Fix up qemudDomainMigratePrepare2 to use virGetHostname instead of
gethostname. Besides the fact that virGetHostname is far more clever,
there was a latent bug in the handling that could cause a buffer overflow
on a very long hostname.
Signed-off-by: Chris Lalancette <clalance@redhat.com>
* autobuild.sh, mingw32-libvirt.spec.in: Enable esx on mingw32
* src/esx/esx_driver.c: Define AI_ADDRCONFIG if not set
* src/esx/esx_util.c, src/esx/esx_vi_types.c: Always use
%lld & friends, since gnulib guarentees we have these
and not the target's own variants
If the bridge device is configured to have IPv6 address and
accept router advertisments, then a malicious guest can send
out bogus advertisments and hijack/DOS host IPv6 connectivity
* src/network_driver.c: Set accept_ra=0, disable_ipv6=1, autoconf=0
for IPv6 sysctl on virual network bridge devices
PCIe DevCap register is actually 32 bits, not 16 bits. Since FLR is
bit 28, we clearly are failing to detect FLR support.
Known to fix device reset with some SR-IOV devices.
* src/pci.c: fix pciDetectFunctionLevelReset()
* src/util.c: Don't drop capabilities until after the PID file has
been written. Kill off child if writing the PID file fails
* src/qemu_driver.c: Remove bogus trailing '/' in state dir
* esx/esx_driver.c: add some documentation about the CPU scheduler
parameters and remove some old, unnecessary compensation code, since
virsh uses the proposed parameter types now.
* src/qemu_driver.c: fix qemudOpenMonitorUnix() to retry on ENOENT
instead of EACCES which is the error one receive when the socket
error hasn't shown up yet
polkit was disabled by default for a reason - because we selectively
enable it on newer fedoras rather than disable it on older fedoras
Same fix needed for netcf
It's not needed at build time
Removed in Fedora by:
* Fri Jun 5 2009 Mark McLoughlin <markmc@redhat.com> - 0.6.4-2.fc12
- Remove the qemu BuildRequires
Disabled on < f12 for now until netcf is in Fedora updates
BuildRequires netcf if enabled, pass --without-netcf if its disabled
* libvirt.spec.in: enabled netcf by default
In order to hotplug a network/bridge backed NIC, we need to first create
the tap file descriptor, add the tap interface to the bridge and then
pass the file descriptor to the qemu process using the 'getfd' monitor
command.
Once the tapfd has been accepted, we create the network backend using
host_net_add, supplying the name assigned to the tapfd. If this fails,
we need to close the tapfd in qemu using the 'closefd' monitor command.
If the version of qemu does not support the getfd/closefd monitor
commands we detect "unknown command" in the getfd reply and fail the
attach operation.
* src/qemu_driver.c: add support for tapfd based hotplug in
qemudDomainAttachNetDevice()