When starting a qemu process there are certain checks done to ensure
that the configuration makes sense. Extract them into a separate
function so that they can be reused in the test code.
In b3d2a42e I've refactored the code and moved the 'cleanup' label.
Unfortunately the code that was originally in the 'endjob' label and
wanted to jump to cleanup is now in the cleanup label. Remove the jump
and let the function finish.
If we are attempting to thaw the filesystems on error, the code would
overwrite the error code that caused the snapshot to fail with the error
of thawing the filesystem. Since the thawing function allows control of
error reporting behavior we can use this feature.
Add a stub for nodeDeviceSysfsGetPCIRelatedDevCaps() for non-Linux
platforms. It allows nodedev driver to work on non-Linux platoforms
that, however, have HAL.
Syntax-check fails with:
cppi: src/bhyve/bhyve_driver.h: line 26: not properly indented
cppi: src/bhyve/bhyve_driver.h: line 27: not properly indented
maint.mk: incorrect preprocessor indentation
Fix by properly indenting '#include's.
Pushed as trivial.
After 1036ddadb2 we use bhyveDriverGetCapabilities from other
sources too, not only from bhyve_driver.c. However, the function
was static so not properly expose to other files. In order to
expose it, we need to move couple of #include-s too.
Then, there has been a copy paste error in
virBhyveProcessReconnect: s/privconn/data->driver/.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
This was only used in debugging messages and not in any real code.
Ceph/RBD uses uint64_t for sizes internally and they can be printed
with %zu without any need for casting.
Signed-off-by: Wido den Hollander <wido@widodh.nl>
Through the years the RBD storage pool code hasn't maintained the
same or correct coding standard which applies to libvirt.
This patch doesn't change any logic in the code, it only applies
the proper coding standards to the code where possible without
making large changes.
This way the code style used in this storage pool is consistent
throughout the whole file.
Signed-off-by: Wido den Hollander <wido@widodh.nl>
I've noticed that variable @reply is not initialized and if
something at the beginning of the function fails, e.g.
virDBusGetSystemBus(), the control jump straight to cleanup label
where dbus_message_unref() is then called over this uninitialized
variable.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
I've noticed couple of warning in dmesg while debugging
something:
[ 9683.973754] HTB: quantum of class 10001 is big. Consider r2q change.
[ 9683.976460] HTB: quantum of class 10002 is big. Consider r2q change.
I've read the HTB documentation and linux kernel code to find out
what's wrong. Basically we need to pass another argument
"quantum" to our tc cmd line because the default computed by HTB
does not always work in which case the warning message is printed
out.
You can read more details here:
http://luxik.cdi.cz/~devik/qos/htb/manual/userg.htm#sharing
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
As the scheduler info elements are represented orthogonally to how it
makes sense to actually store the information, the extracted code will
be later used when converting between XML and internal definitions.
So, systemd-machined has this philosophy that machine names are like
hostnames and hence should follow the same rules. But we always allowed
international characters in domain names. Thus we need to modify the
machine name we are passing to systemd.
In order to change some machine names that we will be passing to systemd,
we also need to call TerminateMachine at the end of a lifetime of a
domain. Even for domains that were started with older libvirt. That
can be achieved thanks to virSystemdGetMachineNameByPID(). And because
we can change machine names, we can get rid of the inconsistent and
pointless escaping of domain names when creating machine names.
So this patch modifies the naming in the following way. It creates the
name as <drivername>-<id>-<name> where invalid hostname characters are
stripped out of the name and if the resulting name is longer, it
truncates it to 64 characters. That way we can start domains we
couldn't start before. Well, at least on systemd.
To make it work all together, the machineName (which is needed only with
systemd) is saved in domain's private data. That way the generation is
moved to the driver and we don't need to pass various unnecessary
arguments to cgroup functions.
The only thing this complicates a bit is the scope generation when
validating a cgroup where we must check both old and new naming, so a
slight modification was needed there.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1282846
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
The virDomainSnapshotDefFormat calls into virDomainDefFormat,
so should be providing a non-NULL virCapsPtr instance. On the
qemu driver we change qemuDomainSnapshotWriteMetadata to also
include caps since it calls virDomainSnapshotDefFormat.
Signed-off-by: Joao Martins <joao.m.martins@oracle.com>
The virDomainObjFormat and virDomainSaveStatus methods
both call into virDomainDefFormat, so should be providing
a non-NULL virCapsPtr instance.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Rather than have a unwieldy regex string - split it up into its components
each having it's own #define and then combine in a different #define
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Use the newly added virCapabilitiesSetNetPrefix to set
the network prefix for the driver. This in return will
be use by NetDefFormat() and NetDefParseXML() routines
to free any interface name that start with the registered
prefix.
Acked-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Joao Martins <joao.m.martins@oracle.com>
virDomainSaveConfig calls virDomainDefFormat which was setting the caps
to NULL, thus keeping the old behaviour (i.e. not looking at
netprefix). This patch adds the virCapsPtr to the function and allows
the configuration to be saved and skipping interface names that were
registered with virCapabilitiesSetNetPrefix().
Signed-off-by: Joao Martins <joao.m.martins@oracle.com>
And use the newly added caps->host.netprefix (if it exists) for
interface names that match the autogenerated target names.
Signed-off-by: Joao Martins <joao.m.martins@oracle.com>
And use the newly added caps->host.netprefix for free interface
names that match the autogenerated target names.
Signed-off-by: Joao Martins <joao.m.martins@oracle.com>
In the reverted commit d2e5538b1, the libxl driver was changed to copy
interface names autogenerated by libxl to the corresponding network def
in the domain's virDomainDef object. The copied name is freed when the
domain transitions to the shutoff state. But when migrating a domain,
the autogenerated name is included in the XML sent to the destination
host. It is possible an interface with the same name already exists on
the destination host, causing migration to fail.
This patch defines a new capability for setting the network device
prefix that will be used in the driver. Valid prefixes are
VIR_NET_GENERATED_PREFIX or the one announced by the driver.
Signed-off-by: Joao Martins <joao.m.martins@oracle.com>
There are slight differences in various ZFS implementations.
Specifically, ZFS on FreeBSD requires to set value of 'volmode'
option to 'dev' to expose volumes as raw disk device (that's what
we need) rather than geom provides, for example.
With ZFS on Linux, however, such option is not available and
volumes exposed like we need by default.
To make our implementation more flexible, only pass 'volmode'
when it's supported. Support is checked by parsing usage
information of the 'zfs get' command.
Same as for deserializer, this method might get handy for admin one day.
The major reason for this patch is to stay consistent with idea, i.e.
when deserializer can be shared, why not serializer as well. The only
problem to be solved was that the daemon side serializer uses a code
snippet which handles sparse arrays returned by some APIs as well as
removes any string parameters that can't be returned to older clients.
This patch makes of the new virTypedParameterRemote datatype introduced
by one of the pvious patches.
Since the method is static to remote_driver, it can't even be used by our
daemon. Other than that, it would be useful to be able to use it with admin as
well. This patch uses the new virTypedParameterRemote datatype introduced in
one of previous patches.
Currently, the deserializer is hardcoded into remote_driver which makes
it impossible for admin to use it. One way to achieve a shared implementation
(besides moving the code to another module) would be pass @ret_params_val as a
void pointer as opposed to the remote_typed_param pointer and add a new extra
argument specifying which of those two protocols is being used and typecast
the pointer at the function entry. An example from remote_protocol:
struct remote_typed_param_value {
int type;
union {
int i;
u_int ui;
int64_t l;
uint64_t ul;
double d;
int b;
remote_nonnull_string s;
} remote_typed_param_value_u;
};
typedef struct remote_typed_param_value remote_typed_param_value;
struct remote_typed_param {
remote_nonnull_string field;
remote_typed_param_value value;
};
That would leave us with a bunch of if-then-elses that needed to be used across
the method. This patch takes the other approach using the new datatype
introduced in one of earlier commits.
Both admin and remote protocols define their own types
(remote_typed_param vs admin_typed_param). Because of the naming convention,
admin typed params wouldn't be able to reuse the serialization/deserialization
methods, which are tailored for use by remote protocol, even if those method
were exported properly. In that case, introduce a new internal data type
structurally copying both admin and remote protocols which, eventually, would
allow serializer and deserializer to be used in a more generic way.
A pretty nasty deadlock occurs while trying to rename a VM in parallel
with virDomainObjListNumOfDomains.
The short description of the problem is as follows:
Thread #1:
qemuDomainRename:
------> aquires domain lock by qemuDomObjFromDomain
---------> waits for domain list lock in any of the listed functions:
- virDomainObjListFindByName
- virDomainObjListRenameAddNew
- virDomainObjListRenameRemove
Thread #2:
virDomainObjListNumOfDomains:
------> aquires domain list lock
---------> waits for domain lock in virDomainObjListCount
Introduce generic virDomainObjListRename function for renaming domains.
It aquires list lock in right order to avoid deadlock. Callback is used
to make driver specific domain updates.
Signed-off-by: Nikolay Shirokovskiy <nshirokovskiy@virtuozzo.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Free the old vcpupids array in case when this function is called again
during the run of the VM. It will be later reused in the vCPU hotplug
code. The function now returns the number of detected VCPUs.
In some cases it may be better to have a bitmap representing state of
individual vcpus rather than iterating the definition. The new helper
creates a bitmap representing the state from the domain definition.
Use 'ret' for return variable name, clarify use of 'param_idx' and avoid
unnecessary 'success' label. No functional changes. Also document the
function.
Since commit 7140807917 we are generating
socket path later than before -- when starting a domain. That makes one
particular inconsistent state of a chardev, which was not possible
before, currently valid. However, SELinux security driver forgot to
guard the main restoring function by a check for NULL-paths. So make it
no-op for NULL paths, as in the DAC driver.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1300532
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
In case of guest panicked, preserved crashed domain has stopped CPUs.
It's not possible to use tools like WinDbg for the problem investigation
until we start CPUs back.
Error paths after sending the event that domain is started written as if ret = -1
which is set at the beginning of the function. It's common idioma to keep 'ret'
equal to -1 until the end of function where it is set to 0. But here we use ret
to keep result of restore operation too and thus breaks the idioma and its users :)
Let's use different variable to hold restore result.
Signed-off-by: Nikolay Shirokovskiy <nshirokovskiy@virtuozzo.com>
Rather than a loop reallocating space to build the regex, just allocate
it once up front, then if there's more than 1 nextent, append a comma and
another regex_unit string.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
The 'stripes' value is described as the "Number of stripes or mirrors in
a logical volume". So add "mirror" and anything that starts with "raid"
to the list of segtypes that can have an 'nextents' value greater than one.
Use of raid segtypes (raid1, raid4, raid5*, raid6*, and raid10) is favored
over mirror in more recent lvm code.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Rather than preallocating a set number of elements, then walking through
the extents and adjusting the specific element in place, use the APPEND
macros to handle that chore.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Having on_crash set to either coredump-destroy or coredump-restart
creates core dumps with option memory-only in the directory specified
by auto_dump_path. When a watchdog is triggered with the action dump
the core dump is also placed into the directory specified by auto_dump_path
but is created without the option memory-only.
This patch sets the option memory-only also for core dumps created by the
watchdog event.
Signed-off-by: Boris Fiuczynski <fiuczy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Bjoern Walk <bwalk@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Stefan Zimmermann <stzi@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Create a helper routine in order to parse any extents information
including the extent size, length, and the device string contained
within the generated 'lvs' output string.
A future patch would then be able to avoid the code more cleanly
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
By opening a RBD volume in Read-Only we do not register a
watcher on the header object inside the Ceph cluster.
Refreshing a volume only calls rbd_stat() which is a operation
which does not write to a RBD image.
This allows us to use a cephx user which has no write
permissions if we would want to use the libvirt storage pool
for informational purposes only.
It also saves us a write into the Ceph cluster which should
speed up refreshing a RBD pool.
rbd_open_read_only() is available in all librbd versions which
also support rbd_open().
Signed-off-by: Wido den Hollander <wido@widodh.nl>
RBD supports cloning by creating a snapshot, protecting it and create
a child image based on that snapshot afterwards.
The RBD storage driver will try to find a snapshot with zero deltas between
the current state of the original volume and the snapshot.
If such a snapshot is found a clone/child image will be created using
the rbd_clone2() function from librbd.
rbd_clone2() is available in librbd since Ceph version Dumpling (0.67) which
dates back to August 2013.
It will use the same features, strip size and stripe count as the parent image.
This implementation will only create a single snapshot on the parent image if
never changes. This reduces the amount of snapshots created for that RBD image
which benefits the performance of the Ceph cluster.
During build the decision will be made to use either rbd_diff_iterate() or
rbd_diff_iterate2().
The latter is faster, but only available on Ceph versions after 0.94 (Hammer).
Cloning is only supported if RBD format 2 is used. All images created by libvirt
are already format 2.
If a RBD format 1 image is used as the original volume the backend will report
a VIR_ERR_OPERATION_UNSUPPORTED error.
Signed-off-by: Wido den Hollander <wido@widodh.nl>
Using VIR_STORAGE_VOL_WIPE_ALG_TRIM a RBD volume can be trimmed down
to 0 bytes using rbd_discard()
Effectively all the data on the volume will be lost/gone, but the volume
remains available for use afterwards.
Starting at offset 0 the storage pool will call rbd_discard() in stripe
size * count increments which is usually 4MB. Stripe size being 4MB and
count 1.
rbd_discard() is available since Ceph version Dumpling (0.67) which dates
back to August 2013.
Signed-off-by: Wido den Hollander <wido@widodh.nl>
This new algorithm adds support for wiping volumes using TRIM.
It does not overwrite all the data in a volume, but it tells the
backing storage pool/driver that all bytes in a volume can be
discarded.
It depends on the backing storage pool how this is handled.
A SCSI backend might send UNMAP commands to remove all data present
on a LUN.
A Ceph backend might use rbd_discard() to instruct the Ceph cluster
that all data on that RBD volume can be discarded.
Signed-off-by: Wido den Hollander <wido@widodh.nl>
When wiping the RBD image will be filled with zeros started
at offset 0 and until the end of the volume.
This will result in the RBD volume growing to it's full allocation
on the Ceph cluster. All data on the volume will be overwritten
however, making it unavailable.
It does NOT take any RBD snapshots into account. The original data
might still be in a snapshot of that RBD volume.
Signed-off-by: Wido den Hollander <wido@widodh.nl>
Use the cast of (virStorageVolWipeAlgorithm) adding the missing case:'s
(VIR_STORAGE_VOL_WIPE_ALG_ZERO and VIR_STORAGE_VOL_WIPE_ALG_LAST).
Additionally, the old code would also still run the SCRUB command on
default since it didn't go to cleanup when a invalid flag was supplied.
We now go to cleanup and exit if a invalid flag would be provided.
Signed-off-by: Wido den Hollander <wido@widodh.nl>
When commit id '82c1740a' made changes to the output format (changing from
using a ',' separator to '#'), the examples in the lvs output from the
comments weren't changed.
Additionally, the two new fields added ('segtype' and 'stripes') were
not included in the output, leaving it well confusing.
This patch fixes the sample output, adds a 'striped' example, and makes
other comment related adjustments for long line and spacing between followup
'NB' remarks (while I'm there).
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
The affected functions are:
virPCIDeviceGetManaged()
virPCIDeviceGetUnbindFromStub()
virPCIDeviceGetRemoveSlot()
virPCIDeviceGetReprobe()
Change their return type from unsigned int to bool: the corresponding
members in struct _virPCIDevice are defined as bool, and even the
corresponding virPCIDeviceSet*() functions take a bool value as input
so there's no point in these functions having unsigned int as return
type.
Suggested-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
In our generator for some code we put empty lines in the output
to separate blocks of code. However, in some cases we put couple
of spaces on the empty line too. It's not bug, it just isn't
nice.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Unbinding a PCI device from the stub driver can require several steps,
and it can be useful for debugging to be able to trace which of these
steps are performed and which are skipped for each device.
The name is confusing, and there are just two uses: one is a test case,
and the other will be removed as part of an upcoming refactoring of
the hostdev code.
Commit 871e10f fixed a memory corruption error, but called strlen()
twice on the same string to do so. Even though the compiler is
probably smart enough to optimize the second call away, having a
single invocation makes the code slightly cleaner.
Suggested-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
In 370608b4c7 we have introduced two new internal APIs.
However, there are no stubs for build without macvtap. Therefore
build on systems lacking macvtap support (e.g. mingw or freebds)
fails when trying to link.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
libvirtd crashes on free()ing portData for an open vswitch port if that port
was deleted. To reproduce:
ovs-vsctl del-port vnet0
virsh migrate --live kvm1 qemu+ssh://dstHost/system
Error message:
libvirtd: *** Error in `/usr/sbin/libvirtd': free(): invalid pointer: 0x000003ff90001e20 ***
The problem is that virCommandRun can return an empty string in the event that
the port being queried does not exist. When this happens then we are
unconditionally overwriting a newline character at position strlen()-1. When
strlen is 0, we overwrite memory that does not belong to the string.
The fix: Only overwrite the newline if the string is not empty.
Reviewed-by: Bjoern Walk <bwalk@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Jason J. Herne <jjherne@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
This patch creates two bitmaps, one for macvlan device names and one
for macvtap. The bitmap position is used to indicate that libvirt is
currently using a device with the name macvtap%d/macvlan%d, where %d
is the position in the bitmap. When requested to create a new
macvtap/macvlan device, libvirt will now look for the first clear bit
in the appropriate bitmap and derive the device name from that rather
than just starting at 0 and counting up until one works.
When libvirtd is restarted, the qemu driver code that reattaches to
active domains calls the appropriate function to "re-reserve" the
device names as it is scanning the status of running domains.
Note that it may seem strange that the retry counter now starts at
8191 instead of 5. This is because we now don't do a "pre-check" for
the existence of a device once we've reserved it in the bitmap - we
move straight to creating it; although very unlikely, it's possible
that someone has a running system where they have a large number of
network devices *created outside libvirt* named "macvtap%d" or
"macvlan%d" - such a setup would still allow creating more devices
with the old code, while a low retry max in the new code would cause a
failure. Since the objective of the retry max is just to prevent an
infinite loop, and it's highly unlikely to do more than 1 iteration
anyway, having a high max is a reasonable concession in order to
prevent lots of new failures.
In the following cases nl_recv() was returning the error "No buffer
space available":
* When switching CPUs to offline/online in a system more than 128 cpus
* When using virsh to destroy domain in a system with many interfaces
This patch sets the buffer size for all netlink sockets created by
libnl to 128K and turns on message peeking for nl_recv(). This
eliminates the "No buffer space available" errors seen in the cases
above, and also preempts other future errors the smaller buffers could
have caused.
Signed-off-by: Leno Hou <houqy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Laine Stump <laine@laine.org>
The current code was a little bit odd. At first we've removed all
possible implicit input devices from domain definition to add them later
back if there was any graphics device defined while parsing XML
description. That's not all, while formating domain definition to XML
description we at first ignore any input devices with bus different to
USB and VIRTIO and few lines later we add implicit input devices to XML.
This seems to me as a lot of code for nothing. This patch may look
to be more complicated than original approach, but this is a preferred
way to modify/add driver specific stuff only in those drivers and not
deal with them in common parsing/formating functions.
The update is to add those implicit input devices into config XML to
follow the real HW configuration visible by guest OS.
There was also inconsistence between our behavior and QEMU's in the way,
that in QEMU there is no way how to disable those implicit input devices
for x86 architecture and they are available always, even without graphics
device. This applies also to XEN hypervisor. VZ driver already does its
part by putting correct implicit devices into live XML.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
In dc576025c3 we renamed virCgroupIsolateMount function to
virCgroupBindMount. However, we forgot about one occurrence in
section of the code which provides stubs for platforms without
support for CGroups like *BSD for instance.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
On the host when we start a container, it will be
placed in a cgroup path of
/machine.slice/machine-lxc\x2ddemo.scope
under /sys/fs/cgroup/*
Inside the containers' namespace we need to setup
/sys/fs/cgroup mounts, and currently will bind
mount /machine.slice/machine-lxc\x2ddemo.scope on
the host to appear as / in the container.
While this may sound nice, it confuses applications
dealing with cgroups, because /proc/$PID/cgroup
now does not match the directory in /sys/fs/cgroup
This particularly causes problems for systems and
will make it create repeated path components in
the cgroup for apps run in the container eg
/machine.slice/machine-lxc\x2ddemo.scope/machine.slice/machine-lxc\x2ddemo.scope/user.slice/user-0.slice/session-61.scope
This also causes any systemd service that uses
sd-notify to fail to start, because when systemd
receives the notification it won't be able to
identify the corresponding unit it came from.
In particular this break rabbitmq-server startup
Future kernels will provide proper cgroup namespacing
which will handle this problem, but until that time
we should not try to play games with hiding parent
cgroups.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The VIR_DOMAIN_STATS_VCPU flag to virDomainListGetStats
enables reporting of stats about vCPUs. Currently we
only report the cumulative CPU running time and the
execution state.
This adds reporting of the wait time - time the vCPU
wants to run, but the host scheduler has something else
running ahead of it.
The data is reported per-vCPU eg
$ virsh domstats --vcpu demo
Domain: 'demo'
vcpu.current=4
vcpu.maximum=4
vcpu.0.state=1
vcpu.0.time=1420000000
vcpu.0.wait=18403928
vcpu.1.state=1
vcpu.1.time=130000000
vcpu.1.wait=10612111
vcpu.2.state=1
vcpu.2.time=110000000
vcpu.2.wait=12759501
vcpu.3.state=1
vcpu.3.time=90000000
vcpu.3.wait=21825087
In implementing this I notice our reporting of CPU execute
time has very poor granularity, since we are getting it
from /proc/$PID/stat. As a future enhancement we should
prefer to get CPU execute time from /proc/$PID/schedstat
or /proc/$PID/sched (if either exist on the running kernel)
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Report
error: invalid argument: requested vcpu '100' is not present in the domain
instead of
error: invalid argument: requested vcpu is higher than allocated vcpus
Since 'savevm' was not converted to QMP libvirt has to parse for error
strings in the text monitor output. One of the unhandled errors is
produced when qemu treats a device as unmigratable.
As current qemu actually does support AHCI migration this bug is
applicable only to older versions of qemu.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1293899
Make bhyveload respect boot order as specified by os.boot section of the
domain XML or by "boot order" for specific devices. As bhyve does not
support a real boot order specification right now, it's just about
choosing a single device to boot from.
libvirt always resets the MAC address of the physdev used for macvtap
passthrough when the guest is finished with it. This was happening
prior to the 802.1Qb[gh] DISASSOCIATE command, and was quite often
failing, presumably because the driver wouldn't allow the MAC address
to be reset while the association was still active, with a log message
like this:
virNetDevSetMAC:168 : Cannot set interface MAC to 00:00:00:00:00:00 on 'eth13': Cannot assign requested address
This patch changes the order - we now do the 802.1Qb[gh] disassociate
and delete the macvtap interface first, then and reset the MAC
address.
'free' on fedora23 wants to use the Slab field for calculated used
memory. The equation is:
used = MemTotal - MemFree - (Cached + Slab) - Buffers
We already set Cached and Buffers to 0, do the same for Slab and its
related values
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1300781
'free' on Fedora 23 will use MemAvailable to calculate its 'available'
field, but we are passing through the host's value. Set it to match
MemFree, which is what 'free' will do for older linux that don't have
MemAvailable
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1300781
We virtualize bits of /proc/meminfo by replacing host values with
values specific to the container.
However for calculating the final size of the returned data, we are
using the size of the original file and not the altered copy, which
could give garbelled output.
... and consolidate the cmdline/extra/root parsing to facilitate doing
so.
The logic is the same as xl's parse_cmdline from the current xen.git master
branch (e6f0e099d2c17de47fd86e817b1998db903cab61).
On the formatting side switch to producing cmdline= instead of extra=.
Update a few tests and add serveral more.
- test-cmdline is added to test the exclusive use of cmdline.
- test-fullvirt-direct-kernel-boot.cfg is updated due to the switch
on the formatting side and now tests the exclusive use of cmdline=.
- Tests are added for both paravirt and fullvirt where the .cfg uses
extra= and (paravirt only) root=. These are format (xl->xml) only
since the inverse will generate cmdline= hence is not a round trip
(which was already true if using root=, which used to generate
extra= on the way back).
- Tests are added for both paravirt and fullvirt where the .cfg
declares cmdline= as well as bogus extra= and (paravirt only) root=
entries which should be ignored. Again these are format only tests
since the inverse won't include the bogus lines.
The last two bullets here required splitting the DO_TEST macro into
two halves, as is done in the xmconfigtest.c case.
In order to introduce a use of VIR_WARN for logging I had to add
virerror.h and VIR_LOG_INIT.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ian.campbell@citrix.com>