Let configure detect ld instead of hardcoding /usr/bin/ld, because
MinGW may have ld in /bin.
Only use a .def file to export symbols on MinGW. Cygwin's ld supports
the normal .syms file used on Linux.
use /var/lib/libvirt/dnsmasq since /var/lib/libvirt/network is
unreadable by the dnsmasq binary
* src/network/bridge_driver.c: update DNSMASQ_STATE_DIR
* src/Makefile.am: create it on make install
* libvirt.spec.in: take the new directory into account
So far the references to other filters needed to appear before filtering
rules. With the below patch they can now appear in any order.
Also I forgot to add a couple of 'rarp's.
In cases where the security driver failed to restore a label after a
guest has saved, we mistakenly jumped to the error cleanup paths.
This is not good, because the operation has in fact completed and
cannot be rolled back completely. Label restore is non-critical, so
just log the problem instead. Also add a missing restore call in
the error cleanup path
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c: Fix handling of security driver
restore failures in QEMU domain save
When cgroups is enabled, access to block devices is likely to be
restricted to a whitelist. Prior to saving a guest to a block device,
it is necessary to add the block device to the whitelist. This is
not required upon restore, since QEMU reads from stdin
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c: Add block device to cgroups whitelist
if neccessary during domain save.
The save process was relying on use of the shell >> append
operator to ensure the save data was placed after the libvirt
header + XML. This doesn't work for block devices though.
Replace this code with use of 'dd' and its 'seek' parameter.
This means that we need to pad the header + XML out to a
multiple of dd block size (in this case we choose 512).
The qemuMonitorMigateToCommand() monitor API is used for both
save/coredump, and migration via UNIX socket. We can't simply
switch this to use 'dd' since this causes problems with the
migration usage. Thus, create a dedicated qemuMonitorMigateToFile
which can accept an filename + offset, and remove the filename
from the current qemuMonitorMigateToCommand() API
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c: Switch to qemuMonitorMigateToFile
for save and core dump
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.c, src/qemu/qemu_monitor.h,
src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.c, src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.h,
src/qemu/qemu_monitor_text.c, src/qemu/qemu_monitor_text.h: Create
a new qemuMonitorMigateToFile, separate from the existing
qemuMonitorMigateToCommand to allow handling file offsets
It is possible to use block devices with domain save/restore. Upon
failure QEMU unlinks the path being saved to. This isn't good when
it is a block device !
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c: Don't unlink block devices if save fails
If a transient QEMU crashes during save attempt, then the virDomainPtr
object may be freed. If a persistent QEMU crashes during save, then
the 'priv->mon' field is no longer valid since it will be inactive.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c: Fix two crashes when QEMU exits
during a save attempt
Qemu currently sends an Ethernet packet with protocol id 0x835 once a VM
was successfully migrated. The content of the packet looks like a
gratuitous RARP, just with the wrong protocol ID, which should be
0x8035. I wrote some filters to let either one of the packets pass and
am adapting the clean-traffic sample filter to use it. I am also
doing some changes on the existing ARP filter which was lacking a
test for source MAC address.
In particular I was forgetting to take the qemuMonitorPrivatePtr
lock (via qemuDomainObjBeginJob), which would cause problems
if two users tried to access the same domain at the same time.
This patch also fixes a problem where I was forgetting to remove
a transient domain from the list of domains.
Thanks to Stephen Shaw for pointing out the problem and testing
out the initial patch.
Signed-off-by: Chris Lalancette <clalance@redhat.com>
This patch adds support for the RARP protocol. This may be needed due to
qemu sending out a RARP packet (at least that's what it seems to want to
do even though the protocol id is wrong) when migration finishes and
we'd need a rule to let the packets pass.
Unfortunately my installation of ebtables does not understand -p RARP
and also seems to otherwise depend on strings in /etc/ethertype
translated to protocol identifiers. Therefore I need to pass -p 0x8035
for RARP. To generally get rid of the dependency of that file I switch
all so far supported protocols to use their protocol identifier in the
-p parameter rather than the string.
I am also extending the schema and added a test case.
changes from v1 to v2:
- added test case into patch
With JSON qemu monitor, we get a STOP event from qemu whenever qemu
stops guests CPUs. The downside of it is that vm->state is changed to
PAUSED and a new generic paused event is send to applications. However,
when we ask qemu to stop the CPUs we are not really interested in qemu
event and we usually want to issue a more specific event.
By setting vm->status to PAUSED before actually sending the request to
qemu (and resetting it back if the request fails) we can ignore the
event since the event handler does nothing when the guest is already
paused. This solution is quite hacky but unfortunately it's the best
solution which I was able to come up with and it doesn't introduce a
race condition.
* virStorageEncryptionFormat is called from both
virDomainDiskDefFormat and virStorageVolTargetDefFormat. The proper
indentation in the generated XML depends on the caller. My earlier
patch to fix the incorrect indentation for the domain XML broke the
indentation for the storage XML. This patch adopts Laine's
suggestion of requring the caller of virStorageEncryptionFormat to
provide an unsigned int with the number of spaces the output should
be indented. The patch modifies both callers to provide the
additional argument.
* Add a regression test for the domain XML
* src/conf/domain_conf.c src/conf/storage_conf.c
src/conf/storage_encryption_conf.c src/conf/storage_encryption_conf.h:
change the indentation code
* tests/qemuxml2xmltest.c
tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-encrypted-disk.args
tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-encrypted-disk.xml: add a regression test
Cygwin's XDR implementation defines xdr_u_int64_t instead of
xdr_uint64_t and lacks IXDR_PUT_INT32/IXDR_GET_INT32.
Alter the IXDR_GET_LONG regex in rpcgen_fix.pl so it doesn't destroy
the #define IXDR_GET_INT32 IXDR_GET_LONG in remote_protocol.x.
Also fix the remote_protocol.h regex in rpcgen_fix.pl.
With this patch I want to enable hex number inputs in the filter XML. A
number that was entered as hex is also printed as hex unless a string
representing the meaning can be found.
I am also extending the schema and adding a test case. A problem with
the DSCP value is fixed on the way as well.
Changes from V1 to V2:
- using asHex boolean in all printf type of functions to select the
output format in hex or decimal format
This patch makes libvirtd start the dnsmasq daemon with a
--dhcp-hostsfile option instead of --dhcp-host options for each
'//ip/dhcp/host' entries defined in network xml file.
the dnsmasq host file is stored into /var/lib/libvirt/network
* src/network/bridge_driver.c: define the directory for the hostfiles
and save/delete them to be used by dnsmasq
* po/POTFILES.in: the new module contains translatable strings
* src/Makefile.am: include the files in the utils set
* src/libvirt_private.syms: exports the symbols internally
It implements an idea to save dhcp hosts' macaddr vs. ipaddr mappings to
static file and make dnsmasq loading it with "--dhcp-hostsfile" option,
originally suggested by Dan, and can address the problem that too
many "--dhcp-host" args hitting ARG_MAX limit
* src/util/dnsmasq.h src/util/dnsmasq.c: adds the 2 new files
We were forgetting to release the memory allocated by
virDomainSnapshotListNames. Free the memory properly.
Signed-off-by: Chris Lalancette <clalance@redhat.com>
While doing some testing of the snapshot code I noticed that
if qemuDomainSnapshotLoad failed, it would print a NULL as
part of the error. That's not desirable, so leave the
full_path variable around until after we are done printing
errors.
Signed-off-by: Chris Lalancette <clalance@redhat.com>
We were freeing the virDomainSnapshotDefPtr, but not
the virDomainSnapshotObjPtr in virDomainSnapshotObjFree.
Signed-off-by: Chris Lalancette <clalance@redhat.com>
While running libvirtd under valgrind and doing some
snapshot testing I noticed that we would always leak a
connection reference. The problem was actually that we
were leaking a domain reference in the libvirtd remote
snapshot code, which was in turn causing a leaked
connection reference. Fix the situation by explicitly
taking and dropping a domain reference where we need it.
Signed-off-by: Chris Lalancette <clalance@redhat.com>
Also move the equivalent checks for LXC and UML before their header
checks. This way configure doesn't check for the headers when the driver
gets disabled anyway.
Under cygwin, winsock2.h is intentionally incompatible with,
<sys/socket.h>, and checking for existence is wrong.
Under mingw, HAVE_WINSOCK2_H is defined on our behalf by
gnulib, in a way that does not interfere with cygwin.
* configure.ac: Drop unnecessary header check.
Reported by Matthias Bolte.
It's not needed and is currently ignored, but this is a bug.
It will get fixed soon and QMP will return an error for keys
it doesn't know about, this will break libvirt.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.c: remove qemuMonitorJSONCommandAddTimestamp()
and the place where it's invoked in qemuMonitorJSONMakeCommand()
The nwfilterDriverActive() could de-reference a NULL pointer
if it hadn't be started at the point it was called. It was
also not thread safe, since it lacked locking around data
accesses.
* src/nwfilter/nwfilter_driver.c: Fix locking & NULL checks
in nwfilterDriverActive()
The user probably doesn't care what the gai error numbers are, as
much as what the failed conversion IP address was.
* src/remote/remote_driver.c (addrToString): Mention which address
could not be converted.
* daemon/remote.c (addrToString): Likewise.
* The error messages coming from qemu's DAC support contain strings
from the original SELinux security driver code. This just removes
references to "security context" and other SELinux-isms from the DAC
code.
Signed-off-by: Spencer Shimko <sshimko@tresys.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
- using INT_BUFSIZE_BOUND() to determine the length of the buffersize
for printing and integer into
- not explicitly initializing static var threadsTerminate to false
anymore, since that's done automatically
Changes after V2:
- removed while looks in case of OOM error
- removed on ifaceDown() call
- preceding one ifaceDown() call with an ifaceCheck() call
Since the name of an interface can be the same between stops and starts
of different VMs I have to switch the IP address learning thread to use
the index of the interface to determine whether an interface is still
available or not - in the case of macvtap the thread needs to listen for
traffic on the physical interface, thus having to time out periodically
to check whether the VM's macvtap device is still there as an indication
that the VM is still alive. Previously the following sequence of 2 VMs
with macvtap device
virsh start testvm1; virsh destroy testvm1 ; virsh start testvm2
would not terminate the thread upon testvm1's destroy since the name of
the interface on the host could be the same (i.e, macvtap0) on testvm1
and testvm2, thus it was easily race-able. The thread would then
determine the IP address parameter for testvm2 but apply the rule set
for testvm1. :-(
I am also introducing a lock for the interface (by name) that the thread
must hold while it listens for the traffic and releases when it
terminates upon VM termination or 0.5 second thereafter. Thus, the new
thread for a newly started VM with the same interface name will not
start while the old one still holds the lock. The only other code that I
see that also needs to grab the lock to serialize operation is the one
that tears down the firewall that were established on behalf of an
interface.
I am moving the code applying the 'basic' firewall rules during the IP
address learning phase inside the thread but won't start the thread
unless it is ensured that the firewall driver has the ability to apply
the 'basic' firewall rules.
The hang fix in d376b7d63e was incomplete
since it left quite a few {Enter,Exit}Monitor calls which require driver
to be unlocked. Since the driver is locked throughout the whole
function, {Enter,Exit}MonitorWithDriver need to be used instead to
ensure driver is not locked when issuing monitor commands.