The polkit access driver will want to use the process start
time field. This was already set for network identities, but
not for the system identity.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit e65667c0c6e016d42abea077e31628ae43f57b74)
Future improvements to the polkit code will require access to
the numeric user ID, not merely user name.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit db7a5688c05f3fd60d9d2b74c72427eb9ee9c176)
The virBitmapParse function was calling virBitmapIsSet() function that
requires the caller to check the bounds of the bitmap without checking
them. This resulted into crashes when parsing a bitmap string that was
exceeding the bounds used as argument.
This patch refactors the function to use virBitmapSetBit without
checking if the bit is set (this function does the checks internally)
and then counts the bits in the bitmap afterwards (instead of keeping
track while parsing the string).
This patch also changes the "parse_error" label to a more common
"error".
The refactor should also get rid of the need to call sa_assert on the
returned variable as the callpath should allow coverity to infer the
possible return values.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=997367
Thanks to Alex Jia for tracking down the issue. This issue is introduced
by commit 0fc8909.
(cherry picked from commit 47b9127e883677a0d60d767030a147450e919a25)
Reuse the buffer for getline and track buffer allocation
separately from the string length to prevent unlikely
out-of-bounds memory access.
This fixes the following leak that happened when zero bytes were read:
==404== 120 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 1,344 of 1,671
==404== at 0x4C2C71B: malloc (in /usr/lib64/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
==404== by 0x906F862: getdelim (iogetdelim.c:68)
==404== by 0x52A48FB: virCgroupPartitionNeedsEscaping (vircgroup.c:1136)
==404== by 0x52A0FB4: virCgroupPartitionEscape (vircgroup.c:1171)
==404== by 0x52A0EA4: virCgroupNewDomainPartition (vircgroup.c:1450)
(cherry picked from commit cc7329317fee6088055d7b09594c19f1b8fec5e3)
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>
(cherry picked from commit ee777e994927ed5f2d427fbc5a53cbe8b5969bda)
Conflicts:
src/lxc/lxc_container.c - did not use setUIDGID before 1.1.0
src/util/virutil.c - oom handling changes not backported
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=964358
Since neither getpwuid_r() nor initgroups() are safe to call in
between fork and exec (they obtain a mutex, but if some other
thread in the parent also held the mutex at the time of the fork,
the child will deadlock), we have to split out the functionality
that is unsafe. At least glibc's initgroups() uses getgrouplist
under the hood, so the ideal split is to expose getgrouplist for
use before a fork. Gnulib already gives us a nice wrapper via
mgetgroups; we wrap it once more to look up by uid instead of name.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Add mgetgroups.
* src/util/virutil.h (virGetGroupList): New declaration.
* src/util/virutil.c (virGetGroupList): New function.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (virutil.h): Export it.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit 75c125641ac73473ba4b0542524d67a184769c8e)
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=964358
A future patch needs to look up pw_gid; but it is wasteful
to crawl through getpwuid_r twice for two separate pieces
of information, and annoying to copy that much boilerplate
code for doing the crawl. The current internal-only
virGetUserEnt is also a rather awkward interface; it's easier
to just design it to let callers request multiple pieces of
data as needed from one traversal.
And while at it, I noticed that virGetXDGDirectory could deref
NULL if the getpwuid_r lookup fails.
* src/util/virutil.c (virGetUserEnt): Alter signature.
(virGetUserDirectory, virGetXDGDirectory, virGetUserName): Adjust
callers.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit c1983ba4e3902308054e961fcae75cece73ef4ba)
Conflicts:
src/util/virutil.c - oom reporting changes not backported
The device bus value was used instead of the device target when
building the sysfs device path. Trivial.
Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
(cherry picked from commit 2c94e00c6098662661cd67a10e982a32b6054a3c)
On Fedora 18, when cross-compiling to mingw with the mingw*-dbus
packages installed, compilation fails with:
CC libvirt_net_rpc_server_la-virnetserver.lo
In file included from /usr/i686-w64-mingw32/sys-root/mingw/include/dbus-1.0/dbus/dbus-connection.h:32:0,
from /usr/i686-w64-mingw32/sys-root/mingw/include/dbus-1.0/dbus/dbus-bus.h:30,
from /usr/i686-w64-mingw32/sys-root/mingw/include/dbus-1.0/dbus/dbus.h:31,
from ../../src/util/virdbus.h:26,
from ../../src/rpc/virnetserver.c:39:
/usr/i686-w64-mingw32/sys-root/mingw/include/dbus-1.0/dbus/dbus-message.h:74:58: error: expected ';', ',' or ')' before 'struct'
I have reported this as a bug against two packages:
- mingw-headers, for polluting the namespace
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=980270
- dbus, for not dealing with the pollution
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=980278
At least dbus has agreed that a future version of dbus headers will
do s/interface/iface/, regardless of what happens in mingw. But it
is also easy to workaround in libvirt in the meantime, without having
to wait for either mingw or dbus to upgrade.
* src/util/virdbus.h (includes): Undo mingw's pollution so that
dbus doesn't fail.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit 1528e8b23a0c0014074b06772368e00a17020a79)
This fixes https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=971325
The problem was that if virPCIGetVirtualFunctions was given the name
of a non-existent interface, it would return to its caller without
initializing the pointer to the array of virtual functions to NULL,
and the caller (virNetDevGetVirtualFunctions) would try to VIR_FREE()
the invalid pointer.
The final error message before the crash would be:
virPCIGetVirtualFunctions:2088 :
Failed to open dir '/sys/class/net/eth2/device':
No such file or directory
In this patch I move the initialization in virPCIGetVirtualFunctions()
to the begining of the function, and also do an explicit
initialization in virNetDevGetVirtualFunctions, just in case someone
in the future adds code into that function prior to the call to
virPCIGetVirtualFunctions.
The IF_MAXUNIT macro is not present on all BSDs, so
make its use conditional, to avoid breaking OS-X.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The 'in_addr_t' typedef is not present in Mingw64 headers.
Instead we can use the more portable 'struct in_addr' and
then access its 's_addr' field.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When creating a virtual FC HBA with virsh/libvirt API, an error message
will be returned: "error: Node device not found",
also the 'nodedev-dumpxml' shows wrong information of wwpn & wwnn
for the new created device.
Signed-off-by: xschen@tnsoft.com.cn
This reverts f90af69 which switched wwpn & wwwn in the wrong place.
https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/scsi/scsi_fc_transport.txt
Building on FreeBSD had this linker error:
/work/a/ports/devel/libvirt/work/libvirt-1.1.0/src/.libs/libvirt.so:
undefined reference to `virPCIDeviceAddressParse'
This was caused by the new use of virPCIDeviceAddressParse in a
portion of virpci.c that wasn't linux-only (in commit 72c029d8). The
problem was that virPCIDeviceAddressParse had originally been defined
inside #ifdef _linux (because it was only used by another function
that was inside the same ifdef).
The solution is to move it out to the part of virpci.c that is
compiled on all platforms.
(Because the portion that was "moved" was 40-50 lines, but only moved
up by 15 lines, the diff for the patch is less than non-informative -
rather than showing that part that I moved, it shows the bit that was
previously before the moved part, and now sits *after* it.)
Any device which belongs to an "IOMMU group" (used by vfio) will
have links to all devices of its group listed in
/sys/bus/pci/$device/iommu_group/devices;
/sys/bus/pci/$device/iommu_group is actually a link to
/sys/kernel/iommu_groups/$n, where $n is the group number (there
will be a corresponding device node at /dev/vfio/$n once the
devices are bound to the vfio-pci driver)
The following functions are added:
virPCIDeviceGetIOMMUGroupList
Gets a virPCIDeviceList with one virPCIDeviceList for each device
in the same IOMMU group as the provided virPCIDevice (a copy of the
original device object is included in the list.
virPCIDeviceAddressIOMMUGroupIterate
Calls the function @actor once for each device in the group that
contains the given virPCIDeviceAddress.
virPCIDeviceAddressGetIOMMUGroupAddresses
Fills in a virPCIDeviceAddressPtr * with an array of
virPCIDeviceAddress, one for each device in the iommu group of the
provided virPCIDeviceAddress (including a copy of the original).
virPCIDeviceAddressGetIOMMUGroupNum
Returns the group number as an int (a valid group number will always
be 0 or greater). If there is no iommu_group link in the device's
directory (usually indicating that vfio isn't loaded), -2 will be
returned. On any real error, -1 will be returned.
We only break out of the while loop if *content is an empty string.
However the buffer has been allocated to BUFSIZ + 1 (8193 in my case),
but it gets overwritten in the next for iteration.
Move VIR_FREE right before we overwrite it to avoid the leak.
==5777== 16,386 bytes in 2 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 1,022 of 1,027
==5777== by 0x5296E28: virReallocN (viralloc.c:184)
==5777== by 0x52B0C66: virFileReadLimFD (virfile.c:1137)
==5777== by 0x52B0E1A: virFileReadAll (virfile.c:1199)
==5777== by 0x529B092: virCgroupGetValueStr (vircgroup.c:534)
==5777== by 0x529AF64: virCgroupMoveTask (vircgroup.c:1079)
Introduced by 83e4c77.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=978352
Don't check for '\n' at the end of file if zero bytes were read.
Found by valgrind:
==404== Invalid read of size 1
==404== at 0x529B09F: virCgroupGetValueStr (vircgroup.c:540)
==404== by 0x529AF64: virCgroupMoveTask (vircgroup.c:1079)
==404== by 0x1EB475: qemuSetupCgroupForEmulator (qemu_cgroup.c:1061)
==404== by 0x1D9489: qemuProcessStart (qemu_process.c:3801)
==404== by 0x18557E: qemuDomainObjStart (qemu_driver.c:5787)
==404== by 0x190FA4: qemuDomainCreateWithFlags (qemu_driver.c:5839)
Introduced by 0d0b409.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=978356
The "fix" I pushed a few commits ago would still leak a virPCIDevice
in case of an OOM error. Although it's inconsequential in practice,
this patch satisfies my OCD.
The same strings were being re-created multiple times just to save
declaring a new variable. In the meantime, the use of the generic
variable names led to confusion when trying to follow the code. This
patch creates strings for:
stubDriverName (was called "driver" in original args)
stubDriverPath ("/sys/bus/pci/drivers/${stubDriverName}")
driverLink ("${device}/driver")
oldDriverName (the final component of path linked to by
"${device}/driver")
oldDriverPath ("/sys/bus/pci/drivers/${oldDriverName}")
then re-uses them as necessary.
I realized after the fact that it's probably better in the long run to
give this function a name that matches the name of the link used in
sysfs to hold the group (iommu_group).
I'm changing it now because I'm about to add several more functions
that deal with iommu groups.
The driver arg to virPCIDeviceDetach is no longer used (the name of the stub driver is now set in the virPCIDevice object, and virPCIDeviceDetach retrieves it from there). Remove it.
Commit 861d40565 added code (my personal change to "clean up" the
submitter's code, *not* the fault of the submitter) that dereferenced
virtVlan without first checking for NULL. This patch fixes that and,
as part of the fix, cleans up some unnecessary obtuseness.
virNetDevBridgeSetSTPDelay accepts delay in milliseconds,
but BSD implementation was expecting seconds. Therefore,
it was working correctly only with delay == 0.
This patch adds functionality to allow libvirt to configure the
'native-tagged' and 'native-untagged' modes on openvswitch networks.
Signed-off-by: Laine Stump <laine@redhat.com>
All APIs that take typed parameters are only using params address in
their entry point debug messages. With the new VIR_TYPED_PARAMS_DEBUG
macro, all functions can easily log all individual typed parameters
passed to them.
When unsupported parameter is passed to virTypedParamsValidate,
VIR_ERR_ARGUMENT_UNSUPPORTED should be returned rather than
VIR_ERR_INVALID_ARG, which is more appropriate for supported parameters
used incorrectly.
virPCIDeviceDetach would previously sometimes consume the input device
object (to put it on the inactive list) and sometimes not. Avoiding
memory leaks required checking beforehand to see if the device was
already on the list, and freeing the device object in the caller only
if there wasn't already an identical object on the inactive list.
This patch makes it consistent - virPCIDeviceDetach will *never*
consume the input virPCIDevice object; if it needs to put one on the
inactive list, it will create a copy and put *that* on the list. This
way the caller knows that it is always their responsibility to free
the device object they created.
virPCIDeviceReattach was making the assumption that the dev object
given to it was one and the same with the dev object on the
inactiveDevs list. If that had been the case, it would not need to
free the dev object it removed from the inactive list, because the
caller of virPCIDeviceReattach always frees the dev object that it
passes in. Since the dev object passed in is *never* the same object
that's on the list (it is a different object with the same name and
attributes, created just for the purpose of searching for the actual
object), simply doing a "ListSteal" to remove the object from the list
results in one leaked object; we need to actually free the object
after removing it from the list.
* virPCIDeviceFindByIDs - find a device on a list w/o creating an object
This makes searching for an existing device on a list lighter weight.
* virPCIDeviceCopy - make a copy of an existing virPCIDevice object.
* virPCIDeviceGetDriverPathAndName - construct new strings containing
1) the name of the driver bound to this device.
2) the full path to the sysfs config for that driver.
(This code was lifted from virPCIDeviceUnbindFromStub, and replaced
there with a call to this new function).
Previously stubDriver was always set from a string literal, so it was
okay to use a const char * that wasn't freed when the virPCIDevice was
freed. This will not be the case in the near future, so it is now a
char* that is allocated in virPCIDeviceSetStubDriver() and freed
during virPCIDeviceFree().
This patch introduces the virAccessManagerPtr class as the
interface between virtualization drivers and the access
control drivers. The viraccessperm.h file defines the
various permissions that will be used for each type of object
libvirt manages
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
It's not used anywhere except for the switch in
virStorageBackendCreateQemuImgOpts, where leaving it in causes
a dead code coverity warning and omitting it breaks compilation
because of unhandled enum value.
Introduced by 6298f74.
Detect qcow2 images with version 3 in the image header as
VIR_STORAGE_FILE_QCOW2.
These images have a feature bitfield, with just one feature supported
so far: lazy_refcounts.
The header length changed too, moving the location of the backing
format name.