After a cpu hotplug the qemu driver did not refresh information about
virtual processors used by qemu and their corresponding threads. This
patch forces a re-detection as is done on start of QEMU.
This ensures that correct information is reported by the
virDomainGetVcpus API and "virsh vcpuinfo".
A failure to obtain the thread<->vcpu mapping is treated non-fatal and
the mapping is not updated in a case of failure as not all versions of
QEMU report this in the info cpus command.
This patch changes a switch statement into ifs when handling live vs.
configuration modifications getting rid of redundant code in case when
both live and persistent configuration gets changed.
when failing to attach another usb device to a domain for some reason
which has one use device attached before, the libvirtd crashed.
The crash is caused by null-pointer dereference error in invoking
usbDeviceListSteal passed in NULL value usb variable.
commit 05abd1507d introduces the bug.
Detected by valgrind. Leaks are introduced in commit 122fa379.
src/conf/storage_conf.c: fix memory leaks.
How to reproduce?
$ make && make -C tests check TESTS=storagepoolxml2xmltest
$ cd tests && valgrind -v --leak-check=full ./storagepoolxml2xmltest
actual result:
==28571== LEAK SUMMARY:
==28571== definitely lost: 40 bytes in 5 blocks
==28571== indirectly lost: 0 bytes in 0 blocks
==28571== possibly lost: 0 bytes in 0 blocks
==28571== still reachable: 1,054 bytes in 21 blocks
==28571== suppressed: 0 bytes in 0 blocks
Signed-off-by: Alex Jia <ajia@redhat.com>
No useful error was being reported when an invalid character device
target type is specified in the domainXML. E.g.
...
<console type="pty">
<source path="/dev/pts/2"/>
<target type="kvm" port="0"/>
</console>
...
resulted in
error: Failed to define domain from x.xml
error: An error occurred, but the cause is unknown
With this small patch, the error is more helpful
error: Failed to define domain from x.xml
error: XML error: unknown target type 'kvm' specified for character device
<vcpu> is not an optional node. The value for its 'placement'
actually always defaults to 'static' in the underlying codes.
(Even no 'cpuset' and 'placement' is specified, the domain
process will be pinned to all the available pCPUs).
Though numad will manage the memory allocation of task dynamically,
it wants management application (libvirt) to pre-set the memory
policy according to the advisory nodeset returned from querying numad,
(just like pre-bind CPU nodeset for domain process), and thus the
performance could benefit much more from it.
This patch introduces new XML tag 'placement', value 'auto' indicates
whether to set the memory policy with the advisory nodeset from numad,
and its value defaults to the value of <vcpu> placement, or 'static'
if 'nodeset' is specified. Example of the new XML tag's usage:
<numatune>
<memory placement='auto' mode='interleave'/>
</numatune>
Just like what current "numatune" does, the 'auto' numa memory policy
setting uses libnuma's API too.
If <vcpu> "placement" is "auto", and <numatune> is not specified
explicitly, a default <numatume> will be added with "placement"
set as "auto", and "mode" set as "strict".
The following XML can now fully drive numad:
1) <vcpu> placement is 'auto', no <numatune> is specified.
<vcpu placement='auto'>10</vcpu>
2) <vcpu> placement is 'auto', no 'placement' is specified for
<numatune>.
<vcpu placement='auto'>10</vcpu>
<numatune>
<memory mode='interleave'/>
</numatune>
And it's also able to control the CPU placement and memory policy
independently. e.g.
1) <vcpu> placement is 'auto', and <numatune> placement is 'static'
<vcpu placement='auto'>10</vcpu>
<numatune>
<memory mode='strict' nodeset='0-10,^7'/>
</numatune>
2) <vcpu> placement is 'static', and <numatune> placement is 'auto'
<vcpu placement='static' cpuset='0-24,^12'>10</vcpu>
<numatune>
<memory mode='interleave' placement='auto'/>
</numatume>
A follow up patch will change the XML formatting codes to always output
'placement' for <vcpu>, even it's 'static'.
It turns out that when cgroups are enabled, the use of a block device
for a snapshot target was failing with EPERM due to libvirt failing
to add the block device to the cgroup whitelist. See also
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=810200
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c
(qemuDomainSnapshotCreateSingleDiskActive)
(qemuDomainSnapshotUndoSingleDiskActive): Account for cgroup.
(qemuDomainSnapshotCreateDiskActive): Update caller.
qemu's behavior in this case is to change the spice server behavior to
require secure connection to any channel not otherwise specified as
being in plaintext mode. libvirt doesn't currently allow requesting this
(via plaintext-channel=<channel name>).
RHBZ: 819499
Signed-off-by: Alon Levy <alevy@redhat.com>
Until now, the nl_pid of the source address of every message sent by
virNetlinkCommand has been set to the value of getpid(). Most of the
time this doesn't matter, and in the one case where it does
(communication with lldpad), it previously was the proper thing to do,
because the netlink event service (which listens on a netlink socket
for unsolicited messages from lldpad) coincidentally always happened
to bind with a local nl_pid == getpid().
With the fix for:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=816465
that particular nl_pid is now effectively a reserved value, so the
netlink event service will always bind to something else
(coincidentally "getpid() + (1 << 22)", but it really could be
anything). The result is that communication between lldpad and
libvirtd is broken (lldpad gets a "disconnected" error when it tries
to send a directed message).
The solution to this problem caused by a solution, is to query the
netlink event service's nlhandle for its "local_port", and send that
as the source nl_pid (but only when sending to lldpad, of course - in
other cases we maintain the old behavior of sending getpid()).
There are two cases where a message is being directed at lldpad - one
in virNetDevLinkDump, and one in virNetDevVPortProfileOpSetLink.
The case of virNetDevVPortProfileOpSetLink is simplest to explain -
only if !nltarget_kernel, i.e. the message isn't targetted for the
kernel, is the dst_pid set (by calling
virNetDevVPortProfileGetLldpadPid()), so only in that case do we call
virNetlinkEventServiceLocalPid() to set src_pid.
For virNetDevLinkDump, it's a bit more complicated. The call to
virNetDevVPortProfileGetLldpadPid() was effectively up one level (in
virNetDevVPortProfileOpCommon), although obscured by an unnecessary
passing of a function pointer. This patch removes the function
pointer, and calls virNetDevVPortProfileGetLldpadPid() directly in
virNetDevVPortProfileOpCommon - if it's doing this, it knows that it
should also call virNetlinkEventServiceLocalPid() to set src_pid too;
then it just passes src_pid and dst_pid down to
virNetDevLinkDump. Since (src_pid == 0 && dst_pid == 0) implies that
the kernel is the destination, there is no longer any need to send
nltarget_kernel as an arg to virNetDevLinkDump, so it's been removed.
The disparity between src_pid being int and dst_pid being uint32_t may
be a bit disconcerting to some, but I didn't want to complicate
virNetlinkEventServiceLocalPid() by having status returned separately
from the value.
This value will be needed to set the src_pid when sending netlink
messages to lldpad. It is part of the solution to:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=816465
Note that libnl's port generation algorithm guarantees that the
nl_socket_get_local_port() will always be > 0 (since it is "getpid() +
(n << 22>" where n is always < 1024), so it is okay to cast the
uint32_t to int (thus allowing us to use -1 as an error sentinel).
Until now, virNetlinkCommand has assumed that the nl_pid in the source
address of outgoing netlink messages should always be the return value
of getpid(). In most cases it actually doesn't matter, but in the case
of communication with lldpad, lldpad saves this info and later uses it
to send netlink messages back to libvirt. A recent patch to fix Bug
816465 changed the order of the universe such that the netlink event
service socket is no longer bound with nl_pid == getpid(), so lldpad
could no longer send unsolicited messages to libvirtd. Adding src_pid
as an argument to virNetlinkCommand() is the first step in notifying
lldpad of the proper address of the netlink event service socket.
src/qemu/qemu_hostdev.c:
refactor qemuPrepareHostdevUSBDevices function, make it focus on
adding usb device to activeUsbHostdevs after check. After that,
the usb hotplug function qemuDomainAttachHostDevice also could use
it.
expand qemuPrepareHostUSBDevices to perform the usb search,
rollback on failure.
src/qemu/qemu_hotplug.c:
If there are multiple usb devices available with same vendorID and productID,
but with different value of "bus, device", we give an error to let user
use <address> to specify the desired one.
usbFindDevice():get usb device according to
idVendor, idProduct, bus, device
it is the exact match of the four parameters
usbFindDeviceByBus():get usb device according to bus, device
it returns only one usb device same as usbFindDevice
usbFindDeviceByVendor():get usb device according to idVendor,idProduct
it probably returns multiple usb devices.
usbDeviceSearch(): a helper function to do the actual search
When we added the default USB controller into domain XML, we efficiently
broke migration to older versions of libvirt that didn't support USB
controllers at all (0.9.4 and earlier) even for domains that don't use
anything that the older libvirt can't provide. We still want to present
the default USB controller in any XML seen by a user/app but we can
safely remove it from the domain XML used during migration. If we are
migrating to a new enough libvirt, it will add the controller XML back,
while older libvirt won't be confused with it although it will still
tell qemu to create the controller.
Similar approach can be used in the future whenever we find out we
always enabled some kind of device without properly advertising it in
domain XML.
Commit 4c82f09e added a capability check for qemu per-device io
throttling, but only applied it to domain startup. As mentioned
in the previous commit (98cec05), the user can still get an 'internal
error' message during a hotplug attempt, when the monitor command
doesn't exist. It is confusing to allow tuning on inactive domains
only to then be rejected when starting the domain.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainSetBlockIoTune): Reject
offline tuning if online can't match it.
If you have a qemu build that lacks the blockio tune monitor command,
then this command:
$ virsh blkdeviotune rhel6u2 hda --total_bytes_sec 1000
error: Unable to change block I/O throttle
error: internal error Unexpected error
fails as expected (well, the error message is lousy), but the next
dumpxml shows that the domain was modified anyway. Worse, that means
if you save the domain then restore it, the restore will likely fail
due to throttling being unsupported, even though no throttling should
even be active because the monitor command failed in the first place.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainSetBlockIoTune): Check for
error before making modification permanent.
These two functions are called from main() on all platforms, and
always return success on platforms that don't support libnl. They
still log an error message, though, which doesn't make sense - they
should just be NOPs on those platforms. (Per a suggestion during
review, I've turned the logs into debug messages rather than removing
them completely).
Error: STRING_NULL:
/libvirt/src/node_device/node_device_linux_sysfs.c:80:
string_null_argument: Function "saferead" does not terminate string "*buf".
/libvirt/src/util/util.c:101:
string_null_argument: Function "read" fills array "*buf" with a non-terminated string.
/libvirt/src/node_device/node_device_linux_sysfs.c:87:
string_null: Passing unterminated string "buf" to a function expecting a null-terminated string.
Error: STRING_NULL:
/libvirt/src/util/uuid.c:273:
string_null_argument: Function "getDMISystemUUID" does not terminate string "*dmiuuid".
/libvirt/src/util/uuid.c:241:
string_null_argument: Function "saferead" fills array "*uuid" with a non-terminated string.
/libvirt/src/util/util.c:101:
string_null_argument: Function "read" fills array "*buf" with a non-terminated string.
/libvirt/src/util/uuid.c:274:
string_null: Passing unterminated string "dmiuuid" to a function expecting a null-terminated string.
/libvirt/src/util/uuid.c:138:
var_assign_parm: Assigning: "cur" = "uuidstr". They now point to the same thing.
/libvirt/src/util/uuid.c:164:
string_null_sink_loop: Searching for null termination in an unterminated array "cur".
Error: RESOURCE_LEAK:
/libvirt/src/qemu/qemu_driver.c:6968:
alloc_fn: Calling allocation function "calloc".
/libvirt/src/qemu/qemu_driver.c:6968:
var_assign: Assigning: "nodeset" = storage returned from "calloc(1UL, 1UL)".
/libvirt/src/qemu/qemu_driver.c:6977:
noescape: Variable "nodeset" is not freed or pointed-to in function "virTypedParameterAssign".
/libvirt/src/qemu/qemu_driver.c:6997:
leaked_storage: Variable "nodeset" going out of scope leaks the storage it points to.
Error: RESOURCE_LEAK:
/libvirt/src/vmx/vmx.c:2431:
alloc_fn: Calling allocation function "calloc".
/libvirt/src/vmx/vmx.c:2431:
var_assign: Assigning: "networkName" = storage returned from "calloc(1UL, 1UL)".
/libvirt/src/vmx/vmx.c:2495:
leaked_storage: Variable "networkName" going out of scope leaks the storage it points to.
Error: RESOURCE_LEAK:
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/nodeinfo.c:629: alloc_fn: Calling allocation function "fopen".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/nodeinfo.c:629: var_assign: Assigning: "cpuinfo" = storage returned from "fopen("/proc/cpuinfo", "r")".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/nodeinfo.c:638: leaked_storage: Variable "cpuinfo" going out of scope leaks the storage it points to.
Error: RESOURCE_LEAK:
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/test/test_driver.c:1041: alloc_arg: Calling allocation function "virXPathNodeSet" on "devs".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/util/xml.c:621: alloc_arg: "virAllocN" allocates memory that is stored into "*list".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/util/memory.c:129: alloc_fn: Storage is returned from allocation function "calloc".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/util/memory.c:129: var_assign: Assigning: "*((void **)ptrptr)" = "calloc(count, size)".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/util/xml.c:625: noescape: Variable "*list" is not freed or pointed-to in function "memcpy".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/test/test_driver.c:1098: leaked_storage: Variable "devs" going out of scope leaks the storage it points to.
Coverity logs:
Error: RESOURCE_LEAK:
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/xen/xen_inotify.c:103: alloc_fn: Calling allocation function "xenDaemonLookupByUUID".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/xen/xend_internal.c:2534: alloc_fn: Storage is returned from allocation function "virGetDomain".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/datatypes.c:191: alloc_arg: "virAlloc" allocates memory that is stored into "ret".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/util/memory.c:101: alloc_fn: Storage is returned from allocation function "calloc".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/util/memory.c:101: var_assign: Assigning: "*((void **)ptrptr)" = "calloc(1UL, size)".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/datatypes.c:210: return_alloc: Returning allocated memory "ret".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/xen/xend_internal.c:2534: var_assign: Assigning: "ret" = "virGetDomain(conn, name, uuid)".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/xen/xend_internal.c:2541: return_alloc: Returning allocated memory "ret".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/xen/xen_inotify.c:103: var_assign: Assigning: "dom" = storage returned from "xenDaemonLookupByUUID(conn, rawuuid)".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/xen/xen_inotify.c:126: leaked_storage: Variable "dom" going out of scope leaks the storage it points to.
Error: RESOURCE_LEAK:
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/xen/xen_hypervisor.c:2742: alloc_fn: Calling allocation function "fopen".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/xen/xen_hypervisor.c:2742: var_assign: Assigning: "cpuinfo" = storage returned from "fopen("/proc/cpuinfo", "r")".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/xen/xen_hypervisor.c:2763: noescape: Variable "cpuinfo" is not freed or pointed-to in function "xenHypervisorMakeCapabilitiesInternal".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/xen/xen_hypervisor.c:2574:45: noescape: "xenHypervisorMakeCapabilitiesInternal" does not free or save its pointer parameter "cpuinfo".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/xen/xen_hypervisor.c:2768: leaked_storage: Variable "cpuinfo" going out of scope leaks the storage it points to.
Error: RESOURCE_LEAK:
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/xen/xen_hypervisor.c:2752: alloc_fn: Calling allocation function "fopen".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/xen/xen_hypervisor.c:2752: var_assign: Assigning: "capabilities" = storage returned from "fopen("/sys/hypervisor/properties/capabilities", "r")".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/xen/xen_hypervisor.c:2763: noescape: Variable "capabilities" is not freed or pointed-to in function "xenHypervisorMakeCapabilitiesInternal".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/xen/xen_hypervisor.c:2574:60: noescape: "xenHypervisorMakeCapabilitiesInternal" does not free or save its pointer parameter "capabilities".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/xen/xen_hypervisor.c:2768: leaked_storage: Variable "capabilities" going out of scope leaks the storage it points to.
Coverity logs:
Error: RESOURCE_LEAK:
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/phyp/phyp_driver.c:523: alloc_fn: Calling allocation function "fopen".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/phyp/phyp_driver.c:523: var_assign: Assigning: "fd" = storage returned from "fopen(local_file, "rb")".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/phyp/phyp_driver.c:540: noescape: Variable "fd" is not freed or pointed-to in function "fread".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/phyp/phyp_driver.c:542: noescape: Variable "fd" is not freed or pointed-to in function "feof".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/phyp/phyp_driver.c:575: leaked_storage: Variable "fd" going out of scope leaks the storage it points to.
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/phyp/phyp_driver.c:585: leaked_storage: Variable "fd" going out of scope leaks the storage it points to.
Error: RESOURCE_LEAK:
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/phyp/phyp_driver.c:2088: alloc_fn: Calling allocation function "phypVolumeLookupByName".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/phyp/phyp_driver.c:2026: alloc_fn: Storage is returned from allocation function "virGetStorageVol".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/datatypes.c:724: alloc_arg: "virAlloc" allocates memory that is stored into "ret".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/util/memory.c:101: alloc_fn: Storage is returned from allocation function "calloc".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/util/memory.c:101: var_assign: Assigning: "*((void **)ptrptr)" = "calloc(1UL, size)".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/datatypes.c:753: return_alloc: Returning allocated memory "ret".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/phyp/phyp_driver.c:2026: var_assign: Assigning: "vol" = "virGetStorageVol(pool->conn, pool->name, volname, key)".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/phyp/phyp_driver.c:2030: return_alloc: Returning allocated memory "vol".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/phyp/phyp_driver.c:2088: leaked_storage: Failing to save storage allocated by "phypVolumeLookupByName(pool, voldef->name)" leaks it.
Error: RESOURCE_LEAK:
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/phyp/phyp_driver.c:2725: alloc_fn: Calling allocation function "phypGetStoragePoolLookUpByUUID".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/phyp/phyp_driver.c:2689: alloc_fn: Storage is returned from allocation function "virGetStoragePool".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/datatypes.c:592: alloc_arg: "virAlloc" allocates memory that is stored into "ret".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/util/memory.c:101: alloc_fn: Storage is returned from allocation function "calloc".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/util/memory.c:101: var_assign: Assigning: "*((void **)ptrptr)" = "calloc(1UL, size)".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/datatypes.c:610: return_alloc: Returning allocated memory "ret".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/phyp/phyp_driver.c:2689: var_assign: Assigning: "sp" = "virGetStoragePool(conn, pools[i], uuid)".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/phyp/phyp_driver.c:2694: return_alloc: Returning allocated memory "sp".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/phyp/phyp_driver.c:2725: leaked_storage: Failing to save storage allocated by "phypGetStoragePoolLookUpByUUID(conn, def->uuid)" leaks it.
Error: RESOURCE_LEAK:
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/phyp/phyp_driver.c:2719: alloc_fn: Calling allocation function "phypStoragePoolLookupByName".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/phyp/phyp_driver.c:2254: alloc_fn: Storage is returned from allocation function "virGetStoragePool".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/datatypes.c:592: alloc_arg: "virAlloc" allocates memory that is stored into "ret".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/util/memory.c:101: alloc_fn: Storage is returned from allocation function "calloc".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/util/memory.c:101: var_assign: Assigning: "*((void **)ptrptr)" = "calloc(1UL, size)".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/datatypes.c:610: return_alloc: Returning allocated memory "ret".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/phyp/phyp_driver.c:2254: return_alloc_fn: Directly returning storage allocated by "virGetStoragePool".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/phyp/phyp_driver.c:2719: leaked_storage: Failing to save storage allocated by "phypStoragePoolLookupByName(conn, def->name)" leaks it.
Error: RESOURCE_LEAK:
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/phyp/phyp_driver.c:2270: alloc_fn: Calling allocation function "phypStoragePoolLookupByName".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/phyp/phyp_driver.c:2254: alloc_fn: Storage is returned from allocation function "virGetStoragePool".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/datatypes.c:592: alloc_arg: "virAlloc" allocates memory that is stored into "ret".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/util/memory.c:101: alloc_fn: Storage is returned from allocation function "calloc".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/util/memory.c:101: var_assign: Assigning: "*((void **)ptrptr)" = "calloc(1UL, size)".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/datatypes.c:610: return_alloc: Returning allocated memory "ret".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/phyp/phyp_driver.c:2254: return_alloc_fn: Directly returning storage allocated by "virGetStoragePool".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/phyp/phyp_driver.c:2270: var_assign: Assigning: "sp" = storage returned from "phypStoragePoolLookupByName(vol->conn, vol->pool)".
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/phyp/phyp_driver.c:2324: leaked_storage: Variable "sp" going out of scope leaks the storage it points to.
/builddir/build/BUILD/libvirt-0.9.10/src/phyp/phyp_driver.c:2327: leaked_storage: Variable "sp" going out of scope leaks the storage it points t
On 32-bit platforms, gcc warns that the comparison between a long
and (ULLONG_MAX/1024/1024) is always false; throwing in a type
conversion shuts up the warning.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.c (qemuMonitorBlockJob): Shut gcc up.
configure.ac: check for libnl-3 in addition to libnl-1
src/Makefile.am: link against libnl when needed
src/util/virnetlink.c:
support libnl3 api. To minimize impact on code flow, wrap the
differences under the virNetlink* namespace.
Unfortunately libnl3 moves netlink/msg.h to
/usr/include/libnl3/netlink/msg.h, so the LIBNL_CFLAGS need to be added
to a bunch of places where they weren't needed with libnl1.
Signed-off-by: Serge Hallyn <serge.hallyn@canonical.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Add function virJSONValueObjectKeysNumber, virJSONValueObjectGetKey
and virJSONValueObjectGetValue, which allow you to iterate over all
fields of json object: you can get number of fields and then get
name and value, stored in field with that name by index.
Signed-off-by: Dmitry Guryanov <dguryanov@parallels.com>
The ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL(m) macro normally resolves to the gcc builtin
__attribute__((__nonnull__(m))). The effect of this in gcc is
unfortunately only to make gcc believe that "m" can never possibly be
NULL, *not* to add in any checks to guarantee that it isn't ever NULL
(i.e. it is an optimization aid, *not* something to verify code
correctness.) - see the following gcc bug report for more details:
http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=17308
Static source analyzers such as clang and coverity apparently can use
ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL(), though, to detect dead code (in the case that the
arg really is guaranteed non-NULL), as well as situations where an
obviously NULL arg is given to the function.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=815270 is a good example
of a bug caused by erroneous application of ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL().
Several people spent a long time staring at this code and not finding
the problem, because the problem wasn't in the function itself, but in
the prototype that specified ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL() for an arg that
actually *wasn't* always non-NULL, and caused a segv when dereferenced
(even though the code that dereferenced the pointer was inside an if()
that checked for a NULL pointer, that code was optimized out by gcc).
There may be some very small gain to be had from the optimizations
that can be inferred from ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL(), but it seems safer to
err on the side of generating code that behaves as expected, while
turning on the attribute for static analyzers.
Once lxcContainerSetStdio is invoked, logging will not work as
expected in libvirt_lxc. So make sure this is the last thing to
be called, in particular after setting the security process label
The virLogSetFromEnv call was done too late in startup to
catch many log messages (eg from security driver initialization).
To assist debugging also explicitly log the security details
at startup
The driver->securityDriverName field may be NULL, if automatic
probing is used to determine security driver. This meant that
unless selinux was explicitly requested in lxc.conf, it was
not being sent to the libvirt_lxc process.
The driver->securityManager field is guaranteed non-NULL, since
there will always be the 'none' security driver present if
nothing else exists. So use that to set the driver name for
libvirt_lxc
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Currently the libvirt_lxc process uses VIR_DOMAIN_XML_INACTIVE
when loading the XML for the container. This means it loses
any dynamic data such as the, just allocated, SELinux label.
Further there is an inconsistency in the libvirt LXC driver
whereby it saves the live config XML and then later overwrites
the file with the live status XML instead. Add a comment about
this for future reference.
* src/lxc/lxc_controller.c: Remove VIR_DOMAIN_XML_INACTIVE
when loading XML
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c: Add comment about inconsistent
config file formats
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This works with newer qemu that doesn't allow escaping spaces.
It's backwards compatible as well.
Signed-off-by: Josh Durgin <josh.durgin@dreamhost.com>
In fact, the 'tapfd' is always NULL, the function 'virNetDevTapCreate()' hasn't
assign 'fd' to 'tapfd', when the function 'virNetDevSetMAC()' is failed then
goto 'error' label, finally, the VIR_FORCE_CLOSE() will deref a NULL 'tapfd'.
* util/virnetdevtap.c (virNetDevTapCreateInBridgePort): fix a NULL pointer derefing.
* How to reproduce?
$ cat > /tmp/net.xml <<EOF
<network>
<name>test</name>
<forward mode='nat'/>
<bridge name='br1' stp='off' delay='1' />
<mac address='00:00:00:00:00:00'/>
<ip address='192.168.100.1' netmask='255.255.255.0'>
<dhcp>
<range start='192.168.100.2' end='192.168.100.254' />
</dhcp>
</ip>
</network>
EOF
$ virsh net-define /tmp/net.xml
$ virsh net-start test
error: Failed to start network brTest
error: End of file while reading data: Input/output error
Signed-off-by: Alex Jia <ajia@redhat.com>
The previous storage patch missed an instance affected by the struct
member rename. It also had some botched whitespace detected by
'make check'.
* src/storage/storage_backend_iscsi.c
(virStorageBackendISCSIFindPoolSources): Adjust to new struct.
* src/conf/storage_conf.c (virStoragePoolSourceFormat): Fix
indentation.
It doesn't break out the "for" loop even if duplicate pool is
found, and thus the "matchpool" could be overriden as NULL again
if there is different pool afterwards.
To address the problem in libvirt-user list:
https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvirt-users/2012-April/msg00150.html
The current storage pools for NFS and iSCSI only require one host to
connect to. Future storage pools like RBD and Sheepdog will require
multiple hosts.
This patch allows multiple source hosts and rewrites the current
storage drivers.
Signed-off-by: Wido den Hollander <wido@widodh.nl>
When libvirtd is started, we create "libvirt/qemu" directories under
hugetlbfs mount point. Only the "qemu" subdirectory is chowned to qemu
user and "libvirt" remains owned by root. If umask was too restrictive
when libvirtd started, qemu user may lose access to "qemu"
subdirectory. Let's explicitly grant search permissions to "libvirt"
directory for all users.
Currently, qemu GA is not providing 'desc' field for errors like
we are used to from qemu monitor. Therefore, we fall back to this
general 'unknown error' string. However, GA is reporting 'class' which
is not perfect, but much more helpful than generic error string.
Thus we should fall back to class firstly and if even no class
is presented, then we can fall back to that generic string.
Before this patch:
virsh # dompmsuspend --target mem f16
error: Domain f16 could not be suspended
error: internal error unable to execute QEMU command
'guest-suspend-ram': unknown QEMU command error
After this patch:
virsh # dompmsuspend --target mem f16
error: Domain f16 could not be suspended
error: internal error unable to execute QEMU command
'guest-suspend-ram': The command has not been found
More bug extermination in the category of:
Error: CHECKED_RETURN:
/libvirt/src/conf/network_conf.c:595:
check_return: Calling function "virAsprintf" without checking return value (as is done elsewhere 515 out of 543 times).
/libvirt/src/qemu/qemu_process.c:2780:
unchecked_value: No check of the return value of "virAsprintf(&msg, "was paused (%s)", virDomainPausedReasonTypeToString(reason))".
/libvirt/tests/commandtest.c:809:
check_return: Calling function "setsid" without checking return value (as is done elsewhere 4 out of 5 times).
/libvirt/tests/commandtest.c:830:
unchecked_value: No check of the return value of "virTestGetDebug()".
/libvirt/tests/commandtest.c:831:
check_return: Calling function "virTestGetVerbose" without checking return value (as is done elsewhere 41 out of 42 times).
/libvirt/tests/commandtest.c:833:
check_return: Calling function "virInitialize" without checking return value (as is done elsewhere 18 out of 21 times).
One note about the error in commandtest line 809: setsid() seems to fail when running the test -- could be removed ?
With RHEL 6.2, virDomainBlockPull(dom, dev, bandwidth, 0) has a race
with non-zero bandwidth: there is a window between the block_stream
and block_job_set_speed monitor commands where an unlimited amount
of data was let through, defeating the point of a throttle.
This race was first identified in commit a9d3495e, and libvirt was
able to reduce the size of the window for that race. In the meantime,
the qemu developers decided to fix things properly; per this message:
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2012-04/msg03793.html
the fix will be in qemu 1.1, and changes block-job-set-speed to use
a different parameter name, as well as adding a new optional parameter
to block-stream, which eliminates the race altogether.
Since our documentation already mentioned that we can refuse a non-zero
bandwidth for some hypervisors, I think the best solution is to do
just that for RHEL 6.2 qemu, so that the race is obvious to the user
(anyone using stock RHEL 6.2 binaries won't have this patch, and anyone
building their own libvirt with this patch for RHEL can also rebuild
qemu to get the modern semantics, so it is no real loss in behavior).
Meanwhile the code must be fixed to honor actual qemu 1.1 naming.
Rename the parameter to 'modern', since the naming difference now
covers more than just 'async' block-job-cancel. And while at it,
fix an unchecked integer overflow.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.h (enum BLOCK_JOB_CMD): Drop unused value,
rename enum to match conventions.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.c (qemuMonitorBlockJob): Reflect enum rename.
* src/qemu_qemu_monitor_json.h (qemuMonitorJSONBlockJob): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.c (qemuMonitorJSONBlockJob): Likewise,
and support difference between RHEL 6.2 and qemu 1.1 block pull.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainBlockJobImpl): Reject
bandwidth during pull with too-old qemu.
* src/libvirt.c (virDomainBlockPull, virDomainBlockRebase):
Document this.
Error: UNINIT:
/libvirt/src/lxc/lxc_driver.c:1412:
var_decl: Declaring variable "fd" without initializer.
/libvirt/src/lxc/lxc_driver.c:1460:
uninit_use_in_call: Using uninitialized value "fd" when calling "virFileClose".
/libvirt/src/util/virfile.c:50:
read_parm: Reading a parameter value.
Error: DEADCODE:
/libvirt/src/lxc/lxc_controller.c:960:
dead_error_condition: On this path, the condition "ret == 4" cannot be true.
/libvirt/src/lxc/lxc_controller.c:959:
at_most: After this line, the value of "ret" is at most -1.
/libvirt/src/lxc/lxc_controller.c:959:
new_values: Noticing condition "ret < 0".
/libvirt/src/lxc/lxc_controller.c:961:
dead_error_line: Execution cannot reach this statement "continue;".
Error: UNINIT:
/libvirt/src/lxc/lxc_controller.c:1104:
var_decl: Declaring variable "consoles" without initializer.
/libvirt/src/lxc/lxc_controller.c:1237:
uninit_use: Using uninitialized value "consoles".
QEMU binary is called several times when we probe different kinds of
capabilities the binary supports. This patch introduces new common
helper so that all probes use a consistent way of invoking qemu.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=816662 pointed out
that attempting 'virsh blockpull' on an offline domain gave a
misleading error message about qemu lacking support for the
operation, even when qemu was specifically updated to support it.
The real problem is that we have several capabilities that are
only determined when starting a domain, and therefore are still
clear when first working with an inactive domain (namely, any
capability set by qemuMonitorJSONCheckCommands).
While this patch was able to hoist an existing check in one of the
three culprits, it had to add redundant checks in the other two
places (because you always have to check for an active domain after
obtaining a VM job lock, but the capability bits were being checked
prior to obtaining the job lock).
Someday it would be nice to patch libvirt to cache the set of
capabilities per qemu binary (as determined by inode and timestamp),
rather than re-probing the binary every time a domain is started,
and to teach the cache how to query the monitor during the one
time the probe is made rather than having to wait until a guest
is started; then, a capability probe would succeed even for offline
guests because it just refers to the cache, and the single check for
an active domain after grabbing the job lock would be sufficient.
But since that will involve a lot more coding, I'm happy to go
with this simpler solution for an immediate solution.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainPMSuspendForDuration)
(qemuDomainSnapshotCreateXML, qemuDomainBlockJobImpl): Check for
offline state before checking an online-only cap.
Below patch fixes the following coverity findings
Error: OVERRUN_STATIC:
/libvirt/src/qemu/qemu_command.c:152:
overrun-buffer-val: Overrunning static array "net->mac" of size 6 bytes by passing it as an argument to a function which indexes it at byte position 15.
/libvirt/src/util/virnetdevmacvlan.c:948:
access_dbuff_const: Calling "virNetDevMacVLanVPortProfileRegisterCallback" indexes array "macaddress" at byte position 15.
/libvirt/src/util/virnetdevmacvlan.c:773:
access_dbuff_const: Calling "memcpy" indexes array "macaddress" with index "16UL" at byte position 15.
Error: OVERRUN_STATIC:
/libvirt/src/qemu/qemu_migration.c:2744:
overrun-buffer-val: Overrunning static array "net->mac" of size 6 bytes by passing it as an argument to a function which indexes it at byte position 15.
/libvirt/src/util/virnetdevmacvlan.c:773:
access_dbuff_const: Calling "memcpy" indexes array "macaddress" with index "16UL" at byte position 15.
Error: OVERRUN_STATIC:
/libvirt/src/qemu/qemu_driver.c:435:
overrun-buffer-val: Overrunning static array "net->mac" of size 6 bytes by passing it as an argument to a function which indexes it at byte position 15.
/libvirt/src/util/virnetdevmacvlan.c:1036:
access_dbuff_const: Calling "virNetDevMacVLanVPortProfileRegisterCallback" indexes array "macaddress" at byte position 15.
/libvirt/src/util/virnetdevmacvlan.c:773:
access_dbuff_const: Calling "memcpy" indexes array "macaddress" with index "16UL" at byte position 15.
This patch addresses the following coverity findings:
/libvirt/src/conf/nwfilter_params.c:390:
var_assigned: Assigning: "varValue" = null return value from "virHashLookup".
/libvirt/src/conf/nwfilter_params.c:392:
dereference: Dereferencing a pointer that might be null "varValue" when calling "virNWFilterVarValueGetNthValue".
/libvirt/src/conf/nwfilter_params.c:399:
dereference: Dereferencing a pointer that might be null "tmp" when calling "virNWFilterVarValueGetNthValue".
This patch addresses the following coverity findings:
/libvirt/src/conf/nwfilter_params.c:157:
deref_parm: Directly dereferencing parameter "val".
/libvirt/src/conf/nwfilter_params.c:473:
negative_returns: Using variable "iterIndex" as an index to array "res->iter".
/libvirt/src/nwfilter/nwfilter_ebiptables_driver.c:2891:
unchecked_value: No check of the return value of "virAsprintf(&protostr, "-d 01:80:c2:00:00:00 ")".
/libvirt/src/nwfilter/nwfilter_ebiptables_driver.c:2894:
unchecked_value: No check of the return value of "virAsprintf(&protostr, "-p 0x%04x ", l3_protocols[protoidx].attr)".
/libvirt/src/nwfilter/nwfilter_ebiptables_driver.c:3590:
var_deref_op: Dereferencing null variable "inst".
Some of the error messages in this function should have been
virReportSystemError (since they have an errno they want to log), but
were mistakenly written as netlinkError, which expects a libvirt error
code instead. The result was that when one of the errors was
encountered, "No error message provided" would be printed instead of
something meaningful (see
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=816465 for an example).
Once qemu monitor reports migration has completed, we just closed our
end of the pipe and let migration tunnel die. This generated bogus error
in case we did so before the thread saw EOF on the pipe and migration
was aborted even though it was in fact successful.
With this patch we first wake up the tunnel thread and once it has read
all data from the pipe and finished the stream we close the
filedescriptor.
A small additional bonus of this patch is that real errors reported
inside qemuMigrationIOFunc are not overwritten by virStreamAbort any
more.
When QEMU reported failed or canceled migration, we correctly detected
it but didn't really consider it as an error condition and migration
protocol just went on. Luckily, some of the subsequent steps eventually
failed end we reported an (unrelated and mostly random) error back to
the caller.
Currently, non-blocking calls are either sent immediately or discarded
in case sending would block. This was implemented based on the
assumption that the non-blocking keepalive call is not needed as there
are other calls in the queue which would keep the connection alive.
However, if those calls are no-reply calls (such as those carrying
stream data), the remote party knows the connection is alive but since
we don't get any reply from it, we think the connection is dead.
This is most visible in tunnelled migration. If it happens to be longer
than keepalive timeout (30s by default), it may be unexpectedly aborted
because the connection is considered to be dead.
With this patch, we only discard non-blocking calls when the last call
with a thread is completed and thus there is no thread left to keep
sending the remaining non-blocking calls.
In some cases (spotted with broken connection during tunneled migration)
we were overwriting the original error with worse or even misleading
errors generated when we were cleaning up after failed migration.
The docs for virConnectSetKeepAlive() advertise that this function
should be able to disable keepalives on negative or zero interval time.
This patch removes the check that prohibited this and adds code to
disable keepalives on negative/zero interval.
* src/libvirt.c: virConnectSetKeepAlive(): - remove check for negative
values
* src/rpc/virnetclient.c
* src/rpc/virnetclient.h: - add virNetClientKeepAliveStop() to disable
keepalive messages
* src/remote/remote_driver.c: remoteSetKeepAlive(): -add ability to
disable keepalives
This patch resolves https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=815270
The function virNetDevMacVLanVPortProfileRegisterCallback() takes an
arg "virtPortProfile", and was checking it for non-NULL before using
it. However, the prototype for
virNetDevMacVLanPortProfileRegisterCallback had marked that arg with
ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL(). Contrary to what one may think,
ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL() does not provide any guarantee that an arg marked
as such really is always non-null; the only effect to the code
generated by gcc, is that gcc *assumes* it is non-NULL; this results
in, for example, the check for a non-NULL value being optimized out.
(Unfortunately, this code removal only occurs when optimization is
enabled, and I am in the habit of doing local builds with optimization
off to ease debugging, so the bug didn't show up in my earlier local
testing).
In general, virPortProfile might always be NULL, so it shouldn't be
marked as ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL. One other function prototype made this
same error, so this patch fixes it as well.
Add 2 new functions to the virSocketAddr 'class':
- virSocketAddrEqual: tests whether two IP addresses and their ports are equal
- virSocketaddSetIPv4Addr: set a virSocketAddr given a 32 bit int
This patch improves the previously added virAtomicInt implementation
by using gcc-builtins if possible. The needed builtins are available
since GCC >= 4.1. At least the 4.0 docs don't mention them.
vboxArray is not castable to a COM item type. vboxArray is a
wrapper around the XPCOM and MSCOM specific array handling.
In this case we can avoid passing NULL as an empty array to
IMachine::Delete by passing a dummy IMedium* array with a single
NULL item.
In order to track a block copy job across libvirtd restarts, we
need to save internal XML that tracks the name of the file
holding the mirror. Displaying this name in dumpxml might also
be useful to the user, even if we don't yet have a way to (re-)
start a domain with mirroring enabled up front. This is done
with a new <mirror> sub-element to <disk>, as in:
<disk type='file' device='disk'>
<driver name='qemu' type='raw'/>
<source file='/var/lib/libvirt/images/original.img'/>
<mirror file='/var/lib/libvirt/images/copy.img' format='qcow2' ready='yes'/>
...
</disk>
For now, the element is output-only, in live domains; it is ignored
when defining a domain or hot-plugging a disk (since those contexts
use VIR_DOMAIN_XML_INACTIVE in parsing). The 'ready' attribute appears
when libvirt knows that the job has changed from the initial pulling
phase over to the mirroring phase, although absence of the attribute
is not a sure indicator of the current phase. If we come up with a way
to make qemu start with mirroring enabled, we can relax the xml
restriction, and allow <mirror> (but not attribute 'ready') on input.
Testing active-only XML meant tweaking the testsuite slightly, but it
was worth it.
* docs/schemas/domaincommon.rng (diskspec): Add diskMirror.
* docs/formatdomain.html.in (elementsDisks): Document it.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h (_virDomainDiskDef): New members.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainDiskDefFree): Clean them.
(virDomainDiskDefParseXML): Parse them, but only internally.
(virDomainDiskDefFormat): Output them.
* tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-disk-mirror.xml: New test file.
* tests/qemuxml2xmloutdata/qemuxml2xmlout-disk-mirror.xml: Likewise.
* tests/qemuxml2xmltest.c (testInfo): Alter members.
(testCompareXMLToXMLHelper): Allow more test control.
(mymain): Run new test.
This patch introduces a new block job, useful for live storage
migration using pre-copy streaming. Justification for including
this under virDomainBlockRebase rather than adding a new command
includes: 1) there are now two possible block jobs in qemu, with
virDomainBlockRebase starting either type of command, and
virDomainBlockJobInfo and virDomainBlockJobAbort working to end
either type; 2) reusing this command allows distros to backport
this feature to the libvirt 0.9.10 API without a .so bump.
Note that a future patch may add a more powerful interface named
virDomainBlockJobCopy, dedicated to just the block copy job, in
order to expose even more options (such as setting an arbitrary
format type for the destination without having to probe it from a
pre-existing destination file); adding a new command for targetting
just block copy would be similar to how we already have
virDomainBlockPull for targetting just the block pull job.
Using a live VM with the backing chain:
base <- snap1 <- snap2
as the starting point, we have:
- virDomainBlockRebase(dom, disk, "/path/to/copy", 0,
VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_COPY)
creates /path/to/copy with the same format as snap2, with no backing
file, so entire chain is copied and flattened
- virDomainBlockRebase(dom, disk, "/path/to/copy", 0,
VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_COPY|VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_COPY_RAW)
creates /path/to/copy as a raw file, so entire chain is copied and
flattened
- virDomainBlockRebase(dom, disk, "/path/to/copy", 0,
VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_COPY|VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_SHALLOW)
creates /path/to/copy with the same format as snap2, but with snap1 as
a backing file, so only snap2 is copied.
- virDomainBlockRebase(dom, disk, "/path/to/copy", 0,
VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_COPY|VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_REUSE_EXT)
reuse existing /path/to/copy (must have empty contents, and format is
probed[*] from the metadata), and copy the full chain
- virDomainBlockRebase(dom, disk, "/path/to/copy", 0,
VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_COPY|VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_REUSE_EXT|
VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_SHALLOW)
reuse existing /path/to/copy (contents must be identical to snap1,
and format is probed[*] from the metadata), and copy only the contents
of snap2
- virDomainBlockRebase(dom, disk, "/path/to/copy", 0,
VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_COPY|VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_REUSE_EXT|
VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_SHALLOW|VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_COPY_RAW)
reuse existing /path/to/copy (must be raw volume with contents
identical to snap1), and copy only the contents of snap2
Less useful combinations:
- virDomainBlockRebase(dom, disk, "/path/to/copy", 0,
VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_COPY|VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_SHALLOW|
VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_COPY_RAW)
fail if source is not raw, otherwise create /path/to/copy as raw and
the single file is copied (no chain involved)
- virDomainBlockRebase(dom, disk, "/path/to/copy", 0,
VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_COPY|VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_REUSE_EXT|
VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_COPY_RAW)
makes little sense: the destination must be raw but have no contents,
meaning that it is an empty file, so there is nothing to reuse
The other three flags are rejected without VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_COPY.
[*] Note that probing an existing file for its format can be a security
risk _if_ there is a possibility that the existing file is 'raw', in
which case the guest can manipulate the file to appear like some other
format. But, by virtue of the VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_COPY_RAW flag,
it is possible to avoid probing of raw files, at which point, probing
of any remaining file type is no longer a security risk.
It would be nice if we could issue an event when pivoting from phase 1
to phase 2, but qemu hasn't implemented that, and we would have to poll
in order to synthesize it ourselves. Meanwhile, qemu will give us a
distinct job info and completion event when we either cancel or pivot
to end the job. Pivoting is accomplished via the new:
virDomainBlockJobAbort(dom, disk, VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_JOB_ABORT_PIVOT)
Management applications can pre-create the copy with a relative
backing file name, and use the VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_REUSE_EXT
flag to have qemu reuse the metadata; if the management application
also copies the backing files to a new location, this can be used
to perform live storage migration of an entire backing chain.
* include/libvirt/libvirt.h.in (VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_JOB_TYPE_COPY):
New block job type.
(virDomainBlockJobAbortFlags, virDomainBlockRebaseFlags): New enums.
* src/libvirt.c (virDomainBlockRebase): Document the new flags,
and implement general restrictions on flag combinations.
(virDomainBlockJobAbort): Document the new flag.
(virDomainSaveFlags, virDomainSnapshotCreateXML)
(virDomainRevertToSnapshot, virDomainDetachDeviceFlags): Document
restrictions.
* include/libvirt/virterror.h (VIR_ERR_BLOCK_COPY_ACTIVE): New
error.
* src/util/virterror.c (virErrorMsg): Define it.
This patch modifies the CPU comparrison function to report the
incompatibilities in more detail to ease identification of problems.
* src/cpu/cpu.h:
cpuGuestData(): Add argument to return detailed error message.
* src/cpu/cpu.c:
cpuGuestData(): Add passthrough for error argument.
* src/cpu/cpu_x86.c
x86FeatureNames(): Add function to convert a CPU definition to flag
names.
x86Compute(): - Add error message parameter
- Add macro for reporting detailed error messages.
- Improve error reporting.
- Simplify calculation of forbidden flags.
x86DataIteratorInit():
x86cpuidMatchAny(): Remove functions that are no longer needed.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c:
qemuBuildCpuArgStr(): - Modify for new function prototype
- Add detailed error reports
- Change error code on incompatible processors
to VIR_ERR_CONFIG_UNSUPPORTED instead of
internal error
* tests/cputest.c:
cpuTestGuestData(): Modify for new function prototype
virThreadSelf tries to access the virThreadPtr stored in TLS for the
current thread via TlsGetValue. When virThreadSelf is called on a thread
that was not created via virThreadCreate (e.g. the main thread) then
TlsGetValue returns NULL as TlsAlloc initializes TLS slots to NULL.
virThreadSelf can be called on the main thread via this call chain from
virsh
vshDeinit
virEventAddTimeout
virEventPollAddTimeout
virEventPollInterruptLocked
virThreadIsSelf
triggering a segfault as virThreadSelf unconditionally dereferences the
return value of TlsGetValue.
Fix this by making virThreadSelf check the TLS slot value for NULL and
setting the given virThreadPtr accordingly.
Reported by Marcel Müller.
POSIX says that sa_sigaction is only safe to use if sa_flags
includes SA_SIGINFO; conversely, sa_handler is only safe to
use when flags excludes that bit. Gnulib doesn't guarantee
an implementation of SA_SIGINFO, but does guarantee that
if SA_SIGINFO is undefined, we can safely define it to 0 as
long as we don't dereference the 2nd or 3rd argument of
any handler otherwise registered via sa_sigaction.
Based on a report by Wen Congyang.
* src/rpc/virnetserver.c (SA_SIGINFO): Stub for mingw.
(virNetServerSignalHandler): Avoid bogus dereference.
(virNetServerFatalSignal, virNetServerNew): Set flags properly.
(virNetServerAddSignalHandler): Drop unneeded #ifdef.
I almost copied-and-pasted some redundant () into my new code,
and figured a general cleanup prereq patch would be better instead.
No semantic change.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainLeaseDefParseXML)
(virDomainDiskDefParseXML, virDomainFSDefParseXML)
(virDomainActualNetDefParseXML, virDomainNetDefParseXML)
(virDomainGraphicsDefParseXML, virDomainVideoAccelDefParseXML)
(virDomainVideoDefParseXML, virDomainHostdevFind)
(virDomainControllerInsertPreAlloced, virDomainDefParseXML)
(virDomainObjParseXML, virDomainCpuSetFormat)
(virDomainCpuSetParse, virDomainDiskDefFormat)
(virDomainActualNetDefFormat, virDomainNetDefFormat)
(virDomainTimerDefFormat, virDomainGraphicsListenDefFormat)
(virDomainDefFormatInternal, virDomainNetGetActualHostdev)
(virDomainNetGetActualBandwidth, virDomainGraphicsGetListen):
Reduce extra ().
Ensure we don't introduce any more lousy integer parsing in new
code, while avoiding a scrub-down of existing legacy code.
Note that we also need to enable sc_prohibit_atoi_atof (see cfg.mk
local-checks-to-skip) before we are bulletproof, but that also
entails scrubbing I'm not ready to do at the moment.
* src/util/util.c (virStrToLong_i, virStrToLong_ui)
(virStrToLong_l, virStrToLong_ul, virStrToLong_ll)
(virStrToLong_ull, virStrToDouble): Mark exemptions.
* src/util/virmacaddr.c (virMacAddrParse): Likewise.
* cfg.mk (sc_prohibit_strtol): New syntax check.
(exclude_file_name_regexp--sc_prohibit_strtol): Ignore files that
I'm not willing to fix yet.
(local-checks-to-skip): Re-enable sc_prohibit_atoi_atof.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=617711 reported that
even with my recent patched to allow <memory unit='G'>1</memory>,
people can still get away with trying <memory>1G</memory> and
silently get <memory unit='KiB'>1</memory> instead. While
virt-xml-validate catches the error, our C parser did not.
Not to mention that it's always fun to fix bugs while reducing
lines of code. :)
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainParseMemory): Check for parse error.
(virDomainDefParseXML): Avoid strtoll.
* src/conf/storage_conf.c (virStorageDefParsePerms): Likewise.
* src/util/xml.c (virXPathLongBase, virXPathULongBase)
(virXPathULongLong, virXPathLongLong): Likewise.
Commit 78345c68 makes at least gcc 4.1.2 on RHEL 5 complain:
cc1: warnings being treated as errors
In file included from vbox/vbox_V4_0.c:13:
vbox/vbox_tmpl.c: In function 'vboxDomainUndefineFlags':
vbox/vbox_tmpl.c:5298: warning: dereferencing type-punned pointer will break strict-aliasing rules [-Wstrict-aliasing]
* src/vbox/vbox_tmpl.c (vboxDomainUndefineFlags): Use union to
avoid compiler warning.
DBus connection. The HAL device code further requires that
the DBus connection is integrated with the event loop and
provides such glue logic itself.
The forthcoming FirewallD integration also requires a
dbus connection with event loop integration. Thus we need
to pull the current event loop glue out of the HAL driver.
Thus we create src/util/virdbus.{c,h} files. This contains
just one method virDBusGetSystemBus() which obtains a handle
to the single shared system bus instance, with event glue
automagically setup.
Fix the support for trusted DHCP server in the ebtables code's
hard-coded function applying DHCP only filtering rules:
Rather than using a char * use the more flexible
virNWFilterVarValuePtr that contains the trusted DHCP server(s)
IP address. Process all entries.
Since all callers so far provided NULL as parameter, no changes
are necessary in any other code.
Currently upon a migration a callback is created when a 802.1qbg link
is set to PREASSOCIATE, this should not happen because this is a no-op
on most switches, and does not lead to an ASSOCIATE state. This patch
only creates callbacks when CREATE or RESTORE is requested. Migration
and libvirtd restart scenarios are already handled elsewhere.
Signed-off-by: D. Herrendoerfer <d.herrendoerfer@herrendoerfer.name>
The below patch fixes the following memory leak.
==20624== 24 bytes in 2 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 532 of 1,867
==20624== at 0x4A05E46: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==20624== by 0x38EC27FC01: strdup (strdup.c:43)
==20624== by 0x4EB6BA3: virDomainChrSourceDefCopy (domain_conf.c:1122)
==20624== by 0x495D76: qemuProcessFindCharDevicePTYs (qemu_process.c:1497)
==20624== by 0x498321: qemuProcessWaitForMonitor (qemu_process.c:1258)
==20624== by 0x49B5F9: qemuProcessStart (qemu_process.c:3652)
==20624== by 0x468B5C: qemuDomainObjStart (qemu_driver.c:4753)
==20624== by 0x469171: qemuDomainStartWithFlags (qemu_driver.c:4810)
==20624== by 0x4F21735: virDomainCreate (libvirt.c:8153)
==20624== by 0x4302BF: remoteDispatchDomainCreateHelper (remote_dispatch.h:852)
==20624== by 0x4F72C14: virNetServerProgramDispatch (virnetserverprogram.c:416)
==20624== by 0x4F6D690: virNetServerHandleJob (virnetserver.c:164)
==20624== by 0x4E8F43D: virThreadPoolWorker (threadpool.c:144)
==20624== by 0x4E8EAB5: virThreadHelper (threads-pthread.c:161)
==20624== by 0x38EC606CCA: start_thread (pthread_create.c:301)
==20624== by 0x38EC2E0C2C: clone (clone.S:115)
Most of our errors complaining about an inability to support a
particular action due to qemu limitations used CONFIG_UNSUPPORTED,
but we had a few outliers. Reported by Jiri Denemark.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuBuildDriveDevStr): Prefer
CONFIG_UNSUPPORTED.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainReboot)
(qemuDomainBlockJobImpl): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_hotplug.c (qemuDomainAttachPciControllerDevice):
Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.c (qemuMonitorTransaction)
(qemuMonitorBlockJob, qemuMonitorSystemWakeup): Likewise.
So that a domain xml which doesn't have "placement" specified, but
"cpuset" is specified, could be parsed. And in this case, the
"placement" mode will be set as "static".
The objects (domain, pool, network, etc) for testing are defined/
started each time when opening a connect to test driver, and thus
the UUID for the objects will be generated each time, with different
values. e.g.
% for i in {1..3}; do ./tools/virsh --connect \
test:///default dumpxml test | grep uuid; done
<uuid>a1b6ee1f-97de-f0ee-617a-0cdb74947df5</uuid>
<uuid>ee68d7d2-3eb9-593e-2769-797ce1f4c4aa</uuid>
<uuid>fecb1d3a-918a-8412-e534-76192cf32b18</uuid>
It's the potential bug which can cause operations like below to fail:
$ virsh -c test:///default dumpxml test > test.xml
[ Some modificatons, though it's not supported, but it should work ]
$ virsh -c test:///default define test.xml
This patch set fixed UUID for objects which support it. (domain,
pool, network).
A "ide-drive" device can be either a hard disk or a CD-ROM,
if there is ",media=cdrom" specified for the backend, it's
a CD-ROM, otherwise it's a hard disk.
Upstream qemu splitted "ide-drive" into "ide-hd" and "ide-cd"
since commit 1f56e32, and ",media=cdrom" is not required for
ide-cd anymore. "ide-drive" is still supported for backwards
compatibility, but no doubt we should go foward.
A "scsi-disk" device can be either a hard disk or a CD-ROM,
if there is ",media=cdrom" specified for the backend, it's
a CD-ROM, otherwise it's a hard disk.
But upstream qemu splitted "scsi-disk" into "scsi-hd" and
"scsi-cd" since commit b443ae, and ",media=cdrom" is not
required for scsi-cd anymore. "scsi-disk" is still supported
for backwards compatibility, but no doubt we should go
foward.
If console[0] is an alias for serial[0], do not enforce the former to
have a PTY source type. This breaks serial consoles on stdio and makes
no sense.
Signed-off-by: Jan Kiszka <jan.kiszka@siemens.com>
When using the xm/xend stack to manage instances there is a bug
that causes the emulated interfaces to be unusable when the vif
config contains type=ioemu.
The current code already has a special quirk to not use this
keyword if no specific model is given for the emulated NIC
(defaulting to rtl8139).
Essentially it works because regardless of the type argument,i
the Xen stack always creates emulated and paravirt interfaces and
lets the guest decide which one to use. So neither xl nor xm stack
actually require the type keyword for emulated NICs.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Bader <stefan.bader@canonical.com>
Currently, we have 3 boolean arguments we have to pass
to qemuProcessStart(). As libvirt grows it is harder and harder
to remember them and their position. Therefore we should
switch to flags instead.
lvcreate want's the parent pool's name, not the pool path
lvchange and lvremove want lv specified as $vgname/$lvname
This largely worked before because these commands strip off a
starting /dev. But https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=714986
is from a user using a 'nested VG' that was having problems.
I couldn't find any info on nested LVM and the reporter never responded,
but I reproduced with XML that specified a valid source name, and
set target path to a symlink.
As explained in previous patch, numad will balance the affinity
dynamically, so reflecting the cpuset from numad at the first
time doesn't make much case, and may just could cause confusion.
Instead of returning a CPUs list, numad returns NUMA node
list instead, this patch is to convert the node list to
cpumap before affinity setting. Otherwise, the domain
processes will be pinned only to CPU[$numa_cell_num],
which will cause significiant performance losses.
Also because numad will balance the affinity dynamically,
reflecting the cpuset from numad back doesn't make much
sense then, and it may just could produce confusion for
the users. Thus the better way is not to reflect it back
to XML. And in this case, it's better to ignore the cpuset
when parsing XML.
The codes to update the cpuset is removed in this patch
incidentally, and there will be a follow up patch to ignore
the manually specified "cpuset" if "placement" is "auto",
and document will be updated too.
The linux-2.6.32 kernel header does not yet define IFLA_VF_MAX and others,
which breaks compiling a new libvirt on old systems like Debian Squeeze.
(I also have to add --without-macvtap --disable-werror --without-virtualport to
./configure to get it to compile.)
Signed-off-by: Philipp Hahn <hahn@univention.de>
Although it should be harmless to do:
disk = disk = def->disks[i]
some not-so-wise compilers may fool around.
Besides, such assignment is useless here.
On newer xend (v3.x and after) there is no state and domid reported
for inactive domains. When initially creating connections this is
handled in various places by assigning domain->id = -1.
But once an instance has been running, the id is set to the current
domain id. And it does not change when the instance is shut down.
So when querying the domain info, the hypervisor driver, which gets
asked first will indicate it cannot find information, then the
xend driver is asked and will set the status to NOSTATE because it
checks for the -1 domain id.
Checking domain/status for 0 seems to be more reliable for that.
One note: I am not sure whether the domain->id also should get set
back to -1 whenever any sub-driver thinks the instance is no longer
running.
BugLink: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=746007
BugLink: http://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/929626
Signed-off-by: Stefan Bader <stefan.bader@canonical.com>
This patch adds a netlink callback when migrating a VEPA enabled
virtual machine. It fixes a Bug where a VM would not request a port
association when it was cleared by lldpad.
This patch requires the latest git version of lldpad to work.
Signed-off-by: D. Herrendoerfer <d.herrendoerfer@herrendoerfer.name>
If dynamic_ownership is off and we are creating a file on NFS
we force chown. This will fail as chown/chmod are not supported
on NFS. However, with no dynamic_ownership we are not required
to do any chown.
In my testing, I was able to provoke an odd block pull failure:
$ virsh blockpull dom vda --bandwidth 10000
error: Requested operation is not valid: No active operation on device: drive-virtio-disk0
merely by using gdb to artifically wait to do the block job set speed
until after the pull had already finished. But in reality, that should
be a success, since the pull finished before we had a chance to set
speed. Furthermore, using a double job lock is not only annoying, but
a bug in itself - if you do parallel virDomainBlockRebase, and hit
the race window just right, the first call grabs the VM job to start
a fast block job, then the second call grabs the VM job to start
a long-running job with unspecified speed, then the first call finally
regrabs the VM job and sets the speed, which ends up running the
second job under the speed from the first call. By consolidating
things into a single job, we avoid opening that race, as well as reduce
the time between starting the job and changing the speed, for less
likelihood of the speed change happening after block job completion
in the first place.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.h (BLOCK_JOB_CMD): Add new mode.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainBlockRebase): Move secondary
job call...
(qemuDomainBlockJobImpl): ...here, for fewer locks.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.c (qemuMonitorJSONBlockJob): Change
return value on new internal mode.
Without the VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_JOB_ABORT_ASYNC flag, libvirt will internally
poll using qemu's "query-block-jobs" API and will not return until the
operation has been completed. API users are advised that this operation
is unbounded and further interaction with the domain during this period
may block. Future patches may refactor things to allow other queries in
parallel with this polling. For older qemu, we synthesize the cancellation
event, since qemu won't generate it.
The choice of polling duration copies from the code in qemu_migration.c.
Signed-off-by: Adam Litke <agl@us.ibm.com>
Cc: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Probably in the noise, but this will let us scale more efficiently
as we learn to recognize even more qemu events.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.c (eventHandlers): Sort.
(qemuMonitorEventCompare): New helper function.
(qemuMonitorJSONIOProcessEvent): Optimize event lookup.
Block job cancellation can take a while. Now that upstream qemu 1.1
has asynchronous block cancellation, we want to expose that to the user.
Therefore, the following updates are made to the virDomainBlockJob API:
A new block job event type VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_JOB_CANCELED is managed by
libvirt. Regardless of the flags used with virDomainBlockJobAbort, this
event will be raised: 1. when using synchronous block_job_cancel (the
event will be synthesized by libvirt), and 2. whenever it is received
from qemu (via asynchronous block-job-cancel). Note that the event
may be detected by libvirt even before the virDomainBlockJobAbort
completes (always true when it is synthesized, but also possible if
cancellation was fast).
A new extension flag VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_JOB_ABORT_ASYNC is added to the
virDomainBlockJobAbort API. When enabled, this function will allow
(but not require) asynchronous operation (ie, it returns as soon as
possible, which might be before the job has actually been canceled).
When the API is used in this mode, it is the responsibility of the
caller to wait for a VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_JOB_CANCELED event or poll via
the virDomainGetBlockJobInfo API to check the cancellation status.
This patch also exposes the new flag through virsh, and makes virsh
slightly easier to use (--async implies --abort, and lack of any options
implies --info), although it leaves the qemu implementation for later
patches.
Signed-off-by: Adam Litke <agl@us.ibm.com>
Cc: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
RHEL 6.2 was released with an early version of block jobs, which only
worked on the qed file format, where the commands were spelled with
underscore (contrary to QMP style), and where 'block_job_cancel' was
synchronous and did not trigger an event.
The upcoming qemu 1.1 release has fixed these short-comings [1][2]:
the commands now work on multiple file types, are spelled with dash,
and 'block-job-cancel' is asynchronous and emits an event upon conclusion.
[1]qemu commit 370521a1d6f5537ea7271c119f3fbb7b0fa57063
[2]https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2012-04/msg01248.html
This patch recognizes the new spellings, and fixes virDomainBlockRebase
to give a graceful error when talking to a too-old qemu on a partial
rebase attempt. Fixes for the new semantics will come later. This
patch also removes a bogus ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL mistakenly added in
commit 10ec36e2.
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.h (QEMU_CAPS_BLOCKJOB_SYNC)
(QEMU_CAPS_BLOCKJOB_ASYNC): New bits.
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.c (qemuCaps): Name them.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.c (qemuMonitorJSONCheckCommands): Set
them.
(qemuMonitorJSONBlockJob): Manage both command names.
(qemuMonitorJSONDiskSnapshot): Minor formatting fix.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.h (qemuMonitorBlockJob): Alter signature.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.h (qemuMonitorJSONBlockJob): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.c (qemuMonitorBlockJob): Pass through
capability bit.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainBlockJobImpl): Update callers.
The new safe console handling introduced a possibility to deadlock the
qemu driver when a new console connection forcibly disconnects a
previous console stream that belongs to an already closed connection.
The virStreamFree function calls subsequently a the virReleaseConnect
function that tries to lock the driver while discarding the connection,
but the driver was already locked in qemuDomainOpenConsole.
Backtrace of the deadlocked thread:
0 0x00007f66e5aa7f14 in __lll_lock_wait () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
1 0x00007f66e5aa3411 in _L_lock_500 () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
2 0x00007f66e5aa322a in pthread_mutex_lock () from/lib64/libpthread.so.0
3 0x0000000000462bbd in qemudClose ()
4 0x00007f66e6e178eb in virReleaseConnect () from/usr/lib64/libvirt.so.0
5 0x00007f66e6e19c8c in virUnrefStream () from /usr/lib64/libvirt.so.0
6 0x00007f66e6e3d1de in virStreamFree () from /usr/lib64/libvirt.so.0
7 0x00007f66e6e09a5d in virConsoleHashEntryFree () from/usr/lib64/libvirt.so.0
8 0x00007f66e6db7282 in virHashRemoveEntry () from/usr/lib64/libvirt.so.0
9 0x00007f66e6e09c4e in virConsoleOpen () from /usr/lib64/libvirt.so.0
10 0x00000000004526e9 in qemuDomainOpenConsole ()
11 0x00007f66e6e421f1 in virDomainOpenConsole () from/usr/lib64/libvirt.so.0
12 0x00000000004361e4 in remoteDispatchDomainOpenConsoleHelper ()
13 0x00007f66e6e80375 in virNetServerProgramDispatch () from/usr/lib64/libvirt.so.0
14 0x00007f66e6e7ae11 in virNetServerHandleJob () from/usr/lib64/libvirt.so.0
15 0x00007f66e6da897d in virThreadPoolWorker () from/usr/lib64/libvirt.so.0
16 0x00007f66e6da7ff6 in virThreadHelper () from/usr/lib64/libvirt.so.0
17 0x00007f66e5aa0c5c in start_thread () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
18 0x00007f66e57e7fcd in clone () from /lib64/libc.so.6
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c: qemuDomainOpenConsole()
-- unlock the qemu driver right after acquiring the domain
object
In case an API fails with "cannot acquire state change lock", searching
for the API that possibly forgot to end its job is not always easy.
Let's keep track of the job owner and print it out for easier
identification.
As reported by Daniel Berrangé, we have a huge performance regression
for virDomainGetInfo() due to the change which makes virDomainEndJob()
save the XML status file every time it is called. Previous to that
change, 2000 calls to virDomainGetInfo() took ~2.5 seconds. After that
change, 2000 calls to virDomainGetInfo() take 2 *minutes* 45 secs.
We made the change to be able to recover from libvirtd restart in the
middle of a job. However, only destroy and async jobs are taken care of.
Thus it makes more sense to only save domain state XML when these jobs
are started/stopped.
I noticed these compiler warnings when building for the s390 architecture.
* src/node_device/node_device_udev.c (udevDeviceMonitorStartup):
Mark unused variable.
* src/nodeinfo.c (linuxNodeInfoCPUPopulate): Avoid unused variable.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c: Wire up -bios with <loader>
* tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-bios.args,
tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-bios.xml: Expand
existing BIOS test case to cover <loader>
Leak introduced in commit 0436d32. If we allocate an actions array,
but fail early enough to never consume it with the qemu monitor
transaction call, we leaked memory.
But our semantics of making the transaction command free the caller's
memory is awkward; avoiding the memory leak requires making every
intermediate function in the call chain check for error. It is much
easier to fix things so that the function that allocates also frees,
while the call chain leaves the caller's data intact. To do that,
I had to hack our JSON data structure to make it easy to protect a
portion of an arbitrary JSON tree from being freed.
* src/util/json.h (virJSONType): Name the enum.
(_virJSONValue): New field.
* src/util/json.c (virJSONValueFree): Use it to protect a portion
of an array.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.c (qemuMonitorJSONTransaction): Avoid
freeing caller's data.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainSnapshotCreateDiskActive):
Free actions array on failure.
We can tell qemuDomainSnapshotFSThaw if we want it to report errors or
not. However, if we don't want to and an error has been already set by
previous qemuReportError() we must keep copy of that error not just a
pointer to it. Otherwise, it get overwritten if FSThaw reports an error.
Detected by valgrind. Leaks are introduced in commit b22eaa7.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainDiskDefParseXML): fix memory leaks.
How to reproduce?
% make && make -C tests check TESTS=qemuxml2argvtest
% cd tests && valgrind -v --leak-check=full ./qemuxml2argvtest
actual result:
==2143== 12 bytes in 2 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 74 of 179
==2143== at 0x4A05FDE: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:236)
==2143== by 0x39D90A67DD: xmlStrndup (xmlstring.c:45)
==2143== by 0x4F5EC0: virDomainDiskDefParseXML (domain_conf.c:3438)
==2143== by 0x502F00: virDomainDefParseXML (domain_conf.c:8304)
==2143== by 0x505FE3: virDomainDefParseNode (domain_conf.c:9080)
==2143== by 0x5069AE: virDomainDefParse (domain_conf.c:9030)
==2143== by 0x41CBF4: testCompareXMLToArgvHelper (qemuxml2argvtest.c:105)
==2143== by 0x41E5DD: virtTestRun (testutils.c:145)
==2143== by 0x416FA3: mymain (qemuxml2argvtest.c:399)
==2143== by 0x41DCB7: virtTestMain (testutils.c:700)
==2143== by 0x39CF01ECDC: (below main) (libc-start.c:226)
Signed-off-by: Alex Jia <ajia@redhat.com>
If the daemon is restarted it will lose list of active
USB devices assigned to active domains. Therefore we need
to rebuild this list on qemuProcessReconnect().
To prevent assigning one USB device to two domains,
we keep a list of assigned USB devices. On domain
startup - qemuProcessStart() - we insert devices
used by domain into the list but remove them only
on detach-device. Devices are, however, released
on qemuProcessStop() as well.
Originally, qemuDomainCheckEjectableMedia was entering monitor with qemu
driver lock. Commit 2067e31bf9, which I
made to fix that, revealed another issue we had (but didn't notice it
since the driver was locked): we didn't set nested job when
qemuDomainCheckEjectableMedia is called during migration. Thus the
original fix I made was wrong.
XenD-3.1 introduced managed domains. HV-domains have rtc_timeoffset
(hgd24f37b31030 from 2007-04-03), which tracks the offset between the
hypervisors clock and the domains RTC, and is persisted by XenD.
In combination with localtime=1 this had a bug until XenD-3.4
(hg5d701be7c37b from 2009-04-01) (I'm not 100% sure how that bug
manifests, but at least for me in TZ=Europe/Berlin I see the previous
offset relative to utc being applied to localtime again, which manifests
in an extra hour being added)
XenD implements the following variants for clock/@offset:
- PV domains don't have a RTC → 'localtime' | 'utc'
- <3.1: no managed domains → 'localtime' | 'utc'
- ≥3.1: the offset is tracked for HV → 'variable'
due to the localtime=1 bug → 'localtime' | 'utc'
- ≥3.4: the offset is tracked for HV → 'variable'
Current libvirtd still thinks XenD only implements <clock offset='utc'/>
and <clock offset='localtime'/>, which is wrong, since the semantic of
'utc' and 'localtime' specifies, that the offset will be reset on
domain-restart, while with 'variable' the offset is kept. (keeping the
offset over "virsh edit" is important, since otherwise the clock might
jump, which confuses certain guest OSs)
xendConfigVersion was last incremented to 4 by the xen-folks for
xen-3.1.0. I know of no way to reliably detect the version of XenD
(user space tools), which may be different from the version of the
hypervisor (kernel) version! Because of this only the change from
'utc'/'localtime' to 'variable' in XenD-3.1 is handled, not the buggy
behaviour of XenD-3.1 until XenD-3.4.
For backward compatibility with previous versions of libvirt Xen-HV
still accepts 'utc' and 'localtime', but they are returned as 'variable'
on the next read-back from Xend to libvirt, since this is what XenD
implements: The RTC is NOT reset back to the specified time on next
restart, but the previous offset is kept.
This behaviour can be turned off by adding the additional attribute
adjustment='reset', in which case libvirt will report an error instead
of doing the conversion. The attribute can also be used as a shortcut to
offset='variable' with basis='...'.
With these changes, it is also necessary to adjust the xen tests:
"localtime = 0" is always inserted, because otherwise on updates the
value is not changed within XenD.
adjustment='reset' is inserted for all cases, since they're all <
XEND_CONFIG_VERSION_3_1_0, only 3.1 introduced persistent
rtc_timeoffset.
Some statements change their order because code was moved around.
Signed-off-by: Philipp Hahn <hahn@univention.de>
Since Xen 3.1 the clock=variable semantic is supported. In addition to
qemu/kvm Xen also knows about a variant where the offset is relative to
'localtime' instead of 'utc'.
Extends the libvirt structure with a flag 'basis' to specify, if the
offset is relative to 'localtime' or 'utc'.
Extends the libvirt structure with a flag 'reset' to force the reset
behaviour of 'localtime' and 'utc'; this is needed for backward
compatibility with previous versions of libvirt, since they report
incorrect XML.
Adapt the only user 'qemu' to the new name.
Extend the RelaxNG schema accordingly.
Document the new 'basis' attribute in the HTML documentation.
Adapt test for the new attribute.
Signed-off-by: Philipp Hahn <hahn@univention.de>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=808979
The leak is really in virProcessInfoGetAffinity, as shown in the
valgrind output given in the above bug report - it calls CPU_ALLOC(),
but then fails to call CPU_FREE().
This leak has existed in every version of libvirt since 0.7.5.
Commit 1b1402b introduced a regression. Since older libvirt versions
would silently round memory up (until the previous patch), but populated
current memory based on querying the guest, it was possible to have
dumpxml show cur > max by the amount of the rounding. For example, if
a user requested 1048570 KiB memory (just shy of 1GiB), the qemu
driver would actually run with 1048576 KiB, and libvirt 0.9.10 would
output a current that was 6KiB larger than the maximum. Situations
where this could have an impact include, but are not limited to,
migration from old to new libvirt, managedsave in old libvirt and
start in new libvirt, snapshot creation in old libvirt and revert in
new libvirt - without this patch, the new libvirt would reject the
VM because of the rounding discrepancy.
Fix things by adding a fuzz factor, and silently clamp current down to
maximum in that case, rather than failing to reparse XML for an existing
VM. From a practical standpoint, this has no user impact: 'virsh
dumpxml' will continue to query the running guest rather than rely on
the incoming xml, which will see the currect current value, and even if
clamping down occurs during parsing, it will be by at most the fuzz
factor of a megabyte alignment, and rounded back up when passed back to
the hypervisor.
Meanwhile, we continue to reject cur > max if the difference is beyond
the fuzz factor of nearest megabyte. But this is not a real change in
behavior, since with 0.9.10, even though the parser allowed it, later
in the processing stream we would reject it at the qemu layer; so
rejecting it in the parser just moves error detection to a nicer place.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainDefParseXML): Don't reject
existing XML.
Based on a report by Zhou Peng.
If we round up a user's memory request, we should update the XML
to reflect the actual value in use by the VM, rather than giving
an artificially small value back to the user.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuBuildNumaArgStr)
(qemuBuildCommandLine): Reflect rounding back to XML.
This patch was created to resolve this upstream bug:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=784767
and is at least a partial solution to this RHEL RFE:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=805071
Previously the only attribute of a network device that could be
modified by virUpdateDeviceFlags() ("virsh update-device") was the
link state; attempts to change any other attribute would log an error
and fail.
This patch adds recognition of a change in bridge device name, and
supports reconnecting the guest's interface to the new device.
Standard audit logs for detaching and attaching a network device are
also generated. Although the current auditing function doesn't log the
bridge being attached to, this will later be changed in a separate
patch.
Regression introduced when we changed types in commit 3e2c3d8f6.
We've done this sort of cleanup before (see commit c685993d7).
* src/conf/storage_conf.c (virStoragePoolDefFormat)
(virStorageVolTargetDefFormat): Cast gid_t and uid_t.
We are so close to a release that we don't want to pull in a
gnulib submodule update and risk regressions, since there has
been a lot of other gnulib churn upstream. However, there are
a couple of gnulib issues that are worth fixing in isolation,
by applying local patches to gnulib.
There was an upstream gnulib bug in maint.mk that rendered most
of our syntax checks ineffective (and fixing it flushed out a
minor bug in our code):
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-gnulib/2012-03/msg00194.html
There is still an upstream bug where gnulib uses the wrong type
for ssize_t on mingw; we need the fix now even though it has not
yet been accepted into gnulib:
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-gnulib/2012-03/msg00188.html
* gnulib/local/top/maint.mk.diff: Pick up upstream gnulib
maint.mk.
* gnulib/local/m4/ssize_t.m4.diff: Work around gnulib bug.
* src/libvirt.c: Remove unused header.
* cfg.mk
(exclude_file_name_regexp--sc_prohibit_empty_lines_at_EOF): Exempt
gnulib local files.
qemuBuildHostNetStr had a switch-within-a-switch where both were
looking at the same variable. This was apparently to take advantage of
code common to three different cases (while also taking care of some
code that was different). However, there were only 2 lines common to
all, one of those can be eliminated by merging it into the
virAsprintfs that are in each case. On top of that, all the extra
empty cases cause Coverity complaints (because they are unreachable),
but absence of the empty cases causes a compile error due to
"enumeration value not handled in switch".
The solution is to just make each toplevel case independent, folding
in the common code to each.
commit b0e2bb33 set a default value for the SPICE agent channel by
inserting it during parsing of the channel XML. That method of setting
a default is problematic because it makes a format/parse roundtrip
unclean, and experience with setting other values as a side effect of
parsing has led to headaches (e.g. automatically setting a MAC address
in the parser when one isn't specified in the input XML).
This patch does not revert commit b0e2bb33 (it will be reverted in a
separate patch) but adds the alternate implementation of simply
inserting the default value in the appropriate place on the qemu
commandline when no value is provided.
If we issue guest command and GA is not running, the issuing thread
will block endlessly. We can check for GA presence by issuing
guest-sync with unique ID (timestamp). We don't want to issue real
command as even if GA is not running, once it is started, it process
all commands written to GA socket.
With latest gnulib we are checking even the lowest level functions
whether they check flags. Moreover, we are shadowing the real error
on system without TUNSETIFF support.
The code is splattered with a mix of
sizeof foo
sizeof (foo)
sizeof(foo)
Standardize on sizeof(foo) and add a syntax check rule to
enforce it
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
A handful of places used %zd for format specifiers even
though the args was size_t, not ssize_t.
* src/remote/remote_driver.c, src/util/xml.c: s/%zd/%zu/
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainChannelDefCheckABIStability): avoid
crashing libvirtd due to derefing a NULL pointer.
For details, please see bug:
RHBZ: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=808371
Signed-off-by: Alex Jia <ajia@redhat.com>
When qemu cannot start, we may call qemuProcessStop() twice.
We have check whether the vm is running at the beginning of
qemuProcessStop() to avoid libvirt deadlock. We call
qemuProcessStop() with driver and vm locked. It seems that
we can avoid libvirt deadlock. But unfortunately we may
unlock driver and vm in the function qemuProcessKill() while
vm->def->id is not -1. So qemuProcessStop() will be run twice,
and monitor will be freed unexpectedly. So we should set
vm->def->id to -1 at the beginning of qemuProcessStop().
An upstream gnulib bug[1] meant that some of our syntax checks
weren't being run. Fix up our offenders before we upgrade to
a newer gnulib.
[1] https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-gnulib/2012-03/msg00194.html
* src/util/virnetdevtap.c (virNetDevTapCreate): Use flags.
* tests/lxcxml2xmltest.c (mymain): Strip useless ().
In the current V3 migration protocol, Libvirt does not
check the result of the function
qemuMigrationVPAssociatePortProfiles
This means that it is possible for a migration to complete
successfully even when the VM loses network connectivity on
the destination host.
With this change libvirt aborts the migration
(during the "finish" step) when the above function fails, that
is to say when at least one of the port profile associations fails.
Signed-off by: Christian Benvenuti <benve@cisco.com>
libvirt documentation for channels with type 'spicevmc' says that the
'target' child node has:
"an optional attribute name controls how the guest will have access
to the channel, and defaults to name='com.redhat.spice.0'."
However, this default value is never set in libvirt code base,
there's only a check in qemu_command.c to error out if the name
attribute doesn't have the expected value (if it's set).
This commit sets a default target name for spicevmc channels during
the domain configuration parsing so that the code agrees with the
documentation.
Commit d42a2ff caused a regression in creating a disk-only snapshot
of a qcow2 disk; by passing the wrong variable to the monitor call,
libvirt ended up creating JSON that looked like "format":null instead
of the intended "format":"qcow2".
To make it easier to diagnose this in the future, make JSON creation
error out if "s:arg" is paired with NULL (it is still possible to
use "n:arg" in the rare cases where qemu will accept a null).
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c
(qemuDomainSnapshotCreateSingleDiskActive): Pass correct value.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.c (qemuMonitorJSONMakeCommandRaw):
Improve error message.
Pass argv to the init binary of LXC, using a new <initarg> element.
* docs/formatdomain.html.in: Document <os> usage for containers
* docs/schemas/domaincommon.rng: Add <initarg> element
* src/conf/domain_conf.c, src/conf/domain_conf.h: parsing and
formatting of <initarg>
* src/lxc/lxc_container.c: Setup LXC argv
* tests/Makefile.am, tests/lxcxml2xmldata/lxc-systemd.xml,
tests/lxcxml2xmltest.c, tests/testutilslxc.c,
tests/testutilslxc.h: Test parsing/formatting of LXC related
XML parts
The SELinux mount point moved from /selinux to /sys/fs/selinux
when systemd came along.
* configure.ac: Probe for SELinux mount point
* src/lxc/lxc_container.c: Use SELinux mount point determined
by configure.ac
When libvirtd is restarted, also restart the netlink event
message callbacks for existing VEPA connections and send
a message to lldpad for these existing links, so it learns
the new libvirtd pid.
Signed-off-by: D. Herrendoerfer <d.herrendoerfer@herrendoerfer.name>
This avoids possible deadlock of the qemu driver in case a domain is
begin migrated (in Begin phase) and unrelated connection to qemu driver
is closed at the right time.
I checked all callers of qemuDomainCheckEjectableMedia() and they are
calling this function with qemu driver locked.
Found when attempting to build on Fedora 17 alpha with:
./autogen.sh --system --enable-compile-warnings=error
(this same build command works without problem on Fedora 16). Since
the consumer of the qemuProcessReconnectData doesn't assume that the
other fields of the struct are initialized (although it uses them
internally), the simpler solution is to just switch to C99-style
struct initialization (which doesn't require specification of all
fields).
libvirt always adds -Werror-frame-larger-than=4096 to the flags when
it builds. When building on Fedora 17, two functions with multiple
1024 buffers declared inside if {} blocks would generate frame size
errors; apparently the version of gcc on Fedora 16 will merge these
multiple buffers into a single buffer even when optimization is off,
but Fedora 17 won't.
The fix is to declare a single 1024 buffer at the top of the two
offending functions, and reuse the single buffer throughout the
functions.
Return statements with parameter enclosed in parentheses were modified
and parentheses were removed. The whole change was scripted, here is how:
List of files was obtained using this command:
git grep -l -e '\<return\s*([^()]*\(([^()]*)[^()]*\)*)\s*;' | \
grep -e '\.[ch]$' -e '\.py$'
Found files were modified with this command:
sed -i -e \
's_^\(.*\<return\)\s*(\(\([^()]*([^()]*)[^()]*\)*\))\s*\(;.*$\)_\1 \2\4_' \
-e 's_^\(.*\<return\)\s*(\([^()]*\))\s*\(;.*$\)_\1 \2\3_'
Then checked for nonsense.
The whole command looks like this:
git grep -l -e '\<return\s*([^()]*\(([^()]*)[^()]*\)*)\s*;' | \
grep -e '\.[ch]$' -e '\.py$' | xargs sed -i -e \
's_^\(.*\<return\)\s*(\(\([^()]*([^()]*)[^()]*\)*\))\s*\(;.*$\)_\1 \2\4_' \
-e 's_^\(.*\<return\)\s*(\([^()]*\))\s*\(;.*$\)_\1 \2\3_'
When qparams support was dropped in commit bc1ff160, we forgot
to add tests to ensure that viruri can do the same round trip
handling of a URI. This round trip was broken, due to use
of the old 'query' field of xmlUriPtr, instead of the new
'query_raw'
Also, we forgot to report an OOM error.
* tests/viruritest.c (mymain): Add tests based on just-deleted
qparamtest.
(testURIParse): Allow difference in input and expected output.
* src/util/viruri.c (virURIFormat): Add missing error. Use
query_raw, instead of query for xmlUriPtr object.
The oVirt developers have stated that the real reasons they want
to have qemu reuse existing volumes when creating a snapshot are:
1. the management framework is set up so that creation has to be
done from a central node for proper resource tracking, and having
libvirt and/or qemu create things violates the framework, and
2. qemu defaults to creating snapshots with an absolute path to
the backing file, but oVirt wants to manage a backing chain that
uses just relative names, to allow for easier migration of a chain
across storage locations.
When 0.9.10 added VIR_DOMAIN_SNAPSHOT_CREATE_REUSE_EXT (commit
4e9953a4), it only addressed point 1, but libvirt was still using
O_TRUNC which violates point 2. Meanwhile, the new qemu
'transaction' monitor command includes a new optional mode argument
that will force qemu to reuse the metadata of the file it just
opened (with the burden on the caller to have valid metadata there
in the first place). So, this tweaks the meaning of the flag to
cover both points as intended for use by oVirt. It is not strictly
backward-compatible to 0.9.10 behavior, but it can be argued that
the O_TRUNC of 0.9.10 was a bug.
Note that this flag is all-or-nothing, and only selects between
'existing' and the default 'absolute-paths'. A more flexible
approach that would allow per-disk selections, as well as adding
support for the 'no-backing-file' mode, would be possible by
extending the <domainsnapshot> xml to have a per-disk mode, but
until we have a management application expressing a need for that
additional complexity, it is not worth doing.
* src/libvirt.c (virDomainSnapshotCreateXML): Tweak documentation.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.h (qemuMonitorDiskSnapshot): Add
parameters.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.h (qemuMonitorJSONDiskSnapshot):
Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.c (qemuMonitorDiskSnapshot): Pass them
through.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.c (qemuMonitorJSONDiskSnapshot): Use
new monitor command arguments.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainSnapshotCreateDiskActive)
(qemuDomainSnapshotCreateSingleDiskActive): Adjust callers.
(qemuDomainSnapshotDiskPrepare): Allow qed, modify rules on reuse.
The hardest part about adding transactions is not using the new
monitor command, but undoing the partial changes we made prior
to a failed transaction.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainSnapshotCreateDiskActive): Use
transaction when available.
(qemuDomainSnapshotUndoSingleDiskActive): New function.
(qemuDomainSnapshotCreateSingleDiskActive): Pass through actions.
(qemuDomainSnapshotCreateXML): Adjust caller.
QEmu 1.1 is adding a 'transaction' command to the JSON monitor.
Each element of a transaction corresponds to a top-level command,
with the additional guarantee that the transaction flushes all
pending I/O, then guarantees that all actions will be successful
as a group or that failure will roll back the state to what it
was before the monitor command. The difference between a
top-level command:
{ "execute": "blockdev-snapshot-sync", "arguments":
{ "device": "virtio0", ... } }
and a transaction:
{ "execute": "transaction", "arguments":
{ "actions": [
{ "type": "blockdev-snapshot-sync", "data":
{ "device": "virtio0", ... } } ] } }
is just a couple of changed key names and nesting the shorter
command inside a JSON array to the longer command. This patch
just adds the framework; the next patch will actually use a
transaction.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.c (qemuMonitorJSONMakeCommand): Move
guts...
(qemuMonitorJSONMakeCommandRaw): ...into new helper. Add support
for array element.
(qemuMonitorJSONTransaction): New command.
(qemuMonitorJSONDiskSnapshot): Support use in a transaction.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.h (qemuMonitorJSONDiskSnapshot): Add
argument.
(qemuMonitorJSONTransaction): New declaration.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.h (qemuMonitorTransaction): Likewise.
(qemuMonitorDiskSnapshot): Add argument.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.c (qemuMonitorTransaction): New wrapper.
(qemuMonitorDiskSnapshot): Pass argument on.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c
(qemuDomainSnapshotCreateSingleDiskActive): Update caller.
Taking an external snapshot of just one disk is atomic, without having
to pause and resume the VM. This also paves the way for later patches
to interact with the new qemu 'transaction' monitor command.
The various scenarios when requesting atomic are:
online, 1 disk, old qemu - safe, allowed by this patch
online, more than 1 disk, old qemu - failure, this patch
offline snapshot - safe, once a future patch implements offline disk snapshot
online, 1 or more disks, new qemu - safe, once future patch uses transaction
Taking an online system checkpoint snapshot is atomic, since it is
done via a single 'savevm' monitor command. Taking an offline system
checkpoint snapshot is atomic, thanks to the previous patch.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainSnapshotCreateXML): Support
new flag for single-disk setups.
(qemuDomainSnapshotDiskPrepare): Check for atomic here.
(qemuDomainSnapshotCreateDiskActive): Skip pausing the VM when
atomic supported.
(qemuDomainSnapshotIsAllowed): Use bool instead of int.
Offline internal snapshots can be rolled back with just a little
bit of refactoring, meaning that we are now automatically atomic.
* src/qemu/qemu_domain.c (qemuDomainSnapshotForEachQcow2): Move
guts...
(qemuDomainSnapshotForEachQcow2Raw): ...to new helper, to allow
rollbacks.
Right now, it is appallingly easy to cause qemu disk snapshots
to alter a domain then fail; for example, by requesting a two-disk
snapshot where the second disk name resides on read-only storage.
In this failure scenario, libvirt reports failure, but modifies
the live domain XML in-place to record that the first disk snapshot
was taken; and places a difficult burden on the management app
to grab the XML and reparse it to see which disks, if any, were
altered by the partial snapshot.
This patch adds a new flag where implementations can request that
the hypervisor make snapshots atomically; either no changes to
XML occur, or all disks were altered as a group. If you request
the flag, you either get outright failure up front, or you take
advantage of hypervisor abilities to make an atomic snapshot. Of
course, drivers should prefer the atomic means even without the
flag explicitly requested.
There's no way to make snapshots 100% bulletproof - even if the
hypervisor does it perfectly atomic, we could run out of memory
during the followup tasks of updating our in-memory XML, and report
a failure. However, these sorts of catastrophic failures are rare
and unlikely, and it is still nicer to know that either all
snapshots happened or none of them, as that is an easier state to
recover from.
* include/libvirt/libvirt.h.in
(VIR_DOMAIN_SNAPSHOT_CREATE_ATOMIC): New flag.
* src/libvirt.c (virDomainSnapshotCreateXML): Document it.
* tools/virsh.c (cmdSnapshotCreate, cmdSnapshotCreateAs): Expose it.
* tools/virsh.pod (snapshot-create, snapshot-create-as): Document
it.
We need a capability bit to gracefully error out if some of the
additions in future patches can't be implemented by the running qemu.
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.h (QEMU_CAPS_TRANSACTION): New cap.
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.c (qemuCaps): Name it.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.c (qemuMonitorJSONCheckCommands): Set
it.
Recent changes have caused build failures on systems where pdwtags works:
commit a26a196 mistakenly exported a public variable
commits a26a196, 57ddcc2, 487c063 all had copy-paste bugs in
hand-updating the golden API rather than rerunning pdwtags
* include/libvirt/libvirt.h.in (virDomainEventTrayChangeReason):
Make this a typedef, not external storage.
* src/remote_protocol-structs (remote_procedure): Fix spelling.
This introduces a new running reason VIR_DOMAIN_RUNNING_WAKEUP,
and new suspend event type VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_STARTED_WAKEUP.
While a wakeup event is emitted, the domain which entered into
VIR_DOMAIN_PMSUSPENDED will be transferred to "running"
with reason VIR_DOMAIN_RUNNING_WAKEUP, and a new domain lifecycle
event emitted with type VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_STARTED_WAKEUP.
This introduces a new domain state pmsuspended to represent
the domain which has been suspended by guest power management,
e.g. (entered itno s3 state). Because a "running" state could
be confused in this case, one will see the guest is paused
actually while playing. And state "paused" is for the domain
which was paused by virDomainSuspend.
This patch introduces a new event type for the QMP event
SUSPEND:
VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_ID_PMSUSPEND
The event doesn't take any data, but considering there might
be reason for wakeup in future, the callback definition is:
typedef void
(*virConnectDomainEventSuspendCallback)(virConnectPtr conn,
virDomainPtr dom,
int reason,
void *opaque);
"reason" is unused currently, always passes "0".
This patch introduces a new event type for the QMP event
WAKEUP:
VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_ID_PMWAKEUP
The event doesn't take any data, but considering there might
be reason for wakeup in future, the callback definition is:
typedef void
(*virConnectDomainEventWakeupCallback)(virConnectPtr conn,
virDomainPtr dom,
int reason,
void *opaque);
"reason" is unused currently, always passes "0".
This is similiar with physical world, one will be surprised if the
box starts with medium exists while the tray is open.
New tests are added, tests disk-{cdrom,floppy}-tray are for the qemu
supports "-device" flag, and disk-{cdrom,floppy}-no-device-cap are
for old qemu, i.e. which doesn't support "-device" flag.
This patch introduces a new event type for the QMP event
DEVICE_TRAY_MOVED, which occurs when the tray of a removable
disk is moved (i.e opened or closed):
VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_ID_TRAY_CHANGE
The event's data includes the device alias and the reason
for tray status' changing, which indicates why the tray
status was changed. Thus the callback definition for the event
is:
enum {
VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_TRAY_CHANGE_OPEN = 0,
VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_TRAY_CHANGE_CLOSE,
\#ifdef VIR_ENUM_SENTINELS
VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_TRAY_CHANGE_LAST
\#endif
} virDomainEventTrayChangeReason;
typedef void
(*virConnectDomainEventTrayChangeCallback)(virConnectPtr conn,
virDomainPtr dom,
const char *devAlias,
int reason,
void *opaque);
Libvirt on x86 parses 'dmidecode' to gather characteristics of host
system. On PowerPC, this is now implemented by reading /proc/cpuinfo
NOTE: memory-DIMM information is not presently implemented.
Acked-by: Daniel Veillard <veillard@redhat.com>
Acked-by: Daniel P Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Prerna Saxena <prerna@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
When SASL requests auth credentials, try to look them up in the
config file first. If any are found, remove them from the list
that the user is prompted for
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
SASL may prompt for credentials after either a 'start' or 'step'
invocation. In both cases the code to handle this is the same.
Refactor this code into a separate method to reduce the duplication,
since the complexity is about to grow
* src/remote/remote_driver.c: Refactor interaction with SASL
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Ensure that the functions in virauth.h have names matching the file
prefix, by renaming virRequest{Username,Password} to
virAuthGet{Username,Password}
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
To follow latest naming conventions, rename src/util/authhelper.[ch]
to src/util/virauth.[ch].
* src/util/authhelper.[ch]: Rename to src/util/virauth.[ch]
* src/esx/esx_driver.c, src/hyperv/hyperv_driver.c,
src/phyp/phyp_driver.c, src/xenapi/xenapi_driver.c: Update
for renamed include files
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The '.ini' file format is a useful alternative to the existing
config file style, when you need to have config files which
are hashes of hashes. The 'virKeyFilePtr' object provides a
way to parse these file types.
* src/Makefile.am, src/util/virkeyfile.c,
src/util/virkeyfile.h: Add .ini file parser
* tests/Makefile.am, tests/virkeyfiletest.c: Test
basic parsing capabilities
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Convert drivers currently using the qparams APIs, to instead
use the virURIPtr query parameters directly.
* src/esx/esx_util.c, src/hyperv/hyperv_util.c,
src/remote/remote_driver.c, src/xenapi/xenapi_utils.c: Remove
use of qparams
* src/util/qparams.h, src/util/qparams.c: Delete
* src/Makefile.am, src/libvirt_private.syms: Remove qparams
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Avoid the need for each driver to parse query parameters itself
by storing them directly in the virURIPtr struct. The parsing
code is a copy of that from src/util/qparams.c The latter will
be removed in a later patch
* src/util/viruri.h: Add query params to virURIPtr
* src/util/viruri.c: Parse query parameters when creating virURIPtr
* tests/viruritest.c: Expand test to cover params
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Instead of just typedef'ing the xmlURIPtr struct for virURIPtr,
use a custom libvirt struct. This allows us to fix various
problems with libxml2. This initially just fixes the query vs
query_raw handling problems.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The parameter in the virURIFormat impl mistakenly used the
xmlURIPtr type, instead of virURIPtr. Since they will soon
cease to be identical, this needs fixing
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Since we defined a custom virURIPtr type, we should use a
virURIFree method instead of assuming it will always be
a typedef for xmlURIPtr
* src/util/viruri.c, src/util/viruri.h, src/libvirt_private.syms:
Add a virURIFree method
* src/datatypes.c, src/esx/esx_driver.c, src/libvirt.c,
src/qemu/qemu_migration.c, src/vmx/vmx.c, src/xen/xend_internal.c,
tests/viruritest.c: s/xmlFreeURI/virURIFree/
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When a client which started non-p2p migration dies in a bad time, the
source libvirtd never clears the migration job and almost nothing can be
done with the domain without restarting the daemon. This patch makes use
of connection close callbacks and ensures that migration job is properly
discarded when the client disconnects.
Destination daemon should not rely on the client or source daemon
(depending on the type of migration) to call Finish when migration
fails, because the client may crash before it can do so. The domain
prepared for incoming migration is set to be destroyed (and migration
job cleaned up) when connection with the client closes but this is not
enough. If the associated qemu process crashes after Prepare step and
the domain is cleaned up before the connection gets closed, autodestroy
is not called for the domain and migration jobs remains set. In case the
domain is defined on destination host (i.e., it is not completely
removed once destroyed) we keep the job set for ever. To fix this, we
register a cleanup callback which is responsible to clean migration-in
job when a domain dies anywhere between Prepare and Finish steps. Note
that we can't blindly clean any job when spotting EOF on monitor since
normally an API is running at that time.
This reverts commit 61f2b6ba5f and most of
commit d8916dc8e2, which effectively
brings back commit ef1065cf5a written by
Jim Fehlig:
The qemu migration speed default is 32MiB/s as defined in migration.c
/* Migration speed throttling */
static int64_t max_throttle = (32 << 20);
There's no need to throttle migration when targeting a file, so set
migration speed to unlimited prior to migration, and restore to libvirt
default value after migration.
Default units is MB for migrate_set_speed monitor command, so
(INT64_MAX / (1024 * 1024)) is used for unlimited migration speed.
This was reverted because migration to file could not be canceled and
even monitored since qemu was not processing any monitor commands until
the migration finished. This is now different as we make sure the
file descriptor we pass to qemu is able to properly report EAGAIN.
Recent qemu changes might have helped as well.
I tested managedsave with this patch in and indeed, it is 10x faster
while I can still monitor its progress.
A few times libvirt users manually setting mac addresses have
complained of a networking failure that ends up being due to a multicast
mac address being used for a guest interface. This patch prevents that
by logging an error and failing if a multicast mac address is
encountered in each of the three following cases:
1) domain xml <interface> mac address.
2) network xml bridge mac address.
3) network xml dhcp/host mac address.
There are several other places where a mac address can be input that
aren't controlled in this manner because failure to do so has no
consequences (e.g., if the address will be used to search through
existing interfaces for a match).
The RNG has been updated to add multiMacAddr and uniMacAddr along with
the existing macAddr, and macAddr was switched to uniMacAddr where
appropriate.
If an error was encountered parsing a dhcp host entry mac address or
name, parsing would continue and log a less descriptive error that
might make it more difficult to notice the true nature of the problem.
This patch returns immediately on logging the first error.
This patch is in response to:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=798467
If a guest's tap device is created using the same MAC address the
guest uses for its own network card (which connects to the tap
device), the Linux kernel will log the following message and traffic
will not pass:
kernel: vnet9: received packet with own address as source address
This patch disallows MAC addresses with a first byte of 0xFE, but only in
the case that the MAC address is used for a guest interface that's
connected by way of a standard tap device. (In other words, the
validation is done at runtime at the same place the MAC address is
modified for the tap device, rather than when mac address is parsed,
the idea being that it is then we know for sure the address will be
problematic.)
Using inheritance, this patch cleans up the cpu_map.xml file and also
sorts all CPU features according to the feature and registry
values. Model features are sorted the same way as foeatures in the
specification.
Also few models that are related were organized together and parts of
the XML are marked with comments
If a guest is paused, we were silently ignoring the quiesce flag,
which results in unclean snapshots, contrary to the intent of the
flag. Since we can't quiesce without guest agent support, we should
instead fail if the guest is not running.
Meanwhile, if we attempt a quiesce command, but the guest agent
doesn't respond, and we time out, we may have left the command
pending on the guest's queue, and when the guest resumes parsing
commands, it will freeze even though our command is no longer
around to issue a thaw. To be safe, we must _always_ pair every
quiesce call with a counterpart thaw, even if the quiesce call
failed due to a timeout, so that if a guest wakes up and starts
processing a command backlog, it will not get stuck in a frozen
state.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainSnapshotCreateDiskActive):
Always issue thaw after a quiesce, even if quiesce failed.
(qemuDomainSnapshotFSThaw): Add a parameter.
This patch fixes a NULL pointer check that was causing SegFault on
some specific configurations. It also reverts commit 59d0c9801c
that was checking for this value in one place.
A common coding pattern for changing blkio parameters is
1. virDomainGetBlkioParameters
2. change one or more params
3. virDomainSetBlkioParameters
For this to work, it must be possible to roundtrip through
the methods without error. Unfortunately virDomainGetBlkioParameters
will return "" for the deviceWeight parameter for guests by default,
which virDomainSetBlkioParameters will then reject as invalid.
This fixes the handling of "" to be a no-op, and also improves the
error message to tell you what was invalid
How to reproduce:
% valgrind -v --leak-check=full virsh migrate mig \
qemu+ssh://$dest/system --unsafe
== 8 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 1 of 28
== at 0x4A04A28: calloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:467)
== by 0x3EB7115FB8: xdr_reference (in /lib64/libc-2.12.so)
== by 0x3EB7115F10: xdr_pointer (in /lib64/libc-2.12.so)
== by 0x4D1EA84: xdr_remote_string (remote_protocol.c:40)
== by 0x4D1EAD8: xdr_remote_domain_migrate_prepare3_ret (remote_protocol.c:4772)
== by 0x4D2FFD2: virNetMessageDecodePayload (virnetmessage.c:382)
== by 0x4D2789C: virNetClientProgramCall (virnetclientprogram.c:382)
== by 0x4D0707D: callWithFD (remote_driver.c:4549)
== by 0x4D070FB: call (remote_driver.c:4570)
== by 0x4D12AEE: remoteDomainMigratePrepare3 (remote_driver.c:4138)
== by 0x4CF7BE9: virDomainMigrateVersion3 (libvirt.c:4815)
== by 0x4CF9432: virDomainMigrate2 (libvirt.c:5454)
==
== LEAK SUMMARY:
== definitely lost: 8 bytes in 1 blocks
== indirectly lost: 0 bytes in 0 blocks
== possibly lost: 0 bytes in 0 blocks
== still reachable: 126,995 bytes in 1,343 blocks
== suppressed: 0 bytes in 0 blocks
This patch also fixes the leaks in remoteDomainMigratePrepare and
remoteDomainMigratePrepare2.
* src/libvirt.c (virStorageVolResize): correct comment typo according to
virStorageVolResizeFlags enum definition.
Signed-off-by: Alex Jia <ajia@redhat.com>
If no <interface> elements are included in an LXC guest XML
description, then the LXC guest will just see the host's
network interfaces. It is desirable to be able to hide the
host interfaces, without having to define any guest interfaces.
This patch introduces a new feature flag <privnet/> to allow
forcing of a private network namespace for LXC. In the future
I also anticipate that we will add <privuser/> to force a
private user ID namespace.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c, src/conf/domain_conf.h: Add support
for <privnet/> feature. Auto-set <privnet> if any <interface>
devices are defined
* src/lxc/lxc_container.c: Honour request for private network
namespace
Commit e457d5ef20 adds ability to pass the
default URI using the client configuration file. If the file is not
present, it still accesses the NULL config object causing a segfault.
Caught running "make check".
Wire up the domain graphics event notifications for SPICE. Adapted
from a RHEL-only patch written by Dan Berrange that used custom
__com.redhat_SPICE events - equivalent events are now available in
upstream QEMU (including a SPICE_CONNECTED event, which was missing in
the __COM.redhat_SPICE version).
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.c: Wire up SPICE graphics events
Currently if the URI passed to virConnectOpen* is NULL, then we
- Look for LIBVIRT_DEFAULT_URI env var
- Probe for drivers
This changes it so that
- Look for LIBVIRT_DEFAULT_URI env var
- Look for 'uri_default' in $HOME/.libvirt/libvirt.conf
- Probe for drivers
numad is an user-level daemon that monitors NUMA topology and
processes resource consumption to facilitate good NUMA resource
alignment of applications/virtual machines to improve performance
and minimize cost of remote memory latencies. It provides a
pre-placement advisory interface, so significant processes can
be pre-bound to nodes with sufficient available resources.
More details: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Features/numad
"numad -w ncpus:memory_amount" is the advisory interface numad
provides currently.
This patch add the support by introducing a new XML attribute
for <vcpu>. e.g.
<vcpu placement="auto">4</vcpu>
<vcpu placement="static" cpuset="1-10^6">4</vcpu>
The returned advisory nodeset from numad will be printed
in domain's dumped XML. e.g.
<vcpu placement="auto" cpuset="1-10^6">4</vcpu>
If placement is "auto", the number of vcpus and the current
memory amount specified in domain XML will be used for numad
command line (numad uses MB for memory amount):
numad -w $num_of_vcpus:$current_memory_amount / 1024
The advisory nodeset returned from numad will be used to set
domain process CPU affinity then. (e.g. qemuProcessInitCpuAffinity).
If the user specifies both CPU affinity policy (e.g.
(<vcpu cpuset="1-10,^7,^8">4</vcpu>) and placement == "auto"
the specified CPU affinity will be overridden.
Only QEMU/KVM drivers support it now.
See docs update in patch for more details.
With current code, we pass true iff domain is cold booting. However,
if disk is inaccessible and startupPolicy for that disk is set to
'requisite' we have to fail iff cold booting.
AMD Bulldozer (or Opteron_G4 as called in QEMU) was added to the list
of cpu models, flags were taken from upstream qemu cpu specifications
and should be sorted by bit values (or first occurence in the feature
specification part of cpu_map.xml).
Based on QEMU upstream commit 885bb0369a4f0abe2c0185178f3cb347cb02cdf1.
Even though we say in documentation setting (tls-)port to -1 is legacy
compat style for enabling autoport, we're roughly doing this for VNC.
However, in case of SPICE auto enable autoport iff both port & tlsPort
are equal -1 as documentation says autoport plays with both.
In qemuDomainDetachNetDevice, detach was being used before it had been
validated. If no matching device was found, this resulted in a
dereference of a NULL pointer.
This behavior was a regression introduced in commit
cf90342be0, so it has not been a part of
any official libvirt release.
When host-model and host-passthrouh CPU modes were introduced, qemu
driver was properly modify to update guest CPU definition during
migration so that we use the right CPU at the destination. However,
similar treatment is needed for (managed)save and snapshots since they
need to save the exact CPU so that a domain can be properly restored.
To avoid repetition of such situation, all places that need live XML
share the code which generates it.
As a side effect, this patch fixes error reporting from
qemuDomainSnapshotWriteMetadata().
Thanks to cgroups, providing user vs. system time of the overall
guest is easy to add to our existing API.
* include/libvirt/libvirt.h.in (VIR_DOMAIN_CPU_STATS_USERTIME)
(VIR_DOMAIN_CPU_STATS_SYSTEMTIME): New constants.
* src/util/virtypedparam.h (virTypedParameterArrayValidate)
(virTypedParameterAssign): Enforce checking the result.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainGetPercpuStats): Fix offender.
(qemuDomainGetTotalcpuStats): Implement new parameters.
* tools/virsh.c (cmdCPUStats): Tweak output accordingly.
As documented in linux.git/Documentation/cgroups/cpuacct.txt,
cpuacct.stat returns user and system time in ticks (the same
unit used in times(2)). It would be a bit nicer if it were like
getrusage(2) and reported timeval contents, or like cpuacct.usage
and in nanoseconds, but we can't be picky.
* src/util/cgroup.h (virCgroupGetCpuacctStat): New function.
* src/util/cgroup.c (virCgroupGetCpuacctStat): Implement it.
(virCgroupGetValueStr): Allow for multi-line files.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (cgroup.h): Export it.
If there is a disk file with a comma in the name, QEmu expects a double
comma instead of a single one (e.g., the file "virtual,disk.img" needs
to be specified as "virtual,,disk.img" in QEmu's command line). This
patch fixes libvirt to work with that feature. Fix RHBZ #801036.
Based on an initial patch by Crístian Viana.
* src/util/buf.h (virBufferEscape): Alter signature.
* src/util/buf.c (virBufferEscape): Add parameter.
(virBufferEscapeSexpr): Fix caller.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuBuildRBDString): Likewise. Also
escape commas in file names.
(qemuBuildDriveStr): Escape commas in file names.
* docs/schemas/basictypes.rng (absFilePath): Relax RNG to allow
commas in input file names.
* tests/qemuxml2argvdata/*-disk-drive-network-sheepdog.*: Update
test.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
We found few more AMD-specific features in cpu64-rhel* models that
made it impossible to start qemu guest on Intel host (with this
setting) even though qemu itself starts correctly with them.
This impacts one test, thus the fix in tests/cputestdata/.
virNetworkDNSHostsDefParseXML was calling VIR_ALLOC(def->hosts) if
def->hosts was NULL. This is a waste of time, though, since
VIR_REALLOC_N is called a few lines further down, prior to any use of
def->hosts. (initializing def->nhosts to 0 is also redundant, because
the newly allocated memory will always be cleared to all 0's anyway).
If user hasn't supplied any tlsPort we default to setting it
to zero in our internal structure. However, when building command
line we test it against -1 which is obviously wrong.
This is nearly identical to an earlier patch for virnetlink.c.
There are special stub versions of all public functions in this file
that are compiled when the platform isn't linux. Each of these
functions had an almost identical message, differing only in the
function name included in the message. Since log messages already
contain the function name, we can just define a const char* with the
common part of the string, and use that same string for all the log
messages.
If nothing else, this at least makes for less strings that need
translating...
This function was freeing a virDomainNetDef with
VIR_FREE(). virDomainNetDef is a complex structure with many pointers
to other dynamically allocated data; to properly free it
virDomainNetDefFree() must be called instead, otherwise several
strings (and potentially other things) will be leaked.
For some reason, although live hotplug of <hostdev> devices is
supported, persistent hotplug is not. This patch adds the proper
VIR_DOMAIN_DEVICE_HOSTDEV cases to the switches in
qemuDomainAttachDeviceConfig and qemuDomainDetachDeviceConfig.
There are several functions that call virNetlinkCommand, and they all
follow a common pattern, with three exit labels: err_exit (or
cleanup), malformed_resp, and buffer_too_small. All three of these
labels do their own cleanup and have their own return. However, the
malformed_resp label usually frees the same items as the
cleanup/err_exit label, and the buffer_too_small label just doesn't
free recvbuf (because it's known to always be NULL at the time we goto
buffer_too_small.
In order to simplify and standardize the code, I've made the following
changes to all of these functions:
1) err_exit is replaced with the more libvirt-ish "cleanup", which
makes sense because in all cases this code is also executed in the
case of success, so labelling it err_exit may be confusing.
2) rc is initialized to -1, and set to 0 just before the cleanup
label. Any code that currently sets rc = -1 is made to instead goto
cleanup.
3) malformed_resp and buffer_too_small just log their error and goto
cleanup. This gives us a single return path, and a single place to
free up resources.
4) In one instance, rather then logging an error immediately, a char*
msg was pointed to an error string, then goto cleanup (and cleanup
would log an error if msg != NULL). It takes no more lines of code
to just log the message as we encounter it.
This patch should have 0 functional effects.
There are several functions in domain_conf.c that remove a device
object from the domain's list of that object type, but don't free the
object or return it to the caller to free. In many cases this isn't a
problem because the caller already had a pointer to the object and
frees it afterward, but in several cases the removed object was just
left floating around with no references to it.
In particular, the function qemuDomainDetachDeviceConfig() calls
functions to locate and remove net (virDomainNetRemoveByMac), disk
(virDomainDiskRemoveByName()), and lease (virDomainLeaseRemove())
devices, but neither it nor its caller qemuDomainModifyDeviceConfig()
ever obtain a pointer to the device being removed, much less free it.
This patch modifies the following "remove" functions to return a
pointer to the device object being removed from the domain device
arrays, to give the caller the option of freeing the device object
using that pointer if needed. In places where the object was
previously leaked, it is now freed:
virDomainDiskRemove
virDomainDiskRemoveByName
virDomainNetRemove
virDomainNetRemoveByMac
virDomainHostdevRemove
virDomainLeaseRemove
virDomainLeaseRemoveAt
The functions that had been leaking:
libxlDomainDetachConfig - leaked a virDomainDiskDef
qemuDomainDetachDeviceConfig - could leak a virDomainDiskDef,
a virDomainNetDef, or a
virDomainLeaseDef
qemuDomainDetachLease - leaked a virDomainLeaseDef
There were certain paths through the hostdev detach code that could
lead to the lower level function failing (and not removing the object
from the domain's hostdevs list), but the higher level function
free'ing the hostdev object anyway. This would leave a stale
hostdevdef pointer in the list, which would surely cause a problem
eventually.
This patch relocates virDomainHostdevRemove from the lower level
functions qemuDomainDetachThisHostDevice and
qemuDomainDetachHostPciDevice, to their caller
qemuDomainDetachThisHostDevice, placing it just before the call to
virDomainHostdevDefFree. This makes it easy to verify that either both
operations are done, or neither.
NB: The "dangling pointer" part of this problem was introduced in
commit 13d5a6, so it is not present in libvirt versions prior to
0.9.9. Earlier versions would return failure in certain cases even
though the the device object was removed/deleted, but the removal and
deletion operations would always both happen or neither.
There are special stub versions of all public functions in this file
that are compiled when either libnl isn't available or the platform
isn't linux. Each of these functions had two almost identical message,
differing only in the function name included in the message. Since log
messages already contain the function name, we can just define a const
char* with the common part of the string, and use that same string for
all the log messages.
Also, rather than doing #if defined ... #else ... #endif *inside the
error log macro invocation*, this patch does #if defined ... just
once, using it to decide which single string to define. This turns the
error log in each function from 6 lines, to 1 line.
This patch will allow OpenFlow controllers to identify which interface
belongs to a particular VM by using the Domain UUID.
ovs-vsctl get Interface vnet0 external_ids
{attached-mac="52:54:00:8C:55:2C", iface-id="83ce45d6-3639-096e-ab3c-21f66a05f7fa", iface-status=active, vm-id="142a90a7-0acc-ab92-511c-586f12da8851"}
V2 changes:
Replaced vm-uuid with vm-id. There was a discussion in Open vSwitch
mailinglist that we should stick with the same DB key postfixes for the
sake of consistency (e.g iface-id, vm-id ...).
The indentation on the final lines of the function was off by four
spaces, making me wonder for a second if there was something
missing. (There wasn't.)
Commit 5d4b0c4c80 tried to fix certain classes of VPATH builds,
but was too limited. In particular, Guannan Ren reported:
> For example: The libvirt source code resides in /home/testuser,
> I make dist in /tmp/buildvpath, the XDR routine .c file will
> include full path of the header file like:
>
> #include "/home/testuser/src/rpc/virnetprotocol.h"
> #include "internal.h"
> #include <arpa/inet.h>
>
> If we distribute the tarball to another machine to compile,
> it will report error as follows:
>
> rpc/virnetprotocol.c:7:59: fatal error:
> /home/testuser/src/rpc/virnetprotocol.h: No such file or directory
* src/rpc/genprotocol.pl: Fix more include lines.
If we need to virFork() to check assess() under different
UID+GID we need to translate returned status via WEXITSTATUS().
Otherwise, we may return values greater than 255 which is
obviously wrong.
The function sanlock_inquire can return NULL in the state string if the
message consists only of a header. The return value is arbitrary and
sent by the server. We should proceed carefully while touching such
pointers.
Some members are generated during XML parse (e.g. MAC address of
an interface); However, with current implementation, if we
are plugging a device both to persistent and live config,
we parse given XML twice: first time for live, second for config.
This is wrong then as the second time we are not guaranteed
to generate same values as we did for the first time.
To prevent that we need to create a copy of DeviceDefPtr;
This is done through format/parse process instead of writing
functions for deep copy as it is easier to maintain:
adding new field to any virDomain*DefPtr doesn't require change
of copying function.
Currently, startupPolicy='requisite' was determining cold boot
by migrateFrom != NULL. That means, if domain was started up
with migrateFrom set we didn't require disk source path and allowed
it to be dropped. However, on snapshot-revert domain wasn't migrated
but according to documentation, requisite should drop disk source
as well.
Output is still in kibibytes, but input can now be in different
scales for ease of typing.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainParseMemory): New helper.
(virDomainDefParseXML): Use it when parsing.
* docs/schemas/domaincommon.rng: Expand XML; rename memoryKBElement
to memoryElement and update callers.
* docs/formatdomain.html.in (elementsMemoryAllocation): Document
scaling.
* tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-memtune.xml: Adjust test.
* tests/qemuxml2xmltest.c: Likewise.
* tests/qemuxml2xmloutdata/qemuxml2xmlout-memtune.xml: New file.
Using 'unsigned long' for memory values is risky on 32-bit platforms,
as a PAE guest can have more than 4GiB memory. Our API is
(unfortunately) locked at 'unsigned long' and a scale of 1024, but
the rest of our system should consistently use 64-bit values,
especially since the previous patch centralized overflow checking.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h (_virDomainDef): Always use 64-bit values
for memory. Change hugepage_backed to a bool.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainDefParseXML)
(virDomainDefCheckABIStability, virDomainDefFormatInternal): Fix
clients.
* src/vmx/vmx.c (virVMXFormatConfig): Likewise.
* src/xenxs/xen_sxpr.c (xenParseSxpr, xenFormatSxpr): Likewise.
* src/xenxs/xen_xm.c (xenXMConfigGetULongLong): New function.
(xenXMConfigGetULong, xenXMConfigSetInt): Avoid truncation.
(xenParseXM, xenFormatXM): Fix clients.
* src/phyp/phyp_driver.c (phypBuildLpar): Likewise.
* src/openvz/openvz_driver.c (openvzDomainSetMemoryInternal):
Likewise.
* src/vbox/vbox_tmpl.c (vboxDomainDefineXML): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuBuildCommandLine): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessStart): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.h (qemuMonitorGetBalloonInfo): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_text.h (qemuMonitorTextGetBalloonInfo):
Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_text.c (qemuMonitorTextGetBalloonInfo):
Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.h (qemuMonitorJSONGetBalloonInfo):
Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.c (qemuMonitorJSONGetBalloonInfo):
Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemudDomainGetInfo)
(qemuDomainGetXMLDesc): Likewise.
* src/uml/uml_conf.c (umlBuildCommandLine): Likewise.
On 64-bit platforms, unsigned long and unsigned long long are
identical, so we don't have to worry about overflow checks.
On 32-bit platforms, anywhere we narrow unsigned long long back
to unsigned long, we have to worry about overflow; it's easier
to do this in one place by having most of the code use the same
or wider types, and only doing the narrowing at the last minute.
Therefore, the memory set commands remain unsigned long, and
the memory get command now centralizes the overflow check into
libvirt.c, so that drivers don't have to repeat the work.
This also fixes a bug where xen returned the wrong value on
failure (most APIs return -1 on failure, but getMaxMemory
must return 0 on failure).
* src/driver.h (virDrvDomainGetMaxMemory): Use long long.
* src/libvirt.c (virDomainGetMaxMemory): Raise overflow.
* src/test/test_driver.c (testGetMaxMemory): Fix driver.
* src/rpc/gendispatch.pl (name_to_ProcName): Likewise.
* src/xen/xen_hypervisor.c (xenHypervisorGetMaxMemory): Likewise.
* src/xen/xen_driver.c (xenUnifiedDomainGetMaxMemory): Likewise.
* src/xen/xend_internal.c (xenDaemonDomainGetMaxMemory):
Likewise.
* src/xen/xend_internal.h (xenDaemonDomainGetMaxMemory):
Likewise.
* src/xen/xm_internal.c (xenXMDomainGetMaxMemory): Likewise.
* src/xen/xm_internal.h (xenXMDomainGetMaxMemory): Likewise.
* src/xen/xs_internal.c (xenStoreDomainGetMaxMemory): Likewise.
* src/xen/xs_internal.h (xenStoreDomainGetMaxMemory): Likewise.
* src/xenapi/xenapi_driver.c (xenapiDomainGetMaxMemory):
Likewise.
* src/esx/esx_driver.c (esxDomainGetMaxMemory): Likewise.
* src/libxl/libxl_driver.c (libxlDomainGetMaxMemory): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemudDomainGetMaxMemory): Likewise.
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c (lxcDomainGetMaxMemory): Likewise.
* src/uml/uml_driver.c (umlDomainGetMaxMemory): Likewise.
The test domain allows <memory>0</memory>, but the RNG was stating
that memory had to be at least 4096000 bytes. Hypervisors should
enforce their own limits, rather than complicating the RNG.
Meanwhile, some copy and paste had introduced some fishy constructs
in various unit tests.
* docs/schemas/domaincommon.rng (memoryKB, memoryKBElement): Drop
limit that isn't enforced in code.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainDefParseXML): Require current
<= maximum.
* tests/qemuxml2argvdata/*.xml: Fix offenders.
Disk manufacturers are fond of quoting sizes in powers of 10,
rather than powers of 2 (after all, 2.1 GB sounds larger than
2.0 GiB, even though the exact opposite is true). So, we might
as well follow coreutils' lead in supporting three types of
suffix: single letter ${u} (which we already had) and ${u}iB
for the power of 2, and ${u}B for power of 10.
Additionally, it is impossible to create a file with more than
2**63 bytes, since off_t is signed (if you have enough storage
to even create one 8EiB file, I'm jealous). This now reports
failure up front rather than down the road when the kernel
finally refuses an impossible size.
* docs/schemas/basictypes.rng (unit): Add suffixes.
* src/conf/storage_conf.c (virStorageSize): Use new function.
* docs/formatstorage.html.in: Document it.
* tests/storagevolxml2xmlin/vol-file-backing.xml: Test it.
* tests/storagevolxml2xmlin/vol-file.xml: Likewise.
Make it obvious to 'dumpxml' readers what unit we are using,
since our default of KiB for memory (1024) differs from qemu's
default of MiB; and differs from our use of bytes for storage.
Tests were updated via:
$ find tests/*data tests/*out -name '*.xml' | \
xargs sed -i 's/<\(memory\|currentMemory\|hard_limit\|soft_limit\|min_guarantee\|swap_hard_limit\)>/<\1 unit='"'KiB'>/"
$ find tests/*data tests/*out -name '*.xml' | \
xargs sed -i 's/<\(capacity\|allocation\|available\)>/<\1 unit='"'bytes'>/"
followed by a few fixes for the stragglers.
Note that with this patch, the RNG for <memory> still forbids
validation of anything except unit='KiB', since the code silently
ignores the attribute; a later patch will expand <memory> to allow
scaled input in the code and update the RNG to match.
* docs/schemas/basictypes.rng (unit): Add 'bytes'.
(scaledInteger): New define.
* docs/schemas/storagevol.rng (sizing): Use it.
* docs/schemas/storagepool.rng (sizing): Likewise.
* docs/schemas/domaincommon.rng (memoryKBElement): New define; use
for memory elements.
* src/conf/storage_conf.c (virStoragePoolDefFormat)
(virStorageVolDefFormat): Likewise.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h (_virDomainDef): Document unit used
internally.
* src/conf/storage_conf.h (_virStoragePoolDef, _virStorageVolDef):
Likewise.
* tests/*data/*.xml: Update all tests.
* tests/*out/*.xml: Likewise.
* tests/define-dev-segfault: Likewise.
* tests/openvzutilstest.c (testReadNetworkConf): Likewise.
* tests/qemuargv2xmltest.c (blankProblemElements): Likewise.
Scaling an integer based on a suffix is something we plan on reusing
in several contexts: XML parsing, virsh CLI parsing, and possibly
elsewhere. Make it easy to reuse, as well as adding in support for
powers of 1000.
* src/util/util.h (virScaleInteger): New function.
* src/util/util.c (virScaleInteger): Implement it.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (util.h): Export it.
Overflow can be user-induced, so it deserves more than being called
an internal error. Note that in general, 32-bit platforms have
far more places to trigger this error (anywhere the public API
used 'unsigned long' but the other side of the connection is a
64-bit server); but some are possible on 64-bit platforms (where
the public API computes the product of two numbers).
* include/libvirt/virterror.h (VIR_ERR_OVERFLOW): New error.
* src/util/virterror.c (virErrorMsg): Translate it.
* src/libvirt.c (virDomainSetVcpusFlags, virDomainGetVcpuPinInfo)
(virDomainGetVcpus, virDomainGetCPUStats): Use it.
* daemon/remote.c (HYPER_TO_TYPE): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainBlockResize): Likewise.
Yes, I like kilobytes better than kibibytes (when I say kilobytes,
I generally mean 1024). But since the term is ambiguous, it can't
hurt to say what we mean, by using both the correct name and
calling out the numeric equivalent.
* src/libvirt.c (virDomainGetMaxMemory, virDomainSetMaxMemory)
(virDomainSetMemory, virDomainSetMemoryFlags)
(virNodeGetFreeMemory): Tweak wording.
* docs/formatdomain.html.in: Likewise.
* docs/formatstorage.html.in: Likewise.
ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED was accidentally forgotten on one arg of a stub
function for functionality that's not present on non-linux
platforms. This causes a non-linux build with
--enable-compile-warnings=error to fail.
The RPC code assumed that the array returned by the driver would be
fully populated; that is, ncpus on entry resulted in ncpus * return
value on exit. However, while we don't support holes in the middle
of ncpus, we do want to permit the case of ncpus on entry being
longer than the array returned by the driver (that is, it should be
safe for the caller to pass ncpus=128 on entry, and the driver will
stop populating the array when it hits max_id).
Additionally, a successful return implies that the caller will then
use virTypedParamArrayClear on the entire array; for this to not
free uninitialized memory, the driver must ensure that all skipped
entries are explicitly zeroed (the RPC driver did this, but not
the qemu driver).
There are now three cases:
server 0.9.10 and client 0.9.10 or newer: No impact - there were no
hypervisor drivers that supported cpu stats
server 0.9.11 or newer and client 0.9.10: if the client calls with
ncpus beyond the max, then the rpc call will fail on the client side
and disconnect the client, but the server is no worse for the wear
server 0.9.11 or newer and client 0.9.11: the server can return a
truncated array and the client will do just fine
I reproduced the problem by using a host with 2 CPUs, and doing:
virsh cpu-stats $dom --start 1 --count 2
* daemon/remote.c (remoteDispatchDomainGetCPUStats): Allow driver
to omit tail of array.
* src/remote/remote_driver.c (remoteDomainGetCPUStats):
Accommodate driver that omits tail of array.
* src/libvirt.c (virDomainGetCPUStats): Document this.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainGetPercpuStats): Clear all
unpopulated entries.
* For now, only "cpu_time" is supported.
* cpuacct cgroup is used for providing percpu cputime information.
* src/qemu/qemu.conf - take care of cpuacct cgroup.
* src/qemu/qemu_conf.c - take care of cpuacct cgroup.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c - added an interface
* src/util/cgroup.c/h - added interface for getting percpu cputime
Signed-off-by: KAMEZAWA Hiroyuki <kamezawa.hiroyu@jp.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Lai Jiangshan <laijs@cn.fujitsu.com>
These changes are applied only if the hostdev has a parent net device
(i.e. if it was defined as "<interface type='hostdev'>" rather than
just "<hostdev>"). If the parent netdevice has virtual port
information, the original virtualport associate functions are called
(these set and restore both mac and port profile on an
interface). Otherwise, only mac address is set on the device.
Note that This is only supported for SR-IOV Virtual Functions (not for
standard PCI or USB netdevs), and virtualport association is only
supported for 802.1Qbh. For all other types of cards and types of
virtualport, a "Config Unsupported" error is returned and the
operation fails.
Signed-off-by: Roopa Prabhu <roprabhu@cisco.com>
This patch includes the following changes to virnetdevmacvlan.c and
virnetdevvportprofile.c:
- removes some netlink functions which are now available in
virnetdev.c
- Adds a vf argument to all port profile functions.
For 802.1Qbh devices, the port profile calls can use a vf argument if
passed by the caller. If the vf argument is -1 it will try to derive the vf
if the device passed is a virtual function.
For 802.1Qbg devices, This patch introduces a null check for the device
argument because during port profile assignment on a hostdev, this argument
can be null.
Signed-off-by: Roopa Prabhu <roprabhu@cisco.com>
This patch adds the following:
- functions to set and get vf configs
- Functions to replace and store vf configs (Only mac address is handled today.
But the functions can be easily extended for vlans and other vf configs)
- function to dump link dev info (This is moved from virnetdevvportprofile.c)
Signed-off-by: Roopa Prabhu <roprabhu@cisco.com>
pciDeviceGetVirtualFunctionInfo returns pf netdevice name and virtual
function index for a given vf. This is just a wrapper around existing functions
to return vf's pf and vf_index with one api call
pciConfigAddressToSysfsfile returns the sysfile pci device link
from a 'struct pci_config_address'
Signed-off-by: Roopa Prabhu <roprabhu@cisco.com>
qemuDomainAttachNetDevice
- re-ordered some things at start of function because
networkAllocateActualDevice should always be run and a slot
in def->nets always allocated, but host_net_add isn't needed
if the actual type is hostdev.
- if actual type is hostdev, defer to
qemuDomainAttachHostDevice (which will reach up to the NetDef
for things like MAC address when necessary). After return
from qemuDomainAttachHostDevice, slip directly to cleanup,
since the rest of the function is specific to emulated net
devices.
- put assignment of new NetDef into expanded def->nets down
below cleanup: (but only on success) since it is also needed
for emulated and hostdev net devices.
qemuDomainDetachHostDevice
- after locating the exact device to detach, check if it's a
network device and, if so, use toplevel
qemuDomainDetachNetDevice instead so that the def->nets list
is properly updated, and 'actual device' properly returned to
network pool if appropriate. Otherwise, for normal hostdevs,
call the lower level qemuDomainDetachThisDevice.
qemuDomainDetachNetDevice
- This is where it gets a bit tricky. After locating the device
on the def->nets list, if the network device type == hostdev,
call the *lower level* qemuDomainDetachThisDevice (which will
reach back up to the parent net device for MAC address /
virtualport when appropriate, then clear the device out of
def->hostdevs) before skipping past all the emulated
net-device-specific code to cleanup:, where the network
device is removed from def->nets, and the network device
object is freed.
In short, any time a hostdev-type network device is detached, we must
go through the toplevel virDomaineDetachNetDevice function first and
last, to make sure 1) the def->nnets list is properly managed, and 2)
any device allocated with networkAllocateActualDevice is properly
freed. At the same time, in the middle we need to go through the
lower-level vidDomainDetach*This*HostDevice to be sure that 1) the
def->hostdevs list is properly managed, 2) the PCI device is properly
detached from the guest and reattached to the host (if appropriate),
and 3) any higher level teardown is called at the appropriate time, by
reaching back up to the NetDef config (part (3) will be covered in a
separate patch).
This patch makes sure that each network device ("interface") of
type='hostdev' appears on both the hostdevs list and the nets list of
the virDomainDef, and it modifies the qemu driver startup code so that
these devices will be presented to qemu on the commandline as hostdevs
rather than as network devices.
It does not add support for hotplug of these type of devices, or code
to honor the <mac address> or <virtualport> given in the config (both
of those will be done in separate patches).
Once each device is placed on both lists, much of what this patch does
is modify places in the code that traverse all the device lists so
that these hybrid devices are only acted on once - either along with
the other hostdevs, or along with the other network interfaces. (In
many cases, only one of the lists is traversed / a specific operation
is performed on only one type of device. In those instances, the code
can remain unchanged.)
There is one special case - when building the commandline, interfaces
are allowed to proceed all the way through
networkAllocateActualDevice() before deciding to skip the rest of
netdev-specific processing - this is so that (once we have support for
networks with pools of hostdev devices) we can get the actual device
allocated, then rely on the loop processing all hostdevs to generate
the correct commandline.
(NB: <interface type='hostdev'> is only supported for PCI network
devices that are SR-IOV Virtual Functions (VF). Standard PCI[e] and
USB devices, and even the Physical Functions (PF) of SR-IOV devices
can only be assigned to a guest using the more basic <hostdev> device
entry. This limitation is mostly due to the fact that non-SR-IOV
ethernet devices tend to lose mac address configuration whenever the
card is reset, which happens when a card is assigned to a guest;
SR-IOV VFs fortunately don't suffer the same problem.)
This is the new interface type that sets up an SR-IOV PCI network
device to be assigned to the guest with PCI passthrough after
initializing some network device-specific things from the config
(e.g. MAC address, virtualport profile parameters). Here is an example
of the syntax:
<interface type='hostdev' managed='yes'>
<source>
<address type='pci' domain='0' bus='0' slot='4' function='3'/>
</source>
<mac address='00:11:22:33:44:55'/>
<address type='pci' domain='0' bus='0' slot='7' function='0'/>
</interface>
This would assign the PCI card from bus 0 slot 4 function 3 on the
host, to bus 0 slot 7 function 0 on the guest, but would first set the
MAC address of the card to 00:11:22:33:44:55.
NB: The parser and formatter don't care if the PCI card being
specified is a standard single function network adapter, or a virtual
function (VF) of an SR-IOV capable network adapter, but the upcoming
code that implements the back end of this config will work *only* with
SR-IOV VFs. This is because modifying the mac address of a standard
network adapter prior to assigning it to a guest is pointless - part
of the device reset that occurs during that process will reset the MAC
address to the value programmed into the card's firmware.
Although it's not supported by any of libvirt's hypervisor drivers,
usb network hostdevs are also supported in the parser and formatter
for completeness and consistency. <source> syntax is identical to that
for plain <hostdev> devices, except that the <address> element should
have "type='usb'" added if bus/device are specified:
<interface type='hostdev'>
<source>
<address type='usb' bus='0' device='4'/>
</source>
<mac address='00:11:22:33:44:55'/>
</interface>
If the vendor/product form of usb specification is used, type='usb'
is implied:
<interface type='hostdev'>
<source>
<vendor id='0x0012'/>
<product id='0x24dd'/>
</source>
<mac address='00:11:22:33:44:55'/>
</interface>
Again, the upcoming patch to fill in the backend of this functionality
will log an error and fail with "Unsupported Config" if you actually
try to assign a USB network adapter to a guest using <interface
type='hostdev'> - just use a standard <hostdev> entry in that case
(and also for single-port PCI adapters).
This refactoring is necessary to support hotplug detach of
type=hostdev network devices, but needs to be in a separate patch to
make potential debugging of regressions more practical.
Rather than the lowest level functions searching for a matching
device, the search is now done in the toplevel function, and an
intermediate-level function (qemuDomainDetachThisHostDevice()), which
expects that the device's entry is already found, is called (this
intermediate function will be called by qemuDomainDetachNetDevice() in
order to support detach of type=hostdev net devices)
This patch should result in 0 differences in functionality.
Three new functions useful in other files:
virDomainHostdevInsert:
Add a new hostdev at the end of the array. This would more sensibly be
called virDomainHostdevAppend, but the existing functions for other
types of devices are called Insert.
virDomainHostdevRemove:
Eliminates one entry from the hostdevs array, but doesn't free it;
patterned after the code at the end of the two
qemuDomainDetachHostXXXDevice functions (and also other pre-existing
virDomainXXXRemove functions for other device types).
virDomainHostdevFind:
This function is patterned from the search loops at the top of
qemuDomainDetachHostPciDevice and qemuDomainDetachHostUsbDevice, and
will be used to re-factor those (and other detach-related) functions.
To shorten some new code that accesses the many fields within the
subsys struct of a hostdev, create a separate toplevel, typedefed
virDomainHostdevSubsys struct so that we can define temporary pointers
to the subsys part.
The parent can be any type of device. It defaults to type=none, and a
NULL pointer. The intent is that if a hostdevdef is contained in the
def for a higher level device (e.g. virDomainNetDef), hostdev->parent
will point to the higher level device, and type will be set to that
type of device. This way, during attach and detach of the device,
parent can be checked, and appropriate callouts made to do higher
level device initialization (e.g. setting MAC address).
Also, although these hostdevs with parents will be added to a domain's
hostdevs list, they will be treated slightly differently when
traversing the list, e.g. virDomainHostdefDefFree for a hostdev that
has a parent doesn't need to be called (and will be a NOP); it will
simply be removed from the list (since the parent device object is in
its own type-specific list, and will be freed from there).
In an upcoming patch, virDomainNetDef will acquire a
virDomainHostdevDef, and the <interface> XML will take on some of the
elements of a <hostdev>. To avoid duplicating the code for parsing and
formatting the <source> element (which will be nearly identical in
these two cases), this patch factors those parts out of the
HostdevDef's parse and format functions, and puts them into separate
helper functions that are now called by the HostdevDef
parser/formatter, and will soon be called by the NetDef
parser/formatter.
One change in behavior - previously virDomainHostdevDefParseXML() had
diverged from current common coding practice by logging an error and
failing if it found any subelements of <hostdev> other than those it
understood (standard libvirt practice is to ignore/discard unknown
elements and attributes during parse). The new helper function ignores
unknown elements, and thus so does the new
virDomainHostdevDefParseXML.
In order to allow for a virDomainHostdevDef that uses the
virDomainDeviceInfo of a "higher level" device (such as a
virDomainNetDef), this patch changes the virDomainDeviceInfo in the
HostdevDef into a virDomainDeviceInfoPtr. Rather than adding checks
all over the code to check for a null info, we just guarantee that it
is always valid. The new function virDomainHostdevDefAlloc() allocates
a virDomainDeviceInfo and plugs it in, and virDomainHostdevDefFree()
makes sure it is freed.
There were 4 places allocating virDomainHostdevDefs, all of them
parsers of one sort or another, and those have all had their
VIR_ALLOC(hostdev) changed to virDomainHostdevDefAlloc(). Other than
that, and the new functions, all the rest of the changes are just
mechanical removals of "&" or changing "." to "->".
There will be cases where the iterator callback will need to know the
type of the device whose info is being operated on, and possibly even
need to use some of the device's config. This patch adds a
virDomainDeviceDefPtr to the args of every callback, and fills it in
appropriately as the devices are iterated through.
The virDomainDeviceInfoPtrs in qemuCollectPCIAddress and
qemuComparePCIDevice are named "dev" and "dev1", but those functions
will be changed (in order to match a change in the args sent to
virDomainDeviceInfoIterate() callback args) to contain a
virDomainDeviceDefPtr device.
This patch renames "dev" to "info" (and "dev[n]" to "info[n]") to
avoid later confusion.
This patch is only code movement + adding some forward definitions of
typedefs.
virDomainHostdevDef (not just a pointer to it, but an actual object)
will be needed in virDomainNetDef and virDomainActualNetDef, so it
must be relocated earlier in the file.
Likewise, virDomainDeviceDef will be needed in virDomainHostdevDef, so
it must be moved up even earlier. This, in turn, creates a forward
reference problem, but fortunately only with pointers to other device
types, so their typedefs can be moved up in the file, eliminating the
problem.
Not all device types were represented in virDomainDeviceType, so some
types of devices couldn't be represented in a virDomainDeviceDef
(which requires a different type of pointer in the union for each
different kind of device).
Since serial, parallel, channel, and console devices are all
virDomainChrDef, and the virDomainDeviceType is never used to produce
a string from the type (and only used in the other direction
internally to code, never to produce XML), I only added one "CHR"
type, which is associated with "virDomainChrDefPtr chr" in the union.
Commit 723d5c (added after the release of 0.9.10) adds a
NetlinkEventClient for each interface sent to
virNetDevMacVLanCreateWithVPortProfile. This should only be done if
the interface actually *has* a virtPortProfile, otherwise the event
handler would be a NOP. The bigger problem is that part of the setup
to create the NetlinkEventClient is to do a memcpy of virtPortProfile
- if it's NULL, this triggers a segv.
This patch just qualifies the code that adds the client - if
virtPortProfile is NULL, it's skipped.
Qemu supports sizing by bytes; we shouldn't force the user to
round up if they really wanted an unaligned total size.
* include/libvirt/libvirt.h.in (VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_RESIZE_BYTES):
New flag.
* src/libvirt.c (virDomainBlockResize): Document it.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.c (qemuMonitorJSONBlockResize): Take
size in bytes.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_text.c (qemuMonitorTextBlockResize):
Likewise. Pass bytes, not megabytes, to monitor.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainBlockResize): Implement new
flag.
No matter what cache mode is used, readonly disks are always safe wrt
migration. Shared disks are required to be readonly or to disable
host-side cache, which makes them safe as well.
A multi-threaded client with event loop may crash if one of its threads
closes a connection while event loop is in the middle of sending
keep-alive message (either request or response). The right place for it
is inside virNetClientIOEventLoop() between poll() and
virNetClientLock(). We should only close a connection directly if no-one
is using it and defer the closing to the last user otherwise. So far we
only did so if the close was initiated by keep-alive timeout.
Building virt-aa-helper with dtrace probes enabled, ldd complained about
undefined references:
./.libs/libvirt_util.a(libvirt_util_la-event_poll.o):(.note.stapsdt+0x24):
undefined reference to `libvirt_event_poll_purge_timeout_semaphore'
...
Lets say I got a volume with '1G' allocation and '10G' capacity. The
available space in the parent pool is '5G'. With the current check for
overcapacity, I can only try to resize to <= '6G'. You see the problem?
With an additional new bool added to determine whether or not to
discourage the use of the supplied MAC address by the bridge itself,
virNetDevTapCreateInBridgePort had three booleans (well, 2 bools and
an int used as a bool) in the arg list, which made it increasingly
difficult to follow what was going on. This patch combines those three
into a single flags arg, which not only shortens the arg list, but
makes it more self-documenting.
When a tap device for a domain is created and attached to a bridge,
the first byte of the tap device MAC address is set to 0xFE, while the
rest is set to match the MAC address that will be presented to the
guest as its network device MAC address. Setting this high value in
the tap's MAC address discourages the bridge from using the tap
device's MAC address as the bridge's own MAC address (Linux bridges
always take on the lowest numbered MAC address of all attached devices
as their own).
In one case within libvirt, a tap device is created and attached to
the bridge with the intent that its MAC address be taken on by the
bridge as its own (this is used to assure that the bridge has a fixed
MAC address to prevent network outages created by the bridge MAC
address "flapping" as guests are started and stopped). In this case,
the first byte of the mac address is *not* altered to 0xFE.
In the current code, callers to virNetDevTapCreateInBridgePort each
make the MAC address modification themselves before calling, which
leads to code duplication, and also prevents lower level functions
from knowing the real MAC address being used by the guest. The problem
here is that openvswitch bridges must be informed about this MAC
address, or they will be unable to pass traffic to/from the guest.
This patch centralizes the location of the MAC address "0xFE fixup"
into virNetDevTapCreateInBridgePort(), meaning 1) callers of this
function no longer need the extra strange bit of code, and 2)
bitNetDevTapCreateBridgeInPort itself now is called with the guest's
unaltered MAC address, and can pass it on, unmodified, to
virNetDevOpenvswitchAddPort.
There is no other behavioral change created by this patch.
Nuke the last vestiges of printing pid_t values with the wrong
types, at least in code compiled on mingw64. There may be other
places, but for now they are only compiled on systems where the
existing %d doesn't trigger gcc warnings.
* src/rpc/virnetsocket.c (virNetSocketNew): Use %lld and casting,
rather than assuming any particular int type for pid_t.
* src/util/command.c (virCommandRunAsync, virPidWait)
(virPidAbort): Likewise.
(verify): Drop a now stale assertion.
No thanks to 64-bit windows, with 64-bit pid_t, we have to avoid
constructs like 'int pid'. Our API in libvirt-qemu cannot be
changed without breaking ABI; but then again, libvirt-qemu can
only be used on systems that support UNIX sockets, which rules
out Windows (even if qemu could be compiled there) - so for all
points on the call chain that interact with this API decision,
we require a different variable name to make it clear that we
audited the use for safety.
Adding a syntax-check rule only solves half the battle; anywhere
that uses printf on a pid_t still needs to be converted, but that
will be a separate patch.
* cfg.mk (sc_correct_id_types): New syntax check.
* src/libvirt-qemu.c (virDomainQemuAttach): Document why we didn't
use pid_t for pid, and validate for overflow.
* include/libvirt/libvirt-qemu.h (virDomainQemuAttach): Tweak name
for syntax check.
* src/vmware/vmware_conf.c (vmwareExtractPid): Likewise.
* src/driver.h (virDrvDomainQemuAttach): Likewise.
* tools/virsh.c (cmdQemuAttach): Likewise.
* src/remote/qemu_protocol.x (qemu_domain_attach_args): Likewise.
* src/qemu_protocol-structs (qemu_domain_attach_args): Likewise.
* src/util/cgroup.c (virCgroupPidCode, virCgroupKillInternal):
Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c(qemuParseProcFileStrings): Likewise.
(qemuParseCommandLinePid): Use pid_t for pid.
* daemon/libvirtd.c (daemonForkIntoBackground): Likewise.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h (_virDomainObj): Likewise.
* src/probes.d (rpc_socket_new): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.h (qemuParseCommandLinePid): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemudGetProcessInfo, qemuDomainAttach):
Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessAttach): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.h (qemuProcessAttach): Likewise.
* src/uml/uml_driver.c (umlGetProcessInfo): Likewise.
* src/util/virnetdev.h (virNetDevSetNamespace): Likewise.
* src/util/virnetdev.c (virNetDevSetNamespace): Likewise.
* tests/testutils.c (virtTestCaptureProgramOutput): Likewise.
* src/conf/storage_conf.h (_virStoragePerms): Use mode_t, uid_t,
and gid_t rather than int.
* src/security/security_dac.c (virSecurityDACSetOwnership): Likewise.
* src/conf/storage_conf.c (virStorageDefParsePerms): Avoid
compiler warning.
Commit 7c90026 added #include "conf/domain_conf.h" to
util/virrandom.c. Fortunately it didn't actually use anything from
domain_conf.h, since as far as I'm aware, files in util aren't allowed
to reference anything in conf (although the opposite is allowed). So
this #include is unnecessary.
I verified it still compiles with the line removed, but have placed a
one day moratorium on me doing any "trivial rule" pushes, so will
wait for someone else to verify/ACK before pushing.
This actually wires up the new optional parameter to block_stream:
http://wiki.qemu.org/Features/LiveBlockMigration/ImageStreamingAPI
The error checking is still sparse, since libvirt must not use
qemu-img or header probing on a qcow2 file in use by qemu to
check if the backing file name is valid; so for now, libvirt is
relying on qemu to diagnose an incorrect backing name. Fixing this
will require libvirt to track the entire backing file chain at the
time qemu is started and keeps it updated with snapshot and pull
operations.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.c (qemuMonitorJSONBlockJob): Add
parameter, and update callers.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.h (qemuMonitorJSONBlockJob): Update
signature.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.h (qemuMonitorBlockJob): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainBlockJobImpl): Update caller.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.c (qemuMonitorBlockJob): Likewise.
Block job commands are not part of upstream qemu until 1.1; and
proper support of job completion and cancellation depends on being
able to receive QMP events, which implies the JSON monitor.
Additionally, some early versions of block job commands were
backported to RHEL qemu, but these versions lacked asynchronous
job cancellation and partial block pull, so there are several
patches that will still be needed in this area of libvirt code
to support both flavors of block job commands.
Due to earlier patches in libvirt, we are guaranteed that all versions
of qemu that support block job commands already require libvirt to
use the JSON monitor. That means that the text version of block jobs
will not be used, and having to refactor two copies of the block job
handlers makes no sense. So instead, we delete the text handlers.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.c (qemuMonitorBlockJob): Drop text monitor
support.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_text.h (qemuMonitorTextBlockJob): Delete.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_text.c (qemuMonitorTextParseBlockJobOne)
(qemuMonitorTextParseBlockJob, qemuMonitorTextBlockJob):
Likewise.
Add de-association handling for 802.1qbg (vepa) via lldpad
netlink messages. Also adds the possibility to perform an
association request without waiting for a confirmation.
Signed-off-by: D. Herrendoerfer <d.herrendoerfer@herrendoerfer.name>
This code adds a netlink event interface to libvirt.
It is based upon the event_poll code and makes use of
it. An event is generated for each netlink message sent
to the libvirt pid.
Signed-off-by: D. Herrendoerfer <d.herrendoerfer@herrendoerfer.name>
In qemu there are 2 cpu models (cpu64-rhel5 and cpu64-rhel6) not
supported by libvirt. This patch adds the support with the flags
specifications from /usr/share/qemu-kvm/cpu-model/cpu-x86_64.conf
The only difference is that AMD-specific features are removed so
the processor type is not vendor-specific. Those features are either
emulated or ignored by qemu if host CPU doesn't support them.
This call to virDomainDeviceDefParse is both unnecessary (since
it will again be called at the top of the immediately following if(),
and if not there, then at the top of the if following that), but it
also creates a leak of one virDomainDeviceDef and one [whatever type
of device the DeviceDef is pointing to; probably a virDomainDiskDef]
in the case that the function has been called with
VIR_DOMAIN_DEVICE_MODIFY_CONFIG (the second parse will overwrite the
devicedef that was just created).
For any disk controller model which is not "lsilogic", the command
line will be like:
-drive file=/dev/sda,if=none,id=drive-scsi0-0-3-0,format=raw \
-device scsi-disk,bus=scsi0.0,channel=0,scsi-id=3,lun=0,i\
drive=drive-scsi0-0-3-0,id=scsi0-0-3-0
The relationship between the libvirt address attrs and the qdev
properties are (controller model is not "lsilogic"; strings
inside <> represent libvirt adress attrs):
bus=scsi<controller>.0
channel=<bus>
scsi-id=<target>
lun=<unit>
* src/qemu/qemu_command.h: (New param "virDomainDefPtr def"
for function qemuBuildDriveDevStr; new param "virDomainDefPtr
vmdef" for function qemuAssignDeviceDiskAlias. Both for
virDomainDiskFindControllerModel's use).
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c:
- New param "virDomainDefPtr def" for qemuAssignDeviceDiskAliasCustom.
For virDomainDiskFindControllerModel's use, if the disk bus is "scsi"
and the controller model is not "lsilogic", "target" is one part of
the alias name.
- According change on qemuAssignDeviceDiskAlias and qemuBuildDriveDevStr
* src/qemu/qemu_hotplug.c:
- Changes to be consistent with declarations of qemuAssignDeviceDiskAlias
qemuBuildDriveDevStr, and qemuBuildControllerDevStr.
* tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-pseries-vio-user-assigned.args,
tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-pseries-vio.args: Update the
generated command line.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h: Add new member "target" to struct
_virDomainDeviceDriveAddress.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c: Parse and format "target"
* Lots of tests (.xml) in tests/domainsnapshotxml2xmlout,
tests/qemuxml2argvdata, tests/qemuxml2xmloutdata, and
tests/vmx2xmldata/ are modified for newly introduced
attribute "target" for address of "drive" type.
KVM will be able to use a PCI SCSI controller even on POWER. Let
the user specify the vSCSI controller by other means than a default.
After this patch, the QEMU driver will actually look at the model
and reject anything but auto, lsilogic and ibmvscsi.
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Osier Yang <jyang@redhat.com>
In qemuDomainAttachNetDevice, the guest's tap interface has only been
attached to the bridge if iface_connected is true. It's possible for
an error to occur prior to that happening, and previously we would
attempt to remove the tap interface from the bridge even if it hadn't
been attached.
QMP commands don't need to be escaped since converting them to json
also escapes special characters. When a QMP command fails, however,
libvirt falls back to HMP commands. These fallback functions
(qemuMonitorText*) do their own escaping, and pass the result directly
to qemuMonitorHMPCommandWithFd. If the monitor is in json mode, these
pre-escaped commands will be escaped again when converted to json,
which can result in the wrong arguments being sent.
For example, a filename test\file would be sent in json as
test\\file.
This prevented attaching an image file with a " or \ in its name in
qemu 1.0.50, and also broke rbd attachment (which uses backslashes to
escape some internal arguments.)
Reported-by: Masuko Tomoya <tomoya.masuko@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Josh Durgin <josh.durgin@dreamhost.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
This patch fixes console corruption, that happens if two concurrent
sessions are opened for a single console on a domain. Result of this
corruption was that each of the console streams recieved just a part
of the data written to the pipe so every console rendered unusable.
New helper function for safe console handling is used to establish the
console stream connection. This function ensures that no other libvirt
client is using the console (with the ability to disconnect consoles of
libvirt clients) and that no UUCP style lockfile is placed on the PTY
device.
* src/qemu/qemu_domain.h
- add data structure to domain's private data dealing with
console connections
* src/qemu/qemu_domain.c:
- allocate/free domain's console data structure
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c
- use the new helper function for console handling
This patch adds a set of functions used in creating console streams for
domains using PTYs and ensures mutually exclusive access to the PTYs.
If mutually exclusive access is not used, two clients may open the same
console, which results in corruption on both clients as both of them
race to read data from the PTY.
Two approaches are used to ensure this:
1) Internal data structure holding open PTYs.
This is used internally and enables the user to forcibly
terminate another console connection eg. when somebody leaves
the console open on another host.
2) UUCP style lock files:
This uses UUCP lock files according to the FHS
( http://www.pathname.com/fhs/pub/fhs-2.3.html#VARLOCKLOCKFILES )
to check if other programs (like minicom) are not using the pty
device of the console.
This feature is disabled by default and may be enabled using
configure parameter
--with-console-lock-files=/path/to/lock/file/directory
or --with-console-lock-files=auto (which tries to infer the
location from OS used (currently only linux).
On usual linux systems, normal users may not write to the
/var/lock directory containing the locks. This poses problems
while in session mode. If the current user has no access to the
lockfile directory, check for presence of the file is still
done, but no lock file is created. This does NOT result in an
error.
This patch adds another callback to a FDstream object. The original
callback is used by the daemon stream driver to handle events.
This callback is called if and only if the stream is about to be closed.
This might be used to handle cleanup steps after a fdstream exits. This
will be used later on in ensuring mutually exclusive access to consoles.
* src/fdstream.c:
- emit the callback, when stream is being closed
- add data structures needed to handle the callback
- add function to register callback
* src/fdstream.h:
- define function prototypes for the callback
This patch causes the fdstream driver to call the stream event callback
if virStreamAbort() is called on a stream using this driver.
A remote handler for a stream can only detect changes via stream events,
so this event callback is necessary in order to enable a daemon to abort
a stream in such a way that the client will see the change.
* src/fdstream.c:
- modify close function to call stream event callback
This patch adds a set of flags to be used with the virDomainOpenConsole
API call to specify if the user wishes to interrupt an existing console
session or just to try open a new one.
VIR_DOMAIN_CONSOLE_SAFE - specifies that the console connection should
be opened only if the hypervisor supports
mutually exclusive access to console devices
VIR_DOMAIN_CONSOLE_FORCE - specifies that the caller wishes to interrupt
existing session and force a creation of a
new one.
This patch changes behavior of virPidFileRead to enable passing NULL as
path to the binary the pid file should be checked against to skip this
check. This enables using this function for reading files that have same
semantics as pid files, but belong to unknown processes.
using 'system-wakeup' monitor command. It is supported only in JSON,
as we are enabling it if possible. Moreover, this command is available
in qemu-1.1+ which definitely has JSON.
Function xmlParseURI does not remove square brackets around IPv6
address when parsing. One of the solutions is making wrappers around
functions working with xmlURI*. This assures that uri->server will be
always properly assigned and it doesn't have to be changed when used
on some new place in the code.
For this purpose, functions virParseURI and virSaveURI were
added. These function are wrappers around xmlParseURI and xmlSaveUri
respectively.
Also there is one new syntax check function to prohibit these functions
anywhere else.
File changes:
- src/util/viruri.h -- declaration
- src/util/viruri.c -- definition
- src/libvirt_private.syms -- symbol export
- src/Makefile.am -- added source and header files
- cfg.mk -- added sc_prohibit_xmlURI
- all others -- ID name and include fixes
The /usr/include/python/pyconfig.h file pollutes the global
namespace with a huge number of HAVE_XXX and WITH_XXX
defines. These change what we detected in our own config.h
In particular if you try to build without DTrace, python's
headers turn it back on with predictable fail.
THe hack to workaround this is to rename WITH_DTRACE to
WITH_DTRACE_PROBES to avoid the namespace clash
It's possible to disable SPICE TLS in qemu.conf. When this happens,
libvirt ignores any SPICE TLS port or x509 directory that may have
been set when it builds the qemu command line to use. However, it's
not ignoring the secure channels that may have been set and adds
tls-channel arguments to qemu command line.
Current qemu versions don't report an error when this happens, and try to use
TLS for the specified channels.
Before this patch
<domain type='kvm'>
<name>auto-tls-port</name>
<memory>65536</memory>
<os>
<type arch='x86_64' machine='pc'>hvm</type>
</os>
<devices>
<graphics type='spice' port='5900' tlsPort='-1' autoport='yes' listen='0' ke
<listen type='address' address='0'/>
<channel name='main' mode='secure'/>
<channel name='inputs' mode='secure'/>
</graphics>
</devices>
</domain>
generates
-spice port=5900,addr=0,disable-ticketing,tls-channel=main,tls-channel=inputs
and starts QEMU.
After this patch, an error is reported if a TLS port is set in the XML
or if secure channels are specified but TLS is disabled in qemu.conf.
This is the behaviour the oVirt people (where I spotted this issue) said
they would expect.
This fixes bug #790436
This patch adds support for vmx files with empty networkName
values (which is the case for vmx generated by Workstation).
It also adds support for vmx containing NATed network interfaces.
Update test suite accordingly
[forwarding this here from RH bug #796732]
When creating a network (virsh net-create) with an erroneous XML
containing an empty <name> element, the error message is misleading:
error: Failed to create network from foo.xml
error: missing domain name information
It took me a bit of time to figure out that it was the *network* name
that was missing (I generate this xml and didn't look at it, first).
I realized that the same message is used for missing name when creating
a domain, network, or device node.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=795656 mentions
that a graceful destroy request can time out, meaning that the
error message is user-visible and should be more appropriate
than just internal error.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainDestroyFlags): Swap error type.
Migrating domains with disks using cache != none is unsafe unless the
disk images are stored on coherent clustered filesystem. Thus we forbid
migrating such domains unless VIR_MIGRATE_UNSAFE flags is used.
This patch adds VIR_MIGRATE_UNSAFE flag for migration APIs and new
VIR_ERR_MIGRATION_UNSAFE error code. The error code should be returned
whenever migrating a domain is considered unsafe (e.g., it's configured
in a way that does not ensure data integrity once it is migrated).
VIR_MIGRATE_UNSAFE flag may be used to force migration even though it
would normally be considered unsafe and forbidden.
AC_CHECK_PROG checks for program in given path. However, if it doesn't
exists, [variable] is set to [value-if-not-found]. We don't want this
to be the empty string in case of 'modprobe' and 'scrub' as we want to
fallback to runtime detection.
Adding "Expect:" to the header list stops libcurl from sending a
Expect header at all.
Before, a dummy Expect header was added that might confuse HTTP
proxies and result in HTTP error code 417 being reported.
Previously we would have:
"os type 'hvm' & arch 'idontexist' combination is not supported"
Now we get
"No guest options available for arch 'idontexist'"
or if options available but guest OS type not applicable:
"No os type 'xen' available for arch 'x86_64'"
* src/util/virfile.h: the virFileWrapperFdFlags being defined as
a globa variable instead of a type ended up generating a duplicate
symbol error.
* AUTHORS: added Lincoln Myers
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuFindAgentConfig): avoid crash libvirtd due to
deref a NULL pointer.
* How to reproduce?
1. virsh edit the following xml into guest configuration:
<channel type='pty'>
<target type='virtio'/>
</channel>
2. virsh start <domain>
or
% virt-install -n foo -r 1024 --disk path=/var/lib/libvirt/images/foo.img,size=1 \
--channel pty,target_type=virtio -l <installation tree>
Signed-off-by: Alex Jia <ajia@redhat.com>
When migrating a qemu domain, we enter the monitor, send some commands,
try to connect to destination qemu, send other commands, end exit the
monitor. However, if we couldn't connect to destination qemu we forgot
to exit the monitor.
Bug introduced by commit d9d518b1c8.
In case libvirtd cannot detect host CPU model (which may happen if it
runs inside a virtual machine), the daemon is likely to segfault when
starting a new qemu domain. It segfaults when domain XML asks for host
(either model or passthrough) CPU or does not ask for any specific CPU
model at all.
Currently, if scrub (used for wiping algorithms) is not present
at compile time, we don't support any other wiping algorithms than
zeroing, even if it was installed later. Switch to runtime detection
instead.
Bug introduced in commit 35abced. On an inactive domain,
$ virsh snapshot-create-as dom snap
$ virsh snapshot-create dom
$ virsh snapshot-create dom
$ virsh snapshot-delete --children dom snap
could crash libvirtd, due to a use-after-free that results
when the callback freed the current element in the iteration.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainSnapshotForEachChild)
(virDomainSnapshotActOnDescendant): Allow iteration to delete
current child.
This patch allows libvirt to add interfaces to already
existing Open vSwitch bridges. The following syntax in
domain XML file can be used:
<interface type='bridge'>
<mac address='52:54:00:d0:3f:f2'/>
<source bridge='ovsbr'/>
<virtualport type='openvswitch'>
<parameters interfaceid='921a80cd-e6de-5a2e-db9c-ab27f15a6e1d'/>
</virtualport>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x00'
slot='0x03' function='0x0'/>
</interface>
or if libvirt should auto-generate the interfaceid use
following syntax:
<interface type='bridge'>
<mac address='52:54:00:d0:3f:f2'/>
<source bridge='ovsbr'/>
<virtualport type='openvswitch'>
</virtualport>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x00'
slot='0x03' function='0x0'/>
</interface>
It is also possible to pass an optional profileid. To do that
use following syntax:
<interface type='bridge'>
<source bridge='ovsbr'/>
<mac address='00:55:1a:65:a2:8d'/>
<virtualport type='openvswitch'>
<parameters interfaceid='921a80cd-e6de-5a2e-db9c-ab27f15a6e1d'
profileid='test-profile'/>
</virtualport>
</interface>
To create Open vSwitch bridge install Open vSwitch and
run the following command:
ovs-vsctl add-br ovsbr
The current default method of terminating the qemu process is to send
a SIGTERM, wait for up to 1.6 seconds for it to cleanly shutdown, then
send a SIGKILL and wait for up to 1.4 seconds more for the process to
terminate. This is problematic because occasionally 1.6 seconds is not
long enough for the qemu process to flush its disk buffers, so the
guest's disk ends up in an inconsistent state.
Since this only occasionally happens when the timeout prior to SIGKILL
is 1.6 seconds, this patch increases that timeout to 10 seconds. At
the very least, this should reduce the occurrence from "occasionally"
to "extremely rarely". (Once SIGKILL is sent, it waits another 5
seconds for the process to die before returning).
Note that in the cases where it takes less than this for qemu to
shutdown cleanly, libvirt will *not* wait for any longer than it would
without this patch - qemuProcessKill polls the process and returns as
soon as it is gone.
This patch is based on an earlier patch by Eric Blake which was never
committed:
https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2011-November/msg00243.html
Aside from rebasing, this patch only drops the driver lock once (prior
to the first time the function sleeps), then leaves it dropped until
it returns (Eric's patch would drop and re-acquire the lock around
each call to sleep).
At the time Eric sent his patch, the response (from Dan Berrange) was
that, while it wasn't a good thing to be holding the driver lock while
sleeping, we really need to rethink locking wrt the driver object,
switching to a finer-grained approach that locks individual items
within the driver object separately to allow for greater concurrency.
This is a good plan, and at the time it made sense to not apply the
patch because there was no known bug related to the driver lock being
held in this function.
However, we now know that the length of the wait in qemuProcessKill is
sometimes too short to allow the qemu process to fully flush its disk
cache before SIGKILL is sent, so we need to lengthen the timeout (in
order to improve the situation with management applications until they
can be updated to use the new VIR_DOMAIN_DESTROY_GRACEFUL flag added
in commit 72f8a7f197). But, if we
lengthen the timeout, we also lengthen the amount of time that all
other threads in libvirtd are essentially blocked from doing anything
(since just about everything needs to acquire the driver lock, if only
for long enough to get a pointer to a domain).
The solution is to modify qemuProcessKill to drop the driver lock
while sleeping, as proposed in Eric's patch. Then we can increase the
timeout with a clear conscience, and thus at least lower the chances
that someone running with existing management software will suffer the
consequence's of qemu's disk cache not being flushed.
In the meantime, we still should work on Dan's proposal to make
locking within the driver object more fine grained.
(NB: although I couldn't find any instance where qemuProcessKill() was
called with no jobs active for the domain (or some other guarantee
that the current thread had at least one refcount on the domain
object), this patch still follows Eric's method of temporarily adding
a ref prior to unlocking the domain object, because I couldn't
convince myself 100% that this was the case.)
In the future (my next patch in fact) we may want to make
decisions depending on qemu having a monitor command or not.
Therefore, we want to set qemuCaps flag instead of querying
on the monitor each time we are about to make that decision.
When blkdeviotune was first committed in 0.9.8, we had the limitation
that setting one value reset all others. But bytes and iops should
be relatively independent. Furthermore, setting tuning values on
a live domain followed by dumpxml did not output the new settings.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDiskPathToAlias): Add parameter, and
update callers.
(qemuDomainSetBlockIoTune): Don't lose previous unrelated
settings. Make live changes reflect to dumpxml output.
* tools/virsh.pod (blkdeviotune): Update documentation.
Detected by valgrind. Leaks are introduced in commit c1b2264.
* src/remote/remote_driver.c (doRemoteOpen): free client program memory in failure path.
* How to reproduce?
% valgrind -v --leak-check=full virsh -c qemu:
* Actual result
==3969== 40 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 8 of 28
==3969== at 0x4A04A28: calloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:467)
==3969== by 0x4C89C41: virAlloc (memory.c:101)
==3969== by 0x4D5A236: virNetClientProgramNew (virnetclientprogram.c:60)
==3969== by 0x4D47AB4: doRemoteOpen (remote_driver.c:658)
==3969== by 0x4D49FFF: remoteOpen (remote_driver.c:871)
==3969== by 0x4D13373: do_open (libvirt.c:1196)
==3969== by 0x4D14535: virConnectOpenAuth (libvirt.c:1422)
==3969== by 0x425627: main (virsh.c:18537)
==3969==
==3969== 40 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 9 of 28
==3969== at 0x4A04A28: calloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:467)
==3969== by 0x4C89C41: virAlloc (memory.c:101)
==3969== by 0x4D5A236: virNetClientProgramNew (virnetclientprogram.c:60)
==3969== by 0x4D47AD7: doRemoteOpen (remote_driver.c:664)
==3969== by 0x4D49FFF: remoteOpen (remote_driver.c:871)
==3969== by 0x4D13373: do_open (libvirt.c:1196)
==3969== by 0x4D14535: virConnectOpenAuth (libvirt.c:1422)
==3969== by 0x425627: main (virsh.c:18537)
==3969==
==3969== LEAK SUMMARY:
==3969== definitely lost: 80 bytes in 2 blocks
Signed-off-by: Alex Jia <ajia@redhat.com>
The auto-generated WWN comply with the new addressing schema of WWN:
<quote>
the first nibble is either hex 5 or 6 followed by a 3-byte vendor
identifier and 36 bits for a vendor-specified serial number.
</quote>
We choose hex 5 for the first nibble. And for the 3-bytes vendor ID,
we uses the OUI according to underlying hypervisor type, (invoking
virConnectGetType to get the virt type). e.g. If virConnectGetType
returns "QEMU", we use Qumranet's OUI (00:1A:4A), if returns
ESX|VMWARE, we use VMWARE's OUI (00:05:69). Currently it only
supports qemu|xen|libxl|xenapi|hyperv|esx|vmware drivers. The last
36 bits are auto-generated.
Some audit records generated by libvirt contain fields enclosed by single
quotes. Since those fields are inside the msg field, which is enclosed by
single quotes, these records generated by libvirt are not correctly parsed by
libauparse.
Some tools, such as virt-manager, prefers having the default USB
controller explicit in the XML document. This patch makes sure there
is one. With this patch, it is now possible to switch from USB1 to
USB2 from the release 0.9.1 of virt-manager.
Fix tests to pass with this change.
virsh blkiotune dom --device-weights /dev/sda,400 --config
wasn't working correctly.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainSetBlkioParameters): Use
correct definition.
Now that no one is relying on the return value being a pointer to
somewhere inside of the passed-in argument, we can simplify the
callers to simply return success or failure. Also wrap some long
lines and add some const-correctness.
* src/util/sysinfo.c (virSysinfoParseBIOS, virSysinfoParseSystem)
(virSysinfoParseProcessor, virSysinfoParseMemory): Change return.
(virSysinfoRead): Adjust caller.
Reported by Alex Jia:
==21503== 112 (32 direct, 80 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are
definitely lost in loss record 37 of 40
==21503== at 0x4A04A28: calloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:467)
==21503== by 0x4A8991: virAlloc (memory.c:101)
==21503== by 0x505A6C: x86DataCopy (cpu_x86.c:247)
==21503== by 0x507B34: x86Compute (cpu_x86.c:1225)
==21503== by 0x43103C: qemuBuildCommandLine (qemu_command.c:3561)
==21503== by 0x41C9F7: testCompareXMLToArgvHelper
(qemuxml2argvtest.c:183)
==21503== by 0x41E10D: virtTestRun (testutils.c:141)
==21503== by 0x41B942: mymain (qemuxml2argvtest.c:705)
==21503== by 0x41D7E7: virtTestMain (testutils.c:696)
In case the caller specifies that confined guests are required but the
security driver turns out to be 'none', we should return an error since
this driver clearly cannot meet that requirement. As a result of this
error, libvirtd fails to start when the host admin explicitly sets
confined guests are required but there is no security driver available.
Since security driver 'none' cannot create confined guests, we override
default confined setting so that hypervisor drivers do not thing they
should create confined guests.
Security label type 'none' requires relabel to be set to 'no' so there's
no reason to output this extra attribute. Moreover, since relabel is
internally stored in a negative from (norelabel), the default value for
relabel would be 'yes' in case there is no <seclabel> element in domain
configuration. In case VIR_DOMAIN_SECLABEL_DEFAULT turns into
VIR_DOMAIN_SECLABEL_NONE, we would incorrectly output relabel='yes' for
seclabel type 'none'.
Qemu uses non-blocking I/O which doesn't play nice with regular file
descriptors. We need to pass a pipe to qemu instead, which can easily be
done using iohelper.
virFileDirectFd was used for accessing files opened with O_DIRECT using
libvirt_iohelper. We will want to use the helper for accessing files
regardless on O_DIRECT and thus virFileDirectFd was generalized and
renamed to virFileWrapperFd.
dmidecode displays processor information, followed by BIOS, system and
memory-DIMM details.
Calls to virSysinfoParseBIOS(), virSysinfoParseSystem() would update
the buffer pointer 'base', so the processor information would be lost
before virSysinfoParseProcessor() was called. Sysinfo would therefore
not be able to display processor details -- It only described <bios>,
<system> and <memory_device> details.
This patch attempts to insulate sysinfo from ordering of dmidecode
output.
Before the fix:
---------------
virsh # sysinfo
<sysinfo type='smbios'>
<bios>
....
</bios>
<system>
....
</system>
<memory_device>
....
</memory_device>
After the fix:
-------------
virsh # sysinfo
<sysinfo type='smbios'>
<bios>
....
</bios>
<system>
....
</system>
<processor>
....
</processor>
<memory_device>
....
</memory_device>
Input to the volume cloning code is a source volume and an XML
descriptor for the new volume. It is possible for the new volume
to have a greater size than source volume, at which point libvirt
will just stick 0s on the end of the new image (for raw format
anyways).
Unfortunately a logic error messed up our tracking of the of the
excess amount that needed to be written: end result is that sparse
clones were made very much non-sparse, and cloning regular disk
images could end up excessively sized (though data unaltered).
Drop the 'remain' variable entriely here since it's redundant, and
track actual allocation directly against the desired 'total'.
gcc 4.7 complains:
util/virhashcode.c:49:17: error: always_inline function might not be inlinable [-Werror=attributes]
util/virhashcode.c:35:17: error: always_inline function might not be inlinable [-Werror=attributes]
Normal 'inline' is a hint that the compiler may ignore; the fact
that the function is static is good enough. We don't care if the
compiler decided not to inline after all.
* src/util/virhashcode.c (getblock, fmix): Relax attribute.
On CentOS5:
If "virsh edit $DOM" is used and an error happens (for example changing
any live cycle action to a non-existing value), libvirt forgets that
$DOM exists, since it is already removed from the internal hash tables,
which are used for domain lookup.
In once case (unreproducible) even the persistent configuration
/etc/xen/$DOM was deleted.
Instead of using the compound function xenXMConfigSaveFile() explicitly
use xenFomatXM() and virConfWriteFile() to distinguish between a failure
in converting the libvirt definition to the xen-xm format and a problem
when writing the file.
Signed-off-by: Philipp Hahn <hahn@univention.de>
Commit b170eb99 introduced a bug: domains that had an explicit
<seclabel type='none'/> when started would not be reparsed if
libvirtd restarted. It turns out that our testsuite was not
exercising this because it never tried anything but inactive
parsing. Additionally, the live XML for such a domain failed
to re-validate. Applying just the tests/ portion of this patch
will expose the bugs that are fixed by the other two files.
* docs/schemas/domaincommon.rng (seclabel): Allow relabel under
type='none'.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virSecurityLabelDefParseXML): Per RNG,
presence of <seclabel> with no type implies dynamic. Don't
require sub-elements for type='none'.
* tests/qemuxml2xmltest.c (mymain): Add test.
* tests/qemuxml2argvtest.c (mymain): Likewise.
* tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-seclabel-none.xml: Add file.
* tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-seclabel-none.args: Add file.
Reported by Ansis Atteka.
On CentOS5 with xen-3.0.3:
Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
virFree (ptrptr=0x8) at util/memory.c:310
310 free(*(void**)ptrptr);
(gdb) bt
#0 virFree (ptrptr=0x8) at util/memory.c:310
#1 0x00002aaaaae167c8 in xenXMDomainDefineXML (conn=0x694e80, xml=0x6b2ce0 "P\fk") at xen/xm_internal.c:1199
#2 0x00002aaaaae070d7 in xenUnifiedDomainDefineXML (conn=0x8,
xml=0x6ac040 "<domain type='xen'>\n <name>pv</name>\n <uuid>20291bc0-453a-4d6c-c6ac-4e5af63b932c</uuid>\n <memory>1048576</memory>\n <currentMemory>1048576</currentMemory>\n <vcpu>1</vcpu>\n <os>\n <type arch='x8"...) at xen/xen_driver.c:1524
#3 0x00002aaaaada7803 in virDomainDefineXML (conn=0x694e80,
xml=0x6ac040 "<domain type='xen'>\n <name>pv</name>\n <uuid>20291bc0-453a-4d6c-c6ac-4e5af63b932c</uuid>\n <memory>1048576</memory>\n <currentMemory>1048576</currentMemory>\n <vcpu>1</vcpu>\n <os>\n <type arch='x8"...) at libvirt.c:7823
#4 0x0000000000426173 in cmdEdit (ctl=0x7fffffffb8e0, cmd=<value optimized out>) at virsh.c:14882
#5 0x000000000041c9ce in vshCommandRun (ctl=0x7fffffffb8e0, cmd=0x658c50) at virsh.c:17712
#6 0x000000000042c3b9 in main (argc=1, argv=<value optimized out>) at virsh.c:19317
Signed-off-by: Philipp Hahn <hahn@univention.de>
Calling qemuDomainMigrateGraphicsRelocate notifies spice clients to
connect to destination qemu so that they can seamlessly switch streams
once migration is done. Unfortunately, current qemu is not able to
accept any connections while incoming migration connection is open.
Thus, we need to delay opening the migration connection to the point
spice client is already connected to the destination qemu.
Unlike .cvsignore under CVS, git allows for ignoring nested
names. We weren't very consistent where new tests were
being ignored (some in .gitignore, some in tests/.gitignore),
and I found it easier to just consolidate everything.
* .gitignore: Subsume entries from subdirectories.
* daemon/.gitignore: Delete.
* docs/.gitignore: Likewise.
* docs/devhelp/.gitignore: Likewise.
* docs/html/.gitignore: Likewise.
* examples/dominfo/.gitignore: Likewise.
* examples/domsuspend/.gitignore: Likewise.
* examples/hellolibvirt/.gitignore: Likewise.
* examples/openauth/.gitignore: Likewise.
* examples/domain-events/events-c/.gitignore: Likewise.
* include/libvirt/.gitignore: Likewise.
* src/.gitignore: Likewise.
* src/esx/.gitignore: Likewise.
* tests/.gitignore: Likewise.
* tools/.gitignore: Likewise.
This eliminates the warning message reported in:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=624447
It was caused by a failure to open an image file that is not
accessible by root (the uid libvirtd is running as) because it's on a
root-squash NFS share, owned by a different user, with permissions of
660 (or maybe 600).
The solution is to use virFileOpenAs() rather than open(). The
codepath that generates the error is during qemuSetupDiskCGroup(), but
the actual open() is in a lower-level generic function called from
many places (virDomainDiskDefForeachPath), so some other pieces of the
code were touched just to add dummy (or possibly useful) uid and gid
arguments.
Eliminating this warning message has the nice side effect that the
requested operation may even succeed (which in this case isn't
necessary, but shouldn't hurt anything either).
virFileOpenAs previously would only try opening a file as the current
user, or as a different user, but wouldn't try both methods in a
single call. This made it cumbersome to use as a replacement for
open(2). Additionally, it had a lot of historical baggage that led to
it being difficult to understand.
This patch refactors virFileOpenAs in the following ways:
* reorganize the code so that everything dealing with both the parent
and child sides of the "fork+setuid+setgid+open" method are in a
separate function. This makes the public function easier to understand.
* Allow a single call to virFileOpenAs() to first attempt the open as
the current user, and if that fails to automatically re-try after
doing fork+setuid (if deemed appropriate, i.e. errno indicates it
would now be successful, and the file is on a networkFS). This makes
it possible (in many, but possibly not all, cases) to drop-in
virFileOpenAs() as a replacement for open(2).
(NB: currently qemuOpenFile() calls virFileOpenAs() twice, once
without forking, then again with forking. That unfortunately can't
be changed without at least some discussion of the ramifications,
because the requested file permissions are different in each case,
which is something that a single call to virFileOpenAs() can't deal
with.)
* Add a flag so that any fchown() of the file to a different uid:gid
is explicitly requested when the function is called, rather than it
being implied by the presence of the O_CREAT flag. This just makes
for less subtle surprises to consumers. (Commit
b1643dc15c added the check for O_CREAT
before forcing ownership. This patch just makes that restriction
more explicit.)
* If either the uid or gid is specified as "-1", virFileOpenAs will
interpret this to mean "the current [gu]id".
All current consumers of virFileOpenAs should retain their present
behavior (after a few minor changes to their setup code and
arguments).
Rename the src/util/netlink files to src/util/virnetlink to
better fit the naming scheme. Also rename nlComm to virNetlinkCommand.
Signed-off-by: D. Herrendoerfer <d.herrendoerfer@herrendoerfer.name>
When libvirt's virDomainDestroy API is shutting down the qemu process,
it first sends SIGTERM, then waits for 1.6 seconds and, if it sees the
process still there, sends a SIGKILL.
There have been reports that this behavior can lead to data loss
because the guest running in qemu doesn't have time to flush its disk
cache buffers before it's unceremoniously whacked.
This patch maintains that default behavior, but provides a new flag
VIR_DOMAIN_DESTROY_GRACEFUL to alter the behavior. If this flag is set
in the call to virDomainDestroyFlags, SIGKILL will never be sent to
the qemu process; instead, if the timeout is reached and the qemu
process still exists, virDomainDestroy will return an error.
Once this patch is in, the recommended method for applications to call
virDomainDestroyFlags will be with VIR_DOMAIN_DESTROY_GRACEFUL
included. If that fails, then the application can decide if and when
to call virDomainDestroyFlags again without
VIR_DOMAIN_DESTROY_GRACEFUL (to force the issue with SIGKILL).
(Note that this does not address the issue of existing applications
that have not yet been modified to use VIR_DOMAIN_DESTROY_GRACEFUL.
That is a separate patch.)
Our HACKING discourages use of malloc and free, for at least
a couple of years now. But we weren't enforcing it, until now :)
For now, I've exempted python and tests, and will clean those up
in subsequent patches. Examples should be permanently exempt,
since anyone copying our examples won't have use of our
internal-only memory.h via libvirt_util.la.
* cfg.mk (sc_prohibit_raw_allocation): New rule.
(exclude_file_name_regexp--sc_prohibit_raw_allocation): and
exemptions.
* src/cpu/cpu.c (cpuDataFree): Avoid false positive.
* src/conf/network_conf.c (virNetworkDNSSrvDefParseXML): Fix
offenders.
* src/libxl/libxl_conf.c (libxlMakeDomBuildInfo, libxlMakeVfb)
(libxlMakeDeviceModelInfo): Likewise.
* src/rpc/virnetmessage.c (virNetMessageSaveError): Likewise.
* tools/virsh.c (_vshMalloc, _vshCalloc): Likewise.
Sometimes, its easier to run children with 2>&1 in shell notation,
and just deal with stdout and stderr interleaved. This was already
possible for fd handling; extend it to also work when doing string
capture of a child process.
* docs/internals/command.html.in: Document this.
* src/util/command.c (virCommandSetErrorBuffer): Likewise.
(virCommandRun, virExecWithHook): Implement it.
* tests/commandtest.c (test14): Test it.
* daemon/remote.c (remoteDispatchAuthPolkit): Use new command
feature.
This patch fixes the access of variable "con" in two files where the
variable was declared only on SELinux builds and thus the build failed
without SELinux. It's a rather nasty fix but helps fix the build
quickly and without any major changes to the code.
Detected by valgrind. Leak is introduced in commit 397e6a7.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c(virDomainDiskDefParseXML): fix memory leak.
How to reproduce?
% make -C tests check TESTS=qemuxml2argvtest
% cd tests && valgrind -v --leak-check=full ./qemuxml2argvtest
* Actual result:
==16352== 4 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 12 of 147
==16352== at 0x4A05FDE: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:236)
==16352== by 0x39D90A67DD: xmlStrndup (xmlstring.c:45)
==16352== by 0x4E83D5: virDomainDiskDefParseXML (domain_conf.c:2894)
==16352== by 0x4F542D: virDomainDefParseXML (domain_conf.c:7626)
==16352== by 0x4F8683: virDomainDefParseNode (domain_conf.c:8390)
==16352== by 0x4F904E: virDomainDefParse (domain_conf.c:8340)
==16352== by 0x41C626: testCompareXMLToArgvHelper (qemuxml2argvtest.c:105)
==16352== by 0x41DED1: virtTestRun (testutils.c:142)
==16352== by 0x418172: mymain (qemuxml2argvtest.c:486)
==16352== by 0x41D5C7: virtTestMain (testutils.c:697)
==16352== by 0x39CF01ECDC: (below main) (in /lib64/libc-2.12.so)
Signed-off-by: Alex Jia <ajia@redhat.com>
To allow the container to access /dev and /dev/pts when under
sVirt, set an explicit mount option. Also set a max size on
the /dev mount to prevent DOS on memory usage
* src/lxc/lxc_container.c: Set /dev mount context
* src/lxc/lxc_controller.c: Set /dev/pts mount context
For the sake of backwards compat, LXC guests are *not*
confined by default. This is because it is not practical
to dynamically relabel containers using large filesystem
trees. Applications can create confined containers though,
by giving suitable XML configs
* src/Makefile.am: Link libvirt_lxc to security drivers
* src/lxc/libvirtd_lxc.aug, src/lxc/lxc_conf.h,
src/lxc/lxc_conf.c, src/lxc/lxc.conf,
src/lxc/test_libvirtd_lxc.aug: Config file handling for
security driver
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c: Wire up security driver functions
* src/lxc/lxc_controller.c: Add a '--security' flag to
specify which security driver to activate
* src/lxc/lxc_container.c, src/lxc/lxc_container.h: Set
the process label just before exec'ing init.
Curently security labels can be of type 'dynamic' or 'static'.
If no security label is given, then 'dynamic' is assumed. The
current code takes advantage of this default, and avoids even
saving <seclabel> elements with type='dynamic' to disk. This
means if you temporarily change security driver, the guests
can all still start.
With the introduction of sVirt to LXC though, there needs to be
a new default of 'none' to allow unconfined LXC containers.
This patch introduces two new security label types
- default: the host configuration decides whether to run the
guest with type 'none' or 'dynamic' at guest start
- none: the guest will run unconfined by security policy
The 'none' label type will obviously be undesirable for some
deployments, so a new qemu.conf option allows a host admin to
mandate confined guests. It is also possible to turn off default
confinement
security_default_confined = 1|0 (default == 1)
security_require_confined = 1|0 (default == 0)
* src/conf/domain_conf.c, src/conf/domain_conf.h: Add new
seclabel types
* src/security/security_manager.c, src/security/security_manager.h:
Set default sec label types
* src/security/security_selinux.c: Handle 'none' seclabel type
* src/qemu/qemu.conf, src/qemu/qemu_conf.c, src/qemu/qemu_conf.h,
src/qemu/libvirtd_qemu.aug: New security config options
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c: Tell security driver about default
config
This re-introduces parsing & formatting for per device seclabels.
There is a new virDomainDeviceSeclabelPtr struct and corresponding
APIs for parsing/formatting.
Revert parsing changes:
commit 302fe95ffa
Author: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Date: Wed Jan 4 16:01:24 2012 -0700
seclabel: fix regression in libvirtd restart
commit b43432931a
Author: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Date: Thu Dec 22 17:47:50 2011 -0700
seclabel: allow a seclabel override on a disk src
These two commits changed the sec label parsing code so that
the same code dealt with both the VM level sec label, and the
per device label. Unfortunately, as we add more options to the
VM level sec label, the logic required to use the same parsing
code for the per device label becomes unintelligible.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c: Remove support for parsing per
device sec labels
I slightly botched commit be9fb5a - I converted '--arg=value' to
'--arg value', which has no semantic change, but did trip up the
testsuite.
* src/network/bridge_driver.c (networkBuildDnsmasqArgv): Restore
expected output.
libvirt supports 4 different versions of the user-land XenD daemon. When
queried the daemon just returns its generation number, which is hard to
match to the version of the Xen tools.
Replace the magic generation numbers by named enum definitions to
improve code readability.
Signed-off-by: Philipp Hahn <hahn@univention.de>
Detected by valgrind. Leaks introduced in commit 973af236.
* src/network/bridge_driver.c: fix memory leaks on failure and successful path.
* How to reproduce?
% make -C tests check TESTS=networkxml2argvtest
% cd tests && valgrind -v --leak-check=full ./networkxml2argvtest
* Actual result:
==2226== 3 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 1 of 24
==2226== at 0x4A05FDE: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:236)
==2226== by 0x39CF0FEDE7: __vasprintf_chk (in /lib64/libc-2.12.so)
==2226== by 0x41DFF7: virVasprintf (stdio2.h:199)
==2226== by 0x41E0B7: virAsprintf (util.c:1695)
==2226== by 0x41A2D9: networkBuildDhcpDaemonCommandLine (bridge_driver.c:545)
==2226== by 0x4145C8: testCompareXMLToArgvHelper (networkxml2argvtest.c:47)
==2226== by 0x4156A1: virtTestRun (testutils.c:141)
==2226== by 0x414332: mymain (networkxml2argvtest.c:123)
==2226== by 0x414D97: virtTestMain (testutils.c:696)
==2226== by 0x39CF01ECDC: (below main) (in /lib64/libc-2.12.so)
==2226==
==2226== 3 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 2 of 24
==2226== at 0x4A05FDE: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:236)
==2226== by 0x39CF0FEDE7: __vasprintf_chk (in /lib64/libc-2.12.so)
==2226== by 0x41DFF7: virVasprintf (stdio2.h:199)
==2226== by 0x41E0B7: virAsprintf (util.c:1695)
==2226== by 0x41A307: networkBuildDhcpDaemonCommandLine (bridge_driver.c:551)
==2226== by 0x4145C8: testCompareXMLToArgvHelper (networkxml2argvtest.c:47)
==2226== by 0x4156A1: virtTestRun (testutils.c:141)
==2226== by 0x414332: mymain (networkxml2argvtest.c:123)
==2226== by 0x414D97: virtTestMain (testutils.c:696)
==2226== by 0x39CF01ECDC: (below main) (in /lib64/libc-2.12.so)
==2226==
==2226== 5 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 4 of 24
==2226== at 0x4A05FDE: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:236)
==2226== by 0x39CF0FEDE7: __vasprintf_chk (in /lib64/libc-2.12.so)
==2226== by 0x41DFF7: virVasprintf (stdio2.h:199)
==2226== by 0x41E0B7: virAsprintf (util.c:1695)
==2226== by 0x41A2AB: networkBuildDhcpDaemonCommandLine (bridge_driver.c:539)
==2226== by 0x4145C8: testCompareXMLToArgvHelper (networkxml2argvtest.c:47)
==2226== by 0x4156A1: virtTestRun (testutils.c:141)
==2226== by 0x414332: mymain (networkxml2argvtest.c:123)
==2226== by 0x414D97: virtTestMain (testutils.c:696)
==2226== by 0x39CF01ECDC: (below main) (in /lib64/libc-2.12.so)
==2226==
==2226== LEAK SUMMARY:
==2226== definitely lost: 11 bytes in 3 blocks
Signed-off-by: Alex Jia <ajia@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
This is a trivial implementation, which works with the current
released qemu 1.0 with backports of preliminary block pull but
no partial rebase. Future patches will update the monitor handling
to support an optional parameter for partial rebase; but as qemu
1.1 is unreleased, it can be in later patches, designed to be
backported on top of the supported API.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainBlockJobImpl): Add parameter,
and adjust callers. Drop redundant check.
(qemuDomainBlockPull): Move guts...
(qemuDomainBlockRebase): ...to new function.
Qemu is adding the ability to do a partial rebase. That is, given:
base <- intermediate <- current
virDomainBlockPull will produce:
current
but qemu now has the ability to leave base in the chain, to produce:
base <- current
Note that current qemu can only do a forward merge, and only with
the current image as the destination, which is fully described by
this API without flags. But in the future, it may be possible to
enhance this API for additional scenarios by using flags:
Merging the current image back into a previous image (that is,
undoing a live snapshot), could be done by passing base as the
destination and flags with a bit requesting a backward merge.
Merging any other part of the image chain, whether forwards (the
backing image contents are pulled into the newer file) or backwards
(the deltas recorded in the newer file are merged back into the
backing file), could also be done by passing a new flag that says
that base should be treated as an XML snippet rather than an
absolute path name, where the XML could then supply the additional
instructions of which part of the image chain is being merged into
any other part.
* include/libvirt/libvirt.h.in (virDomainBlockRebase): New
declaration.
* src/libvirt.c (virDomainBlockRebase): Implement it.
* src/libvirt_public.syms (LIBVIRT_0.9.10): Export it.
* src/driver.h (virDrvDomainBlockRebase): New driver callback.
* src/rpc/gendispatch.pl (long_legacy): Add exemption.
* docs/apibuild.py (long_legacy_functions): Likewise.
This patch adds support for the new api into the qemu driver to support
modification and retrieval of domain description and title. This patch
does not add support for modifying the <metadata> element.
This patch adds API to modify domain metadata for running and stopped
domains. The api supports changing description, title as well as the
newly added <metadata> element. The API has support for storing data in
the metadata element using xml namespaces.
* include/libvirt/libvirt.h.in
* src/libvirt_public.syms
- add function headers
- add enum to select metadata to operate on
- export functions
* src/libvirt.c
- add public api implementation
* src/driver.h
- add driver support
* src/remote/remote_driver.c
* src/remote/remote_protocol.x
- wire up the remote protocol
* include/libvirt/virterror.h
* src/util/virterror.c
- add a new error message note that metadata for domain are
missing
This patch adds a new element <title> to the domain XML. This attribute
can hold a short title defined by the user to ease the identification of
domains. The title may not contain newlines and should be reasonably short.
*docs/formatdomain.html.in
*docs/schemas/domaincommon.rng
- add schema grammar for the new element and documentation
*src/conf/domain_conf.c
*src/conf/domain_conf.h
- add field to hold the new attribute
- add code to parse and create XML with the new attribute
This was forgotten when the function was originally written (not
noticed because it wasn't used at the time). It's required for
proper compilation with modules enabled after applying the recent
virStorageVolResize patches.
This was forgotten when the function was initially written (not
noticed because it wasn't used at the time). It's required for proper
compilation with modules enabled after applying the recent rawio
patches.
We already provide ways to detect when a domain has been paused as a
result of I/O error, but there was no way of getting the exact error or
even the device that experienced it. This new API may be used for both.
If we are building not on a WIN32 architecture and without HAVE_CAPNG
virSetCapabilities has unused argument and virClearCapabilities
is unused as well.
In qemuDomainShutdownFlags if we try to use guest agent,
which has error or is not configured, we jump go endjob
label even if we haven't started any job yet. This may
lead to the daemon crash:
1) virsh shutdown --mode agent on a domain without agent configured
2) wait until domain quits
3) virsh edit
Fix my typo at
commit 74e034964c
"disk->rawio == -1" indicates that this value is not
specified. So in case of this, domain must not
be tainted.
Signed-off-by: Taku Izumi <izumi.taku@jp.fujitsu.com>
Using new function 'virTypedParameterArrayClear' to simplify block of codes.
* daemon/remote.c, src/remote/remote_driver.c: simplify codes.
Signed-off-by: Alex Jia <ajia@redhat.com>
This patch revises qemuProcessStart() function for qemu
processes to retain CAP_SYS_RAWIO if needed.
And in case of that, add taint flag to domain.
Signed-off-by: Taku Izumi <izumi.taku@jp.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Shota Hirae <m11g1401@hibikino.ne.jp>
This patch introduces virSetCapabilities() function and implements
virCommandAllowCap() function.
Existing virClearCapabilities() is function to clear all capabilities.
Instead virSetCapabilities() is function to set arbitrary capabilities.
Signed-off-by: Taku Izumi <izumi.taku@jp.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Shota Hirae <m11g1401@hibikino.ne.jp>
This patch adds a new attribute "rawio" to the "disk" element
of domain XML. Valid values of "rawio" attribute are "yes"
and "no".
rawio='yes' indicates the disk is desirous of CAP_SYS_RAWIO.
If you specify the following XML:
<disk type='block' device='lun' rawio='yes'>
...
</disk>
the domain will be granted CAP_SYS_RAWIO.
(of course, the domain have to be executed with root privilege)
NOTE:
- "rawio" attribute is only valid when device='lun'
- At the moment, any other disks you won't use rawio can use rawio.
Signed-off-by: Taku Izumi <izumi.taku@jp.fujitsu.com>
Our existing virDomainBlockResize takes an unsigned long long
argument; if that command is later taught a DELTA and SHRINK flag,
we cannot change its type without breaking API (but at least such
a change would be ABI compatible). Meanwhile, the only time a
negative size makes sense is if both DELTA and SHRINK are used
together, but if we keep the argument unsigned, applications can
pass the positive delta amount by which they would like to shrink
the system, and have the flags imply the negative value. So,
since this API has not yet been released, and in the interest of
consistency with existing API, we swap virStorageVolResize to
always pass an unsigned value.
* include/libvirt/libvirt.h.in (virStorageVolResize): Use unsigned
argument.
* src/libvirt.c (virStorageVolResize): Likewise.
* src/driver.h (virDrvStorageVolUpload): Adjust clients.
* src/remote/remote_protocol.x (remote_storage_vol_resize_args):
Likewise.
* src/remote_protocol-structs: Regenerate.
Suggested by Daniel P. Berrange.
Fix several references to now renamed functions and parameters when the
functions were moved from src/xen/ to src/xenxs/.
Signed-off-by: Philipp Hahn <hahn@univention.de>
This patch addresses: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=781562
Along with the "rombar" option that controls whether or not a boot rom
is made visible to the guest, qemu also has a "romfile" option that
allows specifying a binary file to present as the ROM BIOS of any
emulated or passthrough PCI device. This patch adds support for
specifying romfile to both passthrough PCI devices, and emulated
network devices that attach to the guest's PCI bus (just about
everything other than ne2k_isa).
One example of the usefulness of this option is described in the
bugzilla report: 82576 sriov network adapters don't provide a ROM BIOS
for the cards virtual functions (VF), but an image of such a ROM is
available, and with this ROM visible to the guest, it can PXE boot.
In libvirt's xml, the new option is configured like this:
<hostdev>
...
<rom file='/etc/fake/boot.bin'/>
...
</hostdev
(similarly for <interface>).
When support for the rombar option was added, it was only added for
PCI passthrough devices, configured with <hostdev>. The same option is
available for any network device that is attached to the guest's PCI
bus. This patch allows setting rombar for any PCI network device type.
After adding cases to test this to qemuxml2argv-hostdev-pci-rombar.*,
I decided to rename those files (to qemuxml2argv-pci-rom.*) to more
accurately reflect the additional tests, and also noticed that up to
now we've only been performing a domainschematest for that case, so I
added the "pci-rom" test to both qemuxml2argv and qemuxml2xml (and in
the process found some bugs whose fixes I squashed into previous
commits of this series).
Since these two items are now in the virDomainDeviceInfo struct, it
makes sense to parse/format them in the functions written to
parse/format that structure. Not all types of devices allow them, so
two internal flags are added to indicate when it is appropriate to do
so.
I was lucky - only one test case needed to be re-ordered!
To help consolidate the commonality between virDomainHostdevDef and
virDomainNetDef into as few members as possible (and because I
think it makes sense), this patch moves the rombar and bootIndex
members into the "info" member that is common to both (and to all the
other structs that use them).
It's a bit problematic that this gives rombar and bootIndex to many
device types that don't use them, but this is already the case for the
master and mastertype members of virDomainDeviceInfo, and is properly
commented as such in the definition.
Note that this opens the door to supporting rombar for other devices
that are attached to the guest PCI bus - virtio-blk-pci,
virtio-net-pci, various other network adapters - which which have that
capability in qemu, but previously had no support in libvirt.
Unlike other users of virTypedParameter with RPC, this interface
can return zero-filled entries because the interface assumes
2 dimensional array. We compress these entries out from the
server when generating the over-the-wire contents, then reconstitute
them in the client.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
add new API virDomainGetCPUStats() for getting cpu accounting information
per real cpus which is used by a domain. The API is designed to allow
future extensions for additional statistics.
based on ideas by Lai Jiangshan and Eric Blake.
* src/libvirt_public.syms: add API for LIBVIRT_0.9.10
* src/libvirt.c: define virDomainGetCPUStats()
* include/libvirt/libvirt.h.in: add virDomainGetCPUStats() header
* src/driver.h: add driver API
* python/generator.py: add python API (as not implemented)
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
This API allows a domain to be put into one of S# ACPI states.
Currently, S3 and S4 are supported. These states are shared
with virNodeSuspendForDuration.
However, for now we don't support any duration other than zero.
The same apply for flags.
Add a new function to allow changing of capacity of storage volumes.
Plan out several flags, even if not all of them will be implemented
up front.
Expose the new command via 'virsh vol-resize'.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
And hook it up for policykit auth. This allows virt-manager to detect
that the user clicked the policykit 'cancel' button and not throw
an 'authentication failed' error message at the user.
If yajl was not compiled in, we end up freeing an incoming
parameter, which leads to a bogus free later on. Regression
introduced in commit 6e769eb.
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.c (qemuCapsParseHelpStr): Avoid alloc
on failure path, which in turn fixes bogus free.
Reported by Cole Robinson.
The virEmitXMLWarning function should always have been in
the xml.[hc] files, and should use virXML as its name
prefix
* src/util/util.c, src/util/util.h: Remove virEmitXMLWarning
* src/util/xml.c, src/util/xml.h: Add virXMLEmitWarning
QEMU supports a bunch of CPUID features that are tied to the kvm CPUID
nodes rather than the processor's. They are "kvmclock",
"kvm_nopiodelay", "kvm_mmu", "kvm_asyncpf". These are not known to
libvirt and their CPUID leaf might move if (for example) the Hyper-V
extensions are enabled. Hence their handling would anyway require some
special-casing.
However, among these the most useful is kvmclock; an additional
"property" of this feature is that a <timer> element is a better model
than a CPUID feature. Although, creating part of the -cpu command-line
from something other than the <cpu> XML element introduces some
ugliness.
Reviewed-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
Add kvmclock timer to documentation, schema and parsers. Keep the
platform timer first since it is kind of special, and alphabetize
the others when possible (i.e. when it does not change the ABI).
Reviewed-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
Avoid creating an empty <cpu> element when the QEMU command-line simply
specifies the default "-cpu qemu32" or "-cpu qemu64".
This requires the previous patch, which lets us represent "-cpu qemu32"
as <os arch='i686'> in the generated XML.
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
The qemu32 CPU model is chosen based on the <os arch=...> name when
creating the QEMU command line for a 64-bit host. For the opposite
transformation we can test the guest CPU model for the "lm" feature.
If it is absent, def->os.arch needs to be corrected.
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
When running under KVM, the arch is usually set to i686 because
the name of the emulator is not qemu-system-x86_64. Use the host
arch instead.
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
Recently (or not so recently) QEMU added the kvm32 and kvm64
architectures, representing a least common denominator of all
hosts that can run KVM. Add them to the machine map.
Also, some features that TCG supports were added to qemu64.
Add them to the cpu_map.xml whenever KVM is guaranteed to support
those. We still have to leave some out, because they would not
be available to guests running on older hosts.
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
The qemu developers have made it clear that modern qemu will no
longer guarantee human monitor command stability; furthermore,
some features, such as async events, are only supported via qmp.
If we are compiled without support for handling JSON, we cannot
expect to sanely interact with modern qemu.
However, things must continue to build on RHEL 5, where qemu
is stuck at 0.10, and where yajl is not available.
Another benefit of this patch: future additions of new monitor
commands need only focus on qemu_monitor_json.c, instead of
also wasting time with qemu_monitor_text.c.
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.c (qemuCapsComputeCmdFlags): Report
error if yajl is missing but qemu requires qmp.
(qemuCapsParseHelpStr): Propagate error.
(qemuCapsExtractVersionInfo): Update caller.
* tests/qemuhelptest.c (testHelpStrParsing): Likewise.
I'm getting tired of remembering to backport RHEL-specific
patches when building upstream libvirt on RHEL 6.x or CentOS.
All the affected versions of RHEL qemu-kvm have backported
enough patches to a) make JSON useful, and b) modify the
-help text to mention libvirt as the preferred interface;
which means this string in the help output is a reliable
indicator that we can outsmart a strict version check,
even when upstream qemu 0.12 lacked the needed features.
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.c (qemuCapsComputeCmdFlags):
Recognize particular help string present when enough features were
backported to be worth using JSON.
* tests/qemuhelptest.c (mymain): Update tests accordingly.
Compare two filters' XML for equality and only rebuild/instantiate the new
filter if the new and current filters are found to be different. This
improves performance during an update of a filter with no obvious change
or the reloading of filters during a 'kill -SIGHUP'
Introduce a function that rebuilds all running VMs' filters. Call
this function when reloading the nwfilter driver.
This addresses a problem introduced by the 2nd patch that typically
causes no filters to be reinstantiate anymore upon driver reload
since their XML has not changed. Yet the current behavior is that
upon a SIGHUP all filters get reinstantiated.
QEMU always sends details about all available block devices as an answer
for "info block"/"query-block" command. On the other hand, our
qemuMonitorGetBlockInfo was made for a single block devices queries
only. Thus, when asking for multiple devices, we asked qemu multiple
times to always get the same answer from which different parts were
filtered. This patch makes qemuMonitorGetBlockInfo return a hash table
of all block devices, which may later be used for getting details about
specific devices.
Added a new field "vm-pid" to the VIRT_CONTROL audit record. This information
is useful to correlated another audit events to the events generated by
libvirt.
On RHEL5, I got:
util/virrandom.c:66: warning: nested extern declaration of '_gl_verify_function66' [-Wnested-externs]
The fix is to hoist the verify earlier. Also some other hodge-podge
fixes I noticed while reviewing Dan's recent series.
* .gitignore: Ignore new test.
* src/util/cgroup.c: Bump copyright year.
* src/util/virhash.c: Fix typo in description.
* src/util/virrandom.c (virRandomBits): Mark doc comment, and
hoist assert to silence older gcc.
Recent discussions have illustrated the potential for DOS attacks
with the hash table implementations used by most languages and
libraries.
https://lwn.net/Articles/474912/
libvirt has an internal hash table impl, and uses hash tables for
a variety of purposes. The hash key generation code is pretty
simple and thus not strongly collision resistant.
This patch replaces the current libvirt hash key generator with
the (public domain) Murmurhash3 code. In addition every hash
table now gets a random seed value which is used to perturb the
hashing code. This should make it impossible to mount any
practical attack against libvirt hashing code.
* bootstrap.conf: Import bitrotate module
* src/Makefile.am: Add virhashcode.[ch]
* src/util/util.c: Make virRandom() return a fixed 32 bit
integer value.
* src/util/hash.c, src/util/hash.h, src/util/cgroup.c: Replace
hash code generation with a call to virHashCodeGen()
* src/util/virhashcode.h, src/util/virhashcode.c: Add a new
virHashCodeGen() API using the Murmurhash3 algorithm.
In preparation for the patch to include Murmurhash3, which
introduces a virhashcode.h and virhashcode.c files, rename
the existing hash.h and hash.c to virhash.h and virhash.c
respectively.
In preparation for conversion over to use the Murmurhash3
algorithm, convert various virHash APIs to use size_t or
uint32 for their return values/parameters, instead of the
variable size 'unsigned long' or 'int' types
The old virRandom() API was not generating good random numbers.
Replace it with a new API virRandomBits which instead of being
told the upper limit, gets told the number of bits of randomness
required.
* src/util/virrandom.c, src/util/virrandom.h: Add virRandomBits,
and move virRandomInitialize
* src/util/util.h, src/util/util.c: Delete virRandom and
virRandomInitialize
* src/libvirt.c, src/security/security_selinux.c,
src/test/test_driver.c, src/util/iohelper.c: Update for
changes from virRandom to virRandomBits
* src/storage/storage_backend_iscsi.c: Remove bogus call
to virRandomInitialize & convert to virRandomBits
Currently, we support only filling a volume with zeroes on wiping.
However, it is not enough as data might still be readable by
experienced and equipped attacker. Many technical papers have been
written, therefore we should support other wiping algorithms.
In file included from ../gnulib/lib/unistd.h:51:0,
from ../src/util/util.h:30,
from rpc/virkeepalive.c:29:
/usr/x86_64-w64-mingw32/sys-root/mingw/include/winsock2.h:15:2: warning: #warning Please include winsock2.h before windows.h [-Wcpp]
Reported by Marc-André Lureau.
* src/util/threads-win32.h (includes): Pick up winsock2.h before
windows.h, as required by mingw64.
On F16 at least, empty volume groups don't have a directory under /dev.
The directory only appears once a logical volume is created.
This tickles some behavior in BackendStablePath which ends with
libvirt sleeping for 5 seconds while waiting for the directory to appear.
This causes all sorts of problems for the virStorageVolLookupByPath API
which virtinst uses, even if trying to resolve a path that is independent
of the logical pool.
In reality we don't even need to do that checking since logical pools
always have a stable target path. Short circuit the polling in that
case.
Fixes bug 782261
Systemd detects containers based on whether they have
an environment variable starting with 'container=lxc';
using a longer name fits the expectations, while also
allowing detection of who created the container.
Requested by Lennart Poettering, in response to
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45175
* src/lxc/lxc_container.c (lxcContainerBuildInitCmd): Add another
env-var.
The current setup code for LXC is bind mounting /dev/pts/ptmx
on top of a character device /dev/ptmx. This is denied by SELinux
policy and is just wrong. The target of a bind mount should just
be a plain file
* src/lxc/lxc_container.c: Don't bind /dev/pts/ptmx onto
a char device
Add a virFileTouch API which ensures that a file will always
exist, even if zero length
* src/util/virfile.c, src/util/virfile.h,
src/libvirt_private.syms: Introduce virFileTouch