This patch fixes a segmentation fault when creating new virtual machines using QEMU.
The segmentation fault is caused by commit f41830680e
and commit cbb6ec42e2.
In virQEMUCapsProbeQMPMachineTypes, when copying machines to qemuCaps, "none" is skipped.
Therefore, the value of i and "qemuCaps->nmachineTypes - 1" do not always match.
However, defIdx value (used to call virQEMUCapsSetDefaultMachine) is set using the value in i
when the array elements are in qemuCaps->nmachineTypes - 1.
So, when libvirt tries to create virtual machines using the default machine type,
qemuCaps->machineTypes[defIdx] is accessed and since the defIdx is NULL, it results in segmentation fault.
Signed-off-by: Yudai Yamagishi <yummy@sfc.wide.ad.jp>
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Currently, the qemuProcessStop tries to open the domain log file
and saves the original error afterwards. Then all the cleanup is
done after which the error is restored back. This has however one
flaw: if opening of the log file fails an error is reported,
which results in previous error being overwritten (the useful
one, e.g. "PCI device XXXX:XXXX could not be found"). Hence, user
sees something like:
error: failed to create logfile /var/log/libvirt/qemu/ovirt_usb.log: No such file or directory
instead of:
error: internal error: Did not find USB device 8644:8003
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Reported-by: Zhou Yimin <zhouyimin@huawei.com>
@listenAddress and @cookiein arguments, should be exchanged,
because the order of the caller and the callee does not match.
This results in the listen address being ignored for peer-to-peer
migration and the cookie being ignored for v2 migration.
Introduced by c4ac7ef (v1.1.4-rc1~141).
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1049338
Signed-off-by: Minoru Usui <usui@mxm.nes.nec.co.jp>
Signed-off-by: Ján Tomko <jtomko@redhat.com>
AArch64 qemu has similar behavior as armv7l, like use of mmio etc.
This patch adds similar bypass checks what we have for armv7l to aarch64.
E.g. we are enabling mmio transport for Nicdev.
Making addDefaultUSB and addDefaultMemballoon to false etc.
V3:
- Adding missing domain rng schema for aarcg64 and test case in
testutilsqemu.c which was causing test suite failure
while running make check.
V2:
- Added testcase to qemuxml2argvtest as suggested
during review comments of V1.
V1:
- Initial patch.
Signed-off-by: Anup Patel <anup.patel@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Pranavkumar Sawargaonkar <pranavkumar@linaro.org>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1047234
Add a range check for supported numa memory placement modes provided by
the user before setting them in the domain definition. Without the check
the user is able to provide a (yet) unknown mode which is then stored in
the domain definition. This potentially causes a NULL dereference when
the defintion is formatted into the XML.
To reproduce run:
virsh numatune DOMNAME --mode 6 --nodeset 0
The XML will then contain:
<numatune>
<memory mode='(null)' nodeset='0'/>
</numatune>
With this fix, the command fails:
error: Unable to change numa parameters
error: invalid argument: unsupported numa_mode: '6'
Add whitespace to separate logical code blocks, reformat error messages
and clean up code flow.
This patch changes error handling in some cases where the the loop would
be continued to jump to cleanup instead and error out rather than modify
the domain any further.
Do not leave the PCI address of the primary video card set
to the legacy default (0000:00:02.0) if we're doing two-pass
allocation.
Since QEMU 1.6 (QEMU_CAPS_VIDEO_PRIMARY) we allow the primary
video card to be on other slots than 0000:00:02.0 (as we use
-device instead of -vga).
However we fail to assign it an address if:
* another device explicitly uses 0000:00:02.0 and
* the primary video device has no address specified
On the first pass, we have set the address to default, then checked
if it's available, leaving it set even if it wasn't. This address
got picked up by the second pass, resulting in a conflict:
XML error: Attempted double use of PCI slot 0000:00:02.0
(may need "multifunction='on'" for device on function 0)
Also fix the test that was supposed to catch this.
This eliminates the misleading error message that was being logged
when a vfio hostdev hotplug failed:
error: unable to set user and group to '107:107' on '/dev/vfio/22':
No such file or directory
as documented in:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1035490
Commit ee414b5d (pushed as a fix for Bug 1016511 and part of Bug
1025108) replaced the single call to
virSecurityManagerSetHostdevLabel() in qemuDomainAttachHostDevice()
with individual calls to that same function in each
device-type-specific attach function (for PCI, USB, and SCSI). It also
added a corresponding call to virSecurityManagerRestoreHostdevLabel()
in the error handling of the device-type-specific functions, but
forgot to remove the common call to that from
qemuDomainAttachHostDevice() - this resulted in a duplicate call to
virSecurityManagerRestoreHostdevLabel(), with the second occurrence
being after (e.g.) a PCI device has already been re-attached to the
host driver, thus destroying some of the device nodes / links that we
then attempted to re-label (e.f. /dev/vfio/22) and generating an error
log that obscured the original error.
This resolves:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1035490
virProcessSetMaxMemLock() (which is a wrapper over prlimit(3)) expects
the memory size in bytes, but libvirt's domain definition (which was
being used by qemuDomainAttachHostPciDevice()) stores all memory
tuning parameters in KiB. This was being accounted for when setting
MaxMemLock at domain startup time (so cold-plugged devices would
work), but not for hotplug.
This patch simplifies the few lines that call
virProcessSetMemMaxLock(), and multiply the amount * 1024 so that
we're locking the correct amount of memory.
What remains a mystery to me is why hot-plug of a managed='no' device
would succeed (at least on my system) while managed='yes' would
fail. I guess in one case the memory was coincidentally already
resident and in the other it wasn't.
On a system that is enforcing FIPS, most libraries honor the
current mode by default. Qemu, on the other hand, refused to
honor FIPS mode unless you add the '-enable-fips' command
line option; worse, this option is not discoverable via QMP,
and is only present on binaries built for Linux. So, if we
detect FIPS mode, then we unconditionally ask for FIPS; either
qemu is new enough to have the option and then correctly
cripple insecure VNC passwords, or it is so old that we are
correctly avoiding a FIPS violation by preventing qemu from
starting. Meanwhile, if we don't detect FIPS mode, then
omitting the argument is safe whether the qemu has the option
(but it would do nothing because FIPS is disabled) or whether
qemu lacks the option (including in the case where we are not
running on Linux).
The testsuite was a bit interesting: we don't want our test
to depend on whether it is being run in FIPS mode, so I had
to tweak things to set the capability bit outside of our
normal interaction with capability parsing.
This fixes https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1035474
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.h (QEMU_CAPS_ENABLE_FIPS): New bit.
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.c (virQEMUCapsInitQMP): Conditionally
set capability according to detection of FIPS mode.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuBuildCommandLine): Use it.
* tests/qemucapabilitiestest.c (testQemuCaps): Conditionally set
capability to test expected output.
* tests/qemucapabilitiesdata/caps_1.2.2-1.caps: Update list.
* tests/qemucapabilitiesdata/caps_1.6.0-1.caps: Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The support for <boot rebootTimeout="12345"/> was added before we were
checking for qemu command line options in QMP, so we haven't properly
adapted virQEMUCaps when using it and thus we report unsupported
option with new enough qemu.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1042690
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Recent changes to events (commit 8a29ffcf) resulted in new compile
failures on some targets (such as ARM OMAP5):
conf/domain_event.c: In function 'virDomainEventDispatchDefaultFunc':
conf/domain_event.c:1198:30: error: cast increases required alignment of
target type [-Werror=cast-align]
conf/domain_event.c:1314:34: error: cast increases required alignment of
target type [-Werror=cast-align]
cc1: all warnings being treated as errors
The error is due to alignment; the base class is merely aligned
to the worst of 'int' and 'void*', while the child class must
be aligned to a 'long long'. The solution is to include a
'long long' (and for good measure, a function pointer) in the
base class to ensure correct alignment regardless of what a
child class may add, but to wrap the inclusion in a union so
as to not incur any wasted space. On a typical x86_64 platform,
the base class remains 16 bytes; on i686, the base class remains
12 bytes; and on the impacted ARM platform, the base class grows
from 12 bytes to 16 bytes due to the increase of alignment from
4 to 8 bytes.
Reported by Michele Paolino and others.
* src/util/virobject.h (_virObject): Use a union to ensure that
subclasses never have stricter alignment than the parent.
* src/util/virobject.c (virObjectNew, virObjectUnref)
(virObjectRef): Adjust clients.
* src/libvirt.c (virConnectRef, virDomainRef, virNetworkRef)
(virInterfaceRef, virStoragePoolRef, virStorageVolRef)
(virNodeDeviceRef, virSecretRef, virStreamRef, virNWFilterRef)
(virDomainSnapshotRef): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.c (qemuMonitorOpenInternal)
(qemuMonitorClose): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Map the new <panic> device in XML to the '-device pvpanic' command
line of qemu. Clients can then couple the <panic> device and the
<on_crash> directive to control behavior when the guest reports
a panic to qemu.
Signed-off-by: Hu Tao <hutao@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1035955
There's a window when starting a qemu process between fork() and exec()
during which we are doing things that may fail but not tunnelling the
error to the daemon. This is basically all within qemuProcessHook().
So whenever we fail in something, e.g. placing a process onto numa node,
users are left with:
error: Child quit during startup handshake: Input/output error
while the original error is thrown into the domain log:
libvirt: error : internal error: NUMA memory tuning in 'preferred'
mode only supports single node
Hence, we should read the log file and search for the error message and
report it to users.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
For dead domains that have no memtune limits, we return 0 instead of
"unlimited", this patch fixes it to return PARAM_UNLIMITED.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
We were unconditionally removing the device from the host list, when it
should only be done on error.
This fixes USB collision detection when hotplugging the same device to
two guests.
If we hit a collision, we free the USB device while it is still part
of our temporary USBDeviceList. When the list is unref'd, the device
is free'd again.
Make the initial device freeing dependent on whether it is present
in the temporary list or not.
Similar to what Jiri did for cgroup setup/teardown in 05e149f94, push
it all into the device handler functions so we can do the necessary prep
work before claiming the device.
This also fixes hotplugging USB devices by product/vendor (virt-manager's
default behavior):
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1016511
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1035108
When attempting to enable more vCPUs in the guest than is currently
enabled in the guest but less than the maximum count for the VM we
currently reported an unhelpful message:
error: internal error: guest agent reports less cpu than requested
This patch changes it to:
error: invalid argument: requested vcpu count is greater than the count
of enabled vcpus in the domain: 3 > 2
When an error occurred in qemuAgentIO, it will be saved in mon->lastError,
but it will not be freed at the end. Present since commit c160ce33;
and compare to commit 9cc8a5af fixing the same problem in qemu_monitor.c.
==22219== 54 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 982 of 1,379
==22219== at 0x4C26B9B: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:263)
==22219== by 0x8520521: strdup (in /lib64/libc-2.11.3.so)
==22219== by 0x52E99CB: virStrdup (virstring.c:554)
==22219== by 0x52B44C4: virCopyError (virerror.c:195)
==22219== by 0x52B5123: virCopyLastError (virerror.c:312)
==22219== by 0x10905877: qemuAgentIO (qemu_agent.c:660)
==22219== by 0x52B6122: virEventPollDispatchHandles (vireventpoll.c:501)
==22219== by 0x52B7AEA: virEventPollRunOnce (vireventpoll.c:647)
==22219== by 0x52B5C1B: virEventRunDefaultImpl (virevent.c:274)
==22219== by 0x54181FD: virNetServerRun (virnetserver.c:1112)
==22219== by 0x11EF4D: main (libvirtd.c:1513)
Signed-off-by: Zhou Yimin <zhouyimin@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
This patch fixes memory leaks reported by valgrind on running
qemuxml2argvtest; introduced in commit 0df53f04.
Most of them are of the form:
==24777== 15 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 39 of 129
==24777== at 0x4A0887C: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:270)
==24777== by 0x341F485E21: strdup (strdup.c:42)
==24777== by 0x4CADE5F: virStrdup (virstring.c:554)
==24777== by 0x4362B6: qemuBuildDriveStr (qemu_command.c:3848)
==24777== by 0x43EF73: qemuBuildCommandLine (qemu_command.c:8500)
==24777== by 0x426670: testCompareXMLToArgvHelper (qemuxml2argvtest.c:350)
==24777== by 0x427C01: virtTestRun (testutils.c:138)
==24777== by 0x41DDB5: mymain (qemuxml2argvtest.c:658)
==24777== by 0x4282A2: virtTestMain (testutils.c:593)
==24777== by 0x341F421A04: (below main) (libc-start.c:225)
==24777==
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Ever since the subcpusets(vcpu,emulator) were introduced, the parent
cpuset cannot be modified to remove the nodes that are in use by the
subcpusets.
The fix is to break the memory node modification into three steps:
1. assign new nodes into the parent,
2. change the nodes in the child nodes,
3. remove the old nodes on the parent node.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1009880
Signed-off-by: Shivaprasad G Bhat <sbhat@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
This resolves:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1029732
The BZ asked for the capability to change the number of queues used by
a virtio-net device while the device is in use. Because the number of
queues can only be set at the time the device is created, that isn't
possible. However, libvirt also shouldn't be silently reporting
success when someone tries to change the number of queues. So this
patch flags that as an error (just as attempts to change any of the
other virtio-specific parameters already do).
This resolves:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=888635
(which was already closed as CANTFIX because the qemu "-boot strict"
commandline option wasn't available at the time).
Problem: you couldn't have a domain that used PXE to boot, but also
had an un-bootable disk device *even if that disk wasn't listed in the
boot order*, because if PXE timed out (e.g. due to the bridge
forwarding delay), the BIOS would move on to the next target, which
would be the unbootable disk device (again - even though it wasn't
given a boot order), and get stuck at a "BOOT DISK FAILURE, PRESS ANY
KEY" message until a user intervened.
The solution available since sometime around QEMU 1.5, is to add
"-boot strict=on" to *every* qemu command. When this is done, if any
devices have a boot order specified, then QEMU will *only* attempt to
boot from those devices that have an explicit boot order, ignoring the
rest.
This patch resolves:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1035188
Commit f094aaac48 changed the PCI device assignment in qemu domains
to default to using VFIO rather than legacy KVM device assignment
(when VFIO is available). It didn't change which driver was used by
default for virNodeDeviceDetachFlags(), though, so that API (and the
virsh nodedev-detach command) was still binding to the pci-stub
driver, used by legacy KVM assignment, by default.
This patch publicizes (only within the qemu module, though, so no
additions to the symbol exports are needed) the functions that check
for presence of KVM and VFIO device assignment, then uses those
functions to decide what to do when no driver is specified for
virNodeDeviceDetachFlags(); if the vfio driver is loaded, the device
will be bound to vfio-pci, or if legacy KVM assignment is supported on
this system, the device will be bound to pci-stub; if neither method
is available, the detach will fail.
Currently the snapshot code did not check if it actually supports
snapshots on various disk backends for domains. To avoid future problems
add checkers that whitelist the supported configurations.
This patch adds function qemuGetDriveSourceString to produce
qemu-compatible disk source strings that will enable to reuse the code
and refactors building of the qemu commandline of disks to use this new
helper.
Automatically assign secret type from the disk source definition and
pull in adding of the comma. Then update callers to keep generated
output the same.
Before this patch, the translation function still needs a second ugly
helper function to actually format the command line for qemu. But if we
do the right stuff in the translation function, we don't have to bother
with the second function any more.
This patch removes the messy qemuBuildVolumeString function and changes
qemuTranslateDiskSourcePool to set stuff up correctly so that the
regular code paths meant for volumes can be used to format the command
line correctly.
For this purpose a new helper "qemuDiskGetActualType()" is introduced to
return the type of the volume in a pool.
As a part of the refactor the qemuTranslateDiskSourcePool function is
fixed to do decisions based on the pool type instead of the volume type.
This allows to separate pool-type-specific stuff more clearly and will
ease addition of other pool types that will require certain other
operations to get the correct pool source.
The previously fixed tests should make sure that we don't break stuff
that was working before.
When doing an internal snapshot on a VM with sheepdog or RBD disks we
would not set a flag to mark the domain is using internal snapshots and
might end up creating a mixed snapshot. Move the setting of the variable
to avoid this problem.
The virsh command 'domxml-to-native' (virConnectDomainXMLToNative())
converts all network devices to "type='ethernet'" in order to make it
more likely that the generated command could be run directly from a
shell (other libvirt network device types end up referencing file
descriptors for tap devices assumed to have been created by libvirt,
which can't be done in this case).
During this conversion, all of the netdev parameters are cleared out,
then specific items are filled in after changing the type. The MAC
address was not one of these preserved items, and the result was that
mac addresses in the generated commandlines were always
00:00:00:00:00:00.
This patch saves the mac address before the conversion, then
repopulates it afterwards, so the proper mac addresses show up in the
commandline.
Signed-off-by: Bing Bu Cao <mars@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Laine Stump <laine@laine.org>
In the 'directory' and 'netfs' storage pools, a user can see
both 'file' and 'dir' storage volume types, to know when they
can descend into a subdirectory. But in a network-based storage
pool, such as the upcoming 'gluster' pool, we use 'network'
instead of 'file', and did not have any counterpart for a
directory until this patch. Adding a new volume type
'network-dir' is better than reusing 'dir', because it makes
it clear that the only way to access 'network' volumes within
that container is through the network mounting (leaving 'dir'
for something accessible in the local file system).
* include/libvirt/libvirt.h.in (virStorageVolType): Expand enum.
* docs/formatstorage.html.in: Document it.
* docs/schemasa/storagevol.rng (vol): Allow new value.
* src/conf/storage_conf.c (virStorageVol): Use new value.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuBuildVolumeString): Fix client.
* src/qemu/qemu_conf.c (qemuTranslateDiskSourcePool): Likewise.
* tools/virsh-volume.c (vshVolumeTypeToString): Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_backend_fs.c
(virStorageBackendFileSystemVolDelete): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The bus type IDE being enum Zero, the bus type on pseries system appears as IDE for all the -hda/-cdrom and for disk drives with if="none" type. Pseries platform needs this to appear as SCSI instead of IDE. The ide being not supported, the explicit requests for ide devices will return an error.
Signed-off-by: Shivaprasad G Bhat <sbhat@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
This nested job is canceled by the first ExitMonitor call (even though
it was not created by the corresponding EnterMonitor call), and
again in qemuMigrationPrepareAny if qemuProcessStart failed.
This can lead to a crash if the vm object was disposed of before calling
qemuDomainRemoveInactive:
0 ..62bc in virClassIsDerivedFrom (klass=0xdeadbeef,
parent=0x7ffce4cdd270) at util/virobject.c:166
1 ..6666 in virObjectIsClass at util/virobject.c:362
2 ..66b4 in virObjectLock at util/virobject.c:314
3 ..477e in virDomainObjListRemove at conf/domain_conf.c:2359
4 ..7a64 in qemuDomainRemoveInactive at qemu/qemu_domain.c:2087
5 ..956c in qemuMigrationPrepareAny at qemu/qemu_migration.c:2469
This was added by commit e4e2822, exposed by 5a4c237 and c7ac251.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1018267
If a SCSI hostdev is included in an initial domain XML, without a
corresponding controller statement, one is created silently when the
guest is booted.
When hotplugging a SCSI hostdev, a presumption is that the controller
is already present in the domain either from the original XML, or via
an earlier hotplug.
[root@xxxxxxxx ~]# cat disk.xml
<hostdev mode='subsystem' type='scsi'>
<source>
<adapter name='scsi_host0'/>
<address bus='0' target='3' unit='1088438288'/>
</source>
</hostdev>
[root@xxxxxxxx ~]# virsh attach-device guest01 disk.xml
error: Failed to attach device from disk.xml
error: internal error: unable to execute QEMU command 'device_add': Bus 'scsi0.0' not found
Since the infrastructure is in place, we can also create a controller
silently for use by the hotplugged hostdev device.
Signed-off-by: Eric Farman <farman@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
For systems without a PCI bus, attaching a SCSI controller fails:
[root@xxxxxxxx ~]# cat controller.xml
<controller type='scsi' model='virtio-scsi' index='0' />
[root@xxxxxxxx ~]# virsh attach-device guest01 controller.xml
error: Failed to attach device from controller.xml
error: XML error: No PCI buses available
A similar problem occurs with the detach of a controller:
[root@xxxxxxxx ~]# virsh detach-device guest01 controller.xml
error: Failed to detach device from controller.xml
error: operation failed: controller scsi:0 not found
The qemuDomainXXtachPciControllerDevice routines made assumptions
that any caller had a PCI bus. These routines now selectively calls
PCI functions where necessary, and assigns the device information
type to one appropriate for the bus in use.
Signed-off-by: Eric Farman <farman@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Ján Tomko <jtomko@redhat.com>
For attach/detach of controller devices, we rename the functions to
remove 'PCI' from their title. The actual separation of PCI-specific
operations will be handled in the next patch.
Signed-off-by: Eric Farman <farman@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
These changes allow the correct virtio-blk-device and virtio-net-device
devices to be used for the 'virt' machine type for armv7 rather than the
PCI virtio devices.
A test case was added to qemuxml2argvtest for this change.
Signed-off-by: Clark Laughlin <clark.laughlin@linaro.org>
Most of our code base uses space after comma but not before;
fix the remaining uses before adding a syntax check.
* src/qemu/qemu_cgroup.c: Consistently use commas.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c: Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_conf.c: Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c: Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.c: Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
On the domain startup, this function is called to dump some info about
the CPUs. At the beginning of the function we check if we aren't running
older qemu which is not exposing the CPUs via 'qom-list'. However, we
are not checking for even older qemus, which throw 'CommandNotFound'
error.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Report the error in virPortAllocatorAcquire instead
of doing it in every caller.
The error contains the port range name instead of the intended
use for the port, e.g.:
Unable to find an unused port in range 'display' (65534-65535)
instead of:
Unable to find an unused port for SPICE
This also adds error reporting when the QEMU driver could not
find an unused port for VNC, VNC WebSockets or NBD migration.
QEMU 1.6.0 introduced new migration status: setup
Libvirt does not expect such string in QMP and refuses to migrate with error
"unexpected migration status in setup"
This patch fixes it.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1025108
So far qemuSetupHostdevCGroup was called very early during hotplug, even
before we knew the device we were about to hotplug was actually
available. By calling the function later, we make sure QEMU won't be
allowed to access devices used by other domains.
Another important effect of this change is that hopluging USB devices
specified by vendor and product (but not by their USB address) works
again. This was broken since v1.0.5-171-g7d763ac, when the call to
qemuFindHostdevUSBDevice was moved after the call to
qemuSetupHostdevCGroup, which then used an uninitialized USB address.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1018267
The aim of virObject refing and urefing is to tell where the object is
to be used and when is no longer needed. Hence any object shouldn't be
used after it has been unrefed, as we might be the last to hold the
reference. The better way is to call virObjectUnref() *after* the last
object usage. In this specific case, the monitor EOF handler was called
after the qemuMonitorIO called virObjectUnref. Not only that @mon was
disposed (which is not used in the handler anyway) but the @mon->vm
which is causing a SIGSEGV:
2013-11-15 10:17:54.425+0000: 20110: error : qemuMonitorIO:688 : internal error: early end of file from monitor: possible problem:
qemu-kvm: -incoming tcp:01.01.01.0:49152: Failed to bind socket: Cannot assign requested address
Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
qemuProcessHandleMonitorEOF (mon=<optimized out>, vm=0x7fb728004170) at qemu/qemu_process.c:299
299 if (priv->beingDestroyed) {
(gdb) p *priv
Cannot access memory at address 0x0
(gdb) p vm
$1 = (virDomainObj *) 0x7fb728004170
(gdb) p *vm
$2 = {parent = {parent = {magic = 3735928559, refs = 0, klass = 0xdeadbeef}, lock = {lock = {__data = {__lock = 2, __count = 0, __owner = 20110, __nusers = 1, __kind = 0, __spins = 0, __list = {__prev = 0x0,
__next = 0x0}}, __size = "\002\000\000\000\000\000\000\000\216N\000\000\001", '\000' <repeats 26 times>, __align = 2}}}, pid = 0, state = {state = 0, reason = 0}, autostart = 0, persistent = 0,
updated = 0, def = 0x0, newDef = 0x0, snapshots = 0x0, current_snapshot = 0x0, hasManagedSave = false, privateData = 0x0, privateDataFreeFunc = 0x0, taint = 304}
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
In the qemuProcessReconnectHelper() a new thread that does all the
interesting work is spawned. The rationale is to not block the daemon
startup process in case of unresponsive qemu. However, the thread
handler is a local variable which gets lost once the control goes out of
scope. Hence the thread gets leaked. We can avoid this if the thread
isn't made joinable.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The QOM path in qemu that contains the CPUID registers of a running VM
may not be present (introduced in QEMU 1.5).
Since commit d94b781771 we have a regression with QEMU that don't
support reporting of the CPUID register state via the monitor as the
process startup code expects the path to exist.
This patch adds code that checks with the monitor if the requested path
already exists and uses it only in this case.
The 'none' machine type is something only intended for use
by libvirt probing capabilities. It isn't something that
is useful for running real VM instances. As such it should
not be exposed to users in the capabilities.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The virQEMUCapsProbeQMPMachineTypes method iterates over machine
types copying them into the qemuCapsPtr object. It only updates
the qemuCaps->nmachinetypes value at the end though. So if OOM
occurs in the middle, the destructor of qemuCapsPtr will not
free the partially initialized machine types.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
If the managedsave image is corrupted, e.g. the XML part is, we fail to
parse it and throw an error, e.g.:
error: Failed to start domain jms8
error: XML error: missing security model when using multiple labels
This is okay, as we can't really start the machine and avoid undefined
qemu behaviour. On the other hand, the error message doesn't give a
clue to users what should they do. The consensus here would be to thrown
a warning to logs saying "Hey, you've got a corrupted file".
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
This patch moves some code in the qemuDomainAttachSCSIDisk
function. The check for the existence of a PCI address assigned
to the SCSI controller was moved in order to be executed only
when needed. The PCI address of a controller is not necessary
if QEMU_CAPS_DEVICE is supported.
This fixes issues with the hotplug of SCSI disks on pseries guests.
When adding support for Q35 guests, the code to assign a PCI address
to the primary video card was moved into Q35 and i440fx(PIIX3)
specific functions, but no fallback was kept for other machine types
that might have a video card.
This patch remedies that by assigning a PCI address to the primary
video card if it does not have any kind of address. In particular,
this fixes issues with pseries guests.
Signed-off-by: Vitor de Lima <vitor.lima@eldorado.org.br>
Signed-off-by: Laine Stump <laine@laine.org>
When starting a VM the qemu process may filter out some requested
features of a domain as it's not supported either by the host or by
qemu. Libvirt didn't check if this happened which might end up in
changing of the guest ABI when migrating.
The proof of concept implementation adds the check for the recently
introduced kvm_pv_unhalt cpuid feature bit. This feature depends on both
qemu and host kernel support and thus increase the possibility of guest
ABI breakage.
The linux kernel recently added support for paravirtual spinlock
handling to avoid performance regressions on overcomitted hosts. This
feature needs to be turned in the hypervisor so that the guest OS is
notified about the possible support.
This patch adds a new feature "paravirt-spinlock" to the XML and
supporting code to enable the "kvm_pv_unhalt" pseudo CPU feature in
qemu.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1008989
Currently we were storing domain feature flags in a bit field as the
they were either enabled or disabled. New features such as paravirtual
spinlocks however can be tri-state as the default option may depend on
hypervisor version.
To allow storing tri-state feature state in the same place instead of
having to declare dedicated variables for each feature this patch
refactors the bit field to an array.
The qemu monitor supports retrieval of actual CPUID bits presented to
the guest using QMP monitor. Add APIs to extract these information and
tests for them.
Signed-off-by: Peter Krempa <pkrempa@redhat.com>
Since 86d90b3a (yes, my patch; again) we are supporting NBD storage
migration. However, on error recovery path we got the steps reversed.
The correct order is: return NBD port to the virPortAllocator and then
either unlock the vm or remove it from the driver. Not vice versa.
==11192== Invalid write of size 4
==11192== at 0x11488559: qemuMigrationPrepareAny (qemu_migration.c:2459)
==11192== by 0x11488EA6: qemuMigrationPrepareDirect (qemu_migration.c:2652)
==11192== by 0x114D1509: qemuDomainMigratePrepare3Params (qemu_driver.c:10332)
==11192== by 0x519075D: virDomainMigratePrepare3Params (libvirt.c:7290)
==11192== by 0x1502DA: remoteDispatchDomainMigratePrepare3Params (remote.c:4798)
==11192== by 0x12DECA: remoteDispatchDomainMigratePrepare3ParamsHelper (remote_dispatch.h:5741)
==11192== by 0x5212127: virNetServerProgramDispatchCall (virnetserverprogram.c:435)
==11192== by 0x5211C86: virNetServerProgramDispatch (virnetserverprogram.c:305)
==11192== by 0x520A8FD: virNetServerProcessMsg (virnetserver.c:165)
==11192== by 0x520A9E1: virNetServerHandleJob (virnetserver.c:186)
==11192== by 0x50DA78F: virThreadPoolWorker (virthreadpool.c:144)
==11192== by 0x50DA11C: virThreadHelper (virthreadpthread.c:161)
==11192== Address 0x1368baa0 is 576 bytes inside a block of size 688 free'd
==11192== at 0x4A07F5C: free (in /usr/lib64/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
==11192== by 0x5079A2F: virFree (viralloc.c:580)
==11192== by 0x11456C34: qemuDomainObjPrivateFree (qemu_domain.c:267)
==11192== by 0x50F41B4: virDomainObjDispose (domain_conf.c:2034)
==11192== by 0x50C2991: virObjectUnref (virobject.c:262)
==11192== by 0x50F4CFC: virDomainObjListRemove (domain_conf.c:2361)
==11192== by 0x1145C125: qemuDomainRemoveInactive (qemu_domain.c:2087)
==11192== by 0x11488520: qemuMigrationPrepareAny (qemu_migration.c:2456)
==11192== by 0x11488EA6: qemuMigrationPrepareDirect (qemu_migration.c:2652)
==11192== by 0x114D1509: qemuDomainMigratePrepare3Params (qemu_driver.c:10332)
==11192== by 0x519075D: virDomainMigratePrepare3Params (libvirt.c:7290)
==11192== by 0x1502DA: remoteDispatchDomainMigratePrepare3Params (remote.c:4798)
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
One of my previous patches (c7ac2519b7) did try to fix the issue when
domain dies too soon during migration. However, this clumsy approach was
missing removal of qemuProcessHandleMonitorDestroy resulting in double
unrefing of mon->vm and hence producing the daemon crash:
==11843== Invalid read of size 4
==11843== at 0x50C28C5: virObjectUnref (virobject.c:255)
==11843== by 0x1148F7DB: qemuMonitorDispose (qemu_monitor.c:258)
==11843== by 0x50C2991: virObjectUnref (virobject.c:262)
==11843== by 0x50C2D13: virObjectFreeCallback (virobject.c:388)
==11843== by 0x509C37B: virEventPollCleanupHandles (vireventpoll.c:583)
==11843== by 0x509C711: virEventPollRunOnce (vireventpoll.c:652)
==11843== by 0x509A620: virEventRunDefaultImpl (virevent.c:274)
==11843== by 0x520D21C: virNetServerRun (virnetserver.c:1112)
==11843== by 0x11F368: main (libvirtd.c:1513)
==11843== Address 0x13b88864 is 4 bytes inside a block of size 136 free'd
==11843== at 0x4A07F5C: free (in /usr/lib64/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
==11843== by 0x5079A2F: virFree (viralloc.c:580)
==11843== by 0x50C29E3: virObjectUnref (virobject.c:270)
==11843== by 0x114770E4: qemuProcessHandleMonitorDestroy (qemu_process.c:1103)
==11843== by 0x1148F7CB: qemuMonitorDispose (qemu_monitor.c:257)
==11843== by 0x50C2991: virObjectUnref (virobject.c:262)
==11843== by 0x50C2D13: virObjectFreeCallback (virobject.c:388)
==11843== by 0x509C37B: virEventPollCleanupHandles (vireventpoll.c:583)
==11843== by 0x509C711: virEventPollRunOnce (vireventpoll.c:652)
==11843== by 0x509A620: virEventRunDefaultImpl (virevent.c:274)
==11843== by 0x520D21C: virNetServerRun (virnetserver.c:1112)
==11843== by 0x11F368: main (libvirtd.c:1513)
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
So far we are checking if qemu supports 'nbd-server-start'. This,
however, makes no sense on the source as nbd-server-* is used on the
destination. On the source the 'drive-mirror' is used instead.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Since the 90139a62 commit the error is copied into mon->lastError but
it's never freed from there.
==31989== 395 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 877 of 978
==31989== at 0x4A06C2B: malloc (in /usr/lib64/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
==31989== by 0x7EAF129: strdup (in /lib64/libc-2.15.so)
==31989== by 0x50D586C: virStrdup (virstring.c:554)
==31989== by 0x50976C1: virCopyError (virerror.c:191)
==31989== by 0x5097A35: virCopyLastError (virerror.c:312)
==31989== by 0x114909A9: qemuMonitorIO (qemu_monitor.c:690)
==31989== by 0x509BEDE: virEventPollDispatchHandles (vireventpoll.c:501)
==31989== by 0x509C701: virEventPollRunOnce (vireventpoll.c:648)
==31989== by 0x509A620: virEventRunDefaultImpl (virevent.c:274)
==31989== by 0x520D21C: virNetServerRun (virnetserver.c:1112)
==31989== by 0x11F368: main (libvirtd.c:1513)
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
If there's a migration cancelled, the bitmap of migration port should be
cleaned up too.
Signed-off-by: Zeng Junliang <zengjunliang@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Coverity complains that the call to virPCIDeviceDetach() in
qemuPrepareHostdevPCIDevices() doesn't check status return like
other calls. Seems this just was lurking until a recent change
to this module resulted in Coverity looking harder and finding
the issue. Introduced by 'a4efb2e33' when function was called
'pciReAttachDevice()'
Just added a ignore_value() since it doesn't appear to matter
if the call fails since we're on a failure path already.
Include reference of the VM object pointer and name in debug
logs for QEMU start/stop functions. Also make sure we log the
PID that we started, since it isn't available elsewhere in the
logs.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
In debugging a recent oVirt/libvirt race condition, I was very
frustrated by lack of logging in the job enter/exit code. This
patch adds some key data which would have been useful in by
debugging attempts.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The following sequence
1. Define a persistent QMEU guest
2. Start the QEMU guest
3. Stop libvirtd
4. Kill the QEMU process
5. Start libvirtd
6. List persistent guests
At the last step, the previously running persistent guest
will be missing. This is because of a race condition in the
QEMU driver startup code. It does
1. Load all VM state files
2. Spawn thread to reconnect to each VM
3. Load all VM config files
Only at the end of step 3, does the 'virDomainObjPtr' get
marked as "persistent". There is therefore a window where
the thread reconnecting to the VM will remove the persistent
VM from the list.
The easy fix is to simply switch the order of steps 2 & 3.
In addition to this though, we must only attempt to reconnect
to a VM which had a non-zero PID loaded from its state file.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The 'error' cleanup block in qemuProcessReconnect() had a
'return' statement in the middle of it. This caused a leak
of virConnectPtr & virQEMUDriverConfigPtr instances. This
was identified because netcf recently started checking its
refcount in libvirtd shutdown:
netcfStateCleanup:109 : internal error: Attempt to close netcf state driver with open connections
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When adding an automatically allocated port to a well-formed migration
URI, keep it well-formed:
tcp://1.2.3.4/ -> tcp://1.2.3.4/:12345 # wrong
tcp://1.2.3.4/ -> tcp://1.2.3.4:12345/ # fixed
tcp://1.2.3.4 -> tcp://1.2.3.4:12345 # still works
tcp:1.2.3.4 -> tcp:1.2.3.4:12345 # still works (old syntax)
Signed-off-by: Michael Chapman <mike@very.puzzling.org>
Expand the "secmodel" XML fragment of "host" with a sequence of
baselabel's which describe the default security context used by
libvirt with a specific security model and virtualization type:
<secmodel>
<model>selinux</model>
<doi>0</doi>
<baselabel type='kvm'>system_u:system_r:svirt_t:s0</baselabel>
<baselabel type='qemu'>system_u:system_r:svirt_tcg_t:s0</baselabel>
</secmodel>
<secmodel>
<model>dac</model>
<doi>0</doi>
<baselabel type='kvm'>107:107</baselabel>
<baselabel type='qemu'>107:107</baselabel>
</secmodel>
"baselabel" is driver-specific information, e.g. in the DAC security
model, it indicates USER_ID:GROUP_ID.
Signed-off-by: Giuseppe Scrivano <gscrivan@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
This patch (and the two patches that precede it) resolve:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1005682
When libvirt was changed to delay the final cleanup of device removal
until the qemu process had signaled it with a DEVICE_DELETED event for
that device, the hostdev removal function
(qemuDomainRemoveHostDevice()) was written to properly handle the
removal of a hostdev that was actually an SRIOV virtual function
(defined with <interface type='hostdev'>). However, the function used
to search for a device matching the alias name provided in the
DEVICE_DELETED message (virDomainDefFindDevice()) would search through
the list of netdevs before hostdevs, so qemuDomainRemoveHostDevice()
was never called; instead the netdev function,
qemuDomainRemoveNetDevice() (which *doesn't* properly cleanup after
removal of <interface type='hostdev'>), was called.
(As a reminder - each <interface type='hostdev'> results in a
virDomainNetDef which contains a virDomainHostdevDef having a parent
type of VIR_DOMAIN_DEVICE_NET, and parent.data.net pointing back to
the virDomainNetDef; both Defs point to the same device info object
(and the info contains the device's "alias", which is used by qemu to
identify the device). The virDomainHostdevDef is added to the domain's
hostdevs list *and* the virDomainNetDef is added to the domain's nets
list, so searching either list for a particular alias will yield a
positive result.)
This function modifies the qemuDomainRemoveNetDevice() to short
circuit itself and call qemu DomainRemoveHostDevice() instead when the
actual device is a VIR_DOMAIN_NET_TYPE_HOSTDEV (similar logic to what
is done in the higher level qemuDomainDetachNetDevice())
Note that even if virDomainDefFindDevice() changes in the future so
that it finds the hostdev entry first, the current code will continue
to work properly.
This function was called in three places, and in each the call was
qualified by a slightly different conditional. In reality, this
function should only be called for a hostdev if all of the following
are true:
1) mode='subsystem'
2) type='pci'
3) there is a parent device definition which is an <interface>
(VIR_DOMAIN_DEVICE_NET)
We can simplify the callers and make them more consistent by checking
these conditions at the top ov qemuDomainHostdevNetConfigRestore and
returning 0 if one of them isn't satisfied.
The location of the call to qemuDomainHostdevNetConfigRestore() has
also been changed in the hot-plug case - it is moved into the caller
of its previous location (i.e. from qemuDomainRemovePCIHostDevice() to
qemuDomainRemoveHostDevice()). This was done to be more consistent
about which functions pay attention to whether or not this is one of
the special <interface> hostdevs or just a normal hostdev -
qemuDomainRemoveHostDevice() already contained a call to
networkReleaseActualDevice() and virDomainNetDefFree(), so it makes
sense for it to also handle the resetting of the device's MAC address
and vlan tag (which is what's done by
qemuDomainHostdevNetConfigRestore()).
Most of the usage of getuid()/getgid() is in cases where we are
considering what privileges we have. As such the code should be
using the effective IDs, not real IDs.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When running setuid, we must be careful about what env vars
we allow commands to inherit from us. Replace the
virCommandAddEnvPass function with two new ones which do
filtering
virCommandAddEnvPassAllowSUID
virCommandAddEnvPassBlockSUID
And make virCommandAddEnvPassCommon use the appropriate
ones
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Commit e3ef20d7 allows user to configure migration ports range via
qemu.conf. However, it forgot to update augeas definition file and
even the test data was malicious.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1019053
When we migrate vms concurrently, there's a chance that libvirtd on
destination assigns the same port for different migrations, which will
lead to migration failure during prepare phase on destination. So we use
virPortAllocator here to solve the problem.
Signed-off-by: Wang Yufei <james.wangyufei@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
The header definition didn't match the function declaration, so adjusted
header to reflect the definition.
Found during a Coverity build where STATIC_ANALYSIS is enabled resulting
in the internal.h adding __nonnull__ handling to arguments.
Commit '6d264c91' added support for the qemuMonitorJSONDrivePivot() and
commit 'fbc3adc9' added a corresponding test which ended up triggering
the build failure which I didn't notice until today!
QEMU has support for SASL auth for SPICE guests, but libvirt
has no way to enable it. Following the example from VNC where
it is globally enabled via qemu.conf
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The last argument of memmove is the amount of bytes to be moved. The
amount is in Bytes. We are moving some void pointers around. However,
since sizeof(void *) is not Byte on any architecture, we've got the
arithmetic wrong.
'const fooPtr' is the same as 'foo * const' (the pointer won't
change, but it's contents can). But in general, if an interface
is trying to be const-correct, it should be using 'const foo *'
(the pointer is to data that can't be changed).
Fix up offenders in src/qemu.
* src/qemu/qemu_bridge_filter.h (networkAllowMacOnPort)
(networkDisallowMacOnPort): Use intended type.
* src/qemu/qemu_bridge_filter.c (networkAllowMacOnPort)
(networkDisallowMacOnPort): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuBuildTPMBackendStr)
(qemuBuildTPMDevStr, qemuBuildCpuArgStr)
(qemuBuildObsoleteAccelArg, qemuBuildMachineArgStr)
(qemuBuildSmpArgStr, qemuBuildNumaArgStr): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_conf.c (qemuSharedDeviceEntryCopy): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainSaveImageStartVM): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_hostdev.c
(qemuDomainHostdevNetConfigVirtPortProfile): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.c
(qemuMonitorJSONAttachCharDevCommand): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
'const fooPtr' is the same as 'foo * const' (the pointer won't
change, but it's contents can). But in general, if an interface
is trying to be const-correct, it should be using 'const foo *'
(the pointer is to data that can't be changed).
Fix up offenders in src/conf/domain_conf, and their fallout.
Several things to note: virObjectLock() requires a non-const
argument; if this were C++, we could treat the locking field
as 'mutable' and allow locking an otherwise 'const' object, but
that is a more invasive change, so I instead dropped attempts
to be const-correct on domain lookup. virXMLPropString and
friends require a non-const xmlNodePtr - this is because libxml2
is not a const-correct library. We could make the src/util/virxml
wrappers cast away const, but I figured it was easier to not
try to mark xmlNodePtr as const. Finally, virDomainDeviceDefCopy
was a rather hard conversion - it calls virDomainDeviceDefPostParse,
which in turn in the xen driver was actually modifying the domain
outside of the current device being visited. We should not be
adding a device on the first per-device callback, but waiting until
after all per-device callbacks are complete.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h (virDomainObjListFindByID)
(virDomainObjListFindByUUID, virDomainObjListFindByName)
(virDomainObjAssignDef, virDomainObjListAdd): Drop attempt at
const.
(virDomainDeviceDefCopy): Use intended type.
(virDomainDeviceDefParse, virDomainDeviceDefPostParseCallback)
(virDomainVideoDefaultType, virDomainVideoDefaultRAM)
(virDomainChrGetDomainPtrs): Make const-correct.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainObjListFindByID)
(virDomainObjListFindByUUID, virDomainObjListFindByName)
(virDomainDeviceDefCopy, virDomainObjListAdd)
(virDomainObjAssignDef, virDomainHostdevSubsysUsbDefParseXML)
(virDomainHostdevSubsysPciOrigStatesDefParseXML)
(virDomainHostdevSubsysPciDefParseXML)
(virDomainHostdevSubsysScsiDefParseXML)
(virDomainControllerModelTypeFromString)
(virDomainTPMDefParseXML, virDomainTimerDefParseXML)
(virDomainSoundCodecDefParseXML, virDomainSoundDefParseXML)
(virDomainWatchdogDefParseXML, virDomainRNGDefParseXML)
(virDomainMemballoonDefParseXML, virDomainNVRAMDefParseXML)
(virSysinfoParseXML, virDomainVideoAccelDefParseXML)
(virDomainVideoDefParseXML, virDomainHostdevDefParseXML)
(virDomainRedirdevDefParseXML)
(virDomainRedirFilterUsbDevDefParseXML)
(virDomainRedirFilterDefParseXML, virDomainIdMapEntrySort)
(virDomainIdmapDefParseXML, virDomainVcpuPinDefParseXML)
(virDiskNameToBusDeviceIndex, virDomainDeviceDefCopy)
(virDomainVideoDefaultType, virDomainHostdevAssignAddress)
(virDomainDeviceDefPostParseInternal, virDomainDeviceDefPostParse)
(virDomainChrGetDomainPtrs, virDomainControllerSCSINextUnit)
(virDomainSCSIDriveAddressIsUsed)
(virDomainDriveAddressIsUsedByDisk)
(virDomainDriveAddressIsUsedByHostdev): Fix fallout.
* src/openvz/openvz_driver.c (openvzDomainDeviceDefPostParse):
Likewise.
* src/libxl/libxl_domain.c (libxlDomainDeviceDefPostParse):
Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_domain.c (qemuDomainDeviceDefPostParse)
(qemuDomainDefaultNetModel): Likewise.
* src/lxc/lxc_domain.c (virLXCDomainDeviceDefPostParse):
Likewise.
* src/uml/uml_driver.c (umlDomainDeviceDefPostParse): Likewise.
* src/xen/xen_driver.c (xenDomainDeviceDefPostParse): Split...
(xenDomainDefPostParse): ...since per-device callback is not the
time to be adding a device.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
virDomainChrGetDomainPtrs() required 4 levels of pointers (taking
a parameter that will be used as an output variable to return the
address of another variable that contains an array of pointers).
This is rather complex to reason about, especially when outside
of the domain_conf file, no other caller should be modifying
the resulting array of pointers directly. Changing the public
signature gives something is easier to reason with, and actually
make const-correct; which is important as it was the only function
that was blocking virDomainDeviceDefCopy from treating its source
as const.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h (virDomainChrGetDomainPtrs): Use simpler
types, and make const-correct for external users.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainChrGetDomainPtrs): Split...
(virDomainChrGetDomainPtrsInternal): ...into an internal version
that lets us modify terms, vs. external form that is read-only.
(virDomainDeviceDefPostParseInternal, virDomainChrFind)
(virDomainChrInsert): Adjust callers.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuGetNextChrDevIndex): Adjust caller.
(qemuDomainDeviceAliasIndex): Make const-correct.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The regular save image code has the support to compress images using a
specified algorithm. This was not implemented for external checkpoints
although it shares most of the backend code.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1017227
The regular save image code has the support to compress images using a
specified algorithm. This was not implemented for managed save although
it shares most of the backend code.
After my patches, some functions gained one more argument
(@listenAddress) which wasn't included in debug printing of
arguments they were called with. Functions in question are:
qemuMigrationPrepareDirect and qemuMigrationPerform.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
I've noticed a SIGSEGV-ing libvirtd on the destination when the qemu
died too quickly = in Prepare phase. What is happening here is:
1) [Thread 3493] We are in qemuMigrationPrepareAny() and calling
qemuProcessStart() which subsequently calls qemuProcessWaitForMonitor()
and qemuConnectMonitor(). So far so good. The qemuMonitorOpen()
succeeds, however switching monitor to QMP mode fails as qemu died
meanwhile. That is qemuMonitorSetCapabilities() returns -1.
2013-10-08 15:54:10.629+0000: 3493: debug : qemuMonitorSetCapabilities:1356 : mon=0x14a53da0
2013-10-08 15:54:10.630+0000: 3493: debug : qemuMonitorJSONCommandWithFd:262 : Send command '{"execute":"qmp_capabilities","id":"libvirt-1"}' for write with FD -1
2013-10-08 15:54:10.630+0000: 3493: debug : virEventPollUpdateHandle:147 : EVENT_POLL_UPDATE_HANDLE: watch=17 events=13
...
2013-10-08 15:54:10.631+0000: 3493: debug : qemuMonitorSend:956 : QEMU_MONITOR_SEND_MSG: mon=0x14a53da0 msg={"execute":"qmp_capabilities","id":"libvirt-1"}
fd=-1
2013-10-08 15:54:10.631+0000: 3262: debug : virEventPollRunOnce:641 : Poll got 1 event(s)
2) [Thread 3262] The event loop is trying to do the talking to monitor.
However, qemu is dead already, remember?
2013-10-08 15:54:13.436+0000: 3262: error : qemuMonitorIORead:551 : Unable to read from monitor: Connection reset by peer
2013-10-08 15:54:13.516+0000: 3262: debug : virFileClose:90 : Closed fd 25
...
2013-10-08 15:54:13.533+0000: 3493: debug : qemuMonitorSend:968 : Send command resulted in error internal error: early end of file from monitor: possible problem:
3) [Thread 3493] qemuProcessStart() failed. No big deal. Go to the
'endjob' label and subsequently to the 'cleanup'. Since the domain is
not persistent and ret is -1, the qemuDomainRemoveInactive() is called.
This has an (unpleasant) effect of virObjectUnref()-in the @vm object.
Unpleasant because the event loop which is about to trigger EOF callback
still holds a pointer to the @vm (not the reference). See the valgrind
output below.
4) [Thread 3262] So the event loop starts triggering EOF:
2013-10-08 15:54:13.542+0000: 3262: debug : qemuMonitorIO:729 : Triggering EOF callback
2013-10-08 15:54:13.543+0000: 3262: debug : qemuProcessHandleMonitorEOF:294 : Received EOF on 0x14549110 'migt10'
And the monitor is cleaned up. This results in calling
qemuProcessHandleMonitorEOF with the @vm pointer passed. The pointer is
kept in qemuMonitor struct.
==3262== Thread 1:
==3262== Invalid read of size 4
==3262== at 0x77ECCAA: pthread_mutex_lock (in /lib64/libpthread-2.15.so)
==3262== by 0x52FAA06: virMutexLock (virthreadpthread.c:85)
==3262== by 0x52E3891: virObjectLock (virobject.c:320)
==3262== by 0x11626743: qemuProcessHandleMonitorEOF (qemu_process.c:296)
==3262== by 0x11642593: qemuMonitorIO (qemu_monitor.c:730)
==3262== by 0x52BD526: virEventPollDispatchHandles (vireventpoll.c:501)
==3262== by 0x52BDD49: virEventPollRunOnce (vireventpoll.c:648)
==3262== by 0x52BBC68: virEventRunDefaultImpl (virevent.c:274)
==3262== by 0x542D3D9: virNetServerRun (virnetserver.c:1112)
==3262== by 0x11F368: main (libvirtd.c:1513)
==3262== Address 0x14549128 is 24 bytes inside a block of size 136 free'd
==3262== at 0x4C2AF5C: free (in /usr/lib64/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
==3262== by 0x529B1FF: virFree (viralloc.c:580)
==3262== by 0x52E3703: virObjectUnref (virobject.c:270)
==3262== by 0x531557E: virDomainObjListRemove (domain_conf.c:2355)
==3262== by 0x1160E899: qemuDomainRemoveInactive (qemu_domain.c:2061)
==3262== by 0x1163A0C6: qemuMigrationPrepareAny (qemu_migration.c:2450)
==3262== by 0x1163A923: qemuMigrationPrepareDirect (qemu_migration.c:2626)
==3262== by 0x11682D71: qemuDomainMigratePrepare3Params (qemu_driver.c:10309)
==3262== by 0x53B0976: virDomainMigratePrepare3Params (libvirt.c:7266)
==3262== by 0x1502D3: remoteDispatchDomainMigratePrepare3Params (remote.c:4797)
==3262== by 0x12DECA: remoteDispatchDomainMigratePrepare3ParamsHelper (remote_dispatch.h:5741)
==3262== by 0x54322EB: virNetServerProgramDispatchCall (virnetserverprogram.c:435)
The mon->vm is set in qemuMonitorOpenInternal() which is the correct
place to increase @vm ref counter. The correct place to decrease the ref
counter is then qemuMonitorDispose().
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
This configuration knob is there to override default listen address for
-incoming for all qemu domains.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=994364
Whenever we check for ABI stability, we have new xml (e.g. provided by
user, or obtained from snapshot, whatever) which we compare to old xml
and see if ABI won't break. However, if the new xml was produced via
virDomainGetXMLDesc(..., VIR_DOMAIN_XML_MIGRATABLE) it lacks some
devices, e.g. 'pci-root' controller. Hence, the ABI stability check
fails even though it is stable. Moreover, we can't simply fix
virDomainDefCheckABIStability because removing the correct devices is
task for the driver. For instance, qemu driver wants to remove the usb
controller too, while LXC driver doesn't. That's why we need special
qemu wrapper over virDomainDefCheckABIStability which removes the
correct devices from domain XML, produces MIGRATABLE xml and calls the
check ABI stability function.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
At the beginning of the function qemuPrepareHostdevPCICheckSupport() is
called. After that @pcidevs is initialized. However, if the very first
command fails, we go to 'cleanup' label where virObjectUnref(pcidevs) is
called. Obviously, it is called before @pcidevs was able to get
initialized. Compiler warns about it:
CC qemu/libvirt_driver_qemu_impl_la-qemu_hostdev.lo
qemu/qemu_hostdev.c: In function 'qemuPrepareHostdevPCIDevices':
qemu/qemu_hostdev.c:824:19: error: 'pcidevs' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
virObjectUnref(pcidevs);
^
cc1: all warnings being treated as errors
Prefer using VFIO (if available) to the legacy KVM device passthrough.
With this patch a PCI passthrough device without the driver configured
will be started with VFIO if it's available on the host. If not legacy
KVM passthrough is checked and error is reported if it's not available.
Add code to check availability of PCI passhthrough using VFIO and the
legacy KVM passthrough and use it when starting VMs and hotplugging
devices to live machine.
The virConnectPtr is passed around loads of nwfilter code in
order to provide it as a parameter to the callback registered
by the virt drivers. None of the virt drivers use this param
though, so it serves no purpose.
Avoiding the need to pass a virConnectPtr means that the
nwfilterStateReload method no longer needs to open a bogus
QEMU driver connection. This addresses a race condition that
can lead to a crash on startup.
The nwfilter driver starts before the QEMU driver and registers
some callbacks with DBus to detect firewalld reload. If the
firewalld reload happens while the QEMU driver is still starting
up though, the nwfilterStateReload method will open a connection
to the partially initialized QEMU driver and cause a crash.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This resolves:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1012824https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1012834
Note that a similar problem was reported in:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=827519
but the fix only worked for <interface type='hostdev'>, *not* for
<interface type='network'> where the network itself was a pool of
hostdevs.
The symptom in both cases was this error message:
internal error: Unable to determine device index for network device
In both cases the cause was lack of proper handling for netdevs
(<interface>) of type='hostdev' when scanning the netdev list looking
for alias names in qemuAssignDeviceNetAlias() - those that aren't
type='hostdev' have an alias of the form "net%d", while those that are
hostdev use "hostdev%d". This special handling was completely lacking
prior to the fix for Bug 827519 which was:
When searching for the highest alias index, libvirt looks at the alias
for each netdev and if it is type='hostdev' it ignores the entry. If
the type is not hostdev, then it expects the "net%d" form; if it
doesn't find that, it fails and logs the above error message.
That fix works except in the case of <interface type='network'> where
the network uses hostdev (i.e. the network is a pool of VFs to be
assigned to the guests via PCI passthrough). In this case, the check
for type='hostdev' would fail because it was done as:
def->net[i]->type == VIR_DOMAIN_NET_TYPE_HOSTDEV
(which compares what was written in the config) when it actually
should have been:
virDomainNetGetActualType(def->net[i]) == VIR_DOMAIN_NET_TYPE_HOSTDEV
(which compares the type of netdev that was actually allocated from
the network at runtime).
Of course the latter wouldn't be of any use if the netdevs of
type='network' hadn't already acquired their actual network connection
yet, but manual examination of the code showed that this is never the
case.
While looking through qemu_command.c, two other places were found to
directly compare the net[i]->type field rather than getting actualType:
* qemuAssignDeviceAliases() - in this case, the incorrect comparison
would cause us to create a "net%d" alias for a netdev with
type='network' but actualType='hostdev'. This alias would be
subsequently overwritten by the proper "hostdev%d" form, so
everything would operate properly, but a string would be
leaked. This patch also fixes this problem.
* qemuAssignDevicePCISlots() - would defer assigning a PCI address to
a netdev if it was type='hostdev', but not for type='network +
actualType='hostdev'. In this case, the actual device usually hasn't
been acquired yet anyway, and even in the case that it has, there is
no practical difference between assigning a PCI address while
traversing the netdev list or while traversing the hostdev
list. Because changing it would be an effective NOP (but potentially
cause some unexpected regression), this usage was left unchanged.
When querying for kvm, we try to find 'enabled' field. Hence the error
message should report we haven't found 'enabled' and not 'running'
(which is not even in the reply). Probably a typo or copy-paste error.
The qemuDomainChangeNet() is called when 'virsh update-device' is
invoked on a NIC. Currently, we fail to update the QoS even though
we have routines for that.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
This basically covers the talking-to-monitor part of
virQEMUCapsInitQMP. The patch itself has no real value,
but it creates an entity to be tested in the next patches.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The change in ef29de14c3 that introduced
better error logging from qemu introduced a warning from coverity about
unused return value from lseek. Silence this warning and fix typo in the
corresponding error message.
Reported by: John Ferlan
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1011330 (case A)
While activeScsiHostdevs and webSocketPorts were allocated in
qemuStateInitialize, they were not freed in qemuStateCleanup.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1011330 (case D)
qemuProcessStart created two references to virQEMUDriverConfigPtr before
calling fork():
cfg = virQEMUDriverGetConfig(driver);
...
hookData.cfg = virObjectRef(cfg);
However, the child only unreferenced hookData.cfg and the parent only
removed the cfg reference. That said, we don't need to increment the
reference counter when assigning cfg to hookData. Both the child and the
parent will correctly remove the reference on cfg (the child will do
that through hookData).
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
The return value of virDomainControllerFind >=0 means that
the specific controller was found.
But some functions invoke it and treat 0 as not found.
This patch fix these incorrect invocation.
Signed-off-by: Chen Hanxiao <chenhanxiao@cn.fujitsu.com>
If qemuParseCommandLine finds an arg it does not understand
it adds it to the QEMU passthrough custom arg list. If the
qemuParseCommandLine method hits an error for any reason
though, it just does 'VIR_FREE(cmd)' on the custom arg list.
This means all actual args / env vars are leaked. Introduce
a qemuDomainCmdlineDefFree method to be used for cleanup.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
If the call to virDomainControllerInsert fails in
qemuParseCommandLine, the controller struct is leaked.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The 'qemuStringToArgvEnv' method splits up a string of command
line env/args to an 'arglist' array. It then copies env vars
to a 'progenv' array and args to a 'progargv' array. When
copyin the env vars, it NULL-ifies the element in 'arglist'
that is copied.
Upon OOM the 'virStringListFree' is called on progenv and
arglist. Unfortunately, because the elements in 'arglist'
related to env vars have been set to NULL, the call to
virStringListFree(arglist) doesn't free anything, even
though some non-NULL args vars still exist later in the
array.
To fix this leak, stop NULL-ifying the 'arglist' elements,
and change the cleanup code to only free elements in the
'arglist' array, not 'progenv'.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
In a number of places in qemuParseCommandLineDisk, an error
is reported, but no 'goto error' jump is used. This causes
failure to report OOM conditions to the caller.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
If OOM occurs in qemuParseCommandLineDisk some intermediate
variables will be leaked when parsing Sheepdog or RBD disks.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The qemuBuildCommandLine code for parsing sound cards will leak
an intermediate variable if an OOM occurs. Move the free'ing of
the variable earlier to avoid the leak.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
In qemuParseNBDString, if the virURIParse fails, the
error is not reported to the caller. Instead execution
falls through to the non-URI codepath causing memory
leaks later on.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
If qemuAddRBDHost fails due to parsing problems or OOM, then
qemuParseRBDString cleanup is skipped causing a memory leak.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
qemuDomainPCIAddressGetNextSlot has a loop for finding
compatible PCI buses. In the loop body it creates a
PCI address string, but never frees this. This causes
a leak if the loop executes more than one iteration,
or if a call in the loop body fails.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This resolves one of the issues listed in:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1003983
00:1E.0 is the location of this controller on at least some actual Q35
hardware, so we try to replicate the placement. The bridge should work
just as well in any other location though, so if 00:1E.0 isn't
available, just allow it to be auto-assigned anywhere appropriate.
This resolves one of the issues in:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1003983
This device is identical to qemu's "intel-hda" device (known as "ich6"
in libvirt), but has a different PCI device ID (which matches the ID
of the hda audio built into the ich9 chipset, of course). It's not
supported in earlier versions of qemu, so it requires a capability
bit.
I'm not sure why this code was written to compare the strings that it
had just retrieved from an enum->string conversion, rather than just
look at the original enum values, but this yields the same results,
and is much more efficient (especially as you add more devices).
This is a prerequisite for patches to resolve:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1003983
Part of the resolution to:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1003983
Although most devices available in qemu area defined as PCI devices,
and strictly speaking should only be attached via a PCI slot, in
practice qemu allows them to be attached to a PCIe slot and sometimes
this makes sense.
For example, The UHCI and EHCI USB controllers are usually attached
directly to the PCIe "root complex" (i.e. PCIe slots) on real
hardware, so that should be possible for a Q35-based qemu virtual
machine as well.
We still want to prefer a standard PCI slot when auto-assigning
addresses, though, and in general to disallow attaching PCI devices
via PCIe slots.
This patch makes that possible by adding a new
QEMU_PCI_CONNECT_TYPE_EITHER_IF_CONFIG flag. Three things are done
with this flag:
1) It is set for the "pcie-root" controller
2) qemuCollectPCIAddress() now has a set of nested switches that set
this "EITHER" flag for devices that we want to allow connecting to
pcie-root when specifically requested in the config.
3) qemuDomainPCIAddressFlagsCompatible() adds this new flag to the
"flagsMatchMask" if the address being checked came from config rather
than being newly auto-allocated by libvirt (this knowledge is
conveniently already available in the "fromConfig" arg).
Now any device having the EITHER flag set can be connected to
pcie-root if explicitly requested, but auto-allocated addresses for
those devices will still be standard PCI slots instead.
This patch only loosens the restrictions on devices that have been
specifically requested, but the setup is such that it should be fairly
easy to add new devices.
Replace them with switch cases. This will make it more efficient when
we add exceptions for more controller types, and other device types.
This is a prerequisite for patches to resolve:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1003983
The previous patches added infrastructure to report better errors from
monitor in some cases. This patch finalizes this "feature" by enabling
this enhanced error reporting on early phases of VM startup. In these
phases the possibility of qemu producing a useful error message is
really high compared to running it during the whole life cycle. After
the start up is complete, the feature is disabled to provide the usual
error messages so that users are not confused by possibly irrelevant
messages that may be in the domain log.
The original motivation to do this enhancement is to capture errors when
using VFIO device passthrough, where qemu reports errors after the
monitor is initialized and the existing error catching code couldn't
catch this producing a unhelpful message:
# virsh start test
error: Failed to start domain test
error: Unable to read from monitor: Connection reset by peer
With this change, the message is changed to:
# virsh start test
error: Failed to start domain test
error: internal error: early end of file from monitor: possible problem:
qemu-system-x86_64: -device vfio-pci,host=00:1a.0,id=hostdev0,bus=pci.0,addr=0x5: vfio: error, group 8 is not viable, please ensure all devices within the iommu_group are bound to their vfio bus driver.
qemu-system-x86_64: -device vfio-pci,host=00:1a.0,id=hostdev0,bus=pci.0,addr=0x5: vfio: failed to get group 8
qemu-system-x86_64: -device vfio-pci,host=00:1a.0,id=hostdev0,bus=pci.0,addr=0x5: Device 'vfio-pci' could not be initialized
Change the monitor error code to add the ability to access the qemu log
file using a file descriptor so that we can dig in it for a more useful
error message. The error is now logged on monitor hangups and overwrites
a possible lesser error. A hangup on the monitor usualy means that qemu
has crashed and there's a significant chance it produced a useful error
message.
The functionality will be latent until the next patch.
Early VM startup errors usually produce a better error message in the
machine log file. Currently we were accessing it only when the process
exited during certain phases of startup. This will help adding a more
comprehensive error extraction for early qemu startup phases.
This patch adds infrastructure to keep a file descriptor for the machine
log file that will be used in case an error happens.
Teach the function to skip character device definitions printed by qemu
at startup in addition to libvirt log messages and make it usable from
outside of qemu_process.c. Also add documentation about the func.
The parsing of '-usb' did not check for failure of the
virDomainControllerInsert method. As a result on OOM, the
parser mistakenly attached USB disks to the IDE controller.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The code formatting NUMA args was ignoring the return value
of virBitmapFormat, so on OOM, it would silently drop the
NUMA cpumask arg.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When building boot menu args, if OOM occurred the CLI args
would end up containing 'order=(null)' due to a missing
call to 'virBufferError'.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The qemuParseCommandLine method did not check the return value of
virStringSplit to see if OOM had occurred. This lead to dereference
of a NULL pointer on OOM.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Most callers of qemuParseKeywords were assigning its return
value to a 'size_t' variable. Then then also checked '< 0'
for error condition, but this will never be true with the
unsigned size_t variable. Rather than using 'ssize_t', change
qemuParseKeywords so that the element count is returned via
an output parameter, leaving the return value solely as an
error indicator.
This avoids a crash accessing beyond the end of an error
upon OOM.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
In
commit 41b5505679
Author: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Date: Wed Aug 28 15:01:23 2013 -0600
qemu: simplify list cleanup
The qemuStringToArgvEnv method was changed to use virStringFreeList
to free the 'arglist' array. This method assumes the string list
array is NULL terminated, however, qemuStringToArgvEnv was not
ensuring this when populating 'arglist'. This caused an out of
bounds access by virStringFreeList when OOM occured in the initial
loop of qemuStringToArgvEnv
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When parsing the RBD hosts, it increments the 'nhosts' counter
before increasing the 'hosts' array allocation. If an OOM then
occurs when increasing the array allocation, the cleanup block
will attempt to access beyond the end of the array. Switch
to using VIR_EXPAND_N instead of VIR_REALLOC_N to protect against
this mistake
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
If OOM occurs in qemuDomainCCWAddressSetCreate, it jumps to
a cleanup block and frees the partially initialized object.
It then mistakenly returns the address of the just free'd
pointer instead of NULL.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Since the wait is done during migration (still inside
QEMU_ASYNC_JOB_MIGRATION_OUT), the code should enter the monitor as such
in order to prohibit all other jobs from interfering in the meantime.
This patch fixes bug #1009886 in which qemuDomainGetBlockInfo was
waiting on the monitor condition and after GetSpiceMigrationStatus
mangled its internal data, the daemon crashed.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1009886
This resolves https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1008903
The Q35 machinetype has an implicit SATA controller at 00:1F.2 which
isn't given the "expected" id of ahci0 by qemu when it's created. The
original suggested solution to this problem was to not specify any
controller for the disks that use the default controller and just
specify "unit=n" instead; qemu should then use the first IDE or SATA
controller for the disk.
Unfortunately, this "solution" is ignorant of the fact that in the
case of SATA disks, the "unit" attribute in the disk XML is actually
*not* being used for the unit, but is instead used to specify the
"bus" number; each SATA controller has 6 buses, and each bus only
allows a single unit. This makes it nonsensical to specify unit='n'
where n is anything other than 0. It also means that the only way to
connect more than a single device to the implicit SATA controller is
to explicitly give the bus names, which happen to be "ide.$n", where
$n can be replaced by the disk's "unit" number.
virDomainSetBlockIoTuneEnsureACL was incorrectly called after we already
started a job. As a result of this, the job was not cleaned up when an
access driver had forbidden the action.
qemu/KVM also supports a tftp URL while specifying the cdrom ISO image.
The xml should be as following:
<disk type='network' device='cdrom'>
<source protocol='tftp' name='/url/path'>
<host name='host.name' port='69'/>
</source>
</disk>
Signed-off-by: Aline Manera <alinefm@br.ibm.com>
The ftps protocol is another protocol supported by qemu/KVM while specifying
the cdrom ISO image.
The xml should be as following:
<disk type='network' device='cdrom'>
<source protocol='ftps' name='/url/path'>
<host name='host.name' port='990'/>
</source>
</disk>
Signed-off-by: Aline Manera <alinefm@br.ibm.com>
The https protocol is also accepted by qemu/KVM when specifying the cdrom ISO
image.
The xml should be as following:
<disk type='network' device='cdrom'>
<source protocol='https' name='/url/path'>
<host name='host.name' port='443'/>
</source>
</disk>
Signed-off-by: Aline Manera <alinefm@br.ibm.com>
If the ABI compatibility check with the "migratable" user XML is
successful, we would leak the originally parsed XML from the user that
would not be used in this case.
Reported by Ján Tomko.
The function implemented common behavior that can be reused for other
hypervisor drivers that use the virDomainObj data structures. Factor out
the core into a separate helper func.
The function implemented common behavior that can be reused for other
hypervisor drivers that use the virDomainObj data structures. Factor out
the core into a separate helper func.
In the original implementation of external checkpoints I've mistakenly
used the live definition to be stored in the save image. The normal
approach is to use the "migratable" definition. This was discovered when
commit 07966f6a8b changed the behavior to
use a converted XML from the user to do the compatibility check to fix
problem when using the regular machine saving.
As the previous patch added a compatibility layer, we can now change the
type of the XML in the image.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1008340
External checkpoints have a bug in the implementation where they use the
normal definition instead of the "migratable" one. This causes errors
when the snapshot is being reverted using the workaround method via
qemuDomainRestoreFlags() with a custom XML. This issue was introduced
when commit 07966f6a8b changed the code to
compare "migratable" XMLs from the user as we should have used
migratable in the image too.
This patch adds a compatibility layer, so that fixing the snapshot code
won't make existing snapshots fail to load.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1008340
qemuMigrationEatCookie has flags to control if these should
be parsed, but it does not fill mig->flags. These cookies might
get leaked if these flags are not set by qemuMigrationBakeCookie.
42 (32 direct, 10 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in
loss record 361 of 662
==123== by 0x1BA33FCA: qemuMigrationEatCookie (qemu_migration.c:678)
==123== by 0x1BA34A1E: qemuMigrationRun (qemu_migration.c:3108)
==123== by 0x1BA3622B: doNativeMigrate (qemu_migration.c:3343)
==123== by 0x1BA3B408: qemuMigrationPerform (qemu_migration.c:4138)
When reverting a live internal snapshot with a live guest the ABI
compatiblity check was comparing a "migratable" definition with a normal
one. This resulted in the check failing with:
revert requires force: Target device address type none does not match source pci
This patch generates a "migratable" definition from the actual one to
check against the definition from the snapshot to avoid this problem.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1006886
Osier Yang pointed out that ever since commit 31cb030, the
signature of qemuDomainObjEndJob was changed to return a bool.
While comparison against 0 or > 0 still gives the right results,
it looks fishy; we also had one place that was comparing < 0
which is effectively dead code.
* src/qemu/qemu_migration.c (qemuMigrationPrepareAny): Fix dead
code bug.
(qemuMigrationBegin): Use more canonical form of bool check.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuAutostartDomain)
(qemuDomainCreateXML, qemuDomainSuspend, qemuDomainResume)
(qemuDomainShutdownFlags, qemuDomainReboot, qemuDomainReset)
(qemuDomainDestroyFlags, qemuDomainSetMemoryFlags)
(qemuDomainSetMemoryStatsPeriod, qemuDomainInjectNMI)
(qemuDomainSendKey, qemuDomainGetInfo, qemuDomainScreenshot)
(qemuDomainSetVcpusFlags, qemuDomainGetVcpusFlags)
(qemuDomainRestoreFlags, qemuDomainGetXMLDesc)
(qemuDomainCreateWithFlags, qemuDomainAttachDeviceFlags)
(qemuDomainUpdateDeviceFlags, qemuDomainDetachDeviceFlags)
(qemuDomainBlockResize, qemuDomainBlockStats)
(qemuDomainBlockStatsFlags, qemuDomainMemoryStats)
(qemuDomainMemoryPeek, qemuDomainGetBlockInfo)
(qemuDomainAbortJob, qemuDomainMigrateSetMaxDowntime)
(qemuDomainMigrateGetCompressionCache)
(qemuDomainMigrateSetCompressionCache)
(qemuDomainMigrateSetMaxSpeed)
(qemuDomainSnapshotCreateActiveInternal)
(qemuDomainRevertToSnapshot, qemuDomainSnapshotDelete)
(qemuDomainQemuMonitorCommand, qemuDomainQemuAttach)
(qemuDomainBlockJobImpl, qemuDomainBlockCopy)
(qemuDomainBlockCommit, qemuDomainOpenGraphics)
(qemuDomainGetBlockIoTune, qemuDomainGetDiskErrors)
(qemuDomainPMSuspendForDuration, qemuDomainPMWakeup)
(qemuDomainQemuAgentCommand, qemuDomainFSTrim): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Failure to attach to a domain during 'virsh qemu-attach' left
the list of domains in an odd state:
$ virsh qemu-attach 4176
error: An error occurred, but the cause is unknown
$ virsh list --all
Id Name State
----------------------------------------------------
2 foo shut off
$ virsh qemu-attach 4176
error: Requested operation is not valid: domain is already active as 'foo'
$ virsh undefine foo
error: Failed to undefine domain foo
error: Requested operation is not valid: cannot undefine transient domain
$ virsh shutdown foo
error: Failed to shutdown domain foo
error: invalid argument: monitor must not be NULL
It all stems from leaving the list of domains unmodified on
the initial failure; we should follow the lead of createXML
which removes vm on failure (the actual initial failure still
needs to be fixed in a later patch, but at least this patch
gets us to the point where we aren't getting stuck with an
unremovable "shut off" transient domain).
While investigating, I also found a leak in qemuDomainCreateXML;
the two functions should behave similarly. Note that there are
still two unusual paths: if dom is not allocated, the user will
see an OOM error even though the vm remains registered (but oom
errors already indicate tricky cleanup); and if the vm starts
and then quits again all before the job ends, it is possible
to return a non-NULL dom even though the dom will no longer be
useful for anything (but this at least lets the user know their
short-lived vm ran).
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainCreateXML): Don't leak vm on
failure to obtain job.
(qemuDomainQemuAttach): Match cleanup of qemuDomainCreateXML.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Currently, only X86 provides users CPU features with CPUID instruction.
If users specify the features for non-x86, it should tell users to
remove them.
This patch is to report one error if features are specified by
users for non-x86 platform.
Signed-off-by: Li Zhang <zhlcindy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
While debugging a failure of 'virsh qemu-attach', I noticed that
we were leaking the count of active domains on failure. This
means that a libvirtd session that is supposed to quit after
active domains disappear will hang around forever.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessAttach): Undo count of
active domains on failure.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
In Fedora 19, 'qemu-kvm' is a simple wrapper that calls
'qemu-system-x86_64 -machine accel=kvm'. Attempting
to use 'virsh qemu-attach $pid' to a machine started as:
qemu-kvm -cdrom /var/lib/libvirt/images/foo.img \
-monitor unix:/tmp/demo,server,nowait -name foo \
--uuid cece4f9f-dff0-575d-0e8e-01fe380f12ea
was failing with:
error: XML error: No PCI buses available
because we did not see 'kvm' in the executable name read from
/proc/$pid/cmdline, and tried to assign os.machine as
"accel=kvm" instead of "pc"; this in turn led to refusal to
recognize the pci bus.
Noticed while investigating https://bugzilla.redhat.com/995312
although there are still other issues to fix before that bug
will be completely solved.
I've concluded that the existing parser code for native-to-xml
is a horrendous hodge-podge of ad-hoc approaches; I basically
rewrote the -machine section to be a bit saner.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuParseCommandLine): Don't assume
-machine argument is always appropriate for os.machine; set
virtType if accel is present.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
'virsh domxml-from-native' and 'virsh qemu-attach' could misbehave
for an emulator installed in (a somewhat unlikely) location
such as /usr/local/qemu-1.6/qemu-system-x86_64 or (an even less
likely) /opt/notxen/qemu-system-x86_64. Limit the strstr seach
to just the basename of the file where we are assuming details
about the binary based on its name.
While testing, I accidentally triggered a core dump during strcmp
when I forgot to set os.type on one of my code paths; this patch
changes such a coding error to raise a nicer internal error instead.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuParseCommandLine): Compute basename
earlier.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainDefPostParseInternal): Avoid
NULL deref.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
CPU features are not supported on non-x86 and hasFeatures will be NULL.
This patch is to remove CPU features functions calling to avoid errors.
Signed-off-by: Li Zhang <zhlcindy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
The VIR_FREE() macro will cast away any const-ness. This masked a
number of places where we passed a 'const char *' string to
VIR_FREE. Fortunately in all of these cases, the variable was not
in fact const data, but a heap allocated string. Fix all the
variable declarations to reflect this.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
No need to open code now that we have a nice function.
Interestingly, our virStringFreeList function is typed correctly
(a malloc'd list of malloc'd strings is NOT const, whether at the
point where it is created, or at the point where it is cleand up),
so using it with a 'const char **' argument would require a cast
to keep the compiler. I chose instead to remove const from code
even where we don't modify the argument, just to avoid the need
to cast.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.h (qemuParseCommandLine): Drop declaration.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuParseProcFileStrings)
(qemuStringToArgvEnv): Don't force malloc'd result to be const.
(qemuParseCommandLinePid, qemuParseCommandLineString): Simplify
cleanup.
(qemuParseCommandLine, qemuFindEnv): Drop const-correctness to
avoid the need to cast in callers.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=999352
Since commit v1.0.5-56-g449e6b1 (Pull parsing of migration xml up into
QEMU driver APIs) any attempt to rename a domain during migration fails
with the following error message:
internal error Incoming cookie data had unexpected name DOM vs DOM2
This is because migration cookies always use the original domain name
and the mentioned commit failed to propagate the name back to
qemuMigrationPrepareAny.
Currently, kernel supports up to 8 queues for a multiqueue tap device.
However, if user tries to enter a huge number (e.g. one million) the tap
allocation fails, as expected. But what is not expected is the log full
of warnings:
warning : virFileClose:83 : Tried to close invalid fd 0
The problem is, upon error we iterate over an array of FDs (handlers to
queues) and VIR_FORCE_CLOSE() over each item. However, the array is
pre-filled with zeros. Hence, we repeatedly close stdin. Ouch.
But there's more. The queues allocation is done in virNetDevTapCreate()
which cleans up the FDs in case of error. Then, its caller, the
virNetDevTapCreateInBridgePort() iterates over the FD array and tries to
close them too. And so does qemuNetworkIfaceConnect() and
qemuBuildInterfaceCommandLine().
Starting with qemu 1.6, the qemu-system-arm vexpress-a9 model has a
hardcoded virtio-mmio transport which enables attaching all virtio
devices.
On the command line, we have to use virtio-XXX-device rather than
virtio-XXX-pci, thankfully s390 already set the precedent here so
it's fairly straight forward.
At the XML level, this adds a new device address type virtio-mmio.
The controller and addressing don't have any subelements at the
moment because we they aren't needed for this usecase, but could
be added later if needed.
Add a test case for an ARM guest with one of every virtio device
enabled.
Similar to the chardev bit, ARM boards depend on the old style '-net nic'
for actually instantiating net devices. But we can't block out
-netdev altogether since it's needed for upcoming virtio support.
And add tests for working ARM XML with console, disk, and networking.
This corresponds to '-sd' and '-drive if=sd' on the qemu command line.
Needed for many ARM boards which don't provide any other way to
pass in storage.
QEMU ARM boards don't give us any way to explicitly wire in
a -chardev, so use the old style -serial options.
Unfortunately this isn't as simple as just turning off the CHARDEV flag
for qemu-system-arm, as upcoming virtio support _will_ use device/chardev.
On my machine, a guest fails to boot if it has a sound card, but not
graphical device/display is configured, because pulseaudio fails to
initialize since it can't access $HOME.
A workaround is removing the audio device, however on ARM boards there
isn't any option to do that, so -nographic always fails.
Set QEMU_AUDIO_DRV=none if no <graphics> are configured. Unfortunately
this has massive test suite fallout.
Add a qemu.conf parameter nographics_allow_host_audio, that if enabled
will pass through QEMU_AUDIO_DRV from sysconfig (similar to
vnc_allow_host_audio)
Add an attribute named 'removable' to the 'target' element of disks,
which controls the removable flag. For instance, on a Linux guest it
controls the value of /sys/block/$dev/removable. This option is only
valid for USB disks (i.e. bus='usb'), and its default value is 'off',
which is the same behaviour as before.
To achieve this, 'removable=on' (or 'off') is appended to the '-device
usb-storage' parameter sent to qemu when adding a USB disk via
'-disk'. A capability flag QEMU_CAPS_USB_STORAGE_REMOVABLE was added
to keep track if this option is supported by the qemu version used.
Bug: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=922495
Signed-off-by: Peter Krempa <pkrempa@redhat.com>
Allow use of the usb-storage device only if the new capability flag
QEMU_CAPS_DEVICE_USB_STORAGE is set, which it is for qemu(-kvm)
versions >= 0.12.1.2-rhel62-beta.
Signed-off-by: Peter Krempa <pkrempa@redhat.com>
vhost only works in KVM mode at the moment, and is infact compiled
out if the emulator is built for non-native architecture. While it
may work at some point in the future for plain qemu, for now it's
just noise on the command line (and which contributes to arm cli
breakage).
When using a <interface type="network"> that points to a network with
hostdev forwarding mode a hostdev alias is created for the network. This
allias is inserted into the hostdev list, but is backed with a part of
the network object that it is connected to.
When a VM is being stopped qemuProcessStop() calls
networkReleaseActualDevice() which eventually frees the memory for the
hostdev object. Afterwards when the domain definition is being freed by
virDomainDefFree() an invalid pointer is accessed by
virDomainHostdevDefFree() and may cause a crash of the daemon.
This patch removes the entry in the hostdev list before freeing the
depending memory to avoid this issue.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1000973
QEMU commit 3984890 introduced the "pci-hole64-size" property,
to i440FX-pcihost and q35-pcihost with a default setting of 2 GB.
Translate <pcihole64>x<pcihole64/> to:
-global q35-pcihost.pci-hole64-size=x for q35 machines and
-global i440FX-pcihost.pci-hole64-size=x for i440FX-based machines.
Error out on other machine types or if the size was specified
but the pcihost device lacks 'pci-hole64-size' property.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=990418
The ftp protocol is already recognized by qemu/KVM so add this support to
libvirt as well.
The xml should be as following:
<disk type='network' device='cdrom'>
<source protocol='ftp' name='/url/path'>
<host name='host.name' port='21'/>
</source>
</disk>
Signed-off-by: Aline Manera <alinefm@br.ibm.com>
QEMU/KVM already allows a HTTP URL for the cdrom ISO image so add this support
to libvirt as well.
The xml should be as following:
<disk type='network' device='cdrom'>
<source protocol='http' name='/url/path'>
<host name='host.name' port='80'/>
</source>
</disk>
Signed-off-by: Aline Manera <alinefm@br.ibm.com>
If there's no hard_limit set and domain uses VFIO we still must lock
the guest memory (prerequisite from qemu). Hence, we should compute
the amount to be locked from max_balloon.
When cpu hotplug fails without reporting an error, we would fail the
command but update the count of vCPUs anyways.
Commit 761fc48136 fixed the case when CPU
hot-unplug failed silently, but forgot to fix up the value in this case.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1000357
The virDomainOpenGraphics method accepts a UNIX socket FD from
the client app. It must set the label on this FD otherwise QEMU
will be prevented from receiving it with recvmsg.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
If user requested multiqueue networking, beside multiple /dev/tap and
/dev/vhost-net openings, we forgot to pass mq=on onto the -device
virtio-net-pci command line. This is advised at:
http://www.linux-kvm.org/page/Multiqueue#Enable_MQ_feature
Re-arrange the code so that the returned bitmap is always initialized to
NULL even on early failures and return an error message as some callers
are already expecting it. Fix up the rest not to shadow the error.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=822052
When doing a live migration, if the destination fails for any
reason after the point in which files should be labeled, then
the cleanup of the destination would restore the labels to their
defaults, even though the source is still trying to continue
running with the image open. Bug 822052 mentioned one source
of live migration failure - a mismatch in SELinux virt_use_nfs
settings (on for source, off for destination); but I found other
situations that would also trigger it (for example, having a
graphics device tied to port 5999 on the source, and a different
domain on the destination already using that port, so that the
destination cannot reuse the port).
In short, just as cleanup of the source on a successful migration
must not relabel files (because the destination would be crippled
by the relabel), cleanup of the destination on a failed migration
must not relabel files (because the source would be crippled).
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessStart): Set flag to avoid
label restoration when cleaning up on failed migration.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Each of the modules handled reporting error messages from the secret fetching
slightly differently with respect to the error. Provide a similar message
for each error case and provide as much data as possible.
Following XML would fail :
<disk type='network' device='lun'>
<driver name='qemu' type='raw'/>
<source protocol='iscsi' name='iqn.2013-07.com.example:iscsi/1'>
<host name='example.com' port='3260'/>
</source>
<target dev='sda' bus='scsi'/>
</disk>
With the message:
error: Failed to start domain iscsilun
error: Unable to get device ID 'iqn.2013-07.com.example:iscsi/1': No such fi
Cause was commit id '1f49b05a' which added 'virDomainDiskSourceIsBlockType'
If there's no hard_limit set and domain uses VFIO we still must lock the
guest memory (prerequisite from qemu). Hence, we should compute the
amount to be locked from max_balloon.
Since 16bcb3 we have a regression. The hard_limit is set
unconditionally. By default the limit is zero. Hence, if user hasn't
configured any, we set the zero in cgroup subsystem making the kernel
kill the corresponding qemu process immediately. The proper fix is to
set hard_limit iff user has configured any.
This function is to guess the correct limit for maximal memory
usage by qemu for given domain. This can never be guessed
correctly, not to mention all the pains and sleepless nights this
code has caused. Once somebody discovers algorithm to solve the
Halting Problem, we can compute the limit algorithmically. But
till then, this code should never see the light of the release
again.
Currently the virConnectBaselineCPU API does not expose the CPU features
that are part of the CPU's model. This patch adds a new flag,
VIR_CONNECT_BASELINE_CPU_EXPAND_FEATURES, that causes the API to explicitly
list all features that are part of that model.
Signed-off-by: Don Dugger <donald.d.dugger@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Hotplugging a single SCSI device works, but adding additional ones
result in an error from QEMU:
[root@gpok197 ~]# virsh attach-device guest01 blah.xml
Device attached successfully
[root@gpok197 ~]# virsh attach-device guest01 blah2.xml
error: Failed to attach device from blah2.xml
error: internal error unable to execute QEMU command 'device_add': Duplicate ID 'hostdev0' for device
The hostdev ID that is created is always set to zero, regardless
of the contents of the XML. Changing the index in the hotplug case
to a negative one so the next available index is used.
Signed-off-by: Eric Farman <farman@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Go through disks of guest, if one disk doesn't exist or its backing
chain is broken, with 'optional' startupPolicy, for CDROM and Floppy
we only discard its source path definition in xml, for disks we drop
it from disk list and free it.
This patch addresses two concerns with the error reporting when an
incompatible PCI address is specified for a device:
1) It wasn't always apparent which device had the problem. With this
patch applied, any error about an incompatible address will always
contain the full address as given in the config, so it will be easier
to determine which device's config aused the problem.
2) In some cases when the problem came from bad config, the error
message was erroneously classified as VIR_ERR_INTERNAL_ERROR. With
this patch applied, the same error message will be changed to indicate
either "internal" or "xml" error depending on whether the address came
from the config, or was automatically generated by libvirt.
Note that in the case of "internal" (due to bad auto-generation)
errors, the PCI address won't be of much use in finding the location
in config to change (because it was automatically generated). Of
course that makes perfect sense, but still the address could provide a
clue about a bug in libvirt attempting to use a type of pci bus that
doesn't have its flags set correctly (or something similar). In other
words, it's not perfect, but it is definitely better.
q35 machines have an implicit ahci (sata) controller at 00:1F.2 which
has no "id" associated with it. For this reason, we can't refer to it
as "ahci0". Instead, we don't give an id on the commandline, which
qemu interprets as "use the first ahci controller". We then need to
specify the unit with "unit=%d" rather than adding it onto the bus
arg.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=979477
Since 1.0.3 we are using the new way to copy non shared storage during
migration (the NBD way). However, whether the new or old way is used is
not controllable by user but unconditionally turned on if both sides of
migration support it. Moreover, the implementation is not complete: the
combination for VIR_MIGRATE_TUNNELLED flag is missing (as we need to
open new port on the destination) in which case we just error out. This
is a deadly combination: not letting users choose their destiny and
erroring out. We should not do that but VIR_WARN and turn the NBD off
instead.
We had been setting the device alias in the devinceinfo for pci
controllers to "pci%u", but then hardcoding "pci.%u" when creating the
device address for other devices using that pci bus. This all worked
just fine until we encountered the built-in "pcie.0" bus (the PCIe
root complex) in Q35 machines.
In order to create the correct commandline for this one case, this
patch:
1) sets the alias for PCI controllers correctly, to "pci.%u" (or
"pcie.%u" for the pcie-root controller)
2) eliminates the hardcoded "pci.%u" for pci controllers when
generatuing device address strings, and instead uses the controller's
alias.
3) plumbs a pointer to the virDomainDef all the way down to
qemuBuildDeviceAddressStr. This was necessary in order to make the
aliase of the controller *used by a device* available (previously
qemuBuildDeviceAddressStr only had the deviceinfo of the device
itself, *not* of the controller it was connecting to). This made for a
larger than desired diff, but at least in the future we won't have to
do it again, since all the information we could possibly ever need for
future enhancements is in the virDomainDef. (right?)
This should be done for *all* controllers, but for now we just do it
in the case of PCI controllers, to reduce the likelyhood of
regression.
This patch adds in special handling for a few devices that need to be
treated differently for q35 domains:
usb - there is no implicit/default usb controller for the q35
machinetype. This is done because normally the default usb controller
is added to a domain by just adding "-usb" to the qemu commandline,
and it's assumed that this will add a single piix3 usb1 controller at
slot 1 function 2. That's not what happens when the machinetype is
q35, though. Instead, adding -usb to the commandline adds 3 usb
(version 2) controllers to the domain at slot 0x1D.{1,2,7}. Rather
than having
<controller type='usb' index='0'/>
translate into 3 separate devices on the PCI bus, it's cleaner to not
automatically add a default usb device; one can always be added
explicitly if desired. Or we may decide that on q35 machines, 3 usb
controllers will be automatically added when none is given. But for
this initial commit, at least we aren't locking ourselves into
something we later won't want.
video - qemu always initializes the primary video device immediately
after any integrated devices for the machinetype. Unless instructed
otherwise (by using "-device vga..." instead of "-vga" which libvirt
uses in many cases to work around deficiencies and bugs in various
qemu versions) qemu will always pick the first unused slot. In the
case of the "pc" machinetype and its derivatives, this is always slot
2, but on q35 machinetypes, the first free slot is slot 1 (since the
q35's integrated peripheral devices are placed in other slots,
e.g. slot 0x1f). In order to make the PCI address of the video device
predictable, that slot (1 or 2, depending on machinetype) is reserved
even when no video device has been specified.
sata - a q35 machine always has a sata controller implicitly added at
slot 0x1F, function 2. There is no way to avoid this controller, so we
always add it. Note that the xml2xml tests for the pcie-root and q35
cases were changed to use DO_TEST_DIFFERENT() so that we can check for
the sata controller being automatically added. This is especially
important because we can't check for it in the xml2argv output (it has
no effect on that output since it's an implicit device).
ide - q35 has no ide controllers.
isa and smbus controllers - these two are always present in a q35 (at
slot 0x1F functions 0 and 3) but we have no way of modelling them in
our config. We do need to reserve those functions so that the user
doesn't attempt to put anything else there though. (note that the "pc"
machine type also has an ISA controller, which we also ignore).
This PCI controller, named "dmi-to-pci-bridge" in the libvirt config,
and implemented with qemu's "i82801b11-bridge" device, connects to a
PCI Express slot (e.g. one of the slots provided by the pcie-root
controller, aka "pcie.0" on the qemu commandline), and provides 31
*non-hot-pluggable* PCI (*not* PCIe) slots, numbered 1-31.
Any time a machine is defined which has a pcie-root controller
(i.e. any q35-based machinetype), libvirt will automatically add a
dmi-to-pci-bridge controller if one doesn't exist, and also add a
pci-bridge controller. The reasoning here is that any useful domain
will have either an immediate (startup time) or eventual (subsequent
hot-plug) need for a standard PCI slot; since the pcie-root controller
only provides PCIe slots, we need to connect a dmi-to-pci-bridge
controller to it in order to get a non-hot-plug PCI slot that we can
then use to connect a pci-bridge - the slots provided by the
pci-bridge will be both standard PCI and hot-pluggable.
Since pci-bridge devices themselves can not be hot-plugged into a
running system (although you can hot-plug other devices into a
pci-bridge's slots), any new pci-bridge controller that is added can
(and will) be plugged into the dmi-to-pci-bridge as long as it has
empty slots available.
This patch is also changing the qemuxml2xml-pcie test from a "DO_TEST"
to a "DO_DIFFERENT_TEST". This is so that the "before" xml can omit
the automatically added dmi-to-pci-bridge and pci-bridge devices, and
the "after" xml can include it - this way we are testing if libvirt is
properly adding these devices.
This controller is implicit on q35 machinetypes. It provides 31 PCIe
(*not* PCI) slots as controller 0.
Currently there are no devices that can connect to pcie-root, and no
implicit pci controller on a q35 machine, so q35 is still
unusable. For a usable q35 system, we need to add a
"dmi-to-pci-bridge" pci controller, which can connect to pcie-root,
and provides standard pci slots that can be used to connect other
devices.
Previous refactoring of the guest PCI address reservation/allocation
code allowed for slot types other than basic PCI (e.g. PCI express,
non-hotpluggable slots, etc) but would not auto-allocate a slot for a
device that required any type other than a basic hot-pluggable
PCI slot.
This patch refactors the code to be aware of different slot types
during auto-allocation of addresses as well - as long as there is an
empty slot of the required type, it will be found and used.
The piece that *wasn't* added is that we don't auto-create a new PCI
bus when needed for anything except basic PCI devices. This is because
there are multiple different types of controllers that can provide,
for example, a PCI express slot (in addition to the pcie-root
controller, these can also be found on a "root-port" or on a
"downstream-switch-port"). Since we currently don't support any PCIe
devices (except pending support for dmi-to-pci-bridge), we can defer
any decision on what to do about this.
* The functions qemuDomainPCIAddressReserveAddr and
qemuDomainPCIAddressReserveSlot were very similar (and should have
been more similar) and were about to get more code added to them which
would create even more duplicated code, so this patch gives
qemuDomainPCIAddressReserveAddr a "reserveEntireSlot" arg, then
replaces the body of qemuDomainPCIAddressReserveSlot with a call to
qemuDomainPCIAddressReserveAddr.
You will notice that addrs->lastaddr was previously set in
qemuDomainPCIAddressReserveAddr (but *not* set in
qemuDomainPCIAddressReserveSlot). For consistency and cleanliness of
code, that bit was removed and put into the one caller of
qemuDomainPCIAddressReserveAddr (there is a similar place where the
caller of qemuDomainPCIAddressReserveSlot sets lastaddr). This does
guarantee identical functionality to pre-patch code, but in practice
isn't really critical, because lastaddr is just keeping track of where
to start when looking for a free slot - if it isn't updated, we will
just start looking on a slot that's already occupied, then skip up to
one that isn't.
* qemuCollectPCIAddress was essentially doing the same thing as
qemuDomainPCIAddressReserveAddr, but with some extra special case
checking at the beginning. The duplicate code has been replaced with
a call to qemuDomainPCIAddressReserveAddr. This required adding a
"fromConfig" boolean, which is only used to change the log error
code from VIR_ERR_INTERNAL_ERROR (when the address was
auto-generated by libvirt) to VIR_ERR_XML_ERROR (when the address is
coming from the config); without this differentiation, it would be
difficult to tell if an error was caused by something wrong in
libvirt's auto-allocate code or just bad config.
* the bit of code in qemuDomainPCIAddressValidate that checks the
connect type flags is going to be used in a couple more places where
we don't need to also check the slot limits (because we're generating
the slot number ourselves), so that has been pulled out into a
separate qemuDomainPCIAddressFlagsCompatible function.
* qemuDomainPCIAddressSetNextAddr
The name of this function was confusing because 1) other functions in
the file that end in "Addr" are only operating on a single function of
one PCI slot, not the entire slot, while functions that do something
with the entire slot end in "Slot", and 2) it didn't contain a verb
describing what it is doing (the "Set" refers to the set that contains
all PCI buses in the system, used to keep track of which slots in
which buses are already reserved for use).
It is now renamed to qemuDomainPCIAddressReserveNextSlot, which more
clearly describes what it is doing. Arguably, it could have been
changed to qemuDomainPCIAddressSetReserveNextSlot, but 1) the word
"set" is confusing in this context because it could be intended as a
verb or as a noun, and 2) most other functions that operate on a
single slot or address within this set are also named
qemuDomainPCIAddress... rather than qemuDomainPCIAddressSet... Only
the Create, Free, and Grow functions for an address set (which modify the
entire set, not just one element) use "Set" in their name.
* qemuPCIAddressAsString, qemuPCIAddressValidate
All the other functions in this set are named
qemuDomainPCIAddressxxxxx, so I renamed these to be consistent.
The parser shouldn't be doing arch-specific things like adding in
implicit controllers to the config. This should instead be done in the
hypervisor's post-parse callback.
This patch removes the auto-add of a usb controller from the domain
parser, and puts it into the qemu driver's post-parse callback (just
as is already done with the auto-add of the pci-root controller). In
the future, any machine/arch that shouldn't have a default usb
controller added should just set addDefaultUSB = false in this
function.
We've recently seen that q35 and ARMV7L domains shouldn't get a default USB
controller, so I've set addDefaultUSB to false for both of those.
If upgrading from a libvirt that is older than 1.0.5, we can
not assume that vm->def->resource is non-NULL. This bogus
assumption caused libvirtd to crash
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
*src/util/virstoragefile.c: Add a helper function to get
the first name of missing backing files, if the name is NULL,
it means the diskchain is not broken.
*src/qemu/qemu_domain.c: qemuDiskChainCheckBroken(disk) to
check if its chain is broken
Refactor this function to make it focus on disk presence checking,
including diskchain checking, and not only for CDROM and Floppy.
This change is good for the following patches.
Make the virCgroupNewMachine method try to use systemd-machined
first. If that fails, then fallback to using the traditional
cgroup setup code path.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Although this isn't apparently needed for the guest agent itself, the
test I will be adding later depends on the newline as a separator of
messages to process.
The VIR_DOMAIN_PAUSED_GUEST_PANICKED constant is badly named,
leaking the QEMU event name. Elsewhere in the API we use
'CRASHED' rather than 'PANICKED', and the addition of 'GUEST'
is redundant since all events are guest related.
Thus rename it to VIR_DOMAIN_PAUSED_CRASHED, which matches
with VIR_DOMAIN_RUNNING_CRASHED and VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_CRASHED.
It was added in commit 14e7e0ae8d
which post-dates v1.1.0, so is safe to rename before 1.1.1
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=981094
The commit 0ad9025ef introduce qemu flag QEMU_CAPS_DEVICE_VIDEO_PRIMARY
for using -device VGA, -device cirrus-vga, -device vmware-svga and
-device qxl-vga. In use, for -device qxl-vga, mouse doesn't display
in guest window like the desciption in above bug.
This patch try to use -device for primary video when qemu >=1.6 which
contains the bug fix patch
Instead of requiring drivers to use a combination of calls
to virCgroupNewDetect and virCgroupIsValidMachine, combine
the two into virCgroupNewDetectMachine
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Both virStoragePoolFree and virStorageVolFree reset the last error,
which might lead to the cryptic message:
An error occurred, but the cause is unknown
When the volume wasn't found, virStorageVolFree was called with NULL,
leading to an error:
invalid storage volume pointer in virStorageVolFree
This patch changes it to:
Storage volume not found: no storage vol with matching name 'tomato'
Function qemuOpenFile() haven't had any idea about seclabels applied
to VMs only, so in case the seclabel differed from the "user:group"
from configuration, there might have been issues with opening files.
Make qemuOpenFile() VM-aware, but only optionally, passing NULL
argument means skipping VM seclabel info completely.
However, all current qemuOpenFile() calls look like they should use VM
seclabel info in case there is any, so convert these calls as well.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=869053
Since PCI bridges, PCIe bridges, PCIe switches, and PCIe root ports
all share the same namespace, they are all defined as controllers of
type='pci' in libvirt (but with a differing model attribute). Each of
these controllers has a certain connection type upstream, allows
certain connection types downstream, and each can either allow a
single downstream connection at slot 0, or connections from slot 1 -
31.
Right now, we only support the pci-root and pci-bridge devices, both
of which only allow PCI devices to connect, and both which have usable
slots 1 - 31. In preparation for adding other types of controllers
that have different capabilities, this patch 1) adds info to the
qemuDomainPCIAddressBus object to indicate the capabilities, 2) sets
those capabilities appropriately for pci-root and pci-bridge devices,
and 3) validates that the controller being connected to is the proper
type when allocating slots or validating that a user-selected slot is
appropriate for a device..
Having this infrastructure in place will make it much easier to add
support for the other PCI controller types.
While it would be possible to do all the necessary checking by just
storing the controller model in the qemyuDomainPCIAddressBus, it
greatly simplifies all the validation code to also keep a "flags",
"minSlot" and "maxSlot" for each - that way we can just check those
attributes rather than requiring a nearly identical switch statement
everywhere we need to validate compatibility.
You may notice many places where the flags are seemingly hard-coded to
QEMU_PCI_CONNECT_HOTPLUGGABLE | QEMU_PCI_CONNECT_TYPE_PCI
This is currently the correct value for all PCI devices, and in the
future will be the default, with small bits of code added to change to
the flags for the few devices which are the exceptions to this rule.
Finally, there are a few places with "FIXME" comments. Note that these
aren't indicating places that are broken according to the currently
supported devices, they are places that will need fixing when support
for new PCI controller models is added.
To assure that there was no regression in the auto-allocation of PCI
addresses or auto-creation of integrated pci-root, ide, and usb
controllers, a new test case (pci-bridge-many-disks) has been added to
both the qemuxml2argv and qemuxml2xml tests. This new test defines a
domain with several dozen virtio disks but no pci-root or
pci-bridges. The .args file of the new test case was created using
libvirt sources from before this patch, and the test still passes
after this patch has been applied.
Although these two enums are named ..._LAST, they really had the value
of ..._SIZE. This patch changes their values so that, e.g.,
QEMU_PCI_ADDRESS_SLOT_LAST really is the slot number of the last slot
on a PCI bus.
The implicit IDE, USB, and video controllers provided by the PIIX3
chipset in the pc-* machinetypes are not present on other
machinetypes, so we shouldn't be doing the special checking for
them. This patch places those validation checks into a separate
function that is only called for machine types that have a PIIX3 chip
(which happens to be the i440fx-based pc-* machine types).
One qemuxml2argv test data file had to be changed - the
pseries-usb-multi test had included a piix3-usb-uhci device, which was
being placed at a specific address, and also had slot 2 auto reserved
for a video device, but the pseries virtual machine doesn't actually
have a PIIX3 chip, so even if there was a piix3-usb-uhci driver for
it, the device wouldn't need to reside at slot 1 function 2. I just
changed the .argv file to have the generic slot info for the two
devices that results when the special PIIX3 code isn't executed.
qemuDomainPCIAddressBus was an array of QEMU_PCI_ADDRESS_SLOT_LAST
uint8_t's, which worked fine as long as every PCI bus was
identical. In the future, some PCI busses will allow connecting PCI
devices, and some will allow PCIe devices; also some will only allow
connection of a single device, while others will allow connecting 31
devices.
In order to keep track of that information for each bus, we need to
turn qemuDomainPCIAddressBus into a struct, for now with just one
member:
uint8_t slots[QEMU_PCI_ADDRESS_SLOT_LAST];
Additional members will come in later patches.
The item in qemuDomainPCIAddresSet that contains the array of
qemuDomainPCIAddressBus is now called "buses" to be more consistent
with the already existing "nbuses" (and with the new "slots" array).
Currently the QEMU driver creates the VM's cgroup prior to
forking, and then uses a virCommand hook to move the child
into the cgroup. This won't work with systemd whose APIs
do the creation of cgroups + attachment of processes atomically.
Fortunately we have a handshake taking place between the
QEMU driver and the child process prior to QEMU being exec()d,
which was introduced to allow setup of disk locking. By good
fortune this synchronization point can be used to enable the
QEMU driver to do atomic setup of cgroups removing the use
of the hook script.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Use the new virCgroupNewDetect function to determine cgroup
placement of existing running VMs. This will allow the legacy
cgroups creation APIs to be removed entirely
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
During qemuTranslateDiskSourcePool() execution, if the srcpool has been
defined with authentication information, then for iSCSI pools copy the
authentication and host information to virDomainDiskDef.
Due to a goto statement missed when refactoring in 2771f8b74c
when acquiring of a domain job failed the error path was not taken. This
resulted into a crash afterwards as an extra reference was removed from a
domain object leading to it being freed. An attempt to list the domains
leaded to a crash of the daemon afterwards.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=928672
The translation must be done before both of cgroup and security
setting, otherwise since the disk source is not translated yet,
it might be skipped on cgroup and security setting.
The difference with already supported pool types (dir, fs, block)
is: there are two modes for iscsi pool (or network pools in future),
one can specify it either to use the volume target path (the path
showed up on host) with mode='host', or to use the remote URI qemu
supports (e.g. file=iscsi://example.org:6000/iqn.1992-01.com.example/1)
with mode='direct'.
For 'host' mode, it copies the volume target path into disk->src. For
'direct' mode, the corresponding info in the *one* pool source host def
is copied to disk->hosts[0].
Convert the remaining methods in vircgroup.c to report errors
instead of returning errno values.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The alias for hostdevs of type SCSI can be too long for QEMU if
larger LUNs are encountered. Here's a real life example:
<hostdev mode='subsystem' type='scsi' managed='no'>
<source>
<adapter name='scsi_host0'/>
<address bus='0' target='19' unit='1088634913'/>
</source>
<address type='drive' controller='0' bus='0' target='0' unit='0'/>
</hostdev>
this results in a too long drive id, resulting in QEMU yelling
Property 'scsi-generic.drive' can't find value 'drive-hostdev-scsi_host0-0-19-1088634913'
This commit changes the alias back to the default hostdev$(index)
scheme.
Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
In case libvirtd is asked to unplug a device but the device is actually
unplugged later when libvirtd is not running, we need to detect that and
remove such device when libvirtd starts again and reconnects to running
domains.
A future patch wants the DAC security manager to be able to safely
get the supplemental group list for a given uid, but at the time
of a fork rather than during initialization so as to pick up on
live changes to the system's group database. This patch adds the
framework, including the possibility of a pre-fork callback
failing.
For now, any driver that implements a prefork callback must be
robust against the possibility of being part of a security stack
where a later element in the chain fails prefork. This means
that drivers cannot do any action that requires a call to postfork
for proper cleanup (no grabbing a mutex, for example). If this
is too prohibitive in the future, we would have to switch to a
transactioning sequence, where each driver has (up to) 3 callbacks:
PreForkPrepare, PreForkCommit, and PreForkAbort, to either clean
up or commit changes made during prepare.
* src/security/security_driver.h (virSecurityDriverPreFork): New
callback.
* src/security/security_manager.h (virSecurityManagerPreFork):
Change signature.
* src/security/security_manager.c (virSecurityManagerPreFork):
Optionally call into driver, and allow returning failure.
* src/security/security_stack.c (virSecurityDriverStack):
Wrap the handler for the stack driver.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessStart): Adjust caller.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
When user does not specify any model for scsi controller, or worse, no
controller at all, but libvirt automatically adds scsi controller with
no model, we are not searching for virtio-scsi and thus this can fail
for example on qemu which doesn't support lsi logic adapter.
This means that when qemu on x86 doesn't support lsi53c895a and the
user adds the following to an XML without any scsi controller:
<disk ...>
...
<target dev='sda'>
</disk>
libvirt fails like this:
# virsh define asdf.xml
error: Failed to define domain from asdf.xml
error: internal error Unable to determine model for scsi controller
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=974943
When virAsprintf was changed from a function to a macro
reporting OOM error in dc6f2da, it was documented as returning
0 on success. This is incorrect, it returns the number of bytes
written as asprintf does.
Some of the functions were converted to use virAsprintf's return
value directly, changing the return value on success from 0 to >= 0.
For most of these, this is not a problem, but the change in
virPCIDriverDir breaks PCI passthrough.
The return value check in virhashtest pre-dates virAsprintf OOM
conversion.
vmwareMakePath seems to be unused.
Merge the virCommandPreserveFD / virCommandTransferFD methods
into a single virCommandPasFD method, and use a new
VIR_COMMAND_PASS_FD_CLOSE_PARENT to indicate their difference
in behaviour
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Introduced in commit 24b08219; compilation on RHEL 6.4 complained:
qemu/qemu_hotplug.c: In function 'qemuDomainAttachChrDevice':
qemu/qemu_hotplug.c:1257: error: declaration of 'remove' shadows a global declaration [-Wshadow]
/usr/include/stdio.h:177: error: shadowed declaration is here [-Wshadow]
* src/qemu/qemu_hotplug.c (qemuDomainAttachChrDevice): Avoid the
name 'remove'.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
A part of the returned monitor response was freed twice and caused
crashes of the daemon when using guest agent cpu count retrieval.
# virsh vcpucount dom --guest
Introduced in v1.0.6-48-gc6afcb0
Implement the new API that will handle setting the balloon driver statistics
collection period in order to enable or disable the collection dynamically.
This patch will add the qemuMonitorJSONGetMemoryStats() to execute a
"guest-stats" on the balloonpath using "get-qom" replacing the former
mechanism which looked through the "query-ballon" returned data for
the fields. The "query-balloon" code only returns 'actual' memory.
Rather than duplicating the existing code, have the JSON API use the
GetBalloonInfo API.
A check in the qemuMonitorGetMemoryStats() will be made to ensure the
balloon driver path has been set. Since the underlying JSON code can
return data not associated with the balloon driver, we don't fail on
a failure to get the balloonpath. Of course since we've made the check,
we can then set the ballooninit flag. Getting the path here is primarily
due to the process reconnect path which doesn't attempt to set the
collection period.
At vm startup and attach attempt to set the balloon driver statistics
collection period based on the value found in the domain xml file. This
is not done at reconnect since it's possible that a collection period
was set on the live guest and making the set period call would reset to
whatever value is stored in the config file.
Setting the stats collection period has a side effect of searching through
the qom-list output for the virtio balloon driver and making sure that it
has the right properties in order to allow setting of a collection period
and eventually fetching of statistics.
The walk through the qom-list is expensive and thus the balloonpath will
be saved in the monitor private structure as well as a flag indicating
that the initialization has already been attempted (in the event that a
path is not found, no sense to keep checking).
This processing model conforms to the qom object model model which
requires setting object properties after device startup. That is, it's
not possible to pass the period along via the startup code as it won't
be recognized.
If users haven't configured guest agent then qemuAgentCommand() will
dereference a NULL 'mon' pointer, which causes crash of libvirtd when
using agent based cpu (un)plug.
With the patch, when the qemu-ga service isn't running in the guest,
a expected error "error: Guest agent is not responding: Guest agent
not available for now" will be raised, and the error "error: argument
unsupported: QEMU guest agent is not configured" is raised when the
guest hasn't configured guest agent.
GDB backtrace:
(gdb) bt
#0 virNetServerFatalSignal (sig=11, siginfo=<value optimized out>, context=<value optimized out>) at rpc/virnetserver.c:326
#1 <signal handler called>
#2 qemuAgentCommand (mon=0x0, cmd=0x7f39300017b0, reply=0x7f394b090910, seconds=-2) at qemu/qemu_agent.c:975
#3 0x00007f39429507f6 in qemuAgentGetVCPUs (mon=0x0, info=0x7f394b0909b8) at qemu/qemu_agent.c:1475
#4 0x00007f39429d9857 in qemuDomainGetVcpusFlags (dom=<value optimized out>, flags=9) at qemu/qemu_driver.c:4849
#5 0x00007f3957dffd8d in virDomainGetVcpusFlags (domain=0x7f39300009c0, flags=8) at libvirt.c:9843
How to reproduce?
# To start a guest without guest agent configuration
# then run the following cmdline
# virsh vcpucount foobar --guest
error: End of file while reading data: Input/output error
error: One or more references were leaked after disconnect from the hypervisor
error: Failed to reconnect to the hypervisor
RHBZ: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=984821
Signed-off-by: Alex Jia <ajia@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Krempa <pkrempa@redhat.com>
There are two levels on which a device may be hotplugged: config
and live. The config level requires just an insert or remove from
internal domain definition structure, which is exactly what this
patch does. There is currently no implementation for a chardev
update action, as there's not much to be updated. But more
importantly, the only thing that can be updated is path or socket
address by which chardevs are distinguished. So the update action
is currently not supported.
Add a new qemuMonitorJSONSetObjectProperty() method to support invocation
of the 'qom-set' JSON monitor command with a provided path, property, and
expected data type to set.
NOTE: The set API was added only for the purpose of the qemumonitorjsontest
The test code uses the same "/machine/i440fx" property as the get test and
attempts to set the "realized" property to "true" (which it should be set
at anyway).
Add a new qemuMonitorJSONGetObjectProperty() method to support invocation
of the 'qom-get' JSON monitor command with a provided path, property, and
expected data type return. The qemuMonitorJSONObjectProperty is similar to
virTypedParameter; however, a future patch will extend it a bit to include
a void pointer to balloon driver statistic data.
NOTE: The ObjectProperty structures and API are added only for the
purpose of the qemumonitorjsontest
The provided test will execute a qom-get on "/machine/i440fx" which will
return a property "realized".
Add a new qemuMonitorJSONGetObjectListPaths() method to support invocation
of the 'qom-list' JSON monitor command with a provided path.
NOTE: The ListPath structures and API's are added only for the
purpose of the qemumonitorjsontest
The returned list of paired data fields of "name" and "type" that can
be used to peruse QOM configuration data and eventually utilize for the
balloon statistics.
The test does a "{"execute":"qom-list", "arguments": { "path": "/"}}" which
returns "{"return": [{"name": "machine", "type": "child<container>"},
{"name": "type", "type": "string"}]}" resulting in a return of an array
of 2 elements with [0].name="machine", [0].type="child<container>". The [1]
entry appears to be a header that could be used some day via a command such
as "virsh qemuobject --list" to format output.
If an error occurs during qemuDomainAttachNetDevice after the macvtap
was created in qemuPhysIfaceConnect, the macvtap device gets left behind.
This patch adds code to the cleanup routine to delete the macvtap.
Signed-off-by: Matthew Rosato <mjrosato@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
I recently patches the callers to virPCIDeviceReset() to not call it
if the current driver for a device was vfio-pci (since that driver
will always reset the device itself when appropriate. At the time, Dan
Berrange suggested that I could instead modify virPCIDeviceReset
to check the currently bound driver for the device, and decide
for itself whether or not to go ahead with the reset.
This patch removes the previously added checks, and replaces them with
a check down in virPCIDeviceReset(), as suggested.
The functional difference here is that previously we were deciding
based on either the hostdev configuration or the value of
stubDriverName in the virPCIDevice object, but now we are actually
comparing to the "driver" link in the device's sysfs entry
directly. In practice, both should be the same.
The function being introduced is responsible for creating command
line argument for '-device' for given character device. Based on
the chardev type, it calls appropriate qemuBuild.*ChrDeviceStr(),
e.g. qemuBuildSerialChrDeviceStr() for serial chardev and so on.
The chardev alias assignment is going to be needed in a separate
places, so it should be moved into a separate function rather
than copying code randomly around.
The function being introduced is responsible for preparing and
executing 'chardev-add' qemu monitor command. Moreover, in case
of PTY chardev, the corresponding pty path is updated.
Currently, we are building InetSocketAddress qemu json type
within the qemuMonitorJSONNBDServerStart function. However, other
future functions may profit from the code as well. So it should
be moved into a static function.
Recent changes uncovered a possibility that 'last_processed_hostdev_vf'
was set to -1 in 'qemuPrepareHostdevPCIDevices' and would cause problems
in for loop end condition in the 'resetvfnetconfig' label if the
variable was never set to 'i' due to 'qemuDomainHostdevNetConfigReplace'
failure.
With current code, error reporting for unsupported devices for hot plug,
unplug and update is total mess. The VIR_ERR_CONFIG_UNSUPPORTED error
code is reported instead of VIR_ERR_OPERATION_UNSUPPORTED. Moreover, the
error messages are not helping to find the root cause (lack of
implementation).
For low-memory domains (roughly under 400MB) our automatic memory limit
computation comes up with a limit that's too low. This is because the
0.5 multiplication does not add enough for such small values. Let's
increase the constant part of the computation to fix this.
Convert the type of loop iterators named 'i', 'j', k',
'ii', 'jj', 'kk', to be 'size_t' instead of 'int' or
'unsigned int', also santizing 'ii', 'jj', 'kk' to use
the normal 'i', 'j', 'k' naming
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Whenever virPortAllocatorRelease is called with port == 0, it complains
that the port is not in an allowed range, which is expectable as the
port was never allocated. Let's make virPortAllocatorRelease ignore 0
ports in a similar way free() ignores NULL pointers.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=981139
If a domain is paused before migration starts, we need to tell that to
the destination libvirtd to prevent it from resuming the domain at the
end of migration. This regression was introduced by commit 5379bb0.
Since commit 23e8b5d8, the code is refactored in a way that supports
domains with multiple graphics elements and commit 37b415200 allows
starting such domains. However none of those commits take migration
into account. Even though qemu doesn't support relocation for
anything else than SPICE and for no more than one graphics, there is no
reason to hardcode one graphics into this part of the code as well.
Add monitor callback API domainGuestPanic, that implements
'destroy', 'restart' and 'preserve' events of the 'on_crash'
in the XML when domain crashed.
After abf75aea24 the compiler screams:
qemu/qemu_driver.c: In function 'qemuNodeDeviceDetachFlags':
qemu/qemu_driver.c:10693:9: error: 'domain' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
pci = virPCIDeviceNew(domain, bus, slot, function);
^
qemu/qemu_driver.c:10693:9: error: 'bus' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
qemu/qemu_driver.c:10693:9: error: 'slot' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
qemu/qemu_driver.c:10693:9: error: 'function' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
Since the other functions qemuNodeDeviceReAttach and qemuNodeDeviceReset
looks exactly the same, I've initialized the variables there as well.
However, I am still wondering why those functions don't matter to gcc
while the first one does.
Implement check whether (maximum) vCPUs doesn't exceed machine
type's cpu-max settings.
On older versions of QEMU the check is disabled.
Signed-off-by: Michal Novotny <minovotn@redhat.com>
A loop in qemuPrepareHostdevPCIDevices() intended to cycle through all
the objects on the list pcidevs was doing "while (listcount > 0)", but
nothing in the body of the loop was reducing the size of the list - it
was instead removing items from a *different* list. It has now been
safely changed to a for() loop.
(This isn't as bad as it sounds - it's only a problem in case of an
OOM error.)
qemuGetActivePciHostDeviceList() had been creating a list that
contained pointers to objects that were also on the activePciHostdevs
list. In case of an OOM error, this newly created list would be
virObjectUnref'ed, which would cause everything on the list to be
freed. But all of those objects would still be on the
activePciHostdevs list, which could have very bad consequences if that
list was ever again accessed.
The solution used here is to populate the new list with *copies* of
the objects from the original list. It turns out that on return from
qemuGetActivePciHostDeviceList(), the caller would almost immediately
go through all the device objects and "steal" them (i.e. remove the
pointer from the list but not delete it) all from either one list or
the other; we now instead just *delete* (remove from the list and
free) each device from one list or the other, so in the end we have
the same state.
I realized after the fact that it's probably better in the long run to
give this function a name that matches the name of the link used in
sysfs to hold the group (iommu_group).
I'm changing it now because I'm about to add several more functions
that deal with iommu groups.