Commit Graph

2150 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jim Fehlig
b049acb0a8 docs: schema: make disk driver name attribute optional
/domain/devices/disk/driver/@name is not a required or mandatory
attribute according to formatdomain, and indeed it was agreed on
IRC that the attribute is "optional for input, recommended (but
not required) for output". Currently the schema requires the
attribute, causing virt-xml-validate to fail on disk config where
the driver name is not explicitly specified. E.g.

# cat test.xml | grep -A 5 cdrom
    <disk type='file' device='cdrom'>
      <driver type='raw'/>
      <target dev='hdb' bus='ide'/>
      <readonly/>
      <address type='drive' controller='0' bus='0' target='0' unit='1'/>
    </disk>

# virt-xml-validate test.xml
Relax-NG validity error : Extra element devices in interleave
test.xml:21: element devices: Relax-NG validity error : Element domain failed to validate content
test.xml fails to validate

Relaxing the name attribute to be optional fixes the validation

# virt-xml-validate test.xml
test.xml validates

(cherry picked from commit b494e09d05)
2017-08-03 17:19:49 -04:00
Ján Tomko
987213ac7d schema: do not require name for certain pool types
Pool types that have the VIR_STORAGE_POOL_SOURCE_NAME flag set
allow omitting the <name> element and instead fill out the pool name
from the <source><name> element.

Relax the schema to make <name> optional for these pools.
Expressing that at least one of these is required is out of scope
of the schema.

(cherry picked from commit 8ef12b96fa)
2017-05-10 15:42:44 -04:00
Daniel Veillard
255f35e124 Release of libvirt-2.2.0
* docs/news.html.in: update for release
* po/*po*: regenerate
2016-09-02 15:28:51 +02:00
Christophe Fergeau
2ff85c28a0 docs: Add missing / to closing tag
The iothread example for virtio-scsi should be
<driver iothread='4'/> rather than <driver iothread='4'>
for the XML to be valid.
2016-08-26 14:58:00 -04:00
Peter Krempa
54147fd9be doc: clarify documentation for vcpu order
Make it clear that vcpu order is valid for online vcpus only and state
that it has to be specified for all vcpus or not provided at all.

Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1370043
2016-08-26 11:23:00 -04:00
Peter Krempa
9eb9106ea5 qemu: command: Add support for sparse vcpu topologies
Add support for using the new approach to hotplug vcpus using device_add
during startup of qemu to allow sparse vcpu topologies.

There are a few limitations imposed by qemu on the supported
configuration:
- vcpu0 needs to be always present and not hotpluggable
- non-hotpluggable cpus need to be ordered at the beginning
- order of the vcpus needs to be unique for every single hotpluggable
  entity

Qemu also doesn't really allow to query the information necessary to
start a VM with the vcpus directly on the commandline. Fortunately they
can be hotplugged during startup.

The new hotplug code uses the following approach:
- non-hotpluggable vcpus are counted and put to the -smp option
- qemu is started
- qemu is queried for the necessary information
- the configuration is checked
- the hotpluggable vcpus are hotplugged
- vcpus are started

This patch adds a lot of checking code and enables the support to
specify the individual vcpu element with qemu.
2016-08-24 15:44:47 -04:00
Peter Krempa
5847bc5c64 conf: Add XML for individual vCPU hotplug
Individual vCPU hotplug requires us to track the state of any vCPU. To
allow this add the following XML:

<domain>
  ...
  <vcpu current='2'>3</vcpu>
  <vcpus>
    <vcpu id='0' enabled='yes' hotpluggable='no' order='1'/>
    <vcpu id='1' enabled='yes' hotpluggable='yes' order='2'/>
    <vcpu id='1' enabled='no' hotpluggable='yes'/>
  </vcpus>
  ...

The 'enabled' attribute allows to control the state of the vcpu.
'hotpluggable' controls whether given vcpu can be hotplugged and 'order'
allows to specify the order to add the vcpus.
2016-08-24 15:44:47 -04:00
Laine Stump
0b6336c2d9 network: allow limiting a <forwarder> element to certain domains
For some unknown reason the original implementation of the <forwarder>
element only took advantage of part of the functionality in the
dnsmasq feature it exposes - it allowed specifying the ip address of a
DNS server which *all* DNS requests would be forwarded to, like this:

   <forwarder addr='192.168.123.25'/>

This is a frontend for dnsmasq's "server" option, which also allows
you to specify a domain that must be matched in order for a request to
be forwarded to a particular server. This patch adds support for
specifying the domain. For example:

   <forwarder domain='example.com' addr='192.168.1.1'/>
   <forwarder domain='www.example.com'/>
   <forwarder domain='travesty.org' addr='10.0.0.1'/>

would forward requests for bob.example.com, ftp.example.com and
joe.corp.example.com all to the DNS server at 192.168.1.1, but would
forward requests for travesty.org and www.travesty.org to
10.0.0.1. And due to the second line, requests for www.example.com,
and odd.www.example.com would be resolved by the libvirt network's own
DNS server (i.e. thery wouldn't be immediately forwarded) even though
they also match 'example.com' - the match is given to the entry with
the longest matching domain. DNS requests not matching any of the
entries would be resolved by the libvirt network's own DNS server.

Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1331796
2016-08-19 21:34:51 -04:00
Laine Stump
9065cfaa88 network: allow disabling dnsmasq's DNS server
If you define a libvirt virtual network with one or more IP addresses,
it starts up an instance of dnsmasq. It's always been possible to
avoid dnsmasq's dhcp server (simply don't include a <dhcp> element),
but until now it wasn't possible to avoid having the DNS server
listening; even if the network has no <dns> element, it is started
using default settings.

This patch adds a new attribute to <dns>: enable='yes|no'. For
backward compatibility, it defaults to 'yes', but if you don't want a
DNS server created for the network, you can simply add:

   <dns enable='no'/>

to the network configuration, and next time the network is started
there will be no dns server created (if there is dhcp configuration,
dnsmasq will be started with "port=0" which disables the DNS server;
if there is no dhcp configuration, dnsmasq won't be started at all).
2016-08-19 21:10:34 -04:00
Laine Stump
25e8112d7c network: new network forward mode 'open'
The new forward mode 'open' is just like mode='route', except that no
firewall rules are added to assure that any traffic does or doesn't
pass. It is assumed that either they aren't necessary, or they will be
setup outside the scope of libvirt.

Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=846810
2016-08-19 21:05:15 -04:00
Michal Privoznik
c4b92f1a8a schema: Don't validate paths
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1353296

On UNIX like systems there are no constraints on what characters
can be in file/dir names (except for NULL, obviously). Moreover,
some values that we think of as paths (e.g. disk source) are not
necessarily paths at all. For instance, some hypervisors take
that as an arbitrary identifier and corresponding file is then
looked up by hypervisor in its table. Instead of trying to fix
our regular expressions (and forgetting to include yet another
character there), lets drop the validation completely.

Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
2016-08-12 10:59:21 +02:00
Laine Stump
b70e54342b conf: don't allow connecting upstream-port directly to pce-expander-bus
I apparently misunderstood Marcel's description of what could and
couldn't be plugged into qemu's pxb-pcie controller (known as
pcie-expander-bus in libvirt) - I specifically allowed directly
connecting a pcie-switch-upstream-port, and it turns out that causes
the guest kernel to crash.

This patch forbids such a connection, and updates the xml docs
appropriately.

Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1361172
2016-08-10 10:26:21 -04:00
Michal Privoznik
e396de03f3 docs: Distribute subsite.xsl
So, I've ran into very interesting problem lately. When doing the
following, I've encountered an error:

  libvirt.git $ make dist && tar -xJf libvirt-2.2.0.tar.xz && \
                cd libvirt-2.2.0 && ./configure && \
                rm docs/formatdomain.html && make -C docs

  make: Entering directory 'docs'
  make: *** No rule to make target 'formatdomain.html', needed by 'web'.  Stop.
  make: Leaving directory 'docs'

I had no idea what was going on, so I've nailed down the commit
that "broke it" via running git-bisect. It was this one:
7659bd9221. But that shed no more light until I realized
that the commit might actually just exposed a problem we had. And
guess what - I've nailed it down. Of course we are not
distributing subsite.xsl that's why make prints error message.
Very misleading one I must say.

Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
2016-08-08 11:49:35 +02:00
Michal Privoznik
64c2480043 Introduce @secure attribute to os loader element
This element will control secure boot implemented by some
firmwares. If the firmware used in <loader/> does support the
feature we must tell it to the underlying hypervisor. However, we
can't know whether loader does support it or not just by looking
at the file. Therefore we have to have an attribute to the
element where users can tell us whether the firmware is secure
boot enabled or not.

Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
2016-08-04 17:14:20 +02:00
Michal Privoznik
d0e4be9d02 Introduce SMM feature
Since its release of 2.4.0 qemu is able to enable System
Management Module in the firmware, or disable it. We should
expose this capability in the XML. Unfortunately, there's no good
way to determine whether the binary we are talking to supports
it. I mean, if qemu's run with real machine type, the smm
attribute can be seen in 'qom-list /machine' output. But it's not
there when qemu's run with -M none. Therefore we're stuck with
version based check.

Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
2016-08-04 17:14:20 +02:00
John Ferlan
2197ea56d7 conf: Add IOThread quota and period scheduler/cputune defs
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1356937

Add the definitions to allow for viewing/setting cgroup period and quota
limits for IOThreads.

This is similar to the work done for emulator quota and period by
commit ids 'b65dafa' and 'e051c482'.

Being able to view/set the IOThread specific values is related to more
recent changes adding global period (commmit id '4d92d58f') and global
quota (commit id '55ecdae') definitions and qemu support (commit id
'4e17ff79' and 'fbcbd1b2'). With a global setting though, if somehow
the IOThread value in the cgroup hierarchy was set "outside of libvirt"
to a value that is incompatible with the global value.

Allowing control over IOThread specific values provides the capability
to alter the IOThread values as necessary.
2016-08-03 06:36:22 -04:00
Cédric Bosdonnat
7d3b2eb58f libxl: add hooks support
Introduce libxl hook and use it for start, prepare, started,
stop, stopped, migrate events.
2016-08-02 14:20:31 +02:00
Chunyan Liu
be146b349f extend usb controller model to support xen pvusb
According to libxl implementation, it supports pvusb
controller of version 1.1 and version 2.0, and it
supports two types of backend, 'pvusb' (dom0 backend)
and 'qusb' (qemu backend). But currently pvusb backend
is not checked in yet.

To match libxl support, extend usb controller schema
to support two more models: qusb1 (qusb, version 1.1)
and 'qusb2' (qusb version 2.0).

Signed-off-by: Chunyan Liu <cyliu@suse.com>
2016-08-02 14:02:21 +02:00
Daniel Veillard
1fa8fd1a9b Release of libvirt-2.1.0
* docs/news.html.in: updated for release
* po/*.po*: regenerated
2016-08-02 12:35:06 +02:00
Nikolay Shirokovskiy
03c1e0f38f schema: fix resolved interfaces of network type
This patch reflects cases when <interface> element and its <source>
subelement for network type are formated based on actual type resolved
from referenced network instead of original one. networkAllocateActualDevice
and virDomainActualNetDefContentsFormat are taken as reference.
2016-08-01 11:30:51 +02:00
Nikolay Shirokovskiy
0e8083da3b schema: add missed alias element to memory device 2016-08-01 11:30:51 +02:00
Daniel P. Berrange
a48c714115 storage: remove "luks" storage volume type
The current LUKS support has a "luks" volume type which has
a "luks" encryption format.

This partially makes sense if you consider the QEMU shorthand
syntax only requires you to specify a format=luks, and it'll
automagically uses "raw" as the next level driver. QEMU will
however let you override the "raw" with any other driver it
supports (vmdk, qcow, rbd, iscsi, etc, etc)

IOW the intention though is that the "luks" encryption format
is applied to all disk formats (whether raw, qcow2, rbd, gluster
or whatever). As such it doesn't make much sense for libvirt
to say the volume type is "luks" - we should be saying that it
is a "raw" file, but with "luks" encryption applied.

IOW, when creating a storage volume we should use this XML

  <volume>
    <name>demo.raw</name>
    <capacity>5368709120</capacity>
    <target>
      <format type='raw'/>
      <encryption format='luks'>
        <secret type='passphrase' uuid='0a81f5b2-8403-7b23-c8d6-21ccd2f80d6f'/>
      </encryption>
    </target>
  </volume>

and when configuring a guest disk we should use

  <disk type='file' device='disk'>
    <driver name='qemu' type='raw'/>
    <source file='/home/berrange/VirtualMachines/demo.raw'/>
    <target dev='sda' bus='scsi'/>
    <encryption format='luks'>
      <secret type='passphrase' uuid='0a81f5b2-8403-7b23-c8d6-21ccd2f80d6f'/>
    </encryption>
  </disk>

This commit thus removes the "luks" storage volume type added
in

  commit 318ebb36f1
  Author: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
  Date:   Tue Jun 21 12:59:54 2016 -0400

    util: Add 'luks' to the FileTypeInfo

The storage file probing code is modified so that it can probe
the actual encryption formats explicitly, rather than merely
probing existance of encryption and letting the storage driver
guess the format.

The rest of the code is then adapted to deal with
VIR_STORAGE_FILE_RAW w/ VIR_STORAGE_ENCRYPTION_FORMAT_LUKS
instead of just VIR_STORAGE_FILE_LUKS.

The commit mentioned above was included in libvirt v2.0.0.
So when querying volume XML this will be a change in behaviour
vs the 2.0.0 release - it'll report 'raw' instead of 'luks'
for the volume format, but still report 'luks' for encryption
format.  I think this change is OK because the storage driver
did not include any support for creating volumes, nor starting
guets with luks volumes in v2.0.0 - that only since then.
Clearly if we change this we must do it before v2.1.0 though.

Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
2016-07-27 18:59:15 +01:00
Prasanna Kumar Kalever
7b7da9e283 qemu: command: Add support for multi-host gluster disks
To allow using failover with gluster it's necessary to specify multiple
volume hosts. Add support for starting qemu with such configurations.

Signed-off-by: Peter Krempa <pkrempa@redhat.com>
2016-07-27 13:38:53 +02:00
Ramon Medeiros
3b9c60af46 docs: Add Kimchi as Web Application
Kimchi is a open-source interface to kvm. It runs with HTML5, simple and
easy to manage kvm guests.

Signed-off-by: Ramon Medeiros <ramonn@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
2016-07-27 10:52:51 +02:00
Anton Khramov
128a8b2c9f network: Added hook for network modification event
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1181539
2016-07-26 12:40:14 -04:00
Ján Tomko
f1bbf57cad hvsupport: skip non-matching lines early
Most of the lines we look at are not going to match one of the
driver types contained in $groups_regex.

Move on to the next line if it does not contain any of them early.
This speeds up the script execution by 50%, since this simple regex
does not have any capture groups.
2016-07-19 18:50:29 +02:00
Ján Tomko
6dc1f10347 hvsupport: construct the group regex upfront
The %groups hash contains all the driver types (e.g.
virHypervisorDriver or virSecretDriver).

When searching for all the APIs that are implemented by a driver
of that specific driver type, we keep iterating over the %groups
hash on every line we look at, then matching against the driver type.

This is inefficient because it prevents perl from caching the regex
and it executes the regex once for every driver type, even though
one regex matching excludes all the others, since all the driver types
are different.

Construct the regex containing all the driver types upfront to save
about 6.4s (~98%) of the script execution time.
2016-07-19 18:50:13 +02:00
Ján Tomko
ad9e72f5fa hvsupport: use a regex instead of XML::XPath
When generating the hvsupport.html.in file, we parse the -api.xml
files generated by apibuild.py to know in which HTML file the API
function is.

Doing an XPath query for every single 'function' element in the
file is inefficient.

Since the XML file is generated by another of our build scripts
(apibuild.py, using Python's standard 'output.write' XML library),
just find the function name->file mapping by a regex upfront.

Also add a note about this next to the line that generates it
in apibuild.py and do not check if XML::XPath is installed in
bootstrap since we no longer use it.
2016-07-19 18:42:44 +02:00
Ján Tomko
fa0b00f94e hvsupport: Introduce parseSymsFile
The code for parsing the different public syms files only differs
in the filenames and version prefix.

Unify it to a single subroutine.
2016-07-18 14:15:57 +02:00
Ján Tomko
4f90364318 Allow omitting USB port
We were requiring a USB port path in the schema, but not enforcing it.
Omitting the USB port would lead to libvirt formatting it as (null).
Such domain cannot be started and will disappear after libvirtd restart
(since it cannot parse back the XML).

Only format the port if it has been specified and mark it as optional
in the XML schema.
2016-07-18 10:55:35 +02:00
John Ferlan
dae3b96560 conf: Revert changes to add new secret type "passphrase"
Revert the remainder of commit id 'c84380106'
2016-07-14 13:47:08 -04:00
John Ferlan
a6bab5c343 docs: Update docs to reflect LUKS secret changes
Commit id's 'c8438010', '9bbf0d7e', and '2552fec24' altered the documentation
to describe adding a 'passphrase' type secret usage model in order to reference
the secret for a luks volume. After commit, it was deemed that a 'volume'
usage model should be used, so adjust the various documents in order rephrase
descriptions in order to follow the correct usage model.

Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
2016-07-14 13:02:01 -04:00
Ján Tomko
ea0ed35d6e Introduce <iommu> device
A device with an attribute 'model', with just one model
so far:

<devices>
  ...
  <iommu model='intel'/>
</devices>

https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1235580
2016-07-12 12:36:13 +02:00
Laine Stump
98fa8f3ef6 conf: support host-side IP/route information in <interface>
This is place as a sub-element of <source>, where other aspects of the
host-side connection to the network device are located (network or
bridge name, udp listen port, etc). It's a bit odd that the interface
we're configuring with this info is itself named in <target dev='x'/>,
but that ship sailed long ago:

    <interface type='ethernet'>
      <mac address='00:16:3e:0f:ef:8a'/>
      <source>
        <ip address='192.168.122.12' family='ipv4'
            prefix='24' peer='192.168.122.1'/>
        <ip address='192.168.122.13' family='ipv4' prefix='24'/>
        <route family='ipv4' address='0.0.0.0'
               gateway='192.168.122.1'/>
        <route family='ipv4' address='192.168.124.0' prefix='24'
               gateway='192.168.124.1'/>
      </source>
    </interface>

In practice, this will likely only be useful for type='ethernet', so
its presence in any other type of interface is currently forbidden in
the generic device Validate function (but it's been put into the
general population of virDomainNetDef rather than the
ethernet-specific union member so that 1) we can more easily add the
capability to other types if needed, and 2) we can retain the info
when set to an invalid interface type all the way through to
validation and report a proper error, rather than just ignoring it
(which is currently what happens for many other type-specific
settings).

(NB: The already-existing configuration of IP info for the guest-side
of interfaces is in subelements directly under <interface>, and the
name of the guest-side interface (when configurable) is in <guest
dev='x'/>).

(This patch had been pushed earlier in
commit fe6a77898a, but was reverted in
commit d658456530 because it had been
accidentally pushed during the freeze for release 2.0.0)
2016-07-01 21:13:30 -04:00
Vasiliy Tolstov
b81cf13e66 conf: allow setting peer address in <ip> element of <interface>
The peer attribute is used to set the property of the same name in the
interface IP info:

  <interface type='ethernet'>
    ...
    <ip family='ipv4' address='192.168.122.5'
        prefix='32' peer='192.168.122.6'/>
    ...
  </interface>

Note that this element is used to set the IP information on the
*guest* side interface, not the host side interface - that will be
supported in an upcoming patch.

(This patch now has quite a history: it was originally pushed in
commit 690969af, which was subsequently reverted in commit 1d14b13f,
then reworked and pushed (along with a lot of other related/supporting
patches) in commit 93135abf1; however *that* commit had been
accidentally pushed during dev. freeze for release 2.0.0, so it was
again reverted in commit f6acf039f0).

Signed-off-by: Vasiliy Tolstov <v.tolstov@selfip.ru>
Signed-off-by: Laine Stump <laine@laine.org>
2016-07-01 21:13:30 -04:00
John Ferlan
2552fec248 encryption: Add <cipher> and <ivgen> to encryption
For a luks device, allow the configuration of a specific cipher to be
used for encrypting the volume.

Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
2016-07-01 15:46:57 -04:00
John Ferlan
9bbf0d7e64 encryption: Add luks parsing for storageencryption
Add parse and format of the luks/passphrase secret including tests for
volume XML parsing.

Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
2016-07-01 15:46:52 -04:00
John Ferlan
47e88b33be util: Add 'usage' for encryption
In order to use more common code and set up for a future type, modify the
encryption secret to allow the "usage" attribute or the "uuid" attribute
to define the secret. The "usage" in the case of a volume secret would be
the path to the volume as dictated by the backwards compatibility brought
on by virStorageGenerateQcowEncryption where it set up the usage field as
the vol->target.path and didn't allow someone to provide it. This carries
into virSecretObjListFindByUsageLocked which takes the secret usage attribute
value from from the domain disk definition and compares it against the
usage type from the secret definition. Since none of the code dealing
with qcow/qcow2 encryption secrets uses usage for lookup, it's a mostly
cosmetic change. The real usage comes in a future path where the encryption
is expanded to be a luks volume and the secret will allow definition of
the usage field.

This code will make use of the virSecretLookup{Parse|Format}Secret common code.

Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
2016-07-01 15:46:24 -04:00
John Ferlan
c84380106f conf: Add new secret type "passphrase"
Add a new secret type known as "passphrase" - it will handle adding the
secret objects that need a passphrase without a specific username.

The format is:

   <secret ...>
     <uuid>...</uuid>
     ...
     <usage type='passphrase'>
       <name>mumblyfratz</name>
     </usage>
   </secret>

Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
2016-07-01 15:45:41 -04:00
Brandon Bennett
47a0866bce Allow custom metadata in network configuration XML
This replicates the metadata field found in the domain configuration
    and adds it to the network configuration XML.
2016-07-01 13:05:25 -04:00
Laine Stump
328fccf135 docs: remove outdated suggestion to make patches with "diff -urp"/"git diff"
I can't think of any good reason to do either of those, and having the
examples there will just lead to unusable patch emails from people who
can't be bothered to read the entire page.
2016-07-01 12:41:10 -04:00
Daniel Veillard
7a2d92f693 Libvirt 2.0.0 release
* docs/news.html.in: update documentation
* po/*.po*: regenerate
2016-07-01 10:59:30 +02:00
Jiri Denemark
60a545fa68 docs: Warn against locked memory limit too high
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1046833

Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
2016-06-30 12:54:42 +02:00
Ján Tomko
f6acf039f0 Revert "conf: allow setting peer address in <ip> element of <interface>"
This reverts commit 93135abf14.

This feature was accidentally pushed in the feature freeze.
2016-06-27 12:54:55 +02:00
Ján Tomko
d658456530 Revert "conf: support host-side IP/route information in <interface>"
This reverts commit fe6a77898a.

This feature was accidentally pushed in the feature freeze.
2016-06-27 12:54:55 +02:00
Laine Stump
fe6a77898a conf: support host-side IP/route information in <interface>
This is place as a sub-element of <source>, where other aspects of the
host-side connection to the network device are located (network or
bridge name, udp listen port, etc). It's a bit odd that the interface
we're configuring with this info is itself named in <target dev='x'/>,
but that ship sailed long ago:

    <interface type='ethernet'>
      <mac address='00:16:3e:0f:ef:8a'/>
      <source>
        <ip address='192.168.122.12' family='ipv4'
            prefix='24' peer='192.168.122.1'/>
        <ip address='192.168.122.13' family='ipv4' prefix='24'/>
        <route family='ipv4' address='0.0.0.0'
               gateway='192.168.122.1'/>
        <route family='ipv4' address='192.168.124.0' prefix='24'
               gateway='192.168.124.1'/>
      </source>
    </interface>

In practice, this will likely only be useful for type='ethernet', so
its presence in any other type of interface is currently forbidden in
the generic device Validate function (but it's been put into the
general population of virDomainNetDef rather than the
ethernet-specific union member so that 1) we can more easily add the
capability to other types, and 2) we can retain the info when set to
an invalid interface type all the way through to validation and report
a proper error, rather than just ignoring it (which is currently what
happens for many other type-specific settings).

(NB: The already-existing configuration of IP info for the guest-side
of interfaces is in subelements directly under <interface>, and the
name of the guest-side interface (when configurable) is in <guest
dev='x'/>).
2016-06-26 19:33:10 -04:00
Vasiliy Tolstov
93135abf14 conf: allow setting peer address in <ip> element of <interface>
The peer attribute is used to set the property of the same name in the
interface IP info:

  <interface type='ethernet'>
    ...
    <ip family='ipv4' address='192.168.122.5'
        prefix='32' peer='192.168.122.6'/>
    ...
  </interface>

Note that this element is used to set the IP information on the
*guest* side interface, not the host side interface - that will be
supported in an upcoming patch.

(This is an updated *re*-commit of commit 690969af, which was
subsequently reverted in commit 1d14b13f).

Signed-off-by: Vasiliy Tolstov <v.tolstov@selfip.ru>
Signed-off-by: Laine Stump <laine@laine.org>
2016-06-26 19:33:10 -04:00
Laine Stump
fbc1843d2e conf: use virNetDevIPInfo for guest-side <interface> config
All the same information was already there, just in slightly different
places in the virDomainNetDef.
2016-06-26 19:33:09 -04:00
Laine Stump
69e04044dd conf: use virNetDevIPInfo in virDomainHostdevCaps
a.k.a. <hostdev mode='capabilities' type='net'>.

This replaces the existing nips, ips, nroutes, and routes with a
single virNetDevIPInfo, and simplifies the code by calling that
object's parse/format/clear functions instead of open coding.
2016-06-26 19:33:09 -04:00
Laine Stump
9911562a22 conf: single object containing list of IP addresses, list of routes
There are currently two places in the domain where this combination is
used, and there is about to be another. This patch puts them together
for brevity and uniformity.

As with the newly-renamed virNetDevIPAddr and virNetDevIPRoute
objects, the new virNetDevIPInfo object will need to be accessed by a
utility function that calls low level Netlink functions (so we don't
want it to be in the conf directory) and will be called from multiple
hypervisor drivers (so it can't be in any hypervisor directory); the
most appropriate place is thus once again the util directory.

The parse and format functions are in conf/domain_conf.c because only
the domain XML (i.e. *not* the network XML) has this exact combination
of IP addresses plus routes. Note that virDomainNetIPInfoFormat() will
end up being the only caller to virDomainNetRoutesFormat() and
virDomainNetIPsFormat(), so it will just subsume those functions in a
later patch, but we can't do that until they are no longer called.

(It would have been nice to include the interface name within the
virNetDevIPInfo object (with a slight name change), but that can't
be done cleanly, because in each case the interface name is provided
in a different place in the XML relative to the routes and IP
addresses, so putting it in this object would actually make the code
more confused rather than simpler).
2016-06-26 19:33:09 -04:00