When a network device that is a VF of an SR-IOV card was assigned to a
guest using <interface type='hostdev'>, only the MAC address was being
saved/restored, but the VLAN tag was left untouched. Up to now we
haven't actually used vlan tags on SR-IOV devices, so the guest would
have used whatever was set, and left it the same at the end.
The patch following this one will hook up the <vlan> element from the
interface config, so save/restore of the device state needs to also
include the vlan tag.
MAC address is being saved as a simple ASCII string in a file named
for the device under /var/run. The VLAN tag is now just added at the
end of that file, after a newline. It might be nicer if the file was
XML (in case it ever gets more complicated) but at the moment there's
nothing else on the horizon, and this makes backward compatibility
easier.
The parameter value for cpuset could be in special format like
"0-10,^7", which is not recognized by cgroup. This patch is to
ensure the cpuset is formatted as expected before passing it to
cgroup. As a side effect, after the patch, it parses the cpuset
early before cgroup setting, to avoid the rollback if cpuset
parsing fails afterwards.
Previous commit:
commit 9093ab7734
Author: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Date: Wed Jul 18 17:03:17 2012 +0100
Add lots of internal symbols to libvirt_private.syms
mistakenly put some conditional SASL symbols in libvirt_private.syms
instead of libvirt_sasl.syms
The network driver now looks for the vlan element in network and
portgroup objects, and logs an error at network define time if a vlan
is requested for a network type that doesn't support it. (Currently
vlan configuration is only supported for openvswitch networks, and
networks used to do hostdev assignment of SR-IOV VFs.)
At runtime, the three potential sources of vlan information are
examined in this order: interface, chosen portgroup, network, and the
first that is non-empty is used. Another check for valid network type
is made at this time, since the interface may have requested a vlan (a
legal thing to have in the interface config, since it's not known
until runtime if the chosen network will actually support it).
Since we must also check for domains requesting vlans for unsupported
connection types even if they are type='network', and since
networkAllocateActualDevice() is being called in exactly the correct
places, and has all of the necessary information to check, I slightly
modified the logic of that function so that interfaces that aren't
type='network' don't just return immediately. Instead, they also
perform all the same validation for supported features. Because of
this, it's not necessary to make this identical check in the other
three places that would normally require it: 1) qemu domain startup,
2) qemu device hotplug, 3) lxc domain startup.
This can be seen as a first step in consolidating network-related
functionality into the network driver, rather than having copies of
the same code spread around in multiple places; this will make it
easier to split the network parts off into a separate daemon, as we've
discussed recently.
The following config elements now support a <vlan> subelements:
within a domain: <interface>, and the <actual> subelement of <interface>
within a network: the toplevel, as well as any <portgroup>
Each vlan element must have one or more <tag id='n'/> subelements. If
there is more than one tag, it is assumed that vlan trunking is being
requested. If trunking is required with only a single tag, the
attribute "trunk='yes'" should be added to the toplevel <vlan>
element.
Some examples:
<interface type='hostdev'/>
<vlan>
<tag id='42'/>
</vlan>
<mac address='52:54:00:12:34:56'/>
...
</interface>
<network>
<name>vlan-net</name>
<vlan trunk='yes'>
<tag id='30'/>
</vlan>
<virtualport type='openvswitch'/>
</network>
<interface type='network'/>
<source network='vlan-net'/>
...
</interface>
<network>
<name>trunk-vlan</name>
<vlan>
<tag id='42'/>
<tag id='43'/>
</vlan>
...
</network>
<network>
<name>multi</name>
...
<portgroup name='production'/>
<vlan>
<tag id='42'/>
</vlan>
</portgroup>
<portgroup name='test'/>
<vlan>
<tag id='666'/>
</vlan>
</portgroup>
</network>
<interface type='network'/>
<source network='multi' portgroup='test'/>
...
</interface>
IMPORTANT NOTE: As of this patch there is no backend support for the
vlan element for *any* network device type. When support is added in
later patches, it will only be for those select network types that
support setting up a vlan on the host side, without the guest's
involvement. (For example, it will be possible to configure a vlan for
a guest connected to an openvswitch bridge, but it won't be possible
to do that for one that is connected to a standard Linux host bridge.)
To allow for the possibility of vlan "trunks", which have more than
one vlan tag associated with them, we need a vlan struct. Since it
will be used by multiple files in src/util, src/conf, src/network, and
src/qemu, it must be defined in src/util. Unfortunately there isn't
currently a common file for simple netdev data definitions, so I
created a new file.
This caused compilation of virnetdevvportprofile.c to fail on systems
without IFLA support in netlink (these are netlink commands used to
configure the VF's of SR-IOV network devices).
Currently there is a hook function that is invoked when a
new client connection comes in, which allows an app to
setup private data. This setup will make it difficult to
serialize client state during process re-exec(). Change to
a model where the app registers a callback when creating
the virNetServerPtr instance, which is used to allocate
the client private data immediately during virNetClientPtr
construction.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Currently the virNetClientPtr constructor will always register
the async IO event handler and the keepalive objects. In the
case of the lock manager, there will be no event loop available
nor keepalive support required. Split this setup out of the
constructor and into separate methods.
The remote driver will enable async IO and keepalives, while
the LXC driver will only enable async IO
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Currently the virNetServerServicePtr is responsible for
creating the virNetServerClientPtr instance when accepting
a new connection. Change this so that the virNetServerServicePtr
merely gives virNetServerPtr a virNetSocketPtr instance. The
virNetServerPtr can then create the virNetServerClientPtr
as it desires
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
It is desirable to be able to query the config params of
the thread pool, in order to save the server state. Add
virThreadPoolGetMinWorkers, virThreadPoolGetMaxWorkers
and virThreadPoolGetPriorityWorkers APIs.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
While the QEMU monitor/agent do not want JSON strings pretty
printed, other parts of libvirt might. Instead of hardcoding
QEMU's desired behaviour in virJSONValueToString(), add a
boolean flag to control pretty printing
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
To allow a virLockManagerPtr to be created directly from a
driver table struct, replace the virLockManagerPluginPtr parameter
with a virLockDriverPtr parameter.
* src/locking/domain_lock.c, src/locking/lock_manager.c,
src/locking/lock_manager.h: Replace plugin param with
a driver in virLockManagerNew
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Do some cleanup of parallelsOpen, STREQ_NULLABLE can replace
a lot of checks.
Also fix error message to be VIR_ERR_INTERNAL_ERROR, the same
as in other drivers.
Signed-off-by: Dmitry Guryanov <dguryanov@parallels.com>
Let's change URI to parallels:///system. Parallels Server supports
creating VMs from non-privileged accounts, but it's not main usage
scenario and it may be forbidden in the future.
Also containers, which will be supported by the driver, can be managed
only by root, so /system path is more suitable for this driver.
Signed-off-by: Dmitry Guryanov <dguryanov@parallels.com>
Each interface has a single pointer to a filterref object. That
filterref can itself point to multiple other filterrefs, but at the
toplevel there is only one.
The parser had previously just silently overwritten earlier filterrefs
when a new one was encountered, so the interface was left with
whichever was the last filterref in the xml, ignoring all the
others. This patch logs an error when it sees more than one filterref.
Just as each physical device used by a network has a connections
counter, now each network has a connections counter which is
incremented once for each guest interface that connects using this
network.
The count is output in the live network XML, like this:
<network connections='20'>
...
</network>
It is read-only, and for informational purposes only - it isn't used
internally anywhere by libvirt.
A later patch will be adding a counter that will be
incremented/decremented each time an guest interface starts/stops
using a particular network. For this to work, all types of networks
need to go through a common return sequence rather than returning
early. To setup for this, a new success: label is added (when
necessary), a new error: label is added which does any cleanup
necessary only for error returns and then does goto cleanup, and early
returns are changed to goto error if it's a failure, or goto success
if it's successful. This way the intent of all the gotos is
unambiguous, and a successful return path never encounters the
"error:" label.
It may be useful for management applications to know which physical
network devices are in use by guests. This information is already
available in the network objects, but wasn't output in the XML. This
patch outputs it when the INACTIVE flag isn't set (and if it's non-0).
I want to include this count in the xml output of networks, but
calling it "connections" in the XML sounds better than "usageCount", and it
would be better if the name in the XML matched the variable name.
In a few places, usageCount was being initialized to 0, but this is
unnecessary, because VIR_ALLOC_N zero-fills everything anyway.
This array was originally defined using the existing
virNetworkForwardIfDef, but that struct has a UsageCount field that
isn't used in the case of PFs. This patch just copies that struct and
removes UsageCount. It ends up being a struct with a single field, but
I left it as a struct in case we need to add other fields to it in the
future.
Use of ldexp() requires -lm on some platforms; use gnulib to determine
this for our makefile. Also, optimize virRandomInt() for the case
of a power-of-two limit (actually rather common, given that Daniel
has a pending patch to replace virRandomBits(10) with code that will
default to virRandomInt(1024) on default SELinux settings).
* .gnulib: Update to latest, for ldexp.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Import ldexp.
* src/Makefile.am (libvirt_util_la_CFLAGS): Link with -lm when
needed.
* src/util/virrandom.c (virRandomInt): Optimize powers of 2.
One of the original ideas behind allowing a <virtualport> in an
interface definition as well as in the <network> definition *and*one
or more <portgroup>s within the network, was that guest-specific
parameteres (like instanceid and interfaceid) could be given in the
interface's virtualport, and more general things (portid, managerid,
etc) could be given in the network and/or portgroup, with all the bits
brought together at guest startup time and combined into a single
virtualport to be used by the guest. This was somehow overlooked in
the implementation, though - it simply picks the "most specific"
virtualport, and uses the entire thing, with no attempt to merge in
details from the others.
This patch uses virNetDevVPortProfileMerge3() to combine the three
possible virtualports into one, then uses
virNetDevVPortProfileCheck*() to verify that the resulting virtualport
type is appropriate for the type of network, and that all the required
attributes for that type are present.
An example of usage is this: assuming a <network> definitions on host
ABC of:
<network>
<name>testA</name>
...
<virtualport type='openvswitch'/>
...
<portgroup name='engineering'>
<virtualport>
<parameters profileid='eng'/>
</virtualport>
</portgroup>
<portgroup name='sales'>
<virtualport>
<parameters profileid='sales'/>
</virtualport>
</portgroup>
</network>
and the same <network> on host DEF of:
<network>
<name>testA</name>
...
<virtualport type='802.1Qbg'>
<parameters typeid="1193047" typeidversion="2"/>
</virtualport>
...
<portgroup name='engineering'>
<virtualport>
<parameters managerid="11"/>
</virtualport>
</portgroup>
<portgroup name='sales'>
<virtualport>
<parameters managerid="55"/>
</virtualport>
</portgroup>
</network>
and a guest <interface> definition of:
<interface type='network'>
<source network='testA' portgroup='sales'/>
<virtualport>
<parameters instanceid="09b11c53-8b5c-4eeb-8f00-d84eaa0aaa4f"
interfaceid="09b11c53-8b5c-4eeb-8f00-d84eaa0aaa4f"\>
</virtualport>
...
</interface>
If the guest was started on host ABC, the <virtualport> used would be:
<virtualport type='openvswitch'>
<parameters interfaceid='09b11c53-8b5c-4eeb-8f00-d84eaa0aaa4f'
profileid='sales'/>
</virtualport>
but if that guest was started on host DEF, the <virtualport> would be:
<virtualport type='802.1Qbg'>
<parameters instanceid="09b11c53-8b5c-4eeb-8f00-d84eaa0aaa4f"
typeid="1193047" typeidversion="2"
managerid="55"/>
</virtualport>
Additionally, if none of the involved <virtualport>s had a specified type
(this includes cases where no virtualport is given at all),
Until now, all attributes in a <virtualport> parameter list that were
acceptable for a particular type, were also required. There were no
optional attributes.
One of the aims of supporting <virtualport> in libvirt's virtual
networks and portgroups is to allow specifying the group-wide
parameters in the network's virtualport, and merge that with the
interface's virtualport, which will have the instance-specific info
(i.e. the interfaceid or instanceid).
Additionally, the guest's interface XML shouldn't need to know what
type of network connection will be used prior to runtime - it could be
openvswitch, 802.1Qbh, 802.1Qbg, or none of the above - but should
still be able to specify instance-specific info just in case it turns
out to be applicable.
Finally, up to now, the parser for virtualport has always generated a
random instanceid/interfaceid when appropriate, making it impossible
to leave it blank (which is what's required for virtualports within a
network/portprofile definition).
This patch modifies the parser and formatter of the <virtualport>
element in the following ways:
* because most of the attributes in a virNetDevVPortProfile are fixed
size binary data with no reserved values, there is no way to embed a
"this value wasn't specified" sentinel into the existing data. To
solve this problem, the new *_specified fields in the
virNetDevVPortProfile object that were added in a previous patch of
this series are now set when the corresponding attribute is present
during the parse.
* allow parsing/formatting a <virtualport> that has no type set. In
this case, all fields are settable, but all are also optional.
* add a GENERATE_MISSING_DEFAULTS flag to the parser - if this flag is
set and an instanceid/interfaceid is expected but not provided, a
random one will be generated. This was previously the default
behavior, but is now done only for virtualports inside an
<interface> definition, not for those in <network> or <portgroup>.
* add a REQUIRE_ALL_ATTRIBUTES flag to the parser - if this flag is
set the parser will call the new
virNetDevVPortProfileCheckComplete() functions at the end of the
parser to check for any missing attributes (based on type), and
return failure if anything is missing. This used to be default
behavior. Now it is only used for the virtualport defined inside an
interface's <actual> element (by the time you've figured out the
contents of <actual>, you should have all the necessary data to fill
in the entire virtualport)
* add a REQUIRE_TYPE flag to the parser - if this flag is set, the
parser will return an error if the virtualport has no type
attribute. This also was previously the default behavior, but isn't
needed in the case of the virtualport for a type='network' interface
(i.e. the exact type isn't yet known), or the virtualport of a
portgroup (i.e. the portgroup just has modifiers for the network's
virtualport, which *does* require a type) - in those cases, the
check will be done at domain startup, once the final virtualport is
assembled (this is handled in the next patch).
This function has several calls to increase the buffer indent by 6,
then decrease it again, then increase, then decrease. Additionally,
there were several printfs that had 6 spaces at the beginning of the
line.
virDomainActualNetDefFormat, which is called by virDomainNetDefFormat,
had similar ugliness.
This patch changes both functions to just increase the indent at the
beginning, decrease it at (well, just before*) the end, and remove all
of the occurences of 6/8 spaces at the beginning of lines.
*The indent had to be reset before the end of the function because
virDomainDeviceInfoFormat assumes a 0 indent and is called from many
other places, and I didn't want to do an overhaul of every caller of
that function. A separate patch to switch all of domain_conf.c would
be a useful exercise, but my current goal is unrelated to that, so
I'll leave it for another day.
There was an error: label that simply did "return ret", but ret was
defaulted to -1, and was never used other than setting it manually to
0 just before a non-error return. Aside from this, some of the error
return paths used "goto error" and others used "return ret".
This patch removes ret and the error: label, and makes all error
returns just consistently do "return -1".
virtPortProfile is now used by 4 different types of network devices
(NETWORK, BRIDGE, DIRECT, and HOSTDEV), and it's getting cumbersome to
replicate so much code in 4 different places just because each type
has the virtPortProfile in a slightly different place. This patch puts
a single virtPortProfile in a common place (outside the type-specific
union) in both virDomainNetDef and virDomainActualNetDef, and adjusts
the parse and format code (and the few other places where it is used)
accordingly.
Note that when a <virtualport> element is found, the parse functions
verify that the interface is of a type that supports one, otherwise an
error is generated (CONFIG_UNSUPPORTED in the case of <interface>, and
INTERNAL in the case of <actual>, since the contents of <actual> are
always generated by libvirt itself).
This patch adds three utility functions that operate on
virNetDevVPortProfile objects.
* virNetDevVPortProfileCheckComplete() - verifies that all attributes
required for the type of the given virtport are specified.
* virNetDevVPortProfileCheckNoExtras() - verifies that there are no
attributes specified which are inappropriate for the type of the
given virtport.
* virNetDevVPortProfileMerge3() - merges 3 virtports into a single,
newly allocated virtport. If any attributes are specified in
more than one of the three sources, and do not exactly match,
an error is logged and the function fails.
These new functions depend on new fields in the virNetDevVPortProfile
object that keep track of whether or not each attribute was
specified. Since the higher level parse function doesn't yet set those
fields, these functions are not actually usable yet (but that's okay,
because they also aren't yet used - all of that functionality comes in
a later patch.)
Note that these three functions return 0 on success and -1 on
failure. This may seem odd for the first two Check functions, since
they could also easily return true/false, but since they actually log
an error when the requested condition isn't met (and should result in
a failure of the calling function), I thought 0/-1 was more
appropriate.
virNetDevVPortProfile has (had) a type field that can be set to one of
several values, and a union of several structs, one for each
type. When a domain's interface object is of type "network", the
domain config may not know beforehand which type of virtualport is
going to be provided in the actual device handed down from the network
driver at runtime, but may want to set some values in the virtualport
that may or may not be used, depending on the type. To support this
usage, this patch replaces the union of structs with toplevel fields
in the struct, making it possible for all of the fields to be set at
the same time.
Both of these functions returned void, but it's convenient for them to
return a const char* of the char* that is passed in. This was you can
call the function and use the result in the same expression/arg.
Commit bb705e25 missed that the appArmor helper file also needs to
resolve the new symbols dragged in by domain_conf.c.
* src/Makefile.am (SECURITY_DRIVER_APPARMOR_HELPER_SOURCES): Pull
in datatypes.c.
openvzOpen fucntion must leave unlocked virDomainObj objects in
driver->domains.
Now even simple commands like list or domain lookup hang,
for example virsh -c openvz:///system list --all.
Signed-off-by: Dmitry Guryanov <dguryanov@parallels.com>
The code for picking a MCS label is about to get significantly
more complicated, so it deserves to be in a standlone method,
instead of a switch/case body.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When generating an SELinux context for a VM from the template
"system_u:system_r:svirt_t:s0", copy the role + user from the
current process instead of the template context. So if the
current process is
unconfined_u:unconfined_r:unconfined_t:s0-s0:c0.c1023
then the VM context ends up as
unconfined_u:unconfined_r:svirt_t:s0:c386,c703
instead of
system_u:system_r:svirt_t:s0:c177,c424
Ideally the /etc/selinux/targeted/contexts/virtual_domain_context
file would have just shown the 'svirt_t' type, and not the full
context, but that can't be changed now for compatibility reasons.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The virSecuritySELinuxGenNewContext method was not reporting any
errors, leaving it up to the caller to report a generic error.
In addition it could potentially trigger a strdup(NULL) in an
OOM scenario. Move all error reporting into the
virSecuritySELinuxGenNewContext method where accurate info
can be provided
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
There is currently no way to distinguish the case that a requested
security driver was disabled, from the case where no security driver
was available. Use VIR_ERR_CONFIG_UNSUPPORTED as the error when an
explicitly requested security driver was disabled
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The security_manager.h header is not self-contained because it
uses the virDomainDefPtr without first including domain_conf.h
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The current virRandomBits() API is only usable if the caller wants
a random number in the range [0, n-1) where n is a power of two.
This adds a virRandom() API which generates a double in the
range [0.0,1.0) with 48 bits of entropy. It then also adds a
virRandomInt(uint32_t max) API which generates an unsigned
in the range [0,@max)
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
As the consensus in:
https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2012-July/msg01692.html,
this patch is to destroy conf/virdomainlist.[ch], folding the
helpers into conf/domain_conf.[ch].
* src/Makefile.am:
- Various indention fixes incidentally
- Add macro DATATYPES_SOURCES (datatypes.[ch])
- Link datatypes.[ch] for libvirt_lxc
* src/conf/domain_conf.c:
- Move all the stuffs from virdomainlist.c into it
- Use virUnrefDomain and virUnrefDomainSnapshot instead of
virDomainFree and virDomainSnapshotFree, which are defined
in libvirt.c, and we don't want to link to it.
- Remove "if" before "free" the object, as virObjectUnref
is in the list "useless_free_options".
* src/conf/domain_conf.h:
- Move all the stuffs from virdomainlist.h into it
- s/LIST_FILTER/LIST_DOMAINS_FILTER/
* src/libxl/libxl_driver.c:
- s/LIST_FILTER/LIST_DOMAINS_FILTER/
- no (include "virdomainlist.h")
* src/libxl/libxl_driver.c: Likewise
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c: Likewise
* src/openvz/openvz_driver.c: Likewise
* src/parallels/parallels_driver.c: Likewise
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c: Likewise
* src/test/test_driver.c: Likewise
* src/uml/uml_driver.c: Likewise
* src/vbox/vbox_tmpl.c: Likewise
* src/vmware/vmware_driver.c: Likewise
* tools/virsh-domain-monitor.c: Likewise
* tools/virsh.c: Likewise
libvirt creates invalid commands if wrong locale is selected. For
example with locale that uses comma as a decimal point, JSON commands
created with decimal numbers are invalid because comma separates the
entries in JSON. Fortunately even when decimal point is affected,
thousands grouping is not, because for grouping to be enabled with
*printf, there has to be an apostrophe flag specified (and supported).
This patch adds specific internal function for converting doubles to
strings with C locale.
This is a patch for bug 847848
If registering an existing lockspace with the sanlock daemon
returns an error, libvirt should not proceed to unlink the lockspace.
Signed-off-by: Asad Saeed <asad.saeed@acidseed.com>
Otherwise distcheck can fail with:
GEN check-symfile
Can't open perl script "../../src/check-symfile.pl": No such file or directory
make[4]: *** [check-symfile] Error 2
This is a patch for bug 826704
All sanlock resources get released when hot-dettaching a disk from the domain
because virLockManagerSanlockRelease uses the wrong function parameters/flags.
With the patch only the resources that should be released are cleaned up.
Signed-off-by: Frido Roose <frido.roose@gmail.com>
This patch introduces a new error code VIR_ERR_OPERATION_UNSUPPORTED to
mark error messages regarding operations that failed due to lack of
support on the hypervisor or other than libvirt issues.
The code is first used in reporting error if qemu does not support block
IO tuning variables yielding error message:
error: Unable to get block I/O throttle parameters
error: Operation not supported: block_io_throttle field
'total_bytes_sec' missing in qemu's output
instead of:
error: Unable to get block I/O throttle parameters
error: internal error cannot read total_bytes_sec
libvirt_qemu_probes.stp stopped working after switching to a build
that used --with-driver-modules. This was because the symbols listed
int libvirt_qemu_probes.stp are no longer in $(bindir)/libvirtd, but
are now in $(libdir)/connection-driver/libvirt_driver_qemu.so.
This patch enhances dtrace2systemtap.pl (which generates the .stp
files from .d files) to look for a new "module" setting in the
comments of the .d file (similar to the existing "binary" setting),
and to look for a --with-modules option. If the --with-modules option
is set *and* a "module" setting is present in the .d file, the process
name for the stap line is set to
$libdir/$module
If either of these isn't true, it reverts to the old behavior.
src/Makefile.am was also modified to add the --with-modules option
when the build calls for it, and src/libvirt_qemu_probes.d has added a
"module" line pointing to the correct .so file for the qemu driver.
The meat of this patch is just moving the calls to
virNWFilterRegisterCallbackDriver from each hypervisor's "register"
function into its "initialize" function. The rest is just code
movement to allow that, and a new virNWFilterUnRegisterCallbackDriver
function to undo what the register function does.
The long explanation:
There is an array in nwfilter called callbackDrvArray that has
pointers to a table of functions for each hypervisor driver that are
called by nwfilter. One of those function pointers is to a function
that will lock the hypervisor driver. Entries are added to the table
by calling each driver's "register" function, which happens quite
early in libvirtd's startup.
Sometime later, each driver's "initialize" function is called. This
function allocates a driver object and stores a pointer to it in a
static variable that was previously initialized to NULL. (and here's
the important part...) If the "initialize" function fails, the driver
object is freed, and that pointer set back to NULL (but the entry in
nwfilter's callbackDrvArray is still there).
When the "lock the driver" function mentioned above is called, it
assumes that the driver was successfully loaded, so it blindly tries
to call virMutexLock on "driver->lock".
BUT, if the initialize never happened, or if it failed, "driver" is
NULL. And it just happens that "lock" is always the first field in
driver so it is also NULL.
Boom.
To fix this, the call to virNWFilterRegisterCallbackDriver for each
driver shouldn't be called until the end of its (*already guaranteed
successful*) "initialize" function, not during its "register" function
(which is currently the case). This implies that there should also be
a virNWFilterUnregisterCallbackDriver() function that is called in a
driver's "shutdown" function (although in practice, that function is
currently never called).
Otherwise, in locations like virobject.c where PROBE is used,
for certain configure options, the compiler warns:
util/virobject.c:110:1: error: 'intptr_t' undeclared (first use in this function)
As long as we are making this header always available, we can
clean up several other files.
* src/internal.h (includes): Pull in <stdint.h>.
* src/conf/nwfilter_conf.h: Rely on internal.h.
* src/storage/storage_backend.c: Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_backend.h: Likewise.
* src/util/cgroup.c: Likewise.
* src/util/sexpr.h: Likewise.
* src/util/virhashcode.h: Likewise.
* src/util/virnetdevvportprofile.h: Likewise.
* src/util/virnetlink.h: Likewise.
* src/util/virrandom.h: Likewise.
* src/vbox/vbox_driver.c: Likewise.
* src/xenapi/xenapi_driver.c: Likewise.
* src/xenapi/xenapi_utils.c: Likewise.
* src/xenapi/xenapi_utils.h: Likewise.
* src/xenxs/xenxs_private.h: Likewise.
* tests/storagebackendsheepdogtest.c: Likewise.
An ESX server has one or more PhysicalNics that represent the actual
hardware NICs. Those can be listed via the interface driver.
A libvirt virtual network is mapped to a HostVirtualSwitch. On the
physical side a HostVirtualSwitch can be connected to PhysicalNics.
On the virtual side a HostVirtualSwitch has HostPortGroups that are
mapped to libvirt virtual network's portgroups. Typically there is
HostPortGroups named 'VM Network' that is used to connect virtual
machines to a HostVirtualSwitch. A second HostPortGroup typically
named 'Management Network' is used to connect the hypervisor itself
to the HostVirtualSwitch. This one is not mapped to a libvirt virtual
network's portgroup. There can be more HostPortGroups than those
typical two on a HostVirtualSwitch.
+---------------+-------------------+
...---| | | +-------------+
| HostPortGroup | |---| PhysicalNic |
| VM Network | | | vmnic0 |
...---| | | +-------------+
+---------------+ HostVirtualSwitch |
| vSwitch0 |
+---------------+ |
| HostPortGroup | |
...---| Management | |
| Network | |
+---------------+-------------------+
The virtual counterparts of the PhysicalNic is the HostVirtualNic for
the hypervisor and the VirtualEthernetCard for the virtual machines
that are grouped into HostPortGroups.
+---------------------+ +---------------+---...
| VirtualEthernetCard |---| |
+---------------------+ | HostPortGroup |
+---------------------+ | VM Network |
| VirtualEthernetCard |---| |
+---------------------+ +---------------+
|
+---------------+
+---------------------+ | HostPortGroup |
| HostVirtualNic |---| Management |
+---------------------+ | Network |
+---------------+---...
The currently implemented network driver can list, define and undefine
HostVirtualSwitches including HostPortGroups for virtual machines.
Existing HostVirtualSwitches cannot be edited yet. This will be added
in a followup patch.
esxVI_LookupHostSystemProperties guarantees that hostSystem is non-NULL.
Remove redundant NULL checks from callers.
Also prefer esxVI_GetStringValue over open-coding the logic.
The static deep copy allocates storage for the copy. The dynamic
version injected the dynamic dispatch after the allocation. This
triggered the invalid argument check in the dynamically dispatched
deep copy call. The deep copy function expects its dest parameter
to be a pointer to a NULL-pointer. This expectation wasn't met due
to the dispatching deep copy doing the allocation before the call.
Fix this by dynamically dispatching to the correct type before the
allocation.
Lists available PhysicalNic devices. A PhysicalNic is always active
and can neither be defined nor undefined.
A PhysicalNic is used to bridge a HostVirtualSwitch to the physical
network.
Remove the target table before renaming a table to it, i.e.,
remove table B before renaming A to B. This makes the
renaming more robust against unconnected left-over tables.
Both LVM volumes and SCSI LUNs have a globally unique
identifier associated with them. It is useful to be able
to query this identifier to then perform disk locking,
rather than try to figure out a stable pathname.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When entering "confirm" phase, we are interested in the value of
cancelled rather then ret variable which was interesting before "finish"
phase and didn't change since then.
Previously, qemu did not respond to monitor commands during migration if
the limit was too high. This prevented us from raising the limit
earlier. The qemu issue seems to be fixed (according to my testing) and
we may remove the 32Mb/s limit.
This patch refactors the JSON parsing function that extracts the block
IO tuning parameters from qemu's output. The most impacting change
concerns the error message that is returned if the reply from qemu does
not contain the needed data. The data for IO parameter tuning were added
in qemu 1.1 and the previous error message was confusing.
This patch also breaks long lines and extracts a multiple time used code
pattern to a macro.
Remove spaces before function calls and some other coding nits in some
parts of the remote driver and refactor getting of URI argument
components into variables used by libvirt later on.
Prevents libvirt from treating RBD backing stores as files. Without this
patch, creating a domain with a qcow2 overlay on an RBD would fail.
This patch essentially extends 9c7c4a4fc5,
which allows nbd backing stores, to allow rbd backing stores.
From man poll(2), poll does not set errno=EAGAIN on interrupt, however
it does set errno=EINTR. Have libvirt retry on the appropriate errno.
Under heavy load, a program of mine kept getting libvirt errors 'poll on
socket failed: Interrupted system call'. The signals were SIGCHLD from
processes forked by threads unrelated to those using libvirt.
Rename qemuDefaultScsiControllerModel to qemuCheckScsiControllerModel.
When scsi model is given explicitly in XML(model > 0) checking if the
underlying QEMU supports it or not first, raise an error on checking
failure.
When the model is not given(mode <= 0), return LSI by default, if
the QEMU doesn't support it, raise an error.
QEMU_CAPS_SCSI_LSI
set the flag when "lsi53c895a", bus PCI, alias "lsi" in
the output of "qemu -device ?"
-device lsi in qemu command line
QEMU_CAPS_VIRTIO_SCSI_PCI
set the flag when "name "virtio-scsi-pci", bus PCI" in
the output of qemu devices query.
-device virtio-scsi-pci in qemu command line
This patch is in response to:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=818467
If a caller to virCommandRun doesn't ask for the exitstatus of the
program it's running, the virCommand functions assume that they should
log an error message and return failure if the exit code isn't
0. However, only the commandline and exit status are logged, while
potentially useful information sent by the program to stderr is
discarded.
Fortunately, virCommandRun is already checking if the caller had asked
for stderr to be saved and, if not, sets things up to save it in
*cmd->errbuf. This makes it fairly simple for virCommandWait to
include *cmd->errbuf in the error log (there are still other callers
that don't setup errbuf, and even virCommandRun won't set it up if the
command is being daemonized, so we have to check that it's non-zero).
Switch virDomainObjPtr to use the virObject APIs for reference
counting. The main change is that virObjectUnref does not return
the reference count, merely a bool indicating whether the object
still has any refs left. Checking the return value is also not
mandatory.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This converts the following public API datatypes to use the
virObject infrastructure:
virConnectPtr
virDomainPtr
virDomainSnapshotPtr
virInterfacePtr
virNetworkPtr
virNodeDevicePtr
virNWFilterPtr
virSecretPtr
virStreamPtr
virStorageVolPtr
virStoragePoolPtr
The code is significantly simplified, since the mutex in the
virConnectPtr object now only needs to be held when accessing
the per-connection virError object instance. All other operations
are completely lock free.
* src/datatypes.c, src/datatypes.h, src/libvirt.c: Convert
public datatypes to use virObject
* src/conf/domain_event.c, src/phyp/phyp_driver.c,
src/qemu/qemu_command.c, src/qemu/qemu_migration.c,
src/qemu/qemu_process.c, src/storage/storage_driver.c,
src/vbox/vbox_tmpl.c, src/xen/xend_internal.c,
tests/qemuxml2argvtest.c, tests/qemuxmlnstest.c,
tests/sexpr2xmltest.c, tests/xmconfigtest.c: Convert
to use virObjectUnref/virObjectRef
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This introduces a fairly basic reference counted virObject type
and an associated virClass type, that use atomic operations for
ref counting.
In a global initializer (recommended to be invoked using the
virOnceInit API), a virClass type must be allocated for each
object type. This requires a class name, a "dispose" callback
which will be invoked to free memory associated with the object's
fields, and the size in bytes of the object struct.
eg,
virClassPtr connclass = virClassNew("virConnect",
sizeof(virConnect),
virConnectDispose);
The struct for the object, must include 'virObject' as its
first member
eg
struct _virConnect {
virObject object;
virURIPtr uri;
};
The 'dispose' callback is only responsible for freeing
fields in the object, not the object itself. eg a suitable
impl for the above struct would be
void virConnectDispose(void *obj) {
virConnectPtr conn = obj;
virURIFree(conn->uri);
}
There is no need to reset fields to 'NULL' or '0' in the
dispose callback, since the entire object will be memset
to 0, and the klass pointer & magic integer fields will
be poisoned with 0xDEADBEEF before being free()d
When creating an instance of an object, one needs simply
pass the virClassPtr eg
virConnectPtr conn = virObjectNew(connclass);
if (!conn)
return NULL;
conn->uri = virURIParse("foo:///bar")
Object references can be manipulated with
virObjectRef(conn)
virObjectUnref(conn)
The latter returns a true value, if the object has been
freed (ie its ref count hit zero)
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This patch adds the support to run the QEMU network helper
under unprivileged user. It also adds the support for
attach-interface option in virsh to run under unprivileged
user.
Signed-off-by: Richa Marwaha <rmarwah@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Corey Bryant<coreyb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
This patch adds the capability in libvirt to check if
-netdev bridge option is supported or not.
Signed-off-by: Richa Marwaha <rmarwah@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Corey Bryant<coreyb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
All callers used the same initialization seed (well, the new
viratomictest forgot to look at getpid()); so we might as well
make this value automatic. And while it may feel like we are
giving up functionality, I documented how to get it back in the
unlikely case that you actually need to debug with a fixed
pseudo-random sequence. I left that crippled by default, so
that a stray environment variable doesn't cause a lack of
randomness to become a security issue.
* src/util/virrandom.c (virRandomInitialize): Rename...
(virRandomOnceInit): ...and make static, with one-shot call.
Document how to do fixed-seed debugging.
* src/util/virrandom.h (virRandomInitialize): Drop prototype.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (virrandom.h): Don't export it.
* src/libvirt.c (virInitialize): Adjust caller.
* src/lxc/lxc_controller.c (main): Likewise.
* src/security/virt-aa-helper.c (main): Likewise.
* src/util/iohelper.c (main): Likewise.
* tests/seclabeltest.c (main): Likewise.
* tests/testutils.c (virtTestMain): Likewise.
* tests/viratomictest.c (mymain): Likewise.
Commit 1f6f723 missed a step. At first I was worried that scrubbing
the conditionals would lead to a runtime failure when compiled without
avahi, but my testing makes it appear that the runtime error will only
occur if the .conf files in /etc request mdns advertisement; and the
old behavior was to silently ignore the request, so this is actually
a better behavior of only failing when the config requests the
impossible.
* src/rpc/virnetserver.c: Drop HAVE_AVAHI conditionals; all
callers already passed NULL if mdns_adv was not configured.
If there's a memory leak in qemu or qemu is exploited the host's
system will sooner or later start trashing instead of killing
the bad process. This however has impact on performance and other
guests as well. Therefore we should set a reasonable RSS limit
even when user hasn't set any. It's better to be secure by default.
Parsing xen-xm format configuration will fail if UUID is not
specified, e.g.
virsh domxml-from-native xen-xm some-config-without-uuid
error: internal error parsing xm config failed
Initially I thought to skip parsing the UUID in xenParseXM() when
not present in the configuration, but this results in a UUID of
all zeros since it is never set
virsh domxml-from-native xen-xm /tmp/jim/bug-773621_pierre-test
<domain type='xen'>
<name>test</name>
<uuid>00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000</uuid>
...
which certainly can't be correct since this is the UUID the xen
tools use for dom0.
This patch takes the approach of generating a UUID when it is not
specified in the configuration.
Commit ba226d334a tried to fix crash of
the daemon when a domain with an open console was destroyed. The fix was
wrong as it tried to remove the callback also when the stream was
aborted, where at that point the fd stream driver was already freed and
removed.
This patch clears the callbacks with a helper right before the hash is
freed, so that it doesn't interfere with other codepaths where the
stream object is freed.
Without this patch, the English phrase 'no name' would appear
literally within the remaining translated message.
* src/parallels/parallels_driver.c (parallelsCreateVm)
(parallelsDomainDefineXML): Tweak error message.
The remote driver did not fill the required snapshot parent argument in
the RPC call structure that caused a client crash when trying to use
this new API.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c:
- Add virDomainControllerFind to find controller device by type
and index.
- Add virDomainControllerRemove to remove the controller device
from maintained controler list.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h:
- Declare the two new helpers.
* src/libvirt_private.syms:
- Expose private symbols for the two new helpers.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c:
- Support attach/detach controller device persistently
* src/qemu/qemu_hotplug.c:
- Use the two helpers to simplify the codes.
The access, birth, modification and change times are added to
storage volumes and corresponding xml representations. This
shows up in the XML in this format:
<timestamps>
<atime>1341933637.027319099</atime>
<mtime>1341933637.027319099</mtime>
</timestamps>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
capability.rng: Guest features can be in any order.
nodedev.rng: Added <driver> element, <capability> phys_function and
virt_functions for PCI devices.
storagepool.rng: Owner or group ID can be -1.
schema tests: New capabilities and nodedev files; changed owner and
group to -1 in pool-dir.xml.
storage_conf: Print uid_t and gid_t as signed to storage pool XML.
The recent changes to the testsuite to validate exported symbols
flushed out a case of unconditionally exporting symbols that
were only conditionally compiled under HAVE_AVAHI.
* src/Makefile.am (libvirt_net_rpc_server_la_SOURCES): Compile
virnetservermdns unconditionally.
* configure.ac (HAVE_AVAHI): Drop unused automake conditional.
* src/rpc/virnetservermdns.c: Add fallbacks when Avahi is not
present.
One of our latest commits fbe87126 introduced this nasty typo:
func(vmdef, ...); where func() dereference vmdef->ncontrollers,
and vmdef was initialized to NULL. This leaves us with unconditional
immediate segfault. It should be vm->def instead.
Security manager is not a dynamically loadable driver. Let's avoid the
confusion by renaming libvirt_driver_security library as
libvirt_security_manager.
Security manager is not a dynamically loadable driver, it's a common
infrastructure similar to util, conf, cpu, etc. used by individual
drivers. Such code is allowed to be linked into libvirt.so.
This reverts commit ec5b7bd2ec and most of
aae5cfb699.
This patch is supposed to fix virdrivermoduletest failures for qemu and
lxc drivers as well as libvirtd's ability to load qemu and lxc drivers.
With 0.10.0-rc0 out the door, we are committed to the next version
number.
* src/libvirt_public.syms (LIBVIRT_0.9.14): Rename...
(LIBVIRT_0.10.0): ...to this.
* docs/formatdomain.html.in: Fix fallout.
* src/openvz/openvz_driver.c (openvzDriver): Likewise.
* src/remote/remote_driver.c (remote_driver): Likewise.
There are a few issues with the current virAtomic APIs
- They require use of a virAtomicInt struct instead of a plain
int type
- Several of the methods do not implement memory barriers
- The methods do not implement compiler re-ordering barriers
- There is no Win32 native impl
The GLib library has a nice LGPLv2+ licensed impl of atomic
ops that works with GCC, Win32, or pthreads.h that addresses
all these problems. The main downside to their code is that
the pthreads impl uses a single global mutex, instead of
a per-variable mutex. Given that it does have a Win32 impl
though, we don't expect anyone to seriously use the pthread.h
impl, so this downside is not significant.
* .gitignore: Ignore test case
* configure.ac: Check for which atomic ops impl to use
* src/Makefile.am: Add viratomic.c
* src/nwfilter/nwfilter_dhcpsnoop.c: Switch to new atomic
ops APIs and plain int datatype
* src/util/viratomic.h: inline impls of all atomic ops
for GCC, Win32 and pthreads
* src/util/viratomic.c: Global pthreads mutex for atomic
ops
* tests/viratomictest.c: Test validate to validate safety
of atomic ops.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Remove the use of a manually run virLogStartup and
virNodeSuspendInitialize methods. Instead make sure they
are automatically run using VIR_ONCE_GLOBAL_INIT
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This patch enables the "none" USB controller for qemu guests and adds
valdiation on hot-plugged devices if the guest has USB disabled.
This patch also adds a set of tests to check parsing of domain XMLs that
use the "none" controller and some forbidden situations concerning it.
This patch adds helpers that validate domain's device configuration.
This will be needed later on to verify devices being hot-plugged to
guests. If the guest has no USB bus, then it's not valid to plug a USB
device to that guest.
Libvirt adds a USB controller to the guest even if the user does not
specify any in the XML. This is due to back-compat reasons.
To allow disabling USB for a guest this patch adds a new USB controller
type "none" that disables USB support for the guest.
The option 'srcSpec' to virsh command find-storage-pool-sources
is optional for logical type of storage pool, but mandatory for
netfs and iscsi type.
When missing the option for netfs and iscsi, libvirt reports XML
parsing error due to null string option srcSpec.
before
error: Failed to find any netfs pool sources
error: (storage_source_specification):1: Document is empty
(null)
after:
error: pool type 'iscsi' requires option --srcSpec for source discovery
To create a new VM in Parallels Clud Server we should issue
"prlctl create" command, and give path to the directory,
where VM should be created. VM's storage will be in that
directory later. So in this first version find out location
of first VM's hard disk and create VM there.
Signed-off-by: Dmitry Guryanov <dguryanov@parallels.com>
Parallels Cloud Server has one serious discrepancy with libvirt:
libvirt stores domain configuration files in one place, and storage
files in other places (with the API of storage pools and storage volumes).
Parallels Cloud Server stores all domain data in a single directory,
for example, you may have domain with name fedora-15, which will be
located in '/var/parallels/fedora-15.pvm', and it's hard disk image will be
in '/var/parallels/fedora-15.pvm/harddisk1.hdd'.
I've decided to create storage driver, which produces pseudo-volumes
(xml files with volume description), and they will be 'converted' to
real disk images after attaching to a VM.
So if someone creates VM with one hard disk using virt-manager,
at first virt-manager creates a new volume, and then defines a
domain. We can lookup a volume by path in XML domain definition
and find out location of new domain and size of its hard disk.
Signed-off-by: Dmitry Guryanov <dguryanov@parallels.com>
Add parallelsDomainDefineXML function, it works only for existing
domains for the present.
It's too hard to convert libvirt's XML domain configuration into
Parallel's one, so I've decided to compare virDomainDef structures:
current domain definition and the one created from XML, given to
the function. And change only different parameters.
Currently only name, description, number of cpus, memory amount
and video memory can be changed.
Video device and console added, because libvirt supposes that
VM must always have one video device, if there are some
graphics and one console.
Signed-off-by: Dmitry Guryanov <dguryanov@parallels.com>
Add support of collecting information about serial
ports. This change is needed mostly as an example,
support of other devices will be added later.
Signed-off-by: Dmitry Guryanov <dguryanov@parallels.com>
Parallels driver is 'stateless', like vmware or openvz drivers.
It collects information about domains during startup using
command-line utility prlctl. VMs in Parallels are identified by UUIDs
or unique names, which can be used as respective fields in
virDomainDef structure. Currently only basic info, like
description, virtual cpus number and memory amount, is implemented.
Querying devices information will be added in the next patches.
Parallels doesn't support non-persistent domains - you can't run
a domain having only disk image, it must always be registered
in system.
Functions for querying domain info have been just copied from
test driver with some changes - they extract needed data from
previously created list of virDomainObj objects.
Signed-off-by: Dmitry Guryanov <dguryanov@parallels.com>
Add function virCommandNewVAList which is equivalent to the
virCommandNewArgList but with va_list instead of a variable number
of arguments.
Signed-off-by: Dmitry Guryanov <dguryanov@parallels.com>
Parallels Cloud Server is a cloud-ready virtualization
solution that allows users to simultaneously run multiple virtual
machines and containers on the same physical server.
More information can be found here: http://www.parallels.com/products/pcs/
Also beta version of Parallels Cloud Server can be downloaded there.
Signed-off-by: Dmitry Guryanov <dguryanov@parallels.com>
The 'check-symfile' test case was checking the contents of
libvirt.syms against libvirt.so + all of libvirt_driver_XXX.so
This was in fact bogus - libvirt.syms should only refer to
stuff in libvirt.so, but it had some symbols from the various
driver modules in it too. Now that libvirt.syms has been
fixed, the check-symfile test can be simplified to only
consider libvirt.so
The nwfilter and secrets drivers are both stateful and are already
linked directly to libvirtd. Linking them to libvirt.so is thus
wrong, likewise exporting their symbols in libvirt.so is wrong
The network driver is stateful, so it is linked directly to libvirtd,
rather than libvirt.so. Thus there are no network symbols to be exported
in libvirt.so, and libvirt_network.syms can be deleted
Otherwise, a build may fail with:
lxc/lxc_conatiner.c: In function 'lxcContainerDropCapabilities':
lxc/lxc_container.c:1662:46: error: unused parameter 'keepReboot' [-Werror=unused-parameter]
* src/lxc/lxc_container.c (lxcContainerDropCapabilities): Mark
parameter unused.
If an LXC container is using a virtual network and that network
is not active, currently the user gets a rather unhelpful
error message about tap device setup failure. Add an explicit
check for whether the network is active, in exactly the same
way as the QEMU driver
The cfg.mk file rule to check for tab characters was not
applied to perl files. Much of our Perl code is full of
tabs as a result. Kill them, kill them all !
The reboot() syscall is allowed by new kernels for LXC containers.
The LXC controller can detect whether a reboot was requested
(instead of a normal shutdown) by looking at the "init" process
exit status. If a reboot was triggered, the exit status will
record SIGHUP as the kill reason.
The LXC controller has cleared all its capabilities, and the
veth network devices will no longer exist at this time. Thus
it cannot restart the container init process itself. Instead
it emits an event which is picked up by the LXC driver in
libvirtd. This will then re-create the container, using the
same configuration as it was previously running with (ie it
will not activate 'newDef').
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Check whether the reboot() system call is virtualized, and if
it is, then allow the container to keep CAP_SYS_REBOOT.
Based on an original patch by Serge Hallyn
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This defines a new RPC protocol to be used between the LXC
controller and the libvirtd LXC driver. There is only a
single RPC message defined thus far, an asynchronous "EXIT"
event that is emitted just before the LXC controller process
exits. This provides the LXC driver with details about how
the container shutdown - normally, or abnormally (crashed),
thus allowing the driver to emit better libvirt events.
Emitting the event in the LXC controller requires a few
little tricks with the RPC service. Simply calling the
virNetServiceClientSendMessage does not work, since this
merely queues the message for asynchronous processing.
In addition the main event loop is no longer running at
the point the event is emitted, so no I/O is processed.
Thus after invoking virNetServiceClientSendMessage it is
necessary to mark the client as being in "delayed close"
mode. Then the event loop is run again, until the client
completes its close - this happens only after the queued
message has been fully transmitted. The final complexity
is that it is not safe to run virNetServerQuit() from the
client close callback, since that is invoked from a
context where the server is locked. Thus a zero-second
timer is used to trigger shutdown of the event loop,
causing the controller to finally exit.
* src/Makefile.am: Add rules for generating RPC protocol
files and dispatch methods
* src/lxc/lxc_controller.c: Emit an RPC event immediately
before exiting
* src/lxc/lxc_domain.h: Record the shutdown reason
given by the controller
* src/lxc/lxc_monitor.c, src/lxc/lxc_monitor.h: Register
RPC program and event handler. Add callback to let
driver receive EXIT event.
* src/lxc/lxc_process.c: Use monitor exit event to decide
what kind of domain event to emit
* src/lxc/lxc_protocol.x: Define wire protocol for LXC
controller monitor.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Update the gendispatch.pl script to get a little closer to
being able to generate code for the LXC monitor, by passing
in the struct prefix separately from the procedure prefix.
Also allow method names using virCapitalLetters instead
of vir_underscore_separator
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Move the code that handles the LXC monitor out of the
lxc_process.c file and into lxc_monitor.{c,h}
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Update the LXC driver to use the virNetClient APIs for
connecting to the libvirt_lxc monitor, instead of the
low-level socket APIs. This is a step towards running
a full RPC protocol with libvirt_lxc
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Rename the lxc_driver_t struct typedef to virLXCDriver to more
closely follow normal libvirt naming conventions
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
For consistency all the APIs in the lxc_domain.c file should
have a virLXCDomain prefix in their name
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
For consistency all the APIs in the lxc_process.c file should
have a virLXCProcess prefix in their name
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
In the socket event handler for the RPC client we must deal
with read/write events, before checking for EOF, otherwise
we might close the socket before we've read & acted upon the
last RPC messages
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Update the remote driver to use the virNetClient close callback
to trigger the virConnectPtr close callbacks
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Allow detection of socket close in virNetClient via a callback
function, triggered on any condition that causes the socket to
be closed.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Currently if the keepalive timer triggers, the 'markClose'
flag is set on the virNetClient. A controlled shutdown will
then be performed. If an I/O error occurs during read or
write of the connection an error is raised back to the
caller, but the connection isn't marked for close. This
patch ensures that all I/O error scenarios always result
in the connection being marked for close.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Define new virConnect{Register,Unregister}CloseCallback() public APIs
which allows registering/unregistering a callback to be invoked when
the connection to a hypervisor is closed. The callback is provided
with the reason for the close, which may be 'error', 'eof', 'client'
or 'keepalive'.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
If a domain is explicitly configured with <seclabel type="none"/> we
correctly ensure that no labeling will be done by setting
norelabel=true. However, if no seclabel element is present in domain XML
and hypervisor is configured not to confine domains by default, we only
set type to "none" without turning off relabeling. Thus if such a domain
is being started, security driver wants to relabel resources with
default label, which doesn't make any sense.
Moreover, with SELinux security driver, the generated image label lacks
"s0" sensitivity, which causes setfilecon() fail with EINVAL in
enforcing mode.
This is a follow up patch of commit f9ce7dad6, it modifies all
the files which declare the copyright like "See COPYING.LIB for
the License of this software" to use the detailed/consistent one.
And deserts the outdated comments like:
* libvirt-qemu.h:
* Summary: qemu specific interfaces
* Description: Provides the interfaces of the libvirt library to handle
* qemu specific methods
*
* Copy: Copyright (C) 2010, 2012 Red Hat, Inc.
Uses the more compact style like:
* libvirt-qemu.h: Interfaces specific for QEMU/KVM driver
*
* Copyright (C) 2010, 2012 Red Hat, Inc.
During refactoring of code, it has proved common to forget to
remove old symbols from the .syms file. While the Win32 linker
will complain about this, the Linux ELF linker does not. The
new test case validates that every symbol listed in the .syms
file actually exists in the built ELF libraries.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
virNWFilterGetIpAddrForIfname and virNWFilterDelIpAddrForIfname
do not exist, so remove them from libvirt_nwfilter.syms
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Any time we have a string with no % passed through gettext, a
translator can inject a % to cause a stack overread. When there
is nothing to format, it's easier to ask for a string that cannot
be used as a formatter, by using a trivial "%s" format instead.
In the past, we have used --disable-nls to catch some of the
offenders, but that doesn't get run very often, and many more
uses have crept in. Syntax check to the rescue!
The syntax check can catch uses such as
virReportError(code,
_("split "
"string"));
by using a sed script to fold context lines into one pattern
space before checking for a string without %.
This patch is just mechanical insertion of %s; there are probably
several messages touched by this patch where we would be better
off giving the user more information than a fixed string.
* cfg.mk (sc_prohibit_diagnostic_without_format): New rule.
* src/datatypes.c (virUnrefConnect, virGetDomain)
(virUnrefDomain, virGetNetwork, virUnrefNetwork, virGetInterface)
(virUnrefInterface, virGetStoragePool, virUnrefStoragePool)
(virGetStorageVol, virUnrefStorageVol, virGetNodeDevice)
(virGetSecret, virUnrefSecret, virGetNWFilter, virUnrefNWFilter)
(virGetDomainSnapshot, virUnrefDomainSnapshot): Add %s wrapper.
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c (lxcDomainSetBlkioParameters)
(lxcDomainGetBlkioParameters): Likewise.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virSecurityDeviceLabelDefParseXML)
(virDomainDiskDefParseXML, virDomainGraphicsDefParseXML):
Likewise.
* src/conf/network_conf.c (virNetworkDNSHostsDefParseXML)
(virNetworkDefParseXML): Likewise.
* src/conf/nwfilter_conf.c (virNWFilterIsValidChainName):
Likewise.
* src/conf/nwfilter_params.c (virNWFilterVarValueCreateSimple)
(virNWFilterVarAccessParse): Likewise.
* src/libvirt.c (virDomainSave, virDomainSaveFlags)
(virDomainRestore, virDomainRestoreFlags)
(virDomainSaveImageGetXMLDesc, virDomainSaveImageDefineXML)
(virDomainCoreDump, virDomainGetXMLDesc)
(virDomainMigrateVersion1, virDomainMigrateVersion2)
(virDomainMigrateVersion3, virDomainMigrate, virDomainMigrate2)
(virStreamSendAll, virStreamRecvAll)
(virDomainSnapshotGetXMLDesc): Likewise.
* src/nwfilter/nwfilter_dhcpsnoop.c (virNWFilterSnoopReqLeaseDel)
(virNWFilterDHCPSnoopReq): Likewise.
* src/openvz/openvz_driver.c (openvzUpdateDevice): Likewise.
* src/openvz/openvz_util.c (openvzKBPerPages): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_cgroup.c (qemuSetupCgroup): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuBuildHubDevStr, qemuBuildChrChardevStr)
(qemuBuildCommandLine): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainGetPercpuStats): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_hotplug.c (qemuDomainAttachNetDevice): Likewise.
* src/rpc/virnetsaslcontext.c (virNetSASLSessionGetIdentity):
Likewise.
* src/rpc/virnetsocket.c (virNetSocketNewConnectUNIX)
(virNetSocketSendFD, virNetSocketRecvFD): Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_backend_disk.c
(virStorageBackendDiskBuildPool): Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_backend_fs.c
(virStorageBackendFileSystemProbe)
(virStorageBackendFileSystemBuild): Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_backend_rbd.c
(virStorageBackendRBDOpenRADOSConn): Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_driver.c (storageVolumeResize): Likewise.
* src/test/test_driver.c (testInterfaceChangeBegin)
(testInterfaceChangeCommit, testInterfaceChangeRollback):
Likewise.
* src/vbox/vbox_tmpl.c (vboxListAllDomains): Likewise.
* src/xenxs/xen_sxpr.c (xenFormatSxprDisk, xenFormatSxpr):
Likewise.
* src/xenxs/xen_xm.c (xenXMConfigGetUUID, xenFormatXMDisk)
(xenFormatXM): Likewise.
Change the permissible minimum value of nodesuspend duration time
to 60 seconds. If option is less than the value, reports error.
Update virsh help and manpage the infomation.
No check for conn->uri being NULL in virAuthGetConfigFilePath (valid
state) made the client segfault. This happens for example with these
settings:
- no virtualbox driver installed (modifies conn->uri)
- no default URI set (VIRSH_DEFAULT_CONNECT_URI="",
LIBVIRT_DEFAULT_URI="", uri_default="")
- auth_sock_rw="sasl"
- virsh run as root
That are unfortunately the settings with fresh Fedora 17 installation
with VDSM.
The check ought to be enough as conn->uri being NULL is valid in later
code and is handled properly.
If from a clean GIT checkout 'make -j 8' is run, the ESX
and Hyper-V code will be generated multiple times over.
This is because there are multiple files being generated
from one invocation of the generator script. make does not
realize this and so invokes the generator once per file.
This doesn't matter with serialized builds, but with
parallel builds multiple instances of the generator get
run at once.
make[2]: Entering directory `/home/berrange/src/virt/libvirt/src'
GEN util/virkeymaps.h
GEN remote/remote_protocol.h
GEN remote/remote_client_bodies.h
GEN remote/qemu_protocol.h
GEN remote/qemu_client_bodies.h
GEN esx/esx_vi_methods.generated.c
GEN esx/esx_vi_methods.generated.h
GEN esx/esx_vi_methods.generated.macro
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.c
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.h
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.typedef
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.typedef
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.typeenum
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.typetostring
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.typefromstring
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.h
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.c
GEN esx/esx_vi_methods.generated.h
GEN esx/esx_vi_methods.generated.c
GEN esx/esx_vi_methods.generated.macro
GEN esx/esx_vi.generated.h
GEN esx/esx_vi.generated.c
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.typeenum
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.typedef
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.typeenum
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.typetostring
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.typefromstring
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.h
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.c
GEN esx/esx_vi_methods.generated.h
...snip...
GEN hyperv/hyperv_wmi.generated.h
GEN libvirt_qemu_probes.h
GEN locking/qemu-sanlock.conf
GEN hyperv/hyperv_wmi.generated.c
GEN rpc/virnetprotocol.h
GEN hyperv/hyperv_wmi_classes.generated.typedef
GEN hyperv/hyperv_wmi_classes.generated.h
GEN hyperv/hyperv_wmi_classes.generated.c
GEN rpc/virkeepaliveprotocol.h
GEN remote/remote_protocol.c
GEN remote/qemu_protocol.c
GEN rpc/virkeepaliveprotocol.c
GEN rpc/virnetprotocol.c
GEN libvirt.def
Prevent this using a timestamp file to control generation,
as was previously done for the python bindings in commit
a7868e0131
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Per the FSF address could be changed from time to time, and GNU
recommends the following now: (http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-howto.html)
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with Foobar. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
This patch removes the explicit FSF address, and uses above instead
(of course, with inserting 'Lesser' before 'General').
Except a bunch of files for security driver, all others are changed
automatically, the copyright for securify files are not complete,
that's why to do it manually:
src/security/security_selinux.h
src/security/security_driver.h
src/security/security_selinux.c
src/security/security_apparmor.h
src/security/security_apparmor.c
src/security/security_driver.c
Fix addresses two issues:
1. Fix generator code to allow deep copy operation for objects with
Dynamic_Cast capabilities.
2. Add missing deep copy routine to Long datatype.
Signed-off-by: Ata E Husain Bohra <ata.husain@hotmail.com>
to query a guests's hostname. Containers like LXC and OpenVZ allow to
set a hostname different from the hosts name and QEMU's guest agent
could provide similar functionality.
When reporting a system error (VIR_ERR_SYSTEM_ERROR) via
virReportSystemError, we should copy the errno value into
the 'int1' field of the virErrorPtr struct. This allows
callers to detect certain errno conditions & discard the
error
* src/util/virterror.c: Place errno value in int1 field
The previous check for YAJL would have many undesirable
consequences, the most important being that it caused the
capabilities XML to lose all <guest> elements. There is
no user visible feedback as to what is wrong in this respect,
merely a syslog message. The empty capabilities causes
libvirtd to then throw away all guest XML configs that are
stored.
This changes the code so that the check for YAJL is only
performed at the time we attempt to spawn a QEMU process
error: Failed to start domain vm-vnc
error: unsupported configuration: this qemu binary requires libvirt to be compiled with yajl
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Instead of using an O(n) efficiency linked list for storing
MCS labels, use a hash table. Instead of having the list
be global, put it in the SELinux driver private data struct
to ensure uniqueness across different instances of the driver.
This also ensures thread safety when multiple hypervisor
drivers are used in the same libvirtd process
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When adding MCS labels, OOM was not being handled correctly.
In addition when reserving an existing label, no check was
made to see if it was already reserved
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The function names in the SELinux driver all start with
SELinux or 'mcs' as a prefix. Sanitize this so that they
all use 'virSecuritySELinux' as the prefix
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Running libvirtd unprivileged results in a warning message from
the NWFilter driver
virNWFilterSnoopLeaseFileRefresh:1882 : open("/var/run/libvirt/network/nwfilter.ltmp"): No such file or directory
Since it requires privileged network access, this driver should
not even run when unprivileged.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Update the legacy Xen drivers to use virReportError instead of
the statsError, virXenInotifyError, virXenStoreError,
virXendError, xenUnifiedError, xenXMError custom macros
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The xenHypervisorInit method was called from two different
locations, during initial driver registration and also while
opening a Xen connection. The former can't report any useful
errors to the end user/app, so remove it. To ensure thread
safety use a VIR_ONCE_GLOBAL_INIT call to invoke
xenHypervisorInit from the xenHypervisorOpen method.
As per the comment, the Xen hypervisor driver is considered to
be mandatory when running privileged. When it fails to open,
we should thus return an error, not ignore it.
ensures that initialization will always take place when it is
needed, and guarantees it only occurs once. The problem is that
the code to setup a global initializer with proper error
propagation is tedious. This introduces VIR_ONCE_GLOBAL_INIT
macro to simplify this.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Update the libvirtd dispatch code to use virReportError
instead of the virNetError custom macro
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Update the nodeinfo helper code to use virReportError instead
of the nodeReportError custom macro
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Update the security drivers to use virReportError instead of
the virSecurityReportError custom macro
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Update the Power-Hypervisor driver to use virReportError
instead of the PHYP_ERROR custom macro
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Update the ESX driver to use virReportError instead of
the ESX_ERROR & ESX_VI_ERROR custom macros
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The 'lxc_driver' global variable is now used from several of
the LXC sources files. Thus it needs to be non-static to
avoid runtime linkage errors
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
The Xen driver had a number of error reports which passed a
constant string without format specifiers and was missing
"%s". Furthermore the errors were related to failing system
calls, but virReportSystemError was not used. So the only
useful piece of info (the errno) was being discarded
Move all the code that manages stop/start of LXC processes
into separate lxc_process.{c,h} file to make the lxc_driver.c
file smaller
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Move the cgroup setup code out of the lxc_controller.c file
and into lxc_cgroup.{c,h}. This reduces the size of the
lxc_controller.c file and paves the way to invoke cgroup
setup from lxc_driver.c instead of lxc_controller.c in the
future
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Move the LXC driver code related to the virDomainObjPtr
private data into separate lxc_domain.{c,h} files
to reduce the size of lxc_driver.c
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Make sure that libvirt_private.syms has all the internal symbols
from APIs in src/rpc/*.h and src/util/cgroup.h, since the LXC
controller/driver will shortly need them
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
To allow virNetServerRun/virNetServerQuit to be invoked multiple
times, we must reset the 'quit' flag in virNetServerRun
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
In the delayed close mode, we're just waiting for final data to
be written back to the client. While waiting, we should not
bother to read more data from the client.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When sending SIGHUP to libvirtd, it will trigger the virStateDriver
reload operation. This is intended to reload the configuration files
for guests. For unknown historical reasons this is also triggering
autostart of all guests. Autostart is generally expected to be
something that happens on OS startup. Starting VMs on SIGHUP will
violate that expectation and potentially cause dangerous scenarios
if the admin has explicitly shutdown a misbehaving VM that has
been marked as autostart
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Update the linux bridge driver to use virReportError instead
of the networkReportError custom macro
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Instead of only removing the ending newline character, it is
better to remove all of standard whitespace character for the
sake of log format.
One example that we have to do this is:
After three times incorrect password input, virsh command
virsh -c qemu://remoteserver/system will report error like:
: Connection reset by peerey,gssapi-keyex,gssapi-with-mic,password).
But it should be:
Permission denied (publickey,gssapi-keyex,gssapi-with-mic,password).
: Connection reset by peer
The reason is that we dropped the newline, but have a '\r' left.
The terminal interprets it as "move the cursor back to the start
of the current line", so the error string is messed up.
It was broken since forever as it expected a libxml2
XML_ELEMENT_NODE containing a XML_TEXT_NODE instead of
just a XML_TEXT_NODE.
This problem was not discovered for so long because
esxVI_String_Deserialize was not used until now.
Reported by Ata Bohra
Commit 80533ca forgot to think about offline cpus. When a node
cpu is offline, then its topology/ subdirectory is not present,
leading to spurious error messages leaked to the user such as:
libvir: error : cannot open /home/dummy/libvirt/tests/nodeinfodata/linux-nodeinfo-sysfs-test-6/node/node0/cpu7/topology/physical_package_id: No such file or directory
Fix that, as well as test it; the test data is gathered from a
machine with one NUMA node, hyperthreading, and with 2 of the
8 cpus offline.
* src/nodeinfo.c (virNodeParseNode): Don't parse topology of
offline cpus.
* tests/nodeinfotest.c (mymain): Run new test.
* tests/nodeinfodata/linux-nodeinfo-sysfs-test-6*: New data.
Update the network filter driver to use virReportError instead
of the virNWFilterReportError custom macro
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This patch brings support to manage sheepdog pools and volumes to libvirt.
It uses the "collie" command-line utility that comes with sheepdog for that.
A sheepdog pool in libvirt maps to a sheepdog cluster.
It needs a host and port to connect to, which in most cases
is just going to be the default of localhost on port 7000.
A sheepdog volume in libvirt maps to a sheepdog vdi.
To create one specify the pool, a name and the capacity.
Volumes can also be resized later.
In the volume XML the vdi name has to be put into the <target><path>.
To use the volume as a disk source for virtual machines specify
the vdi name as "name" attribute of the <source>.
The host and port information from the pool are specified inside the host tag.
<disk type='network'>
...
<source protocol="sheepdog" name="vdi_name">
<host name="localhost" port="7000"/>
</source>
</disk>
To work right this patch parses the output of collie,
so it relies on the raw output option. There recently was a bug which caused
size information to be reported wrong. This is fixed upstream already and
will be in the next release.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Wiedenroth <wiedi@frubar.net>
Basically within a Secure Linux Container (virt-sandbox) we want all content
that the process within the container can write to be labeled the same. We
are labeling the physical disk correctly but when we create "RAM" based file
systems
libvirt is not labeling them, and they are defaulting to tmpfs_t, which will
will not allow the processes to write. This patch labels the RAM based file
systems correctly.
Update the node device driver to use virReportError instead of
the virNodeDeviceReportError custom macro
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Update the secret driver to use virReportError instead of the
virSecretReportError custom macro
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Update the storage driver to use virReportError instead of
the virStorageReportError custom macro
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When passing a const message string to the error reporting APIs
RBD forgot to use "%s" to avoid GCC format string warnings
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This removes nearly all the per-file error reporting macros
from the code in src/util/. A few custom macros remain for the
case, where the file needs to report errors with a variety of
different codes or parameters
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The virNetServerMDNSTimeoutNew method was casting a long long
to an int when reporting errors. This should just be using
%lld instead of %d, avoiding the need to cast
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The virnetdevtap.c and viruri.c files had two error report
messages which were not annotated with _(...)
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Nearly every source file does something like
#define VIR_FROM_THIS VIR_FROM_FOO
#define virFooReportErorr(code, ...) \
virReportErrorHelper(VIR_FROM_THIS, code, __FILE__, \
__FUNCTION__, __LINE__, \
__VA_ARGS__)
This creates needless duplication and inconsistent error
reporting function names in each file. It is trivial to
just have virterror_internal.h provide a virReportError
macro that is equivalent
* src/util/virterror_internal.h: Define virReportError(code, ...)
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Remote driver needs to make sure the driver lock is released before
entering client IO loop as that may block indefinitely in poll(). As a
direct consequence of not following this in stream APIs, tunneled
migration to a destination host which becomes non-responding may block
qemu driver. Luckily, if keepalive is turned for p2p migrations, both
remote and qemu drivers will get automagically unblocked after keepalive
timeout.
The previous commit (387117ad92) was incomplete leaving those
who does not use libpcap with uncompilable sources beacuse
of incomplete conversion of virNWFilterDHCPSnoopReq function.
Introduce new members in the virMacAddr 'class'
- virMacAddrSet: set virMacAddr from a virMacAddr
- virMacAddrSetRaw: setting virMacAddr from raw 6 byte MAC address buffer
- virMacAddrGetRaw: writing virMacAddr into raw 6 byte MAC address buffer
- virMacAddrCmp: comparing two virMacAddr
- virMacAddrCmpRaw: comparing a virMacAddr with a raw 6 byte MAC address buffer
then replace raw MAC addresses by replacing
- 'unsigned char *' with virMacAddrPtr
- 'unsigned char ... [VIR_MAC_BUFLEN]' with virMacAddr
and introduce usage of above functions where necessary.
Even though qemu-kvm binaries can be used in TCG mode, libvirt would
only detect them if /dev/kvm was available. Thus, one would need to make
a /usr/bin/qemu symlink to be able to use TCG mode with qemu-kvm in an
environment without KVM support.
And even though QEMU is able to make use of KVM, libvirt would not
advertise KVM support unless there was a qemu-kvm symlink available.
This patch fixes both issues.
If QEMU supports the BALLOON_EVENT QMP event, then we can
avoid invoking 'query-balloon' when returning XML or the
domain info.
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.c, src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.h:
Add QEMU_CAPS_BALLOON_EVENT
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c: Skip query-balloon in
qemudDomainGetInfo and qemuDomainGetXMLDesc if we have
QEMU_CAPS_BALLOON_EVENT set
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.c, src/qemu/qemu_monitor.h: Check
for BALLOON_EVENT at connect to monitor. Add callback
for balloon change notifications
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.c, src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.h:
Add handling of BALLOON_EVENT and impl 'query-events'
check
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When the guest changes its memory balloon applications may want
to know what the new value is, without having to periodically
poll on XML / domain info. Introduce a "balloon change" event
to let apps see this
* include/libvirt/libvirt.h.in: Define the
virConnectDomainEventBalloonChangeCallback callback
and VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_ID_BALLOON_CHANGE constant
* python/libvirt-override-virConnect.py,
python/libvirt-override.c: Wire up helpers for new event
* daemon/remote.c: Helper for serializing balloon event
* examples/domain-events/events-c/event-test.c,
examples/domain-events/events-python/event-test.py: Add
example of balloon event usage
* src/conf/domain_event.c, src/conf/domain_event.h: Handling
of balloon events
* src/remote/remote_driver.c: Add handler of balloon events
* src/remote/remote_protocol.x: Define wire protocol for
balloon events
* src/remote_protocol-structs: Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When building with --disable-debug, VIR_DEBUG expands to a nop.
But parameters to VIR_DEBUG can be variables that are passed only
to VIR_DEBUG. In the case the building system complains about unused
variables.
When --direct is used when migrating a domain running on a hypervisor
that does not support direct migration (such as QEMU), the caller would
get the following error message:
this function is not supported by the connection driver:
virDomainMigrateToURI2
which is a complete nonsense since qemu driver implements
virDomainMigrateToURI2. This patch would emit a more sensible error in
this case:
Requested operation is not valid: direct migration is not supported
by the connection driver
Commit 32a9aac switched libvirt to use the XDG base directories
to locate most of its data/config. In particular, the per-user socket
for qemu:///session is now stored in the XDG runtime directory.
This directory is located by looking at the XDG_RUNTIME_DIR environment
variable, with a fallback to ~/.cache/libvirt if this variable is not
set.
When the daemon is autospawned because a client application wants
to use qemu:///session, the daemon is ran in a clean environment
which does not contain XDG_RUNTIME_DIR. It will create its socket
in ~/.cache/libvirt. If the client application has XDG_RUNTIME_DIR
set, it will not look for the socket in the fallback place, and will
fail to connect to the autospawned daemon.
This patch adds XDG_RUNTIME_DIR to the daemon environment before
auto-starting it. I've done this in virNetSocketForkDaemon rather
than in virCommandAddEnvPassCommon as I wasn't sure we want to pass
these variables to other commands libvirt spawns. XDG_CACHE_HOME
and XDG_CONFIG_HOME are also added to the daemon env as it makes use
of those as well.
When calling 'lvcreate' if specifying both the '-L' and
'--virtualsize' options, the latter will be treated as
the capacity and the former as the allocation. This can
be used to support sparse volume creation. In addition,
when listing volumes it is necessary to include the 'size'
field in lvs output, so that we can detect sparse volume
allocation correctly.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
To make it easier to dynamically change the command line ARGV,
switch all storage code over to use virCommandPtr APIs for
running programs
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>