I can't think of any good reason to do either of those, and having the
examples there will just lead to unusable patch emails from people who
can't be bothered to read the entire page.
This is place as a sub-element of <source>, where other aspects of the
host-side connection to the network device are located (network or
bridge name, udp listen port, etc). It's a bit odd that the interface
we're configuring with this info is itself named in <target dev='x'/>,
but that ship sailed long ago:
<interface type='ethernet'>
<mac address='00:16:3e:0f:ef:8a'/>
<source>
<ip address='192.168.122.12' family='ipv4'
prefix='24' peer='192.168.122.1'/>
<ip address='192.168.122.13' family='ipv4' prefix='24'/>
<route family='ipv4' address='0.0.0.0'
gateway='192.168.122.1'/>
<route family='ipv4' address='192.168.124.0' prefix='24'
gateway='192.168.124.1'/>
</source>
</interface>
In practice, this will likely only be useful for type='ethernet', so
its presence in any other type of interface is currently forbidden in
the generic device Validate function (but it's been put into the
general population of virDomainNetDef rather than the
ethernet-specific union member so that 1) we can more easily add the
capability to other types, and 2) we can retain the info when set to
an invalid interface type all the way through to validation and report
a proper error, rather than just ignoring it (which is currently what
happens for many other type-specific settings).
(NB: The already-existing configuration of IP info for the guest-side
of interfaces is in subelements directly under <interface>, and the
name of the guest-side interface (when configurable) is in <guest
dev='x'/>).
The peer attribute is used to set the property of the same name in the
interface IP info:
<interface type='ethernet'>
...
<ip family='ipv4' address='192.168.122.5'
prefix='32' peer='192.168.122.6'/>
...
</interface>
Note that this element is used to set the IP information on the
*guest* side interface, not the host side interface - that will be
supported in an upcoming patch.
(This is an updated *re*-commit of commit 690969af, which was
subsequently reverted in commit 1d14b13f).
Signed-off-by: Vasiliy Tolstov <v.tolstov@selfip.ru>
Signed-off-by: Laine Stump <laine@laine.org>
a.k.a. <hostdev mode='capabilities' type='net'>.
This replaces the existing nips, ips, nroutes, and routes with a
single virNetDevIPInfo, and simplifies the code by calling that
object's parse/format/clear functions instead of open coding.
There are currently two places in the domain where this combination is
used, and there is about to be another. This patch puts them together
for brevity and uniformity.
As with the newly-renamed virNetDevIPAddr and virNetDevIPRoute
objects, the new virNetDevIPInfo object will need to be accessed by a
utility function that calls low level Netlink functions (so we don't
want it to be in the conf directory) and will be called from multiple
hypervisor drivers (so it can't be in any hypervisor directory); the
most appropriate place is thus once again the util directory.
The parse and format functions are in conf/domain_conf.c because only
the domain XML (i.e. *not* the network XML) has this exact combination
of IP addresses plus routes. Note that virDomainNetIPInfoFormat() will
end up being the only caller to virDomainNetRoutesFormat() and
virDomainNetIPsFormat(), so it will just subsume those functions in a
later patch, but we can't do that until they are no longer called.
(It would have been nice to include the interface name within the
virNetDevIPInfo object (with a slight name change), but that can't
be done cleanly, because in each case the interface name is provided
in a different place in the XML relative to the routes and IP
addresses, so putting it in this object would actually make the code
more confused rather than simpler).
When support for <interface type='ethernet'> was added in commit
9a4b705f back in 2010, it erroneously looked at <source dev='blah'/>
for a user-specified guest-side interface name. This was never
documented though. (that attribute already existed at the time in the
data.ethernet union member of virDomainNetDef, but apparently had no
practical use - it was only used as a storage place for a NetDef's
bridge name during qemuDomainXMLToNative(), but even then that was
never used for anything).
When support for similar guest-side device naming was added to the lxc
driver several years later, it was put in a new subelement <guest
dev='blah'/>.
In the intervening years, since there was no validation that
ethernet.dev was NULL in the other drivers that didn't actually use
it, innocent souls who were adding other features assuming they needed
to account for non-NULL ethernet.dev when really they didn't, so
little bits of the usual pointless cargo-cult code showed up.
This patch not only switches the openvz driver to use the documented
<guest dev='blah'/> notation for naming the guest-side device (just in
case anyone is still using the openvz driver), and logs an error if
anyone tries to set <source dev='blah'/> for a type='ethernet'
interface, it also removes the cargo-cult uses of ethernet.dev and
<source dev='blah'/>, and eliminates if from the RNG and from
virDomainNetDef.
NB: I decided on this course of action after mentioning the
inconsistency here:
https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2016-May/msg02038.html
and getting encouragement do eliminate it in a later IRC discussion
with danpb.
This patch enables admin socket creation in daemon's code, bumps the library
version in libvirt_admin_public.syms, and performs all necessary modifications
to our makefiles so that admin API can finally be included in the tarball,
and eventually become part of an rpm package (a patch later in this series).
Signed-off-by: Erik Skultety <eskultet@redhat.com>
Many moons ago, commit id '8d7800a55' adjusted the format of the output
to add a space on the HEADER and the DATA... the docs weren't updated to
reflect that... This makes that adjustment.
In the case of chassisNr (used to set chassis_nr of a pci-bridge
controller), 0 is reserved for / used by the pci[e]-root bus. In the
base of busNr, a value of 0 would mean that the root bus had no places
available to plug in new buses, including the pxb itself (the
documentation I wrote for pxb even noted the limit of busNr as 1.254).
NB: oddly, the "chassis" attribute, which is used for pcie-root-port
and pcie-switch-downstream-port *can* be set to 0, since it's the
combination of {chassis, slot} that needs to be unique, not chassis by
itself (and slot 0 of pcie-root is reserved, while pcie-*-port can use
*only* slot 0).
This resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1342962
There was no documentation at all for the XML part. I added at least
some. The 2.0.0 introduction date is deliberate as the parser for the
XML is broken.
The schema file was missing entries for 'mbml' and 'mbmt'.
This allows us to produce releases that are roughly a third in
size, have no limitation on path length, and are still readable
by all supported platforms.
I screwed up by accidentally pushing incomplete version of the
renumbering commit. This patch just fixes the rest so the tree matches
changes in v2.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
This bumps the release number of 2.0.0, to reflect the switch to
a new time based release versioning scheme. The downloads page
is updated to describe our policies for release schedules and
release version numbering
The stable release docs are changed to reflect the fact that
the stable version numbers are now just 3 digits long instead
of 4.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This option allows or disallows detection of zero-writes if it is set to
"on" or "off", respectively. It can be also set to "unmap" in which
case it will try discarding that part of image based on the value of the
"discard" option.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
This new listen type is currently supported only by spice graphics.
It's introduced to make it easier and clearer specify to not listen
anywhere in order to start a guest with OpenGL support.
The old way to do this was set spice graphics autoport='no' and don't
specify any ports. The new way is to use <listen type='none'/>. In
order to be able to migrate to old libvirt the migratable XML will be
generated without the listen element and with autoport='no'. Also the
old configuration will be automatically converted to the this listen
type.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
VNC graphics already supports sockets but only via 'socket' attribute.
This patch coverts that attribute into listen type 'socket'.
For backward compatibility we need to handle listen type 'socket' and 'socket'
attribute properly to support old XMLs and new XMLs. If both are provided they
have to match, if only one of them is provided we need to be able to parse that
configuration too.
To not break migration back to old libvirt if the socket is provided by user we
need to generate migratable XML without the listen element and use only 'socket'
attribute.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
Add support for a "tls_priority" URI parameter in remote
driver URIs. eg
qemu+tls://localhost/session?tls_priority=NORMAL:-VERS-SSL3.0
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
I was asked the other day what's event loop and how libvirt uses
it. Well, I haven't found any good sources on the Internet so I
thought of writing the documentation on my own.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
In 38df47c9af I've tried to prepare our apibuild.py script for
change made in 0628f3498c (1U << 31). What I've done in the
former commit was to replace \d+U in parsed tokens with \d.
Problem was, my regular expression there was not quite right as
it also translated VIR_123U_VAL into VIR_123_VAL.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The apibuild script is a terrifying beast that parses some source
files of ours and produces an XML representation of them. When it
comes to parsing enums we have in some header files, it tries to
be clever and detect a value that an enum member has (or if it is
an alias for a different member). Whilst doing that it has to
deal with values we give to the members in many formats. At some
places we just pass the value in decimal:
VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_JOB_TYPE_PULL = 1,
in other places, we use the aliasing:
VIR_CONNECT_GET_ALL_DOMAINS_STATS_ACTIVE = VIR_CONNECT_LIST_DOMAINS_ACTIVE,
and in other places bitwise shifts are used:
VIR_CONNECT_GET_ALL_DOMAINS_STATS_ENFORCE_STATS = 1 << 31, /* enforce requested stats */
The script tries to parse all of these resulting in the following
tokens: "1", "VIR_CONNECT_LIST_DOMAINS_ACTIVE", "1<<31"; Then, the
script tries to turn these into integers using python's eval()
function. This function succeeds on the first and the last
tokens. But, if we were to modify the last example so that it's
of the following form:
VIR_CONNECT_GET_ALL_DOMAINS_STATS_ENFORCE_STATS = 1U << 31, /* enforce requested stats */
the token representing enum's member value will then be "1U<<31".
So our parsing is good. Unfortunately, python is not aware of the
difference between signed and unsigned C types, therefore eval()
fails over this token and the parser falls back thinking it's an
alias to another enum member. Well it's not.
The solution is to transform [0-9]U into [0-9] as for our
purposes here it's the same thing.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Hand-entering indexes for 20 PCI controllers is not as tedious as
manually determining and entering their PCI addresses, but it's still
annoying, and the algorithm for determining the proper index is
incredibly simple (in all cases except one) - just pick the lowest
unused index.
The one exception is USB2 controllers because multiple controllers in
the same group have the same index. For these we look to see if 1) the
most recently added USB controller is also a USB2 controller, and 2)
the group *that* controller belongs to doesn't yet have a controller
of the exact model we're just now adding - if both are true, the new
controller gets the same index, but in all other cases we just assign
the lowest unused index.
With this patch in place and combined with the automatic PCI address
assignment, we can define a PCIe switch with several ports like this:
<controller type='pci' model='pcie-root-port'/>
<controller type='pci' model='pcie-switch-upstream-port'/>
<controller type='pci' model='pcie-switch-downstream-port'/>
<controller type='pci' model='pcie-switch-downstream-port'/>
<controller type='pci' model='pcie-switch-downstream-port'/>
<controller type='pci' model='pcie-switch-downstream-port'/>
<controller type='pci' model='pcie-switch-downstream-port'/>
...
These will each get a unique index, and PCI addresses that connect
them together appropriately with no pesky numbers required.
Add a new element to <domain> XML:
<os>
<acpi>
<table type="slic">/path/to/acpi/table/file</table>
</acpi>
</os>
To supply a path to a SLIC (Software Licensing) ACPI
table blob.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1327537
Prior to this, <address type='pci'/> wasn't allowed when parsing
(domain+bus+slot+function needed to be a "valid" PCI address, meaning
that at least one of domain/bus/slot had to be non-0), the RNG
required bus to be specified, and if type was set to PCI when
formatting, domain+bus+slot+function would always be output.
This makes all the address attributes optional during parse and RNG
validation, and suppresses domain+bus+slot+function if domain+bus+slot
are all 0 (NB: if d+b+s are all 0, any value for function is
nonsensical as that will never happen in the real world, and after
the next patch we will always assign a real working address to any
empty PCI address before it is ever output to anywhere).
Note that explicitly setting all attributes to 0 is equivalent to
setting none of them, which is okay, since 0000:00:00 is reserved in
any PCI bus setup, and can't be used anyway.
We support omitting listen attribute of graphics element so we should
also support omitting address attribute of listen element. This patch
also updates libvirt to always add a listen element into domain XML
except for VNC graphics if socket attribute is specified.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
All the accesses to files outside our build or source directories
are now identified and appended into a file for later processing.
The location of the file that contains all the records can be
controlled via VIR_TEST_FILE_ACCESS env variable and defaults to
abs_builddir "/test_file_access.txt".
The script that will process the access file is to be added in
next commit.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1265694
Commit id '020135dc' didn't quite get the algorithm correct when a
device mapper source ended with a non numeric value (e.g. ends with
an alphabet value).
This patch modifies the 'part_separator' logic to add the "p" separator
to the attempted target path name only when specified as part_separator='yes'.
For a source name that already ends with a number, the logic doesn't change
as the part separator would need to be there.
For a source name that ends with something other than a number, this allows
the possibility that a "p" separator can be added. The default for one of
these source devices is to not add the separator.
The key for device mapper and the need for a partition separator "p" is
the presence of a number in the last character of the device name link
in /dev/mapper. A name such as "/dev/mapper/mpatha1" would generate
a "/dev/mapper/mpatha1p1" partition, while "/dev/mapper/mpatha" would
generate partition "/dev/mapper/mpatha1". Similarly for a device
mapper entry not using friendly names or an alias, a device such as
"/dev/mapper/3600a0b80005b10ca00005ad656fd8d93" would generate a
paritition "/dev/mapper/3600a0b80005b10ca00005ad656fd8d93p1", while
a device such as "/dev/mapper/3600a0b80005b10ca00005e115729093f" would
generate a partition "/dev/mapper/3600a0b80005b10ca00005e115729093f1".
The long number is the WWID of the device. It's also possible to assign
an alias for a device mapper entry, that alias follows the same rules
with respect to ending with a number or not when adding a "p" to create
the target device path.
SRIOV VFs used in macvtap passthrough mode can take advantage of the
SRIOV card's transparent vlan tagging. All the code was there to set
the vlan tag, and it has been used for SRIOV VFs used for hostdev
interfaces for several years, but for some reason, the vlan tag for
macvtap passthrough devices was stubbed out with a -1.
This patch moves a bit of common validation down to a lower level
(virNetDevReplaceNetConfig()) so it is shared by hostdev and macvtap
modes, and updates the macvtap caller to actually send the vlan config
instead of -1.
Requires adding the plumbing for <device><video>
The value is <enum name='modelType'> to match the associated domain
XML of <video><model type='XXX'/>
Wire it up for qemu too
Add the ability to add an 'iothread' to the controller which will be how
virtio-scsi-pci and virtio-scsi-ccw iothreads have been implemented in qemu.
Describe the new functionality and add tests to parse/validate that the
new attribute can be added.
Rather than be specific about which devices in the <iothreads> description,
let's leave that for the <disk> description for it's <iothread> value.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
This adds a ports= attribute to usb controller XML, like
<controller type='usb' model='nec-xhci' ports='8'/>
This maps to:
qemu -device nec-usb-xhci,p2=8,p3=8
Meaning, 8 ports that support both usb2 and usb3 devices. Gerd
suggested to just expose them as one knob.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1271408
If a panic device is being defined without a model in a domain
the default value is always overwritten with model ISA. An ISA
bus does not exist on S390 and therefore specifying a panic device
results in an unsupported configuration.
Since the S390 architecture inherently provides a crash detection
capability the panic device should be defined in the domain xml.
This patch adds an s390 panic device model and prevents setting a
device address on it.
Signed-off-by: Boris Fiuczynski <fiuczy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Cornelia Huck <cornelia.huck@de.ibm.com>
There were few things done in the nodedev code but we were lacking tests
for it. And because of that we missed that the schema was not updated
either. Fix the schema and add various test files to show the schema
is correct.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
This reverts commit 690969af9c, which
added the domain config parts to support a "peer" attribute in domain
interface <ip> elements.
It's being removed temporarily for the release of libvirt 1.3.4
because the feature doesn't work, and there are concerns that it may
need to be modified in an externally visible manner which could create
backward compatibility problems.
Currently we only allow /dev/random and /dev/hwrng as host input
for <rng><backend model='random'/> device. This was added after
various upstream discussions in commit 4932ef45
However this restriction has generated quite a few complaints over
the years, so a new discussion was initiated:
http://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2016-April/msg00987.html
Several people suggested removing the restriction, and nobody really
spoke up to defend it. So this patch drops the path restriction
entirely
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1074464
All top-level functions have been moved to this class.
On top of that, the app.warning() method has been defined,
so that calls to it - already present in rebuild() - can
actually succeed.
Since commit d195cffa2e, both $(srcdir) and $(abs_builddir)
are passed to the apibuild.py script; however, since the
former is a relative path and the latter an absolute one, the
script might not be able to detect whether they point to the
same location.
Pass both as relative paths to avoid the issue.
When describing attributes and elements, we mostly stick to
a certain pattern; however, there are a few cases when the
information is not presented in the usual way.
Since there doesn't seem to be any reason not to follow the
tried and true formula, rework those bits to fit the rest of
the documentation.
Commit 61b070cf20 cleaned up a number of cases where the <dt>
element was used to document symbols, but the symbol itself was
not inside a <code> element.
To make sure we don't end up having to clean up again a few
months from now, introduce a syntax-check rule that can spot
such mistakes.
All existing exceptions are marked as such, with either file
or line granularity depending on the case.
libvirt-common.h is generated into builddir/include/libvirt. apibuild.py
only operated on srcdir/inlcude/libvirt. With VPATH build
srcdir/docs/libvirt-libvirt-common.html would not get generated and make
RPM failed.
Add bolding for <dt><code> elements to make them "stick out" on the
page rather that just a stream of text where the elements only differ
by slightly different font style.
IGMP is used on IPv4 networks tp setup multicast group memberships. On
IPv6, this job is done by Multicast Listener Discovery (MLD), which
uses ICMPv6 packets rather than its own IP protocol number like IGMP.
The nwfilter documentation lists "igmp-ipv6" as one of the possible
protocols, but this is ignored (and stripped from the xml). This patch
removes that erroneous reference.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1038888
Since commit f5d9c5d00c moved the virTypedParam stuff into
libvirt-common we did not generate any docs for them and neither did we
populate them into libvirt-api.xml. This broke the sanity check in
libvirt python. Fix it by generating docs for libvirt-common.h too.
Some macros don't make sense to be documented at all. Add infrastructure
to the web/api generator and add VIR_DEPRECATED and VIR_EXPORT_VAR as
macros we should not document.
Our uninstall script is not exact counterpart of install one.
Therefore we are leaving couple of files behind. This should not
happen.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
While we could leave it behind as an indelible sign that libvirt
has been running on host, other users might not be that fond of
it.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Ploop image consists of directory with two files: ploop image itself,
called root.hds and DiskDescriptor.xml that contains information about
ploop device: https://openvz.org/Ploop/format.
Such volume are difficult to manipulate in terms of existing volume types
because they are neither a single files nor a directory.
This patch introduces new volume type - ploop. This volume type is used
by ploop volume's exclusively.
Signed-off-by: Olga Krishtal <okrishtal@virtuozzo.com>
Signed-off-by: Ján Tomko <jtomko@redhat.com>
This controller provides a single PCIe port on a new root. It is
similar to pci-expander-bus, intended to provide a bus that can be
associated with a guest-identifiable NUMA node, but is for
machinetypes with PCIe rather than PCI (e.g. q35-based machinetypes).
Aside from PCIe vs. PCI, the other main difference is that a
pci-expander-bus has a companion pci-bridge that is automatically
attached along with it, but pcie-expander-bus has only a single port,
and that port will only connect to a pcie-root-port, or to a
pcie-switch-upstream-port. In order for the bus to be of any use in
the guest, it must have either a pcie-root-port or a
pcie-switch-upstream-port attached (and one or more
pcie-switch-downstream-ports attached to the
pcie-switch-upstream-port).
This is a standard PCI root bus (not a bridge) that can be added to a
440fx-based domain. Although it uses a PCI slot, this is *not* how it
is connected into the PCI bus hierarchy, but is only used for
control. Each pci-expander-bus provides 32 slots (0-31) that can
accept hotplug of standard PCI devices.
The usefulness of pci-expander-bus relative to a pci-bridge is that
the NUMA node of the bus can be specified with the <node> subelement
of <target>. This gives guest-side visibility to the NUMA node of
attached devices (presuming that management apps only assign a device
to a bus that has a NUMA node number matching the node number of the
device on the host).
Each pci-expander-bus also has a "busNr" attribute. The expander-bus
itself will take the busNr specified, and all buses that are connected
to this bus (including the pci-bridge that is automatically added to
any expander bus of model "pxb" (see the next commit)) will use
busNr+1, busNr+2, etc, and the pci-root (or the expander-bus with next
lower busNr) will use bus numbers lower than busNr.
This is especially useful for "bus", since the bus of a device's pci
address is matched to the "index" of a controller to determine which
bus it will be connected to, and "index" is always specified in
decimal - being able to specify both in decimal at least makes it
easier to assure a device is being assigned to the correct bus when it
is added. For the other attributes, it is just a convenience.
(MB: the parser already allows for any of these attributes to be given
in decimal, and there are even examples floating around on the
internet that give them in decimal rather than hex (written in the
days before virsh did schema validation on all XML). This only updates
the schema to match the parser.)
nwfilter.rng defines uint16range and uint32range, but in a different
manner (it also allows a variable name as the value, rather than just
a decimal or hex number). I wanted to add uint16range to
basictypes.rng, but my desired definition was parallel to those for
uint8range and uint24range which are defined in basictypes.rng - they
*don't* allow a variable name for the value.
The simplest path to make everyone happy is to make the "plain"
versions in basictypes.rng have simpler names - "uint8", "uint16", and
"uint24". This patch renames uint8range and uint24range to uint8 and
uint24, while the next patch will add uint16.
The pcie-switch-downstream-port and pcie-root-port controllers have
only a single slot, numbered 0, and the greate majority of all guest
PCI devices are plugged into function 0 of whatever slot they're
using. The parser makes these optional, setting them to 0 when not
specified, and it's logical for the schema to also make them optional.
This cleanups the documentation, reformat some of the paragraphs to use
<p> instead of </br> and rewrites the listen part to be more extendable.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
According to MDN[1], 'margin-left' and similar CSS properties,
including 'margin-right', cannot be applied to the '::first-line'
pseudo-element, so this rule will never have any effect and can
be safely removed.
[1] https://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Web/CSS/::first-line