedulers with the current
# scheduler in square brackets, e.g., "noop deadline [cfq]".
# Fetch the name of the current scheduler.
import re
match = re.match(r'.*\[(.+)\].*', contents)
if match:
self._old_scheduler_value = match.group(1)
# Limit the write buffering, because we do not need too much of it when
# writing sequntially. Excessive buffering makes some systems not very
# responsive, e.g., this was observed in Fedora 17.
try:
with open(self._sysfs_max_ratio_path, "r+") as f_ratio:
self._old_max_ratio_value = f_ratio.read()
f_ratio.seek(0)
f_ratio.write("1")
except IOError as err:
_log.warning("failed to disable excessive buffering, expect "
"worse system responsiveness (reason: cannot set "
"max. I/O ratio to 1: %s)" % err)
def _restore_bdev_settings(self):
"""
Restore old block device settings which we changed in
'_tune_block_device()'.
"""
if self._old_scheduler_value is not None:
try:
with open(self._sysfs_scheduler_path, "w") as f_scheduler:
f_scheduler.write(self._old_scheduler_value)
except IOError as err:
raise Error("cannot restore the '%s' I/O scheduler: %s"
% (self._old_scheduler_value, err))
if self._old_max_ratio_value is not None:
try:
with open(self._sysfs_max_ratio_path, "w") as f_ratio:
f_ratio.write(self._old_max_ratio_value)
except IOError as err:
raise Error("cannot set the max. I/O ratio back to '%s': %s"
% (self._old_max_ratio_value, err))
def copy(self, sync=True, verify=True):
"""
The same as in the base class but tunes the block device for better
performance before starting writing. Additionally, it forces block
device synchronization from time to time in order to make sure we do
not get stuck in 'fsync()' for too long time. The problem is that the
kernel synchronizes block devices when the file is closed. And the
result is that if the user interrupts us while we are copying the data,
the program will be blocked in 'close()' waiting for the block device
synchronization, which may last minutes for slow USB stick. This is
very bad user experience, and we work around this effect by
synchronizing from time to time.
"""
self._tune_block_device()
try:
BmapCopy.copy(self, sync, verify)
except:
raise
finally:
self._restore_bdev_settings()
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