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.
this patch introduce the console api in libxl driver for both pv and
hvm guest. and import and update the libxlMakeChrdevStr function
which was deleted in commit dfa1e1dd.
Signed-off-by: Bamvor Jian Zhang <bjzhang@suse.com>
This function is needed for virt-login-shell. Also modify virGirUserDirectory
to use the new function, to simplify the code.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
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>
The VIR_DOMAIN_SHUTDOWN_CRASHED state constant does not appear
to be used in the QEMU code anyway. It also doesn't make much
(any) sense, since the 'shutdown' state is a transient state
between 'running' and 'shutoff' and when a guest crashes, it
does not end up in a 'shutdown' state, only 'shutoff'.
It was added in commit 14e7e0ae8d
which post-dates v1.1.0, so is safe to remove before 1.1.1
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The way we were casting small (<32bit) integers was broken
on big endian hosts, causing stack smashing. This was detected
in the test suite either by test failures due to incorrect
results, or by libc/gcc abort'ing with its stack canary
triggered.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Depending on the set of mingw packages installed, it is possible
that other .c files hit the mingw header pollution from the
virdbus.h file.
In file included from ../../src/rpc/virnetserver.c:39:0:
../../src/util/virdbus.h:41:35: error: expected ';', ',' or ')' before 'struct'
const char *interface,
^
* src/util/virdbus.h (virDBusCallMethod): Match .c file change.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
On platforms without decent group support, the build failed:
Cannot export virGetGroupList: symbol not defined
./.libs/libvirt_security_manager.a(libvirt_security_manager_la-security_dac.o): In function `virSecurityDACPreFork':
/home/eblake/libvirt-tmp/build/src/../../src/security/security_dac.c:248: undefined reference to `virGetGroupList'
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
* src/util/virutil.c (virGetGroupList): Provide dummy implementation.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Our recent conversion to make VIR_ALLOC report oom wasn't
tested on mingw:
In file included from ../../src/util/virthread.c:29:0:
../../src/util/virthreadwin32.c: In function 'virCondWait':
../../src/util/virthreadwin32.c:166:81: error: 'VIR_FROM_THIS' undeclared (first use in this function)
if (VIR_REALLOC_N(c->waiters, c->nwaiters + 1) < 0) {
^
* src/util/virthreadwin32.c (VIR_FROM_THIS): Define.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The previous patch was incomplete.
CC libvirt_util_la-vircgroup.lo
../../src/util/vircgroup.c:70:12: error: 'virCgroupPartitionEscape' declared 'static' but never defined [-Werror=unused-function]
static int virCgroupPartitionEscape(char **path);
^
* src/util/vircgroup.c (virCgroupPartitionEscape): Move forward
declaration inside conditional.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The virCgroupValidateMachineGroup method calls some functions
which are only conditionally compiled, thus it too must be
made conditional. This fixes the build on non-Linux hosts.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
A VPATH build 'make check' was failing with:
GEN check-driverimpls
Can't open ../../src/../../src/lxc/lxc_monitor_protocol.h: No such file or directory at ../../src/check-driverimpls.pl line 29, <> line 27153.
Can't open ../../src/../../src/lxc/lxc_monitor_protocol.c: No such file or directory at ../../src/check-driverimpls.pl line 29, <> line 27153.
...
GEN check-aclrules
cannot read ../../src/../../src/remote/remote_protocol.x at ../../src/check-aclrules.pl line 128.
because $(srcdir) was being prepended to file names that already
included it.
* src/Makefile.am (check-driverimpls): Don't add srcdir twice.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
When the legacy Xen driver probes with a NULL URI, and
finds itself running on Xen, it will set conn->uri. A
little bit later though it checks to see if libxl support
exists, and if so declines the driver. This leaves the
conn->uri set to 'xen:///', so if libxl also declines
it, it prevents probing of the QEMU driver.
Once a driver has set the conn->uri, it must *never*
decline an open request. So we must move the libxl
check earlier
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
Otherwise, with new enough gcc compiling at -O2, the build fails with:
../../src/conf/domain_conf.c: In function ‘virDomainDeviceDefPostParse’:
../../src/conf/domain_conf.c:2821:29: error: ‘cnt’ may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
for (i = 0; i < *cnt; i++) {
^
../../src/conf/domain_conf.c:2795:20: note: ‘cnt’ was declared here
size_t i, *cnt;
^
../../src/conf/domain_conf.c:2794:30: error: ‘arrPtr’ may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
virDomainChrDefPtr **arrPtr;
^
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainChrGetDomainPtrs): Always
assign into output parameters.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
By setting the default partition in libvirt_lxc it is not
visible when querying the live XML. Move setting of the
default partition into libvirtd virLXCProcessStart
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Decrementing it when it was already 0 causes an invalid free
in virNetworkDefUpdateDNSHost if virNetworkDNSHostDefParseXML
fails and virNetworkDNSHostDefClear gets called twice.
virNetworkForwardDefClear left the number untouched even if it
freed all the elements.
If the app has provided a whitelist of controllers to be used,
we skip detecting its mount point. We still, however, fill in
the placement info which later confuses the machine name
validation code. Skip detecting placement if the controller
mount point is not set
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When a VM has an 'emulator' child cgroup present, we must
strip off that suffix when detecting the cgroup for a
machine
Rename the virCgroupIsValidMachineGroup method to
virCgroupValidateMachineGroup to make a bit clearer
that this isn't simply a boolean check, it will make
changes to the object.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The virCgroupIsValidMachine does not need to be called from
outside the cgroups file now, so make it static.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
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'
Add protection such that the virCgroupRemove and
virCgroupKill* do not do anything to the root cgroup.
Killing all PIDs in the root cgroup does not end well.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Instead of requiring one API call to create a cgroup and
another to add a task to it, introduce a new API
virCgroupNewMachine which does both jobs at once. This
will facilitate the later code to talk to systemd to
achieve this job which is also atomic.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
There's a race in lxc driver causing a deadlock. If a domain is
destroyed immediately after started, the deadlock can occur. When domain
is started, the even loop tries to connect to the monitor. If the
connecting succeeds, virLXCProcessMonitorInitNotify() is called with
@mon->client locked. The first thing that callee does, is
virObjectLock(vm). So the order of locking is: 1) @mon->client, 2) @vm.
However, if there's another thread executing virDomainDestroy on the
very same domain, the first thing done here is locking the @vm. Then,
the corresponding libvirt_lxc process is killed and monitor is closed
via calling virLXCMonitorClose(). This callee tries to lock @mon->client
too. So the order is reversed to the first case. This situation results
in deadlock and unresponsive libvirtd (since the eventloop is involved).
The proper solution is to unlock the @vm in virLXCMonitorClose prior
entering virNetClientClose(). See the backtrace as follows:
Thread 25 (Thread 0x7f1b7c9b8700 (LWP 16312)):
0 0x00007f1b80539714 in __lll_lock_wait () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
1 0x00007f1b8053516c in _L_lock_516 () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
2 0x00007f1b80534fbb in pthread_mutex_lock () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
3 0x00007f1b82a637cf in virMutexLock (m=0x7f1b3c0038d0) at util/virthreadpthread.c:85
4 0x00007f1b82a4ccf2 in virObjectLock (anyobj=0x7f1b3c0038c0) at util/virobject.c:320
5 0x00007f1b82b861f6 in virNetClientCloseInternal (client=0x7f1b3c0038c0, reason=3) at rpc/virnetclient.c:696
6 0x00007f1b82b862f5 in virNetClientClose (client=0x7f1b3c0038c0) at rpc/virnetclient.c:721
7 0x00007f1b6ee12500 in virLXCMonitorClose (mon=0x7f1b3c007210) at lxc/lxc_monitor.c:216
8 0x00007f1b6ee129f0 in virLXCProcessCleanup (driver=0x7f1b68100240, vm=0x7f1b680ceb70, reason=VIR_DOMAIN_SHUTOFF_DESTROYED) at lxc/lxc_process.c:174
9 0x00007f1b6ee14106 in virLXCProcessStop (driver=0x7f1b68100240, vm=0x7f1b680ceb70, reason=VIR_DOMAIN_SHUTOFF_DESTROYED) at lxc/lxc_process.c:710
10 0x00007f1b6ee1aa36 in lxcDomainDestroyFlags (dom=0x7f1b5c002560, flags=0) at lxc/lxc_driver.c:1291
11 0x00007f1b6ee1ab1a in lxcDomainDestroy (dom=0x7f1b5c002560) at lxc/lxc_driver.c:1321
12 0x00007f1b82b05be5 in virDomainDestroy (domain=0x7f1b5c002560) at libvirt.c:2303
13 0x00007f1b835a7e85 in remoteDispatchDomainDestroy (server=0x7f1b857419d0, client=0x7f1b8574ae40, msg=0x7f1b8574acf0, rerr=0x7f1b7c9b7c30, args=0x7f1b5c004a50) at remote_dispatch.h:3143
14 0x00007f1b835a7d78 in remoteDispatchDomainDestroyHelper (server=0x7f1b857419d0, client=0x7f1b8574ae40, msg=0x7f1b8574acf0, rerr=0x7f1b7c9b7c30, args=0x7f1b5c004a50, ret=0x7f1b5c0029e0) at remote_dispatch.h:3121
15 0x00007f1b82b93704 in virNetServerProgramDispatchCall (prog=0x7f1b8573af90, server=0x7f1b857419d0, client=0x7f1b8574ae40, msg=0x7f1b8574acf0) at rpc/virnetserverprogram.c:435
16 0x00007f1b82b93263 in virNetServerProgramDispatch (prog=0x7f1b8573af90, server=0x7f1b857419d0, client=0x7f1b8574ae40, msg=0x7f1b8574acf0) at rpc/virnetserverprogram.c:305
17 0x00007f1b82b8c0f6 in virNetServerProcessMsg (srv=0x7f1b857419d0, client=0x7f1b8574ae40, prog=0x7f1b8573af90, msg=0x7f1b8574acf0) at rpc/virnetserver.c:163
18 0x00007f1b82b8c1da in virNetServerHandleJob (jobOpaque=0x7f1b8574dca0, opaque=0x7f1b857419d0) at rpc/virnetserver.c:184
19 0x00007f1b82a64158 in virThreadPoolWorker (opaque=0x7f1b8573cb10) at util/virthreadpool.c:144
20 0x00007f1b82a63ae5 in virThreadHelper (data=0x7f1b8574b9f0) at util/virthreadpthread.c:161
21 0x00007f1b80532f4a in start_thread () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
22 0x00007f1b7fc4f20d in clone () from /lib64/libc.so.6
Thread 1 (Thread 0x7f1b83546740 (LWP 16297)):
0 0x00007f1b80539714 in __lll_lock_wait () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
1 0x00007f1b8053516c in _L_lock_516 () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
2 0x00007f1b80534fbb in pthread_mutex_lock () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
3 0x00007f1b82a637cf in virMutexLock (m=0x7f1b680ceb80) at util/virthreadpthread.c:85
4 0x00007f1b82a4ccf2 in virObjectLock (anyobj=0x7f1b680ceb70) at util/virobject.c:320
5 0x00007f1b6ee13bd7 in virLXCProcessMonitorInitNotify (mon=0x7f1b3c007210, initpid=4832, vm=0x7f1b680ceb70) at lxc/lxc_process.c:601
6 0x00007f1b6ee11fd3 in virLXCMonitorHandleEventInit (prog=0x7f1b3c001f10, client=0x7f1b3c0038c0, evdata=0x7f1b8574a7d0, opaque=0x7f1b3c007210) at lxc/lxc_monitor.c:109
7 0x00007f1b82b8a196 in virNetClientProgramDispatch (prog=0x7f1b3c001f10, client=0x7f1b3c0038c0, msg=0x7f1b3c003928) at rpc/virnetclientprogram.c:259
8 0x00007f1b82b87030 in virNetClientCallDispatchMessage (client=0x7f1b3c0038c0) at rpc/virnetclient.c:1019
9 0x00007f1b82b876bb in virNetClientCallDispatch (client=0x7f1b3c0038c0) at rpc/virnetclient.c:1140
10 0x00007f1b82b87d41 in virNetClientIOHandleInput (client=0x7f1b3c0038c0) at rpc/virnetclient.c:1312
11 0x00007f1b82b88f51 in virNetClientIncomingEvent (sock=0x7f1b3c0044e0, events=1, opaque=0x7f1b3c0038c0) at rpc/virnetclient.c:1832
12 0x00007f1b82b9e1c8 in virNetSocketEventHandle (watch=3321, fd=54, events=1, opaque=0x7f1b3c0044e0) at rpc/virnetsocket.c:1695
13 0x00007f1b82a272cf in virEventPollDispatchHandles (nfds=21, fds=0x7f1b8574ded0) at util/vireventpoll.c:498
14 0x00007f1b82a27af2 in virEventPollRunOnce () at util/vireventpoll.c:645
15 0x00007f1b82a25a61 in virEventRunDefaultImpl () at util/virevent.c:273
16 0x00007f1b82b8e97e in virNetServerRun (srv=0x7f1b857419d0) at rpc/virnetserver.c:1097
17 0x00007f1b8359db6b in main (argc=2, argv=0x7ffff98dbaa8) at libvirtd.c:1512
The avail_vcpu bitmap has to be allocated before it can be used (using
the maximum allowed value for that). Then for each available VCPU the
bit in the mask has to be set (libxl_bitmap_set takes a bit position
as an argument, not the number of bits to set).
Without this, I would always only get one VCPU for guests created
through libvirt/libxl.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Bader <stefan.bader@canonical.com>
virCgroupAvailable() implementation calls getmntent_r
without checking if HAVE_GETMNTENT_R is defined, so it fails
to build on platforms without getmntent_r support.
Make virCgroupAvailable() just return false without
HAVE_GETMNTENT_R.
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
Parsing 'user:group' is useful even outside the DAC security driver,
so expose the most abstract function which has no DAC security driver
bits in itself.
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).
Thanks to a lack of coordination between kernel and glibc folks,
it has been impossible to mix code using <linux/in.h> and
<net/in.h> for some time now (see for example commit c308a9a).
On at least RHEL 6, <linux/if_bridge.h> tries to use the kernel
side, and fails due to our desire to use the glibc side elsewhere:
In file included from /usr/include/linux/if_bridge.h:17,
from util/virnetdevbridge.c:42:
/usr/include/linux/in6.h:31: error: redefinition of ‘struct in6_addr’
/usr/include/linux/in6.h:48: error: redefinition of ‘struct sockaddr_in6’
/usr/include/linux/in6.h:56: error: redefinition of ‘struct ipv6_mreq’
Thankfully, the kernel layout of these structs is ABI-compatible,
they only differ in the type system presented to the C compiler.
While there are other versions of kernel headers that avoid the
problem, it is easier to just work around the issue than to expect
all developers to upgrade to working kernel headers.
* src/util/virnetdevbridge.c (includes): Coerce the kernel version
of in.h to not collide with the normal version.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
dbus 1.2.24 (on RHEL 6) lacks DBUS_TYPE_UNIX_FD; but as we aren't
trying to pass one of those anyways, we can just drop support for
it in our wrapper. Solves this build error introduced in commit
834c9c94:
CC libvirt_util_la-virdbus.lo
util/virdbus.c:242: error: 'DBUS_TYPE_UNIX_FD' undeclared here (not in a function)
* src/util/virdbus.c (virDBusBasicTypes): Drop support for unix fds.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Commit id '4421e257' strdup'd devAlias, but didn't free
Running qemuhotplugtest under valgrind resulted in the following:
==7375== 9 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 11 of 70
==7375== at 0x4A0887C: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:270)
==7375== by 0x37C1085D71: strdup (strdup.c:42)
==7375== by 0x4CBBD5F: virStrdup (virstring.c:554)
==7375== by 0x4CFF9CB: virDomainEventDeviceRemovedNew (domain_event.c:1174)
==7375== by 0x427791: qemuDomainRemoveChrDevice (qemu_hotplug.c:2508)
==7375== by 0x42C65D: qemuDomainDetachChrDevice (qemu_hotplug.c:3357)
==7375== by 0x41C94F: testQemuHotplug (qemuhotplugtest.c:115)
==7375== by 0x41D817: virtTestRun (testutils.c:168)
==7375== by 0x41C400: mymain (qemuhotplugtest.c:322)
==7375== by 0x41DF3A: virtTestMain (testutils.c:764)
==7375== by 0x37C1021A04: (below main) (libc-start.c:225)
Commit 'c8695053' resulted in the following:
Coverity error seen in the output:
ERROR: REVERSE_INULL
FUNCTION: lxcProcessAutoDestroy
Due to the 'dom' being checked before 'dom->persistent' since 'dom'
is already dereferenced prior to that.
Currently the LXC driver creates the VM's cgroup prior to
forking, and then libvirt_lxc moves the child process
into the cgroup. This won't work with systemd whose APIs
do the creation of cgroups + attachment of processes atomically.
Fortunately we simply move the entire cgroups setup into
the libvirt_lxc child process. We make it take place before
fork'ing into the background, so by the time virCommandRun
returns in the LXC driver, the cgroup is guaranteed to be
present.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
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>
The virCgroupNewDomainDriver and virCgroupNewDriver methods
are obsolete now that we can auto-detect existing cgroup
placement. Delete them to reduce code bloat.
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>
Add virCgroupIsValidMachine API to check whether an auto
detected cgroup is valid for a machine. This lets us
check if a VM has just been placed into some generic
shared cgroup, or worse, the root cgroup
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Add a virCgroupNewDetect API which is used to initialize a
cgroup object with the placement of an arbitrary process.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
If systemd machine does not exist, return -2 instead of -1,
so that applications don't need to repeat the tedious error
checking code
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Current code for handling dbus errors only works for errors
received from the remote application itself. We must also
handle errors emitted by the bus itself, for example, when
it fails to spawn the target service.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Add a privileged field to storageDriverState
Use the privileged value in order to generate a connection which could
be passed to the various storage backend drivers.
In particular, the iSCSI driver will need a connect in order to perform
pool authentication using the 'chap' secrets and the RBD driver utilizes
the connection during pool refresh for pools using 'ceph' secrets.
For now that connection will be to be to qemu driver until a mechanism
is devised to get a connection to just the secret driver without qemu.
Update virStorageBackendRBDOpenRADOSConn() to use the internal API to the
secret driver in order to get the secret value instead of the external
virSecretGetValue() path. Without the flag VIR_SECRET_GET_VALUE_INTERNAL_CALL
there is no way to get the value of private secret.
This also requires ensuring there is a connection which wasn't true for
for the refreshPool() path calls from storageDriverAutostart() prior to
adding support for the connection to a qemu driver. It seems calls to
virSecretLookupByUUIDString() and virSecretLookupByUsage() from the
refreshPool() path would have failed with no way to find the secret - that is
theoretically speaking since the 'conn' was NULL the failure would have been
"failed to find the secret".
Although the XML for CHAP authentication with plain "password"
was introduced long ago, the function was never implemented. This
patch replaces the login/password mechanism by following the
'ceph' (or RBD) model of using a 'username' with a 'secret' which
has the authentication information.
This patch performs the authentication during startPool() processing
of pools with an authType of VIR_STORAGE_POOL_AUTH_CHAP specified
for iSCSI pools.
There are two types of CHAP configurations supported for iSCSI
authentication:
* Initiator Authentication
Forward, one-way; The initiator is authenticated by the target.
* Target Authentication
Reverse, Bi-directional, mutual, two-way; The target is authenticated
by the initiator; This method also requires Initiator Authentication
This only supports the "Initiator Authentication". (I don't have any
enterprise iSCSI env for testing, only have a iSCSI target setup with
tgtd, which doesn't support "Target Authentication").
"Discovery authentication" is not supported by tgt yet too. So this only
setup the session authentication by executing 3 iscsiadm commands, E.g:
% iscsiadm -m node --target "iqn.2013-05.test:iscsi.foo" --name \
"node.session.auth.authmethod" -v "CHAP" --op update
% iscsiadm -m node --target "iqn.2013-05.test:iscsi.foo" --name \
"node.session.auth.username" -v "Jim" --op update
% iscsiadm -m node --target "iqn.2013-05.test:iscsi.foo" --name \
"node.session.auth.password" -v "Jimsecret" --op update
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
Commit 834c9c94 introduced virDBusMessageEncode and
virDBusMessageDecode functions, however corresponding stubs
were not added to !WITH_DBUS section, therefore 'make check'
started to fail when compiled w/out dbus support like that:
Expected symbol virDBusMessageDecode is not in ELF library
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.
virDomainDiskDefForeachPath is not only used by the security
setting helpers, also used by cgroup setting helpers, so this
is to ignore the volume type disk with mode="direct" for cgroup
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].
There are two ways to use a iSCSI LUN as disk source for qemu.
* The LUN's path as it shows up on host, e.g.
/dev/disk/by-path/ip-$ip:3260-iscsi-$iqn-fc18:iscsi.iscsi0-lun-1
* The libiscsi URI from the storage pool source element host attribute, e.g.
iscsi://demo.org:6000/iqn.1992-01.com.example/1
For a "volume" type disk, if the specified "pool" is of iscsi
type, we should support to use the LUN in either of above 2 ways.
That's why to introduce a new XML tag "mode" for the disk source
(libvirt should support iscsi pool with libiscsi, but it's another
new feature, which should be done later).
The "mode" can be either of "host" or "direct". Use "host" to indicate
use of the LUN with the path as it shows up on host. Use "direct" to
indicate to use it with the source pool host URI (future patches may support
to use network type libvirt storage too, e.g. Ceph)
This is another cleanup before extracting platform-specific
parts from bridge_driver.
Rename struct network_driver to _virNetworkDriverState and
add appropriate typedefs: virNetworkDriverState and
virNetworkDriverStatePtr.
This will help us to avoid potential problems when moving
this struct to the .h file.
Convert the remaining methods in vircgroup.c to report errors
instead of returning errno values.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Add virErrorSetErrnoFromLastError and virLastErrorIsSystemErrno
to simplify code which wants to handle system errors in a more
graceful fashion.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
To register virtual machines and containers with systemd-machined,
and thus have cgroups auto-created, we need to talk over DBus.
This is somewhat tedious code, so introduce a dedicated function
to isolate the DBus call in one place.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Doing DBus method calls using libdbus.so is tedious in the
extreme. systemd developers came up with a nice high level
API for DBus method calls (sd_bus_call_method). While
systemd doesn't use libdbus.so, their API design can easily
be ported to libdbus.so.
This patch thus introduces methods virDBusCallMethod &
virDBusMessageRead, which are based on the code used for
sd_bus_call_method and sd_bus_message_read. This code in
systemd is under the LGPLv2+, so we're license compatible.
This code is probably pretty unintelligible unless you are
familiar with the DBus type system. So I added some API
docs trying to explain how to use them, as well as test
cases to validate that I didn't screw up the adaptation
from the original systemd code.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Until now CPU features inherited from a specified CPU model could only
be overridden with 'disable' policy. With this patch, any explicitly
specified feature always overrides the same feature inherited from a CPU
model regardless on the specified policy.
The CPU in x86-exact-force-Haswell.xml would previously be incompatible
with x86-host-SandyBridge.xml CPU even though x86-host-SandyBridge.xml
provides all features required by x86-exact-force-Haswell.xml.
If no explicit driver is set for an image backed filesystem,
set it to use the loop driver (if raw) or nbd driver (if
non-raw)
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
A couple of places in LXC setup for filesystems did not do
a "goto cleanup" after reporting errors. While fixing this,
also add in many more debug statements to aid troubleshooting
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.
Attempts to start a domain with both SELinux and DAC security
modules loaded will deadlock; latent problem introduced in commit
fdb3bde and exposed in commit 29fe5d7. Basically, when recursing
into the security manager for other driver's prefork, we have to
undo the asymmetric lock taken at the manager level.
Reported by Jiri Denemark, with diagnosis help from Dan Berrange.
* src/security/security_stack.c (virSecurityStackPreFork): Undo
extra lock grabbed during recursion.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Makefiles are another easy file to enforce line limits.
Mostly straightforward; interesting tricks worth noting:
src/Makefile.am: $(confdir) was already defined, use it in more places
tests/Makefile.am: path_add and VG required some interesting compression
* cfg.mk (sc_prohibit_long_lines): Add another test.
* Makefile.am: Fix offenders.
* daemon/Makefile.am: Likewise.
* docs/Makefile.am: Likewise.
* python/Makefile.am: Likewise.
* src/Makefile.am: Likewise.
* tests/Makefile.am: Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Commit 75c1256 states that virGetGroupList must not be called
between fork and exec, then commit ee777e99 promptly violated
that for lxc's use of virSecurityManagerSetProcessLabel. Hoist
the supplemental group detection to the time that the security
manager needs to fork. Qemu is safe, as it uses
virSecurityManagerSetChildProcessLabel which in turn uses
virCommand to determine supplemental groups.
This does not fix the fact that virSecurityManagerSetProcessLabel
calls virSecurityDACParseIds calls parseIds which eventually
calls getpwnam_r, which also violates fork/exec async-signal-safe
safety rules, but so far no one has complained of hitting
deadlock in that case.
* src/security/security_dac.c (_virSecurityDACData): Track groups
in private data.
(virSecurityDACPreFork): New function, to set them.
(virSecurityDACClose): Clean up new fields.
(virSecurityDACGetIds): Alter signature.
(virSecurityDACSetSecurityHostdevLabelHelper)
(virSecurityDACSetChardevLabel, virSecurityDACSetProcessLabel)
(virSecurityDACSetChildProcessLabel): Update callers.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
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>
These helpers use the remembered host capabilities to retrieve the cpu
map rather than query the host again. The intended usage for this
helpers is to fix automatic NUMA placement with strict memory alloc. The
code doing the prepare needs to pin the emulator process only to cpus
belonging to a subset of NUMA nodes of the host.
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
With the majority of fields in the virLXCDriverPtr struct
now immutable or self-locking, there is no need for practically
any methods to be using the LXC driver lock. Only a handful
of helper APIs now need it.
The activeUsbHostdevs item in LXCDriver are lockable, but the lock has
to be called explicitly. Call the virObject(Un)Lock() in order to
achieve mutual exclusion once lxcDriverLock is removed.
The 'driver->caps' pointer can be changed on the fly. Accessing
it currently requires the global driver lock. Isolate this
access in a single helper, so a future patch can relax the
locking constraints.
Currently the virLXCDriverPtr struct contains an wide variety
of data with varying access needs. Move all the static config
data into a dedicated virLXCDriverConfigPtr object. The only
locking requirement is to hold the driver lock, while obtaining
an instance of virLXCDriverConfigPtr. Once a reference is held
on the config object, it can be used completely lockless since
it is immutable.
NB, not all APIs correctly hold the driver lock while getting
a reference to the config object in this patch. This is safe
for now since the config is never updated on the fly. Later
patches will address this fully.
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>
Wire up the new virDomainCreate{XML}WithFiles methods in the
LXC driver, so that FDs get passed down to the init process.
The lxc_container code needs to do a little dance in order
to renumber the file descriptors it receives into linear
order, starting from STDERR_FILENO + 1.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
In the following commit:
commit 03d813bbcd
Author: Marek Marczykowski <marmarek@invisiblethingslab.com>
Date: Thu May 23 02:01:30 2013 +0200
remote: fix dom->id after virDomainCreateWithFlags
The virDomainCreateWithFlags remote client helper was made to
invoke REMOTE_PROC_DOMAIN_LOOKUP_BY_UUID to refresh the 'id'
of the domain, following the pattern used in the previous
virDomainCreate method impl.
The remote protocol for virDomainCreateWithFlags though did
actually fix the design flaw in virDomainCreate, by directly
returning the new domain info. For some reason, this data was
never used. So we can just use that data now instead.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Since they make use of file descriptor passing, the remote protocol
methods for virDomainCreate{XML}WithFiles must be written by hand.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
With container based virt, it is useful to be able to pass
pre-opened file descriptors to the container init process.
This allows for containers to be auto-activated from incoming
socket connections, passing the active socket into the container.
To do this, introduce a pair of new APIs, virDomainCreateXMLWithFiles
and virDomainCreateWithFiles, which accept an array of file
descriptors. For the LXC driver, UNIX file descriptor passing
will be used to send them to libvirtd, which will them pass
them down to libvirt_lxc, which will then pass them to the container
init process.
This will only be implemented for LXC right now, but the design
is generic enough it could work with other hypervisors, hence
I suggest adding this to libvirt.so, rather than libvirt-lxc.so
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Add support for creating disk-only (no memory) snapshots in esx, and
for quiescing the VM before taking the snapshot. The VMware API
supports these operations directly, so adding support to libvirt is
just a matter of setting the flags correctly when calling
VMware. VIR_DOMAIN_SNAPSHOT_CREATE_DISK_ONLY and
VIR_DOMAIN_SNAPSHOT_CREATE_QUIESCE are now valid flags for esx.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Although, having it depending on Xen >= 4.3 (by using the proper
libxl feature flag).
Xen currently implements a NUMA placement policy which is basically
the same as the 'interleaved' policy of `numactl', although it can
be applied on a subset of the available nodes. We therefore hardcode
"interleave" as 'numa_mode', and we use the newly introduced libxl
interface to figure out what nodes a domain spans ('numa_nodeset').
With this change, it is now possible to query the NUMA node
affinity of a running domain:
[raistlin@Zhaman ~]$ sudo virsh --connect xen:/// list
Id Name State
----------------------------------------------------
23 F18_x64 running
[raistlin@Zhaman ~]$ sudo virsh --connect xen:/// numatune 23
numa_mode : interleave
numa_nodeset : 1
Signed-off-by: Dario Faggioli <dario.faggioli@citrix.com>
domainGetNumaParameters has a string typed parameter, hence it
is necessary for the libxl driver to support this.
This change implements the connectSupportsFeature hook for the
libxl driver, advertising that VIR_DRV_FEATURE_TYPED_PARAM_STRING
is supported.
Signed-off-by: Dario Faggioli <dario.faggioli@citrix.com>
Cc: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Xen 4.3 changes sysctl version to 10 and domctl version to 9. Update
the hypervisor driver to work with those.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Bader <stefan.bader@canonical.com>
Commit 75c1256 states that virGetGroupList must not be called
between fork and exec, then commit ee777e99 promptly violated
that for lxc.
Patch originally posted by Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>.
Reuse the buffer for getline and track buffer allocation
separately from the string length to prevent unlikely
out-of-bounds memory access.
This fixes the following leak that happened when zero bytes were read:
==404== 120 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 1,344 of 1,671
==404== at 0x4C2C71B: malloc (in /usr/lib64/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
==404== by 0x906F862: getdelim (iogetdelim.c:68)
==404== by 0x52A48FB: virCgroupPartitionNeedsEscaping (vircgroup.c:1136)
==404== by 0x52A0FB4: virCgroupPartitionEscape (vircgroup.c:1171)
==404== by 0x52A0EA4: virCgroupNewDomainPartition (vircgroup.c:1450)
While generating seclabels, we check the seclabel stack if required
driver is in the stack. If not, an error is returned. However, it is
possible for a seclabel to not have any model set (happens with LXC
domains that have just <seclabel type='none'>). If that's the case,
we should just skip the iteration instead of calling STREQ(NULL, ...)
and SIGSEGV-ing subsequently.
Currently, if the primary security driver is 'none', we skip
initializing caps->host.secModels. This means, later, when LXC domain
XML is parsed and <seclabel type='none'/> is found (see
virSecurityLabelDefsParseXML), the model name is not copied to the
seclabel. This leads to subsequent crash in virSecurityManagerGenLabel
where we call STREQ() over the model (note, that we are expecting model
to be !NULL).
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>
Otherwise the container will fail to start if we
enable user namespace, since there is no rights to
do mknod in uninit user namespace.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
lxc driver will use this function to change the owner
of hot added devices.
Move virLXCControllerChown to lxc_container.c and Rename
it to lxcContainerChown.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.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
Not all RBD (Ceph) storage pools have cephx authentication turned on,
so "secret" might not be initialized.
It could also be that the secret couldn't be located.
Only call virSecretFree() if "secret" is initialized earlier.
Signed-off-by: Wido den Hollander <wido@widodh.nl>
Implement the new API that will handle setting the balloon driver statistics
collection period in order to enable or disable the collection dynamically.
Add new API in order to set the balloon memory driver statistics collection
period in order to allow dynamic period adjustment for the virsh dommemstats to
display balloon stats data
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>
When using logical pools, we had to trust the target->path provided.
This parameter, however, can be completely ommited and we can use
'/dev/<source.name>' safely and populate it to target.path.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=952973
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.
Now that we have callbacks, we should auto fill in omitted pieces of
information. It's important for chardev hotplug to fill in the correct
/{serial,parallel,console,channel}/target/@port if no value has been
provided by user.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=799354
Until now, the "host-model" cpu mode couldn't be influenced. This patch
allows to use the <feature> elements to either enable or disable
specific CPU flags. This can be used to force flags that can be emulated
even if the host CPU doesn't support them.
This new function updates or adds a feature to a existing cpu model
definition. This function will be helpful to allow tuning of
"host-model" features in later patches.
Merge virStoragePoolDefParseAuthChap and virStoragePoolDefParseAuthCephx
into a common virStoragePoolDefParseAuthSecret. Change the output to be
common for both by putting 'type' first followed by 'username'.
The existing 'chap' XML logic was never used - just defined. Rather than
try to insert a square peg into a round hole, blow it up and rewrite the
logic to follow the 'ceph' format.
Remove the former "chap.login" and "chap.passwd" fields and replace
with "chap.username" and "chap.secret" in _virStoragePoolAuthChap.
Adjust the virStoragePoolDefParseAuthChap() to process.
Change the rng file to describe the new layout
Update the formatstorage.html to describe the usage of the secret element
to mention that the secret type "iscsi" and "ceph" can be used
to storage pool too.
Update the formatsecret.html to include a reference to the storage pool
Update tests to handle the changes from 'login' and 'passwd' to 'username'
and '<secret>' format
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.
virPCIDeviceGetDriverPathAndName is a static function that will need
to be called by another function that occurs above it in the
file. This patch reorders the static functions so that a forward
declaration isn't needed.
When failing to start a container due to inaccessible root
filesystem path, we did not log any meaningful error. Add a
few debug statements to assist diagnosis
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
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.
For now, only these three helpers are needed:
virDomainChrFind - to find a duplicate chardev within VM def
virDomainChrInsert - wrapper for inserting a new chardev into VM def
virDomainChrRemove - wrapper for removing chardev from VM def
There is, however, one internal helper as well:
virDomainChrGetDomainPtrs which sets given pointers to one of
vmdef->{parallels,serials,consoles,channels} based on passed
chardev type.
This patch enables the password authentication in the libssh2 connection
driver. There are a few benefits to this step:
1) Hosts with challenge response authentication will now be supported
with the libssh2 connection driver.
2) Credential for hosts can now be stored in the authentication
credential config file
The password authentication method wasn't used as there wasn't a
pleasant way to pass the password. This patch adds the option to use
virAuth util functions to request the password either from a config file
or uses the conf callback to request it from the user.
Previously a connection object was required to retrieve the auth
credentials. This patch adds the option to call the retrieval functions
only using the connection URI or path to the configuration file. This
will allow to use this toolkit to request passwords for ssh
authentication in the libssh2 connection driver.
Changes:
*virAuthGetConfigFilePathURI(): use URI to retrieve the config file path
*virAuthGetCredential(): Remove the need to propagate conn object
virAuthGetPasswordPath():
*virAuthGetUsernamePath(): New functions, that use config file path
instead of conn object
nodeGetFreeMemory and nodeGetCellsFreeMemory assumed that the NUMA nodes
are contiguous and starting from 0. Unfortunately there are machines
that don't match this assumption:
available: 1 nodes (1)
node 1 cpus: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
node 1 size: 16340 MB
node 1 free: 11065 MB
Before this patch:
error: internal error Failed to query NUMA free memory
error: internal error Failed to query NUMA free memory for node: 0
After this patch:
Total: 15772580 KiB
0: 0 KiB
Signed-off-by: Peter Krempa <pkrempa@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=964358
POSIX states that multi-threaded apps should not use functions
that are not async-signal-safe between fork and exec, yet we
were using getpwuid_r and initgroups. Although rare, it is
possible to hit deadlock in the child, when it tries to grab
a mutex that was already held by another thread in the parent.
I actually hit this deadlock when testing multiple domains
being started in parallel with a command hook, with the following
backtrace in the child:
Thread 1 (Thread 0x7fd56bbf2700 (LWP 3212)):
#0 __lll_lock_wait ()
at ../nptl/sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/lowlevellock.S:136
#1 0x00007fd5761e7388 in _L_lock_854 () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
#2 0x00007fd5761e7257 in __pthread_mutex_lock (mutex=0x7fd56be00360)
at pthread_mutex_lock.c:61
#3 0x00007fd56bbf9fc5 in _nss_files_getpwuid_r (uid=0, result=0x7fd56bbf0c70,
buffer=0x7fd55c2a65f0 "", buflen=1024, errnop=0x7fd56bbf25b8)
at nss_files/files-pwd.c:40
#4 0x00007fd575aeff1d in __getpwuid_r (uid=0, resbuf=0x7fd56bbf0c70,
buffer=0x7fd55c2a65f0 "", buflen=1024, result=0x7fd56bbf0cb0)
at ../nss/getXXbyYY_r.c:253
#5 0x00007fd578aebafc in virSetUIDGID (uid=0, gid=0) at util/virutil.c:1031
#6 0x00007fd578aebf43 in virSetUIDGIDWithCaps (uid=0, gid=0, capBits=0,
clearExistingCaps=true) at util/virutil.c:1388
#7 0x00007fd578a9a20b in virExec (cmd=0x7fd55c231f10) at util/vircommand.c:654
#8 0x00007fd578a9dfa2 in virCommandRunAsync (cmd=0x7fd55c231f10, pid=0x0)
at util/vircommand.c:2247
#9 0x00007fd578a9d74e in virCommandRun (cmd=0x7fd55c231f10, exitstatus=0x0)
at util/vircommand.c:2100
#10 0x00007fd56326fde5 in qemuProcessStart (conn=0x7fd53c000df0,
driver=0x7fd55c0dc4f0, vm=0x7fd54800b100, migrateFrom=0x0, stdin_fd=-1,
stdin_path=0x0, snapshot=0x0, vmop=VIR_NETDEV_VPORT_PROFILE_OP_CREATE,
flags=1) at qemu/qemu_process.c:3694
...
The solution is to split the work of getpwuid_r/initgroups into the
unsafe portions (getgrouplist, called pre-fork) and safe portions
(setgroups, called post-fork).
* src/util/virutil.h (virSetUIDGID, virSetUIDGIDWithCaps): Adjust
signature.
* src/util/virutil.c (virSetUIDGID): Add parameters.
(virSetUIDGIDWithCaps): Adjust clients.
* src/util/vircommand.c (virExec): Likewise.
* src/util/virfile.c (virFileAccessibleAs, virFileOpenForked)
(virDirCreate): Likewise.
* src/security/security_dac.c (virSecurityDACSetProcessLabel):
Likewise.
* src/lxc/lxc_container.c (lxcContainerSetID): Likewise.
* configure.ac (AC_CHECK_FUNCS_ONCE): Check for setgroups, not
initgroups.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Since neither getpwuid_r() nor initgroups() are safe to call in
between fork and exec (they obtain a mutex, but if some other
thread in the parent also held the mutex at the time of the fork,
the child will deadlock), we have to split out the functionality
that is unsafe. At least glibc's initgroups() uses getgrouplist
under the hood, so the ideal split is to expose getgrouplist for
use before a fork. Gnulib already gives us a nice wrapper via
mgetgroups; we wrap it once more to look up by uid instead of name.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Add mgetgroups.
* src/util/virutil.h (virGetGroupList): New declaration.
* src/util/virutil.c (virGetGroupList): New function.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (virutil.h): Export it.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
A future patch needs to look up pw_gid; but it is wasteful
to crawl through getpwuid_r twice for two separate pieces
of information, and annoying to copy that much boilerplate
code for doing the crawl. The current internal-only
virGetUserEnt is also a rather awkward interface; it's easier
to just design it to let callers request multiple pieces of
data as needed from one traversal.
And while at it, I noticed that virGetXDGDirectory could deref
NULL if the getpwuid_r lookup fails.
* src/util/virutil.c (virGetUserEnt): Alter signature.
(virGetUserDirectory, virGetXDGDirectory, virGetUserName): Adjust
callers.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>