On my Fedora 20 box with mingw cross-compiler, the build failed with:
../../src/rpc/virnetclient.c: In function 'virNetClientSetTLSSession':
../../src/rpc/virnetclient.c:745:14: error: unused variable 'oldmask' [-Werror=unused-variable]
sigset_t oldmask, blockedsigs;
^
I traced it to the fact that mingw64-winpthreads installs a header
that does #define pthread_sigmask(...) 0, which means any argument
only ever passed to pthread_sigmask is reported as unused. This
patch works around the compilation failure, with behavior no worse
than what mingw already gives us regarding the function being a
no-op.
* configure.ac (pthread_sigmask): Probe for broken mingw macro.
* src/util/virutil.h (pthread_sigmask): Rewrite to something that
avoids unused variables.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Like commit 94a26c7e from Eric Blake, the old fuzzy code should
be replaced by the new array management macros now.
And the type of scsi->count should be changed into "size_t", and
thus virSCSIDeviceListCount should return size_t instead, similar
for vir{PCI,USB}DeviceListCount.
When the host is configured with very restrictive firewall (default policy
is DROP for all chains, including OUTPUT), the bridge driver for Linux
adds netfilter entries to allow DHCP and DNS requests to go from the VM
to the dnsmasq of the host.
The issue that this commit fixes is the fact that a DROP policy on the OUTPUT
chain blocks the DHCP replies from the host’s dnsmasq to the VM.
As DHCP replies are sent in UDP, they are not caught by any --ctstate ESTABLISHED
rule and so, need to be explicitly allowed.
Signed-off-by: Lénaïc Huard <lenaic@lhuard.fr.eu.org>
When determining if a device is behind a PCI bridge, the PCI device
class is checked by reading the config space. However, there are some
devices which have the wrong class on the config space, but the class is
initialized by Linux correctly as a PCI BRIDGE. This class can be read
by the sysfs file '/sys/bus/pci/devices/xxxx:xx:xx.x/class'.
One example of such bridge is IBM PCI Bridge 1014:03b9, which is
identified as a Host Bridge when reading the config space.
Signed-off-by: Thadeu Lima de Souza Cascardo <cascardo@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Some of our operation denied messages are outright stupid; for
example, if virIdentitySetAttr fails:
error: operation Identity attribute is already set forbidden for read only access
This patch fixes things to a saner:
error: operation forbidden: Identity attribute is already set
It also consolidates the most common usage pattern for operation
denied errors: read-only connections preventing a public API. In
this case, 'virsh -r -c test:///default destroy test' changes from:
error: operation virDomainDestroy forbidden for read only access
to:
error: operation forbidden: read only access prevents virDomainDestroy
Note that we were previously inconsistent on which APIs used
VIR_FROM_DOM (such as virDomainDestroy) vs. VIR_FROM_NONE (such as
virDomainPMSuspendForDuration). After this patch, all uses
consistently use VIR_FROM_NONE, on the grounds that it is unlikely
that a caller learning that a call is denied can do anything in
particular with extra knowledge which error domain the call belongs
to (similar to what we did in commit baa7244).
* src/util/virerror.c (virErrorMsg): Rework OPERATION_DENIED error
message.
* src/internal.h (virCheckReadOnlyGoto): New macro.
* src/util/virerror.h (virReportRestrictedError): New macro.
* src/libvirt-lxc.c: Use new macros.
* src/libvirt-qemu.c: Likewise.
* src/libvirt.c: Likewise.
* src/locking/lock_daemon.c (virLockDaemonClientNew): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
We weren't very consistent in our use of VIR_ERR_NO_SUPPORT; many
users just passed __FUNCTION__ on, while others passed "%s" to
silence over-eager compilers that warn about __FUNCTION__ not
containing any %. It's nicer to route all these uses through
a single macro, so that if we ever need to change the reporting,
we can do it in one place.
I verified that 'virsh -c test:///default qemu-monitor-command test foo'
gives the same error message before and after this patch:
error: this function is not supported by the connection driver: virDomainQemuMonitorCommand
Note that in libvirt.c, we were inconsistent on whether virDomain*
API used virLibConnError() (with VIR_FROM_NONE) or virLibDomainError()
(with VIR_FROM_DOMAIN); this patch unifies these errors to all use
VIR_FROM_NONE, on the grounds that it is unlikely that a caller
learning that a call is unimplemented can do anything in particular
with extra knowledge of which error domain it belongs to.
One particular change to note is virDomainOpenGraphics which was
trying to fail with VIR_ERR_NO_SUPPORT after a failed
VIR_DRV_SUPPORTS_FEATURE check; all other places that fail a
feature check report VIR_ERR_ARGUMENT_UNSUPPORTED.
* src/util/virerror.h (virReportUnsupportedError): New macro.
* src/libvirt-qemu.c: Use new macro.
* src/libvirt-lxc.c: Likewise.
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c: Likewise.
* src/security/security_manager.c: Likewise.
* src/util/virinitctl.c: Likewise.
* src/libvirt.c: Likewise.
(virDomainOpenGraphics): Use correct error for unsupported feature.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Having one API call into another is generally not good; among
other issues, it gives confusing logs, and is not quite as
efficient.
This fixes several instances, but not all: we still have instances
in both libvirt.c and in backend hypervisors (lxc and qemu) calling
the public virTypedParamsGetString and friends, which dispatch
errors immediately. I'm not sure if it is worth trying to clean
that up in a separate patch (such a cleanup may be easiest by
separating the public function into a wrapper around the internal,
then tweaking internal.h so that internal users directly use the
internal function).
* src/libvirt.c (virDomainGetUUIDString, virNetworkGetUUIDString)
(virStoragePoolGetUUIDString, virSecretGetUUIDString)
(virNWFilterGetUUIDString): Avoid nested public API call.
* src/util/virtypedparam.c (virTypedParamsReplaceString): Don't
dispatch errors here.
(virTypedParamsGet): No need to reset errors.
(virTypedParamsGetBoolean): Use consistent ordering.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
I noticed that the virDomainQemuMonitorCommand debug output wasn't
telling me the name of the domain it was working on. While it was
easy enough to determine which pointer matches the domain based on
other log messages, it is nicer to be consistent.
* src/util/viruuid.h (VIR_UUID_DEBUG): Moved here from...
* src/libvirt.c (VIR_UUID_DEBUG): ...here.
(VIR_ARG15, VIR_HAS_COMMA, VIR_DOMAIN_DEBUG_EXPAND)
(VIR_DOMAIN_DEBUG_PASTE, VIR_DOMAIN_DEBUG_0, VIR_DOMAIN_DEBUG_1)
(VIR_DOMAIN_DEBUG_2, VIR_DOMAIN_DEBUG): Move...
* src/datatypes.h: ...here.
* src/libvirt-qemu.c (virDomainQemuMonitorCommand)
(virDomainQemuAgentCommand): Better debug messages.
* src/libvirt-lxc.c (virDomainLxcOpenNamespace): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Since libvirt 0.9.3, the entire virevent.c file has been a public
API, so improve the documentation in this file. Also, fix a
potential core dump - it could only be triggered by bogus use of
the API and would only affect the caller (not libvirtd), but we
might as well be nice.
* src/libvirt.c (virConnectSetKeepAlive)
(virConnectDomainEventRegister, virConnectDomainEventRegisterAny)
(virConnectNetworkEventRegisterAny): Document event loop requirement.
* src/util/virevent.c (virEventAddHandle, virEventRemoveHandle)
(virEventAddTimeout, virEventRemoveTimeout): Likewise.
(virEventUpdateHandle, virEventUpdateTimeout): Likewise, and avoid
core dump if caller didn't register handler.
(virEventRunDefaultImpl): Expand example, and set up code block in
html docs.
(virEventRegisterImpl, virEventRegisterDefaultImpl): Document more
on the use of the event loop.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1044806
Currently, sending the ANSI_A keycode from os_x codepage doesn't work as
it has a special value of 0x0. Our internal code handles that no
different to other not defined keycodes. Hence, in order to allow it we
must change all the undefined keycodes from 0 to -1 and adapt some code
too.
# virsh send-key guestname --codeset os_x ANSI_A
error: invalid keycode: 'ANSI_A'
# virsh send-key guestname --codeset os_x ANSI_B
# virsh send-key guestname --codeset os_x ANSI_C
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Currently the virDBusAddWatch does
virEventAddHandle(fd, flags,
virDBusWatchCallback,
watch, NULL);
dbus_watch_set_data(watch, info, virDBusWatchFree);
Unfortunately this is racy - since the event loop is in a
different thread, the virDBusWatchCallback method may be
run before we get to calling dbus_watch_set_data. We must
reverse the order of these calls
See https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=885445
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Recent changes to events (commit 8a29ffcf) resulted in new compile
failures on some targets (such as ARM OMAP5):
conf/domain_event.c: In function 'virDomainEventDispatchDefaultFunc':
conf/domain_event.c:1198:30: error: cast increases required alignment of
target type [-Werror=cast-align]
conf/domain_event.c:1314:34: error: cast increases required alignment of
target type [-Werror=cast-align]
cc1: all warnings being treated as errors
The error is due to alignment; the base class is merely aligned
to the worst of 'int' and 'void*', while the child class must
be aligned to a 'long long'. The solution is to include a
'long long' (and for good measure, a function pointer) in the
base class to ensure correct alignment regardless of what a
child class may add, but to wrap the inclusion in a union so
as to not incur any wasted space. On a typical x86_64 platform,
the base class remains 16 bytes; on i686, the base class remains
12 bytes; and on the impacted ARM platform, the base class grows
from 12 bytes to 16 bytes due to the increase of alignment from
4 to 8 bytes.
Reported by Michele Paolino and others.
* src/util/virobject.h (_virObject): Use a union to ensure that
subclasses never have stricter alignment than the parent.
* src/util/virobject.c (virObjectNew, virObjectUnref)
(virObjectRef): Adjust clients.
* src/libvirt.c (virConnectRef, virDomainRef, virNetworkRef)
(virInterfaceRef, virStoragePoolRef, virStorageVolRef)
(virNodeDeviceRef, virSecretRef, virStreamRef, virNWFilterRef)
(virDomainSnapshotRef): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.c (qemuMonitorOpenInternal)
(qemuMonitorClose): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Since kernel 3.12 (commit 34ff8dc08956098563989d8599840b130be81252 in
linux-stable.git in particular) the value for 'unlimited' in cgroup
memory limits changed from LLONG_MAX to ULLONG_MAX. Due to rather
unfortunate choice of our VIR_DOMAIN_MEMORY_PARAM_UNLIMITED constant
(which we transfer as an unsigned long long in Kibibytes), we ended up
with the situation described below (applies to x86_64):
- 2^64-1 (ULLONG_MAX) -- "unlimited" in kernel = 3.12
- 2^63-1 (LLONG_MAX) -- "unlimited" in kernel < 3.12
- 2^63-1024 -- our PARAM_UNLIMITED scaled to Bytes
- 2^53-1 -- our PARAM_UNLIMITED unscaled (in Kibibytes)
This means that when any number within (2^63-1, 2^64-1] is read from
memory cgroup, we are transferring that number instead of "unlimited".
Unfortunately, changing VIR_DOMAIN_MEMORY_PARAM_UNLIMITED would break
ABI compatibility and thus we have to resort to a different solution.
With this patch every value greater than PARAM_UNLIMITED means
"unlimited". Even though this may seem misleading, we are already in
such unclear situation when running 3.12 kernel with memory limits set
to 2^63.
One example showing most of the problems at once (with kernel 3.12.2):
# virsh memtune asdf --hard-limit 9007199254740991 --swap-hard-limit -1
# echo 12345678901234567890 >\
/sys/fs/cgroup/memory/machine/asdf.libvirt-qemu/memory.soft_limit_in_bytes
# virsh memtune asdf
hard_limit : 18014398509481983
soft_limit : 12056327051986884
swap_hard_limit: 18014398509481983
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
In 78839da I am trying to join the worker threads. However, I can't
sipmly reuse pool->nWorkers (same applies for pool->nPrioWorkers),
because of the following flow that is currently implemented:
1) the main thread executing virThreadPoolFree sets pool->quit = true,
wakes up all the workers and wait on pool->quit_cond.
2) A worker is woken up and see quit request. It immediately jumps of
the while() loop and decrements pool->nWorkers (or pool->nPrioWorkers in
case of priority worker). The last thread signalizes pool->quit_cond.
3) Main thread is woken up, with both pool->nWorkers and
pool->nPrioWorkers being zero.
So there's a need to copy the original value of worker thread counts
into local variables. However, these need to set *after* the check for
pool being NULL (dereferencing a NULL is no no). And for safety they can
be set right after the pool is locked.
Reported-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Even though currently we are freeing the pool of worker threads at the
daemon very end, nothing holds us back in joining the worker threads.
Moreover, we avoid leaks like this:
==26697== 1,680 bytes in 5 blocks are possibly lost in loss record 913 of 942
==26697== at 0x4C2BDE4: calloc (in /usr/lib64/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
==26697== by 0x4011131: allocate_dtv (in /lib64/ld-2.16.so)
==26697== by 0x401176D: _dl_allocate_tls (in /lib64/ld-2.16.so)
==26697== by 0x8499602: pthread_create@@GLIBC_2.2.5 (in /lib64/libpthread-2.16.so)
==26697== by 0x52F53E9: virThreadCreate (virthreadpthread.c:188)
==26697== by 0x52F5D4F: virThreadPoolNew (virthreadpool.c:221)
==26697== by 0x53F30DB: virNetServerNew (virnetserver.c:377)
==26697== by 0x11C6ED: main (libvirtd.c:1366)
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The code for extracting sub-mounts would just do a STRPREFIX
check on the mount. This was flawed because if there were
the following mounts
/etc/aliases
/etc/aliases.db
and '/etc/aliases' was asked for, it would return both even
though the latter isn't a sub-mount.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Move the code for lxcContainerGetSubtree into the virfile
module creating 2 new functions
int virFileGetMountSubtree(const char *mtabpath,
const char *prefix,
char ***mountsret,
size_t *nmountsret);
int virFileGetMountReverseSubtree(const char *mtabpath,
const char *prefix,
char ***mountsret,
size_t *nmountsret);
Add a new virfiletest.c test case to validate the new code.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Most of our code base uses space after comma but not before;
fix the remaining uses before adding a syntax check.
* src/util/vircommand.c: Consistently use commas.
* src/util/virlog.c: Likewise.
* src/util/virnetdevbandwidth.c: Likewise.
* src/util/virnetdevmacvlan.c: Likewise.
* src/util/virnetdevvportprofile.c: Likewise.
* src/util/virnetlink.c: Likewise.
* src/util/virpci.c: Likewise.
* src/util/virsysinfo.c: Likewise.
* src/util/virusb.c: Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Report the error in virPortAllocatorAcquire instead
of doing it in every caller.
The error contains the port range name instead of the intended
use for the port, e.g.:
Unable to find an unused port in range 'display' (65534-65535)
instead of:
Unable to find an unused port for SPICE
This also adds error reporting when the QEMU driver could not
find an unused port for VNC, VNC WebSockets or NBD migration.
These two chunks had to be part of df4283a55b. But for some unclear
reason, the weren't. Anyway, these two variables are not used anywhere
within function. They're initialized to NULL and then VIR_FREE()-d. And
there's no reason do do two NOPs, right?
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
This resolves:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1025397
When virPCIGetVirtualFunctions created the list of an SRIOV Physical
Function's (PF) Virtual Functions (VF), it had assumed that the order
of "virtfn*" links returned by readdir() from the PF's sysfs directory
was already in the correct order. Experience has shown that this is
not always the case - it can be in alphabetical order (which would
e.g. place virtfn11 before virtfn2) or even some seemingly random
order (see the example in the bugzilla report)
This results in 1) incorrect assumptions made by consumers of the
output of the virt_functions list of virsh nodedev-dumpxml, and 2)
setting MAC address and vlan tag on the wrong VF (since libvirt uses
netlink to set mac address and vlan tag, netlink requires the VF#, and
the function virPCIGetVirtualFunctionIndex() returns the wrong index
due to the improperly ordered VF list).
The solution provided by this patch is for virPCIGetVirtualFunctions
to no longer scan the entire device directory in its natural order,
but instead to check for links individually by name "virtfn%d" where
%d starts at 0 and increases with each success. Since VFs are created
contiguously by the kernel, this will guarantee that all VFs are
found, and placed in the arry in the correct order.
One note of use to the uninitiated is that VIR_APPEND_ELEMENT always
either increments *num_virtual_functions or fails, so no this isn't an
endless loop.
(NB: the SRIOV_* defines at the top of virpci.c were removed
because they are unnecessary and/or not used.)
This gets rid of another stat() per volume, as well as cutting
bytes read in half, when populating the volumes of a directory
pool during a pool refresh. Not to mention that it provides an
interface that can let gluster pools also probe file types.
* src/util/virstoragefile.h (virStorageFileProbeFormatFromFD):
Delete.
(virStorageFileProbeFormatFromBuf): New prototype.
(VIR_STORAGE_MAX_HEADER): New constant, based on...
* src/util/virstoragefile.c (STORAGE_MAX_HEAD): ...old name.
(vmdk4GetBackingStore, virStorageFileGetMetadataInternal)
(virStorageFileProbeFormat): Adjust clients.
(virStorageFileProbeFormatFromFD): Delete.
(virStorageFileProbeFormatFromBuf): Export.
* src/storage/storage_backend_fs.c (virStorageBackendProbeTarget):
Adjust client.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (virstoragefile.h): Adjust exports.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Future patches will want to learn metadata about a file using
a buffer that was already parsed in order to probe the file's
format. Rather than reopening and re-reading the file, it makes
sense to separate getting file contents from actually parsing
those contents.
* src/util/virstoragefile.c (virStorageFileGetMetadataFromBuf)
(virStorageFileGetMetadataFromFDInternal): New functions.
(virStorageFileGetMetadataInternal): Hoist fstat() and read() into
callers.
(virStorageFileGetMetadataFromFD)
(virStorageFileGetMetadataRecurse): Rework clients.
* src/util/virstoragefile.h (virStorageFileGetMetadataFromBuf):
New prototype.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (virstoragefile.h): Export it.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Our backing file chain code was not very robust to an ill-timed
EINTR, which could lead to a short read causing us to randomly
treat metadata differently than usual. But the existing
virFileReadLimFD forces an error if we don't read the entire
file, even though we only care about the header of the file.
So add a new virFile function that does what we want.
* src/util/virfile.h (virFileReadHeaderFD): New prototype.
* src/util/virfile.c (virFileReadHeaderFD): New function.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (virfile.h): Export it.
* src/util/virstoragefile.c (virStorageFileGetMetadataInternal)
(virStorageFileProbeFormatFromFD): Use it.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
'unsigned char *' makes sense if you are doing math on bytes and
don't want to worry about wraparound from a signed 'char'; but
since all we are doing is memcmp() or virReadBufInt*[LB]E(), which
are both safe on either type of char, and since read() prefers to
operate on 'char *', it's simpler to avoid casts by just typing
things as 'char *' from the get-go. [Technically, read can
operate on an 'unsigned char *' thanks to the C rule that any
pointer can be implicitly converted to 'char *' for legacy K&R
compatibility; but where this patch saves us is if we try to use
virfile.h functions that take 'char **' in order to allocate the
buffer, where the compiler would barf on type mismatch.]
* src/util/virstoragefile.c (FileTypeInfo): Avoid unsigned char.
(cowGetBackingStore, qcow2GetBackingStoreFormat)
(qcowXGetBackingStore, qcow1GetBackingStore)
(qcow2GetBackingStore, vmdk4GetBackingStore, qedGetBackingStore)
(virStorageFileMatchesMagic, virStorageFileMatchesVersion)
(virStorageFileProbeFormatFromBuf, qcow2GetFeatures)
(virStorageFileGetMetadataInternal)
(virStorageFileProbeFormatFromFD): Simplify clients.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
A qcow2 file with a backing file of 'gluster://host/vol/file' should
not try to look for a directory named './gluster:/' in the file system.
* src/util/virstoragefile.c (virBackingStoreIsFile): Broaden check
to include all protocols.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Add a function for efficiently checking if a path is a filesystem
mount point.
NB will not work for bind mounts, only true filesystem mounts.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1018897
If a PCI deivce is not binded to any driver (e.g. there's yet no PCI
driver in the linux kernel) but still users want to passthru the device
we fail the whole operation as we fail to resolve the 'driver' link
under the PCI device sysfs tree. Obviously, this is not a fatal error
and it shouldn't be error at all.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Most of the usage of getuid()/getgid() is in cases where we are
considering what privileges we have. As such the code should be
using the effective IDs, not real IDs.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
We already have stubs for getuid, geteuid, getgid but
not for getegid. Something in gnulib already does a
check for it during configure, so we already have the
HAVE_GETEGID macro defined.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The use of getenv is typically insecure, and we want people
to use our wrappers, to force them to think about setuid
needs.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Unconditional use of getenv is not secure in setuid env.
While not all libvirt code runs in a setuid env (since
much of it only exists inside libvirtd) this is not always
clear to developers. So make all the code paranoid, even
if it only ever runs inside libvirtd.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When running setuid, we must be careful about what env vars
we allow commands to inherit from us. Replace the
virCommandAddEnvPass function with two new ones which do
filtering
virCommandAddEnvPassAllowSUID
virCommandAddEnvPassBlockSUID
And make virCommandAddEnvPassCommon use the appropriate
ones
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
We must not allow file/syslog/journald log outputs when running
setuid since they can be abused to do bad things. In particular
the 'file' output can be used to overwrite files.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Care must be taken accessing env variables when running
setuid. Introduce a virGetEnvAllowSUID for env vars which
are safe to use in a setuid environment, and another
virGetEnvBlockSUID for vars which are not safe. Also add
a virIsSUID helper method for any other non-env var code
to use.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
In fact, the suffix should be _QUIET not _QUIT to stress the
fact, that no OOM error is reported on error.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The recent patch series proposing the addition of PPC little endian
arch support to Linux defines new arch names 'ppcle' and 'ppc64le':
https://lists.ozlabs.org/pipermail/linuxppc-dev/2013-August/109908.html
This just makes libvirt know about these arch names, so it doesn't
immediately trip up if it seems these new names from uname.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Implement the bare minimal sysinfo for AArch64 platforms by
reading the CPU models from /proc/cpuinfo.
Signed-off-by: Anup Patel <anup.patel@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Pranavkumar Sawargaonkar <pranavkumar@linaro.org>
Adding AArch64(ARMv8 64bit) to the current list of valid architectures.
For now, AArch64 name would imply AArch64 LE mode only. In future,
we might have separate names for AArch64 LE and BE.
Signed-off-by: Anup Patel <anup.patel@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Pranavkumar Sawargaonkar <pranavkumar@linaro.org>
The range of valid values for cgroup tunables has
changed in the past and may change again in future
kernels. Avoid hardcoding range checks in libvirt
code, delegating range checking to the kernel itself.
Signed-off-by: Chen Hanxiao <chenhanxiao@cn.fujitsu.com>
When EINVAL is returned while changing a cgroups value, tell
user that what values are invalid for the field.
Signed-off-by: Chen Hanxiao <chenhanxiao@cn.fujitsu.com>
'const fooPtr' is the same as 'foo * const' (the pointer won't
change, but it's contents can). But in general, if an interface
is trying to be const-correct, it should be using 'const foo *'
(the pointer is to data that can't be changed).
Fix up offenders in src/util outside of the virnet namespace.
Also, make a few virSocketAddr functions const-correct, for easier
conversions in future patches.
* src/util/virbuffer.h (virBufferError, virBufferUse)
(virBufferGetIndent): Use intended type.
* src/util/virmacaddr.h (virMacAddrCmp, virMacAddrCmpRaw)
(virMacAddrSet, virMcAddrFormat, virMacAddrIsUnicast)
(virMacAddrIsMulticast): Likewise.
* src/util/virebtables.h (ebtablesAddForwardAllowIn)
(ebtablesRemoveForwardAllowIn): Likewise.
* src/util/virsocketaddr.h (virSocketAddrSetIPv4Addr): Drop
incorrect const.
(virMacAddrGetRaw, virSocketAddrFormat, virSocketAddrFormatFull):
Make const-correct.
(virSocketAddrMask, virSocketAddrMaskByPrefix)
(virSocketAddrBroadcast, virSocketAddrBroadcastByPrefix)
(virSocketAddrGetNumNetmaskBits, virSocketAddrGetIpPrefix)
(virSocketAddrEqual, virSocketAddrIsPrivate)
(virSocketAddrIsWildcard): Use intended type.
* src/util/virbuffer.c (virBufferError, virBufferUse)
(virBufferGetIndent): Fix fallout.
* src/util/virmacaddr.c (virMacAddrCmp, virMacAddrCmpRaw)
(virMacAddrSet, virMcAddrFormat, virMacAddrIsUnicast)
(virMacAddrIsMulticast): Likewise.
* src/util/virebtables.c (ebtablesAddForwardAllowIn)
(ebtablesRemoveForwardAllowIn): Likewise.
* src/util/virsocketaddr.c (virSocketAddrMask, virMacAddrGetRaw)
(virSocketAddrMaskByPrefix, virSocketAddrBroadcast)
(virSocketAddrBroadcastByPrefix, virSocketAddrGetNumNetmaskBits)
(virSocketAddrGetIpPrefix, virSocketAddrEqual)
(virSocketAddrIsPrivate, virSocketAddrIsWildcard)
(virSocketAddrGetIPv4Addr, virSocketAddrGetIPv6Addr)
(virSocketAddrFormat, virSocketAddrFormatFull): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
'const fooPtr' is the same as 'foo * const' (the pointer won't
change, but it's contents can). But in general, if an interface
is trying to be const-correct, it should be using 'const foo *'
(the pointer is to data that can't be changed).
Fix up virhash to provide a const-correct interface: all actions
that don't modify the table take a const table. Note that in
one case (virHashSearch), we actually strip const away - we aren't
modifying the contents of the table, so much as associated data
for ensuring that the code uses the table correctly (if this were
C++, it would be a case for the 'mutable' keyword).
* src/util/virhash.h (virHashKeyComparator, virHashEqual): Use
intended type.
(virHashSize, virHashTableSize, virHashLookup, virHashSearch):
Make const-correct.
* src/util/virhash.c (virHashEqualData, virHashEqual)
(virHashLookup, virHashSize, virHashTableSize, virHashSearch)
(virHashComputeKey): Fix fallout.
* src/conf/nwfilter_params.c
(virNWFilterFormatParameterNameSorter): Likewise.
* src/nwfilter/nwfilter_ebiptables_driver.c
(ebiptablesFilterOrderSort): Likewise.
* tests/virhashtest.c (testHashGetItemsCompKey)
(testHashGetItemsCompValue): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
In Fedora 20, libvirt_lxc crashes immediately at startup with a
trace
#0 0x00007f0cddb653ec in free () from /lib64/libc.so.6
#1 0x00007f0ce0e16f4a in virFree (ptrptr=ptrptr@entry=0x7f0ce1830058) at util/viralloc.c:580
#2 0x00007f0ce0e2764b in virResetError (err=0x7f0ce1830030) at util/virerror.c:354
#3 0x00007f0ce0e27a5a in virResetLastError () at util/virerror.c:387
#4 0x00007f0ce0e28858 in virEventRegisterDefaultImpl () at util/virevent.c:233
#5 0x00007f0ce0db47c6 in main (argc=11, argv=0x7fff4596c328) at lxc/lxc_controller.c:2352
Normally virInitialize calls virErrorInitialize and
virThreadInitialize, but we don't link to libvirt.so
in libvirt_lxc, and nor did we ever call the error
or thread initializers.
I have absolutely no idea how this has ever worked, let alone
what caused it to stop working in Fedora 20.
In addition not all code paths from virLogSetFromEnv will
ensure virLogInitialize is called correctly, which is another
possible crash scenario.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Previous commit
commit 7ada155cdf
Author: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
Date: Wed Sep 11 11:15:02 2013 +0800
DBus: introduce virDBusIsServiceEnabled
Made the cgroups code fallback to non-systemd based setup
when dbus is not running. It was too big a hammer though,
as it did not check what error code was received when the
dbus connection failed. Thus it silently ignored serious
errors from dbus such as "too many client connections",
which should always be treated as fatal.
We only want to ignore errors if the dbus unix socket does
not exist, or if nothing is listening on it.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The log message regex has been
[0-9]{4}-[0-9]{2}-[0-9]{2} [0-9]{2}:[0-9]{2}:[0-9]{2}\.[0-9]{3}\+[0-9]{4}: [0-9]+: debug|info|warning|error :
The precedence of '|' is high though, so this is equivalent to matching
[0-9]{4}-[0-9]{2}-[0-9]{2} [0-9]{2}:[0-9]{2}:[0-9]{2}\.[0-9]{3}\+[0-9]{4}: [0-9]+: debug
Or
info
Or
warning
Or
error :
Which is clearly not what it should have done. This caused the code to
skip over things which are not log messages. The solution is to simply
add brackets.
A test case is also added to validate correctness.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The dbus_bus_get() function returns a shared bus connection that
all libraries in a process can use. You are forbidden from calling
close on this connection though, since you can never know if any
other code might be using it.
Add an option to use private dbus bus connections, if the app
wants to be able to close the connection.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The helper function virCompareLimitUlong compares limit values,
where value of 0 is equal to unlimited. If the latter parameter is 0,
it should return -1 instead of 1, hence the user can only set hard_limit when
swap_hard_limit currently is unlimited.
Worse, all callers pass 2 64-bit values, but on 32-bit platforms,
the second argument was silently truncated to 32 bits, which
could lead to incorrect computations.
Signed-off-by: Bing Bu Cao <mars@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The enum for virNetDevVPort is declared in the header file
virnetdevvportprofile.h, but for some reason the impl is
in netdev_vport_profile_conf.c.
This causes a dep from src/util onto src/conf which is not
allowed. Move the enum impl into virnetdevvportprofile.c
to break the circle.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This function takes exactly one argument: an address to check.
It returns true, if the address is an IPv4 or IPv6 address in numeric
format, false otherwise (e.g. for "examplehost").
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
We currently have other error codes in singular form, e.g.
VIR_ERR_NETWORK_EXIST. Cleanup the previous patch to match the form.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
I created a storage volume(eg: test) from a storage pool(eg:vg10) using
the following command:"virsh vol-create-as --pool vg10 --name test --capacity 300M."
When I re-executed the above command, the output was as the following:
"error: Failed to create vol test
error: Storage volume not found: storage vol 'test' already exists"
I think the output "Storage volume not found" is not appropriate. Because in fact storage
vol test has been found at this time. And then I think virErrorNumber should includes
VIR_ERR_STORAGE_EXIST which can also be used elsewhere. So I make this patch. The result
is as following:
"error: Failed to create vol test
error: storage volume 'test' exists already"
My previous commit 7dc1d4ab was supposed to change safezero to allocate
1 megabyte at maximum, but had the logic reversed and will allocate 1
megabyte at minimum (and a lot more at maximum.)
Signed-off-by: Oskari Saarenmaa <os@ohmu.fi>
mmap can fail on 32-bit systems if we're trying to zero out a lot of data.
Fall back to using block-by-block writing in that case. While we could map
smaller blocks it's unlikely that this code is used a lot and its easier to
just fall back to one of the existing methods.
Also modified the block-by-block zeroing to not allocate a megabyte of
zeroes if we're writing less than that.
Signed-off-by: Oskari Saarenmaa <os@ohmu.fi>
The XML parser reserves 'vnet' as a prefix for automatically
generated NIC device names. Switch the veth device creation
to use this prefix, so it does not have to worry about clashes
with user specified names in the XML.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The veth device creation code run in two steps, first it looks
for two free veth device names, then it runs ip link to create
the veth pair. There is an obvious race between finding free
names and creating them, when guests are started in parallel.
Rewrite the code to loop and re-try creation if it fails, to
deal with the race condition.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The kernel automatically destroys veth devices when cleaning
up the container network namespace. During normal shutdown, it
is thus likely that the attempt to run 'ip link del vethN'
will fail. If it fails, check if the device exists, and avoid
reporting an error if it has gone. This switches to use the
virCommand APIs instead of virRun too.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
So far the virNetDevBandwidthEqual() expected both ->in and ->out items
to be allocated for both @a and @b compared. This is not necessary true
for all our code. For instance, running 'update-device' twice over a NIC
with the very same XML results in SIGSEGV-ing in this function.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
This should resolve:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1012085
libvirt previously recognized NFS, GFS2, OCFS2, and AFS filesystems as
"shared", and thus eligible for exceptions to certain rules/actions
about chowning image files before handing them off to a guest. This
patch widens the definition of "shared filesystem" to include SMB and
CIFS filesystems (aka "Windows file sharing"); both of these use the
same protocol, but different drivers so there are different magic
numbers for each.
The problem is described by [0] but its effect on libvirt is that
starting a container with a full distro running systemd after having
stopped it simply fails.
The container cleanup now calls the machined Terminate function to make
sure that everything is in order for the next run.
[0]: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=68370
mmap's offset must be aligned to page size or mapping will fail.
mmap-based safezero is only used if posix_fallocate isn't available.
Signed-off-by: Oskari Saarenmaa <os@ohmu.fi>
Fixed the retrieval of the AdapterId from the AdapterName of the
hostdev source so it does return an error instead of leaving the
adapter_id uninitialized.
Signed-off-by: Boris Fiuczynski <fiuczy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
The debug message said there was a timeout of 0 pending for -1 ms which
made me think this is where a hang was coming from but according to the
function comments this case means that there is no timeout pending so
make the debug message say that instead of saying there's a -1 ms
timeout.
Normally a lockspace resource is not freed while there are
active owners. During initial resource creation though, an
OOM error will trigger this scenario. virLockSpaceResourceFree
was not freeing the 'owners' field in this case.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
If OOM or another error occurs in virJSONValueFromString the
parser state object will be leaked.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
If OOM occurs in virJSONParserHandleStartMap it will free
a variable that is owned by another object. This leads to
a later double-free.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
If virDBusMessageIterEncode hits an OOM condition it often
leaks the memory associated with the dbus iterator object
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The code parsing comments in config files called virConfAddEntry
but did not check for failure. This caused the comment string to
leak on OOM.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The functions
- iptablesAddForwardDontMasquerade(),
- iptablesRemoveForwardDontMasquerade
handle exceptions in the masquerading implemented in the POSTROUTING chain
of the "nat" table. Such exceptions should be added as chronologically
latest, logically top-most rules.
The bridge driver will call these functions beginning with the next patch:
some special destination IP addresses always refer to the local
subnetwork, even though they don't match any practical subnetwork's
netmask. Packets from virbrN targeting such IP addresses are never routed
outwards, but the current rules treat them as non-virbrN-destined packets
and masquerade them. This causes problems for some receivers on virbrN.
Signed-off-by: Laszlo Ersek <lersek@redhat.com>
The virCommandAddEnvPassCommon method ignored the failure to
pre-allocate the env variable array with VIR_RESIZE_N. While
this is harmless, it confuses the test harness which is trying
to validate OOM handling of every individual allocation call.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When the various viralloc.c functions were changed to use the
normal error reporting code, the OOM injection code paths
were not updated to report errors.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
In commit 6d41cb8, the interface for virEventAddHandleFunc was changed.
This patch updates the documentation for virEventAddHandle to reflect
the new significance of the return value. Also, both functions now
mention -1 for failure.
The polkit access driver will want to use the process start
time field. This was already set for network identities, but
not for the system identity.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Future improvements to the polkit code will require access to
the numeric user ID, not merely user name.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The virDomainGetMetadata function was designed to support also retrieval
of app specific metadata from the <metadata> element. This functionality
was never implemented originally.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1008619
1,003 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 599 of 635
==404== by 0x50728A7: virBufferAddChar (virbuffer.c:185)
==404== by 0x50BC466: virSystemdEscapeName (virsystemd.c:67)
==404== by 0x50BC6B2: virSystemdMakeSliceName (virsystemd.c:108)
==404== by 0x50BC870: virSystemdCreateMachine (virsystemd.c:169)
==404== by 0x5078267: virCgroupNewMachine (vircgroup.c:1498)
Bother those kernel developers. In the latest rawhide, kernel
and glibc have now been unified so that <netinet/in.h> and
<linux/in6.h> no longer clash; but <linux/if_bridge.h> is still
not self-contained. Because of the latest header change, the
build is failing with:
checking for linux/param.h... no
configure: error: You must install kernel-headers in order to compile libvirt with QEMU or LXC support
with details:
In file included from conftest.c:561:0:
/usr/include/linux/in6.h:71:18: error: field 'flr_dst' has incomplete type
struct in6_addr flr_dst;
We need a workaround to avoid our workaround :)
* configure.ac (NETINET_LINUX_WORKAROUND): New test.
* src/util/virnetdevbridge.c (includes): Use it.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Debian systems may run the 'systemd-logind' daemon, which causes the
/sys/fs/cgroup/systemd mount to be setup, but no other cgroup
controllers are created. While the LXC driver considers cgroups to
be mandatory, the QEMU driver is supposed to accept them as optional.
We detect whether they are present by looking in /proc/mounts for
any mounts of type 'cgroups', but this is not sufficient. We need to
skip any named mounts (as seen by a name=XXX string in the mount
options), so that we only detect actual resource controllers.
http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=721979
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This patch introduces virDBusIsServiceEnabled, we can use
this method to get if the service is supported.
In one case, if org.freedesktop.machine1 is unavailable on
host, we should skip creating machine through systemd.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
Some users in Ubuntu/Debian seem to have a setup where all the
cgroup controllers are mounted on /sys/fs/cgroup rather than
any /sys/fs/cgroup/<controller> name. In the loop which detects
which controllers are present for a mount point we were modifying
'mnt_dir' field in the 'struct mntent' var, but not always restoring
the original value. This caused detection to break in the all-in-one
mount setup.
Fix that logic bug and add test case coverage for this mount
setup.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
ARM v7 can operate in either little or big endian modes. Add
support for the big-endian version known as armv7b from uname.
Signed-off-by: Yogesh Tillu <tillu.yogesh@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This patch changes virFileLoopDeviceOpen() to use the new loop-control
device to allocate a new loop device. If this behavior is unsupported
we fall back to the previous method of searching /dev for a free device.
With this patch you can start as many image based LXC domains as you
like (well almost).
Fixes bug https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=995543
The VIR_FREE() macro will cast away any const-ness. This masked a
number of places where we passed a 'const char *' string to
VIR_FREE. Fortunately in all of these cases, the variable was not
in fact const data, but a heap allocated string. Fix all the
variable declarations to reflect this.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When virGetUserEnt() and virGetGroupEnt() fail due to the uid or gid not
existing on the machine they'll print a message like:
$ virsh -c vbox:///session list
error: failed to connect to the hypervisor
error: Failed to find user record for uid '32655': Success
The success at the end is a bit confusing. This changes it to:
$ virsh -c vbox:///session list
error: failed to connect to the hypervisor
error: Failed to find user record for uid '32655'
Currently, kernel supports up to 8 queues for a multiqueue tap device.
However, if user tries to enter a huge number (e.g. one million) the tap
allocation fails, as expected. But what is not expected is the log full
of warnings:
warning : virFileClose:83 : Tried to close invalid fd 0
The problem is, upon error we iterate over an array of FDs (handlers to
queues) and VIR_FORCE_CLOSE() over each item. However, the array is
pre-filled with zeros. Hence, we repeatedly close stdin. Ouch.
But there's more. The queues allocation is done in virNetDevTapCreate()
which cleans up the FDs in case of error. Then, its caller, the
virNetDevTapCreateInBridgePort() iterates over the FD array and tries to
close them too. And so does qemuNetworkIfaceConnect() and
qemuBuildInterfaceCommandLine().
FreeBSD 10 recently changed their definition of RAND_MAX, to try
and cover the fact that their evenly distributed results of rand()
really are a smaller range than a full power of 2. As a result,
I did some investigation, and learned:
1. POSIX requires random() to be evenly distributed across exactly
31 bits. glibc also guarantees this for rand(), but the two are
unrelated, and POSIX only associates RAND_MAX with rand().
Avoiding RAND_MAX altogether thus avoids a build failure on
FreeBSD 10.
2. Concatenating random bits from a PRNG will NOT provide uniform
coverage over the larger value UNLESS the period of the original
PRNG is at least as large as the number of bits being concatenated.
Simple example: suppose that RAND_MAX were 1 with a period of 2**1
(which means that the PRNG merely alternates between 0 and 1).
Concatenating two successive rand() calls would then invariably
result in 01 or 10, which is a rather non-uniform distribution
(00 and 11 are impossible) and an even worse period (2**0, since
our second attempt will get the same number as our first attempt).
But a RAND_MAX of 1 with a period of 2**2 (alternating between
0, 1, 1, 0) provides sane coverage of all four values, if properly
tempered. (Back-to-back calls would still only see half the values
if we don't do some tempering). We therefore want to guarantee a
period of at least 2**64, preferably larger (as a tempering factor);
POSIX only makes this guarantee for random() with 256 bytes of info.
* src/util/virrandom.c (virRandomBits): Use constants that are
accurate for the PRNG we are using, not an unrelated PRNG.
(randomState): Ensure the period of our PRNG exceeds our usage.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Re-arrange the code so that the returned bitmap is always initialized to
NULL even on early failures and return an error message as some callers
are already expecting it. Fix up the rest not to shadow the error.
On hosts that don't have the DBus service running or installed the new
systemd cgroups code failed with hard error instead of falling back to
"manual" cgroup creation.
Use the new helper to check for the system bus and use the fallback code
in case it isn't available.
Some systems may not use DBus in their system. Add a method to check if
the system bus is available that doesn't print error messages so that
code can later check for this condition and use an alternative approach.
The virBitmapParse function was calling virBitmapIsSet() function that
requires the caller to check the bounds of the bitmap without checking
them. This resulted into crashes when parsing a bitmap string that was
exceeding the bounds used as argument.
This patch refactors the function to use virBitmapSetBit without
checking if the bit is set (this function does the checks internally)
and then counts the bits in the bitmap afterwards (instead of keeping
track while parsing the string).
This patch also changes the "parse_error" label to a more common
"error".
The refactor should also get rid of the need to call sa_assert on the
returned variable as the callpath should allow coverity to infer the
possible return values.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=997367
Thanks to Alex Jia for tracking down the issue. This issue is introduced
by commit 0fc8909.
- Convert virCgroupGet* to VIR_CGROUP_SUPPORTED
- Convert virCgroup(Get|Set)FreezerState to VIR_CGROUP_SUPPORTED
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
- Introduce VIR_CGROUP_SUPPORTED conditional
- Convert virCgroupKill* to use it
- Convert virCgroupIsolateMount() to use it
- Convert virCgroupRemoveRecursively to VIR_CGROUP_SUPPORTED
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Make future patches smaller by matching a sane header listing in
the first place. No semantic change.
* src/util/vircgroup.h: Move free next to new, and controller
functions next to each other.
* src/util/vircgroup.c (virCgroupFree, virCgroupHasController)
(virCgroupPathOfController, virCgroupRemoveRecursively)
(virCgroupRemove): Sort implementation to be closer to header.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Avoid a forward declaration of a static function.
* src/util/vircgroup.c (virCgroupPartitionNeedsEscaping)
(virCgroupParticionEscape): Move up.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Format all functions with two blank lines between, and return type
on separate line from function name. Also break some lines longer
than 80 columns. This makes the subsequent macro refactoring
less noisy.
* src/util/vircgroup.c: Match prevailing style.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Recentish (2011) kernels introduced a new device called /dev/loop-control,
which causes libvirt's detection of loop devices to get confused
since it only checks for a prefix of 'loop'. Also check that the
next character is a digit
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This is a second attempt at fixing the problem first attempted
in commit 2df8d99; basically undoing the fact that it was
reverted in commit 43cee32f, plus fixing two more issues: the
code in configure.ac has to EXACTLY match virnetdevbridge.c
with regards to declaring in6 types before using if_bridge.h,
and the fact that RHEL 5 has even more conflicts:
In file included from util/virnetdevbridge.c:49:
/usr/include/linux/in6.h:47: error: conflicting types for 'in6addr_any'
/usr/include/netinet/in.h:206: error: previous declaration of 'in6addr_any' was here
/usr/include/linux/in6.h:49: error: conflicting types for 'in6addr_loopback'
/usr/include/netinet/in.h:207: error: previous declaration of 'in6addr_loopback' was here
The rest of this commit message borrows from the original try
of 2df8d99:
A fresh checkout on a RHEL 6 machine with these packages:
kernel-headers-2.6.32-405.el6.x86_64
glibc-2.12-1.128.el6.x86_64
failed to configure with this message:
checking for linux/if_bridge.h... no
configure: error: You must install kernel-headers in order to compile libvirt with QEMU or LXC support
Digging in config.log, we see that the problem is identical to
what we fixed earlier in commit d12c2811:
configure:98831: checking for linux/if_bridge.h
configure:98853: gcc -std=gnu99 -c -g -O2 conftest.c >&5
In file included from /usr/include/linux/if_bridge.h:17,
from conftest.c:559:
/usr/include/linux/in6.h:31: error: redefinition of 'struct in6_addr'
/usr/include/linux/in6.h:48: error: redefinition of 'struct sockaddr_in6'
/usr/include/linux/in6.h:56: error: redefinition of 'struct ipv6_mreq'
configure:98860: $? = 1
I had not hit it earlier because I was using incremental builds,
where config.cache had shielded me from the kernel-headers breakage.
* configure.ac (if_bridge.h): Avoid conflicting type definitions.
* src/util/virnetdevbridge.c (includes): Also sanitize for RHEL 5.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Commit 3d0e3c1 reintroduced a problem previously squelched in
commit 7e5aa78. Add a syntax check this time around.
util/virutil.c: In function 'virGetGroupList':
util/virutil.c:1015: error: 'for' loop initial declaration used outside C99 mode
* cfg.mk (sc_prohibit_loop_var_decl): New rule.
* src/util/virutil.c (virGetGroupList): Fix offender.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The change from initgroups to virGetGroupList/setgroups in
cab36cfe71ba83b71e536ba5c98e596f02b697b0 dropped the primary group from
processes group list iff the passed in group to virGetGroupList differs
from the user's primary group.
So always include the primary group to bring back the old behaviour.
Debian has the kvm group as primary group but uses
libvirt-qemu:libvirt-qemu as user:group to run the kvm process so
without this change the /dev/kvm is inaccessible.
The journald code would crash if a NULL was passed for the
filename / funcname in the logging code. This shouldn't
happen in general, but it is better to be safe, since there
have been bugs triggering this.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
*src/util/virstoragefile.c: Add a helper function to get
the first name of missing backing files, if the name is NULL,
it means the diskchain is not broken.
*src/qemu/qemu_domain.c: qemuDiskChainCheckBroken(disk) to
check if its chain is broken
Make the virCgroupNewMachine method try to use systemd-machined
first. If that fails, then fallback to using the traditional
cgroup setup code path.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When systemd is involved in managing processes, it may start
killing off & tearing down croups associated with the process
while we're still doing virCgroupKillPainfully. We must
explicitly check for ENOENT and treat it as if we had finished
killing processes
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Systemd uses a named cgroup mount for tracking processes. Add
it as another type of controller, albeit one which we have to
special case in a number of places. In particular we must
never create/delete directories there, nor add tasks. Essentially
the systemd mount is to be considered read-only for libvirt.
With this change both the virCgroupDetectPlacement and
virCgroupCopyPlacement methods must be invoked. The copy
placement method will copy setup for resource controllers
only. The detect placement method will probe for any
named controllers, or resource controllers not already
setup.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
There are some interesting escaping rules to consider when dealing
with systemd slice/scope names. Thus it is helpful to have APIs
for formatting names
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This function is needed for virt-login-shell. Also modify virGirUserDirectory
to use the new function, to simplify the code.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The way we were casting small (<32bit) integers was broken
on big endian hosts, causing stack smashing. This was detected
in the test suite either by test failures due to incorrect
results, or by libc/gcc abort'ing with its stack canary
triggered.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Depending on the set of mingw packages installed, it is possible
that other .c files hit the mingw header pollution from the
virdbus.h file.
In file included from ../../src/rpc/virnetserver.c:39:0:
../../src/util/virdbus.h:41:35: error: expected ';', ',' or ')' before 'struct'
const char *interface,
^
* src/util/virdbus.h (virDBusCallMethod): Match .c file change.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
On platforms without decent group support, the build failed:
Cannot export virGetGroupList: symbol not defined
./.libs/libvirt_security_manager.a(libvirt_security_manager_la-security_dac.o): In function `virSecurityDACPreFork':
/home/eblake/libvirt-tmp/build/src/../../src/security/security_dac.c:248: undefined reference to `virGetGroupList'
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
* src/util/virutil.c (virGetGroupList): Provide dummy implementation.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Our recent conversion to make VIR_ALLOC report oom wasn't
tested on mingw:
In file included from ../../src/util/virthread.c:29:0:
../../src/util/virthreadwin32.c: In function 'virCondWait':
../../src/util/virthreadwin32.c:166:81: error: 'VIR_FROM_THIS' undeclared (first use in this function)
if (VIR_REALLOC_N(c->waiters, c->nwaiters + 1) < 0) {
^
* src/util/virthreadwin32.c (VIR_FROM_THIS): Define.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The previous patch was incomplete.
CC libvirt_util_la-vircgroup.lo
../../src/util/vircgroup.c:70:12: error: 'virCgroupPartitionEscape' declared 'static' but never defined [-Werror=unused-function]
static int virCgroupPartitionEscape(char **path);
^
* src/util/vircgroup.c (virCgroupPartitionEscape): Move forward
declaration inside conditional.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The virCgroupValidateMachineGroup method calls some functions
which are only conditionally compiled, thus it too must be
made conditional. This fixes the build on non-Linux hosts.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
If the app has provided a whitelist of controllers to be used,
we skip detecting its mount point. We still, however, fill in
the placement info which later confuses the machine name
validation code. Skip detecting placement if the controller
mount point is not set
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When a VM has an 'emulator' child cgroup present, we must
strip off that suffix when detecting the cgroup for a
machine
Rename the virCgroupIsValidMachineGroup method to
virCgroupValidateMachineGroup to make a bit clearer
that this isn't simply a boolean check, it will make
changes to the object.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The virCgroupIsValidMachine does not need to be called from
outside the cgroups file now, so make it static.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Instead of requiring drivers to use a combination of calls
to virCgroupNewDetect and virCgroupIsValidMachine, combine
the two into virCgroupNewDetectMachine
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Add protection such that the virCgroupRemove and
virCgroupKill* do not do anything to the root cgroup.
Killing all PIDs in the root cgroup does not end well.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Instead of requiring one API call to create a cgroup and
another to add a task to it, introduce a new API
virCgroupNewMachine which does both jobs at once. This
will facilitate the later code to talk to systemd to
achieve this job which is also atomic.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
virCgroupAvailable() implementation calls getmntent_r
without checking if HAVE_GETMNTENT_R is defined, so it fails
to build on platforms without getmntent_r support.
Make virCgroupAvailable() just return false without
HAVE_GETMNTENT_R.
Parsing 'user:group' is useful even outside the DAC security driver,
so expose the most abstract function which has no DAC security driver
bits in itself.
Thanks to a lack of coordination between kernel and glibc folks,
it has been impossible to mix code using <linux/in.h> and
<net/in.h> for some time now (see for example commit c308a9a).
On at least RHEL 6, <linux/if_bridge.h> tries to use the kernel
side, and fails due to our desire to use the glibc side elsewhere:
In file included from /usr/include/linux/if_bridge.h:17,
from util/virnetdevbridge.c:42:
/usr/include/linux/in6.h:31: error: redefinition of ‘struct in6_addr’
/usr/include/linux/in6.h:48: error: redefinition of ‘struct sockaddr_in6’
/usr/include/linux/in6.h:56: error: redefinition of ‘struct ipv6_mreq’
Thankfully, the kernel layout of these structs is ABI-compatible,
they only differ in the type system presented to the C compiler.
While there are other versions of kernel headers that avoid the
problem, it is easier to just work around the issue than to expect
all developers to upgrade to working kernel headers.
* src/util/virnetdevbridge.c (includes): Coerce the kernel version
of in.h to not collide with the normal version.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
dbus 1.2.24 (on RHEL 6) lacks DBUS_TYPE_UNIX_FD; but as we aren't
trying to pass one of those anyways, we can just drop support for
it in our wrapper. Solves this build error introduced in commit
834c9c94:
CC libvirt_util_la-virdbus.lo
util/virdbus.c:242: error: 'DBUS_TYPE_UNIX_FD' undeclared here (not in a function)
* src/util/virdbus.c (virDBusBasicTypes): Drop support for unix fds.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The virCgroupNewDomainDriver and virCgroupNewDriver methods
are obsolete now that we can auto-detect existing cgroup
placement. Delete them to reduce code bloat.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Add virCgroupIsValidMachine API to check whether an auto
detected cgroup is valid for a machine. This lets us
check if a VM has just been placed into some generic
shared cgroup, or worse, the root cgroup
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Add a virCgroupNewDetect API which is used to initialize a
cgroup object with the placement of an arbitrary process.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
If systemd machine does not exist, return -2 instead of -1,
so that applications don't need to repeat the tedious error
checking code
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Current code for handling dbus errors only works for errors
received from the remote application itself. We must also
handle errors emitted by the bus itself, for example, when
it fails to spawn the target service.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Commit 834c9c94 introduced virDBusMessageEncode and
virDBusMessageDecode functions, however corresponding stubs
were not added to !WITH_DBUS section, therefore 'make check'
started to fail when compiled w/out dbus support like that:
Expected symbol virDBusMessageDecode is not in ELF library
Convert the remaining methods in vircgroup.c to report errors
instead of returning errno values.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Add virErrorSetErrnoFromLastError and virLastErrorIsSystemErrno
to simplify code which wants to handle system errors in a more
graceful fashion.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
To register virtual machines and containers with systemd-machined,
and thus have cgroups auto-created, we need to talk over DBus.
This is somewhat tedious code, so introduce a dedicated function
to isolate the DBus call in one place.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Doing DBus method calls using libdbus.so is tedious in the
extreme. systemd developers came up with a nice high level
API for DBus method calls (sd_bus_call_method). While
systemd doesn't use libdbus.so, their API design can easily
be ported to libdbus.so.
This patch thus introduces methods virDBusCallMethod &
virDBusMessageRead, which are based on the code used for
sd_bus_call_method and sd_bus_message_read. This code in
systemd is under the LGPLv2+, so we're license compatible.
This code is probably pretty unintelligible unless you are
familiar with the DBus type system. So I added some API
docs trying to explain how to use them, as well as test
cases to validate that I didn't screw up the adaptation
from the original systemd code.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When virAsprintf was changed from a function to a macro
reporting OOM error in dc6f2da, it was documented as returning
0 on success. This is incorrect, it returns the number of bytes
written as asprintf does.
Some of the functions were converted to use virAsprintf's return
value directly, changing the return value on success from 0 to >= 0.
For most of these, this is not a problem, but the change in
virPCIDriverDir breaks PCI passthrough.
The return value check in virhashtest pre-dates virAsprintf OOM
conversion.
vmwareMakePath seems to be unused.
Merge the virCommandPreserveFD / virCommandTransferFD methods
into a single virCommandPasFD method, and use a new
VIR_COMMAND_PASS_FD_CLOSE_PARENT to indicate their difference
in behaviour
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Reuse the buffer for getline and track buffer allocation
separately from the string length to prevent unlikely
out-of-bounds memory access.
This fixes the following leak that happened when zero bytes were read:
==404== 120 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 1,344 of 1,671
==404== at 0x4C2C71B: malloc (in /usr/lib64/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
==404== by 0x906F862: getdelim (iogetdelim.c:68)
==404== by 0x52A48FB: virCgroupPartitionNeedsEscaping (vircgroup.c:1136)
==404== by 0x52A0FB4: virCgroupPartitionEscape (vircgroup.c:1171)
==404== by 0x52A0EA4: virCgroupNewDomainPartition (vircgroup.c:1450)
I recently patches the callers to virPCIDeviceReset() to not call it
if the current driver for a device was vfio-pci (since that driver
will always reset the device itself when appropriate. At the time, Dan
Berrange suggested that I could instead modify virPCIDeviceReset
to check the currently bound driver for the device, and decide
for itself whether or not to go ahead with the reset.
This patch removes the previously added checks, and replaces them with
a check down in virPCIDeviceReset(), as suggested.
The functional difference here is that previously we were deciding
based on either the hostdev configuration or the value of
stubDriverName in the virPCIDevice object, but now we are actually
comparing to the "driver" link in the device's sysfs entry
directly. In practice, both should be the same.
virPCIDeviceGetDriverPathAndName is a static function that will need
to be called by another function that occurs above it in the
file. This patch reorders the static functions so that a forward
declaration isn't needed.
Previously a connection object was required to retrieve the auth
credentials. This patch adds the option to call the retrieval functions
only using the connection URI or path to the configuration file. This
will allow to use this toolkit to request passwords for ssh
authentication in the libssh2 connection driver.
Changes:
*virAuthGetConfigFilePathURI(): use URI to retrieve the config file path
*virAuthGetCredential(): Remove the need to propagate conn object
virAuthGetPasswordPath():
*virAuthGetUsernamePath(): New functions, that use config file path
instead of conn object
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=964358
POSIX states that multi-threaded apps should not use functions
that are not async-signal-safe between fork and exec, yet we
were using getpwuid_r and initgroups. Although rare, it is
possible to hit deadlock in the child, when it tries to grab
a mutex that was already held by another thread in the parent.
I actually hit this deadlock when testing multiple domains
being started in parallel with a command hook, with the following
backtrace in the child:
Thread 1 (Thread 0x7fd56bbf2700 (LWP 3212)):
#0 __lll_lock_wait ()
at ../nptl/sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/lowlevellock.S:136
#1 0x00007fd5761e7388 in _L_lock_854 () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
#2 0x00007fd5761e7257 in __pthread_mutex_lock (mutex=0x7fd56be00360)
at pthread_mutex_lock.c:61
#3 0x00007fd56bbf9fc5 in _nss_files_getpwuid_r (uid=0, result=0x7fd56bbf0c70,
buffer=0x7fd55c2a65f0 "", buflen=1024, errnop=0x7fd56bbf25b8)
at nss_files/files-pwd.c:40
#4 0x00007fd575aeff1d in __getpwuid_r (uid=0, resbuf=0x7fd56bbf0c70,
buffer=0x7fd55c2a65f0 "", buflen=1024, result=0x7fd56bbf0cb0)
at ../nss/getXXbyYY_r.c:253
#5 0x00007fd578aebafc in virSetUIDGID (uid=0, gid=0) at util/virutil.c:1031
#6 0x00007fd578aebf43 in virSetUIDGIDWithCaps (uid=0, gid=0, capBits=0,
clearExistingCaps=true) at util/virutil.c:1388
#7 0x00007fd578a9a20b in virExec (cmd=0x7fd55c231f10) at util/vircommand.c:654
#8 0x00007fd578a9dfa2 in virCommandRunAsync (cmd=0x7fd55c231f10, pid=0x0)
at util/vircommand.c:2247
#9 0x00007fd578a9d74e in virCommandRun (cmd=0x7fd55c231f10, exitstatus=0x0)
at util/vircommand.c:2100
#10 0x00007fd56326fde5 in qemuProcessStart (conn=0x7fd53c000df0,
driver=0x7fd55c0dc4f0, vm=0x7fd54800b100, migrateFrom=0x0, stdin_fd=-1,
stdin_path=0x0, snapshot=0x0, vmop=VIR_NETDEV_VPORT_PROFILE_OP_CREATE,
flags=1) at qemu/qemu_process.c:3694
...
The solution is to split the work of getpwuid_r/initgroups into the
unsafe portions (getgrouplist, called pre-fork) and safe portions
(setgroups, called post-fork).
* src/util/virutil.h (virSetUIDGID, virSetUIDGIDWithCaps): Adjust
signature.
* src/util/virutil.c (virSetUIDGID): Add parameters.
(virSetUIDGIDWithCaps): Adjust clients.
* src/util/vircommand.c (virExec): Likewise.
* src/util/virfile.c (virFileAccessibleAs, virFileOpenForked)
(virDirCreate): Likewise.
* src/security/security_dac.c (virSecurityDACSetProcessLabel):
Likewise.
* src/lxc/lxc_container.c (lxcContainerSetID): Likewise.
* configure.ac (AC_CHECK_FUNCS_ONCE): Check for setgroups, not
initgroups.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Since neither getpwuid_r() nor initgroups() are safe to call in
between fork and exec (they obtain a mutex, but if some other
thread in the parent also held the mutex at the time of the fork,
the child will deadlock), we have to split out the functionality
that is unsafe. At least glibc's initgroups() uses getgrouplist
under the hood, so the ideal split is to expose getgrouplist for
use before a fork. Gnulib already gives us a nice wrapper via
mgetgroups; we wrap it once more to look up by uid instead of name.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Add mgetgroups.
* src/util/virutil.h (virGetGroupList): New declaration.
* src/util/virutil.c (virGetGroupList): New function.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (virutil.h): Export it.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
A future patch needs to look up pw_gid; but it is wasteful
to crawl through getpwuid_r twice for two separate pieces
of information, and annoying to copy that much boilerplate
code for doing the crawl. The current internal-only
virGetUserEnt is also a rather awkward interface; it's easier
to just design it to let callers request multiple pieces of
data as needed from one traversal.
And while at it, I noticed that virGetXDGDirectory could deref
NULL if the getpwuid_r lookup fails.
* src/util/virutil.c (virGetUserEnt): Alter signature.
(virGetUserDirectory, virGetXDGDirectory, virGetUserName): Adjust
callers.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Recent changes uncovered a NEGATIVE_RETURNS in the return from sysconf()
when processing a for loop in virtTestCaptureProgramExecChild() in
testutils.c
Code review uncovered 3 other code paths with the same condition that
weren't found by Covirity, so fixed those as well.
I had made the change locally, so make check and make syntax-check
were successful, but forgot to add/commit. Unfortunately, git allows a
push when the local directory is dirty, so it didn't catch my mistake.
Eliminate memmove() by using VIR_*_ELEMENT API instead.
In both pci and usb cases, the count that held the size of the list
was unsigned int so it had to be changed to size_t.
Convert the type of loop iterators named 'i', 'j', k',
'ii', 'jj', 'kk', to be 'size_t' instead of 'int' or
'unsigned int', also santizing 'ii', 'jj', 'kk' to use
the normal 'i', 'j', 'k' naming
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Actually, I'm turning this function into a macro as filename,
function name and line number needs to be passed. The new
function virAsprintfInternal is introduced with the extended set
of arguments.
The device bus value was used instead of the device target when
building the sysfs device path. Trivial.
Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Whenever virPortAllocatorRelease is called with port == 0, it complains
that the port is not in an allowed range, which is expectable as the
port was never allocated. Let's make virPortAllocatorRelease ignore 0
ports in a similar way free() ignores NULL pointers.
When removing a TAP device, the associated bandwidth settings are
removed. Currently, the /sbin/tc is used for that. It is spawned
several times. Moreover, we use the same @cmd variable to
construct the command and its arguments. That means we need to
virCommandFree(cmd); prior to each virCommandNew(TC); which
wasn't done.
On Fedora 18, when cross-compiling to mingw with the mingw*-dbus
packages installed, compilation fails with:
CC libvirt_net_rpc_server_la-virnetserver.lo
In file included from /usr/i686-w64-mingw32/sys-root/mingw/include/dbus-1.0/dbus/dbus-connection.h:32:0,
from /usr/i686-w64-mingw32/sys-root/mingw/include/dbus-1.0/dbus/dbus-bus.h:30,
from /usr/i686-w64-mingw32/sys-root/mingw/include/dbus-1.0/dbus/dbus.h:31,
from ../../src/util/virdbus.h:26,
from ../../src/rpc/virnetserver.c:39:
/usr/i686-w64-mingw32/sys-root/mingw/include/dbus-1.0/dbus/dbus-message.h:74:58: error: expected ';', ',' or ')' before 'struct'
I have reported this as a bug against two packages:
- mingw-headers, for polluting the namespace
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=980270
- dbus, for not dealing with the pollution
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=980278
At least dbus has agreed that a future version of dbus headers will
do s/interface/iface/, regardless of what happens in mingw. But it
is also easy to workaround in libvirt in the meantime, without having
to wait for either mingw or dbus to upgrade.
* src/util/virdbus.h (includes): Undo mingw's pollution so that
dbus doesn't fail.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
iptablesContext holds only 4 pairs of iptables
(table, chain) and there's no need to pass
it around.
This is a first step towards separating bridge_driver.c
in platform-specific parts.
This fixes https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=971325
The problem was that if virPCIGetVirtualFunctions was given the name
of a non-existent interface, it would return to its caller without
initializing the pointer to the array of virtual functions to NULL,
and the caller (virNetDevGetVirtualFunctions) would try to VIR_FREE()
the invalid pointer.
The final error message before the crash would be:
virPCIGetVirtualFunctions:2088 :
Failed to open dir '/sys/class/net/eth2/device':
No such file or directory
In this patch I move the initialization in virPCIGetVirtualFunctions()
to the begining of the function, and also do an explicit
initialization in virNetDevGetVirtualFunctions, just in case someone
in the future adds code into that function prior to the call to
virPCIGetVirtualFunctions.
The IF_MAXUNIT macro is not present on all BSDs, so
make its use conditional, to avoid breaking OS-X.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The 'in_addr_t' typedef is not present in Mingw64 headers.
Instead we can use the more portable 'struct in_addr' and
then access its 's_addr' field.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When creating a virtual FC HBA with virsh/libvirt API, an error message
will be returned: "error: Node device not found",
also the 'nodedev-dumpxml' shows wrong information of wwpn & wwnn
for the new created device.
Signed-off-by: xschen@tnsoft.com.cn
This reverts f90af69 which switched wwpn & wwwn in the wrong place.
https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/scsi/scsi_fc_transport.txt
Building on FreeBSD had this linker error:
/work/a/ports/devel/libvirt/work/libvirt-1.1.0/src/.libs/libvirt.so:
undefined reference to `virPCIDeviceAddressParse'
This was caused by the new use of virPCIDeviceAddressParse in a
portion of virpci.c that wasn't linux-only (in commit 72c029d8). The
problem was that virPCIDeviceAddressParse had originally been defined
inside #ifdef _linux (because it was only used by another function
that was inside the same ifdef).
The solution is to move it out to the part of virpci.c that is
compiled on all platforms.
(Because the portion that was "moved" was 40-50 lines, but only moved
up by 15 lines, the diff for the patch is less than non-informative -
rather than showing that part that I moved, it shows the bit that was
previously before the moved part, and now sits *after* it.)
Any device which belongs to an "IOMMU group" (used by vfio) will
have links to all devices of its group listed in
/sys/bus/pci/$device/iommu_group/devices;
/sys/bus/pci/$device/iommu_group is actually a link to
/sys/kernel/iommu_groups/$n, where $n is the group number (there
will be a corresponding device node at /dev/vfio/$n once the
devices are bound to the vfio-pci driver)
The following functions are added:
virPCIDeviceGetIOMMUGroupList
Gets a virPCIDeviceList with one virPCIDeviceList for each device
in the same IOMMU group as the provided virPCIDevice (a copy of the
original device object is included in the list.
virPCIDeviceAddressIOMMUGroupIterate
Calls the function @actor once for each device in the group that
contains the given virPCIDeviceAddress.
virPCIDeviceAddressGetIOMMUGroupAddresses
Fills in a virPCIDeviceAddressPtr * with an array of
virPCIDeviceAddress, one for each device in the iommu group of the
provided virPCIDeviceAddress (including a copy of the original).
virPCIDeviceAddressGetIOMMUGroupNum
Returns the group number as an int (a valid group number will always
be 0 or greater). If there is no iommu_group link in the device's
directory (usually indicating that vfio isn't loaded), -2 will be
returned. On any real error, -1 will be returned.
We only break out of the while loop if *content is an empty string.
However the buffer has been allocated to BUFSIZ + 1 (8193 in my case),
but it gets overwritten in the next for iteration.
Move VIR_FREE right before we overwrite it to avoid the leak.
==5777== 16,386 bytes in 2 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 1,022 of 1,027
==5777== by 0x5296E28: virReallocN (viralloc.c:184)
==5777== by 0x52B0C66: virFileReadLimFD (virfile.c:1137)
==5777== by 0x52B0E1A: virFileReadAll (virfile.c:1199)
==5777== by 0x529B092: virCgroupGetValueStr (vircgroup.c:534)
==5777== by 0x529AF64: virCgroupMoveTask (vircgroup.c:1079)
Introduced by 83e4c77.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=978352
Don't check for '\n' at the end of file if zero bytes were read.
Found by valgrind:
==404== Invalid read of size 1
==404== at 0x529B09F: virCgroupGetValueStr (vircgroup.c:540)
==404== by 0x529AF64: virCgroupMoveTask (vircgroup.c:1079)
==404== by 0x1EB475: qemuSetupCgroupForEmulator (qemu_cgroup.c:1061)
==404== by 0x1D9489: qemuProcessStart (qemu_process.c:3801)
==404== by 0x18557E: qemuDomainObjStart (qemu_driver.c:5787)
==404== by 0x190FA4: qemuDomainCreateWithFlags (qemu_driver.c:5839)
Introduced by 0d0b409.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=978356
The "fix" I pushed a few commits ago would still leak a virPCIDevice
in case of an OOM error. Although it's inconsequential in practice,
this patch satisfies my OCD.
The same strings were being re-created multiple times just to save
declaring a new variable. In the meantime, the use of the generic
variable names led to confusion when trying to follow the code. This
patch creates strings for:
stubDriverName (was called "driver" in original args)
stubDriverPath ("/sys/bus/pci/drivers/${stubDriverName}")
driverLink ("${device}/driver")
oldDriverName (the final component of path linked to by
"${device}/driver")
oldDriverPath ("/sys/bus/pci/drivers/${oldDriverName}")
then re-uses them as necessary.
I realized after the fact that it's probably better in the long run to
give this function a name that matches the name of the link used in
sysfs to hold the group (iommu_group).
I'm changing it now because I'm about to add several more functions
that deal with iommu groups.
The driver arg to virPCIDeviceDetach is no longer used (the name of the stub driver is now set in the virPCIDevice object, and virPCIDeviceDetach retrieves it from there). Remove it.
Commit 861d40565 added code (my personal change to "clean up" the
submitter's code, *not* the fault of the submitter) that dereferenced
virtVlan without first checking for NULL. This patch fixes that and,
as part of the fix, cleans up some unnecessary obtuseness.
virNetDevBridgeSetSTPDelay accepts delay in milliseconds,
but BSD implementation was expecting seconds. Therefore,
it was working correctly only with delay == 0.
This patch adds functionality to allow libvirt to configure the
'native-tagged' and 'native-untagged' modes on openvswitch networks.
Signed-off-by: Laine Stump <laine@redhat.com>
All APIs that take typed parameters are only using params address in
their entry point debug messages. With the new VIR_TYPED_PARAMS_DEBUG
macro, all functions can easily log all individual typed parameters
passed to them.
When unsupported parameter is passed to virTypedParamsValidate,
VIR_ERR_ARGUMENT_UNSUPPORTED should be returned rather than
VIR_ERR_INVALID_ARG, which is more appropriate for supported parameters
used incorrectly.
virPCIDeviceDetach would previously sometimes consume the input device
object (to put it on the inactive list) and sometimes not. Avoiding
memory leaks required checking beforehand to see if the device was
already on the list, and freeing the device object in the caller only
if there wasn't already an identical object on the inactive list.
This patch makes it consistent - virPCIDeviceDetach will *never*
consume the input virPCIDevice object; if it needs to put one on the
inactive list, it will create a copy and put *that* on the list. This
way the caller knows that it is always their responsibility to free
the device object they created.
virPCIDeviceReattach was making the assumption that the dev object
given to it was one and the same with the dev object on the
inactiveDevs list. If that had been the case, it would not need to
free the dev object it removed from the inactive list, because the
caller of virPCIDeviceReattach always frees the dev object that it
passes in. Since the dev object passed in is *never* the same object
that's on the list (it is a different object with the same name and
attributes, created just for the purpose of searching for the actual
object), simply doing a "ListSteal" to remove the object from the list
results in one leaked object; we need to actually free the object
after removing it from the list.
* virPCIDeviceFindByIDs - find a device on a list w/o creating an object
This makes searching for an existing device on a list lighter weight.
* virPCIDeviceCopy - make a copy of an existing virPCIDevice object.
* virPCIDeviceGetDriverPathAndName - construct new strings containing
1) the name of the driver bound to this device.
2) the full path to the sysfs config for that driver.
(This code was lifted from virPCIDeviceUnbindFromStub, and replaced
there with a call to this new function).
Previously stubDriver was always set from a string literal, so it was
okay to use a const char * that wasn't freed when the virPCIDevice was
freed. This will not be the case in the near future, so it is now a
char* that is allocated in virPCIDeviceSetStubDriver() and freed
during virPCIDeviceFree().
This patch introduces the virAccessManagerPtr class as the
interface between virtualization drivers and the access
control drivers. The viraccessperm.h file defines the
various permissions that will be used for each type of object
libvirt manages
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
It's not used anywhere except for the switch in
virStorageBackendCreateQemuImgOpts, where leaving it in causes
a dead code coverity warning and omitting it breaks compilation
because of unhandled enum value.
Introduced by 6298f74.
Detect qcow2 images with version 3 in the image header as
VIR_STORAGE_FILE_QCOW2.
These images have a feature bitfield, with just one feature supported
so far: lazy_refcounts.
The header length changed too, moving the location of the backing
format name.
Call virLogVMessage instead of virLogMessage, since libudev
called us with a va_list object, not a list of arguments.
Honor message priority and strip the trailing newline.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=969152
virProcessGetNamespaces() opens files in /proc/XXX/ns/ which will
later be passed to setns(). We have to make sure that the file
descriptors in the array are in the correct order. In particular
the 'user' namespace must be first otherwise setns() may fail
for other namespaces.
The order has been taken from util-linux's sys-utils/nsenter.c
Also we must ignore EINVAL in setns() which occurs if the
namespace associated with the fd, matches the calling process'
current namespace.
Signed-off-by: Richard Weinberger <richard@nod.at>
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Such as on FreeBSD. Broken in commit aa2a4cff7.
* src/util/virstoragefile.c (virStorageFileResize): Add missing ';',
mark conditionally unused variables.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The document for "vol-resize" says the new capacity will be sparse
unless "--allocate" is specified, however, the "--allocate" flag
is never implemented. This implements the "--allocate" flag for
fs backend's raw type volume, based on posix_fallocate and the
syscall SYS_fallocate.
We can't use GNULIB's fprintf-posix due to licensing
incompatibilities. We do already have a portable
formatting via virAsprintf() which we got from GNULIB
though. We can use to create a virFilePrintf() function.
But really gnulib could just provide a 'fprintf'
module, that depended on just its 'asprintf' module.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
I noticed several unusual spacings in for loops, and decided to
fix them up. See the next commit for the syntax check that found
all of these.
* examples/domsuspend/suspend.c (main): Fix spacing.
* python/libvirt-override.c: Likewise.
* src/conf/interface_conf.c: Likewise.
* src/security/virt-aa-helper.c: Likewise.
* src/util/virconf.c: Likewise.
* src/util/virhook.c: Likewise.
* src/util/virlog.c: Likewise.
* src/util/virsocketaddr.c: Likewise.
* src/util/virsysinfo.c: Likewise.
* src/util/viruuid.c: Likewise.
* src/vbox/vbox_tmpl.c: Likewise.
* src/xen/xen_hypervisor.c: Likewise.
* tools/virsh-domain-monitor.c (vshDomainStateToString): Drop
default case, to let compiler check us.
* tools/virsh-domain.c (vshDomainVcpuStateToString): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
When src is NULL, VIR_STRDUP will return 0 directly.
This patch will set dest to NULL before VIR_STRDUP return.
Example:
[root@yds-pc libvirt]# virsh
Welcome to virsh, the virtualization interactive terminal.
Type: 'help' for help with commands
'quit' to quit
virsh # connect
error: Failed to connect to the hypervisor
error: internal error Unable to parse URI �N�*
Signed-off-by: yangdongsheng <yangds.fnst@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
With previous patch, we accept negative value as length of string to
duplicate. So there is no need to pass strlen(src) in case we want to do
duplicate the whole string.
It may shorten the code a bit as the following pattern:
VIR_STRNDUP(dst, src, cond ? n : strlen(src))
is used on several places among our code. However, we can
move the strlen into virStrndup and thus write just:
VIR_STRNDUP(dst, src, cond ? n : -1)
Currently, the controllers argument to virCgroupDetect acts both as
a result filter and a required controller specification, which is
a bit overloaded. If both functionalities are needed, it would be
better to have them seperated into a filter and a requirement mask.
The only situation where it is used today is to ensure that only
CPU related controllers are used for the VCPU directories. But here
we clearly do not want to enforce the existence of cpu, cpuacct and
specifically not cpuset at the same time.
This commit changes the semantics of controllers to "filter only".
Should a required mask ever be needed, more work will have to be done.
Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Within whole vircgroup.c we 'return -errno', e.g. 'return -ENOMEM'.
However, in this specific function virCgroupAddTaskStrController
we weren't returning -ENOMEM but -1 despite fact that later in
the function we are returning one of errno values indeed.
In my previous patches I enabled the IFF_MULTI_QUEUE flag every
time the user requested multiqueue TAP device. However, this
works only at runtime. During build time the flag may be
undeclared.
In order to learn libvirt multiqueue several things must be done:
1) The '/dev/net/tun' device needs to be opened multiple times with
IFF_MULTI_QUEUE flag passed to ioctl(fd, TUNSETIFF, &ifr);
2) Similarly, '/dev/vhost-net' must be opened as many times as in 1)
in order to keep 1:1 ratio recommended by qemu and kernel folks.
3) The command line construction code needs to switch from 'fd=X' to
'fds=X:Y:...:Z' and from 'vhostfd=X' to 'vhostfds=X:Y:...:Z'.
4) The monitor handling code needs to learn to pass multiple FDs.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=965169 documents a
problem starting domains when cgroups are enabled; I was able
to reliably reproduce the race about 5% of the time when I added
hooks to domain startup by 3 seconds (as that seemed to be about
the length of time that qemu created and then closed a temporary
thread, probably related to aio handling of initially opening
a disk image). The problem has existed since we introduced
virCgroupMoveTask in commit 9102829 (v0.10.0).
There are some inherent TOCTTOU races when moving tasks between
kernel cgroups, precisely because threads can be created or
completed in the window between when we read a thread id from the
source and when we write to the destination. As the goal of
virCgroupMoveTask is merely to move ALL tasks into the new
cgroup, it is sufficient to iterate until no more threads are
being created in the old group, and ignoring any threads that
die before we can move them.
It would be nicer to start the threads in the right cgroup to
begin with, but by default, all child threads are created in
the same cgroup as their parent, and we don't want vcpu child
threads in the emulator cgroup, so I don't see any good way
of avoiding the move. It would also be nice if the kernel were
to implement something like rename() as a way to atomically move
a group of threads from one cgroup to another, instead of forcing
a window where we have to read and parse the source, then format
and write back into the destination.
* src/util/vircgroup.c (virCgroupAddTaskStrController): Ignore
ESRCH, because a thread ended between read and write attempts.
(virCgroupMoveTask): Loop until all threads have moved.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Resolves:https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=927620
#kill -STOP `pidof qemu-kvm`
#virsh destroy $guest --graceful
error: Failed to destroy domain testVM
error: An error occurred, but the cause is unknown
With --graceful, SIGTERM always is emitted to kill driver
process, but it won't success till burning out waiting time
in case of process being stopped.
But domain destroy without --graceful can work, SIGKILL will
be emitted to the stopped process after 10 secs which always
kills a process even one that is currently stopped.
So report an error after burning out waiting time in this case.
Change bbe97ae968 caused the
QEMU driver to ignore ENOENT errors from cgroups, in order
to cope with missing /proc/cgroups. This is not good though
because many other things can cause ENOENT and should not
be ignored. The callers expect to see ENXIO when cgroups
are not present, so adjust the code to report that errno
when /proc/cgroups is missing
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
In an upcoming patch, I need the way to safely transfer a nested
virJSON object out of its parent container for independent use,
even after the parent is freed.
* src/util/virjson.h (virJSONValueObjectRemoveKey): New function.
(_virJSONObject, _virJSONArray): Use correct type.
* src/util/virjson.c (virJSONValueObjectRemoveKey): Implement it.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (virjson.h): Export it.
* tests/jsontest.c (mymain): Test it.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
network: static route support for <network>
This patch adds the <route> subelement of <network> to define a static
route. the address and prefix (or netmask) attribute identify the
destination network, and the gateway attribute specifies the next hop
address (which must be directly reachable from the containing
<network>) which is to receive the packets destined for
"address/(prefix|netmask)".
These attributes are translated into an "ip route add" command that is
executed when the network is started. The command used is of the
following form:
ip route add <address>/<prefix> via <gateway> \
dev <virbr-bridge> proto static metric <metric>
Tests are done to validate that the input data are correct. For
example, for a static route ip definition, the address must be a
network address and not a host address. Additional checks are added
to ensure that the specified gateway is directly reachable via this
network (i.e. that the gateway IP address is in the same subnet as one
of the IP's defined for the network).
prefix='0' is supported for both family='ipv4' address='0.0.0.0'
netmask='0.0.0.0' or prefix='0', and for family='ipv6' address='::',
prefix=0', although care should be taken to not override a desired
system default route.
Anytime an attempt is made to define a static route which *exactly*
duplicates an existing static route (for example, address=::,
prefix=0, metric=1), the following error message will be sent to
syslog:
RTNETLINK answers: File exists
This can be overridden by decreasing the metric value for the route
that should be preferred, or increasing the metric for the route that
shouldn't be preferred (and is thus in place only in anticipation that
the preferred route may be removed in the future). Caution should be
used when manipulating route metrics, especially for a default route.
Note: The use of the command-line interface should be replaced by
direct use of libnl so that error conditions can be handled better. But,
that is being left as an exercise for another day.
Signed-off-by: Gene Czarcinski <gene@czarc.net>
Signed-off-by: Laine Stump <laine@laine.org>
Currently we report a bogus error message when macvlan
creation fails:
error: Failed to start domain migtest
error: operation failed: Unable to create macvlan device
With this removed, we see the real error:
error: Failed to start domain migtest
error: Unable to get index for interface p31p1: No such device
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Use of the select() system call is inherantly dangerous since
applications will hit a buffer overrun if any FD number exceeds
the size of the select set size (typically 1024). Replace the
two uses of select() with poll() and use cfg.mk to ban any
future use of select().
NB: This changes the phyp driver so that it uses an infinite
timeout, instead of busy-waiting for 1ms at a time.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Found that I was unable to start existing domains after updating
to a kernel with no cgroups support
# zgrep CGROUP /proc/config.gz
# CONFIG_CGROUPS is not set
# virsh start test
error: Failed to start domain test
error: Unable to initialize /machine cgroup: Cannot allocate memory
virCgroupPartitionNeedsEscaping() correctly returns errno (ENOENT) when
attempting to open /proc/cgroups on such a system, but it was being
dropped in virCgroupSetPartitionSuffix().
Change virCgroupSetPartitionSuffix() to propagate errors returned by
its callees. Also check for ENOENT in qemuInitCgroup() when determining
if cgroups support is available.
Add a virFileNBDDeviceAssociate method, which given a filename
will setup a NBD device, using qemu-nbd as the server.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
To correctly handle errors from readdir() you must set 'errno'
to zero before invoking it & check its value afterwards to
distinguish error from EOF.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The helper works for default sysfs_prefix, but for user specified
prefix, it doesn't work. (Detected when writing test cases. A later
patch will add the test cases for fc_host).
In case of the caller can pass a "prefix" (or "sysfs_prefix")
without the trailing slash, and Unix-Like system always eats
up the redundant "slash" in the filepath, let's add it explicitly.
Introduced by commit 244ce462e2, which refactored the helper for wwn
reading, however, it forgot to change the old "strndup" and "sizeof(buf)",
"sizeof(buf)" operates on the fixed length array ("buf") in the old code,
but now "buf" is a pointer.
Before the fix:
% virsh nodedev-dumpxml scsi_host5
<device>
<name>scsi_host5</name>
<parent>pci_0000_04_00_1</parent>
<capability type='scsi_host'>
<host>5</host>
<capability type='fc_host'>
<wwnn>2001001b</wwnn>
<wwpn>2101001b</wwpn>
<fabric_wwn>2001000d</fabric_wwn>
</capability>
</capability>
</device>
With the fix:
% virsh nodedev-dumpxml scsi_host5
<device>
<name>scsi_host5</name>
<parent>pci_0000_04_00_1</parent>
<capability type='scsi_host'>
<host>5</host>
<capability type='fc_host'>
<wwnn>0x2001001b32a9da4e</wwnn>
<wwpn>0x2101001b32a9da4e</wwpn>
<fabric_wwn>0x2001000dec9877c1</fabric_wwn>
</capability>
</capability>
</device>
Commit bfe7721d introduced a regression, but only on platforms
like FreeBSD that lack posix_fallocate and where mmap serves as
a nice fallback for safezero.
util/virfile.c: In function 'safezero':
util/virfile.c:837: error: 'PROT_READ' undeclared (first use in this function)
* src/util/virutil.c (includes): Move use of <sys/mman.h>...
* src/util/virfile.c (includes): ...to the file that uses mmap.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Apps using libvirt will often have code like
if (virXXXX() < 0) {
virErrorPtr err = virGetLastError();
fprintf(stderr, "Something failed: %s\n",
err && err->message ? err->message :
"unknown error");
return -1;
}
Checking for a NULL error object or message leads to very
verbose code. A virGetLastErrorMessage() helper from libvirt
can simplify this to
if (virXXXX() < 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "Something failed: %s\n",
virGetLastErrorMessage());
return -1;
}
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
- provide virNetDevSetMAC() implementation based on SIOCSIFLLADDR
ioctl.
- adjust virNetDevExists() to check for ENXIO error because
FreeBSD throws it when device doesn't exist
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
These all existed before virfile.c was created, and for some reason
weren't moved.
This is mostly straightfoward, although the syntax rule prohibiting
write() had to be changed to have an exception for virfile.c instead
of virutil.c.
This movement pointed out that there is a function called
virBuildPath(), and another almost identical function called
virFileBuildPath(). They really should be a single function, which
I'll take care of as soon as I figure out what the arglist should look
like.
This resolves:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=851411https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=955500
The first problem was that virFileOpenAs was returning fd (-1) in one
of the error cases rather than ret (-errno), so the caller thought
that the error was EPERM rather than ENOENT.
The second problem was that some log messages in the general purpose
qemuOpenFile() function would always say "Failed to create" even if
the caller hadn't included O_CREAT (i.e. they were trying to open an
existing file).
This fixes virFileOpenAs to jump down to the error return (which
returns ret instead of fd) in the previously mentioned incorrect
failure case of virFileOpenAs(), removes all error logging from
virFileOpenAs() (since the callers report it), and modifies
qemuOpenFile to appropriately use "open" or "create" in its log
messages.
NB: I seriously considered removing logging from all callers of
virFileOpenAs(), but there is at least one case where the caller
doesn't want virFileOpenAs() to log any errors, because it's just
going to try again (qemuOpenFile()). We can't simply make a silent
variation of virFileOpenAs() though, because qemuOpenFile() can't make
the decision about whether or not it wants to retry until after
virFileOpenAs() has already returned an error code.
Likewise, I also considered changing virFileOpenAs() to return -1 with
errno set on return, and may still do that, but only as a separate
patch, as it obscures the intent of this patch too much.
The individual hypervisor drivers were directly referencing
APIs in virnodesuspend.c in their virDriverPtr struct. Separate
these methods, so there is always a wrapper in the hypervisor
driver. This allows the unused virConnectPtr args to be removed
from the virnodesuspend.c file. Again this will ensure that
ACL checks will only be performed on invocations that are
directly associated with public API usage.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Currently the virGetHostname() API has a bogus virConnectPtr
parameter. This is because virtualization drivers directly
reference this API in their virDriverPtr tables, tieing its
API design to the public virConnectGetHostname API design.
This also causes problems for access control checks since
these must only be done for invocations from the public
API, not internal invocation.
Remove the bogus virConnectPtr parameter, and make each
hypervisor driver provide a dedicated function for the
driver API impl. This will allow access control checks
to be easily inserted later.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Since PIDs can be reused, polkit prefers to be given
a (PID,start time) pair. If given a PID on its own,
it will attempt to lookup the start time in /proc/pid/stat,
though this is subject to races.
It is safer if the client app resolves the PID start
time itself, because as long as the app has the client
socket open, the client PID won't be reused.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
There are various methods named "virXXXXSecurityContext",
which are specific to SELinux. Rename them all to
"virXXXXSELinuxContext". They will still raise errors at
runtime if SELinux is not compiled in
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
While reviewing proposed VIR_STRDUP conversions, I've already noticed
several places that do:
if (str && VIR_STRDUP(dest, str) < 0)
which can be simplified by allowing str to be NULL (something that
strdup() doesn't allow). Meanwhile, code that wants to ensure a
non-NULL dest regardless of the source can check for <= 0.
Also, make it part of the VIR_STRDUP contract that macro arguments
are evaluated exactly once.
* src/util/virstring.h (VIR_STRDUP, VIR_STRDUP_QUIET, VIR_STRNDUP)
(VIR_STRNDUP_QUIET): Improve contract.
* src/util/virstring.c (virStrdup, virStrndup): Change return
conventions.
* docs/hacking.html.in: Document this.
* HACKING: Regenerate.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
VIR_APPEND_ELEMENT(array, size, elem) was not safe if the expression
for 'size' had side effects. While no one in the current code base
was trying to pass side effects, we might as well be robust and
explicitly document our intentions.
* src/util/viralloc.c (virInsertElementsN): Add special case.
* src/util/viralloc.h (VIR_APPEND_ELEMENT): Use it.
(VIR_ALLOC, VIR_ALLOC_N, VIR_REALLOC_N, VIR_EXPAND_N)
(VIR_RESIZE_N, VIR_SHRINK_N, VIR_INSERT_ELEMENT)
(VIR_DELETE_ELEMENT, VIR_ALLOC_VAR, VIR_FREE): Document
which macros are safe in the presence of side effects.
* docs/hacking.html.in: Document this.
* HACKING: Regenerate.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The code adaptation is not done right now, but in subsequent patches.
Hence I am not implementing syntax-check rule as it would break
compilation. Developers are strongly advised to use these new macros.
They are similar to VIR_ALLOC() logic: VIR_STRDUP(dst, src) returns zero
on success, -1 otherwise. In case you don't want to report OOM error,
use the _QUIET variant of a macro.
POSIX says pthread_t is opaque. We can't guarantee if it is scaler
or a pointer, nor what size it is; and BSD differs from Linux.
We've also had reports of gcc complaining on attempts to cast it,
if we use a cast to the wrong type (for example, pointers have to be
cast to void* or intptr_t before being narrowed; while casting a
function return of scalar pthread_t to void* triggers a different
warning).
Give up on casts, and use unions to get at decent bits instead. And
rather than futz around with figuring which 32 bits of a potentially
64-bit pointer are most likely to be unique, convert the rest of
the code base to use 64-bit values when using a debug id.
Based on a report by Guido Günther against kFreeBSD, but with a
fix that doesn't regress commit 4d970fd29 for FreeBSD.
* src/util/virthreadpthread.c (virThreadSelfID, virThreadID): Use
union to get at a decent bit representation of thread_t bits.
* src/util/virthread.h (virThreadSelfID, virThreadID): Alter
signature.
* src/util/virthreadwin32.c (virThreadSelfID, virThreadID):
Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_domain.h (qemuDomainJobObj): Alter type of owner.
* src/qemu/qemu_domain.c (qemuDomainObjTransferJob)
(qemuDomainObjSetJobPhase, qemuDomainObjReleaseAsyncJob)
(qemuDomainObjBeginNestedJob, qemuDomainObjBeginJobInternal): Fix
clients.
* src/util/virlog.c (virLogFormatString): Likewise.
* src/util/vireventpoll.c (virEventPollInterruptLocked):
Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Commit 776d49f4 added a static function that is only called
conditionally; leading to this compile error on mingw:
CC libvirt_util_la-virprocess.lo
../../src/util/virprocess.c:624:26: error: 'struct rlimit' declared inside parameter list [-Werror]
../../src/util/virprocess.c:624:26: error: its scope is only this definition or declaration, which is probably not what you want [-Werror]
../../src/util/virprocess.c:622:1: error: 'virProcessPrLimit' defined but not used [-Werror=unused-function]
* src/util/virprocess.c (virProcessPrLimit): Only declare
virProcessPrLimit when used.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Commit 7c9a2d88 cleaned up too many headers; FreeBSD builds
failed due to:
util/virutil.c:556: warning: implicit declaration of function 'canonicalize_file_name'
(Not sure which Linux header leaked this declaration, but gnulib
only guarantees it in stdlib.h)
libvirt.c:956: warning: implicit declaration of function 'virGetUserConfigDirectory'
(Here, a build on Linux was picking up virutil.h indirectly via
one of the conditional driver headers, where that driver was not
being built on my FreeBSD setup)
* src/util/virutil.c (includes): Need <stdlib.h> for
canonicalize_file_name.
* src/libvirt.c (includes): Use "virutil.h" unconditionally,
rather than relying on conditional indirect inclusion.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The source code base needs to be adapted as well. Some files
include virutil.h just for the string related functions (here,
the include is substituted to match the new file), some include
virutil.h without any need (here, the include is removed), and
some require both.