The RPC code had several latent memory leaks and an attempt to
free the wrong string, but thankfully nothing triggered them
(blkiotune was the only one returning a string, and always as
the last parameter). Also, our cleanups for rpcgen ended up
nuking a line of code that renders VIR_TYPED_PARAM_INT broken,
because it was the only use of 'i' in a function, even though
it was a member usage rather than a standalone declaration.
* daemon/remote.c (remoteSerializeTypedParameters): Free the
correct array element.
(remoteDispatchDomainGetSchedulerParameters)
(remoteDispatchDomainGetSchedulerParametersFlags)
(remoteDispatchDomainBlockStatsFlags)
(remoteDispatchDomainGetMemoryParameters): Don't leak strings.
* src/rpc/genprotocol.pl: Don't nuke member-usage of 'buf' or 'i'.
The lifetime of the virDomainEventState object is tied to
the lifetime of the driver, which in stateless drivers is
tied to the lifetime of the virConnectPtr.
If we add & remove a timer when allocating/freeing the
virDomainEventState object, we can get a situation where
the timer still triggers once after virDomainEventState
has been freed. The timeout callback can't keep a ref
on the event state though, since that would be a circular
reference.
The trick is to only register the timer when a callback
is registered with the event state & remove the timer
when the callback is unregistered.
The demo for the bug is to run
while true ; do date ; ../tools/virsh -q -c test:///default 'shutdown test; undefine test; dominfo test' ; done
prior to this fix, it will frequently hang and / or
crash, or corrupt memory
Currently all drivers using domain events need to provide a callback
for handling a timer to dispatch events in a clean stack. There is
no technical reason for dispatch to go via driver specific code. It
could trivially be dispatched directly from the domain event code,
thus removing tedious boilerplate code from all drivers
Also fix the libxl & xen drivers to pass 'true' when creating the
virDomainEventState, since they run inside the daemon & thus always
expect events to be present.
* src/conf/domain_event.c, src/conf/domain_event.h: Internalize
dispatch of events from timer callback
* src/libxl/libxl_driver.c, src/lxc/lxc_driver.c,
src/qemu/qemu_domain.c, src/qemu/qemu_driver.c,
src/remote/remote_driver.c, src/test/test_driver.c,
src/uml/uml_driver.c, src/vbox/vbox_tmpl.c,
src/xen/xen_driver.c: Remove all timer dispatch functions
The virDomainEventCallbackList and virDomainEventQueue APIs are
now solely helpers used internally by virDomainEventState APIs.
Remove their decls from domain_event.h since no driver code should
need to use them any more.
* src/conf/domain_event.c: Make virDomainEventCallbackList and
virDomainEventQueue APIs static & remove some unused APIs
* src/conf/domain_event.h, src/libvirt_private.syms: Remove
virDomainEventCallbackList and virDomainEventQueue APIs
No caller of the domain events APIs should need to poke at the
struct internals. Thus they should all be removed from the
header file
* src/conf/domain_event.h: Remove struct definitions
* src/conf/domain_event.c: Add struct definitions
While virDomainEventState has APIs for managing removal of callbacks,
while locked, adding callbacks in the first place requires direct
access to the virDomainEventCallbackList structure. This is not
threadsafe since it is bypassing the virDomainEventState locks
* src/conf/domain_event.c, src/conf/domain_event.h,
src/libvirt_private.syms: Add APIs for managing callbacks
via virDomainEventState.
When registering a callback for a particular event some callers
need to know how many callbacks already exist for that event.
While it is possible to ask for a count, this is not free from
race conditions when threaded. Thus the API for registering
callbacks should return the count of callbacks. Also rename
virDomainEventStateDeregisterAny to virDomainEventStateDeregisterID
* src/conf/domain_event.c, src/conf/domain_event.h,
src/libvirt_private.syms: Return count of callbacks when
registering callbacks
* src/libxl/libxl_driver.c, src/libxl/libxl_driver.c,
src/qemu/qemu_driver.c, src/remote/remote_driver.c,
src/remote/remote_driver.c, src/uml/uml_driver.c,
src/vbox/vbox_tmpl.c, src/xen/xen_driver.c: Update
for change in APIs
The Xen & VBox drivers deal with callbacks & dispatching of
events directly. All the other drivers use a timer to dispatch
events from a clean stack state, rather than deep inside the
drivers. Convert Xen & VBox over to virDomainEventState so
that they match behaviour of other drivers
* src/conf/domain_event.c: Return count of remaining
callbacks when unregistering event callback
* src/vbox/vbox_tmpl.c, src/xen/xen_driver.c,
src/xen/xen_driver.h: Convert to virDomainEventState
If only iptables rules are created then two unnecessary ebtables chains
are also created. This patch fixes this and prevents these chains from
being created. They have been cleaned up properly, though.
A generic error code was returned, if the user aborted a migration job.
This made it hard to distinguish between a user requested abort and an
error that might have occured. This patch introduces a new error code,
which is returned in the specific case of a user abort, while leaving
all other failures with their existing code. This makes it easier to
distinguish between failure while mirgrating and an user requested
abort.
* include/libvirt/virterror.h: - add new error code
* src/util/virterror.c: - add message for the new error code
* src/qemu/qemu_migration.h: - Emit operation aborted error instead of
operation failed, on migration abort
If managed save fails at the right point in time, then the save
image can end up with 0 bytes in length (no valid header), and
our attempts in commit 55d88def to detect and skip invalid save
files missed this case.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainSaveImageOpen): Also unlink
empty file as corrupt. Reported by Dennis Householder.
Currently, on device detach, we parse given XML, find the device
in domain object, free it and try to restore security labels.
However, in some cases (e.g. usb hostdev) parsed XML contains
less information than freed device. In usb case it is bus & device
IDs. These are needed during label restoring as a symlink into
/dev/bus is generated from them. Therefore don't drop device
configuration until security labels are restored.
In commit 6f84e110 I mistakenly set default migration speed to
33554432 Mb! The units of migMaxBandwidth is Mb, with conversion
handled in qemuMonitor{JSON,Text}SetMigrationSpeed().
Also, remove definition of QEMU_DOMAIN_FILE_MIG_BANDWIDTH_MAX since
it is no longer used after reverting commit ef1065cf.
If an async job run on a domain will stop the domain at the end of the
job, a concurrently run query job can hang in qemu monitor and nothing
can be done with that domain from this point on. An attempt to start
such domain results in "Timed out during operation: cannot acquire state
change lock" error.
However, quite a few things have to happen at the right time... There
must be an async job running which stops a domain at the end. This race
was reported with dump --crash but other similar jobs, such as
(managed)save and migration, should be able to trigger this bug as well.
While this async job is processing its last monitor command, that is a
query-migrate to which qemu replies with status "completed", a new
libvirt API that results in a query job must arrive and stay waiting
until the query-migrate command finishes. Once query-migrate is done but
before the async job closes qemu monitor while stopping the domain, the
other thread needs to wake up and call qemuMonitorSend to send its
command to qemu. Before qemu gets a chance to respond to this command,
the async job needs to close the monitor. At this point, the query job
thread is waiting for a condition that no-one will ever signal so it
never finishes the job.
* src/qemu/qemu_hostdev.c (qemuDomainReAttachHostdevDevices):
pciDeviceListFree(pcidevs) in the end free()s the device even if
it's in use by other domain, which can cause a race.
How to reproduce:
<script>
virsh nodedev-dettach pci_0000_00_19_0
virsh start test
virsh attach-device test hostdev.xml
virsh start test2
for i in {1..5}; do
echo "[ -- ${i}th time --]"
virsh nodedev-reattach pci_0000_00_19_0
done
echo "clean up"
virsh destroy test
virsh nodedev-reattach pci_0000_00_19_0
</script>
Device pci_0000_00_19_0 dettached
Domain test started
Device attached successfully
error: Failed to start domain test2
error: Requested operation is not valid: PCI device 0000:00:19.0 is in use by domain test
[ -- 1th time --]
Device pci_0000_00_19_0 re-attached
[ -- 2th time --]
Device pci_0000_00_19_0 re-attached
[ -- 3th time --]
Device pci_0000_00_19_0 re-attached
[ -- 4th time --]
Device pci_0000_00_19_0 re-attached
[ -- 5th time --]
Device pci_0000_00_19_0 re-attached
clean up
Domain test destroyed
Device pci_0000_00_19_0 re-attached
The patch also fixes another problem, there won't be error like
"qemuDomainReAttachHostdevDevices: Not reattaching active
device 0000:00:19.0" in daemon log if some device is in active.
As pciResetDevice and pciReattachDevice won't be called for
the device anymore. This is sensible as we already reported
error when preparing the device if it's active. Blindly trying
to pciResetDevice & pciReattachDevice on the device and getting
an error is just redundant.
This patch fixes two problems:
1) The device will be reattached to host even if it's not
managed, as there is a "pciDeviceSetManaged".
2) The device won't be reattached to host with original
driver properly. As it doesn't honor the device original
properties which are maintained by driver->activePciHostdevs.
This chunk of code below repeated in several functions, factor it into
a helper method virDomainLiveConfigHelperMethod to eliminate duplicated code
based on Eric and Adam's suggestion. I have tested it for all the
relevant APIs changed.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Lei Li <lilei@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
If the vol object is newly created, it increases the volumes count,
but doesn't decrease the volumes count when do cleanup. It can
cause libvirtd to crash when one trying to free the volume objects
like:
for (i = 0; i < pool->volumes.count; i++)
virStorageVolDefFree(pool->volumes.objs[i]);
It's more reliable if we add the newly created vol object in the
end.
When destroying a domain qemuDomainDestroy kills its qemu process and
starts a new job, which means it unlocks the domain object and locks it
again after some time. Although the object is usually unlocked for a
pretty short time, chances are another thread processing an EOF event on
qemu monitor is able to lock the object first and does all the cleanup
by itself. This leads to wrong shutoff reason and lifecycle event detail
and virDomainDestroy API incorrectly reporting failure to destroy an
inactive domain.
Reported by Charlie Smurthwaite.
Current "-ay | -an" has problems on pool starting/refreshing if
the volumes are clustered. Rommer has posted a patch to list 2
months ago.
https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2011-October/msg01116.html
But IMO we shouldn't skip the inactived vols. So this is a squashed
patch by Rommer.
Signed-off-by: Rommer <rommer@active.by>
Network disks don't have paths to be resolved or files to be checked
for ownership. ee3efc41e6 checked this
for some image label functions, but was partially reverted in a
refactor. This finishes adding the check to each security driver's
set and restore label methods for images.
Signed-off-by: Josh Durgin <josh.durgin@dreamhost.com>
This patch addresses https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=760442
When a network has any forward type other than route, nat or none, the
network configuration should be done completely external to libvirt -
libvirt only uses these types to allow configuring guests in a manner
that isn't tied to a specific host (all the host-specific information,
in particular interface names, port profile data, and bandwidth
configuration is in the network definition, and the guest
configuration only references it).
Due to a bug in the bridge network driver, libvirt was adding iptables
rules for networks with forward type='bridge' etc. any time libvirtd
was restarted while one of these networks was active.
This patch eliminates that error by only "reloading" iptables rules if
forward type is route, nat, or none.
Currently qemuDomainAssignPCIAddresses() is called to assign addresses
to PCI devices.
We need to do something similar for devices with spapr-vio addresses.
So create one place where address assignment will be done, that is
qemuDomainAssignAddresses().
Signed-off-by: Michael Ellerman <michael@ellerman.id.au>
For the PPC64 pseries machine type we need to add address information
for the spapr-vty device.
Signed-off-by: Michael Ellerman <michael@ellerman.id.au>
In QEMU PPC64 we have a network device called "spapr-vlan". We can specify
this using the existing syntax for network devices, however libvirt
currently rejects "spapr-vlan" in virDomainNetDefParseXML() because of
the "-". Fix the code to accept "-".
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainNetDefParseXML): Allow '-' in
model name, and be more efficient.
* docs/schemas/domaincommon.rng: Limit valid model names to match code.
Based on a patch by Michael Ellerman.
When parsing ppc64 models on an x86 host an out-of-memory error message is displayed due
to it checking for retcpus being NULL. Fix this by removing the check whether retcpus is NULL
since we will realloc into this variable.
Also in the X86 model parser display the OOM error at the location where it happens.
Fix memory leak:
==27534== 24 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 207 of 530
==27534== at 0x4A05E46: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==27534== by 0x38EC26EC37: vasprintf (in /lib64/libc-2.13.so)
==27534== by 0x4E998E6: virVasprintf (util.c:1677)
==27534== by 0x4E999F1: virAsprintf (util.c:1695)
==27534== by 0x4F1EAAC: nodeGetInfo (nodeinfo.c:593)
==27534== by 0x47948F: qemuCapsInitCPU (qemu_capabilities.c:855)
==27534== by 0x4796B1: qemuCapsInit (qemu_capabilities.c:915)
==27534== by 0x456550: qemuCreateCapabilities (qemu_driver.c:245)
==27534== by 0x4578C4: qemudStartup (qemu_driver.c:580)
==27534== by 0x4F20886: virStateInitialize (libvirt.c:852)
==27534== by 0x420E55: daemonRunStateInit (libvirtd.c:1156)
==27534== by 0x4E94C56: virThreadHelper (threads-pthread.c:157)
Mark this leaked variable as const char * when it is passed into another
function.
Pool creates new workers dynamically. However, it is possible
for a pool to have no workers. If we want to free that pool,
we don't want to wait on quit condition as it will never be
signaled.
Add support for newly supported Intel cpu features. Newly supported
flags are: pclmuldq, dtes64, smx, fma, pdcm, movbe, xsave, osxsave and
avx. This adds support for Intel's Sandy Bridge platform.
A preparatory patch for DHCP snooping where we want to be able to
differentiate between a VM's interface using the tuple of
<VM UUID, Interface MAC address>. We assume that MAC addresses could
possibly be re-used between different networks (VLANs) thus do not only
want to rely on the MAC address to identify an interface.
At the current 'final destination' in virNWFilterInstantiate I am leaving
the vmuuid parameter as ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED until the DHCP snooping patches arrive.
(we may not post the DHCP snooping patches for 0.9.9, though)
Mostly this is a pretty trivial patch. On the lowest layers, in lxc_driver
and uml_conf, I am passing the virDomainDefPtr around until I am passing
only the VM's uuid into the NWFilter calls.
This patch cleans up return codes in the nwfilter subsystem.
Some functions in nwfilter_conf.c (validators and formatters) are
keeping their bool return for now and I am converting their return
code to true/false.
All other functions now have failure return codes of -1 and success
of 0.
[I searched for all occurences of ' 1;' and checked all 'if ' and
adapted where needed. After that I did a grep for 'NWFilter' in the source
tree.]
In some error situations, the function testDomainRestoreFlags() could
unlock the test driver mutex without first locking it. This patch
moves the lock operation earlier, so that it occurs before any
potential jump down to the unlock call.
I found this problem while auditing the test driver lock usage to
determine the cause of a hang while running the following test:
cd tests; while true; do printf x; ./undefine; done
This patch *does not* solve that problem, but we now understand its
actual source, and danpb is working on a patch.
assumptions from generic code.
This implements the minimal set of changes needed in libvirt to launch a
PowerPC-KVM based guest.
It removes x86-specific assumptions about choice of serial driver backend
from generic qemu guest commandline generation code.
It also restricts the ACPI capability to be available for an x86 or
x86_64 domain.
This is not a complete solution -- it still does not guarantee libvirt
the capability to flag non-supported options in guest XML. (Eg, an ACPI
specification in a PowerPC guest XML will still get processed, even
though qemu-system-ppc64 does not support it while qemu-system-x86_64 does.)
This drawback exists because libvirt falls back on qemu to query supported
features, and qemu '-h' blindly lists all capabilities -- irrespective
of whether they are available while emulating a given architecture or not.
The long-term solution would be for qemu to list out capabilities based
on architecture and platform -- so that libvirt can cleanly make out what
devices are supported on an arch (say 'ppc64') and platform (say, 'mac99').
Signed-off-by: Prerna Saxena <prerna@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
This enables libvirt to select the correct qemu binary (qemu-system-ppc64)
for a guest vm based on arch 'ppc64'.
Also, libvirt is enabled to correctly parse the list of supported PowerPC
CPUs, generated by running 'qemu-system-ppc64 -cpu ?'
Signed-off-by: Prerna Saxena <prerna@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Acked-by: Stefan Berger <stefanb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
/proc/cpuinfo
Libvirt at present depends on /proc/cpuinfo to gather host
details such as CPUs, cores, threads, etc. This is an architecture-
dependent approach. An alternative is to use 'Sysfs', which provides
a platform-agnostic interface to parse host CPU topology.
Signed-off-by: Prerna Saxena <prerna@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
On RHEL 5, with libxml2-2.6.26, the build failed with:
virsh.c: In function 'vshNodeIsSuperset':
virsh.c:11951: warning: implicit declaration of function 'xmlChildElementCount'
(or if warnings aren't errors, a link failure later on).
* src/util/xml.h (virXMLChildElementCount): New prototype.
* src/util/xml.c (virXMLChildElementCount): New function.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (xml.h): Export it.
* tools/virsh.c (vshNodeIsSuperset): Use it.
When one thread passes the buck to another thread, it uses
virCondSignal to wake up the target thread. The variable
'haveTheBuck' is not updated in a race-free manner when
this occurs. The current thread sets it to false, and the
woken up thread sets it to true. There is a window where
a 3rd thread can come in and grab the buck.
Even if this didn't lead to crashes & deadlocks, this would
still result in unfairness in the buckpassing algorithm.
A better solution is to *never* set haveTheBuck to false
when we're passing the buck. Only set it to false when there
is no further thread waiting for the buck.
* src/rpc/virnetclient.c: Only set haveTheBuck to false
if no thread is waiting
Commit fd06692544 tried to fix
a race condition in
commit fa9595003d
Author: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Date: Fri Nov 11 15:28:41 2011 +0000
Explicitly track whether the buck is held in remote client
Unfortunately there is a second race condition whereby the
event loop can trigger due to incoming data to read. Revert
this fix, so a complete fix for the problem can be cleanly
applied
* src/rpc/virnetclient.c: Revert fd06692544
With security_driver set to "none" in /etc/libvirt/qemu.conf,
libvirtd would crash when attempted to attach to an existing
qemu process. Only copy the security model if it actually exists.
During virDomainDestroy, QEMU may emit SHUTDOWN event as a response to
SIGTERM and since domain object is still locked, the event is processed
after the domain is destroyed. We need to ignore this event in such case
to avoid changing domain state from shutoff to shutdown.
This patch is to expose the fabric_name of fc_host class, which
might be useful for users who wants to known which fabric the
(v)HBA connects to.
The patch also adds the missed capabilities' XML schema of scsi_host,
(of course, with fabric_wwn added), and update the documents
(docs/formatnode.html.in)
Currently if you try to connect to a local libvirtd when
libvirtd is not in $PATH, you'll get an error
error: internal error invalid use of command API
This is because remoteFindDaemonPath() returns NULL, which
causes us to pass NULL into virNetSocketConnectUNIX which
in turn causes us to pass NULL into virCommandNewArgList.
Adding missing error checks improves this to
error: internal error Unable to locate libvirtd daemon in $PATH
* src/remote/remote_driver.c: Report error if libvirtd
cannot be found
* src/rpc/virnetsocket.c: Report error if caller requested
spawning of daemon, but provided no binary path
The Mingw32 linker highlighted that the symbols for virtime.h
declared in libvirt_private.syms were incorrect
* src/libvirt_private.syms: Fix virtime.h symbols
When QEMU guest finishes its shutdown sequence, qemu stops virtual CPUs
and when started with -no-shutdown waits for us to kill it using
SGITERM. Since QEMU is flushing its internal buffers, some time may pass
before QEMU actually dies. We mistakenly used "paused" state (and
events) for this which is quite confusing since users may see a domain
going to pause while they expect it to shutdown. Since we already have
"shutdown" state with "the domain is being shut down" semantics, we
should use it for this state.
However, the state didn't have a corresponding event so I created one
and called its detail as VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_SHUTDOWN_FINISHED (guest OS
finished its shutdown sequence) with the intent to add
VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_SHUTDOWN_STARTED in the future if we have a
sufficiently capable guest agent that can notify us when guest OS starts
to shutdown.
Otherwise connections to older libvirt abort with:
$ virsh -c qemu+ssh://host.example.com/system list
error: invalid connection pointer in virDrvSupportsFeature
error: failed to connect to the hypervisor
Tested against 0.8.3 and 0.9.8-rc2.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=648855 mentioned a
misuse of 'an' where 'a' is proper; that has since been fixed,
but a search found other problems (some were a spelling error for
'and', while most were fixed by 'a').
* daemon/stream.c: Fix grammar.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c: Likewise.
* src/conf/domain_event.c: Likewise.
* src/esx/esx_driver.c: Likewise.
* src/esx/esx_vi.c: Likewise.
* src/rpc/virnetclient.c: Likewise.
* src/rpc/virnetserverprogram.c: Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_backend_fs.c: Likewise.
* src/util/conf.c: Likewise.
* src/util/dnsmasq.c: Likewise.
* src/util/iptables.c: Likewise.
* src/xen/xen_hypervisor.c: Likewise.
* src/xen/xend_internal.c: Likewise.
* src/xen/xs_internal.c: Likewise.
* tools/virsh.c: Likewise.
virBufferContentAndReset (intentionally) returns NULL for a buffer
with no content, but it is feasible to invoke a command with an
explicit empty string.
* src/util/command.c (virCommandAddEnvBuffer): Reject empty string.
(virCommandAddArgBuffer): Allow explicit empty argument.
* tests/commandtest.c (test9): Test it.
* tests/commanddata/test9.log: Adjust.
The RPC fixups needed on Linux are also needed on cygwin, and
worked without further tweaking to the list of fixups. Also,
unlike BSD, Cygwin exports 'struct ifreq', but unlike Linux,
Cygwin lacks the ioctls that we were using 'struct ifreq' to
access. This patch allows compilation under cygwin.
* src/rpc/genprotocol.pl: Also perform fixups on cygwin.
* src/util/virnetdev.c (HAVE_STRUCT_IFREQ): Also require AF_PACKET
definition.
* src/util/virnetdevbridge.c (virNetDevSetupControlFull): Only
compile if SIOCBRADDBR works.
The pathname for the pipe for tunnelled migration is unresolvable. The
libvirt apparmor driver therefore refuses access, causing migration to
fail. If we can't resolve the path, the worst that can happen is that
we should have given permission to the file but didn't. Otherwise
(especially since this is a /proc/$$/fd/N file) the file is already open
and libvirt won't be refused access by apparmor anyway.
Also adjust virt-aa-helper to allow access to the
*.tunnelmigrate.dest.name files.
For more information, see https://launchpad.net/bugs/869553.
Signed-off-by: Serge Hallyn <serge.hallyn@canonical.com>
Originaly, the code checked if another client is the queue and infered
ownership of the buck from that. Commit fa9595003d
added a separate variable to track the buck. That caused, that a new
call might enter claiming it has the buck, while another thread was
signalled to take the buck. This ends in two threads claiming they hold
the buck and entering poll(). This happens due to a race on waking up
threads on the client lock mutex.
This caused multi-threaded clients to hang, most prominently visible and
reproducible on python based clients, like virt-manager.
This patch causes threads, that have been signalled to take the buck to
re-check if buck is held by another thread.
This ought to fix the build if you have net/if.h but do
not have struct ifreq
* configure.ac: Check for struct ifreq in net/if.h
* src/util/virnetdev.c: Conditionalize to avoid use of
struct ifreq if it does not exist
probes.h can only be generated on Linux, and then only with dtrace
installed. If it is part of the tarball, then either 'make dist'
will fail if you don't have that setup, or we would have to start
keeping probes.h in libvirt.git. Since we only need it to be
generated when dtrace is in use, it's better to avoid shipping
it in the first place, and avoid tracking it in git.
Meanwhile, there is a build dependency - since the RPC code is
generated, it can be built early; but when dtrace is enabled, we
must ensure probes.h is built even earlier. Commit 1afcfbdd tried
to fix this, but did so in a way that added probes.h into the
tarball, and broke VPATH as well. Commit ecbca767 fixed VPATH,
but didn't fix the more fundamental problem. This patch solves
the issue by adding a dependency instead.
Tested with 'make dist' in a clean VPATH builds, for both
'./configure --without-dtrace' and './configure --with-dtrace';
all configurations were able to correctly build a tarball, and
the dtrace configuration no longer sticks probes.h in the tarball.
* src/Makefile.am (REMOTE_DRIVER_GENERATED): Don't ship probes.h;
rather, make it a dependency.
Fix a logic error, the initial value of ret = -1, if just set --config,
it will goto endjob directly without doing its really job here.
Signed-off-by: Lei Li <lilei@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
The glibc time.h header has an undocumented __isleap macro
that we are using. Since it is undocumented & does not appear
on any other OS, stop using it and just define the macro in
libvirt code instead.
* src/util/virtime.c: Remove __isleap usage
Only one IPv4 DHCP definition is supported. Originally the code checked
for a multiple definition and returned an error, but the new domain
definition was already added to networks. This patch moves the check
before the newly defined network is added to active networks.
*src/network/bridge_driver.c: networkDefine(): - move multiple IPv4
addresses check before
definition is used.
Detected by Coverity. Leak introduced in commit c1df2c1.
Two bugs here:
1. memory leak on successful parse
2. failure to parse still returned success
Signed-off-by: Alex Jia <ajia@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Detected by Coverity. Leak introduced in commit 8866eed.
Two bugs here:
1. logfd wasn't closed on all return paths
2. if we failed to mark a domain autodestroy, then the domain
was not made transient but we still returned success
Signed-off-by: Alex Jia <ajia@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Detected by Coverity. Leak introduced in commit 673adba.
Two separate bugs here:
1. call was not freed on all error paths
2. virCondDestroy was called even if virCondInit failed
Signed-off-by: Alex Jia <ajia@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
To add support for running libvirt on PowerPC, a CPU driver for the
PowerPC platform must be added.
Most generic cpu driver routines such as CPU compare, decode, etc
are based on CPUID comparison and are not relevant for non-x86
platforms.
Here, we introduce stubs for relevant PowerPC routines invoked by libvirt.
Signed-off-by: Prerna Saxena <prerna@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Anton Blanchard <anton@au.ibm.com>
filter 0-device-weight when:
- getting blkio parameters with --config
- starting up a domain
When testing with blkio, I found these issues:
(dom is down)
virsh blkiotune dom --device-weights /dev/sda,300,/dev/sdb,500
virsh blkiotune dom --device-weights /dev/sda,300,/dev/sdb,0
virsh blkiotune dom
weight : 800
device_weight : /dev/sda,200,/dev/sdb,0
# issue 1: shows 0 device weight of /dev/sdb that may confuse user
(continued)
virsh start dom
# issue 2: If /dev/sdb doesn't exist, libvirt refuses to bring the
# dom up because it wants to set the device weight to 0 of a
# non-existing device. Since 0 means no weight-limit, we really don't
# have to set it.
Prior to this patch, for a running dom, the commands:
$ virsh blkiotune dom --device-weights /dev/sda,502,/dev/sdb,498
$ virsh blkiotune dom --device-weights /dev/sda,503
$ virsh blkiotune dom
weight : 500
device_weight : /dev/sda,503
claim that /dev/sdb no longer has a non-default weight, but
directly querying cgroups says otherwise:
$ cat /cgroup/blkio/libvirt/qemu/dom/blkio.weight_device
8:0 503
8:16 498
After this patch, an explicit 0 is required to remove a device path
from the XML, and omitting a device path that was previously
specified leaves that device path untouched in the XML, to match
cgroups behavior.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (parseBlkioWeightDeviceStr): Rename...
(qemuDomainParseDeviceWeightStr): ...and use correct type.
(qemuDomainSetBlkioParameters): After parsing string, modify
rather than replacing existing table.
* tools/virsh.pod (blkiotune): Tweak wording.
The next patch will make it possible to have virDomainSetBlkioParameters
leave device weights unchanged if they are not mentioned in the incoming
string, but this only works if the list of block weights does not allow
duplicate paths. Technically, a user can still confuse libvirt by
passing alternate spellings that resolve to the same device, but it
is not worth worrying about working around that kind of abuse.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainDefParseXML): Require unique
paths.
Implement the block I/O throttle setting and getting support to qemu
driver.
Signed-off-by: Lei Li <lilei@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Zhi Yong Wu <wuzhy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Enable block I/O throttle for per-disk in XML, as the first
per-disk IO tuning parameter.
Signed-off-by: Lei Li <lilei@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Zhi Yong Wu <wuzhy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Support Block I/O Throttle setting and query to remote driver.
Signed-off-by: Lei Li <lilei@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Zhi Yong Wu <wuzhy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The virTimestamp and virTimeMs functions in src/util/util.h
duplicate functionality from virtime.h, in a non-async signal
safe manner. Remove them, and convert all code over to the new
APIs.
* src/util/util.c, src/util/util.h: Delete virTimeMs and virTimestamp
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c, src/qemu/qemu_domain.c,
src/qemu/qemu_driver.c, src/qemu/qemu_migration.c,
src/qemu/qemu_process.c, src/util/event_poll.c: Convert to use
virtime APIs
The logging APIs need to be able to generate formatted timestamps
using only async signal safe functions. This rules out using
gmtime/localtime/malloc/gettimeday(!) and much more.
Introduce a new internal API which is async signal safe.
virTimeMillisNowRaw replacement for gettimeofday. Uses clock_gettime
where available, otherwise falls back to the unsafe
gettimeofday
virTimeFieldsNowRaw replacements for gmtime(), convert a timestamp
virTimeFieldsThenRaw into a broken out set of fields. No localtime()
replacement is provided, because converting to
local time is not practical with only async signal
safe APIs.
virTimeStringNowRaw replacements for strftime() which print a timestamp
virTimeStringThenRaw into a string, using a pre-determined format, with
a fixed size buffer (VIR_TIME_STRING_BUFLEN)
For each of these there is also a version without the Raw postfix
which raises a full libvirt error. These versions are not async
signal safe
* src/Makefile.am, src/util/virtime.c, src/util/virtime.h: New files
* src/libvirt_private.syms: New APis
* configure.ac: Check for clock_gettime in -lrt
* tests/virtimetest.c, tests/Makefile.am: Test new APIs
Fix the build on Mingw32 by removing the now obsolete
virGetPMCapabilities symbol from the private exports file
* src/libvirt_private.syms: Remove virGetPMCapabilities
If suspend failed for some reason (e.g. too short duration) then
subsequent attempts to trigger suspend were rejected because we
had already marked a suspend as being in progress
* src/util/virnodesuspend.c: Don't mark suspend as active
until we've successfully triggered it
The command name for the suspend action does not need to be
strdup'd. The constant string can be used directly. This
also means the code can be trivially rearranged to make the
switch clearer
* src/util/virnodesuspend.c: Remove strdup of cmdString
To avoid probing the host power management features on any
call to virInitialize, only initialize the mutex in
virNodeSuspendInit. Do lazy load of the supported PM target
mask when it is actually needed
* src/util/virnodesuspend.c: Lazy init of supported features
If we ensure that virNodeSuspendGetTargetMask always resets
*bitmask to zero upon failure, there is no need for the
powerMgmt_valid field.
* src/util/virnodesuspend.c: Ensure *bitmask is zero upon
failure
* src/conf/capabilities.c, src/conf/capabilities.h: Remove
powerMgmt_valid field
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.c: Remove powerMgmt_valid
The node suspend capabilities APIs should not have been put into
util.[ch]. Instead move them into virnodesuspend.[ch]
* src/util/util.c, src/util/util.h: Remove suspend capabilities APIs
* src/util/virnodesuspend.c, src/util/virnodesuspend.h: Add
suspend capabilities APIs
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.c: Include virnodesuspend.h
Rename virGetPMCapabilities to virNodeSuspendGetTargetMask and
virDiscoverHostPMFeature to virNodeSuspendSupportsTarget.
* src/util/util.c, src/util/util.h: Rename APIs
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.c, src/util/virnodesuspend.c: Adjust
for new names
Since virDiscoverHostPMFeature is just checking one feature,
there is no reason for it to return a bitmask. Change it to
return a boolean
* src/util/util.c, src/util/util.h: Make virDiscoverHostPMFeature
return a boolean
The virHostPMCapability enum helper was declared in util.h
but implemented in capabilities.c, which is in a completely
separate library at link time. Move the declaration into the
capabilities.c file and rename it to match normal conventions
* src/util/util.h: Remove virHostPMCapability enum decl
* src/conf/capabilities.c: Add virCapsHostPMTarget enum
The capabilities XML uses the x86 specific terms 'S3', 'S4'
and 'Hybrid-Syspend'. Switch it to use the same terminology
as the API constants and virsh options, eg 'suspend_mem'
'suspend_disk' and 'suspend_hybrid'
* docs/formatcaps.html.in, docs/schemas/capability.rng,
src/conf/capabilities.c: Rename suspend constants
The internal virHostPMCapability enum just duplicates the
public virNodeSuspendTarget enum, but with different names.
* src/util/util.c: Use VIR_NODE_SUSPEND_TARGET constants
* src/util/util.h: Remove virHostPMCapability enum
* src/conf/capabilities.c: Use VIR_NODE_SUSPEND_TARGET_LAST
The VIR_NODE_SUSPEND_TARGET constants are not flags, so they
should just be assigned straightforward incrementing values.
* include/libvirt/libvirt.h.in: Change VIR_NODE_SUSPEND_TARGET
values
* src/util/virnodesuspend.c: Fix suspend target checks
Detected by Coverity. the only case is caller passes a NULL to 'format' variable,
then taking 'if (format)' false branch, the function qcow2GetBackingStoreFormat
will directly dereferences the NULL 'format' pointer variable.
Signed-off-by: Alex Jia <ajia@redhat.com>
This patch add new pulic API virDomainSetBlockIoTune and
virDomainGetBlockIoTune.
Signed-off-by: Lei Li <lilei@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Zhi Yong Wu <wuzhy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
This adds per-device weights to <blkiotune>. Note that the
cgroups implementation only supports weights per block device,
and not per-file within the device; hence this option must be
global to the domain definition rather than tied to individual
<devices>/<disk> entries:
<domain ...>
<blkiotune>
<device>
<path>/path/to/block</path>
<weight>1000</weight>
</device>
</blkiotune>
..
This patch also adds a parameter --device-weights to virsh command
blkiotune for setting/getting blkiotune.weight_device for any
hypervisor that supports it. All <device> entries under
<blkiotune> are concatenated into a single string attribute under
virDomain{Get,Set}BlkioParameters, named "device_weight".
Signed-off-by: Hu Tao <hutao@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Without this, 'virsh blkiotune --live --config --weight=n'
only affected live.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainSetBlkioParameters): Allow
setting both configurations at once.
After the previous patch, there are now some redundant checks.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemudDomainGetVcpuPinInfo)
(qemuGetSchedulerParametersFlags): Drop checks now guaranteed by
libvirt.c.
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c (lxcGetSchedulerParametersFlags):
Likewise.
Drivers were inconsistent when presented both --live and --config
at once. For example, within qemu, getting memory parameters
favored live, getting blkio tuning favored config, and getting
scheduler parameters errored out. Also, some, but not all,
attempts to mix flags on query were filtered at the virsh level.
We shouldn't have to duplicate efforts in every client app, nor
in every driver. So, it is simpler to just enforce that the two
flags cannot both be used at once on query operations, which has
precedent in libvirt.c, and which matches the documentation of
virDomainModificationImpact.
* src/libvirt.c (virDomainGetMemoryParameters)
(virDomainGetBlkioParameters)
(virDomainGetSchedulerParametersFlags, virDomainGetVcpuPinInfo):
Borrow sanity checking from virDomainGetVcpusFlags.
It requires the domain is running, otherwise fails. Resize to a lower
size is supported, but should be used with extreme caution.
In order to prohibit the "size" overflowing after multiplied by
1024. We do checking in the codes. For QMP mode, the default units
is Bytes, the passed size needs to be multiplied by 1024, however,
for HMP mode, the default units is "Megabytes", the passed "size"
needs to be divided by 1024 then.
Implements functions for both HMP and QMP mode.
For HMP mode, qemu uses "M" as the units by default, so the passed "sized"
is divided by 1024.
For QMP mode, qemu uses "Bytes" as the units by default, the passed "sized"
is multiplied by 1024.
All of the monitor functions return -1 on failure, 0 on success, or -2 if
not supported.
The new API is named as "virDomainBlockResize", intending to add
support for qemu monitor command "block_resize" (both HMP and QMP).
Similar with APIs like "virDomainSetMemoryFlags", the units for
argument "size" is kilobytes.
Add the core functions that implement the functionality of the API.
Suspend is done by using an asynchronous mechanism so that we can return
the status to the caller before the host gets suspended. This asynchronous
operation is achieved by suspending the host in a separate thread of
execution. However, returning the status to the caller is only best-effort,
but not guaranteed.
To resume the host, an RTC alarm is set up (based on how long we want to
suspend) before suspending the host. When this alarm fires, the host
gets woken up.
Suspend-to-RAM operation on a host running Linux can take upto more than 20
seconds, depending on the load of the system. (Freezing of tasks, an operation
preceding any suspend operation, is given up after a 20 second timeout).
And Suspend-to-Disk can take even more time, considering the time required
for compaction, creating the memory image and writing it to disk etc.
So, we do not allow the user to specify a suspend duration of less than 60
seconds, to be on the safer side, since we don't want to prematurely declare
failure when we only had to wait for some more time.
Some systems support a feature known as 'Hybrid-Suspend', apart from the
usual system-wide sleep states such as Suspend-to-RAM (S3) or Suspend-to-Disk
(S4). Add the functionality to discover this power management feature and
export it in the capabilities XML under the <power_management> tag.
When another thread was dispatching while we wanted to send a
non-blocking call, we correctly queued the call and woke up the thread
but the thread just threw the call away since it forgot to recheck if
its socket was writable.
When spawning an ssh connection, the environment variables
DISPLAY, SSH_ASKPASS, ... are passed. However XAUTHORITY,
which is necessary if the .Xauthority is in a non default
place, was not passed.
Signed-off-by: Christian Franke <nobody@nowhere.ws>
virt-xml-validate fails when run on a domain XML file of type 'vbox'.
For failing test case, see https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=757097
This patch updates the XML schema to accept all valid hypervisor
types, as well as dropping hypervisor types that are not in use
by the current code base.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
To make lxcSetContainerResources smaller, pull the mem tune
and device ACL setup code out into separate methods
* src/lxc/lxc_controller.c: Introduce lxcSetContainerMemTune
and lxcSetContainerDeviceACL
While LXC does not have the concept of VCPUS, so we can't do
per-VCPU pCPU placement, we can support the VM level CPU
placement. Todo this simply set the CPU affinity of the LXC
controller at startup. All child processes will inherit this
affinity.
* src/lxc/lxc_controller.c: Set process affinity
This partly reverts my previous patch f88de3eb. We need to
get file status after open, as given path could have been symlink,
so fstat() will operate on different file than lstat().
When aligning you need to clear the bits in the mask and leave the
others aside. Likely this code has never run, and will never run.
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
One of my latest patches 2e37bf42d2
copy serial console definition. On domain shutdown we save this
info into state XML. However, later on the daemon start we simply
drop this info and since we are not re-reading qemu log,
vm->def->consoles[0] does not get populated with copy. Therefore
we need to avoid dropping console definition if it is just alias
for serial console.
If a connection to destination host is lost during peer-to-peer
migration (because keepalive protocol timed out), we won't be able to
finish the migration and it doesn't make sense to wait for qemu to
transmit all data. This patch automatically cancels such migration
without waiting for virDomainAbortJob to be called.
This API can be used to check if the socket associated with
virConnectPtr is still open or it was closed (probably because keepalive
protocol timed out). If there the connection is local (i.e., no socket
is associated with the connection, it is trivially always alive.
virConnectSetKeepAlive public API can be used by a client connecting to
remote server to start using keepalive protocol. The API is handled
directly by remote driver and not transmitted over the wire to the
server.
The keepalive program has two procedures: PING, and PONG.
Both are used only in asynchronous messages and the sender doesn't wait
for any reply. However, the party which receives PING messages is
supposed to react by sending PONG message the other party, but no
explicit binding between PING and PONG messages is made. For backward
compatibility neither server nor client are allowed to send keepalive
messages before checking that remote party supports them.
When virNetClientIOEventLoop is called for a non-blocking call and not
even a single byte can be sent from this call without blocking, we
properly reported that to the caller which properly frees the call. But
we never removed the call from a call queue.
If something fails while initializing qemu job object in
qemuDomainObjPrivateAlloc(), memory to the private pointer is freed, but
after that, the pointer is still dereferenced, which may result in a
segfault.
* qemuDomainObjPrivateAlloc() - Don't dereference NULL pointer.
Generally, functions which return malloc'd strings should be typed
as 'char *', not 'const char *', to make it obvious that the caller
is responsible to free things. free(const char *) fails to compile,
and although we have a cast embedded in VIR_FREE to work around poor
code that frees const char *, it's better to not rely on that hack.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDiskPathToAlias): Change return type.
(qemuDomainBlockJobImpl): Update caller.
Given that we can now handle the target's disk shorthand, in addition
to an absolute path to the file or block device used on the host,
the term 'disk' fits a bit better as the parameter name than 'path'.
* include/libvirt/libvirt.h.in: Update some parameter names.
* src/libvirt.c (virDomainBlockStats, virDomainBlockStatsFlags)
(virDomainBlockPeek, virDomainGetBlockInfo, virDomainBlockJobAbort)
(virDomainGetBlockJobInfo, virDomainBlockJobSetSpeed)
(virDomainBlockPull): Likewise.
Commit 89b6284f made it possible to pass either a source name or
the target device to most API demanding a disk designation, but
forgot to update the documentation. It also failed to update
virDomainBlockStats to take both forms. This patch fixes both the
documentation and the remaining function.
Xen continues to use just device shorthand (that is, I did not
implement path lookup there, since xen does not track a domain_conf
to quickly tie a path back to the device shorthand).
* src/libvirt.c (virDomainBlockStats, virDomainBlockStatsFlags)
(virDomainGetBlockInfo, virDomainBlockPeek)
(virDomainBlockJobAbort, virDomainGetBlockJobInfo)
(virDomainBlockJobSetSpeed, virDomainBlockPull): Document
acceptable disk naming conventions.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainBlockStats)
(qemuDomainBlockStatsFlags): Allow lookup by source name.
* src/test/test_driver.c (testDomainBlockStats): Likewise.
The WITH_VIRTUALPORT macro is defined to 0 when disabled, not
left undefined. So #if must be used instead of #ifdef
* src/util/virnetdevvportprofile.c: s/#ifdef/#if/
In preparation of DHCP Snooping and the detection of multiple IP
addresses per interface:
The hash table that is used to collect the detected IP address of an
interface can so far only handle one IP address per interface. With
this patch we extend this to allow it to handle a list of IP addresses.
Above changes the returned variable type of virNWFilterGetIpAddrForIfname()
from char * to virNWFilterVarValuePtr; adapt all existing functions calling
this function.
Signed-off-by: Eli Qiao <taget@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
When configuring a URI alias like this in 'libvirt.conf':
uri_aliases = [
"jj#j=qemu+ssh://root@127.0.0.1/system",
"sleet=qemu+ssh://root@sleet.cloud.example.com/system",
]
virsh -c jj#j
It will show this error message:
'no connection driver available for No connection for URI jj#j'
Actually,we expect this message below:
Malformed 'uri_aliases' config entry 'jj#j=qemu+ssh://root@127.0.0.1/system', aliases may only contain 'a-Z, 0-9, _, -'
Give this patch to fix this error.
This patch adds support for filtering of STP (spanning tree protocol) traffic
to the parser and makes us of the ebtables support for STP filtering. This code
now enables the filtering of traffic in chains with prefix 'stp'.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Berger <stefanb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
With hunks borrowed from one of David Steven's previous patches, we now
add the capability of having a 'mac' chain which is useful to filter
for multiple valid MAC addresses.
Signed-off-by: David L Stevens <dlstevens@us.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Berger <stefanb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
virStorageBackendLogicalDeleteVol() could not remove the lv with error
"could not remove open logical volume" sometimes. Generally it's caused
by the volume is still active, even if lvremove tries to remove it with
option "--force".
This patch is to fix it by disbale the lv first using "lvchange -aln"
and "lvremove -f" afterwards if the direct "lvremove -f" failed.
This patch exports KVM Host Power Management capabilities as XML so that
higher-level systems management software can make use of these features
available in the host.
The script "pm-is-supported" (from pm-utils package) is run to discover if
Suspend-to-RAM (S3) or Suspend-to-Disk (S4) is supported by the host.
If either of them are supported, then a new tag "<power_management>" is
introduced in the XML under the <host> tag.
However in case the query to check for power management features succeeded,
but the host does not support any such feature, then the XML will contain
an empty <power_management/> tag. In the event that the PM query itself
failed, the XML will not contain any "power_management" tag.
To use this, new APIs could be implemented in libvirt to exploit power
management features such as S3/S4.
None of the callers cared if str was updated to point to the next
byte after the parsed cpuset; simplifying this results in quite
a few code simplifications. Additionally, virCPUDefParseXML was
strdup()'ing a malloc()'d string; avoiding a memory copy resulted
in less code.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h (virDomainCpuSetParse): Alter signature.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainCpuSetParse): Don't modify str.
(virDomainVcpuPinDefParseXML, virDomainDefParseXML): Adjust
callers.
* src/conf/cpu_conf.c (virCPUDefParseXML): Likewise.
* src/xen/xend_internal.c (sexpr_to_xend_topology): Likewise.
* src/xen/xm_internal.c (xenXMDomainPinVcpu): Likewise.
* src/xenxs/xen_sxpr.c (xenParseSxpr): Likewise.
* src/xenxs/xen_xm.c (xenParseXM): Likewise.
For direct attach devices, in qemuBuildCommandLine, we seem to be freeing
actual device on error path (with networkReleaseActualDevice). But the actual
device is not deleted.
qemuProcessStop eventually deletes the direct attach device and releases
actual device. But by the time qemuProcessStop is called qemuBuildCommandLine
has already freed actual device, leaving stray macvtap devices behind on error.
So the simplest fix is to remove the networkReleaseActualDevice in
qemuBuildCommandLine. This patch does just that.
Signed-off-by: Roopa Prabhu <roprabhu@cisco.com>
Now, when we support multiple consoles per domain,
the vm->def->console[0] can still remain an alias
for vm->def->serial[0]; However, we need to copy
it's source definition as well otherwise we'll regress
on virDomainOpenConsole.
Mingw32 complains if you request export of a symbol which does
not in fact exist.
* src/libvirt_bridge.syms, src/libvirt_macvtap.syms: Delete
obsolete files
* src/libvirt_private.syms: Remove virNetServerGetDBusConn
* src/libvirt_dbus.syms: Add virNetServerGetDBusConn
lvs outputs "[$lvname_vorigin]" for the virtual snapshot lv
(created with "--virtualsize"), and the original device pointed
by "$lvname_vorigin" is just for lvm internal use, one should
never use it.
Per lvm's nameing rules, "[" is not valid as part of the vg/lv name.
(man 8 lvm).
<quote>
VALID NAMES
The following characters are valid for VG and LV names: a-z A-Z 0-9 + _
. -
VG and LV names cannot begin with a hyphen. There are also various
reserved names that are used internally by lvm that can not be used as
LV or VG names. A VG cannot be called anything that exists in /dev/ at
the time of creation, nor can it be called '.' or '..'. A LV cannot be
called '.' '..' 'snapshot' or 'pvmove'. The LV name may also not con‐
tain the strings '_mlog' or '_mimage'
</quote>
So we can skip the set the lv's backingStore by checking if the name
begins with a "[".
This patch adds support for filtering of VLAN (802.1Q) traffic to the
parser and makes us of the ebtables support for VLAN filtering. This code
now enables the filtering of traffic in chains with prefix 'vlan'.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Berger <stefanb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Xen4.1 initializes some unspecified sexpr config items to an empty
string, unlike previous Xen versions that would leave the item unset.
E.g. the kernel item for an HVM guest (non-direct kernel boot):
Xen4.0 and earlier
...
(image
(hvm
(kernel )
...
Xen4.1
...
(image
(hvm
(kernel '')
...
The empty string for kernel causes some grief in subsequent parsing
where existence of specified kernel is checked, e.g.
if (!def->os.kernel)
...
This patch solves the problem in sexpr_node_copy() by not copying
a node containing an empty string.
This prepares for subsequent patches which introduce dependence
on cgroup cpuset. Enable cgroup cpuset by default so users don't
have to modify configuration file before encountering a cpuset
error.
This patch modifies the NWFilter parameter parser to support multiple
elements with the same name and to internally build a list of items.
An example of the XML looks like this:
<parameter name='TEST' value='10.1.2.3'/>
<parameter name='TEST' value='10.2.3.4'/>
<parameter name='TEST' value='10.1.1.1'/>
The list of values is then stored in the newly introduced data type
virNWFilterVarValue.
The XML formatter is also adapted to print out all items in alphabetical
order sorted by 'name'.
This patch also fixes a bug in the XML schema on the way.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Berger <stefanb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
This patch extends the NWFilter driver for Linux (ebiptables) to create
rules for each member of a previously introduced list. If for example
an attribute value (internally) looks like this:
IP = [10.0.0.1, 10.0.0.2, 10.0.0.3]
then 3 rules will be generated for a rule accessing the variable 'IP',
one for each member of the list. The effect of this is that this now
allows for filtering for multiple values in one field. This can then be
used to support for filtering/allowing of multiple IP addresses per
interface.
An iterator is introduced that extracts each member of a list and
puts it into a hash table which then is passed to the function creating
a rule. For the above example the iterator would cause 3 loops.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Berger <stefanb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
NWFilters can be provided name-value pairs using the following
XML notation:
<filterref filter='xyz'>
<parameter name='PORT' value='80'/>
<parameter name='VAL' value='abc'/>
</filterref>
The internal representation currently is so that a name is stored as a
string and the value as well. This patch now addresses the value part of it
and introduces a data structure for storing a value either as a simple
value or as an array for later support of lists.
This patch adjusts all code that was handling the values in hash tables
and makes it use the new data type.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Berger <stefanb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
The previous patch extends the priority of filtering rules into negative
numbers. We now use this possibility to interleave the jumping into
chains with filtering rules to for example create the 'root' table of
an interface with the following sequence of rules:
Bridge chain: libvirt-I-vnet0, entries: 6, policy: ACCEPT
-p IPv4 -j I-vnet0-ipv4
-p ARP -j I-vnet0-arp
-p ARP -j ACCEPT
-p 0x8035 -j I-vnet0-rarp
-p 0x835 -j ACCEPT
-j DROP
The '-p ARP -j ACCEPT' rule now appears between the jumps.
Since the 'arp' chain has been assigned priority -700 and the 'rarp'
chain -600, the above ordering can now be achieved with the following
rule:
<rule action='accept' direction='out' priority='-650'>
<mac protocolid='arp'/>
</rule>
This patch now sorts the commands generating the above shown jumps into
chains and interleaves their execution with those for generating rules.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Berger <stefanb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
So far rules' priorities have only been valid in the range [0,1000].
Now I am extending their priority into the range [-1000, 1000] for subsequently
being able to sort rules and the access of (jumps into) chains following
priorities.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Berger <stefanb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
This patch enables chains that have a known prefix in their name.
Known prefixes are: 'ipv4', 'ipv6', 'arp', 'rarp'. All prefixes
are also protocols that can be evaluated on the ebtables level.
Following the prefix they will be automatically connected to an interface's
'root' chain and jumped into following the protocol they evaluate, i.e.,
a table 'arp-xyz' will be accessed from the root table using
ebtables -t nat -A <iface root table> -p arp -j I-<ifname>-arp-xyz
thus generating a 'root' chain like this one here:
Bridge chain: libvirt-O-vnet0, entries: 5, policy: ACCEPT
-p IPv4 -j O-vnet0-ipv4
-p ARP -j O-vnet0-arp
-p 0x8035 -j O-vnet0-rarp
-p ARP -j O-vnet0-arp-xyz
-j DROP
where the chain 'arp-xyz' is accessed for filtering of ARP packets.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Berger <stefanb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
This patch extends the filter XML to support priorities of chains
in the XML. An example would be:
<filter name='allow-arpxyz' chain='arp-xyz' priority='200'>
[...]
</filter>
The permitted values for priorities are [-1000, 1000].
By setting the priority of a chain the order in which it is accessed
from the interface root chain can be influenced.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Berger <stefanb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Use the name of the chain rather than its type index (enum).
This pushes the later enablement of chains with user-given names
into the XML parser. For now we still only allow those names that
are well known ('root', 'arp', 'rarp', 'ipv4' and 'ipv6').
Signed-off-by: Stefan Berger <stefanb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Use scripts for the renaming and cleaning up of chains. This allows us to get
rid of some of the code that is only capable of renaming and removing chains
whose names are hardcoded.
A shell function 'collect_chains' is introduced that is given the name
of an ebtables chain and then recursively determines the names of all
chains that are accessed from this chain and its sub-chains using 'jumps'.
The resulting list of chain names is then used to delete all the found
chains by first flushing and then deleting them.
The same function is also used for renaming temporary filters to their final
names.
I tested this with the bash and dash as script interpreters.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Berger <stefanb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Use the previously introduced chain priorities to sort the chains for access
from an interface's 'root' table and have them created in the proper order.
This gets rid of a lot of code that was previously creating the chains in a
more hardcoded way.
To determine what protocol a filter is used for evaluation do prefix-
matching, i.e., the filter 'arp' is used to filter for the 'arp' protocol,
'ipv4' for the 'ipv4' protocol and 'arp-xyz' will also be used to filter
for the 'arp' protocol following the prefix 'arp' in its name.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Berger <stefanb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
For better handling of the sorting of chains introduce an internally used
priority. Use a lookup table to store the priorities. For now their actual
values do not matter just that the values cause the chains to be properly
sorted through changes in the following patches. However, the values are
chosen as negative so that once they are sorted along with filtering rules
(whose priority may only be positive for now) they will always be instantiated
before them (lower values cause instantiation before higher values). This
is done to maintain backwards compatibility.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Berger <stefanb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Add a function to the virHashTable for getting an array of the hash table's
key-value pairs and have the keys (optionally) sorted.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Berger <stefanb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Support creation of macvlan devices for LXC containers. Do not
allow setting of bandwidth controls or vport profiles due to the
complication that there is no host side visible device to work
with.
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c: Support type=direct interfaces
Update virNetDevMacVLanCreateWithVPortProfile to allow creation
of plain macvlan devices, as well as macvtap devices. The former
is useful for LXC containers
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c: Explicitly request a macvtap device
* src/util/virnetdevmacvlan.c, src/util/virnetdevmacvlan.h: Add
new flag to allow switching between macvlan and macvtap
creation
The current lxcSetupInterfaces() method directly performs setup
of the bridge devices. Since it will shortly need to also create
macvlan devices, move the bridge related code into a separate
method
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c: Split lxcSetupInterfaces() to create a
new lxcSetupInterfaceBridge()
The virDomainNetGetActualBridgeName and virDomainNetGetActualDirectDev
methods both return strings that point to data in the virDomainDefPtr
struct, and should therefore not be freed. The return values should
thus be 'const char *' not 'char *'.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c, src/conf/domain_conf.h: Mark const
* src/network/bridge_driver.c: Update to use a const char *
Move the ifaceMacvtapLinkDump and ifaceGetNthParent functions
into virnetdevvportprofile.c since they are specific to that
code. This avoids polluting the headers with the Linux specific
netlink data types
* src/util/interface.c, src/util/interface.h: Move
ifaceMacvtapLinkDump and ifaceGetNthParent functions and delete
remaining file
* src/util/virnetdevvportprofile.c: Add ifaceMacvtapLinkDump
and ifaceGetNthParent functions
* src/network/bridge_driver.c, src/nwfilter/nwfilter_gentech_driver.c,
src/nwfilter/nwfilter_learnipaddr.c, src/util/virnetdevmacvlan.c:
Remove include of interface.h
Rename ifaceIsVirtualFunction to virNetDevIsVirtualFunction,
ifaceGetVirtualFunctionIndex to virNetDevGetVirtualFunctionIndex
and ifaceGetPhysicalFunction to virNetDevGetPhysicalFunction
* src/util/interface.c, src/util/interface.h: Rename APIs
* src/util/virnetdevvportprofile.c: Update for API rename
Rename the ifaceCheck method to virNetDevValidateConfig and change
so that it always raises an error and returns -1 on error.
* src/util/interface.c, src/util/interface.h: Rename ifaceCheck
to virNetDevValidateConfig
* src/nwfilter/nwfilter_gentech_driver.c,
src/nwfilter/nwfilter_learnipaddr.c: Update for API rename
To match up with the existing virNetDevSetIPv4Address, rename
ifaceGetIPAddress to virNetDevGetIPv4Address
* util/interface.h, util/interface.c: Rename API
* network/bridge_driver.c: Update for API rename
Rename the ifaceGetIndex method to virNetDevGetIndex and
ifaceGetVlanID to virNetDevGetVLanID. Also change the error
reporting behaviour to always raise errors and return -1 on
failure
* util/interface.c, util/interface.h: Rename ifaceGetIndex
and ifaceGetVLAN
* nwfilter/nwfilter_gentech_driver.c, nwfilter/nwfilter_learnipaddr.c,
nwfilter/nwfilter_learnipaddr.c, util/virnetdevvportprofile.c: Update
for API renames and error handling changes
Move virNetDevReplaceMacAddress and virNetDevRestoreMacAddress
to the virnetdev.c file where they naturally belong
* util/interface.c, util/interface.h: Remove
virNetDevReplaceMacAddress and virNetDevRestoreMacAddress
* util/virnetdev.c, util/virnetdev.h: Add
virNetDevReplaceMacAddress and virNetDevRestoreMacAddress
Rename ifaceReplaceMacAddress to virNetDevReplaceMacAddress
and ifaceRestoreMacAddress to virNetDevRestoreMacAddress.
* util/interface.c, util/interface.h, util/virnetdevmacvlan.c:
Rename APIs
Move the low level macvlan creation APIs into the
virnetdevmacvlan.c file where they more naturally
belong
* util/interface.c, util/interface.h: Remove virNetDevMacVLanCreate
and virNetDevMacVLanDelete
* util/virnetdevmacvlan.c, util/virnetdevmacvlan.h: Add
virNetDevMacVLanCreate and virNetDevMacVLanDelete
Rename ifaceMacvtapLinkAdd to virNetDevMacVLanCreate and
ifaceLinkDel to virNetDevMacVLanDelete. Strictly speaking
the latter isn't restricted to macvlan devices, but that's
the only use libvirt has for it.
* util/interface.c, util/interface.h,
util/virnetdevmacvlan.c: Rename APIs
Rename virNetDevMacVLanCreate to virNetDevMacVLanCreateWithVPortProfile
and virNetDevMacVLanDelete to virNetDevMacVLanDeleteWithVPortProfile
To make way for renaming the other macvlan creation APIs in
interface.c
* util/virnetdevmacvlan.c, util/virnetdevmacvlan.h,
qemu/qemu_command.c, qemu/qemu_hotplug.c, qemu/qemu_process.c:
Rename APIs
Rename the macvtap.c file to virnetdevmacvlan.c to reflect its
functionality. Move the port profile association code out into
virnetdevvportprofile.c. Make the APIs available unconditionally
to callers
* src/util/macvtap.h: rename to src/util/virnetdevmacvlan.h,
* src/util/macvtap.c: rename to src/util/virnetdevmacvlan.c
* src/util/virnetdevvportprofile.c, src/util/virnetdevvportprofile.h:
Pull in vport association code
* src/Makefile.am, src/conf/domain_conf.h, src/qemu/qemu_conf.c,
src/qemu/qemu_conf.h, src/qemu/qemu_driver.c: Update include
paths & remove conditional compilation
In preparation for code re-organization, rename the Macvtap
management APIs to have the following patterns
virNetDevMacVLanXXXXX - macvlan/macvtap interface management
virNetDevVPortProfileXXXX - virtual port profile management
* src/util/macvtap.c, src/util/macvtap.h: Rename APIs
* src/conf/domain_conf.c, src/network/bridge_driver.c,
src/qemu/qemu_command.c, src/qemu/qemu_command.h,
src/qemu/qemu_driver.c, src/qemu/qemu_hotplug.c,
src/qemu/qemu_migration.c, src/qemu/qemu_process.c,
src/qemu/qemu_process.h: Update for renamed APIs
Add routines to generate -numa QEMU command line option based on
<numa> ... </numa> XML specifications.
Signed-off-by: Bharata B Rao <bharata@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
This patch adds XML definitions for guest NUMA specification and contains
routines to parse the same. The guest NUMA specification looks like this:
<cpu>
...
<topology sockets='2' cores='4' threads='2'/>
<numa>
<cell cpus='0-7' memory='512000'/>
<cell cpus='8-15' memory='512000'/>
</numa>
...
</cpu>
Signed-off-by: Bharata B Rao <bharata@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
For whatever reason, the kernel allows you to create a regular
file named /dev/sdc.12345; although this file will disappear the
next time devtmpfs is remounted. If you let libvirt generate
the name of the external snapshot for a disk image originally
using the block device /dev/sdc, then the domain will be rendered
unbootable once the qcow2 file is lost on the next devtmpfs
remount. In this case, the user should have used 'virsh
snapshot-create --xmlfile' or 'virsh snapshot-create-as --diskspec'
to specify the name for the qcow2 file in a sane location, rather
than relying on libvirt generating a name that is most likely to
be wrong. We can help avoid naive mistakes by enforcing that
the user provide the external name for any backing file that is
not a regular file.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainSnapshotAlignDisks): Only
generate names if backing file exists as regular file.
Reported by MATSUDA Daiki.
I missed adding virNetServerGetDBusConn() to libvirtd_private.syms
in commit b8adfcc6, which didn't cause a problem in 0.9.6 but
results in this build error in 0.9.7
libvirtd-remote.o: In function `remoteDispatchAuthPolkit':
remote.c:(.text+0x188dd): undefined reference to `virNetServerGetDBusConn'
Due to the asynchronous nature of streams, we might continue to
receive some stream packets from the server even after we have
shutdown the stream on the client side. These should be discarded
silently, rather than raising an error in the RPC layer.
* src/rpc/virnetclient.c: Discard stream data silently
Add a new virNetClientSendNonBlock which returns 2 on
full send, 1 on partial send, 0 on no send, -1 on error
If a partial send occurs, then a subsequent call to any
of the virNetClientSend* APIs will finish any outstanding
I/O.
TODO: the virNetClientEvent event handler could be used
to speed up completion of partial sends if an event loop
is present.
* src/rpc/virnetsocket.h, src/rpc/virnetsocket.c: Add new
virNetSocketHasPendingData() API to test for cached
data pending send.
* src/rpc/virnetclient.c, src/rpc/virnetclient.h: Add new
virNetClientSendNonBlock() API to send non-blocking API
Stop multiplexing virNetClientSend for two different purposes,
instead add virNetClientSendWithReply and virNetClientSendNoReply
* src/rpc/virnetclient.c, src/rpc/virnetclient.h: Replace
virNetClientSend with virNetClientSendWithReply and
virNetClientSendNoReply
* src/rpc/virnetclientprogram.c, src/rpc/virnetclientstream.c:
Update for new API names
Remove some duplication by pulling the code for passing the
buck out into a helper method
* src/rpc/virnetclient.c: Introduce virNetClientIOEventLoopPassTheBuck
Instead of inferring whether the buck is held from the waitDispatch
pointer, use an explicit 'bool haveTheBuck' field
* src/rpc/virnetclient.c: Explicitly track the buck
Directly messing around with the linked list is potentially
dangerous. Introduce some helper APIs to deal with list
manipulating the list
* src/rpc/virnetclient.c: Create linked list handlers
This improves the support for qemu rbd devices by adding support for a few
key features (e.g., authentication) and cleaning up the way in which
rbd configuration options are passed to qemu.
An <auth> member of the disk source xml specifies how librbd should
authenticate. The username attribute is the Ceph/RBD user to authenticate as.
The usage or uuid attributes specify which secret to use. Usage is an
arbitrary identifier local to libvirt.
The old RBD support relied on setting an environment variable to
communicate information to qemu/librbd. Instead, pass those options
explicitly to qemu. Update the qemu argument parsing and tests
accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Sage Weil <sage@newdream.net>
Signed-off-by: Josh Durgin <josh.durgin@dreamhost.com>
Replacing the strchr call with two variables through a strstr call.
Calling strchr with two variables triggers a gcc 4.3/4.4
bug when used in combination with -Wlogical-op and at least -O1.
The ifaceSetMac and ifaceGetMac APIs duplicate the functionality
of the virNetDevSetMAC and virNetDevGetMAC APIs, but returning
errno's instead of raising errors.
* src/util/interface.c, src/util/interface.h: Remove
ifaceSetMac and ifaceGetMac APIs, adjusting callers
for new error behaviour
The ifaceUp, ifaceDown, ifaceCtrl & ifaceIsUp APIs can be replaced
with calls to virNetDevSetOnline and virNetDevIsOnline
* src/util/interface.c, src/util/interface.h: Delete ifaceUp,
ifaceDown, ifaceCtrl & ifaceIsUp
* src/nwfilter/nwfilter_gentech_driver.c, src/util/macvtap.c:
Update to use virNetDevSetOnline and virNetDevIsOnline
Move the virNetDevSetName and virNetDevSetNamespace APIs out
of LXC's veth.c and into virnetdev.c.
Move the remaining content of the file to src/util/virnetdevveth.c
* src/lxc/veth.c: Rename to src/util/virnetdevveth.c
* src/lxc/veth.h: Rename to src/util/virnetdevveth.h
* src/util/virnetdev.c, src/util/virnetdev.h: Add
virNetDevSetName and virNetDevSetNamespace
* src/lxc/lxc_container.c, src/lxc/lxc_controller.c,
src/lxc/lxc_driver.c: Update include paths
The src/lxc/veth.c file contains APIs for managing veth devices,
but some of the APIs duplicate stuff from src/util/virnetdev.h.
Delete thed duplicate APIs and rename the remaining ones to
follow virNetDevVethXXXX
* src/lxc/veth.c, src/lxc/veth.h: Rename APIs & delete duplicates
* src/lxc/lxc_container.c, src/lxc/lxc_controller.c,
src/lxc/lxc_driver.c: Update for API renaming
The src/util/network.c file is a dumping ground for many different
APIs. Split it up into 5 pieces, along functional lines
- src/util/virnetdevbandwidth.c: virNetDevBandwidth type & helper APIs
- src/util/virnetdevvportprofile.c: virNetDevVPortProfile type & helper APIs
- src/util/virsocketaddr.c: virSocketAddr and APIs
- src/conf/netdev_bandwidth_conf.c: XML parsing / formatting
for virNetDevBandwidth
- src/conf/netdev_vport_profile_conf.c: XML parsing / formatting
for virNetDevVPortProfile
* src/util/network.c, src/util/network.h: Split into 5 pieces
* src/conf/netdev_bandwidth_conf.c, src/conf/netdev_bandwidth_conf.h,
src/conf/netdev_vport_profile_conf.c, src/conf/netdev_vport_profile_conf.h,
src/util/virnetdevbandwidth.c, src/util/virnetdevbandwidth.h,
src/util/virnetdevvportprofile.c, src/util/virnetdevvportprofile.h,
src/util/virsocketaddr.c, src/util/virsocketaddr.h: New pieces
* daemon/libvirtd.h, daemon/remote.c, src/conf/domain_conf.c,
src/conf/domain_conf.h, src/conf/network_conf.c,
src/conf/network_conf.h, src/conf/nwfilter_conf.h,
src/esx/esx_util.h, src/network/bridge_driver.c,
src/qemu/qemu_conf.c, src/rpc/virnetsocket.c,
src/rpc/virnetsocket.h, src/util/dnsmasq.h, src/util/interface.h,
src/util/iptables.h, src/util/macvtap.c, src/util/macvtap.h,
src/util/virnetdev.h, src/util/virnetdevtap.c,
tools/virsh.c: Update include files
The virtual port profile parsing/formatting APIs do not
correctly handle unknown profile type strings/numbers.
They behave as a no-op, instead of raising an error
* src/util/network.c, src/util/network.h: Fix error
handling of port profile APIs
* src/conf/domain_conf.c, src/conf/network_conf.c: Update
for API changes
Rename the virVirtualPortProfileParams struct to be
virNetDevVPortProfile, and rename the APIs to match
this prefix.
* src/util/network.c, src/util/network.h: Rename port profile
APIs
* src/conf/domain_conf.c, src/conf/domain_conf.h,
src/conf/network_conf.c, src/conf/network_conf.h,
src/network/bridge_driver.c, src/qemu/qemu_hotplug.c,
src/util/macvtap.c, src/util/macvtap.h: Update for
renamed APIs/structs
Hi
Commit c31d23a787 removed the "conn"
parameter from qemuPhysIfaceConnect(), but it's still used if
WITH_MACVTAP is false. Also, it's still mentioned in the comment
above the function:
/**
* qemuPhysIfaceConnect:
* @def: the definition of the VM (needed by 802.1Qbh and audit)
* @conn: pointer to virConnect object
* @driver: pointer to the qemud_driver
* @net: pointer to he VM's interface description with direct device type
* @qemuCaps: flags for qemu
*
* Returns a filedescriptor on success or -1 in case of error.
*/
int
qemuPhysIfaceConnect(virDomainDefPtr def,
struct qemud_driver *driver,
virDomainNetDefPtr net,
virBitmapPtr qemuCaps,
enum virVMOperationType vmop)
{
int rc;
#if WITH_MACVTAP
[...]
#else
(void)def;
(void)conn;
(void)net;
(void)qemuCaps;
(void)driver;
(void)vmop;
qemuReportError(VIR_ERR_INTERNAL_ERROR,
"%s", _("No support for macvtap device"));
rc = -1;
#endif
return rc;
}
--
Michael Wood <esiotrot@gmail.com>
From f4fc43b4111a4c099395c55902e497b8965e2b53 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Michael Wood <esiotrot@gmail.com>
Date: Sat, 12 Nov 2011 13:37:53 +0200
Subject: [PATCH] Fix build without MACVTAP.
which would blow away all volumes. Honor VIR_STORAGE_POOL_BUILD_OVERWRITE
to force a rebuild.
This was caught by libvirt-tck's storage/110-disk-pool.t.
Qemu will be the first driver to make use of a typed string in the
next round of additions. Separate out the trivial addition.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemudSupportsFeature): Advertise feature.
(qemuDomainGetBlkioParameters, qemuDomainGetMemoryParameters)
(qemuGetSchedulerParametersFlags, qemudDomainBlockStatsFlags):
Allow typed strings flag where trivially supported.
Send and receive string typed parameters across RPC. This also
completes the back-compat mentioned in the previous patch - the
only time we have an older client talking to a newer server is
if RPC is in use, so filtering out strings during RPC prevents
returning an unknown type to the older client.
* src/remote/remote_protocol.x (remote_typed_param_value): Add
another union value.
* daemon/remote.c (remoteDeserializeTypedParameters): Handle
strings on rpc.
(remoteSerializeTypedParameters): Likewise; plus filter out
strings when replying to older clients. Adjust callers.
* src/remote/remote_driver.c (remoteFreeTypedParameters)
(remoteSerializeTypedParameters)
(remoteDeserializeTypedParameters): Handle strings on rpc.
* src/rpc/gendispatch.pl: Properly clean up typed arrays.
* src/remote_protocol-structs: Update.
Based on an initial patch by Hu Tao, with feedback from
Daniel P. Berrange.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
This allows strings to be transported between client and server
in the context of name-type-value virTypedParameter functions.
For compatibility,
o new clients will not send strings to old servers, based on
a feature check
o new servers will not send strings to old clients without the
flag VIR_TYPED_PARAM_STRING_OKAY; this will be enforced at
the RPC layer in the next patch, so that drivers need not
worry about it in general. The one exception is that
virDomainGetSchedulerParameters lacks a flags argument, so
it must not return a string; drivers that forward that
function on to virDomainGetSchedulerParametersFlags will
have to pay attention to the flag.
o the flag VIR_TYPED_PARAM_STRING_OKAY is set automatically,
based on a feature check (so far, no driver implements it),
so clients do not have to worry about it
Future patches can then enable the feature on a per-driver basis.
This patch also ensures that drivers can blindly strdup() field
names (previously, a malicious client could stuff 80 non-NUL bytes
into field and cause a read overrun).
* src/libvirt_internal.h (VIR_DRV_FEATURE_TYPED_PARAM_STRING): New
driver feature.
* src/libvirt.c (virTypedParameterValidateSet)
(virTypedParameterSanitizeGet): New helper functions.
(virDomainSetMemoryParameters, virDomainSetBlkioParameters)
(virDomainSetSchedulerParameters)
(virDomainSetSchedulerParametersFlags)
(virDomainGetMemoryParameters, virDomainGetBlkioParameters)
(virDomainGetSchedulerParameters)
(virDomainGetSchedulerParametersFlags, virDomainBlockStatsFlags):
Use them.
* src/util/util.h (virTypedParameterArrayClear): New helper
function.
* src/util/util.c (virTypedParameterArrayClear): Implement it.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (util.h): Export it.
Based on an initial patch by Hu Tao, with feedback from
Daniel P. Berrange.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Add virnetdev.h,virnetdevbridge.h,virnetdevtap.h to private symbols,
since debian linker no longer allows transitive link resolution
Signed-off-by: Eli Qiao <taget@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
This reverts commit ef1065cf5ac; see also this bug report:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=751900
In qemu 0.15.1 and earlier, during migration to file, the
qemu_savevm_state_begin and qemu_savevm_state_iterate methods
will both process as much migration data as possible until either
1. The file descriptor returns EAGAIN
2. The bandwidth rate limit is reached
If we set the rate limit to ULONG_MAX, test 2 never becomes true. We're
passing a plain file descriptor to QEMU and POSIX does not support EAGAIN on
regular files / block devices, so test 1 never becomes true either.
In the 'virsh save --bypass-cache' case, we pass a pipe instead of a
regular fd, but using a pipe adds I/O overhead, so always passing a
pipe just so qemu can see EAGAIN doesn't seem nice.
The ultimate fix needs to come from qemu - background migration must
respect asynchronous abort requests, or else periodically return
control to the main handling loop without an EAGAIN and without
waiting to hit an insanely large amount of data. But until a
version of qemu is fixed to support "unlimited" data rates while
still allowing cancellation, the best we can do is avoid the
automatic use of unlimited rates from within libvirt (users can
still explicitly change the migration rates, if they are aware that
they are giving up the ability to cancel a job).
Reverting the lone use of QEMU_DOMAIN_FILE_MIG_BANDWIDTH_MAX is
the simplest patch; this slows migration back down to a default
32M/sec cap, but also ensures that the main qemu processing loop
will still be responsive to cancellation requests. Hopefully
upstream qemu will provide us a means of safely using unlimited
speed, including a runtime probe of that capability.
* src/qemu/qemu_migration.c (qemuMigrationToFile): Revert attempt
to use unlimited migration bandwidth when migrating to file.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Veillard <veillard@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
steps to reproduce:
1. having a network xml file(named default.xml) like this one:
<network>
<name>default</name>
<uuid>c5322c4c-81d0-4985-a363-ad6389780d89</uuid>
<bridge name="virbr0" />
<forward/>
<ip address="192.168.122.1" netmask="255.255.255.0">
<dhcp>
<range start="192.168.122.2" end="192.168.122.254" />
</dhcp>
</ip>
</network>
in /etc/libvirt/qemu/networks/, and mark it as autostart:
$ ls -l /etc/libvirt/qemu/networks/autostart
total 0
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 14 Oct 12 14:02 default.xml -> ../default.xml
2. start libvirtd and the device virbr0 is not automatically up.
The reason is that the function virNetDevExists is now returns 1 if
the device exists, comparing to the former one returns 0 if the device
exists. But with only this fix will cause a segmentation fault(the same
steps as above) that is fixed by the second chunk of code.
CC libvirt_driver_xenapi_la-xenapi_driver.lo
xenapi/xenapi_driver.c: In function 'xenapiDomainGetVcpus':
xenapi/xenapi_driver.c:1209:21: error: variable 'cpus' set but not used [-Werror=unused-but-set-variable]
* src/xenapi/xenapi_driver.c (xenapiDomainGetVcpus): Silence
compiler warning.
It's not worth even worrying about a temporary file, unless we
ever expect the script to exceed maximum command-line argument
length limits.
* src/nwfilter/nwfilter_ebiptables_driver.c (ebiptablesExecCLI):
Run the commands as an argument to /bin/sh, rather than worrying
about a temporary file.
(ebiptablesWriteToTempFile): Delete unused function.
If /tmp is mounted with the noexec flag (common on security-conscious
systems), then nwfilter will fail to initialize, because we cannot
run any temporary script via virRun("/tmp/script"); but we _can_
use "/bin/sh /tmp/script". For that matter, using /tmp risks collisions
with other unrelated programs; we already have /var/run/libvirt as a
dedicated temporary directory for use by libvirt.
* src/nwfilter/nwfilter_ebiptables_driver.c
(ebiptablesWriteToTempFile): Use internal directory, not /tmp;
drop attempts to make script executable; and detect close error.
(ebiptablesExecCLI): Switch to virCommand, and invoke the shell to
read the script, rather than requiring an executable script.
The socket address APIs in src/util/network.h either take the
form virSocketAddrXXX, virSocketXXX or virSocketXXXAddr.
Sanitize this so everything is virSocketAddrXXXX, and ensure
that the virSocketAddr parameter is always the first one.
* src/util/network.c, src/util/network.h: Santize socket
address API naming
* src/conf/domain_conf.c, src/conf/network_conf.c,
src/conf/nwfilter_conf.c, src/network/bridge_driver.c,
src/nwfilter/nwfilter_ebiptables_driver.c,
src/nwfilter/nwfilter_learnipaddr.c,
src/qemu/qemu_command.c, src/rpc/virnetsocket.c,
src/util/dnsmasq.c, src/util/iptables.c,
src/util/virnetdev.c, src/vbox/vbox_tmpl.c: Update for
API renaming
Following the renaming of the bridge management APIs, we can now
split the source file into 3 corresponding pieces
* src/util/virnetdev.c: APIs for any type of network interface
* src/util/virnetdevbridge.c: APIs for bridge interfaces
* src/util/virnetdevtap.c: APIs for TAP interfaces
* src/util/virnetdev.c, src/util/virnetdev.h,
src/util/virnetdevbridge.c, src/util/virnetdevbridge.h,
src/util/virnetdevtap.c, src/util/virnetdevtap.h: Copied
from bridge.{c,h}
* src/util/bridge.c, src/util/bridge.h: Split into 3 pieces
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c, src/network/bridge_driver.c,
src/openvz/openvz_driver.c, src/qemu/qemu_command.c,
src/qemu/qemu_conf.h, src/uml/uml_conf.c, src/uml/uml_conf.h,
src/uml/uml_driver.c: Update #include directives
Convert the virNetDevBridgeSetSTP and virNetDevBridgeSetSTPDelay
to use ioctls instead of spawning brctl.
Implement the virNetDevBridgeGetSTP and virNetDevBridgeGetSTPDelay
methods which were declared in the header but never existed
* src/util/bridge.c: Convert to use bridge ioctls instead of brctl
The MTU management APIs are useful to other code inside libvirt,
so should be exposed as non-static APIs.
* src/util/bridge.c, src/util/bridge.h: Expose virNetDevSetMTU,
virNetDevSetMTUFromDevice & virNetDevGetMTU
The existing brXXX APIs in src/util/bridge.h are renamed to
follow one of three different conventions
- virNetDevXXX - operations for any type of interface
- virNetDevBridgeXXX - operations for bridge interfaces
- virNetDevTapXXX - operations for tap interfaces
* src/util/bridge.h, src/util/bridge.c: Rename all APIs
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c, src/network/bridge_driver.c,
src/qemu/qemu_command.c, src/uml/uml_conf.c,
src/uml/uml_driver.c: Update for API renaming