Implement a compressed save image format for qemu. While ideally
we would have the choice between compressed/non-compressed
available to the libvirt API, unfortunately there is no "flags"
parameter to the virDomainSave() API. Therefore, implement this
as a qemu.conf option. gzip, bzip2, and lzma are implemented, and
it should be very easy to implement additional compression
methods.
One open question is if/how we should detect the compression
binaries. One way to do it is to do compile-time setting of the
paths (via configure.in), but that doesn't seem like a great thing
to do. My preferred solution is not to detect at all;
when we go to run the commands that need them, if they
aren't available, or aren't available in one of the standard paths,
then we'll fail. That's also the solution implemented in this patch.
In the future, we'll have a more robust (managed) save/restore API,
at which time we can expose this functionality properly in the API.
V2: get rid of redundant dd command and just use >> to append data.
V3: Add back the missing pieces for the enum and bumping the save version.
V4: Make the compressed field in the save_header an int.
Implement LZMA compression.
Signed-off-by: Chris Lalancette <clalance@redhat.com>
If a PCI device reset causes other devices to be reset, allow it so long
as those other devices are note assigned to another active domain.
Note, we need to take the driver lock qemudNodeDeviceReset() because the
check function will iterate over the domain list.
* src/qemu_conf.c: add qemuCheckPciHostDevice() to iterate over active
domains checking whether the affected device is assigned
* src/pci.[ch]: add pciDeviceEquals() helper
When using a Secondary Bus Reset, all devices on the bus are reset.
Extend the pciResetDevice() API so that a 'check' callback can be
supplied which will verify that it is safe to reset the other devices
on the bus.
The virDomainObjPtr parameter is needed so that when the check function
iterates over the domain list, it can avoid double locking.
* src/pci.[ch]: add a 'check' callback to pciResetDevice(), re-work
pciIterDevices() to pass the check function to the iter functions,
use the check function in the bus iterator, return the first unsafe
device from pciBusCheckOtherDevices() and include its details in
the bus reset error message.
* src/qemu_driver.c, src/xen_uninified.c: just pass NULL as the
check function for now
Currently, if we are unable to reset a PCI device we return a fairly
generic 'No PCI reset capability available' error message.
Fix that by returning an error from the individual reset messages and
using that error to construct the higher level error mesage.
* src/pci.c: set errors in pciTryPowerManagementReset() and
pciTrySecondaryBusReset() on failure; use those error messages
in pciResetDevice(), or explain that no reset support is available
When the guest shuts down, we should attempt to restore all PCI host
devices to a sane state.
In the case of managed hostdevs, we should reset and re-attach the
devices. In the case of unmanaged hostdevs, we should just reset them.
Note, KVM will already reset assigned devices when the guest shuts
down using whatever means it can, so we are only doing it to cover the
cases the kernel can't handle.
* src/qemu_driver.c: add qemuDomainReAttachHostDevices() and call
it from qemudShutdownVMDaemon()
It turns out that a PCI Power Management reset only affects individual
functions, and not the whole device.
The PCI Power Management spec talks about resetting the 'device' rather
than the 'function', but Intel's Dexuan Cui informs me that it is
actually a per-function reset.
Also, Yu Zhao has added pci_pm_reset() to the kernel, and it doesn't
reject multi-function devices, so it must be true! :-)
(A side issue is that we could defer the PM reset to the kernel if we
could detect that the kernel has PM reset support, but barring version
number checks we don't have a way to detect that support)
* src/pci.c: remove the pciDeviceContainsOtherFunctions() check from
pciTryPowerManagementReset() and prefer PM reset over bus reset
where both are available
Cc: Cui, Dexuan <dexuan.cui@intel.com>
Cc: Yu Zhao <yu.zhao@intel.com>
PCI device assignment is only supported in KVM's fork of qemu, so we
should really detect its availability and give a nice error if its
not supported.
* src/qemu_conf.[ch]: introduce QEMUD_CMD_FLAG_PCIDEVICE indicating
that the -pcidevice command line option is available
* tests/*: update the tests
Attaching a host PCI device to a qemu guest is done with a
straightforward 'pci_add auto host host=XX:XX.X' command.
Like with NIC and disk hotplug, we need to retain the guest PCI address
assigned by qemu so that we can use it for hot-unplug.
Identifying a device for detach is done using the host PCI address.
Managed mode is handled by detaching/resetting the device before
attaching it to the guest and re-attaching it after detaching it from
the guest.
* src/qemu_driver.c: add qemudDomainAttachHostPciDevice() and
qemudDomainDetachHostPciDevice()
* src/domain_conf.h: add somewhere to store the guest PCI address
* src/domain_conf.c: handle formatting and parsing the guest PCI
address
Re-factor the hostdev hotplug code so that we can easily add PCI
hostdev hotplug to qemudDomainAttachHostDevice().
* src/qemu_driver.c: rename qemudDomainAttachHostDevice() to
qemudDomainAttachHostUsbDevice(); make qemudDomainAttachHostDevice()
handle all hostdev types
* src/libvirt_private.syms: export a couple of hostdev related
ToString() functions
Some kernel versions expose broken NUMA topology for some machines.
This causes the LXC/UML drivers to fail to start. QEMU driver was
already fixed for this problem
* src/lxc_conf.c: Log and ignore failure to populate NUMA info
* src/uml_conf.c: Log and ignore failure to populate NUMA info
* src/capabilities.c: Reset nnumaCell to 0 after freeing
A couple of minor fixes to phyp escape_specialcharacters. Make it
a static function (since it's only used in phyp/phyp_driver.c), and
make it take a dstlen parameter. This paves the way for removing
strncpy in the future.
Signed-off-by: Chris Lalancette <clalance@redhat.com>
Minor fix to openvzGetVPSUUID to make it take a length parameter.
This ensures that it doesn't make assumptions about the length
of the UUID buffer, and paves the way for removal of strncpy in
the future.
Signed-off-by: Chris Lalancette <clalance@redhat.com>
As of qemu 0.10.6, qemu now honors the -S flag on incoming migration.
That means that when the migration completes, we have to issue a
'cont' command to get the VM running again. We do it unconditionally
since it won't hurt on older qemu.
Signed-off-by: Chris Lalancette <clalance@redhat.com>
Re-factor virDomainMigrate to split out the version 1 and version 2
protocols into their own functions. In reality, the two versions share
very little in common, so forcing them together in the same function was
just confusing. This will also make adding tunnelled migration easier.
Signed-off-by: Chris Lalancette <clalance@redhat.com>
When doing a restore, we were forgetting to update the state file
for the VM. That means that if you do a save/restore, then shut
down libvirtd, then start it back up, you'll see the state of the
guest as "paused", even though it is really running. We were
just forgetting a "virDomainSaveStatus" call in the restor path.
Signed-off-by: Chris Lalancette <clalance@redhat.com>
If the ipv6 kernel module is not loaded, then we get this when starting
a virtual network:
libvir: Network Config error :
cannot enable /proc/sys/net/ipv6/conf/virbr0/disable_ipv6:
No such file or directory
If disable_ipv6 is not present, we should just merrily continue on our
way.
* src/network_driver.c: make networkDisableIPV6() not fail if the kernel
has no ipv6 support
Allow qemu user to open kernel/initrds in this dir, but still prevent
others from listing it.
* libvirt.spec.in: set /var/lib/libvirt/boot perms to 0711
If we're running qemu unprivileged, we need to chown any supplied kernel
or initrd before spawning it.
* src/qemu_driver.c: rename qemuDomainSetDiskOwnership() to
qemuDomainSetFileOwnership(), pass it a path string instead of a disk
definition and use it for chowning the kernel/initrd in
qemuDomainSetAllDeviceOwnership()
While trying to remove uses of unsafe strncpy in the tree, I came
across a couple of usages in the ESX driver. To my eyes, the snprintf
replacements do the same thing in less code, and are also safer.
Signed-off-by: Chris Lalancette <clalance@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Mattias Bolte <matthias.bolte@googlemail.com>
* src/logging.c src/logging.h src/libvirt_private.syms:
define new functions virLogSetFromEnv and virLogParseDefaultPriority
* qemud/qemud.c src/libvirt.c tests/eventtest.c: cleanup to use the
unified functions
* qemud/qemud.c src/logging.[ch]: Similar as for general libvirt, don't
convert high priority levels to debug level. Ignore LIBVIRT_LOG_FILTERS
and LIBVIRT_LOG_OUTPUTS when they're set to the empty string, otherwise
they can override a valid setting from the config file. Send all
settings through the parser functions for validation, so that the
existence of a bad setting doesn't nullify a good setting that should
have applied -- particularly the default output. Keep the order of
precedence consistent for all variables between the environment and
the config file. Warn when an invalid log level, filter, or output
is ignored.
* src/libvirt_private.syms: export internally a few convenience functions
* src/libvirt.c src/logging.c: Don't convert high priority levels to the
debug level. Don't parse LIBVIRT_LOG_FILTERS and LIBVIRT_LOG_OUTPUTS
when they're set to the empty string. Warn when the user specifies an
invalid value (empty string remains a noop).
* po/POTFILES.in: src/logging.c now include translatable strings
* src/xm_internal.c: in case of multiple connections to the xen driver
and some clients were not using domain events, the whole /etc/xen
monitoring would break leading to disapearing domains.