Steps to reproduce this bug:
1. virsh attach-disk domain --source imagefile --target sdb --sourcetype file --driver qemu --subdriver raw
2. virsh detach-device controller.xml # remove scsi controller 0
3. virsh detach-disk domain sdb
error: Failed to detach disk
error: operation failed: detaching scsi0-0-1 device failed: Device 'scsi0-0-1' not found
I think we should not detach a controller when it is used by some other device.
Signed-off-by: Wen Congyang <wency@cn.fujitsu.com>
Done mechanically with:
$ git grep -l '\bDEBUG0\? *(' | xargs -L1 sed -i 's/\bDEBUG0\? *(/VIR_&/'
followed by manual deletion of qemudDebug in daemon/libvirtd.c, along
with a single 'make syntax-check' fallout in the same file, and the
actual deletion in src/util/logging.h.
* src/util/logging.h (DEBUG, DEBUG0): Delete.
* daemon/libvirtd.h (qemudDebug): Likewise.
* global: Change remaining clients over to VIR_DEBUG counterpart.
The virConnectPtr struct will cache instances of all other
objects. APIs like virDomainLookupByUUID will return a
cached object, so if you do virDomainLookupByUUID twice in
a row, you'll get the same exact virDomainPtr instance.
This does not have any performance benefit, since the actual
logic in virDomainLookupByUUID (and other APIs returning
virDomainPtr, etc instances) is not short-circuited. All
it does is to ensure there is only one single virDomainPtr
in existance for any given UUID.
The caching has a number of downsides though, all relating
to stale data. If APIs aren't careful to always overwrite
the 'id' field in virDomainPtr it may become out of data.
Likewise for the name field, if a guest is renamed, or if
a guest is deleted, and then a new one created with the
same UUID but different name.
This has been an ongoing, endless source of bugs for all
applications using libvirt from languages with garbage
collection, causing them to get virDomainPtr instances
from long ago with stale data.
The caching is also a waste of memory resources, since
both applications, and language bindings often maintain
their own hashtable caches of object instances.
This patch removes all the hash table caching, so all
APIs return brand new virDomainPtr (etc) object instances.
* src/datatypes.h: Delete all hash tables.
* src/datatypes.c: Remove all object caching code
This patch adds the possibility to not just drop packets, but to also have them rejected where iptables at least sends an ICMP msg back to the originator. On ebtables this again maps into dropping packets since rejecting is not supported.
I am adding 'since 0.8.9' to the docs assuming this will be the next version of libvirt.
Two regressions:
Commit df1011ca broke builds for systems that lack devmapper
(non-Linux, as well as Linux with ./autogen.sh --without-libvirtd
and without the libraries present).
Commit ce6fd650 broke cross-compilation, due to a gnulib bug.
* .gnulib: Update to latest, for cross-compilation fix.
* src/util/util.c (virIsDevMapperDevice): Provide stub for
platforms not using storage driver.
* configure.ac (devmapper): Arrange to define HAVE_LIBDEVMAPPER_H.
devmapper issue reported by Wen Congyang.
Etienne Gosset reported that libvirt fails to connect to his ESX
server because it failed to parse its malformed host UUID, that
contains an additional space and lacks one hexdigit in the last
group:
xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx- xxxxxxxxxxx
Don't treat this as a fatal error, just ignore it.
Virsh freecell --all was not only getting wrong NUMA nodes count, but
even the NUMA nodes IDs. They doesn't have to be continuous, as I've
found out during testing this. Therefore a modification of
nodeGetCellsFreeMemory() error message.
$ ./configure
...
$ make
...
GEN libvirt.syms
...
$ ./configure --with-driver-modules
...
$ make
...
libvirt.syms doesn't get regenerated but it should as it should
contain virDriverLoadModule now.
* src/Makefile.am (libvirt.syms): Depend on configure changes.
Reported by Matthias Bolte.
There were several occurrences of an extra space inserted between
a function name and the ( opening the argument list in
datatypes.c. This is not consistent with the coding style used in
the rest of this file so removing this extra space makes the
code slightly more readable.
Now that the virHash handling functions call virReportOOMError by
themselves when needed, users of the virHash API no longer need to
do it by themselves. Since users of the virHash API were not
consistently calling virReportOOMError after memory failures from
the virHash code, this has the added benefit of making OOM
reporting from this code more consistent and reliable.
The only difference between these 2 functions is that one errors
out when the entry is already present while the other modifies
the existing entry. Add an helper function with a boolean argument
indicating whether existing entries should be updated or not, and
use this helper in both functions.
The code in virHashUpdateEntry and virHashAddEntry is really
similar. However, the latter rebalances the hash table when
one of its buckets contains too many elements while the former
does not. Fix this discrepancy.
When we attach a disk, but we specify a wrong format of disk image,
qemu monitor command drive_add will fail, but libvirt does not detect
this error.
Signed-off-by: Wen Congyang <wency@cn.fujitsu.com>
Followup to commit 17e19add, and would have prevented the bug
independently fixed in commit 76c57a7c.
* src/util/logging.c (virLogMessage): Preserve errno, since
logging should be as unintrusive as possible.
This fixes https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=609463
The problem was that, since a bridge always acquires the MAC address
of the connected interface with the numerically lowest MAC, as guests
are started and stopped, it was possible for the MAC address to change
over time, and this change in the network was being detected by
Windows 7 (it sees the MAC of the default route change), so on each
reboot it would bring up a dialog box asking about this "new network".
The solution is to create a dummy tap interface with a MAC guaranteed
to be lower than any guest interface's MAC, and attach that tap to the
bridge as soon as it's created. Since all guest MAC addresses start
with 0xFE, we can just generate a MAC with the standard "0x52, 0x54,
0" prefix, and it's guaranteed to always win (physical interfaces are
never connected to these bridges, so we don't need to worry about
competing numerically with them).
Note that the dummy tap is never set to IFF_UP state - that's not
necessary in order for the bridge to take its MAC, and not setting it
to UP eliminates the clutter of having an (eg) "virbr0-nic" displayed
in the output of the ifconfig command.
I chose to not auto-generate the MAC address in the network XML
parser, as there are likely to be consumers of that API that don't
need or want to have a MAC address associated with the
bridge.
Instead, in bridge_driver.c when the network is being defined, if
there is no MAC, one is generated. To account for virtual network
configs that already exist when upgrading from an older version of
libvirt, I've added a %post script to the specfile that searches for
all network definitions in both the config directory
(/etc/libvirt/qemu/networks) and the state directory
(/var/lib/libvirt/network) that are missing a mac address, generates a
random address, and adds it to the config (and a matching address to
the state file, if there is one).
docs/formatnetwork.html.in: document <mac address.../>
docs/schemas/network.rng: add nac address to schema
libvirt.spec.in: %post script to update existing networks
src/conf/network_conf.[ch]: parse and format <mac address.../>
src/libvirt_private.syms: export a couple private symbols we need
src/network/bridge_driver.c:
auto-generate mac address when needed,
create dummy interface if mac address is present.
tests/networkxml2xmlin/isolated-network.xml
tests/networkxml2xmlin/routed-network.xml
tests/networkxml2xmlout/isolated-network.xml
tests/networkxml2xmlout/routed-network.xml: add mac address to some tests
An upcoming patch has a use for a tap device to be created that
doesn't need to be actually put into the "up" state, and keeping it
"down" keeps the output of ifconfig from being unnecessarily cluttered
(ifconfig won't show down interfaces unless you add "-a").
bridge.[ch]: add "up" as an arg to brAddTap()
uml_conf.c, qemu_command.c: add "up" (set to "true") to brAddTap() call.
This is in response to:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=629662
Explanation
qemu's virtio-net-pci driver allows setting the algorithm used for tx
packets to either "bh" or "timer". This is done by adding ",tx=bh" or
",tx=timer" to the "-device virtio-net-pci" commandline option.
'bh' stands for 'bottom half'; when this is set, packet tx is all done
in an iothread in the bottom half of the driver. (In libvirt, this
option is called the more descriptive "iothread".)
'timer' means that tx work is done in qemu, and if there is more tx
data than can be sent at the present time, a timer is set before qemu
moves on to do other things; when the timer fires, another attempt is
made to send more data. (libvirt retains the name "timer" for this
option.)
The resulting difference, according to the qemu developer who added
the option is:
bh makes tx more asynchronous and reduces latency, but potentially
causes more processor bandwidth contention since the cpu doing the
tx isn't necessarily the cpu where the guest generated the
packets.
Solution
This patch provides a libvirt domain xml knob to change the option on
the qemu commandline, by adding a new attribute "txmode" to the
<driver> element that can be placed inside any <interface> element in
a domain definition. It's use would be something like this:
<interface ...>
...
<model type='virtio'/>
<driver txmode='iothread'/>
...
</interface>
I chose to put this setting as an attribute to <driver> rather than as
a sub-element to <tune> because it is specific to the virtio-net
driver, not something that is generally usable by all network drivers.
(note that this is the same placement as the "driver name=..."
attribute used to choose kernel vs. userland backend for the
virtio-net driver.)
Actually adding the tx=xxx option to the qemu commandline is only done
if the version of qemu being used advertises it in the output of
qemu -device virtio-net-pci,?
If a particular txmode is requested in the XML, and the option isn't
listed in that help output, an UNSUPPORTED_CONFIG error is logged, and
the domain fails to start.
When the <driver> element (and its "name" attribute) was added to the
domain XML's interface element, a "backend" enum was simply added to
the toplevel of the virDomainNetDef struct.
Ignoring the naming inconsistency ("name" vs. "backend"), this is fine
when there's only a single item contained in the driver element of the
XML, but doesn't scale well as we add more attributes that apply to
the backend of the virtio-net driver, or add attributes applicable to
other drivers.
This patch changes virDomainNetDef in two ways:
1) Rename the item in the struct from "backend" to "name", so that
it's the same in the XML and in the struct, hopefully avoiding
confusion for someone unfamiliar with the function of the
attribute.
2) Create a "driver" union within virDomainNetDef, and a "virtio"
struct in that struct, which contains the "name" enum value.
3) Move around the virDomainNetParse and virDomainNetFormat functions
to allow for simple plugin of new attributes without disturbing
existing code. (you'll note that this results in a seemingly
redundant if() in the format function, but that will no longer be
the case as soon as a 2nd attribute is added).
In the future, new attributes for the virtio driver backend can be
added to the "virtio" struct, and any other network device backend that
needs an attribute will have its own struct added to the "driver"
union.
The introduction of the v3 migration protocol, along with
support for migration cookies, will significantly expand
the size of the migration code. Move it all to a separate
file to make it more manageable
The functions are not moved 100%. The API entry points
remain in the main QEMU driver, but once the public
virDomainPtr is resolved to the internal virDomainObjPtr,
all following code is moved.
This will allow the new v3 API entry points to call into the
same shared internal migration functions
* src/qemu/qemu_domain.c, src/qemu/qemu_domain.h: Add
qemuDomainFormatXML helper method
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c: Remove all migration code
* src/qemu/qemu_migration.c, src/qemu/qemu_migration.h: Add
all migration code.
Move the qemudStartVMDaemon and qemudShutdownVMDaemon
methods into a separate file, renaming them to
qemuProcessStart, qemuProcessStop. All helper methods
called by these are also moved & renamed to match
* src/Makefile.am: Add qemu_process.c/.h
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c: Add qemuDomainAssignPCIAddresses
* src/qemu/qemu_command.h: Add VNC port min/max
* src/qemu/qemu_domain.c, src/qemu/qemu_domain.h: Add
domain event queue helpers
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c, src/qemu/qemu_driver.h: Remove
all QEMU process startup/shutdown functions
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c, src/qemu/qemu_process.h: Add
all QEMU process startup/shutdown functions
The name convention of device mapper disk is different, and 'parted'
can't be used to delete a device mapper disk partition. e.g.
Name Path
-----------------------------------------
3600a0b80005ad1d7000093604cae912fp1 /dev/mapper/3600a0b80005ad1d7000093604cae912fp1
Error: Expecting a partition number.
This patch introduces 'dmsetup' to fix it.
Changes:
- New function "virIsDevMapperDevice" in "src/utils/utils.c"
- remove "is_dm_device" in "src/storage/parthelper.c", use
"virIsDevMapperDevice" instead.
- Requires "device-mapper" for 'with-storage-disk" in "libvirt.spec.in"
- Check "dmsetup" in 'configure.ac' for "with-storage-disk"
- Changes on "src/Makefile.am" to link against libdevmapper
- New entry for "virIsDevMapperDevice" in "src/libvirt_private.syms"
Changes from v1 to v3:
- s/virIsDeviceMapperDevice/virIsDevMapperDevice/g
- replace "virRun" with "virCommand"
- sort the list of util functions in "libvirt_private.syms"
- ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL(1) for virIsDevMapperDevice declaration.
e.g.
Name Path
-----------------------------------------
3600a0b80005ad1d7000093604cae912fp1 /dev/mapper/3600a0b80005ad1d7000093604cae912fp1
Vol /dev/mapper/3600a0b80005ad1d7000093604cae912fp1 deleted
Name Path
-----------------------------------------
"qemudDomainSaveFlag" goto wrong label "endjob", which will cause
error when security manager trying to restore label (regression).
As it's more reasonable to check if vm is shutoff immediately, and
return right away if it is, remove the checking in "qemudDomainSaveFlag",
and add checking in "qemudDomainSave".
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c
* src/util/cgroup.c (virCgroupSetValueStr, virCgroupGetValueStr)
(virCgroupRemoveRecursively): VIR_DEBUG can clobber errno.
(virCgroupRemove): Use VIR_DEBUG rather than DEBUG.
The code expected that host CPU architecture matches the architecture on
which libvirt runs. This is normally true but not in tests, where host
CPU is faked to produce consistent results.
clang had 5 reports against virCommand; three were false positives
(a NULL deref in ProcessIO solved by sa_assert, and two uninitialized
memory operations solved by adding an initializer), but two were real.
* src/util/command.c (virCommandProcessIO): Fix real bug of
possible NULL dereference. Teach clang that buf is never NULL.
(virCommandRun): Teach clang that infd is only ever accessed when
initialized.
The processWatchdogEvent fix is real, although it can only trigger
on OOM, since bad things happen if doCoreDump is called with a NULL
pathname argument. The other fixes silence clang, but aren't a real
bug because virReportErrorHelper tolerates a NULL format string even
though *printf does not.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (processWatchdogEvent): Exit on OOM.
(qemuDomainIsActive, qemuDomainIsPersistent, qemuDomainIsUpdated):
Provide valid message.
The SCSI storage backend leaks a string containing the pathname
for each block device it discovers
* src/storage/storage_backend_scsi.c: Free the device name
When creating the virDomain::snapshots hash table, virGetDomain
wasn't checking if the creation was successful. This would then
lead to failures in the vir*DomainSnapshot functions. Better to
report this error early and make virGetDomain fail if the
snapshots hash couldn't be created.
* src/datatypes.c: report failure to make a hash table
A couple of allocation were not calling virReportOOMError on allocation
errors
* src/util/hash.c: add the needed call in virHashCreate and
virHashAddOrUpdateEntry
"virStorageBackendCreateVols":
"names->next" serves as condition expression for "do...while",
however, "names" was shifted before, it then results in one less
loop, and thus, one less volume will be created for mpath pool,
the patch is to fix it.
* src/storage/storage_backend_mpath.c
clang complained that STREQ(group->controllers[i].mountPoint,...) was
a NULL dereference when i==VIR_CGROUP_CONTROLLER_CPUSET, because it
assumes the worst about virCgroupPathOfController. Marking the
argument const doesn't yet have an effect, per this clang bug:
http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=7758
So, we use sa_assert, which was designed to shut up false positives
from tools like clang.
* src/util/cgroup.c (virCgroupMakeGroup): Teach clang that there
is no NULL dereference.
This patch reorders the connlimit and comment match extensions relative to the state match (-m state); connlimit being most useful if found after a -m state --state NEW and not before it.
When formatting XML for smartcard device with mode=host, libvirt
generates invalid XML if the device has address info associated:
<smartcard mode='host' <address type='ccid' controller='0' slot='1'/>
Commit 9962e406c6 introduced a
problem where if the VM failed to startup, it would not be
correctly cleaned up. Amongst other things the SELinux
security label would not be removed, which prevents the VM
from ever starting again.
The virDomainIsActive() check at the start of qemudShutdownVMDaemon
checks for vm->def->id not being -1. By moving the assignment of the
VM id to the start of qemudStartVMDaemon, we can ensure cleanup will
occur on failure
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c: Move initialization of 'vm->def->id'
so that qemudShutdownVMDaemon() will process the shutdown
When attaching a device that already exists, xend driver updates
the device with "device_configure", it causes problems (e.g. for
disk device, 'device_configure' only can be used to update device
like CDROM), on the other hand, we provide additional API
(virDomainUpdateDevice) to update device, this fix is to raise up
errors instead of updating the existed device which is not CDROM
device.
Changes from v1 to v2:
- allow to update CDROM
* src/xen/xend_internal.c
Building the 0.8.8 release candidate on cygwin produced this compiler
warning, which is indicative of catastrophic failure on any attempt to
print an error message with errno turned to a string:
CC strerror_r.lo
strerror_r.c: In function 'rpl_strerror_r':
strerror_r.c:67: warning: assignment makes integer from pointer without a cast
This has been fixed in gnulib.
* .gnulib: Update to latest, for strerror_r fix.
* src/util/memory.c (includes): Satisfy 'make syntax-check'.
Suspending a VM which contains shell meta characters doesn't work with
libvirt-0.8.7:
/var/log/libvirt/qemu/andreas_231-ne\ doch\ nicht.log:
sh: -c: line 0: syntax error near unexpected token `doch'
sh: -c: line 0: `cat | { dd bs=4096 seek=1 if=/dev/null && dd bs=1048576; }
Although target="andreas_231-ne doch nicht" contains shell meta
characters (here: blanks), they are not properly escaped by
src/qemu/qemu_monitor_{json,text}.c#qemuMonitor{JSON,Text}MigrateToFile()
First, the filename needs to be properly escaped for the shell, than
this command line has to be properly escaped for qemu again.
For this to work, remove the old qemuMonitorEscapeArg() wrapper, rename
qemuMonitorEscape() to it removing the handling for shell=TRUE, and
implement a new qemuMonitorEscapeShell() returning strings using single
quotes.
Using double quotes or escaping special shell characters with backslashes
would also be possible, but the set of special characters heavily
depends on the concrete shell (dsh, bash, zsh) and its setting (history
expansion, interactive use, ...)
Signed-off-by: Philipp Hahn <hahn@univention.de>
The logging functions are enhanced so that immediately prior to
the first log message being printed to any output channel, the
libvirt package version will be printed.
eg
$ LIBVIRT_DEBUG=1 virsh
18:13:28.013: 17536: info : libvirt version: 0.8.7
18:13:28.013: 17536: debug : virInitialize:361 : register drivers
...
The 'configure' script gains two new arguments which can be
used as
--with-packager="Fedora Project, x86-01.phx2.fedoraproject.org, 01-27-2011-18:00:10"
--with-packager-version="1.fc14"
to allow distros to append a custom string with package specific
data.
The RPM specfile is modified so that it appends the RPM version,
the build host, the build date and the packager name.
eg
$ LIBVIRT_DEBUG=1 virsh
18:14:52.086: 17551: info : libvirt version: 0.8.7, package: 1.fc13 (Fedora Project, x86-01.phx2.fedoraproject.org, 01-27-2011-18:00:10)
18:14:52.086: 17551: debug : virInitialize:361 : register drivers
Thus when distro packagers receive bug reports they can clearly
see what version was in use, even if the bug reporter mistakenly
or intentionally lies about version/builds
* src/util/logging.c: Output version data prior to first log message
* libvirt.spec.in: Include RPM release, date, hostname & packager
* configure.ac: Add --with-packager & --with-packager-version args
QEMUD_CMD_FLAG_PCI_MULTIBUS should be set in the function
qemuCapsExtractVersionInfo()
The flag QEMUD_CMD_FLAG_PCI_MULTIBUS is used in the function
qemuBuildDeviceAddressStr(). All callers get qemuCmdFlags
by the function qemuCapsExtractVersionInfo() except that
testCompareXMLToArgvFiles() in qemuxml2argvtest.c.
So we should set QEMUD_CMD_FLAG_PCI_MULTIBUS in the function
qemuCapsExtractVersionInfo() instead of qemuBuildCommandLine()
because the function qemuBuildCommandLine() does not be called
when we attach a pci device.
tests: set QEMUD_CMD_FLAG_PCI_MULTIBUS in testCompareXMLToArgvFiles()
set QEMUD_CMD_FLAG_PCI_MULTIBUS before calling qemuBuildCommandLine()
as the flags is not set by qemuCapsExtractVersionInfo().
Signed-off-by: Wen Congyang <wency@cn.fujitsu.com>
Quite a few hosts don't have cgroups mounted and so see warnings
from libvirt logged, which then cause bug reports, etc. Reduce
the log level to INFO so they're not visible by default
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c: Reduce log level for cgroups
When run non-root the nwfilter driver logs error messages about
being unable to find iptables/ebtables commands (they are in
/sbin which isn't in $PATH). The nwfilter driver can't ever work
as non-root, so simply skip it entirely thus avoiding the error
messages
* src/conf/nwfilter_conf.h, src/nwfilter/nwfilter_driver.c,
src/nwfilter/nwfilter_gentech_driver.c,
src/nwfilter/nwfilter_gentech_driver.h: Pass 'bool privileged'
flag down to final driver impl
* src/nwfilter/nwfilter_ebiptables_driver.c: Skip initialization
if not privileged
A typo s/spice/vnc/ caused parsing of the spice 'auth' data
to write into the wrong part of the struct, blowing away
other unrelated data.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c: s/vnc/spice/ in parsing spice auth
Most of te VIR_INFO calls in the udev driver are only relevant
to developers so can switch to VIR_DEBUG. Failure to initialize
libpciaccess though is a fatal error
* src/node_device/node_device_udev.c: Adjust log levels
When probing machine types if the QEMU binary does not exist
we get a hard to diagnose error, due to the execve() in the
child failing
error: internal error Child process exited with status 1.
Add an explicit check so that we get
error: Cannot find QEMU binary /usr/libexec/qem3u-kvm: No such file or directory
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.c: Check for QEMU binary
To make it easier to investigate problems with async event
delivery, add two more debugging lines
* daemon/remote.c: Debug when an event is queued for dispatch
* src/remote/remote_driver.c: Debug when an event is received
for processing
When built as modules, the connection drivers live
in $LIBDIR/libvirt/drivers. Now we add lock manager
drivers, we need to distinguish. So move the existing
modules to 'connection-driver'
* src/Makefile.am: Move module install dir
* src/driver.c: Move module search dir
Some functionality run in virExec hooks may do I/O which
can trigger SIGPIPE. Renable SIGPIPE blocking around the
hook function
* src/util/util.c: Block SIGPIPE around hooks
The Linux kernel headers don't have a value for SCSI type 12,
but HAL source code shows this to be a 'raid'. Add workaround
for this type. Lower log level for unknown types since
this is not a fatal error condition. Include the device sysfs
path in the log output to allow identification of which device
has problems.
* src/node_device/node_device_udev.c: Add SCSI RAID type
libpciaccess has many bugs in its pci_system_init/cleanup
functions that makes calling them multiple times unwise.
eg it will double close() FDs, and leak other FDs.
* src/node_device/node_device_udev.c: Only initialize
libpciaccess once
Until now, user namespaces have not done much, but (for that
reason) have been innocuous to glob in with other CLONE_
flags. Upcoming userns development, however, will make tasks
cloned with CLONE_NEWUSER far more restricted. In particular,
for some time they will be unable to access files with anything
other than the world access perms.
This patch assumes that noone really needs the user namespaces
to be enabled. If that is wrong, then we can try a more
baroque patch where we create a file owned by a test userid with
700 perms and, if we can't access it after setuid'ing to that
userid, then return 0. Otherwise, assume we are using an
older, 'harmless' user namespace implementation.
Comments appreciated. Is it ok to do this?
Signed-off-by: Serge Hallyn <serge.hallyn@canonical.com>
The new virConnectGetSysinfo() API allows one to get the system
information associated to a connection host, providing the same
data as a guest that uses <os><smbios mode='host'/></os>, and in
a format that can be pasted into the guest and edited when using
<os><smbios mode='sysinfo'/></os>.
* include/libvirt/libvirt.h.in (virConnectGetSysinfo): Declare.
* src/libvirt_public.syms: Export new symbol.
qemu 0.13.0 (at least as built for Fedora 14, and also backported to
RHEL 6.0 qemu) supported an older syntax for a spicevmc channel; it's
not as flexible (it has an implicit name and hides the chardev
aspect), but now that we support spicevmc, we might as well target
both variants.
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.h (QEMUD_CMD_FLAG_DEVICE_SPICEVMC):
New flag.
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.c (qemuCapsParseDeviceStr): Set it
correctly.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.h (qemuBuildVirtioSerialPortDevStr): Drop
declaration.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuBuildVirtioSerialPortDevStr): Alter
signature, check flag.
(qemuBuildCommandLine): Adjust caller and check flag.
* tests/qemuhelptest.c (mymain): Update test.
* tests/qemuxml2argvtest.c (mymain): New test.
* tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-channel-spicevmc-old.xml:
New file.
* tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-channel-spicevmc-old.args:
Likewise.
Adds <smartcard mode='passthrough' type='spicevmc'/>, which uses the
new <channel name='smartcard'/> of <graphics type='spice'>.
* docs/schemas/domain.rng: Support new XML.
* docs/formatdomain.html.in: Document it.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h (virDomainGraphicsSpiceChannelName): New
enum value.
(virDomainChrSpicevmcName): New enum.
(virDomainChrSourceDef): Distinguish spicevmc types.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainGraphicsSpiceChannelName): Add
smartcard.
(virDomainSmartcardDefParseXML): Parse it.
(virDomainChrDefParseXML, virDomainSmartcardDefParseXML): Set
spicevmc name.
(virDomainChrSpicevmc): New enum conversion functions.
* src/libvirt_private.syms: Export new functions.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuBuildChrChardevStr): Conditionalize
name.
* tests/qemuxml2argvtest.c (domain): New test.
* tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-smartcard-passthrough-spicevmc.args:
New file.
* tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-smartcard-passthrough-spicevmc.xml:
Likewise.
Inspired by https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=615757
Add a new character device backend for virtio serial channels that
activates the QEMU spice agent on the main channel using the vdagent
spicevmc connection. The <target> must be type='virtio', and supports
an optional name that specifies how the guest will see the channel
(for now, name must be com.redhat.spice.0).
<channel type='spicevmc'>
<target type='virtio'/>
<address type='virtio-serial' controller='1' bus='0' port='3'/>
</channel>
* docs/schemas/domain.rng: Support new XML.
* docs/formatdomain.html.in: Document it.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h (virDomainChrType): New enum value.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainChr): Add spicevmc.
(virDomainChrDefParseXML, virDomainChrSourceDefParseXML)
(virDomainChrDefParseTargetXML): Parse and enforce proper use.
(virDomainChrSourceDefFormat, virDomainChrDefFormat): Format.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuBuildChrChardevStr)
(qemuBuildCommandLine): Add qemu support.
* tests/qemuxml2argvtest.c (domain): New test.
* tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-channel-spicevmc.xml: New
file.
* tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-channel-spicevmc.args:
Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Qemu smartcard/spicevmc support exists on branches (such as
http://cgit.freedesktop.org/~alon/qemu/commit/?h=usb_ccid.v15&id=024a37b)
but is not yet upstream. The added -help output matches a scratch build
that will be close to the RHEL 6.1 qemu-kvm.
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.h (QEMUD_CMD_FLAG_CCID_EMULATED)
(QEMUD_CMD_FLAG_CCID_PASSTHRU, QEMUD_CMD_FLAG_CHARDEV_SPICEVMC):
New flags.
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.c (qemuCapsComputeCmdFlags)
(qemuCapsParseDeviceStr): Check for smartcard capabilities.
(qemuCapsExtractVersionInfo): Tweak comment.
* tests/qemuhelptest.c (mymain): New test.
* tests/qemuhelpdata/qemu-kvm-0.12.1.2-rhel61: New file.
* tests/qemuhelpdata/qemu-kvm-0.12.1.2-rhel61-device: Likewise.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h (virDomainSmartcardType): New enum.
(virDomainSmartcardDef, virDomainDeviceCcidAddress): New structs.
(virDomainDef): Include smartcards.
(virDomainSmartcardDefIterator): New typedef.
(virDomainSmartcardDefFree, virDomainSmartcardDefForeach): New
prototypes.
(virDomainControllerType, virDomainDeviceAddressType): Add ccid
enum values.
(virDomainDeviceInfo): Add ccid address type.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainSmartcard): Convert between
enum and string.
(virDomainSmartcardDefParseXML, virDomainSmartcardDefFormat)
(virDomainSmartcardDefFree, virDomainDeviceCcidAddressParseXML)
(virDomainDefMaybeAddSmartcardController): New functions.
(virDomainDefParseXML): Parse the new XML.
(virDomainDefFormat): Convert back to XML.
(virDomainDefFree): Clean up.
(virDomainDeviceInfoIterate): Iterate over passthrough aliases.
(virDomainController, virDomainDeviceAddress)
(virDomainDeviceInfoParseXML, virDomainDeviceInfoFormat)
(virDomainDefAddImplicitControllers): Support new values.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (domain_conf.h): New exports.
* cfg.mk (useless_free_options): List new function.
Currently users who want to use virDomainQemuMonitorCommand() API or
it's virsh equivalent has to use the same protocol as libvirt uses for
communication to qemu. Since the protocol is QMP with current qemu and
HMP much more usable for humans, one ends up typing something like the
following:
virsh qemu-monitor-command DOM \
'{"execute":"human-monitor-command","arguments":{"command-line":"info kvm"}}'
which is not a very convenient way of debugging qemu.
This patch introduces --hmp option to qemu-monitor-command, which says
that the provided command is in HMP. If libvirt uses QMP to talk with
qemu, the command will automatically be converted into QMP. So the
example above is simplified to just
virsh qemu-monitor-command --hmp DOM "info kvm"
Also the result is converted from
{"return":"kvm support: enabled\r\n"}
to just plain HMP:
kvm support: enabled
If libvirt talks to qemu in HMP, --hmp flag is obviously a noop.
This patch fixes 2 occurrences of nla_put expression with a '!' in
front of them that basically prevented the detection that the buffer
is too small. However, code further below would then detect that the
buffer is too small when further parts are added to the netlink message.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemudShutdownVMDaemon): Check that vm is
still active.
Reported by Wen Congyang as follows:
Steps to reproduce this bug:
1. use gdb to debug libvirtd, and set breakpoint in the function
qemuConnectMonitor()
2. start a vm, and the libvirtd will be stopped in qemuConnectMonitor()
3. kill -STOP $(cat /var/run/libvirt/qemu/<domain>.pid)
4. continue to run libvirtd in gdb, and libvirtd will be blocked in the
function qemuMonitorSetCapabilities()
5. kill -9 $(cat /var/run/libvirt/qemu/<domain>.pid)
Here is log of the qemu:
=========
LC_ALL=C PATH=/sbin:/usr/sbin:/bin:/usr/bin ...
char device redirected to /dev/pts/3
2011-01-27 09:38:48.101: shutting down
2011-01-27 09:41:26.401: shutting down
=========
The vm is shut down twice. I do not know whether this behavior has
side effect, but I think we should shutdown the vm only once.
When compiling libvirt with GCC 3.4.6 the following warning is being triggered quite a lot:
util/memory.h:60: warning: declaration of 'remove' shadows a global declaration
/usr/include/stdio.h:175: warning: shadowed declaration is here
Fix this by renaming the parameter to 'toremove'.
Depending if the qemu binary supports multiple pci-busses, the device
options will contain "bus=pci" or "bus=pci.0".
Only x86_64 and i686 seem to have support for multiple PCI-busses. When
a guest of these architectures is started, set the
QEMUD_CMD_FLAG_PCI_MULTIBUS flag.
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
In the SASL codepath we typically read far more data off the
wire than we immediately need. When using a connection from a
single thread this isn't a problem, since only our reply will
be pending (or an event we can handle directly). When using a
connection from multiple threads though, we may read the data
from replies from other threads. If those replies occur after
our own reply, they'll not be processed. The other thread will
then go into poll() and wait for its reply which has already
been received and decoded. The solution is to set poll() timeout
to 0 if there is pending SASL data.
* src/remote/remote_driver.c: Don't sleep in poll() if SASL
data exists
Command line building for incoming tunneled migration is missed,
as a result, all the tunneled migration will fail with "unknown
migration protocol".
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c
commit f1fe9671e was supposed to make sure we use files.h
macros to avoid double close, but it didn't work.
Meanwhile, virCommand is vastly superior to system(), fork(),
and popen() (also to virExec, but we haven't completed that
conversion), so enforce that, too.
* cfg.mk (sc_prohibit_close): Fix typo that excluded close, and
add pclose.
(sc_prohibit_fork_wrappers): New rule, for fork, system, and popen.
* .x-sc_prohibit_close: More exemptions.
* .x-sc_prohibit_fork_wrappers: New file.
* Makefile.am (syntax_check_exceptions): Ship new file.
* src/datatypes.c (virReleaseConnect): Tweak comment to avoid
false positive.
* src/util/files.h (VIR_CLOSE): Likewise.
* src/fdstream.c (virFDStreamOpenFile, virFDStreamCreateFile):
Use VIR_FORCE_CLOSE instead of close.
* tests/commandtest.c (mymain): Likewise.
* tools/virsh.c (editFile): Use virCommand instead of system.
* src/util/util.c (__virExec): Special case preservation of std
file descriptors to child.
Use it in all places where a memory or storage request size is converted
to a larger granularity. This avoids requesting too small memory or storage
sizes that could result from the truncation done by a simple division.
This extends the round up fix in 6002e0406c
to the whole codebase.
Instead of reporting errors for odd values in the VMX code round them up.
Update the QEMU Argv tests accordingly as the original memory size 219200
isn't a even multiple of 1024 and is rounded up to 215 megabyte now. Change
it to 219100 and 219136. Use two different values intentionally to make
sure that rounding up works.
Update virsh.pod accordingly, as rounding down and rejecting are replaced
by rounding up.
Fixes test failure that was overlooked after commit 1e1f7a8950.
* daemon/Makefile.am (check-local): Let 'make check' fail on error.
* daemon/test_libvirtd.aug: Move qemu-specific option...
* src/qemu/test_libvirtd_qemu.aug: ...into correct test.
* src/qemu/libvirtd_qemu.aug: Parse new option.
qemu allows the user to choose what io storage api should be used,
either the default (threads) or native (linux aio) which in the latter
case can result in better performance.
Based on a patch originally by Matthias Dahl.
Red Hat Bugzilla #591703
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The refactoring of QEMU command startup was comitted with
a couple of VIR_WARN lines left in from debugging.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c: Remove log warning lines
When qemuMonitorSetCapabilities() fails, there is no need to
call qemuMonitorClose(), because the caller will already see
the error code and tear down the entire VM. The extra call to
qemuMonitorClose resulted in a double-free due to it removing
a ref count prematurely.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c: Remove premature close of monitor
Regression in commit caa805ea let a lot of bad messages slip in.
* cfg.mk (msg_gen_function): Fix function name.
* src/qemu/qemu_cgroup.c (qemuRemoveCgroup): Fix fallout from
'make syntax-check'.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemudDomainGetInfo)
(qemuDomainWaitForMigrationComplete, qemudStartVMDaemon)
(qemudDomainSaveFlag, qemudDomainAttachDevice)
(qemuDomainUpdateDeviceFlags): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_hotplug.c (qemuDomainAttachHostUsbDevice)
(qemuDomainDetachPciDiskDevice, qemuDomainDetachSCSIDiskDevice):
Likewise.
When attaching device from a xml file and the device is mis-configured,
virsh gives mis-leading message "out of memory". This patch fixes this.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuBuildChrChardevStr): Alter the
chardev alias.
(qemuBuildCommandLine): Output an id for the chardev counterpart.
* tests/qemuxml2argvdata/*: Update tests to match.
Reported by Daniel P. Berrange.
Steps to reproduce this bug:
1. service libvirtd start
2. virsh start <domain>
3. kill -STOP $(cat /var/run/libvirt/qemu/<domain>.pid)
4. service libvirtd restart
5. kill -9 $(cat /var/run/libvirt/qemu/<domain>.pid)
Then libvirtd will core dump or be in deadlock state.
Make sure that json is built into libvirt and the version
of qemu is newer than 0.13.0.
The reason of libvirtd cores dump is that:
We add vm->refs when we alloc the memory, and decrease it
in the function qemuHandleMonitorEOF() in other thread.
We add vm->refs in the function qemuConnectMonitor() and
decrease it when the vm is inactive.
The libvirtd will block in the function qemuMonitorSetCapabilities()
because the vm is stopped by signal SIGSTOP. Now the vm->refs is 2.
Then we kill the vm by signal SIGKILL. The function
qemuMonitorSetCapabilities() failed, and then we will decrease vm->refs
in the function qemuMonitorClose().
In another thread, mon->fd is broken and the function
qemuHandleMonitorEOF() is called.
If qemuHandleMonitorEOF() decreases vm->refs before qemuConnectMonitor()
returns, vm->refs will be decrease to 0 and the memory is freed.
We will call qemudShutdownVMDaemon() as qemuConnectMonitor() failed.
The memory has been freed, so qemudShutdownVMDaemon() is too dangerous.
We will reference NULL pointer in the function virDomainConfVMNWFilterTeardown():
=============
void
virDomainConfVMNWFilterTeardown(virDomainObjPtr vm) {
int i;
if (nwfilterDriver != NULL) {
for (i = 0; i < vm->def->nnets; i++)
virDomainConfNWFilterTeardown(vm->def->nets[i]);
}
}
============
vm->def->nnets is not 0 but vm->def->nets is NULL(We don't set vm->def->nnets
to 0 when we free vm).
We should add an extra reference of vm to avoid vm to be deleted if
qemuConnectMonitor() failed.
Signed-off-by: Wen Congyang <wency@cn.fujitsu.com>
This new parameter allows user specifies where the client
cerficate, client key, CA certificate of x509 is, instead of
hardcoding it. If 'pkipath' is not specified, and the user
is not root, try to find files in $HOME/.pki/libvirt, as long
as one of client cerficate, client key, CA certificate can
not be found, use default global location (LIBVIRT_CACERT,
LIBVIRT_CLIENTCERT, LIBVIRT_CLIENTKEY, see
src/remote/remote_driver.h)
Example of use:
[root@Osier client]# virsh -c qemu+tls://10.66.93.111/system?pkipath=/tmp/pki/client
error: Cannot access CA certificate '/tmp/pki/client/cacert.pem': No such file
or directory
error: failed to connect to the hypervisor
[root@Osier client]# ls -l
total 24
-rwxrwxr-x. 1 root root 6424 Jan 24 21:35 a.out
-rw-r--r--. 1 root root 1245 Jan 23 19:04 clientcert.pem
-rw-r--r--. 1 root root 132 Jan 23 19:04 client.info
-rw-r--r--. 1 root root 1679 Jan 23 19:04 clientkey.pem
[root@Osier client]# cp /tmp/cacert.pem .
[root@Osier client]# virsh -c qemu+tls://10.66.93.111/system?pkipath=/tmp/pki/client
Welcome to virsh, the virtualization interactive terminal.
Type: 'help' for help with commands
'quit' to quit
virsh #
* src/remote/remote_driver.c: adds support for the new pkipath URI parameter
If vol->capacity is odd, the capacity will be rounded down
by devision, this patch is to round it up instead of rounding
down, to be safer in case of one writes to the volume with the
size he used to create.
- src/storage/storage_backend_logical.c: make sure size is not rounded down
If a guest image is saved in compressed format, and the restore fails
in some way after the intermediate process used to uncompress the
image has been started, but before qemu has been started to hook up to
the uncompressor, libvirt will endlessly wait for the uncompressor to
finish, but it never will because it's still waiting to have something
hooked up to drain its output.
The solution is to close the pipes on both sides of the uncompressor,
then send a SIGTERM before calling waitpid on it (only if the restore
has failed, of course).
Add a hook to the error reporting APIs to allow specific
error messages to be filtered out. Wire up libvirtd to
remove VIR_ERR_NO_DOMAIN & similar error codes from the
logs. They are still logged at DEBUG level.
* daemon/libvirtd.c: Filter VIR_ERR_NO_DOMAIN and friends
* src/libvirt_private.syms, src/util/virterror.c,
src/util/virterror_internal.h: Hook for changing error
reporting level
This reverts the additions in commit
abff683f78
taking us back to state where all errors are fully logged
in both libvirtd and normal clients.
THe intent was to stop VIR_ERR_NO_DOMAIN (No such domain
with UUID XXXX) messages from client apps polluting syslog
The change affected all error codes, but more seriously,
it also impacted errors from internal libvirtd infrastructure
For example guest autostart no longer logged errors. The
libvirtd network code no longer logged some errors. This
makes debugging incredibly hard
* daemon/libvirtd.c: Remove error log priority filter
* src/util/virterror.c, src/util/virterror_internal.h: Remove
callback for overriding log priority
This patch is a partial resolution to the following bug:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=667756
(to complete the fix, an updated selinux-policy package is required,
to add the policy that allows libvirt to set the context of a fifo,
which was previously not allowed).
Explanation : When an incoming migration is over a pipe (for example,
if the image was compressed and is being fed through gzip, or was on a
root-squash nfs server, so needed to be opened by a child process
running as a different uid), qemu cannot read it unless the selinux
context label for the pipe has been set properly.
The solution is to check the fd used as the source of the migration
just before passing it to qemu; if it's a fifo (implying that it's a
pipe), we call the newly added virSecurityManagerSetFDLabel() function
to set the context properly.
A need was found to set the SELinux context label on an open fd (a
pipe, as a matter of fact). This patch adds a function to the security
driver API that will set the label on an open fd to secdef.label. For
all drivers other than the SELinux driver, it's a NOP. For the SElinux
driver, it calls fsetfilecon().
If the return is a failure, it only returns error up to the caller if
1) the desired label is different from the existing label, 2) the
destination fd is of a type that supports setting the selinux context,
and 3) selinux is in enforcing mode. Otherwise it will return
success. This follows the pattern of the existing function
SELinuxSetFilecon().
The problem was introduced by commit 4303c91, which removed the checking
of domain state, this patch is to fix it.
Otherwise, improper error will be thrown, e.g.
error: Failed to save domain rhel6 state
error: cannot resolve symlink /var/lib/libvirt/qemu/save/rhel6.save: No such
file or directory
In QEMU, the card itself is a PCI device, but it requires a codec
(either -device hda-output or -device hda-duplex) to actually output
sound. Specifying <sound model='ich6'/> gives us -device intel-hda
-device hda-duplex I think it's important that a simple <sound model='ich6'/>
sets up a useful codec, to have consistent behavior with all other sound cards.
This is basically Dan's proposal of
<sound model='ich6'>
<codec type='output' slot='0'/>
<codec type='duplex' slot='3'/>
</sound>
without the codec bits implemented.
The important thing is to keep a consistent API here, we don't want some
<sound> devs require tweaking codecs but not others. Steps I see to
accomplishing this:
- every <sound> device has a <codec type='default'/> (unless codecs are
manually specified)
- <codec type='none'/> is required to specify 'no codecs'
- new audio settings like mic=on|off could then be exposed in
<sound> or <codec> in a consistent manner for all sound models
v2:
Use model='ich6'
v3:
Use feature detection, from eblake
Set codec id, bus, and cad values
v4:
intel-hda isn't supported if -device isn't available
v5:
Comment spelling fixes
If vnc_auto_unix_socket is enabled, any VNC devices without a hardcoded
listen or socket value will be setup to serve over a unix socket in
/var/lib/libvirt/qemu/$vmname.vnc.
We store the generated socket path in the transient VM definition at
CLI build time.
QEMU supports serving VNC over a unix domain socket rather than traditional
TCP host/port. This is specified with:
<graphics type='vnc' socket='/foo/bar/baz'/>
This provides better security access control than VNC listening on
127.0.0.1, but will cause issues with tools that rely on the lax security
(virt-manager in fedora runs as regular user by default, and wouldn't be
able to access a socket owned by 'qemu' or 'root').
Also not currently supported by any clients, though I have patches for
virt-manager, and virt-viewer should be simple to update.
v2:
schema: Make listen vs. socket a <choice>
This will allow us to record transient runtime state in vm->def, like
default VNC parameters. Accomplish this by adding an extra 'live' parameter
to SetDefTransient, with similar semantics to the 'live' flag for
AssignDef.
When restoring a saved qemu instance via JSON monitor, the vm is
left in a paused state. Turns out the 'cont' cmd was failing with
"MigrationExpected" error class and "An incoming migration is
expected before this command can be executed" error description
due to migration (restore) not yet complete.
Detect if 'cont' cmd fails with "MigrationExpecte" error class and
retry 'cont' cmd.
V2: Fix potential double-free noted by Laine Stump
Report VIR_ERR_CONFIG_UNSUPPORTED instead of VIR_ERR_INTERNAL_ERROR,
as it's valid in our domain schema, just unsupported by hypervisor
here.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c
The code which set VNC passwords correctly had fallback for
the set_password command, but was lacking it for the
expire_password command. This made it impossible to start
a guest. It also failed to check whether QEMU was still
running after the initial 'set_password' command completed
* src/qemu/qemu_hotplug.c: Fix error handling when
password expiry fails
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.c, src/qemu/qemu_monitor_text.c: Fix
return code for missing expire_password command
Avoid overwriting the real error message with a generic
OOM failure message, when machine type probe fails
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c: Don't overwrite error
If the XML security model is NULL, it is assumed that the current
model will be used with dynamic labelling. The verify step is
meaningless and potentially crashes if dereferencing NULL
* src/security/security_manager.c: Skip NULL model on verify
The function virUnrefConnect() may call virReleaseConnect() to release
the dest connection, and the function virReleaseConnect() will call
conn->driver->close().
So the function virUnrefConnect() should be surrounded by
qemuDomainObjEnterRemoteWithDriver() and
qemuDomainObjExitRemoteWithDriver() to prevent possible deadlock between
two communicating libvirt daemons.
See commit f0c8e1cb37 for further details.
Signed-off-by: Wen Congyang <wency@cn.fujitsu.com>
In some circumstances, libvirtd would issue two STOPPED events after it
stopped a domain. This was because an EOF event can arrive after a qemu
process is killed but before qemuMonitorClose() is called.
qemuHandleMonitorEOF() should ignore EOF when the domain is not running.
I wasn't able to reproduce this bug directly, only after adding an
artificial sleep() into qemudShutdownVMDaemon().
A large number of return values used 'return (0)' instead
of simply 'return 0'. Remove all these redundant brackets
so the style is consistent throughout the file
* src/libvirt.c: Remove redundant brackets
The driver table only has 10 slots, but there are potentially
11 drivers that need activating. Improve the error message
when driver registration fails
* src/libvirt.c: Increase driver table size & improve errors
The virLibConnError() function (and related ones) do not correctly
report line number info. Turn them all into macros so line numbers
are reported correctly. Drop the connection object in all of them
since it is no longer used.
Also from the virLibConnWarning() equivalents completely. Now
that the Xen driver is running 100% inside libvirtd, those
codepaths for secondary drivers cannot be reached.
* src/libvirt.c: Replace error functions with macros
* .gnulib: Update to latest, for sigpipe and sigaction modules.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Add siaction, sigpipe, strerror_r.
* tools/virsh.c (vshSetupSignals) [!SIGPIPE]: Delete, now that
gnulib guarantees it.
(SA_SIGINFO): Define for mingw fallback.
* src/util/virterror.c (virStrerror): Simplify, now that gnulib
guarantees the POSIX interface.
* configure.ac (AC_CHECK_FUNCS_ONCE): Drop redundant check.
(AM_PROG_CC_STDC): Move earlier, to keep autoconf happy.
The public object is called NWFilter but the corresponding private
object is called NWFilterPool. I don't see compelling reasons for this
Pool suffix. One might argue that an NWFilter is a "pool" of rules, etc.
Remove the Pool suffix from NWFilterPool. No functional change included.
Fixes regression introduced in commit 2211518, where all qemu 0.12.x
fails to start, as does qemu 0.13.x lacking the pci-assign device.
Prior to 2211518, the code was just ignoring a non-zero exit status
from the qemu child, but the virCommand code checked this to avoid
masking any other issues, which means the real bug of provoking
non-zero exit status has been latent for a longer time.
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.c (qemuCapsExtractVersionInfo): Check
for -device driver,? support.
(qemuCapsExtractDeviceStr): Avoid failure if all probed devices
are unsupported.
Reported by Ken Congyang.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=620363
When using -incoming stdio or -incoming exec:, qemu keeps the
stdin fd open long after the migration is complete. Not to
mention that exec:cat is horribly inefficient, by doubling the
I/O and going through a popen interface in qemu.
The new -incoming fd: of qemu 0.12.0 closes the fd after using
it, and allows us to bypass an intermediary cat process for
less I/O.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.h (qemuBuildCommandLine): Add parameter.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuBuildCommandLine): Support
migration via fd: when possible. Consolidate migration handling
into one spot, now that it is more complex.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemudStartVMDaemon): Update caller.
* tests/qemuxml2argvtest.c (mymain): Likewise.
* tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-restore-v2-fd.args: New file.
* tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-restore-v2-fd.xml: Likewise.
Currently, boot order can be specified per device class but there is no
way to specify exact disk/NIC device to boot from.
This patch adds <boot order='N'/> element which can be used inside
<disk/> and <interface/>. This is incompatible with the older os/boot
element. Since not all hypervisors support per-device boot
specification, new deviceboot flag is included in capabilities XML for
hypervisors which understand the new boot element. Presence of the flag
allows (but doesn't require) users to use the new style boot order
specification.
Display or set unlimited values for memory parameters. Unlimited is
represented by INT64_MAX in memory cgroup.
Signed-off-by: Nikunj A. Dadhania <nikunj@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reported-by: Justin Clift <jclift@redhat.com>
virLibConnError already includes __FUNCTION__ in its output, so we
were redundant. Furthermore, clang warns that __FUNCTION__ is not
a string literal (at least __FUNCTION__ will never contain %, so
it was not a security risk).
* src/datatypes.c: Replace __FUNCTION__ with a descriptive string.
This is in response to a request in:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=665293
In short, under heavy load, it's possible for qemu's networking to
lock up due to the tap device's default 1MB sndbuf being
inadequate. adding "sndbuf=0" to the qemu commandline -netdevice
option will alleviate this problem (sndbuf=0 actually sets it to
0xffffffff).
Because we must be able to explicitly specify "0" as a value, the
standard practice of "0 means not specified" won't work here. Instead,
virDomainNetDef also has a sndbuf_specified, which defaults to 0, but
is set to 1 if some value was given.
The sndbuf value is put inside a <tune> element of each <interface> in
the domain. The intent is that further tunable settings will also be
placed inside this element.
<interface type='network'>
...
<tune>
<sndbuf>0</sndbuf>
...
</tune>
</interface>
This patch is in response to
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=643050
The existing libvirt support for the vhost-net backend to the virtio
network driver happens automatically - if the vhost-net device is
available, it is always enabled, otherwise the standard userland
virtio backend is used.
This patch makes it possible to force whether or not vhost-net is used
with a bit of XML. Adding a <driver> element to the interface XML, eg:
<interface type="network">
<model type="virtio"/>
<driver name="vhost"/>
will force use of vhost-net (if it's not available, the domain will
fail to start). if driver name="qemu", vhost-net will not be used even
if it is available.
If there is no <driver name='xxx'/> in the config, libvirt will revert
to the pre-existing automatic behavior - use vhost-net if it's
available, and userland backend if vhost-net isn't available.
We try to use that command first when setting a VNC/SPICE password. If
that doesn't work we fallback to the legacy VNC only password
Allow an expiry time to be set, if that doesn't work, throw an error
if they try to use SPICE.
Change since v1:
- moved qemuInitGraphicsPasswords to qemu_hotplug, renamed
to qemuDomainChangeGraphicsPasswords.
- updated what looks like a typo (that appears to work anyway) in
initial patch from Daniel:
- ret = qemuInitGraphicsPasswords(driver, vm,
- VIR_DOMAIN_GRAPHICS_TYPE_SPICE,
- &vm->def->graphics[0]->data.vnc.auth,
- driver->vncPassword);
+ ret = qemuInitGraphicsPasswords(driver, vm,
+ VIR_DOMAIN_GRAPHICS_TYPE_SPICE,
+ &vm->def->graphics[0]->data.spice.auth,
+ driver->spicePassword);
Based on patch by Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>.
I broke 'make check' with commit 04197350 by unconditionally
emitting 'hap=' in xen xm driver. Only emit 'hap=' if
xendConfigVersion >= 3. I've tested sending 'hap=' to a Xen 3.2
machine without support for hap setting and verified that xend
silently drops the unrecognized setting.
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.h (qemuCapsParseDeviceStr): New
prototype.
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.c (qemuCapsParsePCIDeviceStrs)
Rename and split...
(qemuCapsExtractDeviceStr, qemuCapsParseDeviceStr): ...to make it
easier to add and test device-specific checks.
(qemuCapsExtractVersionInfo): Update caller.
* tests/qemuhelptest.c (testHelpStrParsing): Also test parsing of
device-related flags.
(mymain): Update expected flags.
* tests/qemuhelpdata/qemu-0.12.1-device: New file.
* tests/qemuhelpdata/qemu-kvm-0.12.1.2-rhel60-device: New file.
* tests/qemuhelpdata/qemu-kvm-0.12.3-device: New file.
* tests/qemuhelpdata/qemu-kvm-0.13.0-device: New file.
It was awkward having only int conversion in the virStrToLong family,
but only long conversion in the virXPath family. Make both families
support both types.
* src/util/util.h (virStrToLong_l, virStrToLong_ul): New
prototypes.
* src/util/xml.h (virXPathInt, virXPathUInt): Likewise.
* src/util/util.c (virStrToLong_l, virStrToLong_ul): New
functions.
* src/util/xml.c (virXPathInt, virXPathUInt): Likewise.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (util.h, xml.h): Export them.
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.c (qemuCapsProbeMachineTypes)
(qemuCapsProbeCPUModels, qemuCapsParsePCIDeviceStrs)
(qemuCapsExtractVersionInfo): Use virCommand rather than virExec.
xen-unstable c/s 16931 introduced a per-domain setting for hvm
guests to enable/disable hardware assisted paging. If disabled,
software techniques such as shadow page tables are used. If enabled,
and the feature exists in underlying hardware, hardware support for
paging is used.
Xen does not provide a mechanism to discover the HAP capability, so
we advertise its availability for hvm guests on Xen >= 3.3.
xen-unstable c/s 16931 introduced a per-domain setting for hvm
guests to enable/disable hardware assisted paging. If disabled,
software techniques such as shadow page tables are used. If enabled,
and the feature exists in underlying hardware, hardware support for
paging is used.
This provides implementation for mapping HAP setting to/from
domxml/native formats in xen drivers.
Extend the virDomainFeature enumeration to include HAP (hardware
assisted paging) feature.
Hardware features such as Extended Page Table and Nested Page
Table augment hypervisor software techniques such as shadow
page table. Adding HAP to the virDomainFeature enumeration
allows users to select between hardware and software memory
management mechanisms for their guests.
Without this patch, at least tests/daemon-conf (which sticks
$builddir/src in the PATH) tries to execute the directory
$builddir/src/qemu rather than a real qemu binary.
* src/util/util.h (virFileExists): Adjust prototype.
(virFileIsExecutable): New prototype.
* src/util/util.c (virFindFileInPath): Reject non-executables and
directories. Avoid huge stack allocation.
(virFileExists): Use lighter-weight syscall.
(virFileIsExecutable): New function.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (util.h): Export new function.
When we do peer2peer migration, the dest uri is an address of the
target host as seen from the source machine. So we must specify
the ip or hostname of target host in dest uri. If we do not specify
it, report an error to the user.
Signed-off-by: Wen Congyang <wency@cn.fujitsu.com>
If the emulator doesn't support SDL graphic, we should reject
the use of SDL graphic xml with error messages, but not ignore
it silently, and pretend things are fine.
"-sdl" flag was exposed explicitly by qemu since 0.10.0, more detail:
http://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2011-January/msg00442.html
And we already have capability flag "QEMUD_CMD_FLAG_0_10", which
could be used to prevent the patch affecting the older versions
of QEMU.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c
Don't report an error when the VirtualBox registry key is missing,
as this just indicates that VirtualBox is not installed in general.
This matches the behavior of the XPCOM glue that silently ignores
a missing VBoxXPCOMC.so.
Skip IB700 when assigning PCI slots.
Note: the I6300ESB watchdog _is_ a PCI device.
To test this: I applied this patch to libvirt-0.8.3-2.fc14 (rebasing
it slightly: qemu_command.c didn't exist in that version) and
installed this on my machine, then tested that I could successfully
add an ib700 watchdog device to a guest, start the guest, and the
ib700 was available to the guest. I also added an i6300esb (PCI)
watchdog to another guest, and verified that libvirt assigned a PCI
device to it, that the guest could be started, and that i6300esb was
present in the guest.
Note that if you previously had a domain with a ib700 watchdog, it
would have had an <address type='pci' .../> clause added to it in the
libvirt configuration. This patch does not attempt to remove this.
You cannot start such a domain -- qemu gives an error if you try.
With this patch you are able to remove the bogus address element
without libvirt adding it back.
Signed-off-by: Richard W.M. Jones <rjones@redhat.com>
* src/util/network.c (virSocketAddrMask): Zero out port, so that
iptables can initialize just the netmask then call
virSocketFormatAddr without an uninitialized read in getnameinfo.
After the remote driver runs an event callback, it unconditionally disables the
loop timer, thinking it just flushed every queued event. This doesn't work
correctly though if an event is queued while a callback is running.
The events actually aren't being lost, it's just that the event loop didn't
think there was anything that needed to be dispatched. So all those 'lost
events' should actually get re-triggered if you manually kick the loop by
generating a new event (like creating a new guest).
The solution is to disable the dispatch timer _before_ we invoke any event
callbacks. Events queued while a callback is running will properly reenable the
timer.
More info at https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=624252
The current security driver usage requires horrible code like
if (driver->securityDriver &&
driver->securityDriver->domainSetSecurityHostdevLabel &&
driver->securityDriver->domainSetSecurityHostdevLabel(driver->securityDriver,
vm, hostdev) < 0)
This pair of checks for NULL clutters up the code, making the driver
calls 2 lines longer than they really need to be. The goal of the
patchset is to change the calling convention to simply
if (virSecurityManagerSetHostdevLabel(driver->securityDriver,
vm, hostdev) < 0)
The first check for 'driver->securityDriver' being NULL is removed
by introducing a 'no op' security driver that will always be present
if no real driver is enabled. This guarentees driver->securityDriver
!= NULL.
The second check for 'driver->securityDriver->domainSetSecurityHostdevLabel'
being non-NULL is hidden in a new abstraction called virSecurityManager.
This separates the driver callbacks, from main internal API. The addition
of a virSecurityManager object, that is separate from the virSecurityDriver
struct also allows for security drivers to carry state / configuration
information directly. Thus the DAC/Stack drivers from src/qemu which
used to pull config from 'struct qemud_driver' can now be moved into
the 'src/security' directory and store their config directly.
* src/qemu/qemu_conf.h, src/qemu/qemu_driver.c: Update to
use new virSecurityManager APIs
* src/qemu/qemu_security_dac.c, src/qemu/qemu_security_dac.h
src/qemu/qemu_security_stacked.c, src/qemu/qemu_security_stacked.h:
Move into src/security directory
* src/security/security_stack.c, src/security/security_stack.h,
src/security/security_dac.c, src/security/security_dac.h: Generic
versions of previous QEMU specific drivers
* src/security/security_apparmor.c, src/security/security_apparmor.h,
src/security/security_driver.c, src/security/security_driver.h,
src/security/security_selinux.c, src/security/security_selinux.h:
Update to take virSecurityManagerPtr object as the first param
in all callbacks
* src/security/security_nop.c, src/security/security_nop.h: Stub
implementation of all security driver APIs.
* src/security/security_manager.h, src/security/security_manager.c:
New internal API for invoking security drivers
* src/libvirt.c: Add missing debug for security APIs
If invalid type is specified, e.g.
<serial type='foo'>
<target port='0'/>
</serial>
We replace 'foo' with "null" type implicitly, without reporting an
error message to tell the user, and "start" or "edit" the domain
will be success.
It's not good to guess what the user wants, This patch is to fix
the problem.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c
Add VM name/UUID in log for domain related APIs.
Format: "dom=%p, (VM: name=%s, uuid=%s), param0=%s, param1=%s
*src/libvirt.c (introduce two macros: VIR_DOMAIN_DEBUG, and
VIR_DOMAIN_DEBUG0)
I added a host definition to a network definition:
<network>
<name>Lokal</name>
<uuid>2074f379-b82c-423f-9ada-305d8088daaa</uuid>
<bridge name='virbr1' stp='on' delay='0' />
<ip address='192.168.180.1' netmask='255.255.255.0'>
<dhcp>
<range start='192.168.180.128' end='192.168.180.254' />
<host mac='23:74:00:03:42:02' name='somevm' ip='192.168.180.10' />
</dhcp>
</ip>
</network>
But due to the wrong if-statement the argument --dhcp-hostsfile doesn't get
added to the dnsmasq command. The patch below fixes it for me.
When dynamic_ownership=0, saved images must be owned by the same uid
as is used to run the qemu process, otherwise restore won't work. To
accomplish this, qemuSecurityDACRestoreSavedStateLabel() needs to
simply return when it's called.
This fix is in response to:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=661720
Although the upper-layer code protected against it, it was possible to
call iptablesForwardMasquerade() with an IPv6 address and have it
attempt to add a rule to the MASQUERADE chain of ip6tables (which
doesn't exist).
This patch changes that function to check the protocol of the given
address, generate an error log if it's not IPv4 (AF_INET), and finally
hardcodes all the family parameters sent down to lower-level functions.
This is partially in response to
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=653300
The crash in that report was coincidentally fixed when we switched
from using inet_pton() to using virSocketParseAddr(), but the absence
of an ip address in a dhcp static host definition was still silently
ignored (and that entry discarded from the saved XML). This patch
turns that into a logged failure; likewise if the entry has neither a
mac address nor a name attribute (the entry is useless without at
least one of those, plus an ip address).
Since the network name is now pulled into this function in order for
those error logs to be more informative, the other error messages in
the function have also been changed to take advantage.
While doing some testing with Qemu and creating huge logfiles I encountered the case where the VM could not start anymore due to the lseek() to the end of the Qemu VM's log file failing. The patch below fixes the problem by replacing the previously used 'int' with 'off_t'.
To reproduce this error, you could do the following:
dd if=/dev/zero of=/var/log/libvirt/qemu/<name of VM>.log bs=1024 count=$((1024*2048))
and you should get an error like this:
error: Failed to start domain <name of VM>
error: Unable to seek to -2147482651 in /var/log/libvirt/qemu/<name of VM>.log: Success
Detected on cygwin:
util/util.c: In function 'virSetUIDGID':
util/util.c:2824: warning: format '%d' expects type 'int', but argument 7 has type 'gid_t' [-Wformat]
(and three other lines)
* src/util/util.c (virSetUIDGID): Cast, as is done elsewhere in
this file, to avoid printf type mismatch warnings.
The udev driver does not update a PCI device with its SR-IOV capabilities,
when applicable, the way the hal driver does. As a result, dumping the
device's XML will not include the relevant physical or virtual function
information.
With this patch, the XML is correct:
# virsh nodedev-dumpxml pci_0000_09_00_0
<device>
<name>pci_0000_09_00_0</name>
<parent>pci_0000_00_1c_0</parent>
<driver>
<name>vxge</name>
</driver>
<capability type='pci'>
<domain>0</domain>
<bus>9</bus>
<slot>0</slot>
<function>0</function>
<product id='0x5833'>X3100 Series 10 Gigabit Ethernet PCIe</product>
<vendor id='0x17d5'>Neterion Inc.</vendor>
<capability type='virt_functions'>
<address domain='0x0000' bus='0x0a' slot='0x00' function='0x1'/>
<address domain='0x0000' bus='0x0a' slot='0x00' function='0x2'/>
<address domain='0x0000' bus='0x0a' slot='0x00' function='0x3'/>
</capability>
</capability>
</device>
# virsh nodedev-dumpxml pci_0000_0a_00_1
<device>
<name>pci_0000_0a_00_1</name>
<parent>pci_0000_00_1c_0</parent>
<driver>
<name>vxge</name>
</driver>
<capability type='pci'>
<domain>0</domain>
<bus>10</bus>
<slot>0</slot>
<function>1</function>
<product id='0x5833'>X3100 Series 10 Gigabit Ethernet PCIe</product>
<vendor id='0x17d5'>Neterion Inc.</vendor>
<capability type='phys_function'>
<address domain='0x0000' bus='0x09' slot='0x00' function='0x0'/>
</capability>
</capability>
</device>
Cc: Dave Allan <dallan@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Wright <chrisw@redhat.com>
As pointed out in https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=659855#c9,
commit c3568ec2 introduced a regression where we no longer close any
fd's beyond FD_SETSIZE.
* src/util/util.c (__virExec): Continue to close fd's beyond
keepfd range.
Reported by Stefan Praszalowicz.
The original version of these functions would modify the address sent
in, meaning that the caller would usually need to copy the address
first. This change makes the original a const, and puts the resulting
masked address into a new arg (which could point to the same
virSocketAddr as the original, if the caller really wants to modify
it).
This also makes the API consistent with virSocketAddrBroadcast[ByPrefix].
Previously we used ioctl() to set the IP address and netmask of the
bridges used for virtual networks, and apparently the SIOCSIFNETMASK
ioctl implicitly set the broadcast address for the interface. The new
method of using the "ip" command requires broadcast address to be
explicitly specified though.
These functions work only for IPv4, becasue IPv6 doesn't have the same
concept of "broadcast address" as IPv4. They merely OR the inverse of
the netmask with the given host address, thus turning on all the host
bits.
Add vboxArrayGetWithUintArg to handle new signature variations. Also
refactor vboxArrayGet* implementation to use a common helper function.
Deal with the incompatible changes in the VirtualBox 4.0 API. This
includes major changes in virtual machine and storage medium lookup,
in RDP server property handling, in session/lock handling and other
minor areas.
VirtualBox 4.0 also dropped the old event API and replaced it with a
completely new one. This is not fixed yet and will be addressed in
another patch. Therefore, currently the domain events are supported
for VirtualBox 3.x only.
Based on initial work from Jean-Baptiste Rouault.
On Windows IID's are represented as GUID by value, instead of nsID
by reference on non-Windows platforms.
Patch the vbox_CAPI_v2_2.h header to deal with this difference.
Rewrite vboxIID abstraction that deals with the different IID
representations. Add support for the GUID representation. Also unify
the four context dependent free functions for vboxIIDs
vboxIIDUnalloc, vboxIIDFree, vboxIIDUtf8Free, vboxIIDUtf16Free
into vboxIIDUnalloc that is now safe to be called (even multiple
times) on a vboxIID independent of the source and context of the
vboxIID.
The new vboxIID is designed to be used as a stack allocated variable.
It has a value member that represents the actual IID value.
This patch fixes https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=664406
If qemu is run as a different uid, it has been unable to access mode
0660 files that are owned by a different user, but with a group that
the qemu is a member of (aside from the one group listed in the passwd
file), because initgroups() is not being called prior to the
exec. initgroups will change the group membership of the process (and
its children) to match the new uid.
To make this happen, the setregid()/setreuid() code in
qemuSecurityDACSetProcessLabel has been replaced with a call to
virSetUIDGID(), which does both of those, plus calls initgroups.
Similar, but not identical, code in qemudOpenAsUID() has been replaced
with virSetUIDGID(). This not only consolidates the functionality to a
single location, but also potentially fixes some as-yet unreported
bugs.
virSetUIDGID() sets both the real and effective group and user of the
process, and additionally calls initgroups() to assure that the
process joins all the auxiliary groups that the given uid is a member
of.
There are cases when we want log an error message, and possibly free
some memory as part of the cleanup, while still preserving errno for a
caller, but the functions that log errors, and virFree (VIR_FREE) make
system calls that will clear errno. This patch preserves errno during
those most basic functions (corresponding to virReportSystemError(),
virReportOOMError(), networkReportError(), etc, as well as
virStrError()). It does *not preserve errno across calls to higher
level items such as virDispatchError(), as it's assumed the caller is
all finished with any need for errno by the time it dispatches the
error.
Running an instance of the router advertisement daemon (radvd) allows
guests using the virtual network to automatically acquire an IPv6
address and default route. Note that acquiring an address only works
for networks with a prefix length of exactly 64 - radvd is still run
in other circumstances, and still advertises routes, but autoconf will
not work because it requires exactly 64 bits of address info from the
network prefix.
This patch avoids a race condition with the pidfile by manually
daemonizing radvd rather than allowing it to daemonize itself, then
creating our own pidfile (in addition to radvd's own file, which is
unnecessary, but there is no way to tell radvd to not create it). This
is accomplished by exec'ing it with "--debug 1" in the commandline,
and using virCommand's features to fork, create a pidfile, and detach
from the newly forked process.
At this point everything is already in place to make IPv6 happen, we just
need to add a few rules, remove some checks for IPv4-only, and document
the changes to the XML on the website.
All of the iptables functions eventually call down to a single
bottom-level function, and fortunately, ip6tables syntax (for all the
args that we use) is identical to iptables format (except the
addresses), so all we need to do is:
1) Get an address family down to the lowest level function in each
case, either implied through an address, or explicitly when no
address is in the parameter list, and
2) At the lowest level, just decide whether to call "iptables" or
"ip6tables" based on the family.
The location of the ip6tables binary is determined at build time by
autoconf. If a particular target system happens to not have ip6tables
installed, any attempts to run it will generate an error, but that
won't happen unless someone tries to define an IPv6 address for a
network. This is identical behavior to IPv4 addresses and iptables.
This patch reorganizes the code in bridge_driver.c to account for the
concept of a single network with multiple IP addresses, without adding
in the extra variable of IPv6. A small bit of code has been
temporarily added that checks all given addresses to verify they are
IPv4 - this will be removed when full IPv6 support is turned on.
This commit adds support for IPv6 parsing and formatting to the
virtual network XML parser, including moving around data definitions
to allow for multiple <ip> elements on a single network, but only
changes the consumers of this API to accommodate for the changes in
API/structure, not to add any actual IPv6 functionality. That will
come in a later patch - this patch attempts to maintain the same final
functionality in both drivers that use the network XML parser - vbox
and "bridge" (the Linux bridge-based driver used by the qemu
hypervisor driver).
* src/libvirt_private.syms: Add new private API functions.
* src/conf/network_conf.[ch]: Change C data structure and
parsing/formatting.
* src/network/bridge_driver.c: Update to use new parser/formatter.
* src/vbox/vbox_tmpl.c: update to use new parser/formatter
* docs/schemas/network.rng: changes to the schema -
* there can now be more than one <ip> element.
* ip address is now an ip-addr (ipv4 or ipv6) rather than ipv4-addr
* new optional "prefix" attribute that can be used in place of "netmask"
* new optional "family" attribute - "ipv4" or "ipv6"
(will default to ipv4)
* define data types for the above
* tests/networkxml2xml(in|out)/nat-network.xml: add multiple <ip> elements
(including IPv6) to a single network definition to verify they are being
correctly parsed and formatted.
brSetInetAddress can only set a single IP address on the bridge, and
uses a method (ioctl(SIOCSETIFADDR)) that only works for IPv4. Replace
it and brSetInetNetmask with a single function that uses the external
"ip addr add" command to add an address/prefix to the interface - this
supports IPv6, and allows adding multiple addresses to the interface.
Although it isn't currently used in the code, we also add a
brDelInetAddress for completeness' sake.
Also, while we're modifying bridge.c, we change brSetForwardDelay and
brSetEnableSTP to use the new virCommand API rather than the
deprecated virRun, and also log an error message in bridge_driver.c if
either of those fail (previously the failure would be completely
silent).
When a netmask isn't specified for an IPv4 address, one can be implied
based on what network class range the address is in. The
virNetworkDefPrefix function does this for us, so netmask isn't
required.
IPv6 will use prefix exclusively, and IPv4 will also optionally be
able to use it, and the iptables functions really need a prefix
anyway, so use the new virNetworkDefPrefix() function to send prefixes
into iptables functions instead of netmasks.
Also, in a couple places where a netmask is actually needed, use the
new private API function for it rather than getting it directly. This
will allow for cases where no netmask or prefix is specified (it
returns the default for the current class of network.)
Some functions in this file were returning 1 on success and 0 on
failure, and others were returning 0 on success and -1 on
failure. Switch them all to return the libvirt-preferred 0/-1.
The functions in iptables.c all return -1 on failure, but all their
callers (which all happen to be in bridge_driver.c) assume that they
are returning an errno, and the logging is done accordingly. This
patch fixes all the error checking and logging to assume < 0 is an
error, and nothing else.
Later patches will add the possibility to define a network's netmask
as a prefix (0-32, or 0-128 in the case of IPv6). To make it easier to
deal with definition of both kinds (prefix or netmask), add two new
functions:
virNetworkDefNetmask: return a copy of the netmask into a
virSocketAddr. If no netmask was specified in the XML, create a
default netmask based on the network class of the virNetworkDef's IP
address.
virNetworkDefPrefix: return the netmask as numeric prefix (or the
default prefix for the network class of the virNetworkDef's IP
address, if no netmask was specified in the XML)
virSocketPrefixToNetmask: Given a 'prefix', which is the number of 1
bits in a netmask, fill in a virSocketAddr object with a netmask as an
IP address (IPv6 or IPv4).
virSocketAddrMask: Mask off the host bits in one virSocketAddr
according to the netmask in another virSocketAddr.
virSocketAddrMaskByPrefix, Mask off the host bits in a virSocketAddr
according to a prefix (number of 1 bits in netmask).
VIR_SOCKET_FAMILY: return the family of a virSocketAddr
Shorten qemuDomainSnapshotWriteSnapshotMetadata function name
and make it take a snapshot pointer instead of dealing with
the current snapshot. Update other functions accordingly.
Add a qemuDomainSnapshotReparentChildren hash iterator to
reparent the children of a snapshot that is being deleted. Use
qemuDomainSnapshotWriteMetadata to write updated metadata
to disk.
This fixes a problem where outdated parent information breaks
the snapshot tree and hinders the deletion of child snapshots.
Reported by Philipp Hahn.
I began noticing a race when reserving VNC ports as described here
https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2010-November/msg00379.html
Turns out that we were not initializing the size field of bitmap
struct when allocating the bitmap. This subsequently caused
virBitmapSetBit() to fail since bitmap->size is 0, hence we never
actually reserved the port.
Fix glitch in commit cddd2a06 (thankfully post-0.8.6, so no
released version has the glitch).
Document and try to workaround glitch in commit 46e9b0f (in 0.8.0),
which invalidated 6 virErrorNumber values dating as far back as 0.7.1.
My audit did not find any other glitches until pre-0.1.0 days. I'm
not sure how to add a syntax-check off the top of my head, but
hopefully the explicit numbering will make people think twice about
renumbering in the future.
* include/libvirt/virterror.h (virErrorDomain): Avoid inserting
new values in the middle, and add explicit numbering to help avoid
this in the future.
(virErrorNumber): Add explicit numbering, and document the snafu.
* src/remote/remote_driver.c (remoteIO): Compensate for the snafu.
This fixes the build from a tarball and makes autobuild.sh
work again.
This should actually have been part of this earlier commit:
esx: Move VMX handling code out of the driver directory
42b2f35d36
Reported by Eric Blake.
All other drivers are explicitly linked to gnulib. The VMware
driver lacked this, resulting in mdir_name being an undefine
symbol.
Explicitly link the VMware driver to gnulib to fix this.
Now the VMware driver doesn't depend on the ESX driver anymore.
Add a WITH_VMX option that depends on WITH_ESX and WITH_VMWARE.
Also add a libvirt_vmx.syms file.
Move some escaping functions from esx_util.c to vmx.c.
Adapt the test suite, ESX and VMware driver to the new code layout.
Connecting to a ESX(i) server that is part of a cluster failed
when the connection also involved a vCenter.
Accept ClusterComputeResource type in addition to ComputeResource
type in the object lookup function.
Reported by Guillaume Le Louët.
If there is a dangling symbolic link in filesystem pool, the pool
will fail to start or refresh, this patch is to fix it by ignoring
it with a warning log.
Network disks are accessed by qemu directly, and have no
associated file on the host, so checking for file ownership etc.
is unnecessary.
Signed-off-by: Josh Durgin <joshd@hq.newdream.net>
* configure.ac (dlopen): Cygwin dlopen is in libc; avoid spurious
failure.
(XDR_CFLAGS): Define when needed.
* src/Makefile.am (libvirt_driver_remote_la_CFLAGS): Use it.
When running 'make check' under a multi-cpu Dom0 xen machine,
nodeinfotest had a spurious failure it was reading from
/sys/devices/system/cpu, but xen has no notion of topology. The test
was intended to be isolated from reading any real system files; the
regression was introduced in Mar 2010 with commit aa2f6f96dd.
Fix things by allowing an early exit for the testsuite.
* src/nodeinfo.c (linuxNodeInfoCPUPopulate): Add parameter.
(nodeGetInfo): Adjust caller.
* tests/nodeinfotest.c (linuxTestCompareFiles): Likewise.
* configure.ac (with_selinux): Check for <selinux/label.h>.
* src/security/security_selinux.c (getContext): New function.
(SELinuxRestoreSecurityFileLabel): Use it to restore compilation
when using older libselinux.
While not technically a double free (since VIR_FREE NULLs the
pointer), this is unnecessary extra code.
This crept in when the function was converted from virRun to virCommand.
The AUTHORS file has also been updated.