Sometimes virObjectEventStateFlush can be called without timer (if the
last event was unregistered right when the timer fired). There is a
check for timer == -1, but that triggers warning and other log messages,
which is unnecessary.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Rather than copy-paste - use a macro
Unfortunately due to how the RNG schema was written keeping the 'value'
and 'value'_max next to each other in the XML causes a schema failure,
so the FORMAT has to write out singly rather than optimizing to write
out both values at once
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
When I added support for the pcie-expander-bus controller in commit
bc07251f, I incorrectly thought that it only had a single slot
available. Actually it has 32 slots, just like the root complex aka
pcie-root (the part that I *did* get correct is that unlike pcie-root
a pcie-expander-bus doesn't allow any integrated endpoint devices -
only pcie-root-ports and dmi-to-pci-controllers are allowed).
This breaks vCPU hotplug, because when starting a domain, we
create a copy of domain definition (which becomes live XML) and
during the post parse callbacks we might adjust some tunings so
that vCPU hotplug is possible.
This reverts commit 581b7756af.
This breaks vCPU hotplug, because when starting a domain, we
create a copy of domain definition (which becomes live XML) and
during the post parse callbacks we might adjust some tunings so
that vCPU hotplug is possible.
This reverts commit c0f90799bc.
Certain operations may make the vcpu order information invalid. Since
the order is primarily used to ensure migration compatibility and has
basically no other user benefits, clear the order prior to certain
operations and document that it may be cleared.
All the operations that would clear the order can still be properly
executed by defining a new domain configuration rather than using the
helper APIs.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1370357
So far only guestfwd and virtio were supported. Add an additional
for Xen as libxl channels create a Xen console visible to the guest.
Signed-off-by: Joao Martins <joao.m.martins@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
When creating a copy of virDomainDef we save ourselves the
trouble of writing deep-copy functions and just format and parse
back domain/device XML. However, the XML we are parsing was
already fully formatted - there is no reason to run post parse
callbacks (which fill in blanks - there are none!).
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
This is an internal flag that prevents our two entry points to
XML parsing (virDomainDefParse and virDomainDeviceDefParse) from
running post parse callbacks. This is expected to be used in
cases when we already have full domain/device XML and we are just
parsing it back (i.e. virDomainDefCopy or virDomainDeviceDefCopy)
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Just like virDomainDefPostParseCallback has gained new
parseOpaque argument, we need to follow the logic with
virDomainDeviceDefPostParse.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
We want to pass the proper opaque pointer instead of NULL to
virDomainDefParse and subsequently virDomainDefParseNode too.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
We want to pass the proper opaque pointer instead of NULL to
virDomainDefParseXML and subsequently virDomainDefPostParse too.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Some callers might want to pass yet another pointer to opaque
data to post parse callbacks. The driver generic one is not
enough because two threads executing post parse callback might
want to see different data (e.g. domain object pointer that
domain def belongs to).
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The domain capabilities XML is capable of showing whether each guest CPU
mode is supported or not with a possibility to provide additional
details. This patch enhances host-model capability to advertise the
exact CPU model which will be used as a host-model:
<cpu>
...
<mode name='host-model' supported='yes'>
<model fallback='allow'>Broadwell</model>
<vendor>Intel</vendor>
<feature policy='disable' name='aes'/>
<feature policy='require' name='vmx'/>
</mode>
...
</cpu>
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
The function filters all CPU features through a given callback while
copying CPU model related parts of a CPU definition.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
The function moves CPU model related parts from one CPU definition to
another. It can be used to avoid unnecessary copies from a temporary CPU
definitions which will be freed anyway.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Useful for copying a CPU definition without model related parts (i.e.,
without model name, feature list, vendor).
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
In case a hypervisor is able to tell us a list of supported CPU models
and whether each CPU models can be used on the current host, we can
propagate this to domain capabilities. This is a better alternative
to calling virConnectCompareCPU for each supported CPU model.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Listing all CPU models supported by QEMU in domain capabilities makes
little sense when libvirt will refuse any model it doesn't know about.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
The patch adds <cpu> element to domain capabilities XML:
<cpu>
<mode name='host-passthrough' supported='yes'/>
<mode name='host-model' supported='yes'/>
<mode name='custom' supported='yes'>
<model>Broadwell</model>
<model>Broadwell-noTSX</model>
...
</mode>
</cpu>
Applications can use it to inspect what CPU configuration modes are
supported for a specific combination of domain type, emulator binary,
guest architecture and machine type.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
In a full domain config, libvirt allows overriding the normal PCI
vs. PCI Express rules when a device address is explicitly provided
(so, e.g., you can force a legacy PCI device to plug into a PCIe port,
although libvirt would never do that on its own). However, due to a
bug libvirt doesn't give this same leeway when hotplugging devices. On
top of that, current libvirt assumes that *all* devices are legacy
PCI. The result of all this is that it's impossible to hotplug a
device into a PCIe port, even if you manually add the PCI address.
This can all be traced to the function
virDomainPCIAddressEnsureAddr(), and the fact that it calls
virDomainPCIaddressReserveSlot() for manually set addresses, and that
function hardcodes the argument "fromConfig" to false (meaning "this
address was auto-assigned, so it should be subject to stricter
validation").
Since virDomainPCIAddressReserveSlot() is just a one line simple
wrapper around virDomainPCIAddressReserveAddr() (adding in a hardcoded
reserveEntireSlot = true and fromConfig = false), all that's needed to
solve the problem with no unwanted side effects is to replace that
call for virDomainPCIAddressReserveSlot() with a direct call to
virDomainPCIAddressReserveAddr(), but with reserveEntireSlot = true,
fromConfig = true. That's what this patch does.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1337490
Add a new secret usage type known as "tls" - it will handle adding the
secret objects for various TLS objects that need to provide some sort
of passphrase in order to access the credentials.
The format is:
<secret ephemeral='no' private='no'>
<description>Sample TLS secret</description>
<usage type='tls'>
<name>mumblyfratz</name>
</usage>
</secret>
Once defined and a passphrase set, future patches will allow the UUID
to be set in the qemu.conf file and thus used as a secret for various
TLS options such as a chardev serial TCP connection, a NBD client/server
connection, and migration.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
If the incoming XML defined a path to a TLS X.509 certificate environment,
add the necessary 'tls-creds-x509' object to the VIR_DOMAIN_CHR_TYPE_TCP
character device.
Likewise, if the environment exists the hot unplug needs adjustment as
well. Note that all the return ret were changed to goto cleanup since
the cfg needs to be unref'd
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
The code for replacing domain's transient definition with the persistent
one is repeated in several places and we'll need to add one more. Let's
make a nice helper for it.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
In the latest glibc, major() and minor() functions are marked as
deprecated (glibc commit dbab6577):
CC util/libvirt_util_la-vircgroup.lo
util/vircgroup.c: In function 'virCgroupGetBlockDevString':
util/vircgroup.c:768:5: error: '__major_from_sys_types' is deprecated:
In the GNU C Library, `major' is defined by <sys/sysmacros.h>.
For historical compatibility, it is currently defined by
<sys/types.h> as well, but we plan to remove this soon.
To use `major', include <sys/sysmacros.h> directly.
If you did not intend to use a system-defined macro `major',
you should #undef it after including <sys/types.h>.
[-Werror=deprecated-declarations]
if (virAsprintf(&ret, "%d:%d ", major(sb.st_rdev), minor(sb.st_rdev)) < 0)
^~
In file included from /usr/include/features.h:397:0,
from /usr/include/bits/libc-header-start.h:33,
from /usr/include/stdio.h:28,
from ../gnulib/lib/stdio.h:43,
from util/vircgroup.c:26:
/usr/include/sys/sysmacros.h:87:1: note: declared here
__SYSMACROS_DEFINE_MAJOR (__SYSMACROS_FST_IMPL_TEMPL)
^
Moreover, in the glibc commit, there's suggestion to keep
ordering of including of header files as implemented here.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Since the domain lock is not held during preparation of an external XML
config, it is possible that the value can change resulting in unexpected
failures during ABI consistency checking for some save and migrate
operations.
This patch adds a new flag to skip the checking of the cur_balloon value
and then sets the destination value to the source value to ensure
subsequent checks without the skip flag will succeed.
This way it is protected from forges and is keeped up to date too.
Signed-off-by: Nikolay Shirokovskiy <nshirokovskiy@virtuozzo.com>
The 'multi' element in PCI address struct used as 'virTristateSwitch',
and its default value is 'VIR_TRISTATE_SWITCH_ABSENT'. Current PCI
process use 'false' to initialization 'multi', which is ambiguously
for assignment or comparison. This patch use '{0}' to initialize
the whole PCI address struct, which fix the 'multi' initialization
and makes code more simplify and explicitly.
Signed-off-by: Xian Han Yu <xhyubj@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Test 12 from objecteventtest (createXML add event) segaults on FreeBSD
with bus error.
At some point it calls testNodeDeviceDestroy() from the test driver. And
it fails when it tries to unlock the device in the "out:" label of this
function.
Unlocking fails because the previous step was a call to
virNodeDeviceObjRemove from conf/node_device_conf.c. This function
removes the given device from the device list and cleans up the object,
including destroying of its mutex. However, it does not nullify the pointer
that was given to it.
As a result, we end up in testNodeDeviceDestroy() here:
out:
if (obj)
virNodeDeviceObjUnlock(obj);
And instead of skipping this, we try to do Unlock and fail because of
malformed mutex.
Change virNodeDeviceObjRemove to use double pointer and set pointer to
NULL.
Validating the vcpu count is more intricate and doing it in the XML
parser will make previously valid configs (with older qemus) vanish.
Now that we have a very similar check in the qemu domain validation
callback we can do it in a more appropriate place.
This basically reverts commit b54de0830a.
Partially resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1370066
Individual vCPU hotplug requires us to track the state of any vCPU. To
allow this add the following XML:
<domain>
...
<vcpu current='2'>3</vcpu>
<vcpus>
<vcpu id='0' enabled='yes' hotpluggable='no' order='1'/>
<vcpu id='1' enabled='yes' hotpluggable='yes' order='2'/>
<vcpu id='1' enabled='no' hotpluggable='yes'/>
</vcpus>
...
The 'enabled' attribute allows to control the state of the vcpu.
'hotpluggable' controls whether given vcpu can be hotplugged and 'order'
allows to specify the order to add the vcpus.
For some unknown reason the original implementation of the <forwarder>
element only took advantage of part of the functionality in the
dnsmasq feature it exposes - it allowed specifying the ip address of a
DNS server which *all* DNS requests would be forwarded to, like this:
<forwarder addr='192.168.123.25'/>
This is a frontend for dnsmasq's "server" option, which also allows
you to specify a domain that must be matched in order for a request to
be forwarded to a particular server. This patch adds support for
specifying the domain. For example:
<forwarder domain='example.com' addr='192.168.1.1'/>
<forwarder domain='www.example.com'/>
<forwarder domain='travesty.org' addr='10.0.0.1'/>
would forward requests for bob.example.com, ftp.example.com and
joe.corp.example.com all to the DNS server at 192.168.1.1, but would
forward requests for travesty.org and www.travesty.org to
10.0.0.1. And due to the second line, requests for www.example.com,
and odd.www.example.com would be resolved by the libvirt network's own
DNS server (i.e. thery wouldn't be immediately forwarded) even though
they also match 'example.com' - the match is given to the entry with
the longest matching domain. DNS requests not matching any of the
entries would be resolved by the libvirt network's own DNS server.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1331796
If you define a libvirt virtual network with one or more IP addresses,
it starts up an instance of dnsmasq. It's always been possible to
avoid dnsmasq's dhcp server (simply don't include a <dhcp> element),
but until now it wasn't possible to avoid having the DNS server
listening; even if the network has no <dns> element, it is started
using default settings.
This patch adds a new attribute to <dns>: enable='yes|no'. For
backward compatibility, it defaults to 'yes', but if you don't want a
DNS server created for the network, you can simply add:
<dns enable='no'/>
to the network configuration, and next time the network is started
there will be no dns server created (if there is dhcp configuration,
dnsmasq will be started with "port=0" which disables the DNS server;
if there is no dhcp configuration, dnsmasq won't be started at all).
The new forward mode 'open' is just like mode='route', except that no
firewall rules are added to assure that any traffic does or doesn't
pass. It is assumed that either they aren't necessary, or they will be
setup outside the scope of libvirt.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=846810
Modify virDomainDefGetVcpuSched to emit an error message if
virDomainDefGetVcpu returns NULL meaning the vcpu could not
be found. Prior to commit id '9cc931f0b' the error message
would have been issued in virDomainDefGetVcpu.
When commit id '6dfb4507' refactored where the iothreadsched data was
stored, the error message for when the virDomainIOThreadIDFind failed
to find an iothreadid ("iothreadsched attribute 'iothreads' uses
undefined iothread ids") was lost. This led to the possibility that
someone would try to use it, but receive the generic message "An error
occurred, but the cause is unknown".
This patch adds the error message back so that someone will know that
they have an invalid configuration.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
If any of the devices referenced a USB hub that does not exist,
defining the domain would either fail with:
error: An error occurred, but the cause is unknown
(if only the last hub in the path is missing)
or crash.
Return a proper error instead of crashing.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1367130
This event is emitted when a nodedev XML definition is updated,
like when cdrom media is changed in a cdrom block device.
Also includes node device update event implementation for udev
backend, virsh nodedev-event support, and event-test support
More misunderstanding/mistaken assumptions on my part - I had thought
that a pci-expander-bus could be plugged into any legacy PCI slot, and
that pcie-expander-bus could be plugged into any PCIe slot. This isn't
correct - they can both be plugged ontly into their respective root
buses. This patch adds that restriction.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1358712
libvirt had allowed a dmi-to-pci-bridge to be plugged in anywhere a
normal PCIe endpoint can be connected, but this is wrong - it will
only work if it's plugged into pcie-root (the PCIe root complex) or a
pcie-expander-bus (the qemu device pxb-pcie). This patch adjusts the
connection flags accordingly.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1363648
I apparently misunderstood Marcel's description of what could and
couldn't be plugged into qemu's pxb-pcie controller (known as
pcie-expander-bus in libvirt) - I specifically allowed directly
connecting a pcie-switch-upstream-port, and it turns out that causes
the guest kernel to crash.
This patch forbids such a connection, and updates the xml docs
appropriately.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1361172
The virDomainPCIAddressFlagsCompatible() error logs report that a
device required a controller that accepted standard PCI endpoint
devices, or PCI Express endpoint devices, and if hotplug was required
by the configuration but not provided by the selected controller. But
the wording of the error messages was apparently confusing (according
to the bugzilla report referenced below). On top of that, if the
device was something other than an endpoint device (e.g. a
pcie-switch-downstream-port) the error message was a complete punt -
it would just say that the flags were incorrect.
This patch makes the messages for PCI/PCIe endpoint and hotplug
requirements more clear, and also specifically indicates what was the
device type when it is other than an endpoint device.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1363627
This element will control secure boot implemented by some
firmwares. If the firmware used in <loader/> does support the
feature we must tell it to the underlying hypervisor. However, we
can't know whether loader does support it or not just by looking
at the file. Therefore we have to have an attribute to the
element where users can tell us whether the firmware is secure
boot enabled or not.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Since its release of 2.4.0 qemu is able to enable System
Management Module in the firmware, or disable it. We should
expose this capability in the XML. Unfortunately, there's no good
way to determine whether the binary we are talking to supports
it. I mean, if qemu's run with real machine type, the smm
attribute can be seen in 'qom-list /machine' output. But it's not
there when qemu's run with -M none. Therefore we're stuck with
version based check.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
While no leak was observed yet, there might be one if
virObjectEventClass is ever derived from another class. Because
in that case plain VIR_FREE() will not call dispose() from parent
classes possibly leaking some memory.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1356937
Add the definitions to allow for viewing/setting cgroup period and quota
limits for IOThreads.
This is similar to the work done for emulator quota and period by
commit ids 'b65dafa' and 'e051c482'.
Being able to view/set the IOThread specific values is related to more
recent changes adding global period (commmit id '4d92d58f') and global
quota (commit id '55ecdae') definitions and qemu support (commit id
'4e17ff79' and 'fbcbd1b2'). With a global setting though, if somehow
the IOThread value in the cgroup hierarchy was set "outside of libvirt"
to a value that is incompatible with the global value.
Allowing control over IOThread specific values provides the capability
to alter the IOThread values as necessary.
According to libxl implementation, it supports pvusb
controller of version 1.1 and version 2.0, and it
supports two types of backend, 'pvusb' (dom0 backend)
and 'qusb' (qemu backend). But currently pvusb backend
is not checked in yet.
To match libxl support, extend usb controller schema
to support two more models: qusb1 (qusb, version 1.1)
and 'qusb2' (qusb version 2.0).
Signed-off-by: Chunyan Liu <cyliu@suse.com>
Consider the following XML snippet:
<memory model=''>
<target>
<size unit='KiB'>523264</size>
<node>0</node>
</target>
</memory>
Whats wrong you ask? The @model attribute. This should result in
an error thrown into users faces during virDomainDefine phase.
Except it doesn't. The XML validation catches this error, but if
users chose to ignore that, they will end up with invalid XML.
Well, they won't be able to start the machine - that's when error
is produced currently. But it would be nice if we could catch the
error like this earlier.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The cur_balloon also increases/decreases with dimm hotplug/unplug.
To be consistent, adjust the value for coldplug too. This was inconsistently
taken care when cur_ballon != memory to begin with. The patch fixes it
irrespective of that.
Signed-off-by: Shivaprasad G Bhat <sbhat@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Krempa <pkrempa@redhat.com>
Nothing in the code path after the removed call has needs/uses the alias
anyway (as would be the case for command line building or talking to monitor).
The alias is VIR_FREE'd in virDomainDeviceInfoClear which is called for any
device that needs/uses an alias via virDomainDeviceDefFree or virDomainDefFree
as well as during virDomainDeviceInfoFree for host devices.
For persistent domains, the domain definition (including aliases) gets
freed a few screens later when it's replaced with newDef.
For transient domains, the definition is freed/unref'd along with the
virDomainObj a few moments later.
The address sets (pci, ccw, virtio serial) are currently cached
in qemu private data, but all the information required to recreate
these sets is in the domain definition. Therefore I am removing
the redundant data and adding a way to recalculate these sets.
Add a function that calculates the virtio serial address set
from the domain definition.
Credit goes to Cole Robinson.
When parsing a command line with USB devices that have
no address specified, QEMU automatically adds a USB hub
if the device would fill up all the available USB ports.
To help most of the users, add one hub if there are more
USB devices than available ports. For wilder configurations,
expect the user to provide us with more hubs and/or controllers.
Walk through all the usb hubs in the domain definition
that have a USB address specified, create the
corresponding structures in the virDomainUSBAddressSet
and mark the port it occupies as used.
A new type to track USB addresses.
Every <controller type='usb' index='i'/> is represented by an
object of type virDomainUSBAddressHub located at buses[i].
Each of these hubs has up to 'nports' ports.
If a port is occupied, it has the corresponding bit set in
the 'ports' bitmap, e.g. port 1 would have the 0th bit set.
If there is a hub on this port, then hubs[i] will point
to this hub.
When formatting the graphics data for TYPE_SPICE, check if the glisten
is NULL before blindly referencing
Found by Coverity
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
New type of <devices> <filesystem type= 'volume'> is introduced.
This patch allows to use volumes for storing the filesystem, that is
accessed from the guest e.g. root directory for container.
To take advantage of volumes as a backend of filesystem volume
and pool names should be specified:
<filesystem type= 'volume'>
<source pool='pool name' volume='volume name'/>
Signed-off-by: Olga Krishtal <okrishtal@virtuozzo.com>
In preparation to tracking which USB addresses are occupied.
Introduce two helper functions for printing the port path
as a string and appending it to a virBuffer.
We were requiring a USB port path in the schema, but not enforcing it.
Omitting the USB port would lead to libvirt formatting it as (null).
Such domain cannot be started and will disappear after libvirtd restart
(since it cannot parse back the XML).
Only format the port if it has been specified and mark it as optional
in the XML schema.
Playing directly with our live definition, updating it, and reverting it
back once we are done is very nice and it's quite dangerous too. Let's
just make a copy of the domain definition if needed and do all tricks on
the copy.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1320470
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
MinGW complained that we might be dereferencing a NULL pointer. While
that can't be true, the logic certainly allows for that.
../../src/conf/domain_conf.c: In function 'virDomainDefPostParse':
../../src/conf/domain_conf.c:4224:18: error: potential null pointer dereference [-Werror=null-dereference]
if (!vcpu->online && vcpu->cpumask) {
~~~~^~~~~~~~
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
MinGW complained that we might be dereferencing a NULL pointer. While
that can't be true, the logic certainly allows for that.
src/conf/domain_conf.c: In function 'virDomainDefGetVcpuPinInfoHelper':
src/conf/domain_conf.c:1545:17: error: potential null pointer dereference [-Werror=null-dereference]
if (vcpu->cpumask)
~~~~^~~~~~~~~
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Allow to store driver specific data on a per-vcpu basis.
Move of the virDomainDef*Vcpus* functions was necessary as
virDomainXMLOptionPtr was declared below this block and I didn't want to
split the function headers.
Most callers make sure that it's never called with an out of range vCPU.
Every other caller reports a different error explicitly. Drop the error
reporting and clean up some dead code paths.
After 27726d8c21 a privateData is allocated in
virDomainHostdevDefAlloc(). However, the counter part - freeing
them in Free() is missing which leads to the following memory
leak:
==6489== 24 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 684 of 1,003
==6489== at 0x4C2C070: calloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:623)
==6489== by 0x54B7C94: virAllocVar (viralloc.c:560)
==6489== by 0x5517BE6: virObjectNew (virobject.c:193)
==6489== by 0x1B400121: qemuDomainHostdevPrivateNew (qemu_domain.c:798)
==6489== by 0x5557B24: virDomainHostdevDefAlloc (domain_conf.c:2152)
==6489== by 0x5575578: virDomainHostdevDefParseXML (domain_conf.c:12709)
==6489== by 0x5582292: virDomainDefParseXML (domain_conf.c:16995)
==6489== by 0x5583C98: virDomainDefParseNode (domain_conf.c:17470)
==6489== by 0x5583B07: virDomainDefParse (domain_conf.c:17417)
==6489== by 0x5583B95: virDomainDefParseFile (domain_conf.c:17441)
==6489== by 0x55A3F24: virDomainObjListLoadConfig (virdomainobjlist.c:465)
==6489== by 0x55A43E6: virDomainObjListLoadAllConfigs (virdomainobjlist.c:596)
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Libxl is the last user and I don't have the toolchain prepared to
compile the libxl driver. Move it to the libxl driver to avoid having to
refactor the code.
This is place as a sub-element of <source>, where other aspects of the
host-side connection to the network device are located (network or
bridge name, udp listen port, etc). It's a bit odd that the interface
we're configuring with this info is itself named in <target dev='x'/>,
but that ship sailed long ago:
<interface type='ethernet'>
<mac address='00:16:3e:0f:ef:8a'/>
<source>
<ip address='192.168.122.12' family='ipv4'
prefix='24' peer='192.168.122.1'/>
<ip address='192.168.122.13' family='ipv4' prefix='24'/>
<route family='ipv4' address='0.0.0.0'
gateway='192.168.122.1'/>
<route family='ipv4' address='192.168.124.0' prefix='24'
gateway='192.168.124.1'/>
</source>
</interface>
In practice, this will likely only be useful for type='ethernet', so
its presence in any other type of interface is currently forbidden in
the generic device Validate function (but it's been put into the
general population of virDomainNetDef rather than the
ethernet-specific union member so that 1) we can more easily add the
capability to other types if needed, and 2) we can retain the info
when set to an invalid interface type all the way through to
validation and report a proper error, rather than just ignoring it
(which is currently what happens for many other type-specific
settings).
(NB: The already-existing configuration of IP info for the guest-side
of interfaces is in subelements directly under <interface>, and the
name of the guest-side interface (when configurable) is in <guest
dev='x'/>).
(This patch had been pushed earlier in
commit fe6a77898a, but was reverted in
commit d658456530 because it had been
accidentally pushed during the freeze for release 2.0.0)
The peer attribute is used to set the property of the same name in the
interface IP info:
<interface type='ethernet'>
...
<ip family='ipv4' address='192.168.122.5'
prefix='32' peer='192.168.122.6'/>
...
</interface>
Note that this element is used to set the IP information on the
*guest* side interface, not the host side interface - that will be
supported in an upcoming patch.
(This patch now has quite a history: it was originally pushed in
commit 690969af, which was subsequently reverted in commit 1d14b13f,
then reworked and pushed (along with a lot of other related/supporting
patches) in commit 93135abf1; however *that* commit had been
accidentally pushed during dev. freeze for release 2.0.0, so it was
again reverted in commit f6acf039f0).
Signed-off-by: Vasiliy Tolstov <v.tolstov@selfip.ru>
Signed-off-by: Laine Stump <laine@laine.org>
Add a new secret type known as "passphrase" - it will handle adding the
secret objects that need a passphrase without a specific username.
The format is:
<secret ...>
<uuid>...</uuid>
...
<usage type='passphrase'>
<name>mumblyfratz</name>
</usage>
</secret>
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Since the virSecretDefParseUsage ensures each of the fields is present,
no need to check during virSecretDefFormatUsage (also virBufferEscapeString
is a no-op with a NULL argument).
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
A helper that will execute a callback on every USB device
in the domain definition.
With an ability to skip USB hubs, since we will want to treat
them differently in some cases.
virTypedParameterAssign steals the string rather than copying it into
the typed parameter and thus freeing it leads to a crash when attempting
to serialize the results.
This was introduced in commit 9f50f6e2 and later made an universal
helper in 32e6339c.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1351473
Some code paths already assume that it is allocated since it was always
allocated by virDomainPerfDefParseXML. Make it member of virDomainDef
directly so that we don't have to allocate it all the time.
This fixes crash when attempting to connect to an existing process via
virDomainQemuAttach since we would not allocate it in that code path.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1350688
This is place as a sub-element of <source>, where other aspects of the
host-side connection to the network device are located (network or
bridge name, udp listen port, etc). It's a bit odd that the interface
we're configuring with this info is itself named in <target dev='x'/>,
but that ship sailed long ago:
<interface type='ethernet'>
<mac address='00:16:3e:0f:ef:8a'/>
<source>
<ip address='192.168.122.12' family='ipv4'
prefix='24' peer='192.168.122.1'/>
<ip address='192.168.122.13' family='ipv4' prefix='24'/>
<route family='ipv4' address='0.0.0.0'
gateway='192.168.122.1'/>
<route family='ipv4' address='192.168.124.0' prefix='24'
gateway='192.168.124.1'/>
</source>
</interface>
In practice, this will likely only be useful for type='ethernet', so
its presence in any other type of interface is currently forbidden in
the generic device Validate function (but it's been put into the
general population of virDomainNetDef rather than the
ethernet-specific union member so that 1) we can more easily add the
capability to other types, and 2) we can retain the info when set to
an invalid interface type all the way through to validation and report
a proper error, rather than just ignoring it (which is currently what
happens for many other type-specific settings).
(NB: The already-existing configuration of IP info for the guest-side
of interfaces is in subelements directly under <interface>, and the
name of the guest-side interface (when configurable) is in <guest
dev='x'/>).
The peer attribute is used to set the property of the same name in the
interface IP info:
<interface type='ethernet'>
...
<ip family='ipv4' address='192.168.122.5'
prefix='32' peer='192.168.122.6'/>
...
</interface>
Note that this element is used to set the IP information on the
*guest* side interface, not the host side interface - that will be
supported in an upcoming patch.
(This is an updated *re*-commit of commit 690969af, which was
subsequently reverted in commit 1d14b13f).
Signed-off-by: Vasiliy Tolstov <v.tolstov@selfip.ru>
Signed-off-by: Laine Stump <laine@laine.org>
virDomainNetIPInfoParseXML() and virDomainNetIPInfoFormat() are no
longer "unused", so we can now remove the "ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED" from
their definitions, since virDomainNetIPInfoFormat() is now the only
caller of virDomainNetIPsFormat() and virDomainNetRoutesFormat(),
those two functions can simply be subsumed into
virDomainNetIPInfoFormat().
a.k.a. <hostdev mode='capabilities' type='net'>.
This replaces the existing nips, ips, nroutes, and routes with a
single virNetDevIPInfo, and simplifies the code by calling that
object's parse/format/clear functions instead of open coding.
There are currently two places in the domain where this combination is
used, and there is about to be another. This patch puts them together
for brevity and uniformity.
As with the newly-renamed virNetDevIPAddr and virNetDevIPRoute
objects, the new virNetDevIPInfo object will need to be accessed by a
utility function that calls low level Netlink functions (so we don't
want it to be in the conf directory) and will be called from multiple
hypervisor drivers (so it can't be in any hypervisor directory); the
most appropriate place is thus once again the util directory.
The parse and format functions are in conf/domain_conf.c because only
the domain XML (i.e. *not* the network XML) has this exact combination
of IP addresses plus routes. Note that virDomainNetIPInfoFormat() will
end up being the only caller to virDomainNetRoutesFormat() and
virDomainNetIPsFormat(), so it will just subsume those functions in a
later patch, but we can't do that until they are no longer called.
(It would have been nice to include the interface name within the
virNetDevIPInfo object (with a slight name change), but that can't
be done cleanly, because in each case the interface name is provided
in a different place in the XML relative to the routes and IP
addresses, so putting it in this object would actually make the code
more confused rather than simpler).
These functions all need to be called from a utility function that
must be located in the util directory, so we move them all into
util/virnetdevip.[ch] now that it exists.
Function and struct names were appropriately changed for the new
location, but all code is unchanged aside from motion and renaming.
When support for <interface type='ethernet'> was added in commit
9a4b705f back in 2010, it erroneously looked at <source dev='blah'/>
for a user-specified guest-side interface name. This was never
documented though. (that attribute already existed at the time in the
data.ethernet union member of virDomainNetDef, but apparently had no
practical use - it was only used as a storage place for a NetDef's
bridge name during qemuDomainXMLToNative(), but even then that was
never used for anything).
When support for similar guest-side device naming was added to the lxc
driver several years later, it was put in a new subelement <guest
dev='blah'/>.
In the intervening years, since there was no validation that
ethernet.dev was NULL in the other drivers that didn't actually use
it, innocent souls who were adding other features assuming they needed
to account for non-NULL ethernet.dev when really they didn't, so
little bits of the usual pointless cargo-cult code showed up.
This patch not only switches the openvz driver to use the documented
<guest dev='blah'/> notation for naming the guest-side device (just in
case anyone is still using the openvz driver), and logs an error if
anyone tries to set <source dev='blah'/> for a type='ethernet'
interface, it also removes the cargo-cult uses of ethernet.dev and
<source dev='blah'/>, and eliminates if from the RNG and from
virDomainNetDef.
NB: I decided on this course of action after mentioning the
inconsistency here:
https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2016-May/msg02038.html
and getting encouragement do eliminate it in a later IRC discussion
with danpb.
Rearrange this function to be better organized and more correct:
* the error codes were changed from the incorrect INVALID_ARG to
XML_ERROR
* prefix still isn't required, but if present it must be valid or an
error will be logged.
* don't emit a debug log just because prefix is missing - this
is valid.
* group everything related to setting prefix in one place rather than
scattered through the function.
I'm tired of mistyping this all the time, so let's do it the same all
the time (similar to how we changed all "Pci" to "PCI" awhile back).
(NB: I've left alone some things in the esx and vbox drivers because
I'm unable to compile them and they weren't obviously *not* a part of
some API. I also didn't change a couple of variables named,
e.g. "somethingIptables", because they were derived from the name of
the "iptables" command)
These had been declared in conf/device_conf.h, but then used in
util/virnetdev.c, meaning that we had to #include conf/device_conf.h
in virnetdev.c (which we have for a long time said shouldn't be done.
This caused a bigger problem when I tried to #include util/virnetdev.h
in a file in src/conf (which is allowed) - for some reason the
"device_conf.h: File not found" error.
The solution is to move the data types and functions used in util
sources from conf to util. Some names were adjusted during the move
("virInterface" --> "virNetDevIf", and "VIR_INTERFACE" -->
"VIR_NETDEV_IF")
The VIR_STORAGE_POOL_EVENT_REFRESHED constant does not
reflect any change in the lifecycle of the storage pool.
It should thus not be part of the storage pool lifecycle
event set, but rather be a top level event in its own
right. Thus we introduce VIR_STORAGE_POOL_EVENT_ID_REFRESH
to replace it.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Disallowing them broke a use case of testing multipath configurations
for storage. Originally this was added as it was impossible to
use certain /dev/disk-by... links but the disks worked properly.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1349895
Move the enum into a new src/util/virsecret.h, rename it to be
virSecretLookupType. Add a src/util/virsecret.h in order to perform
a couple of simple operations on the secret XML and virSecretLookupTypeDef
for clearing and copying.
This includes quite a bit of collateral damage, but the goal is to remove
the "virStorage*" and replace with the virSecretLookupType so that it's
easier to to add new lookups that aren't necessarily storage pool related.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
This code was attempting to handle some implicit <console> XML
formatting for manually assembled DomainDef, since previously the
console<->serial compat copying was only done at XML parse time.
Nowadays it's done via virDomainDefPostParse ->
virDomainDefAddConsoleCompat, which all manual DomainDef builders
already call, so we can drop this workaround.
In the case of chassisNr (used to set chassis_nr of a pci-bridge
controller), 0 is reserved for / used by the pci[e]-root bus. In the
base of busNr, a value of 0 would mean that the root bus had no places
available to plug in new buses, including the pxb itself (the
documentation I wrote for pxb even noted the limit of busNr as 1.254).
NB: oddly, the "chassis" attribute, which is used for pcie-root-port
and pcie-switch-downstream-port *can* be set to 0, since it's the
combination of {chassis, slot} that needs to be unique, not chassis by
itself (and slot 0 of pcie-root is reserved, while pcie-*-port can use
*only* slot 0).
This resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1342962
When loading status XMLs with following graphics definition:
<graphics type='spice' port='5900' autoport='yes' listen='127.0.0.1'>
<listen type='address' address='127.0.0.1' fromConfig='1'/>
<image compression='off'/>
</graphics>
libvirtd would leak a few bytes:
10 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 71 of 1,127
at 0x4C2C000: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:299)
by 0x6789298: xmlStrndup (in /usr/lib64/libxml2.so.2.9.4)
by 0x552AB0A: virXMLPropString (virxml.c:479)
by 0x5539536: virDomainGraphicsListensParseXML (domain_conf.c:11171)
by 0x553DD5E: virDomainGraphicsDefParseXMLSpice (domain_conf.c:11414)
by 0x553DD5E: virDomainGraphicsDefParseXML (domain_conf.c:11749)
by 0x5566061: virDomainDefParseXML (domain_conf.c:16939)
by 0x556953F: virDomainObjParseXML (domain_conf.c:17348)
by 0x556953F: virDomainObjParseNode (domain_conf.c:17513)
by 0x5569902: virDomainObjParseFile (domain_conf.c:17532)
by 0x5571E02: virDomainObjListLoadStatus (virdomainobjlist.c:514)
by 0x5571E02: virDomainObjListLoadAllConfigs (virdomainobjlist.c:596)
by 0x26E0BDC8: qemuStateInitialize (qemu_driver.c:911)
by 0x55B1FDB: virStateInitialize (libvirt.c:770)
by 0x122039: daemonRunStateInit (libvirtd.c:960)
This is going to be important later when we received
DEVICE_DELETED event on the qemu monitor. If we do,
virDomainDefFindDevice() is called to find the device for given
device alias in the virDomainDef tree. When we enable removal for
redirdevs we need to include them in the lookup process too.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Basically, there are just two functions introduced here:
virDomainRedirdevDefFind which looks up given redirdev in domain
definition, and virDomainRedirdevDefRemove which removes the
device at given index in the array of devices.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
There's currently just one limitation: redirdevs that want to go
on USB bus require a USB controller, surprisingly.
At the same time, since I'm using virDomainDefHasUSB() in this
new validator function, it has to be moved a few lines up and
also its header needed to be changed a bit: it is now taking a
const pointer to domain def since it's not changing anything in
there.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
While we need to know the difference between the total memory stored in
<memory> and the actual size not included in the possible memory modules
we can't pre-calculate it reliably. This is due to the fact that
libvirt's XML is copied via formatting and parsing the XML and the
initial memory size can be reliably calculated only when certain
conditions are met due to backwards compatibility.
This patch removes the storage of 'initial_memory' and fixes the helpers
to recalculate the initial memory size all the time from the total
memory size. This conversion is possible when we also make sure that
memory hotplug accounts properly for the update of the total memory size
and thus the helpers for inserting and removing memory devices need to
be tweaked too.
This fixes a bug where a cold-plug and cold-remove of a memory device
would increase the size reported in <memory> in the XML by the size of
the memory device. This would happen as the persistent definition is
copied before attaching the device and this would lead to the loss of
data in 'initial_memory'.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1344892
Implement storage pool event callbacks for START, STOP, DEFINE, UNDEFINED
and REFRESHED in functions when a storage pool is created/started/stopped
etc. accordingly
This option allows or disallows detection of zero-writes if it is set to
"on" or "off", respectively. It can be also set to "unmap" in which
case it will try discarding that part of image based on the value of the
"discard" option.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
In libxl driver we do virObjectRef in libxlDomainObjBeginJob,
If virCondWaitUntil failed, it goes to error, do virObjectUnref,
There's a chance that someone undefine the vm at the same time,
and refs unref to zero, vm is freed in libxlDomainObjBeginJob.
But the vm outside function is not Null, we do virObjectUnlock(vm).
That's how we overwrite the vm memory after it's freed. I fix it.
Signed-off-by: Wang Yufei <james.wangyufei@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
../../src/conf/domain_conf.c:10949: error: declaration of 'socket'
shadows a global declaration [-Wshadow]
../../src/conf/domain_conf.c:24373: error: declaration of 'listen'
shadows a global declaration [-Wshadow]
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
This new listen type is currently supported only by spice graphics.
It's introduced to make it easier and clearer specify to not listen
anywhere in order to start a guest with OpenGL support.
The old way to do this was set spice graphics autoport='no' and don't
specify any ports. The new way is to use <listen type='none'/>. In
order to be able to migrate to old libvirt the migratable XML will be
generated without the listen element and with autoport='no'. Also the
old configuration will be automatically converted to the this listen
type.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
VNC graphics already supports sockets but only via 'socket' attribute.
This patch coverts that attribute into listen type 'socket'.
For backward compatibility we need to handle listen type 'socket' and 'socket'
attribute properly to support old XMLs and new XMLs. If both are provided they
have to match, if only one of them is provided we need to be able to parse that
configuration too.
To not break migration back to old libvirt if the socket is provided by user we
need to generate migratable XML without the listen element and use only 'socket'
attribute.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
Even though it's auto-generated it's based on qemu.conf option and listen type
address already uses "fromConfig" to carry this information. Following commits
will convert the socket to listen element so this rename is required because
there will be also an option to get socket auto-generated independently on the
qemu.conf option.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
Since it will not be called from outside of conf we can unexport it too
if we move it to the appropriate place.
Test suite change is necessary since the error will be reported sooner
now.
Similarly to the domain definition validator add a device validator. The
change to the prototype of the domain validator is necessary as
virDomainDeviceInfoIterateInternal requires a non-const pointer.
Until now we weren't able to add checks that would reject configuration
once accepted by the parser. This patch adds a new callback and
infrastructure to add such checks. In this patch all the places where
rejecting a now-invalid configuration wouldn't be a good idea are marked
with a new parser flag.
Remove the live attribute and mark the definition as transient
whether the domain is runing or not.
There were only two callers left calling with live=false:
* testDomainStartState, where the domain already is active
because we assigned vm->def->id just a few lines above the call
* virDomainObjGetPersistentDef, which now only calls
virDomainObjSetDefTransient for an active domain
Calling virDomainObjSetDefTransient with live=false is a no-op
on an inactive domain.
Only call it on an active domain, since this is the only place using
the live bool.
There's this problem on the recent gcc-6.1:
In file included from conf/domain_conf.c:37:0:
conf/domain_conf.c: In function 'virDomainChrPreAlloc':
conf/domain_conf.c:14109:35: error: potential null pointer dereference [-Werror=null-dereference]
return VIR_REALLOC_N(*arrPtr, *cntPtr + 1);
^~
./util/viralloc.h:158:73: note: in definition of macro 'VIR_REALLOC_N'
# define VIR_REALLOC_N(ptr, count) virReallocN(&(ptr), sizeof(*(ptr)), (count), \
^~~~~
conf/domain_conf.c: In function 'virDomainChrRemove':
conf/domain_conf.c:14133:21: error: potential null pointer dereference [-Werror=null-dereference]
for (i = 0; i < *cntPtr; i++) {
^~~~~~~
GCC basically fails to see, that the
virDomainChrGetDomainPtrsInternal will never actually return NULL
because it's never called over a domain char device with _LAST
type. But to make it shut up, lets turn this function into
returning an integer and check in the callers if a zero value
value was returned.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Okay, I admit that our code here is complex. It's not easy to
spot that NULL deref can't really happen here. So it's no wonder
that a dumb compiler fails to see all the connections and
produces the following errors:
CC conf/libvirt_conf_la-domain_conf.lo
conf/domain_conf.c: In function 'virDomainDefFormatInternal':
conf/domain_conf.c:22162:22: error: potential null pointer dereference [-Werror=null-dereference]
if (sched->policy == i)
~~~~~^~~~~~~~
<snip/>
cc1: all warnings being treated as errors
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Hand-entering indexes for 20 PCI controllers is not as tedious as
manually determining and entering their PCI addresses, but it's still
annoying, and the algorithm for determining the proper index is
incredibly simple (in all cases except one) - just pick the lowest
unused index.
The one exception is USB2 controllers because multiple controllers in
the same group have the same index. For these we look to see if 1) the
most recently added USB controller is also a USB2 controller, and 2)
the group *that* controller belongs to doesn't yet have a controller
of the exact model we're just now adding - if both are true, the new
controller gets the same index, but in all other cases we just assign
the lowest unused index.
With this patch in place and combined with the automatic PCI address
assignment, we can define a PCIe switch with several ports like this:
<controller type='pci' model='pcie-root-port'/>
<controller type='pci' model='pcie-switch-upstream-port'/>
<controller type='pci' model='pcie-switch-downstream-port'/>
<controller type='pci' model='pcie-switch-downstream-port'/>
<controller type='pci' model='pcie-switch-downstream-port'/>
<controller type='pci' model='pcie-switch-downstream-port'/>
<controller type='pci' model='pcie-switch-downstream-port'/>
...
These will each get a unique index, and PCI addresses that connect
them together appropriately with no pesky numbers required.
Make virDomainControllerFindUnusedIndex() a global function so that it
can be used outside domain_conf.c (as well as higher up in
domain_conf.c itself)/ Also make its DomainDef arg a const* so that
functions which only have a const* to the domain can use it.
IS_USB2_CONTROLLER() is useful in more places aside from just when
assigning PCI addresses in QEMU, and is checking for enum values that
are all defined in conf/domain_conf.h anyway, so define it there
instead.
Add a new element to <domain> XML:
<os>
<acpi>
<table type="slic">/path/to/acpi/table/file</table>
</acpi>
</os>
To supply a path to a SLIC (Software Licensing) ACPI
table blob.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1327537
Instead of setting the flag before parsing the PCI address, set
it afterwards. This ensure we can never end up in a situation
where the flag has been set but pci_dev.physical_function has
not been filled in.
Rather than only assigning a PCI address when no address is given at
all, also do it when the config says that the address type is 'pci',
but it gives no address (virDeviceInfoPCIAddressWanted()).
There are also several places after parsing but prior to address
assignment where code previously expected that any info with address
type='pci' would have a *valid* PCI address, which isn't always the
case - now we check not only for type='pci', but also for a valid
address (virDeviceInfoPCIAddressPresent()).
The test case added in this patch was directly copied from Cole's patch titled:
qemu: Wire up address type=pci auto_allocate
Prior to this, <address type='pci'/> wasn't allowed when parsing
(domain+bus+slot+function needed to be a "valid" PCI address, meaning
that at least one of domain/bus/slot had to be non-0), the RNG
required bus to be specified, and if type was set to PCI when
formatting, domain+bus+slot+function would always be output.
This makes all the address attributes optional during parse and RNG
validation, and suppresses domain+bus+slot+function if domain+bus+slot
are all 0 (NB: if d+b+s are all 0, any value for function is
nonsensical as that will never happen in the real world, and after
the next patch we will always assign a real working address to any
empty PCI address before it is ever output to anywhere).
Note that explicitly setting all attributes to 0 is equivalent to
setting none of them, which is okay, since 0000:00:00 is reserved in
any PCI bus setup, and can't be used anyway.
In order to allow <address type='pci'/> with no other attributes to
mean "I want a PCI address, but any PCI address will do" (just as
having no <address> at all usually indicates), we will need to change
several places in the code from a simple "info->type == (or !=)
VIR_DOMAIN_DEVICE_ADDRESS_TYPE_(PCI|NONE)" into something slightly
more complex, this patch adds to new functions that take a
virDomainDeviceInfoPtr and return true/false depending on 1) whether
the current state of the info indicates that we "want" a PCI address
for this device (virDeviceInfoPCIAddressWanted()) and 2) whether this
device already has a valid PCI address
(virDeviceInfoPCIAddressPresent()).
Both of these functions required the simpler check for whether a pci
address is "empty" (i.e. all of its attributes are 0, which can never
happen in a real PCI address, since slot 0 of bus 0 of domain 0 is
always reserved), so that function is also added.
Also moves all the subordinate structs. This is necessary due to a new
inline function that will be defined in device_conf.h, and also makes
sense, because it is the *device* info that's in the struct. (Actually
a lot more stuff from domain_conf.h could move to this newer file, but
I didn't want to disturb any more than necessary).
Move code that decide whether we print the 'listen' attribute or not
into virDomainGraphicsListenDefFormatAddr() function.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
Name the validation function distinctively since it's called in the
parser. Later patches will add function that will validate disk
definitions that are invalid but need to be parsed to avoid losing
domains.
We support omitting listen attribute of graphics element so we should
also support omitting address attribute of listen element. This patch
also updates libvirt to always add a listen element into domain XML
except for VNC graphics if socket attribute is specified.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
Move the compatibility code out of virDomainGraphicsListensParseXML()
into virDomainGraphicsListenDefParseXML(). This also fixes a small
inconsistency between the code and error message itself.
Before this patch we would search first listen element that is
type='address' to validate listen and address attributes. After this
patch we always take the first listen element regardless of the type.
This shouldn't break anything since all drivers supports only one
listen.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
If socket attribute is present we start VNC that listens only on that
unix socket. This makes the parser behave the same way as we actually
use the socket attribute.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
Commit 82ba41108a made possible to use direct mapped iSCSI
volumes in qemu as disk sources but didn't remove the define time check.
Rework the check by simplifying the condition and allow any volumes to
be used with disk type='lun'.
Move filling out the default video (v)ram to DeviceDefPostParse.
This means it can be removed from virDomainVideoDefParseXML
and qemuParseCommandLine. Also, we no longer need to special case
VIR_DOMAIN_VIRT_XEN, since the per-driver callback gets called
before the generic one.
Commit 6879be48 moved adding of an implicit video device after XML
parsing. As a result, libxlDomainDeviceDefPostParse() is no longer
called to set the default vram when adding an implicit device.
Commit 6879be48 assumes virDomainVideoDefaultRAM() will set the
default vram, but it returns 0 if the domain virtType is
VIR_DOMAIN_VIRT_XEN. Attempting to start an HVM domain with vram=0
results in
error: unsupported configuration: videoram must be at least 4MB for CIRRUS
The default vram setting for Xen HVM domains depends on the device
model used (qemu-xen vs qemu-traditional), hence setting the
default is deferred to libxlDomainDeviceDefPostParse().
Call the device post-parse callback even for implicit video,
to fill out the default vram even for VIR_DOMAIN_VIRT_XEN.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1334557
Most-of-commit-message-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1318993
Commit id 'dd519a294' caused a regression cloning a volume into a
logical pool by removing just the 'allocation' adjustment during
storageVolCreateXMLFrom. Combined with the change to not require the
new volume input XML to have a capacity listed (commit id 'e3f1d2a8')
left the possibility that a zero allocation value (e.g., not provided)
would create a thin/sparse logical volume. When a thin lv becomes fully
populated, then LVM sets the partition 'inactive' and the subsequent
fdatasync() fails.
Add a new 'has_allocation' flag to be set at XML parse time to indicate
that allocation was provided. This is done so that if it's not provided
the create-from code uses the capacity value since we document that if
omitted, the volume will be fully allocated at time of creation.
For a logical backend, that creation time is 'createVol', while for a
file backend, creation doesn't set the size, but the 'createRaw' called
during buildVolFrom will decide whether the file is sparse or not based
on the provided capacity and allocation value.
For volume clones that provide different allocation and capacity values
to allow for sparse files, there is no change.
Usage of this keyword in front of function declaration that is exported via a
header file is unnecessary, since internally, this has been the default for most
compilers for quite some time.
Signed-off-by: Erik Skultety <eskultet@redhat.com>
Commit 5ed235c6 added unnecessary redifinition of
virDomainCapsDeviceHostdev in conf/domain_capabilities.h. This breaks
build with clang 3.4:
In file included from conf/domain_capabilities.c:25:
conf/domain_capabilities.h:88:44: error: redefinition of typedef
'virDomainCapsDeviceHostdev' is a C11 feature
[-Werror,-Wtypedef-redefinition]
typedef struct _virDomainCapsDeviceHostdev virDomainCapsDeviceHostdev;
^
conf/domain_capabilities.h:86:44: note: previous definition is here
typedef struct _virDomainCapsDeviceHostdev virDomainCapsDeviceHostdev;
So drop one of those.
If the call to virXPathNodeSet to set naddresses fails, Coverity notes
that the subsequent VIR_ALLOC_N cannot have a negative value (well it
probably wouldn't be negative per se).
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Requires adding the plumbing for <device><video>
The value is <enum name='modelType'> to match the associated domain
XML of <video><model type='XXX'/>
Wire it up for qemu too
Commin 36785c7e refactored the code for input devices but introduced a
bug where we removed all keyboard from migratable XML. We have to
remove only implicit keyboards like PS2 or XEN.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
Add the ability to add an 'iothread' to the controller which will be how
virtio-scsi-pci and virtio-scsi-ccw iothreads have been implemented in qemu.
Describe the new functionality and add tests to parse/validate that the
new attribute can be added.
This adds a ports= attribute to usb controller XML, like
<controller type='usb' model='nec-xhci' ports='8'/>
This maps to:
qemu -device nec-usb-xhci,p2=8,p3=8
Meaning, 8 ports that support both usb2 and usb3 devices. Gerd
suggested to just expose them as one knob.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1271408
If a panic device is being defined without a model in a domain
the default value is always overwritten with model ISA. An ISA
bus does not exist on S390 and therefore specifying a panic device
results in an unsupported configuration.
Since the S390 architecture inherently provides a crash detection
capability the panic device should be defined in the domain xml.
This patch adds an s390 panic device model and prevents setting a
device address on it.
Signed-off-by: Boris Fiuczynski <fiuczy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Cornelia Huck <cornelia.huck@de.ibm.com>
libvirt-daemon-config-nwfilter will put a bunch of xml configs
into /etc/libvirt/nwfilter. These configs don't hardcode a UUID
and depends on libvirt to generate one. However the generated UUID
is never saved to disk, unless the user manually calls Define.
This makes daemon reload quite noisy with many errors like:
error : virNWFilterObjAssignDef:3101 : operation failed: filter 'allow-incoming-ipv4' already exists with uuid 50def3b5-48d6-46a3-b005-cc22df4e5c5c
Because a new UUID is generated every time the config is read from
disk, so libvirt constantly thinks it's finding a new nwfilter.
Detect if we generated a UUID when the config file is loaded; if so,
resave the new contents to disk to ensure the UUID is persisteny.
This is similar to what was done in commit a47ae7c0 with virtual
networks and generated MAC addresses
In virNWFilterObjLoad we can still fail after virNWFilterObjAssignDef,
but we don't unlock and free the created virNWFilterObjPtr in the
cleanup path.
The bit we are trying to do after AssignDef is just STRDUP in the
configFile path. However caching the configFile in the NWFilterObj
is largely redundant and doesn't follow the same pattern we use
for domain and network objects.
So just remove all the configFile caching which fixes the latent
bug as a side effect.
We historically format runtime seclabel selinux/apparmor values,
however we skip formatting runtime DAC values. This was added in
commit 990e46c454
Author: Marcelo Cerri <mhcerri@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Date: Fri Aug 31 13:40:41 2012 +0200
conf: Avoid formatting auto-generated DAC labels
to maintain migration compatibility with libvirt < 0.10.0.
However the formatting was skipped unconditionally. Instead only
skip formatting in the VIR_DOMAIN_DEF_FORMAT_MIGRATABLE case.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1215833
Trying to define a pool name containing an embedded '/'
will immediately fail when trying to write the XML to disk.
This patch explicitly rejects names containing a '/'
Besides our stateful driver, there are two other storage impls:
esx and phyp. esx doesn't support pool creation, so this should
doesn't apply.
phyp does support pool creation, and the name is passed to the
'mksp' tool, which google doesn't reveal whether it accepts '/'
or not. IMO the likeliness of this impacting any users is near zero
Trying to define a network name containing an embedded '/'
will immediately fail when trying to write the XML to disk.
This patch explicitly rejects names containing a '/'
Besides the network bridge driver, the only other network
implementation is a very thin one for virtualbox, which seems to
use the network name as a host interface name, which won't
accept '/' anyways, so I think this is fine to do unconitionally.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=787604
Trying to define a domain name containing an embedded '/'
will immediately fail when trying to write the XML to disk for
our stateful drivers. This patch explicitly rejects names
containing a '/', and provides an xmlopt feature for drivers
to avoid this validation check, which is enabled in every
non-stateful driver that already has xmlopt handling wired up.
(Technically this could reject a previously accepted vmname like
'/foo', however at least for the qemu driver that falls over
later when starting qemu)
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=639923
We were lacking tests that are checking for the completeness of our
nodedev XMLs and also whether we output properly formatted ones. This
patch adds parsing for the capability elements inside the <capability
type='pci'> element. Also bunch of tests are added to show everything
works properly.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
We had both and the only difference was that the latter also included
information about multifunction setting. The problem with that was that
we couldn't use functions made for only one of the structs (e.g.
parsing). To consolidate those two structs, use the one in virpci.h,
include that in domain_conf.h and add the multifunction member in it.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Modeled after the qemuDomainDiskPrivatePtr logic, create a privateData
pointer in the _virDomainHostdevDef to allow storage of private data
for a hypervisor in order to at least temporarily store auth/secrets
data for usage during qemuBuildCommandLine.
NB: Since the qemu_parse_command (qemuParseCommandLine) code is not
expecting to restore the auth/secret data, there's no need to add
code to handle this new structure there.
Updated copyrights for modules touched. Some didn't have updates in a
couple years even though changes have been made.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
This reverts commit 690969af9c, which
added the domain config parts to support a "peer" attribute in domain
interface <ip> elements.
It's being removed temporarily for the release of libvirt 1.3.4
because the feature doesn't work, and there are concerns that it may
need to be modified in an externally visible manner which could create
backward compatibility problems.
Similarly to what commit 7140807917 did with some internal paths,
clear vnc socket paths that were generated by us. Having such path in
the definition can cause trouble when restoring the domain. The path is
generated to the per-domain directory that contains the domain ID.
However, that ID will be different upon restoration, so qemu won't be
able to create that socket because the directory will not be prepared.
To be able to migrate to older libvirt, skip formatting the socket path
in migratable XML if it was autogenerated. And mark it as autogenerated
if it already exists and we're parsing live XML.
Best viewed with '-C'.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1326270
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Add virDomainObjGetShortName() and use it. For now that's used in one
place, but we should expose it so that future patches can use it.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Currently we only allow /dev/random and /dev/hwrng as host input
for <rng><backend model='random'/> device. This was added after
various upstream discussions in commit 4932ef45
However this restriction has generated quite a few complaints over
the years, so a new discussion was initiated:
http://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2016-April/msg00987.html
Several people suggested removing the restriction, and nobody really
spoke up to defend it. So this patch drops the path restriction
entirely
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1074464
Introduce the final accessor's to _virSecretObject data and move the
structure from virsecretobj.h to virsecretobj.c
The virSecretObjSetValue logic will handle setting both the secret
value and the value_size. Some slight adjustments to the error path
over what was in secretSetValue were made.
Additionally, a slight logic change in secretGetValue where we'll
check for the internalFlags and error out before checking for
and erroring out for a NULL secret->value. That way, it won't be
obvious to anyone that the secret value wasn't set rather they'll
just know they cannot get the secret value since it's private.
Move and rename the secretRewriteFile, secretSaveDef, and secretSaveValue
from secret_driver to virsecretobj
Need to make some slight adjustments since the secretSave* functions
called secretEnsureDirectory, but otherwise mostly just a move of code.
Move and rename secretDeleteSaved from secret_driver into virsecretobj and
split it up into two parts since there is error path code that looks to
just delete the secret data file
Move to secret_conf.c and rename to virSecretLoadAllConfigs. Also includes
moving/renaming the supporting virSecretLoad, virSecretLoadValue, and
virSecretLoadValidateUUID.
This patch replaces most of the guts of secret_driver.c with recently
added secret_conf.c APIs in order manage secret lists and objects
using the hashed virSecretObjList* lookup API's.
Add function to return a "match" filtered list of secret objects. This
function replaces the guts of secretConnectListAllSecrets.
Need to also move and make global virSecretUsageIDForDef since it'll
be used by both secret_driver.c and secret_conf.c
Add the functions to add/remove elements from the hashed secret obj list.
These will replace secret_driver functions secretAssignDef and secretObjRemove.
The virSecretObjListAddLocked will perform the necessary lookups and
decide whether to replace an existing hash entry or create a new one.
This includes setting up the configPath and base64Path as well as being
able to support the caller's need to restore from a previous definition
in case something goes wrong in the caller.
New API's including unlocked and Locked versions in order to be able
to use in either manner.
Support for searching hash object lists instead of linked lists will
replace existing secret_driver functions secretFindByUUID and
secretFindByUsage
Move virSecretObj from secret_driver.c to virsecretobj.h
To support being able to create a hashed secrets list, move the
virSecretObj to virsecretobj.h so that the code can at least find
the definition.
This should be a temporary situation while the virsecretobj.c code
is patched in order to support a hashed secret object while still
having the linked list support in secret_driver.c. Eventually, the
goal is to move the virSecretObj into virsecretobj.c, although it
is notable that the existing model from which virSecretObj was
derived has virDomainObj in src/conf/domain_conf.h and virNetworkObj
in src/conf/network_conf.h, so virSecretObj wouldn't be unique if
it were to remain in virsecretobj.h Still adding accessors to fetch
and store hashed object data will be the end goal.
Add definitions and infrastucture in virsecretobj.c to create and
handle a hashed virSecretObj and virSecretObjList including the class,
object, lock setup, and disposal API's. Nothing will call these yet.
This infrastructure will replace the forward linked list logic
within the secret_driver, eventually.
VIR_ERR_NO_SUPPORT maps to the error string
this function is not supported by the connection driver
and is largely only used for when a driver doesn't have any
implementation for a public API. So its usage with invalid
net-update requests is a bit out of place. Instead use
VIR_ERR_OPERATION_UNSUPPORTED which maps to:
Operation not supported
And is what qemu's hotplug routines use in similar scenarios
The struct contains a single boolean field, 'supported':
the meaning of this field is too generic to be limited to
devices only, and in fact it's already being used for
other things like loaders and OSs.
Instead of trying to come up with a more generic name just
get rid of the struct altogether.
Prior to this patch we didn't make any attempt to prevent two entries
in the array of interfaces/PCI devices from pointing to the same
device.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1002423
So in glibc-2.23 sys/sysmacros.h is no longer included from sys/types.h
and we don't build because of the usage of major/minor/makedev macros.
Autoconf already has AC_HEADER_MAJOR macro that check where exactly
these functions/macros are defined, so let's use that.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Ploop image consists of directory with two files: ploop image itself,
called root.hds and DiskDescriptor.xml that contains information about
ploop device: https://openvz.org/Ploop/format.
Such volume are difficult to manipulate in terms of existing volume types
because they are neither a single files nor a directory.
This patch introduces new volume type - ploop. This volume type is used
by ploop volume's exclusively.
Signed-off-by: Olga Krishtal <okrishtal@virtuozzo.com>
Signed-off-by: Ján Tomko <jtomko@redhat.com>
This controller provides a single PCIe port on a new root. It is
similar to pci-expander-bus, intended to provide a bus that can be
associated with a guest-identifiable NUMA node, but is for
machinetypes with PCIe rather than PCI (e.g. q35-based machinetypes).
Aside from PCIe vs. PCI, the other main difference is that a
pci-expander-bus has a companion pci-bridge that is automatically
attached along with it, but pcie-expander-bus has only a single port,
and that port will only connect to a pcie-root-port, or to a
pcie-switch-upstream-port. In order for the bus to be of any use in
the guest, it must have either a pcie-root-port or a
pcie-switch-upstream-port attached (and one or more
pcie-switch-downstream-ports attached to the
pcie-switch-upstream-port).
This is a standard PCI root bus (not a bridge) that can be added to a
440fx-based domain. Although it uses a PCI slot, this is *not* how it
is connected into the PCI bus hierarchy, but is only used for
control. Each pci-expander-bus provides 32 slots (0-31) that can
accept hotplug of standard PCI devices.
The usefulness of pci-expander-bus relative to a pci-bridge is that
the NUMA node of the bus can be specified with the <node> subelement
of <target>. This gives guest-side visibility to the NUMA node of
attached devices (presuming that management apps only assign a device
to a bus that has a NUMA node number matching the node number of the
device on the host).
Each pci-expander-bus also has a "busNr" attribute. The expander-bus
itself will take the busNr specified, and all buses that are connected
to this bus (including the pci-bridge that is automatically added to
any expander bus of model "pxb" (see the next commit)) will use
busNr+1, busNr+2, etc, and the pci-root (or the expander-bus with next
lower busNr) will use bus numbers lower than busNr.
There are two places in qemu_domain_address.c where we have a switch
statement to convert PCI controller models
(VIR_DOMAIN_CONTROLLER_MODEL_PCI*) into the connection type flag that
is matched when looking for an upstream connection for that model of
controller (VIR_PCI_CONNECT_TYPE_*). This patch makes a utility
function in conf/domain_addr.c to do that, so that when a new PCI
controller is added, we only need to add the new model-->connect-type
in a single place.
The flags used to determine which devices could be plugged into which
controllers were quite confusing, as they tried to create classes of
connections, then put particular devices into possibly multiple
classes, while sometimes setting multiple flags for the controllers
themselves. The attempt to have a single flag indicate, e.g. that a
root-port or a switch-downstream-port could connect was not only
confusing, it was leading to a situation where it would be impossible
to specify exactly the right combinations for a new controller.
The solution is for the VIR_PCI_CONNECT_TYPE_* flags to have a 1:1
correspondence with each type of PCI controller, plus a flag for a PCI
endpoint device and another for a PCIe endpoint device (the only
exception to this is that pci-bridge and pcie-expander-bus controllers
have their upstream connection classified as
VIR_PCI_CONNECT_TYPE_PCI_DEVICE since they can be plugged into
*exactly* the same ports as any endpoint device). Each device then
has a single flag for connect type (plus the HOTPLUG flag if that
device can e hotplugged), and each controller sets the CONNECT bits
for all controllers that can be plugged into it, as well as for either
type of endpoint device that can be plugged in (and the HOTPLUG flag
if it can accept hotplugged devices).
With this change, it is *slightly* easier to understand the matching
of connections (as long as you remember that the flag for a
device/upstream-facing connection of a controller is the same as that
device's type, while the flags for a controller's downstream
connections is the OR of all device types that can be plugged into
that controller). More importantly, it will be possible to correctly
specify what can be plugged into a pcie-switch-expander-bus, when
support for it is added.
When support for dmi-to-pci-bridge was added, it was assumed that,
just as with the pci-root bus, slot 0 was reserved. This is not the
case - it can be used to connect a device just like any other slot, so
remove the restriction and update the test cases that auto-assign an
address on a dmi-to-pci-bridge.
Every other maxSlot was either set to 0 or to
VIR_PCI_ADDRESS_SLOT_LAST, but this one was for some reason set to the
literal value 31 (which is the same as VIR_PCI_ADDRESS_SLOT_LAST).
This makes them all consistent.
GCC in RHEL-6 complains about listen:
../../src/conf/domain_conf.c:23718: error: declaration of 'listen' shadows a global declaration [-Wshadow]
/usr/include/sys/socket.h:204: error: shadowed declaration is here [-Wshadow]
This renames all the listen to gListen.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
Since we didn't opt to use one single event for device lifecycle for a
VM we are missing one last event if the device removal failed. This
event will be emitted once we asked to eject the device but for some
reason it is not possible.
Instead of calling the virDomainGraphicsListensParseXML function for all
graphics types and ignore the wrong ones move the call only to graphics
types where we supports listen elements.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
Those are the last two places that uses the getter functions. Use a
direct access instead and remove those getters.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
Removes the check for graphics type, it's not a public API and developer
know what he's doing and this check makes no sense. It also removes
the ability to allocate a new array if there is none. This was used by
the virDomainGraphicsListenAdd* functions and isn't used anymore.
This is now a simple getter with simple check for listens array presence
and whether the index in out of bounds.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
This effectively removes virDomainGraphicsListenSetAddress which was
used only to change the address of listen structure and possible change
the listen type. The new function will auto-expand the listens array
and append a new listen.
The old function was used on pre-allocated array of listens and in most
cases it only "add" a new listen. The two remaining uses can access the
listen structure directly.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
Rest of the fields of the iotune data structure did not check for
malformed integers. Use the previously defined macro to extract them
which will simplify the code and add error reporting.
Since the structure was pre-initialized to 0 we don't need to set every
single member to 0 if it's not present in the XML. Additionally if we
put the name of the field into the error message the code can be
simplified using a macro to parse the members.
If we encounter a video device with primary=yes, we insert it
at def->videos[0].
There is no need to record this in a separate variable,
just check if there already is a primary video at def->videos[0].
We call VIR_INSERT_ELEMENT_INPLACE either with 0 (for primary video)
or def->nvideos (for the rest).
Use a variable with more semantic name, since j is usually used
for iterating.
We start with both i and def->nvideos at 0 and increment both
after every successful iteration.
Use i directly, instead of passing the def->nvideos value through j.
Commit 119cd06 started setting the primary bool for the first
user-specified video even if user omitted the 'primary' attribute.
However this was done before the addition of the implicit device.
This broke startup of transient qemu domains with no <video>:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1325757
Move this default to virDomainDefPostParseInternal,
after the addition of the implicit video device, to catch the implicit
video as well.
Commit dc98a5bc refactored the code a lot and forget about checking if
listen attribute is specified. This ensures that listen attribute and
first listen element are compared only if both exist.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
Commit d77ffb6876 added not only reporting of the PCI header type, but
also parsing of that information. However, because there was no parsing
done for the other sub-PCI capabilities, if there was any other
capability then a valid header type name (like phys_function or
virt_functions) the parsing would fail. This prevented passing node
device XMLs that we generated into our own functions when dealing with,
e.g. with SRIOV cards.
Instead of reworking the whole parsing, just fix this one occurence and
remove a test for it for the time being. Future patches will deal with
the rest.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Create a bitmap of iothreads that have scheduler info set so that the
transformation algorithm does not have to iterate the empty bitmap many
times. By reusing self-expanding bitmaps the bitmap size does not need
to be pre-calculated.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1264008
This patch adds new xml element, and so we can have the option of
also having perf events enabled immediately at startup.
Signed-off-by: Qiaowei Ren <qiaowei.ren@intel.com>
Message-id: 1459171833-26416-6-git-send-email-qiaowei.ren@intel.com
This patch adds support for "vpindex", "runtime", "synic",
"stimer", and "vendor_id" features available in qemu 2.5+.
- When Hyper-V "vpindex" is on, guest can use MSR HV_X64_MSR_VP_INDEX
to get virtual processor ID.
- Hyper-V "runtime" enlightement feature allows to use MSR
HV_X64_MSR_VP_RUNTIME to get the time the virtual processor consumes
running guest code, as well as the time the hypervisor spends running
code on behalf of that guest.
- Hyper-V "synic" stands for Synthetic Interrupt Controller, which is
lapic extension controlled via MSRs.
- Hyper-V "stimer" switches on Hyper-V SynIC timers MSR's support.
Guest can setup and use fired by host events (SynIC interrupt and
appropriate timer expiration message) as guest clock events
- Hyper-V "reset" allows guest to reset VM.
- Hyper-V "vendor_id" exposes hypervisor vendor id to guest.
Signed-off-by: Nikolay Shirokovskiy <nshirokovskiy@virtuozzo.com>
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
1. All hyperv features are tristate ones. So make tristate generating part common.
2. Reduce nesting on spinlocks.
Signed-off-by: Nikolay Shirokovskiy <nshirokovskiy@virtuozzo.com>
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
1. All hyperv features are tristate ones. So make tristate parsing code common.
2. Reindent switch statement.
3. Reduce nesting in spinlocks parsing.
Signed-off-by: Nikolay Shirokovskiy <nshirokovskiy@virtuozzo.com>
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
When reading in an XML definition for a SCSI target device, the name
property of struct scsi_target refers to the @target element.
Let's fix this obvious typo and also extend the XML schema to provide
validation.
Signed-off-by: Bjoern Walk <bwalk@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Most hypervisors use Hardware Assisted Paging by default and don't
require specifying the feature in domain conf. But some hypervisors
support disabling HAP on a per-domain basis. To enable HAP by default
yet provide a knob to disable it, extend the <hap> feature with a
'state=on|off' attribute, similar to <pvspinlock> and <vmport> features.
In the absence of <hap>, the hypervisor default (on) is used. <hap>
without the state attribute would be the same as <hap state='on'/> for
backwards compatibility. And of course <hap state='off'/> disables hap.
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_SUSPENDED_POSTCOPY and VIR_DOMAIN_PAUSED_POSTCOPY are
used on the source host once migration enters post-copy mode (which
means the domain gets paused on the source. After the destination host
takes over the execution of the domain, its virtual CPUs are resumed and
the domain enters VIR_DOMAIN_RUNNING_POSTCOPY state and
VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_RESUMED_POSTCOPY event is emitted.
In case migration fails during post-copy mode and none of the hosts have
complete state of the domain, both domains will remain paused with
VIR_DOMAIN_PAUSED_POSTCOPY_FAILED reason and an upper layer may decide
what to do.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
It's just a combination of AddImplicitControllers, and AddConsoleCompat.
Every caller that wants ImplicitControllers also wants the ConsoleCompat
AFAICT, so lump them together. We also need it for future patches.
Judging by how the whitelist has skewed quite far from the original
error message, I think it's better to just drop these.
If someone wants to revive this check I suggest implementing it on
a per-HV driver basis with PostParse callbacks.
If we expose this information, which is one byte in every PCI config
file, we let all mgmt apps know whether the device itself is an endpoint
or not so it's easier for them to decide whether such device can be
passed through into a VM (endpoint) or not (*-bridge).
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1317531
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Commit id '4f846170' added printing of a new field 'part_separator';
however, neglected to do so when there was an "freeExtent" defined
for the device (as there would be when the disk pool was started).
This patch adjusts the logic to appropriately format the device path and
if there the part_separator attribute.
Just a cleanup I stumbled upon in one of my older branches I did when
browsing through some code and forgot to send it.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Add new function to manage adding the disk -drive options to the
command line removing that task from the mainline qemuBuildCommandLine.
Also since using const virDomainDef in new function, that means other
functions called needed to change their usage.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Add new function to manage adding the controller -device options to the
command line removing that task from the mainline qemuBuildCommandLine.
Also adjust to using const virDomainDef instead of virDomainDefPtr.
This causes collateral damage in order to modify called APIs to use
the const virDomainDef instead as well.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Extend the chardev source XML so that there is a new optional
<log/> element, which is applicable to all character device
backend types. For example, to log output of a TCP backed
serial port
<serial type='tcp'>
<source mode='connect' host='127.0.0.1' service='9999'/>
<protocol type='raw'/>
<log file='/var/log/libvirt/qemu/demo-serial0.log' append='on'/>
<target port='0'/>
</serial>
Not all hypervisors will support use of logfiles.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Introduce VIR_DOMAIN_DEF_FEATURE_OFFLINE_VCPUPIN domain feature flag
whcih will allow to skip ignoring of the pinning information for
hypervisor drivers which will want to implement forward-pinning of
vcpus.
Introduce a helper to check supported device and domain config and move
the memory hotplug checks to it.
The advantage of this approach is that by default all new features are
considered unsupported by all hypervisors unless specifically changed
rather than the previous approach where every hypervisor would need to
declare that a given feature is unsupported.
To avoid having to forbid new features added to domain XML in post parse
callbacks for individual hypervisor drivers the feature flag mechanism
will allow to add a central check that will be disabled for the drivers
that will add support.
As a first example flag, the 'hasWideSCSIBus' is converted to the new
bitmap.
The VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_ID_JOB_COMPLETED event will be triggered once a job
(such as migration) finishes and it will contain statistics for the job
as one would get by calling virDomainGetJobStats. Thanks to this event
it is now possible to get statistics of a completed migration of a
transient domain on the source host.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
While trying to build with -Os couple of compile errors showed
up.
conf/domain_conf.c: In function 'virDomainChrRemove':
conf/domain_conf.c:13666:24: error: 'ret' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
virDomainChrDefPtr ret, **arrPtr = NULL;
^
Compiler fails to see that @ret is used only if set in the loop,
but whatever, there's no harm in initializing the variable.
In vboxAttachDrivesNew and _vboxAttachDrivesOld compiler thinks
that @rc may be used uninitialized. Well, not directly, but maybe
after some optimization. Yet again, no harm in initializing a
variable.
In file included from ./util/virthread.h:26:0,
from ./datatypes.h:28,
from vbox/vbox_tmpl.c:43,
from vbox/vbox_V3_1.c:37:
vbox/vbox_tmpl.c: In function '_vboxAttachDrivesOld':
./util/virerror.h:181:5: error: 'rc' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
virReportErrorHelper(VIR_FROM_THIS, code, __FILE__, \
^
In file included from vbox/vbox_V3_1.c:37:0:
vbox/vbox_tmpl.c:1041:14: note: 'rc' was declared here
nsresult rc;
^
Yet again, one uninitialized variable:
qemu/qemu_driver.c: In function 'qemuDomainBlockCommit':
qemu/qemu_driver.c:17194:9: error: 'baseSource' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
qemuDomainPrepareDiskChainElement(driver, vm, baseSource,
^
And another one:
storage/storage_backend_logical.c: In function 'virStorageBackendLogicalMatchPoolSource.isra.2':
storage/storage_backend_logical.c:618:33: error: 'thisSource' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
thisSource->devices[j].path))
^
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
While trying to build with -Os I've encountered some build
failures.
util/vircommand.c: In function 'virCommandAddEnvFormat':
util/vircommand.c:1257:1: error: inlining failed in call to 'virCommandAddEnv': call is unlikely and code size would grow [-Werror=inline]
virCommandAddEnv(virCommandPtr cmd, char *env)
^
util/vircommand.c:1308:5: error: called from here [-Werror=inline]
virCommandAddEnv(cmd, env);
^
This function is big enough for the compiler to be not inlined.
This is the error message I'm seeing:
Then virDomainNumatuneNodeSpecified is exported and called from
other places. It shouldn't be inlined then.
In file included from network/bridge_driver_platform.h:30:0,
from network/bridge_driver_platform.c:26:
network/bridge_driver_linux.c: In function 'networkRemoveRoutingFirewallRules':
./conf/network_conf.h:350:1: error: inlining failed in call to 'virNetworkDefForwardIf.constprop': call is unlikely and code size would grow [-Werror=inline]
virNetworkDefForwardIf(const virNetworkDef *def, size_t n)
^
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Prior to commit id '3d021381' virDomainObjUpdateModificationImpact was
part of virDomainLiveConfigHelperMethod and the *flags if condition
VIR_DOMAIN_AFFECT_CONFIG checked the ->persistent boolean and made the
virDomainObjGetPersistentDef call.
Since the functions were split the ->persistent check is all that remained
and thus could be combined into one if statement.
Signed-off-by: Nikolay Shirokovskiy <nshirokovskiy@virtuozzo.com>
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
This parameter represents top level period cgroup
that limits whole domain enforcement period for a quota
Signed-off-by: Alexander Burluka <aburluka@virtuozzo.com>
This attribute is used to extend secondary PCI bar and expose it to the
guest as 64bit memory. It works like this: attribute vram is there to
set size of secondary PCI bar and guest sees it as 32bit memory,
attribute vram64 can extend this secondary PCI bar. If both attributes
are used, guest sees two memory bars, both address the same memory, with
the difference that the 32bit bar can address only the first part of the
whole memory.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1260749
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
We always place primary video device at first place, to make it easier
to create a qemu command or format an xml, but we should also set the
primary boolean for primary video device to 'true'.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
Add Spice graphics gl attribute. qemu 2.6 should have -spice gl=on argument to
enable opengl rendering context (patches on the ML). This is necessary to
actually enable virgl rendering.
Add a qemuxml2argv test for virtio-gpu + spice with virgl.
Signed-off-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
While reviewing how storage driver used ObjListPtr's for reference
in some recent secret driver patches to use the same mechanism, I came
across an instance where the wrong API was called for error paths after
successfully allocating the storage pool pointer and inserting into
the driver pool list.
The path is after virStoragePoolObjAssignDef succeeds - the 'def' passed
in is assigned to pool->def (or newDef) so it shouldn't be the only thing
deleted. The pool is now part of driver->pools.objs, so it would need to
be removed (as happens in the storagePoolCreateXML error paths).
Rather than calling virStoragePoolDefFree to free the def which is now
assigned to the pool, call virStoragePoolObjRemove to ensure the pool
element is removed from the driver list and that anything stored in pool
is properly handled by virStoragePoolObjFree including the call to
virStoragePoolDefFree for the pool->{def|newDef} element.
Checking whether x > 0 before looping over [0..x] items doesn't make
sense and multi-line body must have curly brackets around it.
Best viewed with '-w'.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
There's a check if a domain definition has any graphics card and
if so, we iterate over each one of them. This makes no sense,
because even if it has none we can still iterate over.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Seems like the natural fit, since we are already adding other XML bits
in the PostParse routine.
Previously AddImplicitControllers was only called at the end of XML
parsing, meaning code that builds a DomainDef by hand had to manually
call it. Now those PostParse callers get it for free.
There's some test churn here; xen xm and sexpr test suite bits weren't
calling this before, but now they are, so you'll see new IDE controllers.
I don't think this will cause problems in practice, since the code already
needs to handle these implicit controllers like in the case when a user
defines their own XML.
virDomainObjWait is designed to be called in a loop. Make sure we break
the loop in case the domain dies to avoid waiting for an event which
will never happen.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Commit f1a89a8 allowed parsing configs from /etc/libvirt
without validating the emulator capabilities.
Check for the presence of os->type.machine even if the
VIR_DOMAIN_DEF_PARSE_SKIP_OSTYPE_CHECKS flag is set,
otherwise the daemon can crash on carelessly crafted input
in the config directory.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1267256
Our existing virHashForEach method iterates through all items disregarding the
fact, that some of the iterators might have actually failed. Errors are usually
dispatched through an error element in opaque data which then causes the
original caller of virHashForEach to return -1. In that case, virHashForEach
could return as soon as one of the iterators fail. This patch changes the
iterator return type and adjusts all of its instances accordingly, so the
actual refactor of virHashForEach method can be dealt with later.
Signed-off-by: Erik Skultety <eskultet@redhat.com>
Since no value in the virGICVersion enumeration is negative, a clever
enough compiler can report an error such as
src/conf/domain_conf.c:15337:75: error: comparison of unsigned enum
expression < 0 is always false [-Werror,-Wtautological-compare]
if ((def->gic_version = virGICVersionTypeFromString(tmp)) < 0 ||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ^ ~
virGICVersionTypeFromString() can, however, return a negative value if
the input string is not part of the enumeration, so we definitely need
that check.
Work around the problem by storing the return value in a temporary int
variable.
The snapshot name generator truncates the original file name after a '.'
and replaces the suffix with the snapshot name. If two disks source
images differ only in the suffix portion, the generated name will be
duplicate.
Since this is a corner case just error out stating that a duplicate name
was generated. The user can work around this situation by providing
the file names explicitly.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1283085
Older gcc fails to see that the variable is set iff @hasPriority
== true in which case the former is set a value. Initialize the
value while declaring it to make the compiler shut up.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Due to bad design the vcpu sched element is orthogonal to the way how
the data belongs to the corresponding objects. Now that vcpus are a
struct that allow to store other info too, let's convert the data to the
sane structure.
The helpers for the conversion are made universal so that they can be
reused for iothreads too.
This patch also resolves https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1235180
since with the correct storage approach you can't have dangling data.
Move the logic from virDomainDiskDefDstDuplicates into
virDomainDiskDefCheckDuplicateInfo so that we don't have to loop
multiple times through the array of disks. Since the original function
was called in qemuBuildDriveDevStr, it was actually called for every
single disk which was quite wasteful.
Additionally the target uniqueness check needed to be duplicated in
the disk hotplug case, since the disk was inserted into the domain
definition after the device string was formatted and thus
virDomainDiskDefDstDuplicates didn't do anything in that case.
As the scheduler info elements are represented orthogonally to how it
makes sense to actually store the information, the extracted code will
be later used when converting between XML and internal definitions.
The virDomainSnapshotDefFormat calls into virDomainDefFormat,
so should be providing a non-NULL virCapsPtr instance. On the
qemu driver we change qemuDomainSnapshotWriteMetadata to also
include caps since it calls virDomainSnapshotDefFormat.
Signed-off-by: Joao Martins <joao.m.martins@oracle.com>
The virDomainObjFormat and virDomainSaveStatus methods
both call into virDomainDefFormat, so should be providing
a non-NULL virCapsPtr instance.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
virDomainSaveConfig calls virDomainDefFormat which was setting the caps
to NULL, thus keeping the old behaviour (i.e. not looking at
netprefix). This patch adds the virCapsPtr to the function and allows
the configuration to be saved and skipping interface names that were
registered with virCapabilitiesSetNetPrefix().
Signed-off-by: Joao Martins <joao.m.martins@oracle.com>
And use the newly added caps->host.netprefix (if it exists) for
interface names that match the autogenerated target names.
Signed-off-by: Joao Martins <joao.m.martins@oracle.com>
And use the newly added caps->host.netprefix for free interface
names that match the autogenerated target names.
Signed-off-by: Joao Martins <joao.m.martins@oracle.com>
In the reverted commit d2e5538b1, the libxl driver was changed to copy
interface names autogenerated by libxl to the corresponding network def
in the domain's virDomainDef object. The copied name is freed when the
domain transitions to the shutoff state. But when migrating a domain,
the autogenerated name is included in the XML sent to the destination
host. It is possible an interface with the same name already exists on
the destination host, causing migration to fail.
This patch defines a new capability for setting the network device
prefix that will be used in the driver. Valid prefixes are
VIR_NET_GENERATED_PREFIX or the one announced by the driver.
Signed-off-by: Joao Martins <joao.m.martins@oracle.com>
A pretty nasty deadlock occurs while trying to rename a VM in parallel
with virDomainObjListNumOfDomains.
The short description of the problem is as follows:
Thread #1:
qemuDomainRename:
------> aquires domain lock by qemuDomObjFromDomain
---------> waits for domain list lock in any of the listed functions:
- virDomainObjListFindByName
- virDomainObjListRenameAddNew
- virDomainObjListRenameRemove
Thread #2:
virDomainObjListNumOfDomains:
------> aquires domain list lock
---------> waits for domain lock in virDomainObjListCount
Introduce generic virDomainObjListRename function for renaming domains.
It aquires list lock in right order to avoid deadlock. Callback is used
to make driver specific domain updates.
Signed-off-by: Nikolay Shirokovskiy <nshirokovskiy@virtuozzo.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
In some cases it may be better to have a bitmap representing state of
individual vcpus rather than iterating the definition. The new helper
creates a bitmap representing the state from the domain definition.
Rather than preallocating a set number of elements, then walking through
the extents and adjusting the specific element in place, use the APPEND
macros to handle that chore.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
The current code was a little bit odd. At first we've removed all
possible implicit input devices from domain definition to add them later
back if there was any graphics device defined while parsing XML
description. That's not all, while formating domain definition to XML
description we at first ignore any input devices with bus different to
USB and VIRTIO and few lines later we add implicit input devices to XML.
This seems to me as a lot of code for nothing. This patch may look
to be more complicated than original approach, but this is a preferred
way to modify/add driver specific stuff only in those drivers and not
deal with them in common parsing/formating functions.
The update is to add those implicit input devices into config XML to
follow the real HW configuration visible by guest OS.
There was also inconsistence between our behavior and QEMU's in the way,
that in QEMU there is no way how to disable those implicit input devices
for x86 architecture and they are available always, even without graphics
device. This applies also to XEN hypervisor. VZ driver already does its
part by putting correct implicit devices into live XML.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
The VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_ID_MIGRATION_ITERATION event will be triggered
whenever VIR_DOMAIN_JOB_MEMORY_ITERATION changes its value, i.e.,
whenever a new iteration over guest memory pages is started during
migration.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Add a new storage pool source device attribute 'part_separator=[yes|no]'
in order to allow a 'disk' storage pool using a device mapper multipath
device to not add the "p" partition separator to the generated device
name when libvirt_parthelper is run.
This will allow libvirt to find device mapper multipath devices which were
configured in /etc/multipath.conf to use 'user_friendly_names' or custom
'alias' names for the LUN.
Commit id '7bf3198df' neglected to initialize deflate leading to a
possibility if model allocation/checks fail, then the VIR_FREE(deflate)
would be erroneous. Noted by Jan Tomko.
Excessive memory balloon inflation can cause invocation of OOM-killer,
when Linux is under severe memory pressure. QEMU memballoon device
has a feature to release some memory at the last moment before some
process will be get killed by OOM-killer.
Introduce a new optional balloon device attribute 'autodeflate' to
enable or disable this feature.
This new function will add a single controller of the given model,
except the case of ich9-usb-ehci1 (the master controller for a USB2
controller set) in which case a set of related controllers will be
added (EHCI1, UHCI1, UHCI2, UHCI3). These controllers will not be
given PCI addresses, but should be otherwise ready to use.
"-1" is allowed for controller model, and means "default for this
machinetype". This matches the existing practice in
qemuDomainDefPostParse(), which always adds the default controller
with model = -1, and relies on the commandline builder to set a model
(that is wrong, but will be fixed later).
We need a virDomainDefAddController() that doesn't check for an
existing controller at the same index (since USB2 controllers must be
added in sets of 4 that are all at the same index), so rather than
duplicating the code in virDomainDefMaybeAddController(), split it
into two functions, in the process eliminating existing duplicated
code that loops through the controller list by calling
virDomainControllerFind(), which does the same thing).
Commit id '70ffa02fc' added the data.file.append option to some
VIR_DOMAIN_CHR_TYPE_FILE cases in switch statements allowing the
code to "fall through" for the remainder of the cases. This causes
angst in code profiling tools, like Coverity since there is no break;
followed by more case conditions. Adjust the logic to be more specific
within each case.
Signed-off-by: Dmitry Mishin <dim@virtuozzo.com>
For completeness, use the VIR_TRISTATE_SWITCH_ABSENT for data.file.append
comparisons. Commit ids '70ffa02f' and '53a15aed' just went with the non
zero comparison.
This used to return 'unkown' and that was not correct.
A vol-dumpxml now returns:
<volume type='network'>
<name>image3</name>
<key>libvirt/image3</key>
<source>
</source>
<capacity unit='bytes'>10737418240</capacity>
<allocation unit='bytes'>10737418240</allocation>
<target>
<path>libvirt/image3</path>
<format type='raw'/>
</target>
</volume>
The RBD driver will now error out if a different format than RAW
is provided when creating a volume.
Signed-off-by: Wido den Hollander <wido@widodh.nl>
Currently, there is no possibility for user to specify desired behaviour of
output to file - truncate or append. This patch adds an ability to explicitly
specify that user wants to preserve file's content on reopen.
Signed-off-by: Dmitry Mishin <dim@virtuozzo.com>
We only support hotplugging SCSI controllers.
The USB and virtio-serial related code was never reachable because
this function was only called for VIR_DOMAIN_CONTROLLER_TYPE_SCSI
controllers.
This reverts commit ee0d97a and parts of commits 16db8d2
and d6d54cd1.
When the function changes the memory lock limit for the first time,
it will retrieve the current value and store it inside the
virDomainObj for the domain.
When the function is called again, if memory locking is no longer
needed, it will be able to restore the memory locking limit to its
original value.
Once more stuff will be moved into the vCPU data structure it will be
necessary to get a specific one in some ocasions. Add a helper that will
simplify this task.