The gid value passed to devpts has to be translated by hand as
virLXCControllerSetupDevPTS() is called before setting up the user
and group mappings.
Otherwise devpts will use an unmapped gid and openpty()
will fail within containers.
Linux kernel commit 23adbe12
("fs,userns: Change inode_capable to capable_wrt_inode_uidgid")
uncovered that issue.
Signed-off-by: Richard Weinberger <richard@nod.at>
Signed-off-by: Ján Tomko <jtomko@redhat.com>
This patch changes the setmaxmem function to support the '--live',
'--config', and '--current' flags by revectoring the code through
the setmem function using the VIR_DOMAIN_MEM_MAXIMUM flag. The
setmem code is refactored to handle both cases depending on the flag.
The changed maxmem code for the MEM_MAXIMUM path will not allow
modification to the memory values of an active guest unless the --config
switch is used.
Signed-off-by: Chen Hanxiao <chenhanxiao@cn.fujitsu.com>
Otherwise this beautiful error would be overwritten when
the function is called with a really high rate number:
2014-07-28 12:51:47.920+0000: 2304: error : virCommandWait:2399 :
internal error: Child process (/sbin/tc class add dev vnet0 parent 1:
classid 1:1 htb rate 4294968kbps) unexpected exit status 1: Illegal "rate"
Usage: ... qdisc add ... htb [default N] [r2q N]
default minor id of class to which unclassified packets are sent {0}
r2q DRR quantums are computed as rate in Bps/r2q {10}
debug string of 16 numbers each 0-3 {0}
... class add ... htb rate R1 [burst B1] [mpu B] [overhead O]
[prio P] [slot S] [pslot PS]
[ceil R2] [cburst B2] [mtu MTU] [quantum Q]
rate rate allocated to this class (class can still borrow)
burst max bytes burst which can be accumulated during idle period {computed}
mpu minimum packet size used in rate computations
overhead per-packet size overhead used in rate computations
linklay adapting to a linklayer e.g. atm
ceil definite upper class rate (no borrows) {rate}
cburst burst but for ceil {computed}
mtu max packet size we create rate map for {1600}
prio priority of leaf; lowe
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1043735
This patch adds back the virDomainDef typedef into domain_conf and
makes all the numatune_conf functions independent of any virDomainDef
definitions.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1122205
Although the edits were changing in-memory XML, it was not flushed
to disk; so unless some other action changes XML, a libvirtd restart
would lose the changed information.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainObjSetMetadata): Add parameter,
to save live status across restarts.
(virDomainSaveXML): Allow for test driver.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h (virDomainObjSetMetadata): Adjust
signature.
* src/bhyve/bhyve_driver.c (bhyveDomainSetMetadata): Adjust caller.
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c (lxcDomainSetMetadata): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainSetMetadata): Likewise.
* src/test/test_driver.c (testDomainSetMetadata): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The patch described above introduced two problems caught by the compiler
and thus breaking the build.
One of the problems was comparison of unsigned with < 0 and the second
one jumped a variable init.
Before:
virsh # dominfo chx3
State: shut off
Max memory: 92160 KiB
Used memory: 92160 KiB
After:
virsh # dominfo container1
State: shut off
Max memory: 92160 KiB
Used memory: 0 KiB
Similar to qemu cases.
Signed-off-by: Chen Hanxiao <chenhanxiao@cn.fujitsu.com>
Added <capabilities> in the <features> section of LXC domains
configuration. This section can contain elements named after the
capabilities like:
<mknod state="on"/>, keep CAP_MKNOD capability
<sys_chroot state="off"/> drop CAP_SYS_CHROOT capability
Users can restrict or give more capabilities than the default using
this mechanism.
kernel commit 7dc5dbc879bd0779924b5132a48b731a0bc04a1e
forbid us doing a fresh mount for sysfs
when enable userns but disable netns.
This patch will create a bind mount in this senario.
Signed-off-by: Chen Hanxiao <chenhanxiao@cn.fujitsu.com>
LXC network devices can now be assigned a custom NIC device name on the
container side. For example, this is configured with:
<interface type='network'>
<source network='default'/>
<guest dev="eth1"/>
</interface>
In this example the network card will appear as eth1 in the guest.
There were numerous places where numatune configuration (and thus
domain config as well) was changed in different ways. On some
places this even resulted in persistent domain definition not to be
stable (it would change with daemon's restart).
In order to uniformly change how numatune config is dealt with, all
the internals are now accessible directly only in numatune_conf.c and
outside this file accessors must be used.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Since there was already public virDomainNumatune*, I changed the
private virNumaTune to match the same, so all the uses are unified and
public API is kept:
s/vir\(Domain\)\?Numa[tT]une/virDomainNumatune/g
then shrunk long lines, and mainly functions, that were created after
that:
sed -i 's/virDomainNumatuneMemPlacementMode/virDomainNumatunePlacement/g'
And to cope with the enum name, I haad to change the constants as
well:
s/VIR_NUMA_TUNE_MEM_PLACEMENT_MODE/VIR_DOMAIN_NUMATUNE_PLACEMENT/g
Last thing I did was at least a little shortening of already long
name:
s/virDomainNumatuneDef/virDomainNumatune/g
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
This patch adds support for the QEMU vhost-user feature to libvirt.
vhost-user enables the communication between a QEMU virtual machine
and other userspace process using the Virtio transport protocol.
It uses a char dev (e.g. Unix socket) for the control plane,
while the data plane based on shared memory.
The XML looks like:
<interface type='vhostuser'>
<mac address='52:54:00:3b:83:1a'/>
<source type='unix' path='/tmp/vhost.sock' mode='server'/>
<model type='virtio'/>
</interface>
Signed-off-by: Michele Paolino <m.paolino@virtualopensystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Rename linuxDomainInterfaceStats to virNetInterfaceStats in order
to allow adding platform specific implementations without
making consumer worrying about specific implementation to be used.
Also, rename util/virstatslinux.c to util/virstats.c so placing
other platform specific implementations into this file don't
look unexpected from the file name.
In lxc, we could not use setmem command
with --config options.
This patch will add support for this.
Signed-off-by: Chen Hanxiao <chenhanxiao@cn.fujitsu.com>
In the future we might need to track state of individual images. Move
the readonly and shared flags to the virStorageSource struct so that we
can keep them in a per-image basis.
For inactive domains, set both current and maximum memory
to the specified 'maximum memory' value.
This matches the behavior of QEMU driver's SetMaxMemory.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1091132
We invoked virCgroupHasController twice for checking
VIR_CGROUP_CONTROLLER_DEVICES
in lxcDomainAttachDeviceDiskLive.
Signed-off-by: Chen Hanxiao <chenhanxiao@cn.fujitsu.com>
Replace:
if (virBufferError(&buf)) {
virBufferFreeAndReset(&buf);
virReportOOMError();
...
}
with:
if (virBufferCheckError(&buf) < 0)
...
This should not be a functional change (unless some callers
misused the virBuffer APIs - a different error would be reported
then)
So far, we only report an error if formatting the siblings bitmap
in NUMA topology fails.
Be consistent and always report error in virCapabilitiesFormatXML.
The comments for lxcDomainCreateXMLWithFiles are out of date. So update them.
And add comments for lxcDomainCreateXML
Signed-off-by: Wang Rui <moon.wangrui@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Yue wenyuan <yuewenyuan@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Fix lxcDomainGetMemoryParameters and lxcDomainGetSchedulerParametersFlags:
virsh -c lxc:/// memtune DOMAIN
error: Unable to get number of memory parameters
error: unsupported flags (0x4) in function lxcDomainGetMemoryParameters
Introduced by commit 399394.
Signed-off-by: Chen Hanxiao <chenhanxiao@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Ján Tomko <jtomko@redhat.com>
I'm going to add functions that will deal with individual image files
rather than whole disks. Rename the security function to make room for
the new one.
For future work we want to get info for not only the free memory
but overall memory size too. That's why the function must have
new signature too.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
As part of the work on backing chains, I'm finding that it would
be easier to directly manipulate chains of pointers (adding a
snapshot merely adjusts pointers to form the correct list) rather
than copy data from one struct to another. This patch converts
domain disk source to be a pointer.
In this patch, the pointer is ALWAYS allocated (thanks in part to
the previous patch forwarding all disk def allocation through a
common point), and all other changse are just mechanical fallout of
the new type; there should be no functional change. It is possible
that we may want to leave the pointer NULL for a cdrom with no
medium in a later patch, but as that requires a closer audit of the
source to ensure we don't fault on a null dereference, I didn't do
it here.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h (_virDomainDiskDef): Change type of src.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c: Adjust all clients.
* src/security/security_selinux.c: Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_domain.c: Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c: Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_conf.c: Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c: Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_migration.c: Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c: Likewise.
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c: Likewise.
* src/lxc/lxc_controller.c: Likewise.
* tests/securityselinuxlabeltest.c: Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The VIR_ENUM_DECL/VIR_ENUM_IMPL helper macros already append 'Type'
to the enum name being converted; it looks silly to have functions
with 'TypeType' in their name. Even though some of our enums have
to have a 'Type' suffix, the corresponding string conversion
functions do not.
* src/conf/secret_conf.h (VIR_ENUM_DECL): Rename virSecretUsageType.
* src/conf/storage_conf.h (VIR_ENUM_DECL): Rename
virStoragePoolAuthType, virStoragePoolSourceAdapterType,
virStoragePartedFsType.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainDiskDefParseXML)
(virDomainFSDefParseXML, virDomainFSDefFormat): Update callers.
* src/conf/secret_conf.c (virSecretDefParseUsage)
(virSecretDefFormatUsage): Likewise.
* src/conf/storage_conf.c (virStoragePoolDefParseAuth)
(virStoragePoolDefParseSource, virStoragePoolSourceFormat):
Likewise.
* src/lxc/lxc_controller.c (virLXCControllerSetupLoopDevices):
Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_backend_disk.c
(virStorageBackendDiskPartFormat): Likewise.
* src/util/virstorageencryption.c (virStorageEncryptionSecretParse)
(virStorageEncryptionSecretFormat): Likewise.
* tools/virsh-secret.c (cmdSecretList): Likewise.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (secret_conf.h, storage_conf.h): Export
corrected names.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
"Freezed" is not an English word.
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c (lxcFreezeContainer): Fix typo.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainSnapshotFSFreeze): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The LXC controller itself needs to mknod the USB device
node in /dev/bus/usb, so we can't block mknod permission
from the cgroup.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The check for a network being active during interface attach was being
done individually in several places (by both the lxc driver and the
qemu driver), but those places were too specific, leading to it *not*
being checked when allocating a connection/device from a macvtap or
hostdev network.
This patch puts a single check in networkAllocateActualDevice(), which
is always called before the any network interface is attached to any
type of domain. It also removes all the other now-redundant checks
from the lxc and qemu drivers.
NB: the following patches are prerequisites for this patch, in the
case that it is backported to any branch:
440beeb network: fix virNetworkObjAssignDef and persistence
8aaa5b6 network: create statedir during driver initialization
b9e9549 network: change location of network state xml files
411c548 network: set macvtap/hostdev networks active if their state
file exists
This fixes:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=880483
Instead of hardcoding LIBEXECDIR as the location of the libvirt_lxc
binary set in the LXC driver capabilities, use virFileFindResource
to optionally find it in the current build directory.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Currently, virCgroupGetPercpuStats is only used by the LXC driver,
filling out the CPUTIME stats. qemuDomainGetPercpuStats does this
and also filles out VCPUTIME stats.
Extend virCgroupGetPercpuStats to also report VCPUTIME stats if
nvcpupids is non-zero. In the LXC driver, we don't have cpupids.
In the QEMU driver, there is at least one cpupid for a running domain,
so the behavior shouldn't change for QEMU either.
Also rename getSumVcpuPercpuStats to virCgroupGetPercpuVcpuSum.
Commit b9dd878f (util: make it easier to grab only regular command exit)
changed the call semantics of virCommandRun() and therefore of virRun()
too. But lxcCheckNetNsSupport() was not updated.
As consequence of this lxcCheckNetNsSupport always failed and broke LXC.
Signed-off-by: Richard Weinberger <richard@nod.at>
Now that we ditched our custom pthread impl for Win32, we can
use PTHREAD_MUTEX_INITIALIZER for static mutexes. This avoids
the need to use a virOnce one-time global initializer in a
number of places.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Since it is an abbreviation, USB should always be fully
capitalized or full lower case, never Usb.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Every caller checked the return value and logged an error
- one if no device with the specified MAC was found,
other if there were multiple devices matching the MAC address
(except for qemuDomainUpdateDeviceConfig which logged the same
message in both cases).
Move the error reporting into virDomainNetFindIdx, since in both cases,
we couldn't find one single match - it's just the error messages that
differ.
Currently, the Linux kernel treats values of '0' and '1' as
the minimum of 2. Values larger than the maximum are changed
to the maximum.
Re-reading the shares value after setting it reflects this in
the live domain XML.
Currently, <cputune><shares>0</shares></cputune> is treated
as if it were not specified.
Treat is as a valid value if it was explicitly specified
and write it to the cgroups.
It's finally time to start tracking disk backing chains in
<domain> XML. The first step is to start refactoring code
so that we have an object more convenient for representing
each host source resource in the context of a single guest
<disk>. Ultimately, I plan to move the new type into src/util
where it can be reused by virStorageFile, but to make the
transition easier to review, this patch just creates the
new type then fixes everything until it compiles again.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h (_virDomainDiskDef): Split...
(_virDomainDiskSourceDef): ...to new struct.
(virDomainDiskAuthClear): Use new type.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainDiskDefFree): Split...
(virDomainDiskSourceDefClear): ...to new function.
(virDomainDiskGetType, virDomainDiskSetType)
(virDomainDiskGetSource, virDomainDiskSetSource)
(virDomainDiskGetDriver, virDomainDiskSetDriver)
(virDomainDiskGetFormat, virDomainDiskSetFormat)
(virDomainDiskAuthClear, virDomainDiskGetActualType)
(virDomainDiskDefParseXML, virDomainDiskSourceDefFormat)
(virDomainDiskDefFormat, virDomainDiskDefForeachPath)
(virDomainDiskDefGetSecurityLabelDef)
(virDomainDiskSourceIsBlockType): Adjust all users.
* src/lxc/lxc_controller.c (virLXCControllerSetupDisk):
Likewise.
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c (lxcDomainAttachDeviceMknodHelper):
Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuAddRBDHost, qemuParseRBDString)
(qemuParseDriveURIString, qemuParseGlusterString)
(qemuParseISCSIString, qemuParseNBDString)
(qemuDomainDiskGetSourceString, qemuBuildDriveStr)
(qemuBuildCommandLine, qemuParseCommandLineDisk)
(qemuParseCommandLine): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_conf.c (qemuCheckSharedDevice)
(qemuAddISCSIPoolSourceHost, qemuTranslateDiskSourcePool):
Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainUpdateDeviceConfig)
(qemuDomainPrepareDiskChainElement)
(qemuDomainSnapshotCreateInactiveExternal)
(qemuDomainSnapshotPrepareDiskExternalBackingInactive)
(qemuDomainSnapshotPrepareDiskInternal)
(qemuDomainSnapshotPrepare)
(qemuDomainSnapshotCreateSingleDiskActive)
(qemuDomainSnapshotUndoSingleDiskActive)
(qemuDomainBlockPivot, qemuDomainBlockJobImpl)
(qemuDomainBlockCopy, qemuDomainBlockCommit): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_migration.c (qemuMigrationIsSafe): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessGetVolumeQcowPassphrase)
(qemuProcessInitPasswords): Likewise.
* src/security/security_selinux.c
(virSecuritySELinuxSetSecurityFileLabel): Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_driver.c (virStorageFileInitFromDiskDef):
Likewise.
* tests/securityselinuxlabeltest.c (testSELinuxLoadDef):
Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Part of a series of cleanups to use new accessor methods.
* src/lxc/lxc_cgroup.c (virLXCCgroupSetupDeviceACL): Use
accessors.
* src/lxc/lxc_controller.c (virLXCControllerSetupLoopDeviceDisk)
(virLXCControllerSetupNBDDeviceDisk)
(virLXCControllerSetupLoopDevices, virLXCControllerSetupDisk):
Likewise.
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c (lxcDomainAttachDeviceDiskLive)
(lxcDomainDetachDeviceDiskLive): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
When checking compatibility of a device with a domain definition, we
should know what we're going to do with the device. Because we may need
to check for different things when we're attaching a new device versus
detaching an existing device.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
A device needs to be checked for compatibility with the domain
definition it corresponds to. Specifically, for VIR_DOMAIN_AFFECT_CONFIG
case we should check against persistent def rather than active def.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Any source file which calls the logging APIs now needs
to have a VIR_LOG_INIT("source.name") declaration at
the start of the file. This provides a static variable
of the virLogSource type.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=992980
This config tunable allows users to determine the maximum number of
accepted but yet not authenticated users.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Coverity found an issue in lxc_driver and uml_driver that we don't
check the return value of register functions.
I've also updated all other places and unify the way we check the
return value.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
Many of the domain xml format functions (including all of the device
format functions) had hard-coded spaces, which made for incorrect
indentation when those functions were called in a different context
(for example, commit 2122cf39 added <interface> XML into the document
provided to a network hook script, and in this case it should have
been indented by 2 spaces, but was instead indented by 6 spaces).
To make it possible to insert a properly indented device anywhere into
an XML document, this patch removes hardcoded spaces from the
formatting functions, and calls virBufferAdjustIndent() at appropriate
places instead. (a regex search of domain_conf.c was done to assure
that all occurrences of hardcoded spaces were removed).
virDomainDiskSourceDefFormatInternal() is also called from
snapshot_conf.c, so two virBufferAdjustIndent() calls were temporarily
added around that call - those functions will have hardcoded spaces
removed in a separate patch.
This could cause some conflicts when backporting future changes to the
formatting functions to older branches, but fortunately the changes
are almost all trivial, so conflict resolution will be obvious.
Change any variable names with Usb, Pci or Scsi to use
USB, PCI and SCSI since they are abbreviations.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Auditing all callers of virCommandRun and virCommandWait that
passed a non-NULL pointer for exit status turned up some
interesting observations. Many callers were merely passing
a pointer to avoid the overall command dying, but without
caring what the exit status was - but these callers would
be better off treating a child death by signal as an abnormal
exit. Other callers were actually acting on the status, but
not all of them remembered to filter by WIFEXITED and convert
with WEXITSTATUS; depending on the platform, this can result
in a status being reported as 256 times too big. And among
those that correctly parse the output, it gets rather verbose.
Finally, there were the callers that explicitly checked that
the status was 0, and gave their own message, but with fewer
details than what virCommand gives for free.
So the best idea is to move the complexity out of callers and
into virCommand - by default, we return the actual exit status
already cleaned through WEXITSTATUS and treat signals as a
failed command; but the few callers that care can ask for raw
status and act on it themselves.
* src/util/vircommand.h (virCommandRawStatus): New prototype.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (util/command.h): Export it.
* docs/internals/command.html.in: Document it.
* src/util/vircommand.c (virCommandRawStatus): New function.
(virCommandWait): Adjust semantics.
* tests/commandtest.c (test1): Test it.
* daemon/remote.c (remoteDispatchAuthPolkit): Adjust callers.
* src/access/viraccessdriverpolkit.c (virAccessDriverPolkitCheck):
Likewise.
* src/fdstream.c (virFDStreamCloseInt): Likewise.
* src/lxc/lxc_process.c (virLXCProcessStart): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuCreateInBridgePortWithHelper):
Likewise.
* src/xen/xen_driver.c (xenUnifiedXendProbe): Simplify.
* tests/reconnect.c (mymain): Likewise.
* tests/statstest.c (mymain): Likewise.
* src/bhyve/bhyve_process.c (virBhyveProcessStart)
(virBhyveProcessStop): Don't overwrite virCommand error.
* src/libvirt.c (virConnectAuthGainPolkit): Likewise.
* src/openvz/openvz_driver.c (openvzDomainGetBarrierLimit)
(openvzDomainSetBarrierLimit): Likewise.
* src/util/virebtables.c (virEbTablesOnceInit): Likewise.
* src/util/viriptables.c (virIpTablesOnceInit): Likewise.
* src/util/virnetdevveth.c (virNetDevVethCreate): Fix debug
message.
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.c (virQEMUCapsInitQMP): Add comment.
* src/storage/storage_backend_iscsi.c
(virStorageBackendISCSINodeUpdate): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Right now, a caller waiting for a child process either requires
the child to have status 0, or must use WIFEXITED() and friends
itself. But in many cases, we want the middle ground of treating
fatal signals as an error, and directly accessing the normal exit
value without having to use WEXITSTATUS(), in order to easily
detect an expected non-zero exit status. This adds the middle
ground to the low-level virProcessWait; the next patch will add
it to virCommand.
* src/util/virprocess.h (virProcessWait): Alter signature.
* src/util/virprocess.c (virProcessWait): Add parameter.
(virProcessRunInMountNamespace): Adjust caller.
* src/util/vircommand.c (virCommandWait): Likewise.
* src/util/virfile.c (virFileAccessibleAs): Likewise.
* src/lxc/lxc_container.c (lxcContainerHasReboot)
(lxcContainerAvailable): Likewise.
* daemon/libvirtd.c (daemonForkIntoBackground): Likewise.
* tools/virt-login-shell.c (main): Likewise.
* tools/virsh-domain.c (cmdLxcEnterNamespace): Likewise.
* tests/testutils.c (virtTestCaptureProgramOutput): Likewise.
* tests/commandtest.c (test23): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
This function is needed for user namespaces, where we need to chmod()
the cgroup to the initial uid/gid such that systemd is allowed to
use the cgroup.
Signed-off-by: Richard Weinberger <richard@nod.at>
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The virDomainGetRootFilesystem method can be generalized to allow
any filesystem path to be obtained.
While doing this, start a new test case for purpose of testing various
helper methods in the domain_conf.{c,h} files, such as this one.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The virCgroupXXX APIs' return value must be checked for
being less than 0, not equal to 0.
An VIR_ERR_OPERATION_INVALID error must also be raised
when the VM is not running to prevent a crash on NULL
priv->cgroup field.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Destroying a suspended domain needs special action.
We cannot simply terminate all process because they are frozen.
Do deal with that we send them SIGKILL and thaw them.
Upon wakeup the process sees the pending signal and dies immediately.
Signed-off-by: Richard Weinberger <richard@nod.at>
There might be some use cases, where user wants to prepare the host or
its environment prior to starting a network and do some cleanup after
the network has been shut down. Consider all the functionality that
libvirt doesn't currently have as an example what a hook script can
possibly do.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Rewrite multiple hotunplug functions to to use the
virProcessRunInMountNamespace helper. This avoids
risk of a malicious guest replacing /dev with an absolute
symlink, tricking the driver into changing the host OS
filesystem.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Rewrite lxcDomainAttachDeviceHostdevMiscLive function
to use the virProcessRunInMountNamespace helper. This avoids
risk of a malicious guest replacing /dev with a absolute
symlink, tricking the driver into changing the host OS
filesystem.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Rewrite lxcDomainAttachDeviceHostdevStorageLive function
to use the virProcessRunInMountNamespace helper. This avoids
risk of a malicious guest replacing /dev with a absolute
symlink, tricking the driver into changing the host OS
filesystem.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Rewrite lxcDomainAttachDeviceHostdevSubsysUSBLive function
to use the virProcessRunInMountNamespace helper. This avoids
risk of a malicious guest replacing /dev with a absolute
symlink, tricking the driver into changing the host OS
filesystem.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Rewrite lxcDomainAttachDeviceDiskLive function to use the
virProcessRunInMountNamespace helper. This avoids risk of
a malicious guest replacing /dev with a absolute symlink,
tricking the driver into changing the host OS filesystem.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Use helper virProcessRunInMountNamespace in lxcDomainShutdownFlags and
lxcDomainReboot. Otherwise, a malicious guest could use symlinks
to force the host to manipulate the wrong file in the host's namespace.
Idea by Dan Berrange, based on an initial report by Reco
<recoverym4n@gmail.com> at
http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=732394
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The check for whether the cgroup devices ACL is available is
done quite late during LXC hotplug - in fact after the device
node is already created in the container in some cases. Better
to do it upfront so we fail immediately.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The LXC disk hotplug code was allowing block or character devices
to be given as disk. A disk is always a block device.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When detaching a USB device from an LXC guest we must remove
the device from the cgroup ACL. Unfortunately we were telling
the cgroup code to use the guest /dev path, not the host /dev
path, and the guest device node had already been unlinked.
This was, however, fortunate since the code passed &priv->cgroup
instead of priv->cgroup, so would have crash if the device node
were accessible.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
After hotplugging a USB device, the LXC driver forgot
to add the device def to the virDomainDefPtr.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The LXC code missed the 'usb' component out of the path
/dev/bus/usb/$BUSNUM/$DEVNUM, so it failed to actually
setup cgroups for the device. This was in fact lucky
because the call to virLXCSetupHostUsbDeviceCgroup
was also mistakenly passing '&priv->cgroup' instead of
just 'priv->cgroup'. So once the path is fixed, libvirtd
would then crash trying to access the bogus virCgroupPtr
pointer. This would have been a security issue, were it
not for the bogus path preventing the pointer reference
being reached.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The problem with VLAN is that the user still has to manually create the
vlan interface on the host. Then the generated configuration will use
it as a nerwork hostdev device. So the generated configurations of the
following two fragments are equivalent (see rhbz#1059637).
lxc.network.type = phys
lxc.network.link = eth0.5
lxc.network.type = vlan
lxc.network.link = eth0
lxc.network.vlan.id = 5
Some of the LXC configuration properties aren't migrated since they
would only cause problems in libvirt-lxc:
* lxc.network.ipv[46]: LXC driver doesn't setup IP address of guests,
see rhbz#1059624
* lxc.network.name, see rhbz#1059630
If no network configuration is provided, LXC only provides the loopback
interface. To match this, we need to use the privnet feature. LXC will
also define a 'none' network type in its 1.0.0 version that fits
libvirt LXC driver's default.
LXC rootfs can be either a directory or a block device or an image
file. The first two types have been implemented, but the image file is
still to be done since LXC auto-guesses the file format at mount time
and the LXC driver doesn't support the 'auto' format.
This function aims at converting LXC configuration into a libvirt
domain XML description to help users migrate from LXC to libvirt.
Here is an example of how the lxc configuration works:
virsh -c lxc:/// domxml-from-native lxc-tools /var/lib/lxc/migrate_test/config
It is possible that some parts couldn't be properly mapped into a
domain XML fragment, so users should carefully review the result
before creating the domain.
fstab files in lxc.mount lines will need to be merged into the
configuration file as lxc.mount.entry.
As we can't know the amount of memory of the host, we have to set a
default value for max_balloon that users will probably want to adjust.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1058839
Commit f9f56340 for CVE-2014-0028 almost had the right idea - we
need to check the ACL rules to filter which events to send. But
it overlooked one thing: the event dispatch queue is running in
the main loop thread, and therefore does not normally have a
current virIdentityPtr. But filter checks can be based on current
identity, so when libvirtd.conf contains access_drivers=["polkit"],
we ended up rejecting access for EVERY event due to failure to
look up the current identity, even if it should have been allowed.
Furthermore, even for events that are triggered by API calls, it
is important to remember that the point of events is that they can
be copied across multiple connections, which may have separate
identities and permissions. So even if events were dispatched
from a context where we have an identity, we must change to the
correct identity of the connection that will be receiving the
event, rather than basing a decision on the context that triggered
the event, when deciding whether to filter an event to a
particular connection.
If there were an easy way to get from virConnectPtr to the
appropriate virIdentityPtr, then object_event.c could adjust the
identity prior to checking whether to dispatch an event. But
setting up that back-reference is a bit invasive. Instead, it
is easier to delay the filtering check until lower down the
stack, at the point where we have direct access to the RPC
client object that owns an identity. As such, this patch ends
up reverting a large portion of the framework of commit f9f56340.
We also have to teach 'make check' to special-case the fact that
the event registration filtering is done at the point of dispatch,
rather than the point of registration. Note that even though we
don't actually use virConnectDomainEventRegisterCheckACL (because
the RegisterAny variant is sufficient), we still generate the
function for the purposes of documenting that the filtering
takes place.
Also note that I did not entirely delete the notion of a filter
from object_event.c; I still plan on using that for my upcoming
patch series for qemu monitor events in libvirt-qemu.so. In
other words, while this patch changes ACL filtering to live in
remote.c and therefore we have no current client of the filtering
in object_event.c, the notion of filtering in object_event.c is
still useful down the road.
* src/check-aclrules.pl: Exempt event registration from having to
pass checkACL filter down call stack.
* daemon/remote.c (remoteRelayDomainEventCheckACL)
(remoteRelayNetworkEventCheckACL): New functions.
(remoteRelay*Event*): Use new functions.
* src/conf/domain_event.h (virDomainEventStateRegister)
(virDomainEventStateRegisterID): Drop unused parameter.
* src/conf/network_event.h (virNetworkEventStateRegisterID):
Likewise.
* src/conf/domain_event.c (virDomainEventFilter): Delete unused
function.
* src/conf/network_event.c (virNetworkEventFilter): Likewise.
* src/libxl/libxl_driver.c: Adjust caller.
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c: Likewise.
* src/network/bridge_driver.c: Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c: Likewise.
* src/remote/remote_driver.c: Likewise.
* src/test/test_driver.c: Likewise.
* src/uml/uml_driver.c: Likewise.
* src/vbox/vbox_tmpl.c: Likewise.
* src/xen/xen_driver.c: Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Coverity complains about default: label in libxl_driver.c not be able
to be reached. It's by design for the code and since it's not necessary
in the code nor does it elicit any compiler/make check warnings - just
remove it rather than adding a coverity[dead_error_begin] tag.
While I'm at it, lxc_driver.c and nodeinfo.c have the same design, so I
removed the default labels and the existing coverity tags.
The NWFilter code has as a deadlock race condition between
the virNWFilter{Define,Undefine} APIs and starting of guest
VMs due to mis-matched lock ordering.
In the virNWFilter{Define,Undefine} codepaths the lock ordering
is
1. nwfilter driver lock
2. virt driver lock
3. nwfilter update lock
4. domain object lock
In the VM guest startup paths the lock ordering is
1. virt driver lock
2. domain object lock
3. nwfilter update lock
As can be seen the domain object and nwfilter update locks are
not acquired in a consistent order.
The fix used is to push the nwfilter update lock upto the top
level resulting in a lock ordering for virNWFilter{Define,Undefine}
of
1. nwfilter driver lock
2. nwfilter update lock
3. virt driver lock
4. domain object lock
and VM start using
1. nwfilter update lock
2. virt driver lock
3. domain object lock
This has the effect of serializing VM startup once again, even if
no nwfilters are applied to the guest. There is also the possibility
of deadlock due to a call graph loop via virNWFilterInstantiate
and virNWFilterInstantiateFilterLate.
These two problems mean the lock must be turned into a read/write
lock instead of a plain mutex at the same time. The lock is used to
serialize changes to the "driver->nwfilters" hash, so the write lock
only needs to be held by the define/undefine methods. All other
methods can rely on a read lock which allows good concurrency.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
I noticed that we allow virDomainGetVcpusFlags even for read-only
connections, but that with a flag, it can require guest agent
interaction. It is feasible that a malicious guest could
intentionally abuse the replies it sends over the guest agent
connection to possibly trigger a bug in libvirt's JSON parser,
or withhold an answer so as to prevent the use of the agent
in a later command such as a shutdown request. Although we
don't know of any such exploits now (and therefore don't mind
posting this patch publicly without trying to get a CVE assigned),
it is better to err on the side of caution and explicitly require
full access to any domain where the API requires guest interaction
to operate correctly.
I audited all commands that are marked as conditionally using a
guest agent. Note that at least virDomainFSTrim is documented
as needing a guest agent, but that such use is unconditional
depending on the hypervisor (so the existing domain:fs_trim ACL
should be sufficient there, rather than also requirng domain:write).
But when designing future APIs, such as the plans for obtaining
a domain's IP addresses, we should copy the approach of this patch
in making interaction with the guest be specified via a flag, and
use that flag to also require stricter access checks.
* src/libvirt.c (virDomainGetVcpusFlags): Forbid guest interaction
on read-only connection.
(virDomainShutdownFlags, virDomainReboot): Improve docs on agent
interaction.
* src/remote/remote_protocol.x
(REMOTE_PROC_DOMAIN_SNAPSHOT_CREATE_XML)
(REMOTE_PROC_DOMAIN_SET_VCPUS_FLAGS)
(REMOTE_PROC_DOMAIN_GET_VCPUS_FLAGS, REMOTE_PROC_DOMAIN_REBOOT)
(REMOTE_PROC_DOMAIN_SHUTDOWN_FLAGS): Require domain:write for any
conditional use of a guest agent.
* src/xen/xen_driver.c: Fix clients.
* src/libxl/libxl_driver.c: Likewise.
* src/uml/uml_driver.c: Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c: Likewise.
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c: Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
With this patch,user can set throttle blkio cgroup for
lxc domain through virsh tool.
Signed-off-by: Guan Qiang <hzguanqiang@corp.netease.com>
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
This patch introduces virCgroupSetBlkioDeviceReadIops,
virCgroupSetBlkioDeviceWriteIops,
virCgroupSetBlkioDeviceReadBps and
virCgroupSetBlkioDeviceWriteBps,
we can use these interfaces to set up throttle
blkio cgroup for domain.
This patch also adds the new throttle blkio cgroup
elements to the test xml.
Signed-off-by: Guan Qiang <hzguanqiang@corp.netease.com>
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
The public virConnectRef and virConnectClose API are just thin
wrappers around virObjectRef/virObjectRef, with added object
validation and an error reset. Within our backend drivers, use
of the object validation is just an inefficiency since we always
pass valid objects. More important to think about is what
happens with the error reset; our uses of virConnectRef happened
to be safe (since we hadn't encountered any earlier errors), but
in several cases the use of virConnectClose could lose a real
error.
Ideally, we should also avoid calling virConnectOpen() from
within backend drivers - but that is a known situation that
needs much more design work.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessReconnectHelper)
(qemuProcessReconnect): Avoid nested public API call.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuAutostartDomains)
(qemuStateInitialize, qemuStateStop): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_migration.c (doPeer2PeerMigrate): Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_driver.c (storageDriverAutostart):
Likewise.
* src/uml/uml_driver.c (umlAutostartConfigs): Likewise.
* src/lxc/lxc_process.c (virLXCProcessAutostartAll): Likewise.
(virLXCProcessReboot): Likewise, and avoid leaking conn on error.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Ever since ACL filtering was added in commit 7639736 (v1.1.1), a
user could still use event registration to obtain access to a
domain that they could not normally access via virDomainLookup*
or virConnectListAllDomains and friends. We already have the
framework in the RPC generator for creating the filter, and
previous cleanup patches got us to the point that we can now
wire the filter through the entire object event stack.
Furthermore, whether or not domain:getattr is honored, use of
global events is a form of obtaining a list of networks, which
is covered by connect:search_domains added in a93cd08 (v1.1.0).
Ideally, we'd have a way to enforce connect:search_domains when
doing global registrations while omitting that check on a
per-domain registration. But this patch just unconditionally
requires connect:search_domains, even when no list could be
obtained, based on the following observations:
1. Administrators are unlikely to grant domain:getattr for one
or all domains while still denying connect:search_domains - a
user that is able to manage domains will want to be able to
manage them efficiently, but efficient management includes being
able to list the domains they can access. The idea of denying
connect:search_domains while still granting access to individual
domains is therefore not adding any real security, but just
serves as a layer of obscurity to annoy the end user.
2. In the current implementation, domain events are filtered
on the client; the server has no idea if a domain filter was
requested, and must therefore assume that all domain event
requests are global. Even if we fix the RPC protocol to
allow for server-side filtering for newer client/server combos,
making the connect:serach_domains ACL check conditional on
whether the domain argument was NULL won't benefit older clients.
Therefore, we choose to document that connect:search_domains
is a pre-requisite to any domain event management.
Network events need the same treatment, with the obvious
change of using connect:search_networks and network:getattr.
* src/access/viraccessperm.h
(VIR_ACCESS_PERM_CONNECT_SEARCH_DOMAINS)
(VIR_ACCESS_PERM_CONNECT_SEARCH_NETWORKS): Document additional
effect of the permission.
* src/conf/domain_event.h (virDomainEventStateRegister)
(virDomainEventStateRegisterID): Add new parameter.
* src/conf/network_event.h (virNetworkEventStateRegisterID):
Likewise.
* src/conf/object_event_private.h (virObjectEventStateRegisterID):
Likewise.
* src/conf/object_event.c (_virObjectEventCallback): Track a filter.
(virObjectEventDispatchMatchCallback): Use filter.
(virObjectEventCallbackListAddID): Register filter.
* src/conf/domain_event.c (virDomainEventFilter): New function.
(virDomainEventStateRegister, virDomainEventStateRegisterID):
Adjust callers.
* src/conf/network_event.c (virNetworkEventFilter): New function.
(virNetworkEventStateRegisterID): Adjust caller.
* src/remote/remote_protocol.x
(REMOTE_PROC_CONNECT_DOMAIN_EVENT_REGISTER)
(REMOTE_PROC_CONNECT_DOMAIN_EVENT_REGISTER_ANY)
(REMOTE_PROC_CONNECT_NETWORK_EVENT_REGISTER_ANY): Generate a
filter, and require connect:search_domains instead of weaker
connect:read.
* src/test/test_driver.c (testConnectDomainEventRegister)
(testConnectDomainEventRegisterAny)
(testConnectNetworkEventRegisterAny): Update callers.
* src/remote/remote_driver.c (remoteConnectDomainEventRegister)
(remoteConnectDomainEventRegisterAny): Likewise.
* src/xen/xen_driver.c (xenUnifiedConnectDomainEventRegister)
(xenUnifiedConnectDomainEventRegisterAny): Likewise.
* src/vbox/vbox_tmpl.c (vboxDomainGetXMLDesc): Likewise.
* src/libxl/libxl_driver.c (libxlConnectDomainEventRegister)
(libxlConnectDomainEventRegisterAny): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuConnectDomainEventRegister)
(qemuConnectDomainEventRegisterAny): Likewise.
* src/uml/uml_driver.c (umlConnectDomainEventRegister)
(umlConnectDomainEventRegisterAny): Likewise.
* src/network/bridge_driver.c
(networkConnectNetworkEventRegisterAny): Likewise.
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c (lxcConnectDomainEventRegister)
(lxcConnectDomainEventRegisterAny): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
the unix socket /var/run/libvirt/lxc/domain.sock is not created
under the selinux context which configured by <seclabel>.
If we try to connect the domain.sock under the selinux context
of domain in virtLXCProcessConnectMonitor,selinux will deny
this connect operation.
type=AVC msg=audit(1387953696.067:662): avc: denied { connectto } for pid=21206 comm="libvirtd" path="/usr/local/var/run/libvirt/lxc/systemd.sock" scontext=unconfined_u:system_r:svirt_lxc_net_t:s0:c770,c848 tcontext=unconfined_u:system_r:unconfined_t:s0-s0:c0.c1023 tclass=unix_stream_socket
fix this problem by creating socket under selinux context of domain.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
The @name variable is VIR_STRDUP()-ed into, but never freed. In fact,
there's no need to duplicate a command line argument since all places
where @name is used expect const char.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Ever since their introduction (commit 1509b80 in v0.5.0 for
virConnectDomainEventRegister, commit 4445723 in v0.8.0 for
virConnectDomainEventDeregisterAny), the event deregistration
functions have been documented as returning 0 on success;
likewise for older registration (only the newer RegisterAny
must return a non-zero callbackID). And now that we are
adding virConnectNetworkEventDeregisterAny for v1.2.1, it
should have the same semantics.
Fortunately, all of the stateful drivers have been obeying
the docs and returning 0, thanks to the way the remote_driver
tracks things (in fact, the RPC wire protocol is unable to
send a return value for DomainEventRegisterAny, at least not
without adding a new RPC number). Well, except for vbox,
which was always failing deregistration, due to failure to
set the return value to anything besides its initial -1.
But for local drivers, such as test:///default, we've been
returning non-zero numbers; worse, the non-zero numbers have
differed over time. For example, in Fedora 12 (libvirt 0.8.2),
calling Register twice would return 0 and 1 [the callbackID
generated under the hood]; while in Fedora 20 (libvirt 1.1.3),
it returns 1 and 2 [the number of callbacks registered for
that event type]. Since we have changed the behavior over
time, and since it differs by local vs. remote, we can safely
argue that no one could have been reasonably relying on any
particular behavior, so we might as well obey the docs, as well
as prepare callers that might deal with older clients to not be
surprised if the docs are not strictly followed.
For consistency, this patch fixes the code for all drivers,
even though it only makes an impact for vbox and for local
drivers. By fixing all drivers, future copy and paste from
a remote driver to a local driver is less likely to
reintroduce the bug.
Finally, update the testsuite to gain some coverage of the
issue for local drivers, including the first test of old-style
domain event registration via function pointer instead of
event id.
* src/libvirt.c (virConnectDomainEventRegister)
(virConnectDomainEventDeregister)
(virConnectDomainEventDeregisterAny): Clarify docs.
* src/libxl/libxl_driver.c (libxlConnectDomainEventRegister)
(libxlConnectDomainEventDeregister)
(libxlConnectDomainEventDeregisterAny): Match documentation.
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c (lxcConnectDomainEventRegister)
(lxcConnectDomainEventDeregister)
(lxcConnectDomainEventDeregisterAny): Likewise.
* src/test/test_driver.c (testConnectDomainEventRegister)
(testConnectDomainEventDeregister)
(testConnectDomainEventDeregisterAny)
(testConnectNetworkEventDeregisterAny): Likewise.
* src/uml/uml_driver.c (umlConnectDomainEventRegister)
(umlConnectDomainEventDeregister)
(umlConnectDomainEventDeregisterAny): Likewise.
* src/vbox/vbox_tmpl.c (vboxConnectDomainEventRegister)
(vboxConnectDomainEventDeregister)
(vboxConnectDomainEventDeregisterAny): Likewise.
* src/xen/xen_driver.c (xenUnifiedConnectDomainEventRegister)
(xenUnifiedConnectDomainEventDeregister)
(xenUnifiedConnectDomainEventDeregisterAny): Likewise.
* src/network/bridge_driver.c
(networkConnectNetworkEventDeregisterAny): Likewise.
* tests/objecteventtest.c (testDomainCreateXMLOld): New test.
(mymain): Run it.
(testDomainCreateXML): Check return values.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The libvirt_internal.h header was included by the internal.h header.
This made it painful to add new stuff to the header file that would
require some more specific types. Remove inclusion by internal.h and add
it to appropriate places manually.
This reverts commit aa4619337c.
This patch was accidentally pushed prematurely, and has incorrect
logic for which shutdown methods to attempt.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
We weren't very consistent in our use of VIR_ERR_NO_SUPPORT; many
users just passed __FUNCTION__ on, while others passed "%s" to
silence over-eager compilers that warn about __FUNCTION__ not
containing any %. It's nicer to route all these uses through
a single macro, so that if we ever need to change the reporting,
we can do it in one place.
I verified that 'virsh -c test:///default qemu-monitor-command test foo'
gives the same error message before and after this patch:
error: this function is not supported by the connection driver: virDomainQemuMonitorCommand
Note that in libvirt.c, we were inconsistent on whether virDomain*
API used virLibConnError() (with VIR_FROM_NONE) or virLibDomainError()
(with VIR_FROM_DOMAIN); this patch unifies these errors to all use
VIR_FROM_NONE, on the grounds that it is unlikely that a caller
learning that a call is unimplemented can do anything in particular
with extra knowledge of which error domain it belongs to.
One particular change to note is virDomainOpenGraphics which was
trying to fail with VIR_ERR_NO_SUPPORT after a failed
VIR_DRV_SUPPORTS_FEATURE check; all other places that fail a
feature check report VIR_ERR_ARGUMENT_UNSUPPORTED.
* src/util/virerror.h (virReportUnsupportedError): New macro.
* src/libvirt-qemu.c: Use new macro.
* src/libvirt-lxc.c: Likewise.
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c: Likewise.
* src/security/security_manager.c: Likewise.
* src/util/virinitctl.c: Likewise.
* src/libvirt.c: Likewise.
(virDomainOpenGraphics): Use correct error for unsupported feature.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Currently, the @flags usage is a bit unclear at first sight to say the
least. There's no need for such unclear code especially when we can
borrow the working code from qemuDomainShutdownFlags().
In addition, this fixes one bug too. If user requested both
VIR_DOMAIN_SHUTDOWN_INITCTL and VIR_DOMAIN_SHUTDOWN_SIGNAL at the same
time, he is basically saying: 'Use the force Luke! If initctl fails try
sending a signal.' But with the current code we don't do that. If
initctl fails for some reason (e.g. inability to write to /dev/initctl)
we don't try sending any signal but fail immediately. To make things
worse, making a domain shutdown with bare _SIGNAL was working by blind
chance of a @rc variable being placed at correct place on the stack so
its initial value was zero.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The function doesn't check whether the request is made for active or
inactive domain. Thus when the domain is not running it still tries
accessing non-existing cgroups (priv->cgroup, which is NULL).
I re-made the function in order for it to work the same way it's qemu
counterpart does.
Reproducer:
1) Define an LXC domain
2) Do 'virsh memtune <domain> --hard-limit 133T'
Backtrace:
Thread 6 (Thread 0x7fffec8c0700 (LWP 26826)):
#0 0x00007ffff70edcc4 in virCgroupPathOfController (group=0x0, controller=3,
key=0x7ffff75734bd "memory.limit_in_bytes", path=0x7fffec8bf718) at util/vircgroup.c:1764
#1 0x00007ffff70e9206 in virCgroupSetValueStr (group=0x0, controller=3,
key=0x7ffff75734bd "memory.limit_in_bytes", value=0x7fffe409f360 "1073741824")
at util/vircgroup.c:669
#2 0x00007ffff70e98b4 in virCgroupSetValueU64 (group=0x0, controller=3,
key=0x7ffff75734bd "memory.limit_in_bytes", value=1073741824) at util/vircgroup.c:740
#3 0x00007ffff70ee518 in virCgroupSetMemory (group=0x0, kb=1048576) at util/vircgroup.c:1904
#4 0x00007ffff70ee675 in virCgroupSetMemoryHardLimit (group=0x0, kb=1048576)
at util/vircgroup.c:1944
#5 0x00005555557d54c8 in lxcDomainSetMemoryParameters (dom=0x7fffe40cc420,
params=0x7fffe409f100, nparams=1, flags=0) at lxc/lxc_driver.c:774
#6 0x00007ffff72c20f9 in virDomainSetMemoryParameters (domain=0x7fffe40cc420,
params=0x7fffe409f100, nparams=1, flags=0) at libvirt.c:4051
#7 0x000055555561365f in remoteDispatchDomainSetMemoryParameters (server=0x555555eb7e00,
client=0x555555ec4b10, msg=0x555555eb94e0, rerr=0x7fffec8bfb70, args=0x7fffe40b8510)
at remote_dispatch.h:7621
#8 0x00005555556133fd in remoteDispatchDomainSetMemoryParametersHelper (server=0x555555eb7e00,
client=0x555555ec4b10, msg=0x555555eb94e0, rerr=0x7fffec8bfb70, args=0x7fffe40b8510,
ret=0x7fffe40b84f0) at remote_dispatch.h:7591
#9 0x00007ffff73b293f in virNetServerProgramDispatchCall (prog=0x555555ec3ae0,
server=0x555555eb7e00, client=0x555555ec4b10, msg=0x555555eb94e0)
at rpc/virnetserverprogram.c:435
#10 0x00007ffff73b207f in virNetServerProgramDispatch (prog=0x555555ec3ae0,
server=0x555555eb7e00, client=0x555555ec4b10, msg=0x555555eb94e0)
at rpc/virnetserverprogram.c:305
#11 0x00007ffff73a4d2c in virNetServerProcessMsg (srv=0x555555eb7e00, client=0x555555ec4b10,
prog=0x555555ec3ae0, msg=0x555555eb94e0) at rpc/virnetserver.c:165
#12 0x00007ffff73a4e8d in virNetServerHandleJob (jobOpaque=0x555555ec3e30, opaque=0x555555eb7e00)
at rpc/virnetserver.c:186
#13 0x00007ffff7187f3f in virThreadPoolWorker (opaque=0x555555eb7ac0) at util/virthreadpool.c:144
#14 0x00007ffff718733a in virThreadHelper (data=0x555555eb7890) at util/virthreadpthread.c:161
#15 0x00007ffff468ed89 in start_thread (arg=0x7fffec8c0700) at pthread_create.c:308
#16 0x00007ffff3da26bd in clone () at ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/clone.S:113
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
The function doesn't check whether the request is made for active or
inactive domain. Thus when the domain is not running it still tries
accessing non-existing cgroups (priv->cgroup, which is NULL).
I re-made the function in order for it to work the same way it's qemu
counterpart does.
Reproducer:
1) Define an LXC domain
2) Do 'virsh memtune <domain>'
Backtrace:
Thread 6 (Thread 0x7fffec8c0700 (LWP 13387)):
#0 0x00007ffff70edcc4 in virCgroupPathOfController (group=0x0, controller=3,
key=0x7ffff75734bd "memory.limit_in_bytes", path=0x7fffec8bf750) at util/vircgroup.c:1764
#1 0x00007ffff70e958c in virCgroupGetValueStr (group=0x0, controller=3,
key=0x7ffff75734bd "memory.limit_in_bytes", value=0x7fffec8bf7c0) at util/vircgroup.c:705
#2 0x00007ffff70e9d29 in virCgroupGetValueU64 (group=0x0, controller=3,
key=0x7ffff75734bd "memory.limit_in_bytes", value=0x7fffec8bf810) at util/vircgroup.c:804
#3 0x00007ffff70ee706 in virCgroupGetMemoryHardLimit (group=0x0, kb=0x7fffec8bf8a8)
at util/vircgroup.c:1962
#4 0x00005555557d590f in lxcDomainGetMemoryParameters (dom=0x7fffd40024a0,
params=0x7fffd40027a0, nparams=0x7fffec8bfa24, flags=0) at lxc/lxc_driver.c:826
#5 0x00007ffff72c28d3 in virDomainGetMemoryParameters (domain=0x7fffd40024a0,
params=0x7fffd40027a0, nparams=0x7fffec8bfa24, flags=0) at libvirt.c:4137
#6 0x000055555563714d in remoteDispatchDomainGetMemoryParameters (server=0x555555eb7e00,
client=0x555555ebaef0, msg=0x555555ebb3e0, rerr=0x7fffec8bfb70, args=0x7fffd40024e0,
ret=0x7fffd4002420) at remote.c:1895
#7 0x00005555556052c4 in remoteDispatchDomainGetMemoryParametersHelper (server=0x555555eb7e00,
client=0x555555ebaef0, msg=0x555555ebb3e0, rerr=0x7fffec8bfb70, args=0x7fffd40024e0,
ret=0x7fffd4002420) at remote_dispatch.h:4050
#8 0x00007ffff73b293f in virNetServerProgramDispatchCall (prog=0x555555ec3ae0,
server=0x555555eb7e00, client=0x555555ebaef0, msg=0x555555ebb3e0)
at rpc/virnetserverprogram.c:435
#9 0x00007ffff73b207f in virNetServerProgramDispatch (prog=0x555555ec3ae0,
server=0x555555eb7e00, client=0x555555ebaef0, msg=0x555555ebb3e0)
at rpc/virnetserverprogram.c:305
#10 0x00007ffff73a4d2c in virNetServerProcessMsg (srv=0x555555eb7e00, client=0x555555ebaef0,
prog=0x555555ec3ae0, msg=0x555555ebb3e0) at rpc/virnetserver.c:165
#11 0x00007ffff73a4e8d in virNetServerHandleJob (jobOpaque=0x555555ebc7e0, opaque=0x555555eb7e00)
at rpc/virnetserver.c:186
#12 0x00007ffff7187f3f in virThreadPoolWorker (opaque=0x555555eb7ac0) at util/virthreadpool.c:144
#13 0x00007ffff718733a in virThreadHelper (data=0x555555eb7890) at util/virthreadpthread.c:161
#14 0x00007ffff468ed89 in start_thread (arg=0x7fffec8c0700) at pthread_create.c:308
#15 0x00007ffff3da26bd in clone () at ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/clone.S:113
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Systemd specified that any /dev/pts/NNN device on which it
is expected to spawn a agetty login, should be listed in
the 'container_ttys' env variable. It should just contain
the relative paths, eg 'pts/0' not '/dev/pts/0' and should
be space separated.
http://cgit.freedesktop.org/systemd/systemd/commit/?id=1d97ff7dd71902a5604c2fed8964925d54e09de9
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Currently, if virFileMakePath() fails, the @ret is left initialized from
virAsprintf() just a few lines above leading to a wrong return value of
zero whereas -1 should be returned.
Signed-off-by: Chen Hanxiao <chenhanxiao@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
When setting up filesystems backed by block devices or file
images, the SELinux mount options must be used to ensure the
correct context is set
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Move the code for lxcContainerGetSubtree into the virfile
module creating 2 new functions
int virFileGetMountSubtree(const char *mtabpath,
const char *prefix,
char ***mountsret,
size_t *nmountsret);
int virFileGetMountReverseSubtree(const char *mtabpath,
const char *prefix,
char ***mountsret,
size_t *nmountsret);
Add a new virfiletest.c test case to validate the new code.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Also after commit 5ff9d8a65ce80efb509ce4e8051394e9ed2cd942
vfs: Lock in place mounts from more privileged users,
unprivileged user has no rights to umount the mounts that
inherited from parent mountns.
right now, I have no good idea to fix this problem, we need
to do more research. this patch just skip unmounting these
mounts for shared root.
BTW, I think when libvirt lxc enables user namespace, the
configuation that shares root with host is very rara.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
After kernel commit 5ff9d8a65ce80efb509ce4e8051394e9ed2cd942
vfs: Lock in place mounts from more privileged users,
unprivileged user has no rights to move the mounts that
inherited from parent mountns. we use this feature to move
the /stateDir/domain-name.{dev, devpts} to the /dev/ and
/dev/pts directroy of container. this commit breaks libvirt lxc.
this patch changes the behavior to bind these mounts when
user namespace is enabled and move these mounts when user
namespace is disabled.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
Most of our code base uses space after comma but not before;
fix the remaining uses before adding a syntax check.
* src/lxc/lxc_container.c: Consistently use commas.
* src/openvz/openvz_driver.c: Likewise.
* src/openvz/openvz_util.c: Likewise.
* src/remote/remote_driver.c: Likewise.
* src/test/test_driver.c: Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Without a 'return 0' in the stub lxcStartFuse() method, the
compiler warns:
lxc/lxc_fuse.c:374: error: control reaches end of non-void function
[-Wreturn-type]
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The glibc setxid is supposed to be async signal safe, but
libc developers confirm that it is not. This causes a problem
when libvirt_lxc starts the FUSE thread and then runs clone()
to start the container. If the clone() was done before the
FUSE thread has completely started up, then the container
will hang in setxid after clone().
The fix is to avoid creating any threads until after the
container has been clone()'d. By avoiding any threads in
the parent, the child is no longer required to run in an
async signal safe context, and we thus avoid the glibc
bug.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
If the host side of an LXC container console disconnected
and the guest side continued to write data, until the PTY
buffer filled up, the LXC controller would busy wait. It
would repeatedly see POLLHUP from poll() and not disable
the watch.
This was due to some bogus logic detecting blocking
conditions. Upon seeing a POLLHUP we must disable all
reading & writing from the PTY, and setup the epoll to
wake us up again when the connection comes back.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Currently we were storing domain feature flags in a bit field as the
they were either enabled or disabled. New features such as paravirtual
spinlocks however can be tri-state as the default option may depend on
hypervisor version.
To allow storing tri-state feature state in the same place instead of
having to declare dedicated variables for each feature this patch
refactors the bit field to an array.
Currently the LXC container tries to skip selinux/securityfs
mounts if the directory does not exist in the filesystem,
or if SELinux is disabled.
The former check is flawed because the /sys/fs/selinux
or /sys/kernel/securityfs directories may exist in sysfs
even if the mount type is disabled. Instead of just doing
an access() check, use an virFileIsMounted() to see if
the FS is actually present in the host OS. This also
avoids the need to check is_selinux_enabled().
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Some mounts must be skipped if running inside a user namespace,
since the kernel forbids their use. Instead of strcmp'ing the
filesystem type in the body of the loop, set an explicit flag
in the lxcBasicMounts table.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Currently the lxcBasicMounts array has separate entries for
most mounts, to reflect that we must do a separate mount
operation to make mounts read-only. Remove the duplicate
entries and instead set the MS_RDONLY flag against the main
entry. Then change lxcContainerMountBasicFS to look for the
MS_RDONLY flag, mask it out & do a separate bind mount.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The 'srcpath' variable is initialized from 'mnt->src' and never
changed thereafter. Some places continue to use 'mnt->src' and
others use 'srcpath'. Remove the pointless 'srcpath' variable
and use 'mnt->src' everywhere.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The virLXCBasicMountInfo struct contains a 'char *opts'
field passed onto the mount() syscall. Every entry in the
list sets this to NULL though, so it can be removed to
simplify life.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Expand the "secmodel" XML fragment of "host" with a sequence of
baselabel's which describe the default security context used by
libvirt with a specific security model and virtualization type:
<secmodel>
<model>selinux</model>
<doi>0</doi>
<baselabel type='kvm'>system_u:system_r:svirt_t:s0</baselabel>
<baselabel type='qemu'>system_u:system_r:svirt_tcg_t:s0</baselabel>
</secmodel>
<secmodel>
<model>dac</model>
<doi>0</doi>
<baselabel type='kvm'>107:107</baselabel>
<baselabel type='qemu'>107:107</baselabel>
</secmodel>
"baselabel" is driver-specific information, e.g. in the DAC security
model, it indicates USER_ID:GROUP_ID.
Signed-off-by: Giuseppe Scrivano <gscrivan@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The lxcContainerSetID() method prints a misleading log
message about setting the uid/gid when no ID map is
present in the XML config. Skip the debug message in
this case.
Signed-off-by: Chen Hanxiao <chenhanxiao@cn.fujitsu.com>
Most of the usage of getuid()/getgid() is in cases where we are
considering what privileges we have. As such the code should be
using the effective IDs, not real IDs.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Unconditional use of getenv is not secure in setuid env.
While not all libvirt code runs in a setuid env (since
much of it only exists inside libvirtd) this is not always
clear to developers. So make all the code paranoid, even
if it only ever runs inside libvirtd.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When running setuid, we must be careful about what env vars
we allow commands to inherit from us. Replace the
virCommandAddEnvPass function with two new ones which do
filtering
virCommandAddEnvPassAllowSUID
virCommandAddEnvPassBlockSUID
And make virCommandAddEnvPassCommon use the appropriate
ones
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
A typo in the setup of NBD backed filesystems meant the
/dev/nbdN device would not be added to the cgroups device
ACL.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
'const fooPtr' is the same as 'foo * const' (the pointer won't
change, but it's contents can). But in general, if an interface
is trying to be const-correct, it should be using 'const foo *'
(the pointer is to data that can't be changed).
Fix up all remaining offenders.
* src/lxc/lxc_process.c (virLXCProcessSetupInterfaceBridged): Drop
needless const.
* src/uml/uml_driver.c (umlMonitorCommand): Use intended type.
(umlMonitorAddress): Fix fallout.
* src/xen/xm_internal.c (xenXMDomainSearchForUUID): Use intended type.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
'const fooPtr' is the same as 'foo * const' (the pointer won't
change, but it's contents can). But in general, if an interface
is trying to be const-correct, it should be using 'const foo *'
(the pointer is to data that can't be changed).
Fix up offenders in src/conf/domain_conf, and their fallout.
Several things to note: virObjectLock() requires a non-const
argument; if this were C++, we could treat the locking field
as 'mutable' and allow locking an otherwise 'const' object, but
that is a more invasive change, so I instead dropped attempts
to be const-correct on domain lookup. virXMLPropString and
friends require a non-const xmlNodePtr - this is because libxml2
is not a const-correct library. We could make the src/util/virxml
wrappers cast away const, but I figured it was easier to not
try to mark xmlNodePtr as const. Finally, virDomainDeviceDefCopy
was a rather hard conversion - it calls virDomainDeviceDefPostParse,
which in turn in the xen driver was actually modifying the domain
outside of the current device being visited. We should not be
adding a device on the first per-device callback, but waiting until
after all per-device callbacks are complete.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h (virDomainObjListFindByID)
(virDomainObjListFindByUUID, virDomainObjListFindByName)
(virDomainObjAssignDef, virDomainObjListAdd): Drop attempt at
const.
(virDomainDeviceDefCopy): Use intended type.
(virDomainDeviceDefParse, virDomainDeviceDefPostParseCallback)
(virDomainVideoDefaultType, virDomainVideoDefaultRAM)
(virDomainChrGetDomainPtrs): Make const-correct.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainObjListFindByID)
(virDomainObjListFindByUUID, virDomainObjListFindByName)
(virDomainDeviceDefCopy, virDomainObjListAdd)
(virDomainObjAssignDef, virDomainHostdevSubsysUsbDefParseXML)
(virDomainHostdevSubsysPciOrigStatesDefParseXML)
(virDomainHostdevSubsysPciDefParseXML)
(virDomainHostdevSubsysScsiDefParseXML)
(virDomainControllerModelTypeFromString)
(virDomainTPMDefParseXML, virDomainTimerDefParseXML)
(virDomainSoundCodecDefParseXML, virDomainSoundDefParseXML)
(virDomainWatchdogDefParseXML, virDomainRNGDefParseXML)
(virDomainMemballoonDefParseXML, virDomainNVRAMDefParseXML)
(virSysinfoParseXML, virDomainVideoAccelDefParseXML)
(virDomainVideoDefParseXML, virDomainHostdevDefParseXML)
(virDomainRedirdevDefParseXML)
(virDomainRedirFilterUsbDevDefParseXML)
(virDomainRedirFilterDefParseXML, virDomainIdMapEntrySort)
(virDomainIdmapDefParseXML, virDomainVcpuPinDefParseXML)
(virDiskNameToBusDeviceIndex, virDomainDeviceDefCopy)
(virDomainVideoDefaultType, virDomainHostdevAssignAddress)
(virDomainDeviceDefPostParseInternal, virDomainDeviceDefPostParse)
(virDomainChrGetDomainPtrs, virDomainControllerSCSINextUnit)
(virDomainSCSIDriveAddressIsUsed)
(virDomainDriveAddressIsUsedByDisk)
(virDomainDriveAddressIsUsedByHostdev): Fix fallout.
* src/openvz/openvz_driver.c (openvzDomainDeviceDefPostParse):
Likewise.
* src/libxl/libxl_domain.c (libxlDomainDeviceDefPostParse):
Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_domain.c (qemuDomainDeviceDefPostParse)
(qemuDomainDefaultNetModel): Likewise.
* src/lxc/lxc_domain.c (virLXCDomainDeviceDefPostParse):
Likewise.
* src/uml/uml_driver.c (umlDomainDeviceDefPostParse): Likewise.
* src/xen/xen_driver.c (xenDomainDeviceDefPostParse): Split...
(xenDomainDefPostParse): ...since per-device callback is not the
time to be adding a device.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Make the virLXCProcessReadLogOutputData method ignore the log
lines about the container startup argv, ignore the generic
error message from libvirt_lxc when lxcContainerMain fails
and skip over blank lines.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The lxcContainerResolveSymlinks method merely logged some errors
as debug messages, rather than reporting them as proper errors.
This meant startup failures were not diagnosed at all.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Ensure the lxcContainerMain method reports any errors that
occur during setup to stderr, where libvirtd will pick them
up.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
In Fedora 20, libvirt_lxc crashes immediately at startup with a
trace
#0 0x00007f0cddb653ec in free () from /lib64/libc.so.6
#1 0x00007f0ce0e16f4a in virFree (ptrptr=ptrptr@entry=0x7f0ce1830058) at util/viralloc.c:580
#2 0x00007f0ce0e2764b in virResetError (err=0x7f0ce1830030) at util/virerror.c:354
#3 0x00007f0ce0e27a5a in virResetLastError () at util/virerror.c:387
#4 0x00007f0ce0e28858 in virEventRegisterDefaultImpl () at util/virevent.c:233
#5 0x00007f0ce0db47c6 in main (argc=11, argv=0x7fff4596c328) at lxc/lxc_controller.c:2352
Normally virInitialize calls virErrorInitialize and
virThreadInitialize, but we don't link to libvirt.so
in libvirt_lxc, and nor did we ever call the error
or thread initializers.
I have absolutely no idea how this has ever worked, let alone
what caused it to stop working in Fedora 20.
In addition not all code paths from virLogSetFromEnv will
ensure virLogInitialize is called correctly, which is another
possible crash scenario.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The LXC code would read the log file if an LXC guest failed to
startup. There were a number of failure cases where the guest
will not start and libvirtd never gets as far as looking at the
log file.
Fix this by replacing some earlier generic errors with messages
from the log.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The LXC controller main() method initialized 'rc' to 1
rather than '-1'. In the cleanup path it will print any
error to stderr, if-and-only-if rc < 0. Hence the incorrect
initialization caused errors to be lost.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The LXC controller uses dbus to talk to systemd to create
cgroups. This means that each LXC controller instance has
a dbus connection. The DBus daemon is limited to 256
connections by default and we want to be able to run many
1000 of containers.
While the dbus limit could be raised in the config files,
it is simpler to make libvirt LXC controller close its
dbus connection once everything is configured.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Since 76b644c when the support for RAM filesystems was introduced,
libvirt accepted the following XML:
<source usage='1024' unit='KiB'/>
This was parsed correctly and internally stored in bytes, but it
was formatted as (with an extra 's'):
<source usage='1024' units='KiB'/>
When read again, this was treated as if the units were missing,
meaning libvirt was unable to parse its own XML correctly.
The usage attribute was documented as being in KiB, but it was not
scaled if the unit was missing. Transient domains still worked,
because this was balanced by an extra 'k' in the mount options.
This patch:
Changes the parser to use 'units' instead of 'unit', as the latter
was never documented (fixing persistent domains) and some programs
(libvirt-glib, libvirt-sandbox) already parse the 'units' attribute.
Removes the extra 'k' from the tmpfs mount options, which is needed
because now we parse our own XML correctly.
Changes the default input unit to KiB to match documentation, fixing:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1015689
The virConnectPtr is passed around loads of nwfilter code in
order to provide it as a parameter to the callback registered
by the virt drivers. None of the virt drivers use this param
though, so it serves no purpose.
Avoiding the need to pass a virConnectPtr means that the
nwfilterStateReload method no longer needs to open a bogus
QEMU driver connection. This addresses a race condition that
can lead to a crash on startup.
The nwfilter driver starts before the QEMU driver and registers
some callbacks with DBus to detect firewalld reload. If the
firewalld reload happens while the QEMU driver is still starting
up though, the nwfilterStateReload method will open a connection
to the partially initialized QEMU driver and cause a crash.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
If veth device allocation has a fatal error, the veths
array may contain NULL device names. Avoid calling the
virNetDevVethDelete function on such names.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
During container cleanup there is a race where the kernel may
have destroyed the veth device before we try to set it offline.
This causes log error messages. Given that we're about to
delete the device entirely, setting it offline is pointless.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
We forgot to do cleanup when lxcContainerMountFSTmpfs
failed to bind fs as read-only.
Signed-off-by: Chen Hanxiao <chenhanxiao@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The problem is described by [0] but its effect on libvirt is that
starting a container with a full distro running systemd after having
stopped it simply fails.
The container cleanup now calls the machined Terminate function to make
sure that everything is in order for the next run.
[0]: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=68370
If a dir does not exist, raise an immediate error in logs
rather than letting virFileResolveAllLinks fail, since this
gives better error reporting to the user.
Signed-off-by: Chen Hanxiao <chenhanxiao@cn.fujitsu.com>
When FUSE is enabled, the LXC container is setup with
a custom /proc/meminfo file. This file uses "KB" as a
suffix, rather than "kB" which is the kernel's style.
Fix this inconsistency to avoid confusing apps.
Signed-off-by: Chen Hanxiao <chenhanxiao@cn.fujitsu.com>
Right now we mount selinuxfs even user namespace is enabled and
ignore the error. But we shouldn't ignore these errors when user
namespace is not enabled.
This patch skips mounting selinuxfs when user namespace enabled.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
If the guest is configured with
<filesystem type='mount'>
<source dir='/'/>
<target dir='/'/>
<readonly/>
</filesystem>
Then any submounts under / should also end up readonly, except
for those setup as basic mounts. eg if the user has /home on a
separate volume, they'd expect /home to be readonly, but we
should not touch the /sys, /proc, etc dirs we setup ourselves.
Users can selectively make sub-mounts read-write again by
simply listing them as new mounts without the <readonly>
flag set
<filesystem type='mount'>
<source dir='/home'/>
<target dir='/home'/>
</filesystem>
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Move the array of basic mounts out of the lxcContainerMountBasicFS
function, to a global variable. This is to allow it to be referenced
by other methods wanting to know what the basic mount paths are.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The devpts, dev and fuse filesystems are mounted temporarily.
there is no need to export them to container if container shares
the root directory with host.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
Right now, securityfs is disallowed to be mounted in non-initial
user namespace, so we must avoid trying to mount securityfs in
a container which has user namespace enabled.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
If booting a container with a root FS that isn't the host's
root, we must ensure that the /dev mount point exists.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The lxcContainerMountFSBlockAuto method can be used to mount the
initial root filesystem, so it cannot assume a prefix of /.oldroot.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
If securityfs is available on the host, we should ensure to
mount it read-only in the container. This will avoid systemd
trying to mount it during startup causing SELinux AVCs.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This configuration knob lets user to set the length of queue of
connection requests waiting to be accept()-ed by the daemon. IOW, it
just controls the @backlog passed to listen:
int listen(int sockfd, int backlog);
If upgrading from a libvirt that is older than 1.0.5, we can
not assume that vm->def->resource is non-NULL. This bogus
assumption caused libvirtd to crash
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Make the virCgroupNewMachine method try to use systemd-machined
first. If that fails, then fallback to using the traditional
cgroup setup code path.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
By setting the default partition in libvirt_lxc it is not
visible when querying the live XML. Move setting of the
default partition into libvirtd virLXCProcessStart
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Instead of requiring drivers to use a combination of calls
to virCgroupNewDetect and virCgroupIsValidMachine, combine
the two into virCgroupNewDetectMachine
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
There's a race in lxc driver causing a deadlock. If a domain is
destroyed immediately after started, the deadlock can occur. When domain
is started, the even loop tries to connect to the monitor. If the
connecting succeeds, virLXCProcessMonitorInitNotify() is called with
@mon->client locked. The first thing that callee does, is
virObjectLock(vm). So the order of locking is: 1) @mon->client, 2) @vm.
However, if there's another thread executing virDomainDestroy on the
very same domain, the first thing done here is locking the @vm. Then,
the corresponding libvirt_lxc process is killed and monitor is closed
via calling virLXCMonitorClose(). This callee tries to lock @mon->client
too. So the order is reversed to the first case. This situation results
in deadlock and unresponsive libvirtd (since the eventloop is involved).
The proper solution is to unlock the @vm in virLXCMonitorClose prior
entering virNetClientClose(). See the backtrace as follows:
Thread 25 (Thread 0x7f1b7c9b8700 (LWP 16312)):
0 0x00007f1b80539714 in __lll_lock_wait () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
1 0x00007f1b8053516c in _L_lock_516 () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
2 0x00007f1b80534fbb in pthread_mutex_lock () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
3 0x00007f1b82a637cf in virMutexLock (m=0x7f1b3c0038d0) at util/virthreadpthread.c:85
4 0x00007f1b82a4ccf2 in virObjectLock (anyobj=0x7f1b3c0038c0) at util/virobject.c:320
5 0x00007f1b82b861f6 in virNetClientCloseInternal (client=0x7f1b3c0038c0, reason=3) at rpc/virnetclient.c:696
6 0x00007f1b82b862f5 in virNetClientClose (client=0x7f1b3c0038c0) at rpc/virnetclient.c:721
7 0x00007f1b6ee12500 in virLXCMonitorClose (mon=0x7f1b3c007210) at lxc/lxc_monitor.c:216
8 0x00007f1b6ee129f0 in virLXCProcessCleanup (driver=0x7f1b68100240, vm=0x7f1b680ceb70, reason=VIR_DOMAIN_SHUTOFF_DESTROYED) at lxc/lxc_process.c:174
9 0x00007f1b6ee14106 in virLXCProcessStop (driver=0x7f1b68100240, vm=0x7f1b680ceb70, reason=VIR_DOMAIN_SHUTOFF_DESTROYED) at lxc/lxc_process.c:710
10 0x00007f1b6ee1aa36 in lxcDomainDestroyFlags (dom=0x7f1b5c002560, flags=0) at lxc/lxc_driver.c:1291
11 0x00007f1b6ee1ab1a in lxcDomainDestroy (dom=0x7f1b5c002560) at lxc/lxc_driver.c:1321
12 0x00007f1b82b05be5 in virDomainDestroy (domain=0x7f1b5c002560) at libvirt.c:2303
13 0x00007f1b835a7e85 in remoteDispatchDomainDestroy (server=0x7f1b857419d0, client=0x7f1b8574ae40, msg=0x7f1b8574acf0, rerr=0x7f1b7c9b7c30, args=0x7f1b5c004a50) at remote_dispatch.h:3143
14 0x00007f1b835a7d78 in remoteDispatchDomainDestroyHelper (server=0x7f1b857419d0, client=0x7f1b8574ae40, msg=0x7f1b8574acf0, rerr=0x7f1b7c9b7c30, args=0x7f1b5c004a50, ret=0x7f1b5c0029e0) at remote_dispatch.h:3121
15 0x00007f1b82b93704 in virNetServerProgramDispatchCall (prog=0x7f1b8573af90, server=0x7f1b857419d0, client=0x7f1b8574ae40, msg=0x7f1b8574acf0) at rpc/virnetserverprogram.c:435
16 0x00007f1b82b93263 in virNetServerProgramDispatch (prog=0x7f1b8573af90, server=0x7f1b857419d0, client=0x7f1b8574ae40, msg=0x7f1b8574acf0) at rpc/virnetserverprogram.c:305
17 0x00007f1b82b8c0f6 in virNetServerProcessMsg (srv=0x7f1b857419d0, client=0x7f1b8574ae40, prog=0x7f1b8573af90, msg=0x7f1b8574acf0) at rpc/virnetserver.c:163
18 0x00007f1b82b8c1da in virNetServerHandleJob (jobOpaque=0x7f1b8574dca0, opaque=0x7f1b857419d0) at rpc/virnetserver.c:184
19 0x00007f1b82a64158 in virThreadPoolWorker (opaque=0x7f1b8573cb10) at util/virthreadpool.c:144
20 0x00007f1b82a63ae5 in virThreadHelper (data=0x7f1b8574b9f0) at util/virthreadpthread.c:161
21 0x00007f1b80532f4a in start_thread () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
22 0x00007f1b7fc4f20d in clone () from /lib64/libc.so.6
Thread 1 (Thread 0x7f1b83546740 (LWP 16297)):
0 0x00007f1b80539714 in __lll_lock_wait () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
1 0x00007f1b8053516c in _L_lock_516 () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
2 0x00007f1b80534fbb in pthread_mutex_lock () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
3 0x00007f1b82a637cf in virMutexLock (m=0x7f1b680ceb80) at util/virthreadpthread.c:85
4 0x00007f1b82a4ccf2 in virObjectLock (anyobj=0x7f1b680ceb70) at util/virobject.c:320
5 0x00007f1b6ee13bd7 in virLXCProcessMonitorInitNotify (mon=0x7f1b3c007210, initpid=4832, vm=0x7f1b680ceb70) at lxc/lxc_process.c:601
6 0x00007f1b6ee11fd3 in virLXCMonitorHandleEventInit (prog=0x7f1b3c001f10, client=0x7f1b3c0038c0, evdata=0x7f1b8574a7d0, opaque=0x7f1b3c007210) at lxc/lxc_monitor.c:109
7 0x00007f1b82b8a196 in virNetClientProgramDispatch (prog=0x7f1b3c001f10, client=0x7f1b3c0038c0, msg=0x7f1b3c003928) at rpc/virnetclientprogram.c:259
8 0x00007f1b82b87030 in virNetClientCallDispatchMessage (client=0x7f1b3c0038c0) at rpc/virnetclient.c:1019
9 0x00007f1b82b876bb in virNetClientCallDispatch (client=0x7f1b3c0038c0) at rpc/virnetclient.c:1140
10 0x00007f1b82b87d41 in virNetClientIOHandleInput (client=0x7f1b3c0038c0) at rpc/virnetclient.c:1312
11 0x00007f1b82b88f51 in virNetClientIncomingEvent (sock=0x7f1b3c0044e0, events=1, opaque=0x7f1b3c0038c0) at rpc/virnetclient.c:1832
12 0x00007f1b82b9e1c8 in virNetSocketEventHandle (watch=3321, fd=54, events=1, opaque=0x7f1b3c0044e0) at rpc/virnetsocket.c:1695
13 0x00007f1b82a272cf in virEventPollDispatchHandles (nfds=21, fds=0x7f1b8574ded0) at util/vireventpoll.c:498
14 0x00007f1b82a27af2 in virEventPollRunOnce () at util/vireventpoll.c:645
15 0x00007f1b82a25a61 in virEventRunDefaultImpl () at util/virevent.c:273
16 0x00007f1b82b8e97e in virNetServerRun (srv=0x7f1b857419d0) at rpc/virnetserver.c:1097
17 0x00007f1b8359db6b in main (argc=2, argv=0x7ffff98dbaa8) at libvirtd.c:1512
Commit 'c8695053' resulted in the following:
Coverity error seen in the output:
ERROR: REVERSE_INULL
FUNCTION: lxcProcessAutoDestroy
Due to the 'dom' being checked before 'dom->persistent' since 'dom'
is already dereferenced prior to that.
Currently the LXC driver creates the VM's cgroup prior to
forking, and then libvirt_lxc moves the child process
into the cgroup. This won't work with systemd whose APIs
do the creation of cgroups + attachment of processes atomically.
Fortunately we simply move the entire cgroups setup into
the libvirt_lxc child process. We make it take place before
fork'ing into the background, so by the time virCommandRun
returns in the LXC driver, the cgroup is guaranteed to be
present.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Use the new virCgroupNewDetect function to determine cgroup
placement of existing running VMs. This will allow the legacy
cgroups creation APIs to be removed entirely
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Convert the remaining methods in vircgroup.c to report errors
instead of returning errno values.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
If no explicit driver is set for an image backed filesystem,
set it to use the loop driver (if raw) or nbd driver (if
non-raw)
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
A couple of places in LXC setup for filesystems did not do
a "goto cleanup" after reporting errors. While fixing this,
also add in many more debug statements to aid troubleshooting
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
With the majority of fields in the virLXCDriverPtr struct
now immutable or self-locking, there is no need for practically
any methods to be using the LXC driver lock. Only a handful
of helper APIs now need it.
The activeUsbHostdevs item in LXCDriver are lockable, but the lock has
to be called explicitly. Call the virObject(Un)Lock() in order to
achieve mutual exclusion once lxcDriverLock is removed.
The 'driver->caps' pointer can be changed on the fly. Accessing
it currently requires the global driver lock. Isolate this
access in a single helper, so a future patch can relax the
locking constraints.
Currently the virLXCDriverPtr struct contains an wide variety
of data with varying access needs. Move all the static config
data into a dedicated virLXCDriverConfigPtr object. The only
locking requirement is to hold the driver lock, while obtaining
an instance of virLXCDriverConfigPtr. Once a reference is held
on the config object, it can be used completely lockless since
it is immutable.
NB, not all APIs correctly hold the driver lock while getting
a reference to the config object in this patch. This is safe
for now since the config is never updated on the fly. Later
patches will address this fully.
Merge the virCommandPreserveFD / virCommandTransferFD methods
into a single virCommandPasFD method, and use a new
VIR_COMMAND_PASS_FD_CLOSE_PARENT to indicate their difference
in behaviour
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Wire up the new virDomainCreate{XML}WithFiles methods in the
LXC driver, so that FDs get passed down to the init process.
The lxc_container code needs to do a little dance in order
to renumber the file descriptors it receives into linear
order, starting from STDERR_FILENO + 1.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Commit 75c1256 states that virGetGroupList must not be called
between fork and exec, then commit ee777e99 promptly violated
that for lxc.
Patch originally posted by Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>.
Currently, if the primary security driver is 'none', we skip
initializing caps->host.secModels. This means, later, when LXC domain
XML is parsed and <seclabel type='none'/> is found (see
virSecurityLabelDefsParseXML), the model name is not copied to the
seclabel. This leads to subsequent crash in virSecurityManagerGenLabel
where we call STREQ() over the model (note, that we are expecting model
to be !NULL).
Otherwise the container will fail to start if we
enable user namespace, since there is no rights to
do mknod in uninit user namespace.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
lxc driver will use this function to change the owner
of hot added devices.
Move virLXCControllerChown to lxc_container.c and Rename
it to lxcContainerChown.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
When failing to start a container due to inaccessible root
filesystem path, we did not log any meaningful error. Add a
few debug statements to assist diagnosis
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=964358
POSIX states that multi-threaded apps should not use functions
that are not async-signal-safe between fork and exec, yet we
were using getpwuid_r and initgroups. Although rare, it is
possible to hit deadlock in the child, when it tries to grab
a mutex that was already held by another thread in the parent.
I actually hit this deadlock when testing multiple domains
being started in parallel with a command hook, with the following
backtrace in the child:
Thread 1 (Thread 0x7fd56bbf2700 (LWP 3212)):
#0 __lll_lock_wait ()
at ../nptl/sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/lowlevellock.S:136
#1 0x00007fd5761e7388 in _L_lock_854 () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
#2 0x00007fd5761e7257 in __pthread_mutex_lock (mutex=0x7fd56be00360)
at pthread_mutex_lock.c:61
#3 0x00007fd56bbf9fc5 in _nss_files_getpwuid_r (uid=0, result=0x7fd56bbf0c70,
buffer=0x7fd55c2a65f0 "", buflen=1024, errnop=0x7fd56bbf25b8)
at nss_files/files-pwd.c:40
#4 0x00007fd575aeff1d in __getpwuid_r (uid=0, resbuf=0x7fd56bbf0c70,
buffer=0x7fd55c2a65f0 "", buflen=1024, result=0x7fd56bbf0cb0)
at ../nss/getXXbyYY_r.c:253
#5 0x00007fd578aebafc in virSetUIDGID (uid=0, gid=0) at util/virutil.c:1031
#6 0x00007fd578aebf43 in virSetUIDGIDWithCaps (uid=0, gid=0, capBits=0,
clearExistingCaps=true) at util/virutil.c:1388
#7 0x00007fd578a9a20b in virExec (cmd=0x7fd55c231f10) at util/vircommand.c:654
#8 0x00007fd578a9dfa2 in virCommandRunAsync (cmd=0x7fd55c231f10, pid=0x0)
at util/vircommand.c:2247
#9 0x00007fd578a9d74e in virCommandRun (cmd=0x7fd55c231f10, exitstatus=0x0)
at util/vircommand.c:2100
#10 0x00007fd56326fde5 in qemuProcessStart (conn=0x7fd53c000df0,
driver=0x7fd55c0dc4f0, vm=0x7fd54800b100, migrateFrom=0x0, stdin_fd=-1,
stdin_path=0x0, snapshot=0x0, vmop=VIR_NETDEV_VPORT_PROFILE_OP_CREATE,
flags=1) at qemu/qemu_process.c:3694
...
The solution is to split the work of getpwuid_r/initgroups into the
unsafe portions (getgrouplist, called pre-fork) and safe portions
(setgroups, called post-fork).
* src/util/virutil.h (virSetUIDGID, virSetUIDGIDWithCaps): Adjust
signature.
* src/util/virutil.c (virSetUIDGID): Add parameters.
(virSetUIDGIDWithCaps): Adjust clients.
* src/util/vircommand.c (virExec): Likewise.
* src/util/virfile.c (virFileAccessibleAs, virFileOpenForked)
(virDirCreate): Likewise.
* src/security/security_dac.c (virSecurityDACSetProcessLabel):
Likewise.
* src/lxc/lxc_container.c (lxcContainerSetID): Likewise.
* configure.ac (AC_CHECK_FUNCS_ONCE): Check for setgroups, not
initgroups.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Recent changes uncovered a NEGATIVE_RETURNS in the return from sysconf()
when processing a for loop in virtTestCaptureProgramExecChild() in
testutils.c
Code review uncovered 3 other code paths with the same condition that
weren't found by Covirity, so fixed those as well.
Convert the type of loop iterators named 'i', 'j', k',
'ii', 'jj', 'kk', to be 'size_t' instead of 'int' or
'unsigned int', also santizing 'ii', 'jj', 'kk' to use
the normal 'i', 'j', 'k' naming
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Create parent directroy for hostdev automatically when we
start a lxc domain or attach a hostdev to a lxc domain.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
This helper function is used to create parent directory for
the hostdev which will be added to the container. If the
parent directory of this hostdev doesn't exist, the mknod of
the hostdev will fail. eg with /dev/net/tun
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
Many applications use /dev/tty to read from stdin.
e.g. zypper on openSUSE.
Let's create this device node to unbreak those applications.
As /dev/tty is a synonym for the current controlling terminal
it cannot harm the host or any other containers.
Signed-off-by: Richard Weinberger <richard@nod.at>
libivrt lxc can only set generic weight for container,
This patch allows user to setup per device blkio
weigh for container.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
User namespaces will deny the ability to mount the SELinux
filesystem. This is harmless for libvirt's LXC needs, so the
error can be ignored.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Since these devices are created for the container.
the owner should be the root user of the container.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
container will create /dev/pts directory in /dev.
the owner of /dev should be the root user of container.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
Since these tty devices will be used by container,
the owner of them should be the root user of container.
This patch also adds a new function virLXCControllerChown,
we can use this general function to change the owner of
files.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
user namespace doesn't allow to create devices in
uninit userns. We should create devices on host side.
We first mount tmpfs on dev directroy under state dir
of container. then create devices under this dev dir.
Finally in container, mount the dev directroy created
on host to the /dev/ directroy of container.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
This patch introduces new helper function
virLXCControllerSetupUserns, in this function,
we set the files uid_map and gid_map of the init
task of container.
lxcContainerSetID is used for creating cred for
tasks running in container. Since after setuid/setgid,
we may be a new user. This patch calls lxcContainerSetUserns
at first to make sure the new created files belong to
right user.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
User namespace will be enabled only when the idmap exist
in configuration.
If you want disable user namespace,just remove these
elements from XML.
If kernel doesn't support user namespace and idmap exist
in configuration file, libvirt lxc will start failed and
return "Kernel doesn't support user namespace" message.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
As a consequence of the cgroup layout changes from commit 'cfed9ad4', the
lxcDomainGetSchedulerParameters[Flags]()' and lxcGetSchedulerType() APIs
failed to return data for a non running domain. This can be seen through
a 'virsh schedinfo <domain>' command which returns:
Scheduler : Unknown
error: Requested operation is not valid: cgroup CPU controller is not mounted
Prior to that change a non running domain would return:
Scheduler : posix
cpu_shares : 0
vcpu_period : 0
vcpu_quota : 0
emulator_period: 0
emulator_quota : 0
This patch will restore the capability to return configuration only data
for a non running domain regardless of whether cgroups are available.
By default files in a FUSE mount can only be accessed by the
user which created them, even if the file permissions would
otherwise allow it. To allow other users to access the FUSE
mount the 'allow_other' mount option must be used. This bug
prevented non-root users in an LXC container from reading
the /proc/meminfo file.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=967977
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Earlier commit f7e8653f dropped support for using LXC with
kernels having single-instance devpts filesystem from the
LXC controller. It forgot to remove the same code from the
LXC container setup.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
After commit c131525bec
"Auto-add a root <filesystem> element to LXC containers on startup"
for libvirt lxc, root must be existent.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
Re-add the selinux header to lxc_container.c since other
functions now use it, beyond the patch that was just
reverted.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Before trying to mount the selinux filesystem in a container
use is_selinux_enabled() to check if the machine actually
has selinux support (eg not booted with selinux=0)
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
During startup, the LXC driver uses paths such as
/.oldroot/var/run/libvirt/lxc/...
to access directories from the previous root filesystem
after doing a pivot_root(). Unfortunately if /var/run
is an absolute symlink to /run, instead of a relative
symlink to ../run, these paths break.
At least one Linux distro is known to use an absolute
symlink for /var/run, so workaround this, by resolving
all symlinks before doing the pivot_root().
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
We do not want to allow contained applications to be able to read fusefs_t.
So we want /proc/meminfo label to match the system default proc_t.
Fix checking of error codes
The lxcContainerMountAllFS method had a 'bool skipRoot'
flag to control whether it mounts the / filesystem. Since
removal of the non-pivot root container setup codepaths,
this flag is obsolete as the only caller always passes
'true'.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Many methods accept a string parameter specifying the
old root directory prefix. Since removal of the non-pivot
root container setup codepaths, this parameter is obsolete
in many methods where the callers always pass "/.oldroot".
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The lxcContainerMountBasicFS method had a 'bool pivotRoot'
flag to control whether it mounted a private /dev. Since
removal of the non-pivot root container setup codepaths,
this flag is obsolete as the only caller always passes
'true'.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The LXC driver can already configure <disk> or <filesystem>
devices to use the loop device. This extends it to also allow
for use of the NBD device, to support non-raw formats.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The current code for setting up loop devices to LXC disks first
does a switch() based on the disk format, then looks at the
disk driver name. Reverse this so it first looks at the driver
name, and then the disk format. This is more useful since the
list of supported disk formats depends on what driver is used.
The code for setting loop devices for LXC fs entries also needs
to have the same logic added, now the XML schema supports this.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The LXC, QEMU, and LibXL drivers have all merged their handling of
the attach/update/modify device APIs into one large
'xxxxDomainModifyDeviceFlags'
which then does a 'switch()' based on the actual API being invoked.
While this saves some lines of code, it is not really all that
significant in the context of the driver API impls as a whole.
This merger of the handling of different APIs creates pain when
wanting to automated analysis of the code and do things which
are specific to individual APIs. The slight duplication of code
from unmerged the API impls, is preferrable to allow for easier
automated analysis.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The individual hypervisor drivers were directly referencing
APIs in virnodesuspend.c in their virDriverPtr struct. Separate
these methods, so there is always a wrapper in the hypervisor
driver. This allows the unused virConnectPtr args to be removed
from the virnodesuspend.c file. Again this will ensure that
ACL checks will only be performed on invocations that are
directly associated with public API usage.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The individual hypervisor drivers were directly referencing
APIs in src/nodeinfo.c in their virDriverPtr struct. Separate
these methods, so there is always a wrapper in the hypervisor
driver. This allows the unused virConnectPtr args to be
removed from the nodeinfo.c file. Again this will ensure that
ACL checks will only be performed on invocations that are
directly associated with public API usage.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Currently the virGetHostname() API has a bogus virConnectPtr
parameter. This is because virtualization drivers directly
reference this API in their virDriverPtr tables, tieing its
API design to the public virConnectGetHostname API design.
This also causes problems for access control checks since
these must only be done for invocations from the public
API, not internal invocation.
Remove the bogus virConnectPtr parameter, and make each
hypervisor driver provide a dedicated function for the
driver API impl. This will allow access control checks
to be easily inserted later.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The source code base needs to be adapted as well. Some files
include virutil.h just for the string related functions (here,
the include is substituted to match the new file), some include
virutil.h without any need (here, the include is removed), and
some require both.
Ensure that all drivers implementing public APIs use a
naming convention for their implementation that matches
the public API name.
eg for the public API virDomainCreate make sure QEMU
uses qemuDomainCreate and not qemuDomainStart
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Ensure that the driver struct field names match the public
API names. For an API virXXXX we must have a driver struct
field xXXXX. ie strip the leading 'vir' and lowercase any
leading uppercase letters.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The change in commit aed4986322
was incomplete, missing a couple of cases of /system. This
caused failure to start VMs.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
After discussions with systemd developers it was decided that
a better default policy for resource partitions is to have
3 default partitions at the top level
/system - system services
/machine - virtual machines / containers
/user - user login session
This ensures that the default policy isolates guest from
user login sessions & system services, so a mis-behaving
guest can't consume 100% of CPU usage if other things are
contending for it.
Thus we change the default partition from /system to
/machine
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
http://www.uhv.edu/ac/newsletters/writing/grammartip2009.07.01.htm
(and several other sites) give hints that 'onto' is best used if
you can also add 'up' just before it and still make sense. In many
cases in the code base, we really want the two-word form, or even
a simplification to just 'on' or 'to'.
* docs/hacking.html.in: Use correct 'on to'.
* python/libvirt-override.c: Likewise.
* src/lxc/lxc_controller.c: Likewise.
* src/util/virpci.c: Likewise.
* daemon/THREADS.txt: Use simpler 'on'.
* docs/formatdomain.html.in: Better usage.
* docs/internals/rpc.html.in: Likewise.
* src/conf/domain_event.c: Likewise.
* src/rpc/virnetclient.c: Likewise.
* tests/qemumonitortestutils.c: Likewise.
* HACKING: Regenerate.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The LXC driver currently has code to detect cgroups mounts
and then re-mount them inside the new root filesystem. Replace
this fragile code with a call to virCgroupIsolateMount.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The virCgroupNewDriver method had a 'bool privileged' param.
If a false value was ever passed in, it would simply not
work, since non-root users don't have any privileges to create
new cgroups. Just delete this broken code entirely and make
the QEMU driver skip cgroup setup in non-privileged mode
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Historically QEMU/LXC guests have been placed in a cgroup layout
that is
$LOCATION-OF-LIBVIRTD/libvirt/{qemu,lxc}/$VMNAME
This is bad for a number of reasons
- The cgroup hierarchy gets very deep which seriously
impacts kernel performance due to cgroups scalability
limitations.
- It is hard to setup cgroup policies which apply across
services and virtual machines, since all VMs are underneath
the libvirtd service.
To address this the default cgroup location is changed to
be
/system/$VMNAME.{lxc,qemu}.libvirt
This puts virtual machines at the same level in the hierarchy
as system services, allowing consistent policy to be setup
across all of them.
This also honours the new resource partition location from the
XML configuration, for example
<resource>
<partition>/virtualmachines/production</partitions>
</resource>
will result in the VM being placed at
/virtualmachines/production/$VMNAME.{lxc,qemu}.libvirt
NB, with the exception of the default, /system, path which
is intended to always exist, libvirt will not attempt to
auto-create the partitions in the XML. It is the responsibility
of the admin/app to configure the partitions. Later libvirt
APIs will provide a way todo this.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
A resource partition is an absolute cgroup path, ignoring the
current process placement. Expose a virCgroupNewPartition API
for constructing such cgroups
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Rename all the virCgroupForXXX methods to use the form
virCgroupNewXXX since they are all constructors. Also
make sure the output parameter is the last one in the
list, and annotate all pointers as non-null. Fix up
all callers, and make sure they use true/false not 0/1
for the boolean parameters
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Instead of calling virCgroupForDomain every time we need
the virCgrouPtr instance, just do it once at Vm startup
and cache a reference to the object in virLXCDomainObjPrivatePtr
until shutdown of the VM. Removing the virCgroupPtr from
the LXC driver state also means we don't have stale mount
info, if someone mounts the cgroups filesystem after libvirtd
has been started
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
If the user requests a mount for /run, this may hide any existing
mounts that are lower down in /run. The result is that the
container still sees the mounts in /proc/mounts, but cannot
access them
sh-4.2# df
df: '/run/user/501/gvfs': No such file or directory
df: '/run/media/berrange/LIVE': No such file or directory
df: '/run/media/berrange/SecureDiskA1': No such file or directory
df: '/run/libvirt/lxc/sandbox': No such file or directory
Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on
/dev/mapper/vg_t500wlan-lv_root 151476396 135390200 8384900 95% /
tmpfs 1970888 3204 1967684 1% /run
/dev/sda1 194241 155940 28061 85% /boot
devfs 64 0 64 0% /dev
tmpfs 64 0 64 0% /sys/fs/cgroup
tmpfs 1970888 1200 1969688 1% /etc/libvirt-sandbox/scratch
Before mounting any filesystem at a particular location, we
must recursively unmount anything at or below the target mount
point
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Ensure lxcContainerUnmountSubtree is at the top of the
lxc_container.c file so it is easily referenced from
any other method. No functional change
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This allows a container-type domain to have exclusive access to one of
the host's NICs.
Wire <hostdev caps=net> with the lxc_controller - when moving the newly
created veth devices into a new namespace, also look for any hostdev
devices that should be moved. Note: once the container domain has been
destroyed, there is no code that moves the interfaces back to the
original namespace. This does happen, though, probably due to default
cleanup on namespace destruction.
Signed-off-by: Bogdan Purcareata <bogdan.purcareata@freescale.com>
The virCgroupMounted method is badly named, since a controller can be
mounted, but disabled in the current object. Rename the method to be
virCgroupHasController. Also make it tolerant to a NULL virCgroupPtr
and out-of-range controller index, to avoid duplication of these
checks in all callers
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Currently when getting an instance of virCgroupPtr we will
create the path in all cgroup controllers. Only at the virt
driver layer are we attempting to filter controllers. This
is bad because the mere act of creating the dirs in the
controllers can have a functional impact on the kernel,
particularly for performance.
Update the virCgroupForDriver() method to accept a bitmask
of controllers to use. Only create dirs in the controllers
that are requested. When creating cgroups for domains,
respect the active controller list from the parent cgroup
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The virCgroupGetAppRoot is not clear in its meaning. Change
to virCgroupForSelf to highlight that this returns the
cgroup config for the caller's process
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This patch refactors various places to allow removing of the
defaultConsoleTargetType callback from the virCaps structure.
A new console character device target type is introduced -
VIR_DOMAIN_CHR_CONSOLE_TARGET_TYPE_NONE - to mark that no type was
specified in the XML. This type is at the end converted to the standard
VIR_DOMAIN_CHR_CONSOLE_TARGET_TYPE_SERIAL. Other types that are
different from this default have to be processed separately in the
device post parse callback.
Use the virDomainXMLConf structure to hold this data and tweak the code
to avoid semantic change.
Without configuration the KVM mac prefix is used by default. I chose it
as it's in the privately administered segment so it should be usable for
any purposes.
This patch removes the emulatorRequired field and associated
infrastructure from the virCaps object. Instead the driver specific
callbacks are used as this field isn't enforced by all drivers.
This patch implements the appropriate callbacks in the qemu and lxc
driver and moves to check to that location.
This patch adds instrumentation that will allow hypervisor drivers to
fill and validate domain and device definitions after parsed by the XML
parser.
With this patch, after the XML is parsed, a callback to the driver is
issued requesting to fill and validate driver specific details of the
configuration. This allows to use sensible defaults and checks on a per
driver basis at the time the XML is parsed.
Two callback pointers are stored in the new virDomainXMLConf object:
* virDomainDeviceDefPostParseCallback (devicesPostParseCallback)
- called for a single device parsed and for every single device in a
domain config. A virDomainDeviceDefPtr is passed along with the
domain definition and virCaps.
* virDomainDefPostParseCallback, (domainPostParseCallback)
- A callback that is meant to process the domain config after it's
parsed. A virDomainDefPtr is passed along with virCaps.
Both types of callbacks support arbitrary opaque data passed for the
callback functions.
Errors may be reported in those callbacks resulting in a XML parsing
failure.
This patch is the result of running:
for i in $(git ls-files | grep -v html | grep -v \.po$ ); do
sed -i -e "s/virDomainXMLConf/virDomainXMLOption/g" -e "s/xmlconf/xmlopt/g" $i
done
and a few manual tweaks.
This reverts commit c9c87376f2.
Now that we force all containers to have a root filesystem,
there is no way the host's /dev is ever exposed
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Currently the LXC container code has two codepaths, depending on
whether there is a <filesystem> element with a target path of '/'.
If we automatically add a <filesystem> device with src=/ and dst=/,
for any container which has not specified a root filesystem, then
we only need one codepath for setting up the filesystem.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Early on kernel support for private devpts was not widespread,
so we had compatibiltiy codepaths. Such old kernels are not
seriously used for LXC these days, so the compat code can go
away
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
For a root filesystem with type=file or type=block, the LXC
container was forgetting to actually mount it, before doing
the pivot root step.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Currently the lxc controller sets up the devpts instance on
$rootfsdef->src, but this only works if $rootfsdef is using
type=mount. To support type=block or type=file for the root
filesystem, we must use /var/lib/libvirt/lxc/$NAME.devpts
for the temporary devpts mount in the controller
Instead of using /var/lib/libvirt/lxc/$NAME for the FUSE
filesystem, use /var/lib/libvirt/lxc/$NAME.fuse. This allows
room for other temporary mounts in the same directory
Some of the LXC callbacks did not lock the virDomainObjPtr
instance. This caused transient errors like
error: Failed to start domain busy-mount
error: cannot rename file '/var/run/libvirt/lxc/busy-mount.xml.new' as '/var/run/libvirt/lxc/busy-mount.xml': No such file or directory
as 2 threads tried to update the status file concurrently
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The 'nodeset' variable was never initialized, causing a later
VIR_FREE(nodeset) to free uninitialized memory.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Intend to reduce the redundant code,use virNumaSetupMemoryPolicy
to replace virLXCControllerSetupNUMAPolicy and
qemuProcessInitNumaMemoryPolicy.
This patch also moves the numa related codes to the
file virnuma.c and virnuma.h
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
Allow lxc using the advisory nodeset from querying numad,
this means if user doesn't specify the numa nodes that
the lxc domain should assign to, libvirt will automatically
bind the lxc domain to the advisory nodeset which queried from
numad.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
The LXC controller is closing loop devices as soon as the
container has started. This is fine if the loop device
was setup as a mounted filesystem, but if we're just passing
through the loop device as a disk, nothing else is keeping
it open. Thus we must keep the loop device FDs open for as
long the libvirt_lxc process is running.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Currently the LXC controller creates the cgroup, configures the
resources and adds the task all in one go. This is not sufficiently
flexible for the forthcoming NBD integration. We need to make sure
the NBD process gets into the right cgroup immediately, but we can
not have limits (in particular the device ACL) applied at the point
where we start qemu-nbd. So create a virLXCCgroupCreate method
which creates the cgroup and adds the current task to be called
early, and leave virLXCCgroupSetup to only do resource config.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The naming used in the RPC protocols for the LXC monitor and
lock daemon confused the script used to generate systemtap
helper functions. Rename the LXC monitor protocol symbols to
reduce confusion. Adapt the gensystemtap.pl script to cope
with the LXC monitor / lock daemon naming conversions.
This has no functional impact on RPC wire protocol, since
names are only used in the C layer
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
If an LXC domain failed to start because of a bogus SELinux
label, virLXCProcessStart would call VIR_CLOSE(0) by mistake.
This is because the code which initializes the member of the
ttyFDs array to -1 got moved too far away from the place where
the array is first allocated.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
In some startup failure modes, the fuse thread may get itself
wedged. This will cause the entire libvirt_lxc process to
hang trying to the join the thread. There is no compelling
reason to wait for the thread to exit if the whole process
is exiting, so just daemonize the fuse thread instead.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The virDomainGetSecurityLabel method is currently (mistakenly)
showing the label of the libvirt_lxc process:
...snip...
Security model: selinux
Security DOI: 0
Security label: system_u:system_r:virtd_t:s0-s0:c0.c1023 (permissive)
when it should be showing the init process label
...snip...
Security model: selinux
Security DOI: 0
Security label: system_u:system_r:svirt_t:s0:c724,c995 (permissive)
The virCaps structure gathered a ton of irrelevant data over time that.
The original reason is that it was propagated to the XML parser
functions.
This patch aims to create a new data structure virDomainXMLConf that
will contain immutable data that are used by the XML parser. This will
allow two things we need:
1) Get rid of the stuff from virCaps
2) Allow us to add callbacks to check and add driver specific stuff
after domain XML is parsed.
This first attempt removes pointers to private data allocation functions
to this new structure and update all callers and function that require
them.
When setting up disks with loop devices for LXC, one of the
switch cases was missing a 'break' causing it to fallthrough
to an error condition.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
otherwise we crash with
#0 virUSBDeviceListFind (list=0x0, dev=dev@entry=0x8193d70) at util/virusb.c:526
#1 0xb1a4995b in virLXCPrepareHostdevUSBDevices (driver=driver@entry=0x815d9a0, name=0x815dbf8 "debian-700267", list=list@entry=0x81d8f08) at lxc/lxc_hostdev.c:88
#2 0xb1a49fce in virLXCPrepareHostUSBDevices (def=0x8193af8, driver=0x815d9a0) at lxc/lxc_hostdev.c:261
#3 virLXCPrepareHostDevices (driver=driver@entry=0x815d9a0, def=0x8193af8) at lxc/lxc_hostdev.c:328
#4 0xb1a4c5b1 in virLXCProcessStart (conn=0x817d3f8, driver=driver@entry=0x815d9a0, vm=vm@entry=0x8190908, autoDestroy=autoDestroy@entry=false, reason=reason@entry=VIR_DOMAIN_RUNNING_BOOTED)
at lxc/lxc_process.c:1068
#5 0xb1a57e00 in lxcDomainStartWithFlags (dom=dom@entry=0x815e460, flags=flags@entry=0) at lxc/lxc_driver.c:1014
#6 0xb1a57fc3 in lxcDomainStart (dom=0x815e460) at lxc/lxc_driver.c:1046
#7 0xb79c8375 in virDomainCreate (domain=domain@entry=0x815e460) at libvirt.c:8450
#8 0x08078959 in remoteDispatchDomainCreate (args=0x81920a0, rerr=0xb65c21d0, client=0xb0d00490, server=<optimized out>, msg=<optimized out>) at remote_dispatch.h:1066
#9 remoteDispatchDomainCreateHelper (server=0x80c4928, client=0xb0d00490, msg=0xb0d005b0, rerr=0xb65c21d0, args=0x81920a0, ret=0x815d208) at remote_dispatch.h:1044
#10 0xb7a36901 in virNetServerProgramDispatchCall (msg=0xb0d005b0, client=0xb0d00490, server=0x80c4928, prog=0x80c6438) at rpc/virnetserverprogram.c:432
#11 virNetServerProgramDispatch (prog=0x80c6438, server=server@entry=0x80c4928, client=0xb0d00490, msg=0xb0d005b0) at rpc/virnetserverprogram.c:305
#12 0xb7a300a7 in virNetServerProcessMsg (msg=<optimized out>, prog=<optimized out>, client=<optimized out>, srv=0x80c4928) at rpc/virnetserver.c:162
#13 virNetServerHandleJob (jobOpaque=0xb0d00510, opaque=0x80c4928) at rpc/virnetserver.c:183
#14 0xb7924f98 in virThreadPoolWorker (opaque=opaque@entry=0x80a94b0) at util/virthreadpool.c:144
#15 0xb7924515 in virThreadHelper (data=0x80a9440) at util/virthreadpthread.c:161
#16 0xb7887c39 in start_thread (arg=0xb65c2b70) at pthread_create.c:304
#17 0xb77eb78e in clone () at ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/i386/clone.S:130
when adding a domain with a usb device. This is Debian bug
http://bugs.debian.org/700267
This fixes the build on Debian Wheezy which otherwise fails with:
CC libvirt_driver_lxc_impl_la-lxc_process.lo
lxc/lxc_process.c: In function 'virLXCProcessGetNsInode':
lxc/lxc_process.c:648:5: error: implicit declaration of function 'stat' [-Werror=implicit-function-declaration]
lxc/lxc_process.c:648:5: error: nested extern declaration of 'stat' [-Werror=nested-externs]
cc1: all warnings being treated as errors
By using a loopback device, disks backed by plain files can
be made available to LXC containers. We make no attempt to
auto-detect format if <driver type="raw"/> is not set,
instead we unconditionally treat that as meaning raw. This
is to avoid the security issues inherent with format
auto-detection
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Currently we rely on a VIR_ERROR message being logged by the
virRaiseError function to report LXC startup errors. This gives
the right message, but is rather ugly and can be truncated
if lots of log messages are written. Change the LXC controller
to explicitly print any virErrorPtr message to stderr. Then
change the driver to skip over anything that looks like a log
message.
The result is that this
error: Failed to start domain busy
error: internal error guest failed to start: 2013-03-04 19:46:42.846+0000: 1734: info : libvirt version: 1.0.2
2013-03-04 19:46:42.846+0000: 1734: error : virFileLoopDeviceAssociate:600 : Unable to open /root/disk.raw: No such file or directory
changes to
error: Failed to start domain busy
error: internal error guest failed to start: Unable to open /root/disk.raw: No such file or directory
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
In the LXC container startup code when switching stdio
streams, we call VIR_FORCE_CLOSE on all FDs. This triggers
a huge number of warnings, but we don't see them because
stdio is closed at this point. strace() however shows them
which can confuse people debugging the code. Switch to
VIR_MASS_CLOSE to avoid this
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
To enable locking to be introduced to the security manager
objects later, turn virSecurityManager into a virObjectLockable
class
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
To enable virCapabilities instances to be reference counted,
turn it into a virObject. All cases of virCapabilitiesFree
turn into virObjectUnref
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
To allow modifications to the lists to be synchronized, convert
virPCIDeviceList and virUSBDeviceList into virObjectLockable
classes. The locking, however, will not be self-contained. The
users of these classes will have to call virObjectLock/Unlock
in the critical regions.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When iterating over USB host devices to setup cgroups, the
usbDevice object was leaked in both LXC and QEMU driers
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The duplicate VM checking should be done atomically with
virDomainObjListAdd, so shoud not be a separate function.
Instead just use flags to indicate what kind of checks are
required.
This pair, used in virDomainCreateXML:
if (virDomainObjListIsDuplicate(privconn->domains, def, 1) < 0)
goto cleanup;
if (!(dom = virDomainObjListAdd(privconn->domains,
privconn->caps,
def, false)))
goto cleanup;
Changes to
if (!(dom = virDomainObjListAdd(privconn->domains,
privconn->caps,
def,
VIR_DOMAIN_OBJ_LIST_ADD_CHECK_LIVE,
NULL)))
goto cleanup;
This pair, used in virDomainRestoreFlags:
if (virDomainObjListIsDuplicate(privconn->domains, def, 1) < 0)
goto cleanup;
if (!(dom = virDomainObjListAdd(privconn->domains,
privconn->caps,
def, true)))
goto cleanup;
Changes to
if (!(dom = virDomainObjListAdd(privconn->domains,
privconn->caps,
def,
VIR_DOMAIN_OBJ_LIST_ADD_LIVE |
VIR_DOMAIN_OBJ_LIST_ADD_CHECK_LIVE,
NULL)))
goto cleanup;
This pair, used in virDomainDefineXML:
if (virDomainObjListIsDuplicate(privconn->domains, def, 0) < 0)
goto cleanup;
if (!(dom = virDomainObjListAdd(privconn->domains,
privconn->caps,
def, false)))
goto cleanup;
Changes to
if (!(dom = virDomainObjListAdd(privconn->domains,
privconn->caps,
def,
0, NULL)))
goto cleanup;
As a step towards making virDomainObjList thread-safe turn it
into an opaque virObject, preventing any direct access to its
internals.
As part of this a new method virDomainObjListForEach is
introduced to replace all existing usage of virHashForEach
A followon to commit id: 68dceb635 - if iface->iname is NULL, then
neither virNetDevOpenvswitchRemovePort() nor virNetDevVethDelete()
should be called. Found by Coverity.
The use of switch statements inside a bounded for loop resulted in some
false positives regarding the "default:" label which cannot be reached
since each of the other case statements use the possible for loop values.
The virDomainObj, qemuAgent, qemuMonitor, lxcMonitor classes
all require a mutex, so can be switched to use virObjectLockable
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Currently all classes must directly inherit from virObject.
This allows for arbitrarily deep hierarchy. There's not much
to this aside from chaining up the 'dispose' handlers from
each class & providing APIs to check types.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
libvirt lxc will fail to start when selinux is disabled.
error: Failed to start domain noroot
error: internal error guest failed to start: PATH=/bin:/sbin TERM=linux container=lxc-libvirt container_uuid=b9873916-3516-c199-8112-1592ff694a9e LIBVIRT_LXC_UUID=b9873916-3516-c199-8112-1592ff694a9e LIBVIRT_LXC_NAME=noroot /bin/sh
2013-01-09 11:04:05.384+0000: 1: info : libvirt version: 1.0.1
2013-01-09 11:04:05.384+0000: 1: error : lxcContainerMountBasicFS:546 : Failed to mkdir /sys/fs/selinux: No such file or directory
2013-01-09 11:04:05.384+0000: 7536: info : libvirt version: 1.0.1
2013-01-09 11:04:05.384+0000: 7536: error : virLXCControllerRun:1466 : error receiving signal from container: Input/output error
2013-01-09 11:04:05.404+0000: 7536: error : virCommandWait:2287 : internal error Child process (ip link del veth1) unexpected exit status 1: Cannot find device "veth1"
fix this problem by checking if selinuxfs is mounted
in host before we try to create dir /sys/fs/selinux.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
The virDomainLxcOpenNamespace method needs to open every file
in /proc/$INITPID/ns and return the open file descriptor to the
client application.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This patch introduces support for LXC specific public APIs. In
common with what was done for QEMU, this creates a libvirt_lxc.so
library and libvirt/libvirt-lxc.h header file.
The actual APIs are
int virDomainLxcOpenNamespace(virDomainPtr domain,
int **fdlist,
unsigned int flags);
int virDomainLxcEnterNamespace(virDomainPtr domain,
unsigned int nfdlist,
int *fdlist,
unsigned int *noldfdlist,
int **oldfdlist,
unsigned int flags);
which provide a way to use the setns() system call to move the
calling process into the container's namespace. It is not
practical to write in a generically applicable manner. The
nearest that we could get to such an API would be an API which
allows to pass a command + argv to be executed inside a
container. Even if we had such a generic API, this LXC specific
API is still useful, because it allows the caller to maintain
the current process context, in particular any I/O streams they
have open.
NB the virDomainLxcEnterNamespace() API is special in that it
runs client side, so does not involve the internal driver API.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
when we has no host's src mapped to container.
there is no .oldroot dir,so libvirt lxc will fail
to start when mouting meminfo.
in this case,the parameter srcprefix of function
lxcContainerMountProcFuse should be NULL.and make
this method handle NULL correctly.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
To avoid confusion between the LXC driver <-> controller
monitor RPC protocol and the libvirt-lxc.so <-> libvirtd public
RPC protocol, rename the former to lxc_monitor_protocol.x
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The code for setting up a private /dev/pts for the containers
is also responsible for making the LXC controller have a
private mount namespace. Unfortunately the /dev/pts code is
not run if launching a container without a custom root. This
causes the LXC FUSE mount to leak into the host FS.
To bring in line with new naming practice, rename the=
src/util/cgroup.{h,c} files to vircgroup.{h,c}
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Convert the host capabilities and domain config structs to
use the virArch datatype. Update the parsers and all drivers
to take account of datatype change
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Wire up the attach/detach device drivers in LXC to support the
hotplug/unplug of host misc devices.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Wire up the attach/detach device drivers in LXC to support the
hotplug/unplug of host storage devices.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Wire up the attach/detach device drivers in LXC to support the
hotplug/unplug of USB host devices.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Wire up the attach/detach/update device APIs to support changing
of hostdevs in the persistent config file
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Wire up the attach/detach/update device APIs to support changing
of disks in the persistent config file
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Wire up the attach/detach/update device APIs to support changing
of network interfaces in the persistent config file
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This wires up the LXC driver to support the domain device attach/
detach/update APIs, following the same code design as used in
the QEMU driver. No actual changes are possible with this commit,
it is only providing the framework
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This extends support for host device passthrough with LXC to
cover misc devices. In this case all we need todo is a
mknod in the container's /dev and whitelist the device in
cgroups
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This extends support for host device passthrough with LXC to
cover storage devices. In this case all we need todo is a
mknod in the container's /dev and whitelist the device in
cgroups
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This adds support for host device passthrough with the
LXC driver. Since there is only a single kernel image,
it doesn't make sense to pass through PCI devices, but
USB devices are fine. For the latter we merely need to
make the /dev/bus/usb/NNN/MMM character device exist
in the container's /dev
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Currently LXC guests can be given arbitrary pre-mounted
filesystems, however, for some usecases it is more appropriate
to provide block devices which the container can mount itself.
This first impl only allows for <disk type='block'>, in other
words exposing a host disk device to a container. Since LXC
does not have device namespace virtualization, we are cheating
a little bit. If the XML specifies /dev/sdc4 to be given to
the container as /dev/sda1, when we do the mknod /dev/sda1
in the container's /dev, we actually use the major:minor
number of /dev/sdc4, not /dev/sda1.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The code for creating veth/macvlan devices is part of the
LXC process startup code. Refactor this a little and export
the methods to the rest of the LXC driver. This allows them
to be reused for NIC hotplug code
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
These classes can borrow unused bandwidth. Basically,
only egress qdsics can have classes, therefore we can
do this kind of traffic shaping only on host's outgoing,
that is domain's incoming traffic.
Currently to deal with auto-shutdown libvirtd must periodically
poll all stateful drivers. Thus sucks because it requires
acquiring both the driver lock and locks on every single virtual
machine. Instead pass in a "inhibit" callback to virStateInitialize
which drivers can invoke whenever they want to inhibit shutdown
due to existance of active VMs.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Add support for doing controlled shutdown / reboot in the LXC
driver. The default behaviour is to try talking to /dev/initctl
inside the container's virtual root (/proc/$INITPID/root). This
works with sysvinit or systemd. If that file does not exist
then send SIGTERM (for shutdown) or SIGHUP (for reboot). These
signals are not any kind of particular standard for shutdown
or reboot, just something apps can choose to handle. The new
virDomainSendProcessSignal allows for sending custom signals.
We might allow the choice of SIGTERM/HUP to be configured for
LXC containers via the XML in the future.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The virStateInitialize method and several cgroups methods were
using an 'int privileged' parameter or similar for dual-state
values. These are better represented with the bool type.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Implement the new API for sending signals to processes in a guest
for the LXC driver. Only support sending signals to the init
process for now, because
- The kernel does not appear to expose the mapping between
container PID numbers and host PID numbers anywhere in the
host OS namespace
- There is no race-free way to validate whether a host PID
corresponds to a process in a container.
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c: Allow sending processes signals
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
we already have virtualize meminfo for container through fuse filesystem,
add function lxcContainerMountProcFuse to mount this meminfo file to
the container's /proc/meminfo.
So we can isolate container's /proc/meminfo from host now.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
with this patch,container's meminfo will be shown based on
containers' mem cgroup.
Right now,it's impossible to virtualize all values in meminfo,
I collect some values such as MemTotal,MemFree,Cached,Active,
Inactive,Active(anon),Inactive(anon),Active(file),Inactive(anon),
Active(file),Inactive(file),Unevictable,SwapTotal,SwapFree.
if I miss something, please let me know.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
this patch addes fuse support for libvirt lxc.
we can use fuse filesystem to generate sysinfo dynamically,
So we can isolate /proc/meminfo,cpuinfo and so on through
fuse filesystem.
we mount fuse filesystem for every container.
the mount name is libvirt,mount point is
localstatedir/run/libvirt/lxc/containername.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
When starting an LXC guest with a virNetwork based NIC device,
if the network was not active, the virNetworkPtr device would
be leaked
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When starting a container, newDef is initialized to a
copy of 'def', but when startup fails newDef is never
removed. This cause later attempts to use 'virDomainDefine'
to lose the new data being defined.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
A mistaken initialization of 'ret' caused failure to create
macvtap devices to be ignored. The libvirt_lxc process
would later fail to start due to missing devices
Also make sure code checks '< 0' and not '!= 0' since only
-1 is considered an error condition
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
If the <interface> device did not contain any <target>
element, LXC would crash on a NULL pointer if starting
the container failed
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The LXC driver relies on use of cgroups to kill off LXC processes
in shutdown. If cgroups aren't available, we're unable to kill
off processes, so we must treat lack of cgroups as a fatal startup
error.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The code setting up LXC cgroups used an 'rc' variable both
for capturing the return value of methods it calls, and
its own return status. The result was that several failures
in setting up cgroups would actually result in success being
returned.
Use a separate 'ret' for tracking return value as per normal
code design in other parts of libvirt
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The initpid will be required long term to enable LXC to
implement various hotplug operations. Thus it needs to be
persisted in the domain status XML. LXC has not used the
domain status XML before, so this introduces use of the
helpers.
Currently the lxcContainerSetupMounts method uses the
virSecurityManagerPtr instance to obtain the mount options
string and then only passes the string down into methods
it calls. As functionality in LXC grows though, those
methods need to have direct access to the virSecurityManagerPtr
instance. So push the code down a level.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The impls of virSecurityManagerGetMountOptions had no way to
return errors, since the code was treating 'NULL' as a success
value. This is somewhat pointless, since the calling code did
not want NULL in the first place and has to translate it into
the empty string "". So change the code so that the impls can
return "" directly, allowing use of NULL for error reporting
once again
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When no security driver is specified libvirt_lxc segfaults as a debug
message tries to access security labels for the container that are not
present.
This problem was introduced in commit 6c3cf57d6c.
Early jumps to the cleanup label caused a crash of the libvirt_lxc
container helper as the cleanup section called
virLXCControllerDeleteInterfaces(ctrl) without checking the ctrl argument
for NULL. The argument was de-referenced soon after.
$ /usr/libexec/libvirt_lxc
/usr/libexec/libvirt_lxc: missing --name argument for configuration
Segmentation fault
The virLXCControllerClientCloseHook method was mistakenly
assuming that the private data associated with the network
client was the virLXCControllerPtr. In fact it was just a
dummy int, so we were derefencing a bogus struct. The
frequent result of this was that we would never quit, because
we tried to arm a non-existant timer.
Fix the code by removing the dummy private data and just
using the virLXCControllerPtr instance as private data
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Currently the LXC driver logs audit messages when a container
is started or stopped. These audit messages, however, contain
the PID of the libvirt_lxc supervisor process. To enable
sysadmins to correlate with audit messages generated by
processes /inside/ the container, we need to include the
container init process PID.
We can't do this in the main 'start' audit message, since
the init PID is not available at that point. Instead we output
a completely new audit record, that lists both PIDs.
type=VIRT_CONTROL msg=audit(1353433750.071:363): pid=20180 uid=0 auid=501 ses=3 subj=unconfined_u:unconfined_r:unconfined_t:s0-s0:c0.c1023 msg='virt=lxc op=init vm="busy" uuid=dda7b947-0846-1759-2873-0f375df7d7eb vm-pid=20371 init-pid=20372 exe="/home/berrange/src/virt/libvirt/daemon/.libs/lt-libvirtd" hostname=? addr=? terminal=pts/6 res=success'
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The LXC controller code currently directly invokes the
libvirt main loop code. The problem is that this misses
the cleanup of virNetServerClient connections that
virNetServerRun takes care of.
The result is that when libvirtd is stopped, the
libvirt_lxc controller process gets stuck in a I/O loop.
When libvirtd is then started again, it fails to connect
to the controller and thus kills off the entire domain.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
For S390, the default console target type cannot be of type 'serial'.
It is necessary to at least interpret the 'arch' attribute
value of the os/type element to produce the correct default type.
Therefore we need to extend the signature of defaultConsoleTargetType
to account for architecture. As a consequence all the drivers
supporting this capability function must be updated.
Despite the amount of changed files, the only change in behavior is
that for S390 the default console target type will be 'virtio'.
N.B.: A more future-proof approach could be to to use hypervisor
specific capabilities to determine the best possible console type.
For instance one could add an opaque private data pointer to the
virCaps structure (in case of QEMU to hold capsCache) which could
then be passed to the defaultConsoleTargetType callback to determine
the console target type.
Seems to be however a bit overengineered for the use case...
Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
The libvirt coding standard is to use 'function(...args...)'
instead of 'function (...args...)'. A non-trivial number of
places did not follow this rule and are fixed in this patch.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This needs to be done before the container starts. Turning
off the mknod capability is noticed by systemd, which will
no longer attempt to create device nodes.
This eliminates SELinux AVC messages and ugly failure messages in the journal.
Add two new APIs virNetServerClientNewPostExecRestart and
virNetServerClientPreExecRestart which allow a virNetServerClientPtr
object to be created from a JSON object and saved to a
JSON object, for the purpose of re-exec'ing a process.
This includes serialization of the connected socket associated
with the client
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
There was an inverted return value in lxcCgroupControllerActive().
The function assumes cgroups are active and do couple of checks
to prove that. If any of them fails, false is returned. Therefore,
at the end, after all checks are done we must return true, not false.
Many parts of virDomainDefPtr were using 'int' variables as
array length counts. Replace all these with size_t and update
various format strings & API signatures to adapt
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Depending on the scenario in which LXC containers exit, it is
possible for the EOF callback of the LXC monitor to deadlock
the driver.
#0 0x00000038a0a0de4d in __lll_lock_wait () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
#1 0x00000038a0a09ca6 in _L_lock_840 () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
#2 0x00000038a0a09ba8 in pthread_mutex_lock () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
#3 0x00007f4bd9579d55 in virMutexLock (m=<optimized out>) at util/threads-pthread.c:85
#4 0x00007f4bcacc7597 in lxcDriverLock (driver=0x7f4bc40c8290) at lxc/lxc_conf.h:81
#5 virLXCProcessMonitorEOFNotify (mon=<optimized out>, vm=0x7f4bb4000b00) at lxc/lxc_process.c:581
#6 0x00007f4bd9645c91 in virNetClientCloseLocked (client=client@entry=0x7f4bb4009e60)
at rpc/virnetclient.c:554
#7 0x00007f4bd96460f8 in virNetClientIOEventLoopPassTheBuck (thiscall=0x0, client=0x7f4bb4009e60)
at rpc/virnetclient.c:1306
#8 virNetClientIOEventLoopPassTheBuck (client=0x7f4bb4009e60, thiscall=0x0)
at rpc/virnetclient.c:1287
#9 0x00007f4bd96467a2 in virNetClientCloseInternal (reason=3, client=0x7f4bb4009e60)
at rpc/virnetclient.c:589
#10 virNetClientCloseInternal (client=0x7f4bb4009e60, reason=3) at rpc/virnetclient.c:561
#11 0x00007f4bcacc4a82 in virLXCMonitorClose (mon=0x7f4bb4000a00) at lxc/lxc_monitor.c:201
#12 0x00007f4bcacc55ac in virLXCProcessCleanup (reason=<optimized out>, vm=0x7f4bb4000b00,
driver=0x7f4bc40c8290) at lxc/lxc_process.c:240
#13 virLXCProcessStop (driver=0x7f4bc40c8290, vm=vm@entry=0x7f4bb4000b00,
reason=reason@entry=VIR_DOMAIN_SHUTOFF_DESTROYED) at lxc/lxc_process.c:735
#14 0x00007f4bcacc5bd2 in virLXCProcessAutoDestroyDom (payload=<optimized out>,
name=0x7f4bb4003c80, opaque=0x7fff41af2df0) at lxc/lxc_process.c:94
#15 0x00007f4bd9586649 in virHashForEach (table=0x7f4bc409b270,
iter=iter@entry=0x7f4bcacc5ab0 <virLXCProcessAutoDestroyDom>, data=data@entry=0x7fff41af2df0)
at util/virhash.c:514
#16 0x00007f4bcacc52d7 in virLXCProcessAutoDestroyRun (driver=driver@entry=0x7f4bc40c8290,
conn=conn@entry=0x7f4bb8000ab0) at lxc/lxc_process.c:120
#17 0x00007f4bcacca628 in lxcClose (conn=0x7f4bb8000ab0) at lxc/lxc_driver.c:128
#18 0x00007f4bd95e67ab in virReleaseConnect (conn=conn@entry=0x7f4bb8000ab0) at datatypes.c:114
When the driver calls virLXCMonitorClose, there is really no
need for the EOF callback to be invoked in this case, since
the caller can easily handle events itself. In changing this,
the monitor needs to take a deep copy of the callback list,
not merely a reference.
Also adds debug statements in various places to aid
troubleshooting
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Asynchronously setting priv->mon to NULL was pointless,
just remove the destroy callback entirely.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Continue consolidation of process functions by moving some
helpers out of command.{c,h} into virprocess.{c,h}
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Some kernel versions (at least RHEL-6 2.6.32) do not let you over-mount
an existing selinuxfs instance with a new one. Thus we must unmount the
existing instance inside our namespace.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-howto.html recommends that
the 'If not, see <url>.' phrase be a separate sentence.
* tests/securityselinuxhelper.c: Remove doubled line.
* tests/securityselinuxtest.c: Likewise.
* globally: s/; If/. If/
The introduction of /sys/fs/cgroup came in fairly recent kernels.
Prior to that time distros would pick a custom directory like
/cgroup or /dev/cgroup. We need to auto-detect where this is,
rather than hardcoding it
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This bug was revealed by the crash described in
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=852383
The vlan info pointer sent to virNetDevOpenvswitchAddPort should never
be non-NULL unless there is at least one tag. The factthat such a vlan
info pointer was receveid pointed out that a caller was passing the
wrong pointer. Instead of sending &net->vlan, the result of
virDomainNetGetActualVlan(net) should be sent - that function will
look for vlan info in net->data.network.actual->vlan, and in cany case
return NULL instead of a pointer if the vlan info it finds has no
tags.
Aside from causing the crash, sending a hardcoded &net->vlan has the
effect of ignoring vlan info from a <network> or <portgroup> config.
This patch updates the structures that store information about each
domain and each hypervisor to support multiple security labels and
drivers. It also updates all the remaining code to use the new fields.
Signed-off-by: Marcelo Cerri <mhcerri@linux.vnet.ibm.com>