As pointed on CVE-2011-1146, some API forgot to check the read-only
status of the connection for entry point which modify the state
of the system or may lead to a remote execution using user data.
The entry points concerned are:
- virConnectDomainXMLToNative
- virNodeDeviceDettach
- virNodeDeviceReAttach
- virNodeDeviceReset
- virDomainRevertToSnapshot
- virDomainSnapshotDelete
* src/libvirt.c: fix the above set of entry points to error on read-only
connections
By default, all dnsmasq processes share the same leases file. libvirt
also uses the --dhcp-lease-max option to control the maximum number of
leases allowed. The problem is that libvirt puts in a number equal to
the number of addresses in the range for the one network handled by a
single instance of dnsmasq, but dnsmasq checks the total number of
leases in the file (which could potentially contain many more).
The solution is to tell each instance of dnsmasq to create and use its
own leases file. (/var/lib/libvirt/network/<net-name>.leases).
This file is created by dnsmasq when it starts, but not deleted when
it exists. This is fine when the network is just being stopped, but if
the leases file was left around when a network was undefined, we could
end up with an ever-increasing number of dead files - instead, we
explicitly unlink the leases file when a network is undefined.
Note that Ubuntu carries a patch against an older version of libvirt for this:
hhttps://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/libvirt/+bug/713071
ttp://bazaar.launchpad.net/~serge-hallyn/ubuntu/maverick/libvirt/bugall/revision/109
I was certain I'd also seen discussion of this on libvir-list or
libvirt-users, but couldn't find it.
This fixes a regression introduced in commit ad48df, and reported on
the libvirt-users list:
https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvirt-users/2011-March/msg00018.html
The problem in that commit was that we began searching a list of ip
address definitions (rather than just having one) to look for a dhcp
range or static host; when we didn't find any, our pointer (ipdef) was
left at NULL, and when ipdef was NULL, we returned without starting up
dnsmasq.
Previously dnsmasq was started even without any dhcp ranges or static
entries, because it's still useful for DNS services.
Another problem I noticed while investigating was that, if there are
IPv6 addresses, but no IPv4 addresses of any kind, we would jump out
at an ever higher level in the call chain.
This patch does the following:
1) networkBuildDnsmasqArgv() = all uses of ipdef are protected from
NULL dereference. (this patch doesn't change indentation, to make
review easier. The next patch will change just the
indentation). ipdef is intended to point to the first IPv4 address
with DHCP info (or the first IPv4 address if none of them have any
dhcp info).
2) networkStartDhcpDaemon() = if the loop looking for an ipdef with
DHCP info comes up empty, we then grab the first IPv4 def from the
list. Also, instead of returning if there are no IPv4 defs, we just
return if there are no IP defs at all (either v4 or v6). This way a
network that is IPv6-only will still get dnsmasq listening for DNS
queries.
3) in networkStartNetworkDaemon() - we will startup dhcp not just if there
are any IPv4 addresses, but also if there are any IPv6 addresses.
Currently a single storage volume with a broken backing file will disable the
whole storage pool. This can happen when the backing file is on some
unavailable network storage or if the backing volume is deleted, while the
storage volumes using it remain.
Since the storage pool can not be re-activated, re-creating the missing
or deleting the now useless volumes using libvirt only is not possible.
Fixing this is a little bit tricky:
1. virStorageBackendProbeTarget() only detects the missing backing file,
if the backing file format is not explicitly specified. If the
backing file is created using
kvm-img create -f qcow2 -o backing_fmt=qcow2,backing_file=... ...
no error is detected at this stage.
The new return code -3 signals that the backing file could not be
opened.
2. The backingStore.format must be >= 0, since values < 0 would break
virStorageVolTargetDefFormat() when dumping the XML data such as
<format type='...'/>
Because of this the format is faked as VIR_STORAGE_FILE_RAW.
3. virStorageBackendUpdateVolTargetInfo() always opens the backing file
and thus always detects a missing backing file.
Since it "only" updates the capacity, allocation, owner, group, mode
and SELinux label, just ignore errors at this stage, print an error
message and continue.
4. Using vol-dump on a broken volume still doesn't work, but at least
vol-destroy and pool-refresh do work now.
To reproduce:
dir=$(mktemp -d)
virsh pool-create-as tmp dir '' '' '' '' "$dir"
virsh vol-create-as --format qcow2 tmp back 1G
virsh vol-create-as --format qcow2 --backing-vol-format qcow2 --backing-vol back tmp cow 1G
virsh vol-delete --pool tmp back
virsh pool-refresh tmp
After the last step, the pool will be gone (because it was not persistent). As
long as the now broken image stays in the directory, you will not be able to
re-create or re-start the pool.
Signed-off-by: Philipp Hahn <hahn@univention.de>
This patch introduces a new libvirt API (virDomainSetMemoryFlags) and
a flag (virDomainMemoryModFlags).
Signed-off-by: Taku Izumi <izumi.taku@jp.fujitsu.com>
Opening raw network devices with the intent of passing those fds to
qemu is worth an audit point. This makes a multi-part audit: first,
we audit the device(s) that libvirt opens on behalf of the MAC address
of a to-be-created interface (which can independently succeed or
fail), then we audit whether qemu actually started the network device
with the same MAC (so searching backwards for successful audits with
the same MAC will show which fd(s) qemu is actually using). Note that
it is possible for the fd to be successfully opened but no attempt
made to pass the fd to qemu (for example, because intermediate
nwfilter operations failed) - no interface start audit will occur in
that case; so the audit for a successful opened fd does not imply
rights given to qemu unless there is a followup audit about the
attempt to start a new interface.
Likewise, when a network device is hot-unplugged, there is only one
audit message about the MAC being discontinued; again, searching back
to the earlier device open audits will show which fds that qemu quits
using (and yes, I checked via /proc/<qemu-pid>/fd that qemu _does_
close out the fds associated with an interface on hot-unplug). The
code would require much more refactoring to be able to definitively
state which device(s) were discontinued at that point, since we
currently don't record anywhere in the XML whether /dev/vhost-net was
opened for a given interface.
* src/qemu/qemu_audit.h (qemuAuditNetDevice): New prototype.
* src/qemu/qemu_audit.c (qemuAuditNetDevice): New function.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.h (qemuNetworkIfaceConnect)
(qemuPhysIfaceConnect, qemuOpenVhostNet): Adjust prototype.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuNetworkIfaceConnect)
(qemuPhysIfaceConnect, qemuOpenVhostNet): Add audit points and
adjust parameters.
(qemuBuildCommandLine): Adjust caller.
* src/qemu/qemu_hotplug.c (qemuDomainAttachNetDevice): Likewise.
Since libvirt always passes /dev/net/tun to qemu via fd, we should
never trigger the cases where qemu tries to directly open the
device. Therefore, it is safer to deny the cgroup device ACL.
* src/qemu/qemu_cgroup.c (defaultDeviceACL): Remove /dev/net/tun.
* src/qemu/qemu.conf (cgroup_device_acl): Reflect this change.
qemu driver in libvirt gained support for creating domain snapshots
almost a year ago in libvirt 0.8.0. Since then we enabled QMP support
for qemu >= 0.13.0 but QMP equivalents of {save,load,del}vm commands are
not implemented in current qemu (0.14.0) so the domain snapshot support
is not very useful.
This patch detects when the appropriate QMP command is not implemented
and tries to use human-monitor-command (aka HMP passthrough) to run
it's HMP equivalent.
JSON monitor command implementation can now just directly call text
monitor implementation and it will be automatically encapsulated into
QMP's human-monitor-command.
Some qemu monitor event handlers were issuing inadequate warning when
virDomainSaveStatus() failed. They copied the message from I/O error
handler without customizing it to provide better information on why
virDomainSaveStatus() was called.
For newer qemu-img, the help string for "backing file format" is
"[-F backing_fmt]".
Fix the wrong logic error by commit e997c268.
* src/storage/storage_backend.c
Adding audit points showed that we were granting too much privilege
to qemu; it should not need any mknod rights to recreate any
devices. On the other hand, lxc should have all device privileges.
The solution is adding a flag parameter.
This also lets us restrict write access to read-only disks.
* src/util/cgroup.h (virCgroup*Device*): Adjust prototypes.
* src/util/cgroup.c (virCgroupAllowDevice)
(virCgroupAllowDeviceMajor, virCgroupAllowDevicePath)
(virCgroupDenyDevice, virCgroupDenyDeviceMajor)
(virCgroupDenyDevicePath): Add parameter.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemudDomainSaveFlag): Update clients.
* src/lxc/lxc_controller.c (lxcSetContainerResources): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_cgroup.c: Likewise.
(qemuSetupDiskPathAllow): Also, honor read-only disks.
Although the cgroup device ACL controller path can be worked out
by researching the code, it is more efficient to include that
information directly in the audit message.
* src/util/cgroup.h (virCgroupPathOfController): New prototype.
* src/util/cgroup.c (virCgroupPathOfController): Export.
* src/libvirt_private.syms: Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_audit.c (qemuAuditCgroup): Use it.
Device names can be manipulated, so it is better to also log
the major/minor device number corresponding to the cgroup ACL
changes that libvirt made. This required some refactoring
of the relatively new qemu cgroup audit code.
Also, qemuSetupChardevCgroup was only auditing on failure, not success.
* src/qemu/qemu_audit.h (qemuDomainCgroupAudit): Delete.
(qemuAuditCgroup, qemuAuditCgroupMajor, qemuAuditCgroupPath): New
prototypes.
* src/qemu/qemu_audit.c (qemuDomainCgroupAudit): Rename...
(qemuAuditCgroup): ...and drop a parameter.
(qemuAuditCgroupMajor, qemuAuditCgroupPath): New functions, to
allow listing device major/minor in audit.
(qemuAuditGetRdev): New helper function.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemudDomainSaveFlag): Adjust callers.
* src/qemu/qemu_cgroup.c (qemuSetupDiskPathAllow)
(qemuSetupHostUsbDeviceCgroup, qemuSetupCgroup)
(qemuTeardownDiskPathDeny): Likewise.
(qemuSetupChardevCgroup): Likewise, fixing missing audit.
* src/qemu/qemu_audit.c (qemuDomainHostdevAudit): Avoid use of
"type", which has a pre-defined meaning.
(qemuDomainCgroupAudit): Likewise, as well as "item".
I noticed these while testing 'make dist'.
Parsing ./../src/util/event.c
Function comment for virEventRegisterDefaultImpl lacks description of return value
Function comment for virEventRunDefaultImpl lacks description of return value
Parsing ./../src/util/virterror.c
Missing comment for function virSetErrorLogPriorityFunc
* src/util/event.c (virEventRegisterDefaultImpl)
(virEventRunDefaultImpl): Document return types.
* src/util/virterror.c (virSetErrorLogPriorityFunc): Provide docs.
virRun gives pretty useful error output, let's not overwrite it unless there
is a good reason. Some places were providing more information about what
the commands were _attempting_ to do, however that's usually less useful from
a debugging POV than what actually happened.
as described at
http://wiki.debian.org/ToolChain/DSOLinkinghttps://fedoraproject.org/wiki/UnderstandingDSOLinkChange
otherwise the build fails on current Debian unstable with:
CCLD libvirtd
/usr/bin/ld: ../src/.libs/libvirt_driver_lxc.a(libvirt_driver_lxc_la-lxc_container.o): undefined reference to symbol 'capng_apply'
/usr/bin/ld: note: 'capng_apply' is defined in DSO //usr/lib/libcap-ng.so.0 so try adding it to the linker command line
CCLD libvirtd
/usr/bin/ld: ../src/.libs/libvirt_driver_storage.a(libvirt_driver_storage_la-storage_backend.o): undefined reference to symbol 'fgetfilecon'
/usr/bin/ld: note: 'fgetfilecon' is defined in DSO //lib/libselinux.so.1 so try adding it to the linker command line
//lib/libselinux.so.1: could not read symbols: Invalid operation
and similar errors.
On cygwin:
CC libvirt_driver_security_la-security_dac.lo
security/security_dac.c: In function 'virSecurityDACSetProcessLabel':
security/security_dac.c:618: warning: format '%d' expects type 'int', but argument 7 has type 'uid_t' [-Wformat]
We've done this before (see src/util/util.c).
* src/security/security_dac.c (virSecurityDACSetProcessLabel): On
cygwin, uid_t is a 32-bit long.
On cygwin:
CC libvirt_util_la-cgroup.lo
util/cgroup.c: In function 'virCgroupKillRecursiveInternal':
util/cgroup.c:1458: warning: implicit declaration of function 'virCgroupNew' [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
* src/util/cgroup.c (virCgroupKill): Don't build on platforms
where virCgroupNew is unsupported.
Apparently some signals found on Unix are not exposed, this led
to a compilation failure
* src/util/logging.c: make code related to each signal dependant
upon the definition of that signal
The way to detach a USB disk is the same as that to detach a SCSI
disk. Rename this function and we can use it to detach a USB disk.
Signed-off-by: Wen Congyang <wency@cn.fujitsu.com>
When I use newest libvirt to save a domain, libvirtd will be deadlock.
Here is the output of gdb:
(gdb) thread 3
[Switching to thread 3 (Thread 0x7f972a1fc710 (LWP 30265))]#0 0x000000351fe0e034 in __lll_lock_wait () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
(gdb) bt
at qemu/qemu_driver.c:2074
ret=0x7f972a1fbbe0) at remote.c:2273
(gdb) thread 7
[Switching to thread 7 (Thread 0x7f9730bcd710 (LWP 30261))]#0 0x000000351fe0e034 in __lll_lock_wait () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
(gdb) bt
(gdb) p *(virMutexPtr)0x6fdd60
$2 = {lock = {__data = {__lock = 2, __count = 0, __owner = 30261, __nusers = 1, __kind = 0, __spins = 0, __list = {__prev = 0x0, __next = 0x0}},
__size = "\002\000\000\000\000\000\000\000\065v\000\000\001", '\000' <repeats 26 times>, __align = 2}}
(gdb) p *(virMutexPtr)0x1a63ac0
$3 = {lock = {__data = {__lock = 2, __count = 0, __owner = 30265, __nusers = 1, __kind = 0, __spins = 0, __list = {__prev = 0x0, __next = 0x0}},
__size = "\002\000\000\000\000\000\000\000\071v\000\000\001", '\000' <repeats 26 times>, __align = 2}}
(gdb) info threads
7 Thread 0x7f9730bcd710 (LWP 30261) 0x000000351fe0e034 in __lll_lock_wait () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
6 Thread 0x7f972bfff710 (LWP 30262) 0x000000351fe0b43c in pthread_cond_wait@@GLIBC_2.3.2 () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
5 Thread 0x7f972b5fe710 (LWP 30263) 0x000000351fe0b43c in pthread_cond_wait@@GLIBC_2.3.2 () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
4 Thread 0x7f972abfd710 (LWP 30264) 0x000000351fe0b43c in pthread_cond_wait@@GLIBC_2.3.2 () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
* 3 Thread 0x7f972a1fc710 (LWP 30265) 0x000000351fe0e034 in __lll_lock_wait () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
2 Thread 0x7f97297fb710 (LWP 30266) 0x000000351fe0b43c in pthread_cond_wait@@GLIBC_2.3.2 () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
1 Thread 0x7f9737aac800 (LWP 30260) 0x000000351fe0803d in pthread_join () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
The reason is that we will try to lock some object in callback function, and we may call event API with locking the same object.
In the function virEventDispatchHandles(), we unlock eventLoop before calling callback function. I think we should
do the same thing in the function virEventCleanupTimeouts() and virEventCleanupHandles().
Signed-off-by: Wen Congyang <wency@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Not all applications have an existing event loop they need
to integrate with. Forcing them to implement the libvirt
event loop integration APIs is an undue burden. This just
exposes our simple poll() based implementation for apps
to use. So instead of calling
virEventRegister(....callbacks...)
The app would call
virEventRegisterDefaultImpl()
And then have a thread somewhere calling
static bool quit = false;
....
while (!quit)
virEventRunDefaultImpl()
* daemon/libvirtd.c, tools/console.c,
tools/virsh.c: Convert to public event loop APIs
* include/libvirt/libvirt.h.in, src/libvirt_private.syms: Add
virEventRegisterDefaultImpl and virEventRunDefaultImpl
* src/util/event.c: Implement virEventRegisterDefaultImpl
and virEventRunDefaultImpl using poll() event loop
* src/util/event_poll.c: Add full error reporting
* src/util/virterror.c, include/libvirt/virterror.h: Add
VIR_FROM_EVENTS
The event loop implementation is used by more than just the
daemon, so move it into the shared area.
* daemon/event.c, src/util/event_poll.c: Renamed
* daemon/event.h, src/util/event_poll.h: Renamed
* tools/Makefile.am, tools/console.c, tools/virsh.c: Update
to use new virEventPoll APIs
* daemon/mdns.c, daemon/mdns.c, daemon/Makefile.am: Update
to use new virEventPoll APIs
* src/util/logging.c: fix virLogDumpAllFD() to avoid snprintf, simplify
the code and provide more useful signal descriptions. Also remove an
unused variable.
For qemu names the primary vga as "qxl-vga":
1) if vram is specified for 2nd qxl device:
-vga qxl -global qxl-vga.vram_size=$SIZE \
-device qxl,id=video1,vram_size=$SIZE,...
2) if vram is not specified for 2nd qxl device, (use the default
set by global):
-vga qxl -global qxl-vga.vram_size=$SIZE \
-device qxl,id=video1,...
For qemu names all qxl devices as "qxl":
1) if vram is specified for 2nd qxl device:
-vga qxl -global qxl.vram_size=$SIZE \
-device qxl,id=video1,vram_size=$SIZE ...
2) if vram is not specified for 2nd qxl device:
-vga qxl -global qxl-vga.vram_size=$SIZE \
-device qxl,id=video1,...
"-global" is the only way to define vram_size for the primary qxl
device, regardless of how qemu names it, (It's not good a good
way, as original idea of "-global" is to set a global default for
a driver property, but to specify vram for first qxl device, we
have to use it).
For other qxl devices, as they are represented by "-device", could
specify it directly and seperately for each, and it overrides the
default set by "-global" if specified.
v1 - v2:
* modify "virDomainVideoDefaultRAM" so that it returns 16M as the
default vram_size for qxl device.
* vram_size * 1024 (qemu accepts bytes for vram_size).
* apply default vram_size for qxl device for which vram_size is
not specified.
* modify "graphics-spice" tests (more sensiable vram_size)
* Add an argument of virDomainDefPtr type for qemuBuildVideoDevStr,
to use virDomainVideoDefaultRAM in qemuBuildVideoDevStr).
v2 - v3:
* Modify default video memory size for qxl device from 16M to 24M
* Update codes to be consistent with changes on qemu_capabilities.*
virLogEmergencyDumpAll() allows to dump the content of the
debug buffer from within a signal handler. It saves to all
log file or stderr if none is found
* src/util/logging.h src/util/logging.c: add the new API
and cleanup the old virLogDump code
* src/libvirt_private.syms: exports it as a private symbol
Initially only the log actually written out by libvirt were
saved on the memory buffer, this patch forces all informations
including info and debug to be saved in memory too. This is
useful to get full data in case of crash.
This was also found while investigating
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=670848
An EOF on a domain's monitor socket results in an event being queued
to handle the EOF. The handler calls qemuProcessHandleMonitorEOF. If
it is a transient domain, this leads to a call to
virDomainRemoveInactive, which removes the domain from the driver's
hashtable and unref's it. Nowhere in this code is the qemu driver lock
acquired.
However, all modifications to the driver's domain hashtable *must* be
done while holding the driver lock, otherwise the hashtable can become
corrupt, and (even more likely) another thread could call a different
hashtable function and acquire a pointer to the domain that is in the
process of being destroyed.
To prevent such a disaster, qemuProcessHandleMonitorEOF must get the
qemu driver lock *before* it gets the DomainObj's lock, and hold it
until it is finished with the DomainObj. This guarantees that nobody
else modifies the hashtable at the same time, and that anyone who had
already gotten the DomainObj from the hashtable prior to this call has
finished with it before we remove/destroy it.
This was found while researching the root cause of:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=670848
virDomainUnref should only be called with the lock held for the
virDomainObj in question. However, when a transient qemu domain gets
EOF on its monitor socket, it queues an event which frees the monitor,
which unref's the virDomainObj without first locking it. If another
thread has already locked the virDomainObj, the modification of the
refcount could potentially be corrupted. In an extreme case, it could
also be potentially unlocked by virDomainObjFree, thus left open to
modification by anyone else who would have otherwise waited for the
lock (not to mention the fact that they would be accessing freed
data!).
The solution is to have qemuMonitorFree lock the domain object right
before unrefing it. Since the caller to qemuMonitorFree doesn't expect
this lock to be held, if the refcount doesn't go all the way to 0,
qemuMonitorFree must unlock it after the unref.
In virFileOperation, the parent does a fallback to a non-fork
attempt if it detects that the child returned EACCES. However,
the child was calling _exit(-EACCES), which does _not_ appear
as EACCES in the parent.
* src/util/util.c (virFileOperation): Correctly pass EACCES from
child to parent.
virSecurityDAC{Set,Restore}ChardevCallback expect virSecurityManagerPtr,
but are passed virDomainObjPtr instead. This makes
virSecurityDACSetChardevLabel set a wrong uid/gid on chardevs. This
patch fixes this behaviour.
Signed-off-by: Soren Hansen <soren@linux2go.dk>
This fixes a possible crash of libvirtd during its startup. When qemu
driver reconnects to running domains, it iterates over all domain
objects in a hash. When reconnecting to an associated qemu monitor
fails and the domain is transient, it's immediately removed from the
hash. Despite the fact that it's explicitly forbidden to do so. If
libvirtd is lucky enough, virHashForEach will access random memory when
the callback finishes and the deamon will crash.
Since it's trivial to fix virHashForEach to allow removal of hash
entries while iterating through them, I went this way instead of fixing
qemuReconnectDomain callback (and possibly others) to avoid deleting the
entries.
qemudDomainSaveImageStartVM was evil - it closed the incoming fd
argument on some, but not all, code paths, without informing the
caller about that action. No wonder that this resulted in
double-closes: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=672725
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemudDomainSaveImageStartVM): Alter
signature, to avoid double-close.
(qemudDomainRestore, qemudDomainObjRestore): Update callers.
When a SPICE or VNC graphics controller is present, and sound is
piggybacked over a channel to the graphics device rather than
directly accessing host hardware, then there is no need to grant
host hardware access to that qemu process.
* src/qemu/qemu_cgroup.c (qemuSetupCgroup): Prevent sound with
spice, and with vnc when vnc_allow_host_audio is 0.
Reported by Daniel Berrange.
The kill() function doesn't exist on Win32, so it needs to be
checked for at build time & code disabled in cgroups
* configure.ac: Check for kill()
* src/util/cgroup.c: Stub out virCGroupKill* functions
when kill() isn't available
this is the patch to add support for multiple serial ports to the
libvirt Xen driver. It support both old style (serial = "pty") and
new style (serial = [ "/dev/ttyS0", "/dev/ttyS1" ]) definition and
tests for xml2sexpr, sexpr2xml and xmconfig have been added as well.
Written and tested on RHEL-5 Xen dom0 and working as designed but
the Xen version have to have patch for RHBZ #614004 but this patch
is for upstream version of libvirt.
Also, this patch is addressing issue described in RHBZ #670789.
Signed-off-by: Michal Novotny <minovotn@redhat.com>
this is the patch to fix the virDomainChrDefParseTargetXML() functionality
to parse the target port from XML if available. This is necessary for
multiple serial port support which is the second part of this patch.
Signed-off-by: Michal Novotny <minovotn@redhat.com>
The virCgroupKill method kills all PIDs found in a cgroup
The virCgroupKillRecursively method does this recursively
for child cgroups.
The virCgroupKillPainfully method does a recursive kill
several times in a row until everything has really died
Relax the restriction that the hash table key must be a string
by allowing an arbitrary hash code generator + comparison func
to be provided
* util/hash.c, util/hash.h: Allow any pointer as a key
* internal.h: Include stdbool.h as standard.
* conf/domain_conf.c, conf/domain_conf.c,
conf/nwfilter_params.c, nwfilter/nwfilter_gentech_driver.c,
nwfilter/nwfilter_gentech_driver.h, nwfilter/nwfilter_learnipaddr.c,
qemu/qemu_command.c, qemu/qemu_driver.c,
qemu/qemu_process.c, uml/uml_driver.c,
xen/xm_internal.c: s/char */void */ in hash callbacks
Since the deallocator is passed into the constructor of
a hash table it is not desirable to pass it into each
function again. Remove it from all functions, but provide
a virHashSteal to allow a item to be removed from a hash
table without deleteing it.
* src/util/hash.c, src/util/hash.h: Remove deallocator
param from all functions. Add virHashSteal
* src/libvirt_private.syms: Add virHashSteal
* src/conf/domain_conf.c, src/conf/nwfilter_params.c,
src/nwfilter/nwfilter_learnipaddr.c,
src/qemu/qemu_command.c, src/xen/xm_internal.c: Update
for changed hash API
Using the 'personality(2)' system call, we can make a container
on an x86_64 host appear to be i686. Likewise for most other
Linux 64bit arches.
* src/lxc/lxc_conf.c: Fill in 32bit capabilities for x86_64 hosts
* src/lxc/lxc_container.h, src/lxc/lxc_container.c: Add API to
check if an arch has a 32bit alternative
* src/lxc/lxc_controller.c: Set the process personality when
starting guest
This is done for two reasons:
- we are getting very close to 64 flags which is the maximum we can use
with unsigned long long
- by using LL constants in enum we already violates C99 constraint that
enum values have to fit into int
When spawning 'init' in the container, set
LIBVIRT_LXC_UUID=XXXXXXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXXXXXXXXXX
LIBVIRT_LXC_NAME=YYYYYYYYYYYY
to allow guest software to detect & identify that they
are in a container
* src/lxc/lxc_container.c: Set LIBVIRT_LXC_UUID and
LIBVIRT_LXC_NAME env vars
The virFileAbsPath was not taking into account the '/' directory
separator when allocating memory for combining cwd + path. Convert
to use virAsprintf to avoid this type of bug completely.
* src/util/util.c: Convert virFileAbsPath to use virAsprintf
Normal practice for /dev/pts is to have it mode=620,gid=5
but LXC was leaving mode=000,gid=0 preventing unprivilegd
users in the guest use of PTYs
* src/lxc/lxc_controller.c: Fix /dev/pts setup
Current code does an IFF_UP on a 8021Qbh interface immediately after a port
profile set. This is ok in most cases except when its the migration prepare
stage. During migration we want to postpone IFF_UP'ing the interface on the
destination host until the source host has disassociated the interface.
This patch moves IFF_UP of the interface to the final stage of migration.
The motivation for this change is to postpone any addr registrations on the
destination host until the source host has done the addr deregistrations.
While at it, for symmetry with associate move ifDown of a 8021Qbh interface
to before disassociate
Steps to reproduce this bug:
1. virsh attach-disk domain --source imagefile --target sdb --sourcetype file --driver qemu --subdriver raw
2. virsh detach-device controller.xml # remove scsi controller 0
3. virsh detach-disk domain sdb
error: Failed to detach disk
error: operation failed: detaching scsi0-0-1 device failed: Device 'scsi0-0-1' not found
I think we should not detach a controller when it is used by some other device.
Signed-off-by: Wen Congyang <wency@cn.fujitsu.com>
Done mechanically with:
$ git grep -l '\bDEBUG0\? *(' | xargs -L1 sed -i 's/\bDEBUG0\? *(/VIR_&/'
followed by manual deletion of qemudDebug in daemon/libvirtd.c, along
with a single 'make syntax-check' fallout in the same file, and the
actual deletion in src/util/logging.h.
* src/util/logging.h (DEBUG, DEBUG0): Delete.
* daemon/libvirtd.h (qemudDebug): Likewise.
* global: Change remaining clients over to VIR_DEBUG counterpart.
The virConnectPtr struct will cache instances of all other
objects. APIs like virDomainLookupByUUID will return a
cached object, so if you do virDomainLookupByUUID twice in
a row, you'll get the same exact virDomainPtr instance.
This does not have any performance benefit, since the actual
logic in virDomainLookupByUUID (and other APIs returning
virDomainPtr, etc instances) is not short-circuited. All
it does is to ensure there is only one single virDomainPtr
in existance for any given UUID.
The caching has a number of downsides though, all relating
to stale data. If APIs aren't careful to always overwrite
the 'id' field in virDomainPtr it may become out of data.
Likewise for the name field, if a guest is renamed, or if
a guest is deleted, and then a new one created with the
same UUID but different name.
This has been an ongoing, endless source of bugs for all
applications using libvirt from languages with garbage
collection, causing them to get virDomainPtr instances
from long ago with stale data.
The caching is also a waste of memory resources, since
both applications, and language bindings often maintain
their own hashtable caches of object instances.
This patch removes all the hash table caching, so all
APIs return brand new virDomainPtr (etc) object instances.
* src/datatypes.h: Delete all hash tables.
* src/datatypes.c: Remove all object caching code
This patch adds the possibility to not just drop packets, but to also have them rejected where iptables at least sends an ICMP msg back to the originator. On ebtables this again maps into dropping packets since rejecting is not supported.
I am adding 'since 0.8.9' to the docs assuming this will be the next version of libvirt.
Two regressions:
Commit df1011ca broke builds for systems that lack devmapper
(non-Linux, as well as Linux with ./autogen.sh --without-libvirtd
and without the libraries present).
Commit ce6fd650 broke cross-compilation, due to a gnulib bug.
* .gnulib: Update to latest, for cross-compilation fix.
* src/util/util.c (virIsDevMapperDevice): Provide stub for
platforms not using storage driver.
* configure.ac (devmapper): Arrange to define HAVE_LIBDEVMAPPER_H.
devmapper issue reported by Wen Congyang.
Etienne Gosset reported that libvirt fails to connect to his ESX
server because it failed to parse its malformed host UUID, that
contains an additional space and lacks one hexdigit in the last
group:
xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx- xxxxxxxxxxx
Don't treat this as a fatal error, just ignore it.
Virsh freecell --all was not only getting wrong NUMA nodes count, but
even the NUMA nodes IDs. They doesn't have to be continuous, as I've
found out during testing this. Therefore a modification of
nodeGetCellsFreeMemory() error message.
$ ./configure
...
$ make
...
GEN libvirt.syms
...
$ ./configure --with-driver-modules
...
$ make
...
libvirt.syms doesn't get regenerated but it should as it should
contain virDriverLoadModule now.
* src/Makefile.am (libvirt.syms): Depend on configure changes.
Reported by Matthias Bolte.
There were several occurrences of an extra space inserted between
a function name and the ( opening the argument list in
datatypes.c. This is not consistent with the coding style used in
the rest of this file so removing this extra space makes the
code slightly more readable.
Now that the virHash handling functions call virReportOOMError by
themselves when needed, users of the virHash API no longer need to
do it by themselves. Since users of the virHash API were not
consistently calling virReportOOMError after memory failures from
the virHash code, this has the added benefit of making OOM
reporting from this code more consistent and reliable.
The only difference between these 2 functions is that one errors
out when the entry is already present while the other modifies
the existing entry. Add an helper function with a boolean argument
indicating whether existing entries should be updated or not, and
use this helper in both functions.
The code in virHashUpdateEntry and virHashAddEntry is really
similar. However, the latter rebalances the hash table when
one of its buckets contains too many elements while the former
does not. Fix this discrepancy.
When we attach a disk, but we specify a wrong format of disk image,
qemu monitor command drive_add will fail, but libvirt does not detect
this error.
Signed-off-by: Wen Congyang <wency@cn.fujitsu.com>
Followup to commit 17e19add, and would have prevented the bug
independently fixed in commit 76c57a7c.
* src/util/logging.c (virLogMessage): Preserve errno, since
logging should be as unintrusive as possible.
This fixes https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=609463
The problem was that, since a bridge always acquires the MAC address
of the connected interface with the numerically lowest MAC, as guests
are started and stopped, it was possible for the MAC address to change
over time, and this change in the network was being detected by
Windows 7 (it sees the MAC of the default route change), so on each
reboot it would bring up a dialog box asking about this "new network".
The solution is to create a dummy tap interface with a MAC guaranteed
to be lower than any guest interface's MAC, and attach that tap to the
bridge as soon as it's created. Since all guest MAC addresses start
with 0xFE, we can just generate a MAC with the standard "0x52, 0x54,
0" prefix, and it's guaranteed to always win (physical interfaces are
never connected to these bridges, so we don't need to worry about
competing numerically with them).
Note that the dummy tap is never set to IFF_UP state - that's not
necessary in order for the bridge to take its MAC, and not setting it
to UP eliminates the clutter of having an (eg) "virbr0-nic" displayed
in the output of the ifconfig command.
I chose to not auto-generate the MAC address in the network XML
parser, as there are likely to be consumers of that API that don't
need or want to have a MAC address associated with the
bridge.
Instead, in bridge_driver.c when the network is being defined, if
there is no MAC, one is generated. To account for virtual network
configs that already exist when upgrading from an older version of
libvirt, I've added a %post script to the specfile that searches for
all network definitions in both the config directory
(/etc/libvirt/qemu/networks) and the state directory
(/var/lib/libvirt/network) that are missing a mac address, generates a
random address, and adds it to the config (and a matching address to
the state file, if there is one).
docs/formatnetwork.html.in: document <mac address.../>
docs/schemas/network.rng: add nac address to schema
libvirt.spec.in: %post script to update existing networks
src/conf/network_conf.[ch]: parse and format <mac address.../>
src/libvirt_private.syms: export a couple private symbols we need
src/network/bridge_driver.c:
auto-generate mac address when needed,
create dummy interface if mac address is present.
tests/networkxml2xmlin/isolated-network.xml
tests/networkxml2xmlin/routed-network.xml
tests/networkxml2xmlout/isolated-network.xml
tests/networkxml2xmlout/routed-network.xml: add mac address to some tests
An upcoming patch has a use for a tap device to be created that
doesn't need to be actually put into the "up" state, and keeping it
"down" keeps the output of ifconfig from being unnecessarily cluttered
(ifconfig won't show down interfaces unless you add "-a").
bridge.[ch]: add "up" as an arg to brAddTap()
uml_conf.c, qemu_command.c: add "up" (set to "true") to brAddTap() call.
This is in response to:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=629662
Explanation
qemu's virtio-net-pci driver allows setting the algorithm used for tx
packets to either "bh" or "timer". This is done by adding ",tx=bh" or
",tx=timer" to the "-device virtio-net-pci" commandline option.
'bh' stands for 'bottom half'; when this is set, packet tx is all done
in an iothread in the bottom half of the driver. (In libvirt, this
option is called the more descriptive "iothread".)
'timer' means that tx work is done in qemu, and if there is more tx
data than can be sent at the present time, a timer is set before qemu
moves on to do other things; when the timer fires, another attempt is
made to send more data. (libvirt retains the name "timer" for this
option.)
The resulting difference, according to the qemu developer who added
the option is:
bh makes tx more asynchronous and reduces latency, but potentially
causes more processor bandwidth contention since the cpu doing the
tx isn't necessarily the cpu where the guest generated the
packets.
Solution
This patch provides a libvirt domain xml knob to change the option on
the qemu commandline, by adding a new attribute "txmode" to the
<driver> element that can be placed inside any <interface> element in
a domain definition. It's use would be something like this:
<interface ...>
...
<model type='virtio'/>
<driver txmode='iothread'/>
...
</interface>
I chose to put this setting as an attribute to <driver> rather than as
a sub-element to <tune> because it is specific to the virtio-net
driver, not something that is generally usable by all network drivers.
(note that this is the same placement as the "driver name=..."
attribute used to choose kernel vs. userland backend for the
virtio-net driver.)
Actually adding the tx=xxx option to the qemu commandline is only done
if the version of qemu being used advertises it in the output of
qemu -device virtio-net-pci,?
If a particular txmode is requested in the XML, and the option isn't
listed in that help output, an UNSUPPORTED_CONFIG error is logged, and
the domain fails to start.
When the <driver> element (and its "name" attribute) was added to the
domain XML's interface element, a "backend" enum was simply added to
the toplevel of the virDomainNetDef struct.
Ignoring the naming inconsistency ("name" vs. "backend"), this is fine
when there's only a single item contained in the driver element of the
XML, but doesn't scale well as we add more attributes that apply to
the backend of the virtio-net driver, or add attributes applicable to
other drivers.
This patch changes virDomainNetDef in two ways:
1) Rename the item in the struct from "backend" to "name", so that
it's the same in the XML and in the struct, hopefully avoiding
confusion for someone unfamiliar with the function of the
attribute.
2) Create a "driver" union within virDomainNetDef, and a "virtio"
struct in that struct, which contains the "name" enum value.
3) Move around the virDomainNetParse and virDomainNetFormat functions
to allow for simple plugin of new attributes without disturbing
existing code. (you'll note that this results in a seemingly
redundant if() in the format function, but that will no longer be
the case as soon as a 2nd attribute is added).
In the future, new attributes for the virtio driver backend can be
added to the "virtio" struct, and any other network device backend that
needs an attribute will have its own struct added to the "driver"
union.
The introduction of the v3 migration protocol, along with
support for migration cookies, will significantly expand
the size of the migration code. Move it all to a separate
file to make it more manageable
The functions are not moved 100%. The API entry points
remain in the main QEMU driver, but once the public
virDomainPtr is resolved to the internal virDomainObjPtr,
all following code is moved.
This will allow the new v3 API entry points to call into the
same shared internal migration functions
* src/qemu/qemu_domain.c, src/qemu/qemu_domain.h: Add
qemuDomainFormatXML helper method
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c: Remove all migration code
* src/qemu/qemu_migration.c, src/qemu/qemu_migration.h: Add
all migration code.
Move the qemudStartVMDaemon and qemudShutdownVMDaemon
methods into a separate file, renaming them to
qemuProcessStart, qemuProcessStop. All helper methods
called by these are also moved & renamed to match
* src/Makefile.am: Add qemu_process.c/.h
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c: Add qemuDomainAssignPCIAddresses
* src/qemu/qemu_command.h: Add VNC port min/max
* src/qemu/qemu_domain.c, src/qemu/qemu_domain.h: Add
domain event queue helpers
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c, src/qemu/qemu_driver.h: Remove
all QEMU process startup/shutdown functions
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c, src/qemu/qemu_process.h: Add
all QEMU process startup/shutdown functions
The name convention of device mapper disk is different, and 'parted'
can't be used to delete a device mapper disk partition. e.g.
Name Path
-----------------------------------------
3600a0b80005ad1d7000093604cae912fp1 /dev/mapper/3600a0b80005ad1d7000093604cae912fp1
Error: Expecting a partition number.
This patch introduces 'dmsetup' to fix it.
Changes:
- New function "virIsDevMapperDevice" in "src/utils/utils.c"
- remove "is_dm_device" in "src/storage/parthelper.c", use
"virIsDevMapperDevice" instead.
- Requires "device-mapper" for 'with-storage-disk" in "libvirt.spec.in"
- Check "dmsetup" in 'configure.ac' for "with-storage-disk"
- Changes on "src/Makefile.am" to link against libdevmapper
- New entry for "virIsDevMapperDevice" in "src/libvirt_private.syms"
Changes from v1 to v3:
- s/virIsDeviceMapperDevice/virIsDevMapperDevice/g
- replace "virRun" with "virCommand"
- sort the list of util functions in "libvirt_private.syms"
- ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL(1) for virIsDevMapperDevice declaration.
e.g.
Name Path
-----------------------------------------
3600a0b80005ad1d7000093604cae912fp1 /dev/mapper/3600a0b80005ad1d7000093604cae912fp1
Vol /dev/mapper/3600a0b80005ad1d7000093604cae912fp1 deleted
Name Path
-----------------------------------------
"qemudDomainSaveFlag" goto wrong label "endjob", which will cause
error when security manager trying to restore label (regression).
As it's more reasonable to check if vm is shutoff immediately, and
return right away if it is, remove the checking in "qemudDomainSaveFlag",
and add checking in "qemudDomainSave".
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c
* src/util/cgroup.c (virCgroupSetValueStr, virCgroupGetValueStr)
(virCgroupRemoveRecursively): VIR_DEBUG can clobber errno.
(virCgroupRemove): Use VIR_DEBUG rather than DEBUG.
The code expected that host CPU architecture matches the architecture on
which libvirt runs. This is normally true but not in tests, where host
CPU is faked to produce consistent results.
clang had 5 reports against virCommand; three were false positives
(a NULL deref in ProcessIO solved by sa_assert, and two uninitialized
memory operations solved by adding an initializer), but two were real.
* src/util/command.c (virCommandProcessIO): Fix real bug of
possible NULL dereference. Teach clang that buf is never NULL.
(virCommandRun): Teach clang that infd is only ever accessed when
initialized.
The processWatchdogEvent fix is real, although it can only trigger
on OOM, since bad things happen if doCoreDump is called with a NULL
pathname argument. The other fixes silence clang, but aren't a real
bug because virReportErrorHelper tolerates a NULL format string even
though *printf does not.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (processWatchdogEvent): Exit on OOM.
(qemuDomainIsActive, qemuDomainIsPersistent, qemuDomainIsUpdated):
Provide valid message.
The SCSI storage backend leaks a string containing the pathname
for each block device it discovers
* src/storage/storage_backend_scsi.c: Free the device name
When creating the virDomain::snapshots hash table, virGetDomain
wasn't checking if the creation was successful. This would then
lead to failures in the vir*DomainSnapshot functions. Better to
report this error early and make virGetDomain fail if the
snapshots hash couldn't be created.
* src/datatypes.c: report failure to make a hash table
A couple of allocation were not calling virReportOOMError on allocation
errors
* src/util/hash.c: add the needed call in virHashCreate and
virHashAddOrUpdateEntry
"virStorageBackendCreateVols":
"names->next" serves as condition expression for "do...while",
however, "names" was shifted before, it then results in one less
loop, and thus, one less volume will be created for mpath pool,
the patch is to fix it.
* src/storage/storage_backend_mpath.c
clang complained that STREQ(group->controllers[i].mountPoint,...) was
a NULL dereference when i==VIR_CGROUP_CONTROLLER_CPUSET, because it
assumes the worst about virCgroupPathOfController. Marking the
argument const doesn't yet have an effect, per this clang bug:
http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=7758
So, we use sa_assert, which was designed to shut up false positives
from tools like clang.
* src/util/cgroup.c (virCgroupMakeGroup): Teach clang that there
is no NULL dereference.
This patch reorders the connlimit and comment match extensions relative to the state match (-m state); connlimit being most useful if found after a -m state --state NEW and not before it.
When formatting XML for smartcard device with mode=host, libvirt
generates invalid XML if the device has address info associated:
<smartcard mode='host' <address type='ccid' controller='0' slot='1'/>
Commit 9962e406c6 introduced a
problem where if the VM failed to startup, it would not be
correctly cleaned up. Amongst other things the SELinux
security label would not be removed, which prevents the VM
from ever starting again.
The virDomainIsActive() check at the start of qemudShutdownVMDaemon
checks for vm->def->id not being -1. By moving the assignment of the
VM id to the start of qemudStartVMDaemon, we can ensure cleanup will
occur on failure
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c: Move initialization of 'vm->def->id'
so that qemudShutdownVMDaemon() will process the shutdown
When attaching a device that already exists, xend driver updates
the device with "device_configure", it causes problems (e.g. for
disk device, 'device_configure' only can be used to update device
like CDROM), on the other hand, we provide additional API
(virDomainUpdateDevice) to update device, this fix is to raise up
errors instead of updating the existed device which is not CDROM
device.
Changes from v1 to v2:
- allow to update CDROM
* src/xen/xend_internal.c
Building the 0.8.8 release candidate on cygwin produced this compiler
warning, which is indicative of catastrophic failure on any attempt to
print an error message with errno turned to a string:
CC strerror_r.lo
strerror_r.c: In function 'rpl_strerror_r':
strerror_r.c:67: warning: assignment makes integer from pointer without a cast
This has been fixed in gnulib.
* .gnulib: Update to latest, for strerror_r fix.
* src/util/memory.c (includes): Satisfy 'make syntax-check'.
Suspending a VM which contains shell meta characters doesn't work with
libvirt-0.8.7:
/var/log/libvirt/qemu/andreas_231-ne\ doch\ nicht.log:
sh: -c: line 0: syntax error near unexpected token `doch'
sh: -c: line 0: `cat | { dd bs=4096 seek=1 if=/dev/null && dd bs=1048576; }
Although target="andreas_231-ne doch nicht" contains shell meta
characters (here: blanks), they are not properly escaped by
src/qemu/qemu_monitor_{json,text}.c#qemuMonitor{JSON,Text}MigrateToFile()
First, the filename needs to be properly escaped for the shell, than
this command line has to be properly escaped for qemu again.
For this to work, remove the old qemuMonitorEscapeArg() wrapper, rename
qemuMonitorEscape() to it removing the handling for shell=TRUE, and
implement a new qemuMonitorEscapeShell() returning strings using single
quotes.
Using double quotes or escaping special shell characters with backslashes
would also be possible, but the set of special characters heavily
depends on the concrete shell (dsh, bash, zsh) and its setting (history
expansion, interactive use, ...)
Signed-off-by: Philipp Hahn <hahn@univention.de>
The logging functions are enhanced so that immediately prior to
the first log message being printed to any output channel, the
libvirt package version will be printed.
eg
$ LIBVIRT_DEBUG=1 virsh
18:13:28.013: 17536: info : libvirt version: 0.8.7
18:13:28.013: 17536: debug : virInitialize:361 : register drivers
...
The 'configure' script gains two new arguments which can be
used as
--with-packager="Fedora Project, x86-01.phx2.fedoraproject.org, 01-27-2011-18:00:10"
--with-packager-version="1.fc14"
to allow distros to append a custom string with package specific
data.
The RPM specfile is modified so that it appends the RPM version,
the build host, the build date and the packager name.
eg
$ LIBVIRT_DEBUG=1 virsh
18:14:52.086: 17551: info : libvirt version: 0.8.7, package: 1.fc13 (Fedora Project, x86-01.phx2.fedoraproject.org, 01-27-2011-18:00:10)
18:14:52.086: 17551: debug : virInitialize:361 : register drivers
Thus when distro packagers receive bug reports they can clearly
see what version was in use, even if the bug reporter mistakenly
or intentionally lies about version/builds
* src/util/logging.c: Output version data prior to first log message
* libvirt.spec.in: Include RPM release, date, hostname & packager
* configure.ac: Add --with-packager & --with-packager-version args