Commit Graph

340 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Viktor Mihajlovski
24aa7f8d11 S390: Documentation for CCW address type
The native bus for s390 I/O is called CCW (channel command word).
As QEMU has added basic support for the CCW bus, i.e. the
ability to assign CCW devnos (bus addresses) to devices.
Domains with the new machine type s390-ccw-virtio can use the
CCW bus. Currently QEMU will only allow to define virtio
devices on the CCW bus.
Here we add the new machine type and the new device address to the
schema definition and add a new paragraph to the domain XML
documentation.

Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
2013-02-11 16:27:45 -07:00
Osier Yang
38dd53e5ca rng: Change the datatype for volume name for common use
The "volName" will be used by later patch.
2013-01-28 11:52:54 +08:00
Osier Yang
c9d9cc5eae eng: Remove the duplicate definition
The RE for data type "name" storagepool.rng uses is same with
"genericName" in basictypes.rng.
2013-01-28 11:52:51 +08:00
Josh Durgin
c1509ab47e qemu: escape ipv6 for rbd network disk hosts
Hosts for rbd are ceph monitor daemons. These have fixed IP addresses,
so they are often referenced by IP rather than hostname for
convenience, or to avoid relying on DNS. Using IPv4 addresses as the
host name works already, but IPv6 addresses require rbd-specific
escaping because the colon is used as an option separator in the
string passed to qemu.

Escape these colons, and enclose the IPv6 address in square brackets
so it is distinguished from the port, which is currently mandatory.

Acked-by: Osier Yang <jyang@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Josh Durgin <josh.durgin@inktank.com>
2013-01-25 11:48:24 +08:00
Peter Krempa
828820e2d3 schemas: Add schemas for more CPU topology information in the caps XML
This patch adds RNG schemas for adding more information in the topology
output of the NUMA section in the capabilities XML.

The added elements are designed to provide more information about the
placement and topology of the processors in the system to management
applications.

A demonstration of supported XML added by this patch:
<capabilities>
  <host>
    <topology>
      <cells num='3'>
        <cell id='0'>
          <cpus num='4'> <!-- this is node with Hyperthreading -->
            <cpu id='0' socket_id='0' core_id='0' siblings='0-1'/>
            <cpu id='1' socket_id='0' core_id='0' siblings='0-1'/>
            <cpu id='2' socket_id='0' core_id='1' siblings='2-3'/>
            <cpu id='3' socket_id='0' core_id='1' siblings='2-3'/>
          </cpus>
        </cell>
        <cell id='1'>
          <cpus num='4'> <!-- this is node with modules (Bulldozer) -->
            <cpu id='4' socket_id='0' core_id='2' siblings='4-5'/>
            <cpu id='5' socket_id='0' core_id='3' siblings='4-5'/>
            <cpu id='6' socket_id='0' core_id='4' siblings='6-7'/>
            <cpu id='7' socket_id='0' core_id='5' siblings='6-7'/>
          </cpus>
         </cell>
        <cell id='2'>
          <cpus num='4'> <!-- this is a normal multi-core node -->
            <cpu id='8' socket_id='1' core_id='0' siblings='8'/>
            <cpu id='9' socket_id='1' core_id='1' siblings='9'/>
            <cpu id='10' socket_id='1' core_id='2' siblings='10'/>
            <cpu id='11' socket_id='1' core_id='3' siblings='11'/>
          </cpus>
         </cell>
      </cells>
    </topology>
  </host>
</capabilities>

The socket_id field represents identification of the physical socket the
CPU is plugged in. This ID may not be identical to the physical socket
ID reported by the kernel.

The core_id identifies a core within a socket. Also this field may not
accurately represent physical ID's.

The core_id is guaranteed to be unique within a cell and a socket. There
may be duplicates between sockets. Only cores sharing core_id within one
cell and one socket can be considered as threads. Cores sharing core_id
within sparate cells are distinct cores.

The siblings field is a list of CPU id's the cpu id's the CPU is sibling
with - thus a thread. The list is in the cpuset format.
2013-01-24 10:53:00 +01:00
Peter Krempa
14940b5eaa schema: Make the cpuset type reusable across schema files 2013-01-24 10:53:00 +01:00
Osier Yang
3f46ce78fc rng: Have colorful *.rng with editor
Just add the head line to let the editor know it's XML document.
2013-01-23 23:03:17 +08:00
Alon Levy
55bfd020d8 qemu: Support ram bar size for qxl devices
Adds a "ram" attribute globally to the video.model element, that changes
the resulting qemu command line only if video.type == "qxl".

<video>
  <model type='qxl' ram='65536' vram='65536' heads='1'/>
</video>

That attribute gets a default value of 64*1024. The schema is unchanged
for other video element types.

The resulting qemu command line change is the addition of

-global qxl-vga.ram_size=<ram>*1024

or

-global qxl.ram_size=<ram>*1024

For the main and secondary qxl devices respectively.

The default for the qxl ram bar is 64*1024 kilobytes (the same as the
default qxl vram bar size).
2013-01-22 10:40:45 -07:00
Guannan Ren
e3a04455fa qemu: add usb-serial support
Add an optional 'type' attribute to <target> element of serial port
device. There are two choices for its value, 'isa-serial' and
'usb-serial'. For backward compatibility, when attribute 'type' is
missing the 'isa-serial' will be chosen as before.

Libvirt XML sample

    <serial type='pty'>
      <target type='usb-serial' port='0'/>
      <address type='usb' bus='0' port='1'/>
    </serial>

qemu commandline:

qemu ${other_vm_args}              \
    -chardev pty,id=charserial0    \
    -device usb-serial,chardev=charserial0,id=serial0,bus=usb.0,port=1
2013-01-10 21:29:20 +08:00
J.B. Joret
d760255d01 S390: Add SCLP console front end support
The SCLP console is the native console type for s390 and is preferred
over the virtio console as it doesn't require special drivers and
is more efficient. Recent versions of QEMU come with SCLP support
which is hereby enabled.

The new target types 'sclp' and 'sclplm' can be used to specify a
SCLP console. Adding documentation, domain schema and XML processing
support.

Signed-off-by: J.B. Joret <jb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
2013-01-08 11:37:52 +01:00
Osier Yang
b9c57e7b0d docs: Add docs and rng schema for new XML tag sgio
This introduces new XML tag "sgio" for disk, its valid values
are "filtered" and "unfiltered", setting it as "filtered" will
set the disk's unpriv_sgio to 0, and "unfiltered" to set it
as 1, which allows the unprivileged SG_IO commands.
2013-01-07 21:37:24 +08:00
Daniel P. Berrange
aae0fc2a92 Add support for <hostdev mode="capabilities">
The <hostdev> device type has long had a redundant "mode"
attribute, which has always been "subsys". This finally
introduces a new mode "capabilities", which will be used
by the LXC driver for device assignment. Since container
based virtualization uses a single kernel, the idea of
assigning physical PCI devices doesn't make sense. It is
still reasonable to assign USB devices, but for assigning
arbitrary nodes in /dev, the new 'capabilities' mode is
to be used.

The first capability support is 'storage', which is for
assignment of block devices. Functionally this is really
pretty similar to the <disk> support. The only difference
is the device node name is identical in both host and
container namespaces.

    <hostdev mode='capabilities' type='storage'>
      <source>
        <block>/dev/sdf1</block>
      </source>
    </hostdev>

The second capability support is 'misc', which is for
assignment of character devices. There is no existing
parallel to this. Again the device node is the same
inside & outside the container.

    <hostdev mode='capabilities' type='misc'>
      <source>
        <char>/dev/input/event3</char>
      </source>
    </hostdev>

The reason for keeping the char & storage devices
separate in the domain XML, is to mirror the split
in the node device XML. NB the node device XML does
not yet report character devices, but that's another
new patch to come

Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
2012-12-17 17:50:50 +00:00
Guannan Ren
09938bb3b0 conf: add optional attribte primary to video <model> element
If there are multiple video devices
primary = 'yes' marks this video device as the primary one.
The rest are secondary video devices. No more than one could be
mark as primary. If none of them has primary attribute, the first
one will be the primary by default like what it was.
The reason of this changing is that for qemu, only one primary video
device is permitted which can be of any type. For secondary video
devices, only qxl is allowd. Primary attribute removes the restriction
that the first have to be the primary one.

We always put the primary video device into the first position of
video device structure array after parsing.
2012-12-17 14:01:20 +08:00
Michal Privoznik
ec6474b245 bandwidth: add new 'floor' attribute
This is however supported only on domain interfaces with
type='network'. Moreover, target network needs to have at least
inbound QoS set. This is required by hierarchical traffic shaping.

From now on, the required attribute for <inbound/> is either 'average'
(old) or 'floor' (new). This new attribute can be used just for
interfaces type of network (<interface type='network'/>) currently.
2012-12-11 18:35:12 +01:00
Gene Czarcinski
2d5cd1d724 network: add support for DHCPv6
The DHCPv6 support includes IPV6 dhcp-range and dhcp-host for one
IPv6 subnetwork on one interface.  This support will only work
if dnsmasq version >= 2.64; otherwise an error occurs if
dhcp-range or dhcp-host is specified for an IPv6 address.

Essentially, this change provides the same DHCP support for IPv6
that has been available for IPv4.

With dnsmasq >= 2.64, support for the RA service is also now provided
by dnsmasq (radvd is no longer used/started). (Although at least one
version of dnsmasq prior to 2.64 "supported" IPv6 Router
Advertisement, there were bugs (fixed in 2.64) that rendered it
unusable.)

Documentation and the network schema has been updated
to reflect the new support.
2012-12-11 05:49:45 -05:00
Osier Yang
b718ded39a qemu: Allow the user to specify vendor and product for disk
QEMU supports setting vendor and product strings for disk since
1.2.0 (only scsi-disk, scsi-hd, scsi-cd support it), this patch
exposes it with new XML elements <vendor> and <product> of disk
device.
2012-12-07 16:53:27 +08:00
Gene Czarcinski
705e67d40b network: allow guest to guest IPv6 without gateway definition
This patch adds the capability for virtual guests to do IPv6
communication via a virtual network interface with no IPv6 (gateway)
addresses specified.  This capability has always been enabled by
default for IPv4, but disabled for IPv6 for security concerns, and
because it requires the ip6tables command to be operational (which
isn't the case on a system with the ipv6 module completely disabled).

This patch adds a new attribute "ipv6" at the toplevel of a <network>
object.  If ipv6='yes', the extra ip6tables rules required to permite
inter-guest communications are added when the network is started. If
it is 'no', or not present, those rules will not be added; thus the
default behavior doesn't change, so there should be no compatibility
issues with any existing installations.

Note that virtual guests cannot communication with the virtualization
host via this interface, because the following kernel tunable has
been set:

   net.ipv6.conf.<bridge_interface_name>.disable_ipv6 = 1

This assures that the bridge interface will not have an IPv6
link-local (fe80::) address.

To control this behavior so that it is not enabled by default, the parameter
ipv6='yes' on the <network> statement has been added.

Documentation related to this patch has been updated.
The network schema has also been updated.
2012-12-05 14:58:32 -05:00
Harsh Prateek Bora
a2d2b80fbd Add Gluster protocol as supported network disk backend
This patch introduces the RNG schema and updates necessary data strucutures
to allow various hypervisors to make use of Gluster protocol as one of the
supported network disk backend. Next patch will add support to make use of
this feature in Qemu since it now supports Gluster protocol as one of the
network based storage backend.

Two new optional attributes for <host> element are introduced - 'transport'
and 'socket'. Valid transport values are tcp, unix or rdma. If none specified,
tcp is assumed. If transport is unix, socket specifies path to unix socket.

This patch allows users to specify disks on gluster backends like this:

    <disk type='network' device='disk'>
      <driver name='qemu' type='raw'/>
      <source protocol='gluster' name='Volume1/image'>
        <host name='example.org' port='6000' transport='tcp'/>
      </source>
      <target dev='vda' bus='virtio'/>
    </disk>

    <disk type='network' device='disk'>
      <driver name='qemu' type='raw'/>
      <source protocol='gluster' name='Volume2/image'>
        <host transport='unix' socket='/path/to/sock'/>
      </source>
      <target dev='vdb' bus='virtio'/>
    </disk>

Signed-off-by: Harsh Prateek Bora <harsh@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
2012-11-27 10:19:22 +01:00
Ján Tomko
a4c19459aa qemu: add bootindex for usb-host and usb-redir devices
Allow bootindex to be specified for redirected USB devices and host USB
devices.

Bug: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=805414
2012-11-14 19:03:18 -07:00
Eric Blake
4201a7ea1c snapshot: new XML for external system checkpoint
Each <domainsnapshot> can now contain an optional <memory>
element that describes how the VM state was handled, similar
to disk snapshots.  The new element will always appear in
output; for back-compat, an input that lacks the element will
assume 'no' or 'internal' according to the domain state.

Along with this change, it is now possible to pass <disks> in
the XML for an offline snapshot; this also needs to be wired up
in a future patch, to make it possible to choose internal vs.
external on a per-disk basis for each disk in an offline domain.
At that point, using the --disk-only flag for an offline domain
will be able to work.

For some examples below, remember that qemu supports the
following snapshot actions:

qemu-img: offline external and internal disk
savevm: online internal VM and disk
migrate: online external VM
transaction: online external disk

=====
<domainsnapshot>
  <memory snapshot='no'/>
  ...
</domainsnapshot>

implies that there is no VM state saved (mandatory for
offline and disk-only snapshots, not possible otherwise);
using qemu-img for offline domains and transaction for online.

=====
<domainsnapshot>
  <memory snapshot='internal'/>
  ...
</domainsnapshot>

state is saved inside one of the disks (as in qemu's 'savevm'
system checkpoint implementation).  If needed in the future,
we can also add an attribute pointing out _which_ disk saved
the internal state; maybe disk='vda'.

=====
<domainsnapshot>
  <memory snapshot='external' file='/path/to/state'/>
  ...
</domainsnapshot>

This is not wired up yet, but future patches will allow this to
control a combination of 'virsh save /path/to/state' plus disk
snapshots from the same point in time.

=====

So for 1.0.1 (and later, as needed), I plan to implement this table
of combinations, with '*' designating new code and '+' designating
existing code reached through new combinations of xml and/or the
existing DISK_ONLY flag:

domain  memory  disk   disk-only | result
-----------------------------------------
offline omit    omit   any       | memory=no disk=int, via qemu-img
offline no      omit   any       |+memory=no disk=int, via qemu-img
offline omit/no no     any       | invalid combination (nothing to snapshot)
offline omit/no int    any       |+memory=no disk=int, via qemu-img
offline omit/no ext    any       |*memory=no disk=ext, via qemu-img
offline int/ext any    any       | invalid combination (no memory to save)
online  omit    omit   off       | memory=int disk=int, via savevm
online  omit    omit   on        | memory=no disk=default, via transaction
online  omit    no/ext off       | unsupported for now
online  omit    no     on        | invalid combination (nothing to snapshot)
online  omit    ext    on        | memory=no disk=ext, via transaction
online  omit    int    off       |+memory=int disk=int, via savevm
online  omit    int    on        | unsupported for now
online  no      omit   any       |+memory=no disk=default, via transaction
online  no      no     any       | invalid combination (nothing to snapshot)
online  no      int    any       | unsupported for now
online  no      ext    any       |+memory=no disk=ext, via transaction
online  int/ext any    on        | invalid combination (disk-only vs. memory)
online  int     omit   off       |+memory=int disk=int, via savevm
online  int     no/ext off       | unsupported for now
online  int     int    off       |+memory=int disk=int, via savevm
online  ext     omit   off       |*memory=ext disk=default, via migrate+trans
online  ext     no     off       |+memory=ext disk=no, via migrate
online  ext     int    off       | unsupported for now
online  ext     ext    off       |*memory=ext disk=ext, via migrate+transaction

* docs/schemas/domainsnapshot.rng (memory): New RNG element.
* docs/formatsnapshot.html.in: Document it.
* src/conf/snapshot_conf.h (virDomainSnapshotDef): New fields.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainSnapshotDefFree)
(virDomainSnapshotDefParseString, virDomainSnapshotDefFormat):
Manage new fields.
* tests/domainsnapshotxml2xmltest.c: New test.
* tests/domainsnapshotxml2xmlin/*.xml: Update existing tests.
* tests/domainsnapshotxml2xmlout/*.xml: Likewise.
2012-11-02 09:56:23 -06:00
Eric Blake
e2c41e4860 storage: match RNG to supported driver types
At one point, the code passed through arbitrary strings for file
formats, which supposedly lets qemu handle a new file type even
before libvirt has been taught to handle it.  However, to properly
label files, libvirt has to learn the file type anyway, so we
might as well make our life easier by only accepting file types
that we are prepared to handle.  This patch lets the RNG validation
ensure that only known strings are let through.

* docs/schemas/domaincommon.rng (driverFormat): Limit to list of
supported strings.
* docs/schemas/domainsnapshot.rng (driver): Likewise.
2012-10-19 17:35:09 -06:00
Peter Krempa
cc922fddc3 conf: Add support for HyperV Enlightenment features
Hypervisors are starting to support HyperV Enlightenment features that
improve behavior of guests running Microsoft Windows operating systems.

This patch adds support for the "relaxed" feature that improves timer
behavior and also establishes a framework to add these features in
future.
2012-10-18 12:22:50 +02:00
Jiri Denemark
f95560b3fe conf: Mark missing optional USB devices in domain XML
When startupPolicy set for a USB devices allows such device to be
missing, there was no way this could be detected from domain XML. With
this patch, libvirt emits a new missing='yes' attribute for such devices
when active domain XML is generated.
2012-10-12 10:55:32 +02:00
Jiri Denemark
e658daeb58 conf: Add support for startupPolicy for USB devices
USB devices can disappear without OS being mad about it, which makes
them ideal for startupPolicy. With this attribute, USB devices can be
configured to be mandatory (the default), requisite (will disappear
during migration if they cannot be found), or completely optional.
2012-10-11 15:11:41 +02:00
Jiri Denemark
76f5bcabe6 conf: Add on_lockfailure event configuration
Using this new element, one can configure an action that should be
performed when resource locks are lost.
2012-10-11 14:41:41 +02:00
Jiri Denemark
d0ea530b00 conf: Rename life cycle actions to event actions
While current on_{poweroff,reboot,crash} action configuration is about
configuring life cycle actions, they can all be considered events and
actions that need to be done on a particular event. Let's generalize the
code by renaming life cycle actions to event actions so that it can be
reused later for non-lifecycle events.
2012-10-11 14:40:54 +02:00
Richard W.M. Jones
f8b08d0e96 Add <seclabel> to character devices.
This allows the user to control labelling of each character device
separately (the default is to inherit from the VM).

Signed-off-by: Richard W.M. Jones <rjones@redhat.com>
2012-09-21 13:43:47 +01:00
Martin Kletzander
78f3666fe9 Add support for limiting guest coredump
Sometimes when guest machine crashes, coredump can get huge due to the
guest memory. This can be limited using madvise(2) system call and is
being used in QEMU hypervisor. This patch adds an option for configuring
that in the domain XML and related documentation.
2012-09-20 16:41:07 +02:00
Martin Kletzander
c33a922faa Add support for reboot-timeout
Whenever the guest machine fails to boot, new parameter (reboot-timeout)
controls whether it should reboot and after how many ms it should do so.

Docs included.
2012-09-20 16:41:01 +02:00
Osier Yang
dbb7df1f81 schema: Add schema for disk <wwn>
* docs/formatdomain.html.in: Add document.
* docs/schemas/nodedev.rng: Move definition of "wwn" to ...
* docs/schemas/basictypes.rng: ...Here
* docs/schemas/domaincommon.rng: Add schema for disk <wwn>
2012-09-18 14:42:29 +08:00
Martin Kletzander
4a8b7cba80 Add support for EOI with APIC
New options is added to support EOI (End of Interrupt) exposure for
guests. As it makes sense only when APIC is enabled, I added this into
the <apic> element in <features> because this should be tri-state
option (cannot be handled as standalone feature).
2012-09-14 08:18:11 +02:00
Guannan Ren
1c9d485dda test: add xml2argvtest for usb-redir filter and update xml schema 2012-09-13 17:22:37 +08:00
Viktor Mihajlovski
72f1f2206e Rename iolimit to blockio.
After discussion with DB we decided to rename the new iolimit
element as it creates the impression it would be there to
limit (i.e. throttle) I/O instead of specifying immutable
characteristics of a block device.
This is also backed by the fact that the term I/O Limits has
vanished from newer storage admin documentation.

Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
2012-09-04 09:14:36 -06:00
Martin Kletzander
09cd8f2ddf Add per-guest S3/S4 state configuration
There is a new <pm/> element implemented that can control what ACPI
sleeping states will be advertised by BIOS and allowed to be switched
to by libvirt. The default keeps defaults on hypervisor, otherwise
forces chosen setting.
The documentation of the pm element is added as well.
2012-09-03 09:08:21 +02:00
Viktor Mihajlovski
5cc50ad7a4 conf: Support for Block Device IO Limits
Introducing a new iolimits element allowing to override certain
properties of a guest block device like the physical and logical
block size.
This can be useful for platforms with 'non-standard' disk formats
like S390 DASD with its 4K block size.

Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
2012-08-31 11:27:27 -07:00
Osier Yang
c289ebacd6 schemas: Fix wwn pattern
It should be [] instead of ().
2012-08-31 21:49:27 +08:00
Hu Tao
b65dafa812 qemu: introduce period/quota tuning for emulator
This patch introduces support of setting emulator's period and
quota to limit cpu bandwidth when the vm starts.  Also updates
XML Schema for new entries and docs.
2012-08-22 16:52:22 +08:00
Tang Chen
19630db3e3 Support emulatorpin xml parse.
This patch adds a new xml element <emulatorpin>, which is a sibling
to the existing <vcpupin> element under the <cputune>, to pin emulator
threads to specified physical CPUs.

Signed-off-by: Tang Chen <tangchen@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Hu Tao <hutao@cn.fujitsu.com>
2012-08-22 15:51:23 +08:00
J.B. Joret
5d4f8d9746 Support for Disk Geometry Override
A hypervisor may allow to override the disk geometry of drives.
Qemu, as an example with cyls=,heads=,secs=[,trans=].
This patch extends the domain config to allow the specification of
disk geometry with libvirt.

Signed-off-by: J.B. Joret <jb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
2012-08-21 15:30:07 -06:00
Marcelo Cerri
e9377dda36 Multiple security drivers in XML data
This patch updates the domain and capability XML parser and formatter to
support more than one "seclabel" element for each domain and device. The
RNG schema and the tests related to this are also updated by this patch.

Signed-off-by: Marcelo Cerri <mhcerri@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
2012-08-20 19:13:33 +02:00
Shradha Shah
1446003419 conf: parser/formatter/rng for <forward mode='hostdev'>
This patch introduces the new forward mode='hostdev' along with
attribute managed. Includes updates to the network RNG and new xml
parser/formatter code.

Signed-off-by: Shradha Shah <sshah@solarflare.com>
2012-08-17 15:43:26 -04:00
Laine Stump
3f9274a524 conf: add <vlan> element to network and domain interface elements
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.)
2012-08-15 13:10:57 -04:00
Laine Stump
e4a199a1af schema: fix some problems in network/interface schemas
<portgroup> allows a <bandwidth> element, but the schema didn't have
this. Since this makes for multiple elements in portgroup, they must
be interleaved.

<interface type='bridge'> needs to allow <virtualport> elements
for openvswitch, but the schema didn't allow this.
2012-08-15 13:10:57 -04:00
Dmitry Guryanov
9700ca82fe parallels: add domain configuration example
Signed-off-by: Dmitry Guryanov <dguryanov@parallels.com>
2012-08-15 16:39:40 +08:00
Laine Stump
300bcdb63b network: add connections counter to networks
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.
2012-08-14 23:53:58 -04:00
Laine Stump
4af3cbafdd conf: support partially-specified <virtualport> in parser and formatter
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).
2012-08-14 15:47:50 -04:00
Hendrik Schwartke
7383c1d762 Added timestamps to storage volumes
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>
2012-08-02 17:14:17 -06:00
Ján Tomko
37a10129c2 Update xml schemas according to libvirt source
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.
2012-08-02 14:36:23 -06:00
Peter Krempa
0925189713 domain_conf: Add USB controler model "none"
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.
2012-08-02 11:54:14 +02:00
Sebastian Wiedenroth
29bc4fe646 Add a sheepdog backend for the storage driver
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>
2012-07-18 20:08:27 +01:00