Commit Graph

5877 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jiri Denemark
5d513d4659 qemu-caps: Get host model directly from Qemu when available
When qmp query-cpu-model-expansion is available probe Qemu for its view of the
host model. In kvm environments this can provide a more complete view of the
host model because features supported by Qemu and Kvm can be considered.

Signed-off-by: Collin L. Walling <walling@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Jason J. Herne <jjherne@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
2017-01-06 12:24:57 +01:00
Collin L. Walling
fab9d6e1a9 qemu: qmp query-cpu-model-expansion command
query-cpu-model-expansion is used to get a list of features for a given cpu
model name or to get the model and features of the host hardware/environment
as seen by Qemu/kvm.

Signed-off-by: Collin L. Walling <walling@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Jason J. Herne <jjherne@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
2017-01-06 12:24:57 +01:00
Martin Kletzander
c1140eb9ed qemu: Remove /dev mount info properly
Just so it doesn't bite us in the future, even though it's unlikely.

And fix the comment above it as well.  Commit e08ee7cd34 took the
info from the function it's calling, but that was lie itself in the
first place.

Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
2017-01-05 16:24:55 +01:00
Michal Privoznik
e08ee7cd34 qemuDomainGetPreservedMounts: Fetch list of /dev/* mounts dynamically
With my namespace patches, we are spawning qemu in its own
namespace so that we can manage /dev entries ourselves. However,
some filesystems mounted under /dev needs to be preserved in
order to be shared with the parent namespace (e.g. /dev/pts).
Currently, the list of mount points to preserve is hardcoded
which ain't right - on some systems there might be less or more
items under real /dev that on our list. The solution is to parse
/proc/mounts and fetch the list from there.

Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
2017-01-05 16:00:20 +01:00
Michal Privoznik
6de3f11637 qemuProcessLaunch: fix indentation
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
2017-01-05 14:38:45 +01:00
Wangjing (King, Euler)
3afaae4984 qemu: snapshot: restart CPUs when recover from interrupted snapshot job
If we restart libvirtd while VM was doing external memory snapshot, VM's
state be updated to paused as a result of running a migration-to-file
operation, and then VM will be left as paused state. In this case we must
restart the VM's CPUs to resume it.

Signed-off-by: Wang King <king.wang@huawei.com>
2017-01-05 10:47:03 +01:00
Peter Krempa
2e86c0816f qemu: snapshot: Resume VM after live snapshot
Commit 4b951d1e38 missed the fact that the
VM needs to be resumed after a live external checkpoint (memory
snapshot) where the cpus would be paused by the migration rather than
libvirt.
2017-01-04 16:50:18 +01:00
Michal Privoznik
dd78da09b0 qemuDomainCreateDevice: Be more careful about device path
Again, not something that I'd hit, but there is a chance in
theory that this might bite us. Currently the way we decide
whether or not to create /dev entry for a device is by marching
first four characters of path with "/dev". This might be not
enough. Just imagine somebody has a disk image stored under
"/devil/path/to/disk". We ought to be matching against "/dev/".

Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
2017-01-04 15:36:42 +01:00
Michal Privoznik
ce01a2b11c qemuDomainAttachDeviceMknodHelper: Don't unlink() so often
Not that I'd encounter any bug here, but the code doesn't look
100% correct. Imagine, somebody is trying to attach a device to a
domain, and the device's /dev entry already exists in the qemu
namespace. This is handled gracefully and the control continues
with setting up ACLs and calling security manager to set up
labels. Now, if any of these steps fail, control jump on the
'cleanup' label and unlink() the file straight away. Even when it
was not us who created the file in the first place. This can be
possibly dangerous.

Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
2017-01-04 15:36:42 +01:00
Michal Privoznik
3aae99fe71 qemu: Handle EEXIST gracefully in qemuDomainCreateDevice
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1406837

Imagine you have a domain configured in such way that you are
assigning two PCI devices that fall into the same IOMMU group.
With mount namespace enabled what happens is that for the first
PCI device corresponding /dev/vfio/X entry is created and when
the code tries to do the same for the second mknod() fails as
/dev/vfio/X already exists:

2016-12-21 14:40:45.648+0000: 24681: error :
qemuProcessReportLogError:1792 : internal error: Process exited
prior to exec: libvirt: QEMU Driver error : Failed to make device
/var/run/libvirt/qemu/windoze.dev//vfio/22: File exists

Worse, by default there are some devices that are created in the
namespace regardless of domain configuration (e.g. /dev/null,
/dev/urandom, etc.). If one of them is set as backend for some
guest device (e.g. rng, chardev, etc.) it's the same story as
described above.

Weirdly, in attach code this is already handled.

Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
2017-01-04 15:36:42 +01:00
John Ferlan
7f7d990483 qemu: Don't assume secret provided for LUKS encryption
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1405269

If a secret was not provided for what was determined to be a LUKS
encrypted disk (during virStorageFileGetMetadata processing when
called from qemuDomainDetermineDiskChain as a result of hotplug
attach qemuDomainAttachDeviceDiskLive), then do not attempt to
look it up (avoiding a libvirtd crash) and do not alter the format
to "luks" when adding the disk; otherwise, the device_add would
fail with a message such as:

   "unable to execute QEMU command 'device_add': Property 'scsi-hd.drive'
    can't find value 'drive-scsi0-0-0-0'"

because of assumptions that when the format=luks that libvirt would have
provided the secret to decrypt the volume.

Access to unlock the volume will thus be left to the application.
2017-01-03 12:59:18 -05:00
Shivaprasad G Bhat
5f65c96e8d Allow virtio-console on PPC64
virQEMUCapsSupportsChardev existing checks returns true
for spapr-vty alone. Instead verify spapr-vty validity
and let the logic to return true for other device types
so that virtio-console passes.

The non-pseries machines dont have spapr-vio-bus. So, the
function always returned false for them before.

Fixes - https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1257813

Signed-off-by: Shivaprasad G Bhat <sbhat@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
2016-12-21 18:01:10 +01:00
Nikolay Shirokovskiy
9f08b76631 qemu: clean out unused migrate to unix 2016-12-21 16:24:59 +01:00
John Ferlan
b9b1aa6392 qemu: Adjust qemuDomainGetBlockInfo data for sparse backed files
According to commit id '0282ca45a' the 'physical' value should
essentially be the last offset of the image or the host physical
size in bytes of the image container. However, commit id '15fa84ac'
refactored the GetBlockInfo to use the same returned data as the
GetStatsBlock API for an active domain. For the 'entry->physical'
that would end up being the "actual-size" as set through the
qemuMonitorJSONBlockStatsUpdateCapacityOne (commit '7b11f5e5').
Digging deeper into QEMU code one finds that actual_size is
filled in using the same algorithm as GetBlockInfo has used for
setting the 'allocation' field when the domain is inactive.

The difference in values is seen primarily in sparse raw files
and other container type files (such as qcow2), which will return
a smaller value via the stat API for 'st_blocks'. Additionally
for container files, the 'capacity' field (populated via the
QEMU "virtual-size" value) may be slightly different (smaller)
in order to accomodate the overhead for the container. For
sparse files, the state 'st_size' field is returned.

This patch thus alters the allocation and physical values for
sparse backed storage files to be more appropriate to the API
contract. The result for GetBlockInfo is the following:

 capacity: logical size in bytes of the image (how much storage
           the guest will see)
 allocation: host storage in bytes occupied by the image (such
             as highest allocated extent if there are no holes,
             similar to 'du')
 physical: host physical size in bytes of the image container
           (last offset, similar to 'ls')

NB: The GetStatsBlock API allows a different contract for the
values:

 "block.<num>.allocation" - offset of the highest written sector
                            as unsigned long long.
 "block.<num>.capacity" - logical size in bytes of the block device
                          backing image as unsigned long long.
 "block.<num>.physical" - physical size in bytes of the container
                          of the backing image as unsigned long long.
2016-12-20 12:56:44 -05:00
Marc Hartmayer
fb2cd32c9a qemu: qemuDomainDiskChangeSupported: Add missing 'address' check
Disk->info is not live updatable so add a check for this. Otherwise
libvirt reports success even though no data was updated.

Signed-off-by: Marc Hartmayer <mhartmay@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Bjoern Walk <bwalk@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Boris Fiuczynski <fiuczy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
2016-12-20 11:22:44 +01:00
Peter Krempa
8551d39f4f qemu: blockcopy: Save monitor error prior to calling into lock manager
The error would be overwritten otherwise producing a meaningless error
message.

Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1302171
2016-12-19 17:28:41 +01:00
Peter Krempa
9e9305542e qemu: block copy: Forbid block copy to relative paths
Similarly to 29bb066915 forbid paths used with blockjobs to be relative.

Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1300177
2016-12-16 18:30:39 +01:00
Michal Privoznik
ab41ce7f4e qemu: Mark more namespace code linux-only
Some of the functions are not called on non-linux platforms
which makes them useless there.

Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
2016-12-16 11:51:06 +00:00
Nitesh Konkar
71bbe65311 perf: add ref_cpu_cycles perf event support
This patch adds support and documentation for
the ref_cpu_cycles perf event.

Signed-off-by: Nitesh Konkar <nitkon12@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
2016-12-15 17:32:03 -05:00
Nitesh Konkar
9ae79400ff perf: add stalled_cycles_backend perf event support
This patch adds support and documentation for
the stalled_cycles_backend perf event.

Signed-off-by: Nitesh Konkar <nitkon12@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
2016-12-15 16:47:05 -05:00
Nitesh Konkar
060c159b08 perf: add stalled_cycles_frontend perf event support
This patch adds support and documentation
for the stalled_cycles_frontend perf event.

Signed-off-by: Nitesh Konkar <nitkon12@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
2016-12-15 16:47:05 -05:00
Nitesh Konkar
7d34731067 perf: add bus_cycles perf event support
This patch adds support and documentation
for the bus_cycles perf event.

Signed-off-by: Nitesh Konkar <nitkon12@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
2016-12-15 16:47:05 -05:00
Peter Krempa
4b951d1e38 qemu: snapshot: Don't attempt to resume cpus if they were not paused
External disk-only snapshots with recent enough qemu don't require
libvirt to pause the VM. The logic determining when to resume cpus was
slightly flawed and attempted to resume them even if they were not
paused by the snapshot code. This normally was not a problem, but with
locking enabled the code would attempt to acquire the lock twice.

The fallout of this bug would be a error from the API, but the actual
snapshot being created. The bug was introduced with when adding support
for external snapshots with memory (checkpoints) in commit f569b87.

Resolves problems described by:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1403691
2016-12-15 09:46:41 +01:00
Peter Krempa
e8f167a623 qemu: monitor: Don't resume lockspaces in resume event handler
After qemu delivers the resume event it's already running and thus it's
too late to enter lockspaces since it may already have modified the
disk. The code only creates false log entries in the case when locking
is enabled. The lockspace needs to be acquired prior to starting cpus.
2016-12-15 09:46:41 +01:00
Michal Privoznik
f444faa94a qemu: Enable mount namespace
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1404952

Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
2016-12-15 09:25:16 +01:00
Michal Privoznik
661887f558 qemu: Let users opt-out from containerization
Given how intrusive previous patches are, it might happen that
there's a bug or imperfection. Lets give users a way out: if they
set 'namespaces' to an empty array in qemu.conf the feature is
suppressed.

Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
2016-12-15 09:25:16 +01:00
Michal Privoznik
f95c5c48d4 qemu: Manage /dev entry on RNG hotplug
When attaching a device to a domain that's using separate mount
namespace we must maintain /dev entries in order for qemu process
to see them.

Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
2016-12-15 09:25:16 +01:00
Michal Privoznik
f5fdf23a68 qemu: Manage /dev entry on chardev hotplug
When attaching a device to a domain that's using separate mount
namespace we must maintain /dev entries in order for qemu process
to see them.

Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
2016-12-15 09:25:16 +01:00
Michal Privoznik
6e57492839 qemu: Manage /dev entry on hostdev hotplug
When attaching a device to a domain that's using separate mount
namespace we must maintain /dev entries in order for qemu process
to see them.

Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
2016-12-15 09:25:16 +01:00
Michal Privoznik
81df21507b qemu: Manage /dev entry on disk hotplug
When attaching a device to a domain that's using separate mount
namespace we must maintain /dev entries in order for qemu process
to see them.

Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
2016-12-15 09:25:16 +01:00
Michal Privoznik
eadaa97548 qemu: Enter the namespace on relabelling
Instead of trying to fix our security drivers, we can use a
simple trick to relabel paths in both namespace and the host.
I mean, if we enter the namespace some paths are still shared
with the host so any change done to them is visible from the host
too.
Therefore, we can just enter the namespace and call
SetAllLabel()/RestoreAllLabel() from there. Yes, it has slight
overhead because we have to fork in order to enter the namespace.
But on the other hand, no complexity is added to our code.

Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
2016-12-15 09:25:16 +01:00
Michal Privoznik
2160f338a7 qemu: Prepare RNGs when starting a domain
When starting a domain and separate mount namespace is used, we
have to create all the /dev entries that are configured for the
domain.

Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
2016-12-15 09:25:16 +01:00
Michal Privoznik
8ec8a8c5ff qemu: Prepare inputs when starting a domain
When starting a domain and separate mount namespace is used, we
have to create all the /dev entries that are configured for the
domain.

Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
2016-12-15 09:25:16 +01:00
Michal Privoznik
2c654490f3 qemu: Prepare TPM when starting a domain
When starting a domain and separate mount namespace is used, we
have to create all the /dev entries that are configured for the
domain.

Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
2016-12-15 09:25:16 +01:00
Michal Privoznik
4e4451019c qemu: Prepare chardevs when starting a domain
When starting a domain and separate mount namespace is used, we
have to create all the /dev entries that are configured for the
domain.

Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
2016-12-15 09:25:16 +01:00
Michal Privoznik
73267cec46 qemu: Prepare hostdevs when starting a domain
When starting a domain and separate mount namespace is used, we
have to create all the /dev entries that are configured for the
domain.

Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
2016-12-15 09:25:16 +01:00
Michal Privoznik
054202d020 qemu: Prepare disks when starting a domain
When starting a domain and separate mount namespace is used, we
have to create all the /dev entries that are configured for the
domain.

Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
2016-12-15 09:25:16 +01:00
Michal Privoznik
bb4e529664 qemu: Spawn qemu under mount namespace
Prime time. When it comes to spawning qemu process and
relabelling all the devices it's going to touch, there's inherent
race with other applications in the system (e.g. udev). Instead
of trying convincing udev to not touch libvirt managed devices,
we can create a separate mount namespace for the qemu, and mount
our own /dev there. Of course this puts more work onto us as we
have to maintain /dev files on each domain start and device
hot(un-)plug. On the other hand, this enhances security also.

From technical POV, on domain startup process the parent
(libvirtd) creates:

  /var/lib/libvirt/qemu/$domain.dev
  /var/lib/libvirt/qemu/$domain.devpts

The child (which is going to be qemu eventually) calls unshare()
to create new mount namespace. From now on anything that child
does is invisible to the parent. Child then mounts tmpfs on
$domain.dev (so that it still sees original /dev from the host)
and creates some devices (as explained in one of the previous
patches). The devices have to be created exactly as they are in
the host (including perms, seclabels, ACLs, ...). After that it
moves $domain.dev mount to /dev.

What's the $domain.devpts mount there for then you ask? QEMU can
create PTYs for some chardevs. And historically we exposed the
host ends in our domain XML allowing users to connect to them.
Therefore we must preserve devpts mount to be shared with the
host's one.

To make this patch as small as possible, creating of devices
configured for domain in question is implemented in next patches.

Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
2016-12-15 09:25:16 +01:00
Michal Privoznik
a5896e8ca4 qemu_cgroup: Expose defaultDeviceACL
This is a list of devices that qemu needs for its run (apart from
what's configured for domain). The devices on the list are
enabled in the CGroups by default so they will be good candidates
for initial /dev for new qemu.

Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
2016-12-15 09:25:16 +01:00
Daniel P. Berrange
a81cfb649d Avoid variable named 'stat'
Using a variable named 'stat' clashes with the system function
'stat()' causing compiler warnings on some platforms

cc1: warnings being treated as errors
../../src/qemu/qemu_monitor_text.c: In function 'parseMemoryStat':
../../src/qemu/qemu_monitor_text.c:604: error: declaration of 'stat' shadows a global declaration [-Wshadow]
/usr/include/sys/stat.h:455: error: shadowed declaration is here [-Wshadow]

Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
2016-12-14 12:17:08 +00:00
Viktor Mihajlovski
283e290434 qemu: Allow use of hot plugged host CPUs if no affinity set
If the cpuset cgroup controller is disabled in /etc/libvirt/qemu.conf
QEMU virtual machines can in principle use all host CPUs, even if they
are hot plugged, if they have no explicit CPU affinity defined.

However, there's libvirt code supposed to handle the situation where
the libvirt daemon itself is not using all host CPUs. The code in
qemuProcessInitCpuAffinity attempts to set an affinity mask including
all defined host CPUs. Unfortunately, the resulting affinity mask for
the process will not contain the offline CPUs. See also the
sched_setaffinity(2) man page.

That means that even if the host CPUs come online again, they won't be
used by the QEMU process anymore. The same is true for newly hot
plugged CPUs. So we are effectively preventing that QEMU uses all
processors instead of enabling it to use them.

It only makes sense to set the QEMU process affinity if we're able
to actually grow the set of usable CPUs, i.e. if the process affinity
is a subset of the online host CPUs.

There's still the chance that for some reason the deliberately chosen
libvirtd affinity matches the online host CPU mask by accident. In this
case the behavior remains as it was before (CPUs offline while setting
the affinity will not be used if they show up later on).

Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Tested-by: Matthew Rosato <mjrosato@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
2016-12-13 18:25:00 -05:00
Jiri Denemark
f00c00475f qemu: Fix virQEMUCapsFindTarget on ppc64le
virQEMUCapsFindTarget is supposed to find an alternative QEMU binary if
qemu-system-$GUEST_ARCH doesn't exist. The alternative is using host
architecture when it is compatible with $GUEST_ARCH. But a special
treatment has to be applied for ppc64le since the QEMU binary is always
called qemu-system-ppc64.

Broken by me in v2.2.0-171-gf2e71550d.

https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1403745

Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
2016-12-13 22:11:33 +01:00
Nitesh Konkar
8981d7925e perf: add branch_misses perf event support
This patch adds support and documentation
for the branch_misses perf event.

Signed-off-by: Nitesh Konkar <nitkon12@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
2016-12-12 18:04:52 -05:00
Nikolay Shirokovskiy
cdd6819318 qemu: agent: take monitor lock in qemuAgentNotifyEvent
qemuAgentNotifyEvent accesses monitor structure and is called on qemu
reset/shutdown/suspend events under domain lock. Other monitor
functions on the other hand take monitor lock and don't hold domain lock.
Thus it is possible to have risky simultaneous access to the structure
from 2 threads. Let's take monitor lock here to make access exclusive.
2016-12-12 17:14:11 -05:00
Nikolay Shirokovskiy
c9a191fc48 qemu: don't use vm when lock is dropped in qemuDomainGetFSInfo
Current call to qemuAgentGetFSInfo in qemuDomainGetFSInfo is
unsafe. Domain lock is dropped and we use vm->def. Let's make
def copy to fix that.
2016-12-12 17:14:11 -05:00
Nikolay Shirokovskiy
3ab9652a86 qemu: agent: fix uninitialized var case in qemuAgentGetFSInfo
In case of 0 filesystems *info is not set while according
to virDomainGetFSInfo contract user should call free on it even
in case of 0 filesystems. Thus we need to properly set
it. NULL will be enough as free eats NULLs ok.
2016-12-12 17:14:11 -05:00
John Ferlan
cf436a560d qemu: Fix GetBlockInfo setting allocation from wr_highest_offset
The libvirt-domain.h documentation indicates that for a qcow2 file
in a filesystem being used for a backing store should report the disk
space occupied by a file; however, commit id '15fa84ac' altered the
code to trust that the wr_highest_offset should be used whenever
wr_highest_offset_valid was set.

As it turns out this will lead to indeterminite results. For an active
domain when qemu hasn't yet had the need to find the wr_highest_offset
value, qemu will report 0 even though qemu-img will report the proper
disk size. This causes reporting of the following XML:

  <disk type='file' device='disk'>
    <driver name='qemu' type='qcow2'/>
    <source file='/path/to/test-1g.qcow2'/>

to be as follows:

Capacity:       1073741824
Allocation:     0
Physical:       1074139136

with qemu-img indicating:

image: /path/to/test-1g.qcow2
file format: qcow2
virtual size: 1.0G (1073741824 bytes)
disk size: 1.0G

Once the backing source file is opened on the guest, then wr_highest_offset
is updated, but only to the high water mark and not the size of the file.

This patch will adjust the logic to check for the file backed qcow2 image
and enforce setting the allocation to the returned 'physical' value, which
is the 'actual-size' value from a 'query-block' operation.

NB: The other consumer of the wr_highest_offset output (GetAllDomainStats)
has a contract that indicates 'allocation' is the offset of the highest
written sector, so it doesn't need adjustment.

Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
2016-12-12 16:04:17 -05:00
John Ferlan
9d734b60a7 util: Introduce virStorageSourceUpdateCapacity
Instead of having duplicated code in qemuStorageLimitsRefresh and
virStorageBackendUpdateVolTargetInfo to get capacity specific data
about the storage backing source or volume -- create a common API
to handle the details for both.

As a side effect, virStorageFileProbeFormatFromBuf returns to being
a local/static helper to virstoragefile.c

For the QEMU code - if the probe is done, then the format is saved so
as to avoid future such probes.

For the storage backend code, there is no need to deal with the probe
since we cannot call the new API if target->format == NONE.

Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
2016-12-12 16:04:17 -05:00
John Ferlan
3039ec962e util: Introduce virStorageSourceUpdateBackingSizes
Instead of having duplicated code in qemuStorageLimitsRefresh and
virStorageBackendUpdateVolTargetInfoFD to fill in the storage backing
source or volume allocation, capacity, and physical values - create a
common API that will handle the details for both.

The common API will fill in "default" capacity values as well - although
those more than likely will be overridden by subsequent code. Having just
one place to make the determination of what the values should be will
make things be more consistent.

For the QEMU code - the data filled in will be for inactive domains
for the GetBlockInfo and DomainGetStatsOneBlock API's. For the storage
backend code - the data will be filled in during the volume updates.

Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
2016-12-12 16:04:17 -05:00
John Ferlan
c5f6151390 util: Introduce virStorageSourceUpdatePhysicalSize
Commit id '8dc27259' introduced virStorageSourceUpdateBlockPhysicalSize
in order to retrieve the physical size for a block backed source device
for an active domain since commit id '15fa84ac' changed to use the
qemuMonitorGetAllBlockStatsInfo and qemuMonitorBlockStatsUpdateCapacity
API's to (essentially) retrieve the "actual-size" from a 'query-block'
operation for the source device.

However, the code only was made functional for a BLOCK backing type
and it neglected to use qemuOpenFile, instead using just open. After
the open the block lseek would find the end of the block and set the
physical value, close the fd and return.

Since the code would return 0 immediately if the source device wasn't
a BLOCK backed device, the physical would be displayed incorrectly,
such as follows in domblkinfo for a file backed source device:

Capacity:       1073741824
Allocation:     0
Physical:       0

This patch will modify the algorithm to get the physical size for other
backing types and it will make use of the qemuDomainStorageOpenStat
helper in order to open/stat the source file depending on its type.
The qemuDomainGetStatsOneBlock will no longer inhibit printing errors,
but it will still ignore them leaving the physical value set to 0.

Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
2016-12-12 16:04:17 -05:00