To enable the CPU XML from the capabilities to be pasted directly
into the guest XML with no editing, pick a sensible default for
match and feature policy. The CPU match will be exact and the
feature policy will be require. This should ensure safety for
migration and give DWIM semantics for users
* src/conf/cpu_conf.c: Default to exact match and require policy
* docs/formatdomain.html.in: Document new defaults
According to API documentation virDomain{At,De}tachDevice calls are
supposed to only work on active guests for device hotplug. For anything
beyond that, their *Flags variants have to be used.
Despite the variant which was acked on libvirt mailing list
(https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2010-January/msg00385.html)
commit ed9c14a7ef (by Jim Fehlig)
introduced automagic behavior of these API calls for xen driver. Since
January, these calls always change persistent configuration of a guest
and if the guest is currently active, they also hot(un)plug the device.
That change didn't follow API documentation and also broke device
hot(un)plug for older xend implementations which do not support changing
persistent configuration of a guest and hot(un)plugging in one step.
This patch should not break anything for active guests. On the other
hand, changing inactive guests is not supported any more.
When a user calls to virDomain{Attach,Detach,Update}DeviceFlags() with
flags == VIR_DOMAIN_DEVICE_MODIFY_LIVE on an inactive guest running on
an old Xen hypervisor (such as RHEL-5) xend_internal driver reports:
Xend version does not support modifying persistent config
which is pretty confusing since no-one requested to modify persistent
config.
In this patch I am extending the rule instantiator to create the state
match according to the state attribute in the XML. Only one iptables
rule in the incoming or outgoing direction will be created for a rule
in direction 'in' or 'out' respectively. A rule in direction 'inout' does
get iptables rules in both directions.
The xm internal xen driver only supports disk and network devices to be
added to a guest. On an attempt to attach any other device the xm driver
used VIR_ERR_XML_ERROR which resulted in a completely bogus error
message:
error: Failed to attach device from pci.xml
error: XML description for unknown device is not well formed or invalid
Since version 4.1 ESX(i) can expose virtual serial devices over TCP.
Add support in the VMX handling code for this, add test cases to cover
it and add links to some documentation.
ESX supports two additional protocols: TELNETS and TLS. Add them to
the list of serial-over-TCP protocols.
The <vcpu cpuset=...> attribute has been available since commit
e193b5dd, but without documentation or RNG validation.
* docs/schemas/domain.rng (vcpu): Further validate cpuset.
* docs/formatdomain.html.in: Document it.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c: Fix typos.
Description: Implement AppArmorSetSecurityHostdevLabel() and
AppArmorRestoreSecurityHostdevLabel() for hostdev and pcidev attach.
virt-aa-helper also has to be adjusted because *FileIterate() is used for pci
and usb devices and the corresponding XML for hot attached hostdev and pcidev
is not in the XML passed to virt-aa-helper. The new '-F filename' option is
added to append a rule to the profile as opposed to the existing '-f
filename', which rewrites the libvirt-<uuid>.files file anew. This new '-F'
option will append a rule to an existing libvirt-<uuid>.files if it exists,
otherwise it acts the same as '-f'.
load_profile() and reload_profile() have been adjusted to add an 'append'
argument, which when true will use '-F' instead of '-f' when executing
virt-aa-helper.
All existing calls to load_profile() and reload_profile() have been adjusted
to use the old behavior (ie append==false) except AppArmorSetSavedStateLabel()
where it made sense to use the new behavior.
This patch also adds tests for '-F'.
Bug-Ubuntu: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/libvirt/+bug/640993
In this patch I am extending the rule instantiator to create the comment
node where supported, which is the case for iptables and ip6tables.
Since commands are written in the format
cmd='iptables ...-m comment --comment \"\" '
certain characters ('`) in the comment need to be escaped to
prevent comments from becoming commands themselves or cause other
forms of (bash) substitutions. I have tested this with various input and in
my tests the input made it straight into the comment. A test case for TCK
will be provided separately that tests this.
When creating a new gust, the function phypBuildLpar() was not
checking for NULL values
src/phyp/phyp_driver.c: check the definition arguments to avoid a segmentation
fault in phypBuildLpar()
This reverses commit 04c3704, which added a define to nwfilter to
allow libvirtd compilation on Mac OS X. Stefan Bergers commit, 2e7294d,
is the proper solution, removing the requirement for nwfilter on non-Linux.
The patch below reports a warning in the log if the generated ip(6)tables rules would not be effective due to the proc filesystem entries
/proc/sys/net/bridge/bridge-nf-call-iptables
/proc/sys/net/bridge/bridge-nf-call-ip6tables
containing a '0'. The warning tells the user what to do. I am rate-limiting the warning message to appear only every 10 seconds.
Description: Check for VIR_DOMAIN_CHR_TYPE in serial ports and add 'rw' for
defined serial ports, parallel ports and channels
Bug-Ubuntu: LP: #578527, LP: #609055
pciFindStubDriver currently returns 0 in one of the error cases.
While it's correct...NULL is more readable.
Signed-off-by: Chris Wright <chrisw@redhat.com>
The addrToString methods were not coping with UNIX domain sockets
which have no normal host+port address. Hardcode special handling
for these so that SASL routines can work over UNIX sockets. Also
fix up SSF logic in remote client so that it presumes that a UNIX
socket is secure
* daemon/remote.c: Fix addrToString for UNIX sockets.
* src/remote/remote_driver.c: Fix addrToString for UNIX sockets
and fix SSF logic to work for TLS + UNIX sockets in the same
manner
When nwfilter support was added to UML, I didn't realise the UML driver
needed instrumentation to make updating nwfilters on the fly work. This
patch adds this bit of glue.
Signed-off-by: Soren Hansen <soren@linux2go.dk>
* src/Makefile.am (libvirt.def, libvirt_qemu.def): '\}' and '\t'
are not required by POSIX. Use '}' and literal tab instead.
(install-data-local): Avoid sed -i.
* tests/read-bufsiz: Likewise.
Reported by Mitchell Hashimoto.
The current code will go into an infinite loop if the printf generated
string is >= 1000, AND exactly 1 character smaller than the amount of free
space in the buffer. When this happens, we are dropped into the loop body,
but nothing will actually change, because count == (buf->size - buf->use - 1),
and virBufferGrow returns unchanged if count < (buf->size - buf->use)
Fix this by removing the '- 1' bit from 'size'. The *nprintf functions handle
the NULL byte for us anyways, so we shouldn't need to manually accommodate
for it.
Here's a bug where we are actually hitting this issue:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=602772
v2: Eric's improvements: while -> if (), remove extra va_list variable,
make sure we report buffer error if snprintf fails
v3: Add tests/virbuftest which reproduces the infinite loop before this
patch, works correctly after
Apparently the xen block device statistics moved from
"/sys/devices/xen-backend/vbd-%d-%d/statistics/%s"
to
"/sys/bus/xen-backend/devices/vbd-%d-%d/statistics/%s"
* src/xen/block_stats.c: try the extra path in case of failure to
find the statistics in /sys
A QEMU guest can have upto VIR_DOMAIN_BOOT_LAST boot entries
defined. When building the QEMU arg, each entry takes a
single byte. This means the array must be declared to be
VIR_DOMAIN_BOOT_LAST+1 bytes in length to allow for the
trailing null
* src/qemu/qemu_conf.c: Fix off-by-1 boot arg array size
For static-only DHCP, i.e. with no <range> but at least one <host>
element within <dhcp> element, we have to add "--dhcp-range IP,static"
option to dnsmasq to actually enable the service. Without this option,
dnsmasq will not respond to DHCP requests.
QMP in QEMU 0.13 has been fixed to enforce type correctness,
this means that boolean types must be true or false, not
integers.
Signed-off-by: Luiz Capitulino <lcapitulino@redhat.com>
QMP in QEMU 0.13 has been fixed to enforce type correctness,
this means that boolean types must be true or false, not
integers.
Signed-off-by: Luiz Capitulino <lcapitulino@redhat.com>
Before this commit SessionIsActive was not used because ESX(i)
doesn't implement it. vCenter supports SessionIsActive, so use
it here, but keep the fall back mechanism for ESX(i) and GSX.
QueryVirtualDiskUuid is only available on an ESX(i) server. vCenter
returns an NotImplemented fault and a GSX server is missing the
VirtualDiskManager completely. Therefore only use QueryVirtualDiskUuid
with an ESX(i) server and fall back to path as storage volume key for
vCenter and GSX server.
VirtualDisks are .vmdk file based. Other files in a datastore
like .iso or .flp files don't have a UUID attached, fall back
to the path as key for them.
This patch adds support for ethernet interface type to OpenVZ domains
as stated in this previous message: http://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-
list/2010-July/msg00658.html
Instead of splitting the path part of a datastore path into
directory and file name, keep this in one piece. An example:
"[datastore] directory/file"
was split into this before:
datastoreName = "datastore"
directoryName = "directory"
fileName = "file"
Now it's split into this:
datastoreName = "datastore"
directoryName = "directory"
directoryAndFileName = "directory/file"
This simplifies code using esxUtil_ParseDatastorePath, because
directoryAndFileName is used more often than fileName. Also the
old approach expected the datastore path to reference an actual
file, but this isn't always correct, especially when listing
volumes. In that case esxUtil_ParseDatastorePath is used to parse
a path that references a directory. This fails for a vpx://
connection because the vCenter returns directory paths with a
trailing '/'. The new approach is robust against this and the
actual decision if the datastore path should reference a file or
a directory is up to the caller of esxUtil_ParseDatastorePath.
Update the tests accordingly.