Even though http://libvirt.org/formatdomain.html#elementsMetadata
states that it requires RFC4122 compliance UUIDs that are generated
by virUUIDGenerate() are not. Following patch modifies generated
UUIDs to conform to rules described in RFC.
Signed-off-by: Milos Vyletel <milos.vyletel@sde.cz>
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>
This updates the definitions and supporting structures in the XML
schema and domain configuration files.
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>
To support "shareable" for volume type disk, we have to translate
the source before trying to add the shared disk entry. To achieve
the goal, this moves the helper qemuTranslateDiskSourcePool into
src/qemu/qemu_conf.c, and introduce an internal only member (voltype)
for struct _virDomainDiskSourcePoolDef, to record the underlying
volume type for use when building the drive string.
Later patch will support "shareable" volume type disk.
This adds a new helper qemuTranslateDiskSourcePool which uses the
storage pool/vol APIs to translate the disk source before building
the drive string. Network volume is not supported yet. Disk chain
for volume type disk may be supported later, but before I'm confident
it doesn't break anything, it's just disabled now.
With this patch, one can specify the disk source using libvirt
storage like:
<disk type='volume' device='disk'>
<driver name='qemu' type='raw' cache='none'/>
<source pool='default' volume='fc18.img'/>
<target dev='vdb' bus='virtio'/>
</disk>
"seclabels" and "startupPolicy" are not supported for this new
disk type ("volume"). They will be supported in later patches.
docs/formatdomain.html.in:
* Add documents for new XMLs
docs/schemas/domaincommon.rng:
* Add rng for new XMLs;
src/conf/domain_conf.h:
* New struct for 'volume' type disk source (virDomainDiskSourcePoolDef)
* Add VIR_DOMAIN_DISK_TYPE_VOLUME for enum virDomainDiskType
src/conf/domain_conf.c:
* New helper virDomainDiskSourcePoolDefParse to parse the 'volume'
type disk source.
* New helper virDomainDiskSourcePoolDefFree to free the source def
if 'volume' type disk.
tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-disk-source-pool.xml:
tests/qemuxml2xmltest.c:
* New test
This finds the parent for vHBA by iterating over all the HBA
which supports vport_ops capability on the host, and return
the first one which is online, not saturated (vports in use
is less than max_vports).
startPool creates the vHBA if it's not existed yet, stopPool destroys
the vHBA. Also to support autostart, checkPool will creates the vHBA
if it's not existed yet.
The helper iterates over sysfs, to find out the matched scsi host
name by comparing the wwnn,wwpn pair. It will be used by checkPool
and refreshPool of storage scsi backend. New helper getAdapterName
is introduced in storage_backend_scsi.c, which uses the new util
helper virGetFCHostNameByWWN to get the fc_host adapter name.
node device driver names the HBA like "scsi_host5", but storage
driver uses "host5", which could make the user confused. This
changes them to be consistent. However, for back-compat reason,
adapter name like "host5" is still supported.
This introduces 4 new attributes for storage pool source adapter.
E.g.
<adapter type='fc_host' parent='scsi_host5' wwnn='20000000c9831b4b' wwpn='10000000c9831b4b'/>
Attribute 'type' can be either 'scsi_host' or 'fc_host', and defaults
to 'scsi_host' if attribute 'name' is specified. I.e. It's optional
for 'scsi_host' adapter, for back-compat reason. However, mandatory
for 'fc_host' adapter and any new future adapter types. Attribute
'parent' is to specify the parent for the fc_host adapter.
* docs/formatstorage.html.in:
- Add documents for the 4 new attrs
* docs/schemas/storagepool.rng:
- Add RNG schema
* src/conf/storage_conf.c:
- Parse and format the new XMLs
* src/conf/storage_conf.h:
- New struct virStoragePoolSourceAdapter, replace "char *adapter" with it;
- New enum virStoragePoolSourceAdapterType
* src/libvirt_private.syms:
- Export TypeToString and TypeFromString
* src/phyp/phyp_driver.c:
- Replace "adapter" with "adapter.data.name", which is member of the union
of the new struct virStoragePoolSourceAdapter now. Later patch will
add the checking, as "adapter.data.name" is only valid for "scsi_host"
adapter.
* src/storage/storage_backend_scsi.c:
- Like above
* tests/storagepoolxml2xmlin/pool-scsi-type-scsi-host.xml:
* tests/storagepoolxml2xmlin/pool-scsi-type-fc-host.xml:
- New test for 'fc_host' and "scsi_host" adapter
* tests/storagepoolxml2xmlout/pool-scsi.xml:
- Change the expected output, as the 'type' defaults to 'scsi_host' if 'name"
specified now
* tests/storagepoolxml2xmlout/pool-scsi-type-scsi-host.xml:
* tests/storagepoolxml2xmlout/pool-scsi-type-fc-host.xml:
- New test
* tests/storagepoolxml2xmltest.c:
- Include the test
There are a number of places which generate cast alignment
warnings, which are difficult or impossible to address. Use
pragmas to disable the warnings in these few places
conf/nwfilter_conf.c: In function 'virNWFilterRuleDetailsParse':
conf/nwfilter_conf.c:1806:16: warning: cast increases required alignment of target type [-Wcast-align]
item = (nwItemDesc *)((char *)nwf + att[idx].dataIdx);
conf/nwfilter_conf.c: In function 'virNWFilterRuleDefDetailsFormat':
conf/nwfilter_conf.c:3238:16: warning: cast increases required alignment of target type [-Wcast-align]
item = (nwItemDesc *)((char *)def + att[i].dataIdx);
storage/storage_backend_mpath.c: In function 'virStorageBackendCreateVols':
storage/storage_backend_mpath.c:247:17: warning: cast increases required alignment of target type [-Wcast-align]
names = (struct dm_names *)(((char *)names) + next);
nwfilter/nwfilter_dhcpsnoop.c: In function 'virNWFilterSnoopDHCPDecode':
nwfilter/nwfilter_dhcpsnoop.c:994:15: warning: cast increases required alignment of target type [-Wcast-align]
pip = (struct iphdr *) pep->eh_data;
nwfilter/nwfilter_dhcpsnoop.c:1004:11: warning: cast increases required alignment of target type [-Wcast-align]
pup = (struct udphdr *) ((char *) pip + (pip->ihl << 2));
nwfilter/nwfilter_learnipaddr.c: In function 'procDHCPOpts':
nwfilter/nwfilter_learnipaddr.c:327:33: warning: cast increases required alignment of target type [-Wcast-align]
uint32_t *tmp = (uint32_t *)&dhcpopt->value;
nwfilter/nwfilter_learnipaddr.c: In function 'learnIPAddressThread':
nwfilter/nwfilter_learnipaddr.c:501:43: warning: cast increases required alignment of target type [-Wcast-align]
struct iphdr *iphdr = (struct iphdr*)(packet +
nwfilter/nwfilter_learnipaddr.c:538:43: warning: cast increases required alignment of target type [-Wcast-align]
struct iphdr *iphdr = (struct iphdr*)(packet +
nwfilter/nwfilter_learnipaddr.c:544:48: warning: cast increases required alignment of target type [-Wcast-align]
struct udphdr *udphdr= (struct udphdr *)
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When reading the inotify FD, we get back a sequence of
struct inotify_event, each with variable length data following.
It is not safe to simply cast from the char *buf to the
struct inotify_event struct since this may violate data
alignment rules. Thus we must copy from the char *buf
into the struct inotify_event instance before accessing
the data.
uml/uml_driver.c: In function 'umlInotifyEvent':
uml/uml_driver.c:327:13: warning: cast increases required alignment of target type [-Wcast-align]
e = (struct inotify_event *)tmp;
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The current way virObject instances are allocated using
VIR_ALLOC_N causes alignment warnings
util/virobject.c: In function 'virObjectNew':
util/virobject.c:195:11: error: cast increases required alignment of target type [-Werror=cast-align]
Changing to use VIR_ALLOC_VAR will avoid the need todo
the casts entirely.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The virNetlinkCommand() method takes an 'unsigned char **'
parameter to be filled with the received netlink message.
The callers then immediately cast this to 'struct nlmsghdr',
triggering (bogus) warnings about increasing alignment
requirements
util/virnetdev.c: In function 'virNetDevLinkDump':
util/virnetdev.c:1300:12: warning: cast increases required alignment of target type [-Wcast-align]
resp = (struct nlmsghdr *)*recvbuf;
^
util/virnetdev.c: In function 'virNetDevSetVfConfig':
util/virnetdev.c:1429:12: warning: cast increases required alignment of target type [-Wcast-align]
resp = (struct nlmsghdr *)recvbuf;
Since all callers cast to 'struct nlmsghdr' we can avoid
the warning problem entirely by simply changing the
signature of virNetlinkCommand to return a 'struct nlmsghdr **'
instead of 'unsigned char **'. The way we do the cast inside
virNetlinkCommand does not have any alignment issues.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Playing games with field offsets in a struct causes all sorts
of alignment warnings on ARM platforms
util/virkeycode.c: In function '__virKeycodeValueFromString':
util/virkeycode.c:26:7: warning: cast increases required alignment of target type [-Wcast-align]
(*(typeof(field_type) *)((char *)(object) + field_offset))
^
util/virkeycode.c:91:28: note: in expansion of macro 'getfield'
const char *name = getfield(virKeycodes + i, const char *, name_offset);
^
util/virkeycode.c:26:7: warning: cast increases required alignment of target type [-Wcast-align]
(*(typeof(field_type) *)((char *)(object) + field_offset))
^
util/virkeycode.c:94:20: note: in expansion of macro 'getfield'
return getfield(virKeycodes + i, unsigned short, code_offset);
^
util/virkeycode.c: In function '__virKeycodeValueTranslate':
util/virkeycode.c:26:7: warning: cast increases required alignment of target type [-Wcast-align]
(*(typeof(field_type) *)((char *)(object) + field_offset))
^
util/virkeycode.c:127:13: note: in expansion of macro 'getfield'
if (getfield(virKeycodes + i, unsigned short, from_offset) == key_value)
^
util/virkeycode.c:26:7: warning: cast increases required alignment of target type [-Wcast-align]
(*(typeof(field_type) *)((char *)(object) + field_offset))
^
util/virkeycode.c:128:20: note: in expansion of macro 'getfield'
return getfield(virKeycodes + i, unsigned short, to_offset);
There is no compelling reason to use a struct for the keycode
tables. It can easily just use an array of arrays instead,
avoiding all alignment problems
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
For both "live" and "config" changes of vcpupin and emulatorpin, an
all clear bitmap doesn't make sense, and it can just cause corruptions.
E.g (similar for emulatorpin).
% virsh vcpupin hame 0 8,^8 --config
% virsh vcpupin hame
VCPU: CPU Affinity
----------------------------------
0:
1: 0-63
2: 0-63
3: 0-63
% virsh dumpxml hame | grep cpuset
<vcpupin vcpu='0' cpuset=''/>
% virsh start hame
error: Failed to start domain hame
error: An error occurred, but the cause is unknown
This introduce a new attribute "num_queues" (same with the good name
QEMU uses) for virtio-scsi controller. An example of the XML:
<controller type='scsi' index='0' model='virtio-scsi' num_queues='8'/>
The corresponding QEMU command line:
-device virtio-scsi-pci,id=scsi0,num_queues=8,bus=pci.0,addr=0x3 \
By default, libtool builds two .o files for every .lo rule:
src/foo.o - static builds
src/.libs/foo.o - shared library builds
But since commit ad42b34b disabled static builds, src/foo.o is
no longer built by default. On a fresh checkout, this means our
protocol check rules using pdwtags were testing a missing file,
and thanks to a lousy behavior of pdwtags happily giving no output
and 0 exit status (http://bugzilla.redhat.com/949034), we were
merely claiming that "dwarves is too old" and skipping the test.
However, if you swap between branches and do incremental builds,
such as building v0.10.2-maint and then switching back to master,
you end up with src/foo.o being leftover from its 0.10.2 state,
and then 'make check' fails because the .o file does not match
the protocol-structs file due to API additions in the meantime.
A simpler fix would be to always look in .libs for the .o to
be parsed; but since it is possible to pass ./configure options
to tell libtool to do a static-only build with no shared .o,
I went with the approach of finding the newest of the two files,
whenever both exist.
* src/Makefile.am (PDWTAGS): Ensure we test just-built file.
When setting processor count for a domain using the API libvirt enforced
a maximum processor count, while it isn't enforced when taking the XML path.
This patch removes the check to match the XML.
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>
The last Viktor's effort to fix the race and memory corruption unfortunately
wasn't complete in the case the close callback was not registered in an
connection. At that time, the trail of event's that I'll describe later could
still happen and corrupt the memory or cause a crash of the client (including
the daemon in case of a p2p migration).
Consider the following prerequisities and trail of events:
Let's have a remote connection to a hypervisor that doesn't have a close
callback registered and the client is using the event loop. The crash happens in
cooperation of 2 threads. Thread E is the event loop and thread W is the worker
that does some stuff. R denotes the remote client.
1.) W - The client finishes everything and sheds the last reference on the client
2.) W - The virObject stuff invokes virConnectDispose that invokes doRemoteClose
3.) W - the remote close method invokes the REMOTE_PROC_CLOSE RPC method.
4.) W - The thread is preempted at this point.
5.) R - The remote side receives the close and closes the socket.
6.) E - poll() wakes up due to the closed socket and invokes the close callback
7.) E - The event loop is preempted right before remoteClientCloseFunc is called
8.) W - The worker now finishes, and frees the conn object.
9.) E - The remoteClientCloseFunc accesses the now-freed conn object in the
attempt to retrieve pointer for the real close callback.
10.) Kaboom, corrupted memory/segfault.
This patch tries to fix this by introducing a new object that survives the
freeing of the connection object. We can't increase the reference count on the
connection object itself or the connection would never be closed, as the
connection is closed only when the reference count reaches zero.
The new object - virConnectCloseCallbackData - is a lockable object that keeps
the pointers to the real user registered callback and ensures that the
connection callback is either not called if the connection was already freed or
that the connection isn't freed while this is being called.
By adjusting the reference count of the connection object we
prevent races between callback function and virConnectClose.
Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.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.
Use the qemu specific callback to fill this data in the qemu driver as
it's the only place where it was used and fix tests as the qemu test
capability object didn't configure the defaults for the tests.
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 removes the defaultDiskDriverName from the virCaps
structure. This particular default value is used only in the qemu driver
so this patch uses the recently added callback to fill the driver name
if it's needed instead of propagating it through virCaps.
This gets rid of the parameter in favor of using the new callback
infrastructure to do the same stuff.
This patch implements the domain adjustment callback in the openVZ
driver and moves the check from the parser to a new validation method in
the callback infrastructure.
This patch implements the devices post parse callback and uses it to fill
the default qemu network card model into the XML if none is specified.
Libvirt assumes that the network card model for qemu is the "rtl8139".
Record this in the XML using the new callback to avoid user
confusion.
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.
If libnuma is not compiled in, or numa_available() returns an
error, stub out fake NUMA info consisting of one NUMA cell
containing all CPUs and memory.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Not all kernel builds have any entries under the location
/sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/topology. We already cope with
that being missing in some cases, but not all. Update the
code which looks for thread_siblings to cope with the missing
file
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The Raspberry Pi runs the armv6l architecture and apparently
people are trying to run libvirt LXC on it. So we should allow
that as a valid arch
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Implement the bare minimal sysinfo for ARM platforms by
reading the CPU models from /proc/cpuinfo
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The nodedev driver currently only detects harddisk, cdrom
and floppy devices. This adds support for SD cards, which
are common storage for ARM devices, eg the Google ChromeBook
<device>
<name>block_mmcblk0_0xb1c7c08b</name>
<parent>computer</parent>
<capability type='storage'>
<block>/dev/mmcblk0</block>
<drive_type>sd</drive_type>
<serial>0xb1c7c08b</serial>
<size>15758000128</size>
<logical_block_size>512</logical_block_size>
<num_blocks>30777344</num_blocks>
</capability>
</device>
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
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>
When creating a logical volume with virStorageVolCreateXMLFrom,
"qemu-img convert" is called internally if clonevol is a file volume.
Then, vol->target.format is used as output_fmt parameter but the
target.format of logical volumes is always 0 because logical volumes
haven't the volume format type element.
Fortunately, 0 was treated as RAW file format before commit f772b3d9,
so there was no problem. But now, 0 is treated as the type of none,
qemu-img fails with "Unknown file format 'none'".
This patch fixes this issue by treating output block devices as RAW
file format like for input block devices.
Signed-off-by: Atsushi Kumagai <kumagai-atsushi@mxc.nes.nec.co.jp>
otherwise we crash later on if we don't find a match like:
#0 0xb72c2b4f in virSecurityManagerGenLabel (mgr=0xb8e42d20, vm=0xb8ef40c0) at security/security_manager.c:424
#1 0xb18811f3 in qemuProcessStart (conn=conn@entry=0xb8eed880, driver=driver@entry=0xb8e3b1e0, vm=vm@entry=0xb8ef58f0,
migrateFrom=migrateFrom@entry=0xb18f6088 "stdio", stdin_fd=18,
stdin_path=stdin_path@entry=0xb8ea7798 "/var/lib/jenkins/jobs/libvirt-tck-build/workspace/tck.img", snapshot=snapshot@entry=0x0,
vmop=vmop@entry=VIR_NETDEV_VPORT_PROFILE_OP_RESTORE, flags=flags@entry=2) at qemu/qemu_process.c:3364
#2 0xb18d6cb2 in qemuDomainSaveImageStartVM (conn=conn@entry=0xb8eed880, driver=driver@entry=0xb8e3b1e0, vm=0xb8ef58f0, fd=fd@entry=0xb6bf3f98,
header=header@entry=0xb6bf3fa0, path=path@entry=0xb8ea7798 "/var/lib/jenkins/jobs/libvirt-tck-build/workspace/tck.img",
start_paused=start_paused@entry=false) at qemu/qemu_driver.c:4843
#3 0xb18d7eeb in qemuDomainRestoreFlags (conn=conn@entry=0xb8eed880,
path=path@entry=0xb8ea7798 "/var/lib/jenkins/jobs/libvirt-tck-build/workspace/tck.img", dxml=dxml@entry=0x0, flags=flags@entry=0)
at qemu/qemu_driver.c:4962
#4 0xb18d8123 in qemuDomainRestore (conn=0xb8eed880, path=0xb8ea7798 "/var/lib/jenkins/jobs/libvirt-tck-build/workspace/tck.img")
at qemu/qemu_driver.c:4987
#5 0xb718d186 in virDomainRestore (conn=0xb8eed880, from=0xb8ea87d8 "/var/lib/jenkins/jobs/libvirt-tck-build/workspace/tck.img") at libvirt.c:2768
#6 0xb7736363 in remoteDispatchDomainRestore (args=<optimized out>, rerr=0xb6bf41f0, client=0xb8eedaf0, server=<optimized out>, msg=<optimized out>)
at remote_dispatch.h:4679
#7 remoteDispatchDomainRestoreHelper (server=0xb8e1a3e0, client=0xb8eedaf0, msg=0xb8ee72c8, rerr=0xb6bf41f0, args=0xb8ea8968, ret=0xb8ef5330)
at remote_dispatch.h:4661
#8 0xb720db01 in virNetServerProgramDispatchCall (msg=0xb8ee72c8, client=0xb8eedaf0, server=0xb8e1a3e0, prog=0xb8e216b0)
at rpc/virnetserverprogram.c:439
#9 virNetServerProgramDispatch (prog=0xb8e216b0, server=server@entry=0xb8e1a3e0, client=0xb8eedaf0, msg=0xb8ee72c8) at rpc/virnetserverprogram.c:305
#10 0xb7206e97 in virNetServerProcessMsg (msg=<optimized out>, prog=<optimized out>, client=<optimized out>, srv=0xb8e1a3e0) at rpc/virnetserver.c:162
#11 virNetServerHandleJob (jobOpaque=0xb8ea7720, opaque=0xb8e1a3e0) at rpc/virnetserver.c:183
#12 0xb70f9f78 in virThreadPoolWorker (opaque=opaque@entry=0xb8e1a540) at util/virthreadpool.c:144
#13 0xb70f94a5 in virThreadHelper (data=0xb8e0e558) at util/virthreadpthread.c:161
#14 0xb705d954 in start_thread (arg=0xb6bf4b70) at pthread_create.c:304
#15 0xb6fd595e in clone () at ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/i386/clone.S:130
This unbreaks libvirt-tck's domain/100-transient-save-restore.t with
qemu:///session and selinux compiled in but disabled.
Introduced by 8d68cbeaa8
Commit f84b92ea introduced a memory leak on error; John Ferlan reported
that valgrind caught it during 'make check'.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuBuildMachineArgStr): Plug leak.
By passing the flags -z relro -z now to the linker, we can force
it to resolve all library symbols at startup, instead of on-demand.
This allows it to then make the global offset table (GOT) read-only,
which makes some security attacks harder.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
PIE (position independent executable) adds security to executables
by composing them entirely of position-independent code (PIC. The
.so libraries already build with -fPIC. This adds -fPIE which is
the equivalent to -fPIC, but for executables. This for allows Exec
Shield to use address space layout randomization to prevent attackers
from knowing where existing executable code is during a security
attack using exploits that rely on knowing the offset of the
executable code in the binary, such as return-to-libc attacks.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The JSON generator is able to represent only values less than LLONG_MAX, fix the
bandwidth limit checks when converting to value to catch overflows before they
reach the generator.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=947387
If a user configures a domain to use a seclabel of a specific type,
but the appropriate driver is not accessible, we should refuse to
start the domain. For instance, if user requires selinux, but it is
either non present in the system, or is just disabled, we should not
start the domain. Moreover, since we are touching only those labels we
have a security driver for, the other labels may confuse libvirt when
reconnecting to a domain on libvirtd restart. In our selinux example,
when starting up a domain, missing security label is okay, as we
auto-generate one. But later, when libvirt is re-connecting to a live
qemu instance, we parse a state XML, where security label is required
and it is an error if missing:
error : virSecurityLabelDefParseXML:3228 : XML error: security label
is missing
This results in a qemu process left behind without any libvirt control.
Mimic the fix done in 02b9097274 to fix crash by
accessing an already freed structure. Also copy the explaining comment why the
pointer can't be accessed any more.
Format the address using the helper instead of having similar code in
multiple places.
This patch also fixes leak of the MAC address string in
ebtablesRemoveForwardAllowIn() and ebtablesAddForwardAllowIn() in
src/util/virebtables.c
The domain XML generator creates the mac addres strings with lowercase
strings with a separate piece of code. This patch changes the formating
helper to do the same stuff to allow using it to normalize a string
provided by the user. After this change some of the tests that are
outputing the mac address will need to be changed.
Currently, -machine option is used only when dump-guest-core is set.
To use options defined in machine option for newer version of QEMU,
it needs to use -machine xxx, and to be compatible with older version
-M, this patch adds QEMU_CAPS_MACHINE_OPT capability for newer
version which supports -machine option.
Signed-off-by: Li Zhang <zhlcindy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Reported by Anthony Messina in
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=904692
Present since introduction of smartcard support in commit f5fd9baa
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuBuildCommandLine): Match qemu spelling.
* tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-smartcard-host-certificates.args:
Fix broken test.
Allow migration over IPv6 by listening on [::] instead of 0.0.0.0
when QEMU supports it (QEMU_CAPS_IPV6_MIGRATION) and there is
at least one v6 address configured on the system.
Use virURIParse in qemuMigrationPrepareDirect to allow parsing
IPv6 addresses, which would cause an 'incorrect :port' error
message before.
Move setting of migrateFrom from qemuMigrationPrepare{Direct,Tunnel}
after domain XML parsing, since we need the QEMU binary path from it
to get its capabilities.
Bug: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=846013
Code added by commit id '523207fe8'
TEST: qemuxml2argvtest
........................................ 40
........................................ 80
........................................ 120
........................................ 160
........................................ 200
........................................ 240
................................. 273 OK
==30993== 39 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 33 of 87
==30993== at 0x4A0887C: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:270)
==30993== by 0x41E501: fakeSecretGetValue (qemuxml2argvtest.c:33)
==30993== by 0x427591: qemuBuildDriveURIString (qemu_command.c:2571)
==30993== by 0x42C502: qemuBuildDriveStr (qemu_command.c:2627)
==30993== by 0x4335FC: qemuBuildCommandLine (qemu_command.c:6443)
==30993== by 0x41E8A0: testCompareXMLToArgvHelper (qemuxml2argvtest.c:154
==30993== by 0x41FE8F: virtTestRun (testutils.c:157)
==30993== by 0x418BE3: mymain (qemuxml2argvtest.c:506)
==30993== by 0x4204CA: virtTestMain (testutils.c:719)
==30993== by 0x38D6821A04: (below main) (in /usr/lib64/libc-2.16.so)
==30993==
==30993== 46 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 64 of 87
==30993== at 0x4A0887C: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:270)
==30993== by 0x38D690A167: __vasprintf_chk (in /usr/lib64/libc-2.16.so)
==30993== by 0x4CB28E7: virVasprintf (stdio2.h:210)
==30993== by 0x4CB29A3: virAsprintf (virutil.c:2017)
==30993== by 0x4275B4: qemuBuildDriveURIString (qemu_command.c:2580)
==30993== by 0x42C502: qemuBuildDriveStr (qemu_command.c:2627)
==30993== by 0x4335FC: qemuBuildCommandLine (qemu_command.c:6443)
==30993== by 0x41E8A0: testCompareXMLToArgvHelper (qemuxml2argvtest.c:154
==30993== by 0x41FE8F: virtTestRun (testutils.c:157)
==30993== by 0x418BE3: mymain (qemuxml2argvtest.c:506)
==30993== by 0x4204CA: virtTestMain (testutils.c:719)
==30993== by 0x38D6821A04: (below main) (in /usr/lib64/libc-2.16.so)
==30993==
==30993== 385 (56 direct, 329 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely los
==30993== at 0x4A06B6F: calloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:593)
==30993== by 0x4C6B2CF: virAllocN (viralloc.c:152)
==30993== by 0x4C9C7EB: virObjectNew (virobject.c:191)
==30993== by 0x4D21810: virGetSecret (datatypes.c:642)
==30993== by 0x41E5D5: fakeSecretLookupByUsage (qemuxml2argvtest.c:51)
==30993== by 0x4D4BEC5: virSecretLookupByUsage (libvirt.c:15295)
==30993== by 0x4276A9: qemuBuildDriveURIString (qemu_command.c:2565)
==30993== by 0x42C502: qemuBuildDriveStr (qemu_command.c:2627)
==30993== by 0x4335FC: qemuBuildCommandLine (qemu_command.c:6443)
==30993== by 0x41E8A0: testCompareXMLToArgvHelper (qemuxml2argvtest.c:154
==30993== by 0x41FE8F: virtTestRun (testutils.c:157)
==30993== by 0x418BE3: mymain (qemuxml2argvtest.c:506)
==30993==
PASS: qemuxml2argvtest
Interesting side note is that running the test singularly via 'make -C tests
check TESTS=qemuxml2argvtest' didn't trip the valgrind error; however,
running during 'make -C tests valgrind' did cause the error to be seen.
When logical pool has no PVs associated with itself (user-created),
virCommandFree(cmd) is called twice with the same pointer and that
causes a segfault in daemon.
With my previous patches, we unconditionally appended a seclabel,
even if it wasn't generated but found in array of defined seclabels.
This resulted in double free later when doing virDomainDefFree
and iterating over the array of defined seclabels.
Moreover, there was another possibility of double free, if the
seclabel was generated in the last iteration of the process of
walking trough security managers array.
One of my previous patches manipulated virSecurityLabel* APIs,
some were added to header files, and some were renamed. However,
these changes were not reflected in libvirt_private.syms.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=923946
The <seclabel type='none'/> should be added iff there is no other
seclabel defined within a domain. This bug can be easily reproduced:
1) configure selinux seclabel for a domain
2) disable system's selinux and restart libvirtd
3) observe <seclabel type='none'/> being appended to a domain on its
startup
The virDomainDefGetSecurityLabelDef was modifying the domain XML.
It tried to find a seclabel corresponding to given sec driver. If the
label wasn't found, the function created one which is wrong. In fact
it's security manager which should modify this part of domain XML.
When libvirtd loads active network configs from network state directory,
it should release the class_id memory block which was allocated
at the time of loading xml from network config directory.
virBitmapParse will create a new memory block of bitmap class_id which
causes a memory leak.
This happens when at least one virtual network is active before.
==12234== 8,216 (24 direct, 8,192 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely \
lost in loss record 702 of 709
==12234== at 0x4A06B2F: calloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:593)
==12234== by 0x37AB04D77D: virAlloc (in /usr/lib64/libvirt.so.0.1000.3)
==12234== by 0x37AB04EF89: virBitmapNew (in /usr/lib64/libvirt.so.0.1000.3)
==12234== by 0x37AB0BFB37: virNetworkAssignDef (in /usr/lib64/libvirt.so.0.1000.3)
==12234== by 0x37AB0BFD31: ??? (in /usr/lib64/libvirt.so.0.1000.3)
==12234== by 0x37AB0BFE92: virNetworkLoadAllConfigs (in /usr/lib64/libvirt.so.0.1000.3)
==12234== by 0x10650E5A: ??? (in /usr/lib64/libvirt/connection-driver/libvirt_driver_network.so)
==12234== by 0x37AB0EB72F: virStateInitialize (in /usr/lib64/libvirt.so.0.1000.3)
==12234== by 0x40DE04: ??? (in /usr/sbin/libvirtd)
==12234== by 0x37AB0832E8: ??? (in /usr/lib64/libvirt.so.0.1000.3)
==12234== by 0x3796807D14: start_thread (in /usr/lib64/libpthread-2.16.so)
==12234== by 0x37960F246C: clone (in /usr/lib64/libc-2.16.so)
iptables-1.4.18 removed the long deprecated "state" match.
Use "conntrack" instead in forwarding rules.
Fixes openSUSE bug https://bugzilla.novell.com/811251#811251.
Despite the comment stating virNetClientIncomingEvent handler should
never be called with either client->haveTheBuck or client->wantClose
set, there is a sequence of events that may lead to both booleans being
true when virNetClientIncomingEvent is called. However, when that
happens, we must not immediately close the socket as there are other
threads waiting for the buck and they would cause SIGSEGV once they are
woken up after the socket was closed. Another thing is we should clear
all remaining calls in the queue after closing the socket.
The situation that can lead to the crash involves three threads, one of
them running event loop and the other two calling libvirt APIs. The
event loop thread detects an event on client->sock and calls
virNetClientIncomingEvent handler. But before the handler gets a chance
to lock client, the other two threads (T1 and T2) start calling some
APIs. T1 gets the buck and detects EOF on client->sock while processing
its RPC call. Since T2 is waiting for its own call, T1 passes the buck
on to it and unlocks client. But before T2 gets the signal, the event
loop thread wakes up, does its job and closes client->sock. The crash
happens when T2 actually wakes up and tries to do its job using a closed
client->sock.
When we write a log message into a log, we separate thread ID from
timestamp using ": ". However, when storing the message into the ring
buffer, we omitted the separator, e.g.:
2013-02-27 11:49:11.852+00003745: ...
#virsh detach-device $guest usb.xml
error: Failed to detach device from usb2.xml
error: operation failed: host usb device vendor=0x0951 \
product=0x1625 not found
This regresstion is due to a typo in matching function. The first
argument is always the usb device that we are checking for. If the
usb xml file provided by user contains bus and device info, we try
to search it by them, otherwise, we use vendor and product info.
The bug occurred only when detaching a usb device with no bus and
device info provided in the usb xml file.
f946462e14 changed behavior by settings
VIR_DOMAIN_DEVICE_ADDRESS_TYPE_PCI upfront. If we do so before invoking
qemuDomainPCIAddressEnsureAddr we merely try to set the PCI slot via
qemuDomainPCIAddressReserveSlot instead reserving a new address via
qemuDomainPCIAddressSetNextAddr which fails with
$ ~/run-tck-test domain/200-disk-hotplug.t
./scripts/domain/200-disk-hotplug.t .. # Creating a new transient domain
./scripts/domain/200-disk-hotplug.t .. 1/5 # Attaching the new disk /var/lib/jenkins/jobs/libvirt-tck-build/workspace/scratchdir/200-disk-hotplug/extra.img
# Failed test 'disk has been attached'
# at ./scripts/domain/200-disk-hotplug.t line 67.
# died: Sys::Virt::Error (libvirt error code: 1, message: internal error unable to reserve PCI address 0:0:0.0
# )
Since we switched from direct host migration scheme to the one,
where we connect to the destination and then just pass a FD to a
qemu, we have uncovered a qemu bug. Qemu expects migration FD to
block. However, we are passing a nonblocking one which results in
cryptic error messages like:
qemu: warning: error while loading state section id 2
load of migration failed
The bug is already known to Qemu folks, but we should workaround
already released Qemus. Patch has been originally proposed by Stefan
Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com>
virConnectOpenAuth didn't require 'name' to be specified (VIR_DEBUG
used NULLSTR() for the output) and by default, if name == NULL, the
default connection uri is used. This was not indicated in the
documentation and wasn't checked for in other API's VIR_DEBUG outputs.
This reverts commit 5ac846e42e.
After further discussions with Alon Levy, I learned the following:
The use of '-vga qxl' vs. '-device qxl-vga' is completely orthogonal
to whether ram_size can be exposed. Downstream distros are interested
in backporting support for multi-head qxl, but this can be done in
one of two ways:
1. Support one head per PCI device. If you do this, then it makes
sense to have full control over the PCI address of each device. For
full control, you need '-device qxl-vga' instead of '-vga qxl'.
2. Support multiple heads through a single PCI device. If you do
this, then you need to allocate more RAM to that PCI device (enough
ram to cover the multiple screens). Here, the device is hard-coded
to 0:0:2.0, both in qemu and libvirt code.
Apparently, backporting ram_size changes to allow multiple heads in
a single device is much easier than backporting multiple device
support. Furthermore, the presence or absence of qxl-vga.surfaces
is no different than the presence or absence of qxl-vga.ram_size;
both properties can be applied regardless of whether you have one
PCI device (-vga qxl) or multiple (-device qxl-vga), so this property
is NOT a good witness of whether '-device qxl-vga' support has been
backported.
Downstream RHEL will NOT be using this patch; and worse, leaving this
patch in risks doing the wrong thing if compiling upstream libvirt
on RHEL, so the best course of action is to revert it. That means
that libvirt will go back to only using '-device qxl-vga' for qemu
>= 1.2, but this is just fine because we know of no distros that plan
on backporting multiple PCI address support to any older version of
qemu. Meanwhile, downstream can still use ram_size to pack multiple
heads through a single PCI device.
virPCIGetVirtualFunctions returns 0 even if there is no "virtfn"
entry under the device sysfs path.
And virPCIGetVirtualFunctions returns -1 when it fails to get
the PCI config space of one VF, however, with keeping the
the VFs already detected.
That's why udevProcessPCI and gather_pci_cap use logic like:
if (!virPCIGetVirtualFunctions(syspath,
&data->pci_dev.virtual_functions,
&data->pci_dev.num_virtual_functions) ||
data->pci_dev.num_virtual_functions > 0)
data->pci_dev.flags |= VIR_NODE_DEV_CAP_FLAG_PCI_VIRTUAL_FUNCTION;
to tag the PCI device with "virtual_function" cap.
However, this results in a VF will aslo get "virtual_function" cap.
This patch fixes it by:
* Ignoring the VF which has failure of getting PCI config space
(given that the successfully detected VFs are kept , it makes
sense to not give up on the failure of one VF too) with a warning,
so virPCIGetVirtualFunctions will not return -1 except out of memory.
* Free the allocated *virtual_functions when out of memory
And thus the logic can be changed to:
/* Out of memory */
int ret = virPCIGetVirtualFunctions(syspath,
&data->pci_dev.virtual_functions,
&data->pci_dev.num_virtual_functions);
if (ret < 0 )
goto out;
if (data->pci_dev.num_virtual_functions > 0)
data->pci_dev.flags |= VIR_NODE_DEV_CAP_FLAG_PCI_VIRTUAL_FUNCTION;
This abstracts nodeDeviceVportCreateDelete as an util function
virManageVport, which can be further used by later storage patches
(to support persistent vHBA, I don't want to create the vHBA
using the public API, which is not good).
This enrichs HBA's xml by dumping the number of max vports and
vports in use. Format is like:
<capability type='vport_ops'>
<max_vports>164</max_vports>
<vports>5</vports>
</capability>
* docs/formatnode.html.in: (Document the new XML)
* docs/schemas/nodedev.rng: (Add the schema)
* src/conf/node_device_conf.h: (New member for data.scsi_host)
* src/node_device/node_device_linux_sysfs.c: (Collect the value of
max_vports and vports)
This adds two util functions (virIsCapableFCHost and virIsCapableVport),
and rename helper check_fc_host_linux as detect_scsi_host_caps,
check_capable_vport_linux is removed, as it's abstracted to the util
function virIsCapableVport. detect_scsi_host_caps nows detect both
the fc_host and vport_ops capabilities. "stat(2)" is replaced with
"access(2)" for saving.
* src/util/virutil.h:
- Declare virIsCapableFCHost and virIsCapableVport
* src/util/virutil.c:
- Implement virIsCapableFCHost and virIsCapableVport
* src/node_device/node_device_linux_sysfs.c:
- Remove check_capable_vport_linux
- Rename check_fc_host_linux as detect_scsi_host_caps, and refactor
it a bit to detect both fc_host and vport_os capabilities
* src/node_device/node_device_driver.h:
- Change/remove the related declarations
* src/node_device/node_device_udev.c: (Use detect_scsi_host_caps)
* src/node_device/node_device_hal.c: (Likewise)
* src/node_device/node_device_driver.c (Likewise)
The use of 'stat' in nodeDeviceVportCreateDelete is only to check
if the file exists or not, it's a bit overkill, and safe to replace
with the wrapper of access(2) (virFileExists).
"open_wwn_file" in node_device_linux_sysfs.c is redundant, on one
hand it duplicates work of virFileReadAll, on the other hand, it's
waste to use a function for it, as there is no other users of it.
So I don't see why the file opening work cannot be done in
"read_wwn_linux".
"read_wwn_linux" can be abstracted as an util function. As what all
it does is to read the sysfs entry.
So this patch removes "open_wwn_file", and abstract "read_wwn_linux"
as an util function "virReadFCHost" (a more general name, because
after changes, it can read each of the fc_host entry now).
* src/util/virutil.h: (Declare virReadFCHost)
* src/util/virutil.c: (Implement virReadFCHost)
* src/node_device/node_device_linux_sysfs.c: (Remove open_wwn_file,
and read_wwn_linux)
src/node_device/node_device_driver.h: (Remove the declaration of
read_wwn_linux, and the related macros)
src/libvirt_private.syms: (Export virReadFCHost)
VIR_CONNECT_LIST_NODE_DEVICES_CAP_FC_HOST to filter the FC HBA,
and VIR_CONNECT_LIST_NODE_DEVICES_CAP_VPORTS to filter the FC HBA
which supports vport.
Guess it was created for the fc_host and vports_ops capabilities
purpose, but there is enum virNodeDevScsiHostCapFlags for them,
and enum virNodeDevHBACapType is unused, and actually both
VIR_ENUM_DECL and VIR_ENUM_IMPL use the wrong enum name
"virNodeDevHBACap".
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 virDomainGetRootFilesystem was only returning filesystems
with type=mount. This is bogus - any type of filesystem is
valid as the root, if dst=/.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Noticed that parsing bond interface XML containing the miimon element
fails
<interface type="bond" name="bond0">
...
<bond mode="active-backup">
<miimon freq="100" carrier="netif"/>
...
</bond>
</interface>
This configuration does not contain the optional updelay and downdelay
attributes, but parsing will fail due to returning the result of
virXPathULong (a -1 when the attribute doesn't exist) from
virInterfaceDefParseBond after examining the updelay attribute.
While fixing this bug, cleanup the function to use virXPathInt instead
of virXPathULong, and store the result directly instead of using a tmp
variable. Using virXPathInt actually fixes a potential silent
truncation bug noted by Eric Blake.
Also, there is no cleanup in the error label. Remove the label,
returning failure where failure occurs and success if the end of the
function is reached.
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>
This does nothing more than adding the new device and capability.
The device is present since QEMU 1.2.0.
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
A better way to do this would be to use a configuration file like
[iscsi "target-name"]
user = name
password = pwd
and pass it via -readconfig. This would remove the username and password
from the "ps" output. For now, however, keep this solution.
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
Only sheepdog actually required it in the code, and we can use 7000 as the
default---the same value that QEMU uses for the simple "sheepdog:VOLUME"
syntax. With this change, the schema can be fixed to allow no port.
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
libiscsi provides a userspace iSCSI initiator.
The main advantage over the kernel initiator is that it is very
easy to provide different initiator names for VMs on the same host.
Thus libiscsi supports usage of persistent reservations in the VM,
which otherwise would only be possible with NPIV.
libiscsi uses "iscsi" as the scheme, not "iscsi+tcp". We can change
this in the tests (while remaining backwards-compatible manner, because
QEMU uses TCP as the default transport for both Gluster and NBD).
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
Some code mistakenly called virIdentityOnceInit directly
instead of virIdentityInitialize(). This meant that one-time
initializer was run many times with predictably bad results.
The VIR_ERR_NO_SUPPORT error code is reserved for cases where an
API is not implemented in a driver. It definitely should not be
used when an API execution fails due to unsupported operation.
The recent commit moved some of the use of libnuma out of the
driver code, and into src/util/. It did not, however, update
libvirt_util.la to link against libnuma. This caused linkage
failure with virt-aa-helper, since nothing else caused libnuma
to be pulled onto the linker command line.
The fix removes all reference to NUMACTL_LIBS/CFLAGS from the
various modules in src/Makefile.am and just adds them to the
libvirt_util.la module, which everything else depends on.
Technically a build-breaker fix, but wanted to wait for feedback
on this
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
We should record the new disk src in the shared disk table for
updating disk (CD-ROM or Floppy) API. Fortunately, we only allow
to update the disk source now, otherwise we might also want to
set the unpriv_sgio setting.
This plumbs in the XML description of iSCSI shares. The next patches
will add support for the libiscsi userspace initiator.
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
Now that VCPU number are removed from qemu_monitor_text.c
(commit cc78d7ba), VCPU string checking also should be removed.
Report-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Li Zhang <zhlcindy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
but libvirt is built with --with-selinux. In this case getpeercon
returns ENOPROTOOPT so don't return an error in that case but simply
don't set seccon.
The virNetSocket & virIdentity classes accidentally got some
conditionals using HAVE_SELINUX instead of WITH_SELINUX.
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>
qemuGetNumadAdvice will be used by LXC driver, rename
it to virNumaGetAutoPlacementAdvice and move it to virnuma.c
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
The "dtb" option sets the filename for the device tree.
If without this option support, "-dtb file" will be converted into
<qemu:commandline> in domain XML file.
For example, '-dtb /media/ram/test.dtb' will be converted into
<qemu:commandline>
<qemu:arg value='-dtb'/>
<qemu:arg value='/media/ram/test.dtb'/>
</qemu:commandline>
This is not very friendly.
This patchset add special <dtb> tag like <kernel> and <initrd>
which is easier for user to write domain XML file.
<os>
<type arch='ppc' machine='ppce500v2'>hvm</type>
<kernel>/media/ram/uImage</kernel>
<initrd>/media/ram/ramdisk</initrd>
<dtb>/media/ram/test.dtb</dtb>
<cmdline>root=/dev/ram rw console=ttyS0,115200</cmdline>
</os>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
When building with --without-libvirtd and udev support is detected we
will fail to build with the following error:
node_device/node_device_udev.c:1608:37: error: unknown type name
'virStateInhibitCallback'
virStorageBackendRBDRefreshPool() first allocates an array big enough
to hold 1024 names, then calls rbd_list(), which returns ERANGE if the
array isn't big enough. When that happens, the VIR_ALLOC_N is called
again with a larger size. Unfortunately, the original array isn't
freed before allocating a new one.
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>
When dispatching an RPC API call, setup the current identity to
hold the identity of the network client associated with the
RPC message being dispatched. The setting is thread-local, so
only affects the API call in this thread
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Add APIs which allow creation of a virIdentity from the info
associated with a virNetServerClientPtr instance. This is done
based on the results of client authentication processes like
TLS, x509, SASL, SO_PEERCRED
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
If no user identity is available, some operations may wish to
use the system identity. ie the identity of the current process
itself. Add an API to get such an identity.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
To allow any internal API to get the current identity, add APIs
to associate a virIdentityPtr with the current thread, via a
thread local
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Introduce a local object virIdentity for managing security
attributes used to form a client application's identity.
Instances of this object are intended to be used as if they
were immutable, once created & populated with attributes
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
A socket object has various pieces of security data associated
with it, such as the SELinux context, the SASL username and
the x509 distinguished name. Add new APIs to virNetServerClient
and related modules to access this data.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Commit 82d5fe5437
qemu: check backing chains even when cgroup is omitted
added backing file checks just before the code that removes optional
disks if they are not present. However, the backing chain code fails in
case the disk file does not exist, which makes qemuProcessStart fail
regardless on configured startupPolicy.
Note that startupPolicy implementation is still wrong after this patch
since it only check the first file in a possible chain. It should rather
check the complete backing chain. But this is an existing limitation
that can be solved later. After all, startupPolicy is most useful for
CDROM images and they won't make use of backing files in most cases.
QEMU 1.3 and newer support an alternative URI-based syntax to specify
the location of an NBD server. Libvirt can keep on using the old
syntax in general, but only the URI syntax supports IPv6 addresses.
The URI syntax also supports relative paths to Unix sockets. These
should never be used but aren't explicitly blocked either by the parser,
so support it just in case.
The URI syntax is intentionally compatible with Gluster's, and the
code can be reused.
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
This reuses the XML format that was introduced for Gluster.
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
These are supported by nbd-server and by the NBD server that QEMU
embeds for live image access.
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Move the code to an external function, and structure it to prepare
the addition of new features in the next few patches.
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
We've already scrubbed for comparisons of 'uid_t == -1' (which fail
on platforms where uid_t is a u16), but another one snuck in.
* src/util/virutil.c (virSetUIDGIDWithCaps): Correct uid comparison.
* cfg.mk (sc_prohibit_risky_id_promotion): New rule.
QEMU added -drive in 2007, and NBD in 2008. Both appeared first in
release 0.10.0. Thus the code to support network disks without -drive
is dead, and in fact it incorrectly escapes commas. Drop it.
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
When getting CPUs' information, it assumes that CPU indexes
are not contiguous. But for ppc64 platform, CPU indexes are not
contiguous because SMT is needed to be disabled, so CPU information
is not right on ppc64 and vpuinfo, vcpupin can't work corretly.
This patch is to remove the assumption to be compatible with ppc64.
Test:
4 vcpus are assigned to one VM and execute vcpuinfo command.
Without patch: There is only one vcpu informaion can be listed.
With patch: All vcpus' information can be listed correctly.
Signed-off-by: Li Zhang <zhlcindy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
This patch adds auditing of resources used by Virtio RNG devices. Only
resources on the local filesystems are audited.
The audit logs look like:
For the 'random' backend:
type=VIRT_RESOURCE msg=audit(1363099126.643:31): pid=995252 uid=0 auid=4294967295 ses=4294967295 msg='virt=kvm resrc=rng reason=start vm="qcow-test" uuid=118733ed-b658-3e22-a2cb-4fe5cb3ddf79 old-rng="?" new-rng="/dev/random": exe="/home/pipo/libvirt/daemon/.libs/libvirtd" hostname=? addr=? terminal=pts/0 res=success'
For local character device source:
type=VIRT_RESOURCE msg=audit(1363100164.240:96): pid=995252 uid=0 auid=4294967295 ses=4294967295 msg='virt=kvm resrc=rng reason=start vm="qcow-test" uuid=118733ed-b658-3e22-a2cb-4fe5cb3ddf79 old-rng="?" new-rng="/tmp/unix.sock": exe="/home/pipo/libvirt/daemon/.libs/libvirtd" hostname=? addr=? terminal=pts/0 res=success'
Newer versions of QEMU support virtio-scsi and virtio-rng devices
on the virtio-s390 and ccw buses. Adding capability detection,
address assignment and command line generation for that.
Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
QEMU_CAPS_VIRTIO_SCSI_PCI implies that virtio-scsi is only supported
for the PCI bus, which is not the case. Remove the _PCI suffix.
Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
My commit 7a2e845a86 (and its
prerequisites) managed to effectively ignore the
clear_emulator_capabilities setting in qemu.conf (visible in the code
as the VIR_EXEC_CLEAR_CAPS flag when qemu is being exec'ed), with the
result that the capabilities are always cleared regardless of the
qemu.conf setting. This patch fixes it by passing the flag through to
virSetUIDGIDWithCaps(), which uses it to decide whether or not to
clear existing capabilities before adding in those that were
requested.
Note that the existing capabilities are *always* cleared if the new
process is going to run as non-root, since the whole point of running
non-root is to have the capabilities removed (it's still possible to
maintain individual capabilities as needed using the capBits argument
though).
Multi-head QXL support is so useful that distros have started to
backport it to qemu earlier than 1.2. After discussion with
Alon Levy, we determined that the existence of the qxl-vga.surfaces
property is a reliable indicator of whether '-device qxl-vga' works,
or whether we have to stick to the older '-vga qxl'. I'm leaving
in the existing check for QEMU_CAPS_DEVICE_VIDEO_PRIMARY tied to
qemu 1.2 and newer (in case qemu is built without qxl support),
but for those distros that backport qxl, this additional capability
check will allow the correct command line for both RHEL 6.3 (which
lacks the feature) and RHEL 6.4 (where qemu still claims to be
version 0.12.2.x, but has backported multi-head qxl).
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.c (virQEMUCapsObjectPropsQxlVga): New
property test.
(virQEMUCapsExtractDeviceStr): Probe for backport of new
capability to qemu earlier than 1.2.
* tests/qemuhelpdata/qemu-kvm-1.2.0-device: Update test.
* tests/qemuhelpdata/qemu-1.2.0-device: Likewise.
* tests/qemuhelpdata/qemu-kvm-0.12.1.2-rhel62-beta-device:
Likewise.
The src/lxc/lxc_*_dispatch.h files only had deps on the
RPC generator script & the XDR definition file. So when
the Makefile.am args passed to the generator were change,
the disaptch code was not re-generated. This caused a
build failure
CC libvirt_lxc-lxc_controller.o
lxc/lxc_controller.c: In function 'virLXCControllerSetupServer':
lxc/lxc_controller.c:718:47: error: 'virLXCMonitorProcs' undeclared (first use in this function)
lxc/lxc_controller.c:718:47: note: each undeclared identifier is reported only once for each function it appears in
lxc/lxc_controller.c:719:47: error: 'virLXCMonitorNProcs' undeclared (first use in this function)
make[3]: *** [libvirt_lxc-lxc_controller.o] Error 1
For added fun, the generated files were not listed in
CLEANFILES, so only a 'git clean -f' would fix the build
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>
When converting to virObject, the probes on the 'Free' functions
were removed on the basis that there is a probe on virObjectFree
that suffices. This puts a burden on people writing probe scripts
to identify which object is being dispose. This adds back probes
in the 'Dispose' functions and updates the rpc monitor systemtap
example to use them
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Normally libvirtd should run with a SELinux label
system_u:system_r:virtd_t:s0-s0:c0.c1023
If a user manually runs libvirtd though, it is sometimes
possible to get into a situation where it is running
system_u:system_r:init_t:s0
The SELinux security driver isn't expecting this and can't
parse the security label since it lacks the ':c0.c1023' part
causing it to complain
internal error Cannot parse sensitivity level in s0
This updates the parser to cope with this, so if no category
is present, libvirtd will hardcode the equivalent of c0.c1023.
Now this won't work if SELinux is in Enforcing mode, but that's
not an issue, because the user can only get into this problem
if in Permissive mode. This means they can now start VMs in
Permissive mode without hitting that parsing error
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Pull the code which parses the current process MCS range
out of virSecuritySELinuxMCSFind and into a new method
virSecuritySELinuxMCSGetProcessRange.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The body of the loop in virSecuritySELinuxMCSFind would
directly 'return NULL' on OOM, instead of jumping to the
cleanup label. This caused a leak of several local vars.
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>
When opening a stream to a device which is a TTY, that device
may become the controlling TTY of libvirtd, if libvirtd was
daemonized. This in turn means when the other end of the stream
closes, libvirtd gets SIGHUP, causing it to reload its config.
Prevent this by forcing O_NOCTTY on all streams that are opened
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Qemu's implementation of virtio RNG supports rate limiting of the
entropy used. This patch exposes the option to tune this functionality.
This patch is based on qemu commit 904d6f588063fb5ad2b61998acdf1e73fb4
The rate limiting is exported in the XML as:
<devices>
...
<rng model='virtio'>
<rate bytes='123' period='1234'/>
<backend model='random'/>
</rng>
...
In debug mode, the bug failed to start vm
error: Failed to start domain rhel5u9
error: internal error Out of space while reading console log output:
...
We didn't yet expose the virtio device attach and detach functionality
for s390 domains as the device hotplug was very limited with the old
virtio-s390 bus. With the CCW bus there's full hotplug support for
virtio devices in QEMU, so we are adding this to libvirt too.
Since the virtio hotplug isn't limited to PCI anymore, we change the
function names from xxxPCIyyy to xxxVirtioyyy, where we handle all
three virtio bus types.
Signed-off-by: J.B. Joret <jb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
This commit adds the QEMU driver support for CCW addresses. The
current QEMU only allows virtio devices to be attached to the
CCW bus. We named the new capability indicating that support
QEMU_CAPS_VIRTIO_CCW accordingly.
The fact that CCW devices can only be assigned to domains with a
machine type of s390-ccw-virtio requires a few extra checks for
machine type in qemu_command.c on top of querying
QEMU_CAPS_VIRTIO_{CCW|S390}.
The majority of the new functions deals with CCW address generation
and management.
Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Add necessary handling code for the new s390 CCW address type to
virDomainDeviceInfo. Further, introduce memory management, XML
parsing, output formatting and range validation for the new
virDomainDeviceCCWAddress type.
Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.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>
A number of symbols are only present when GNUTLS is enabled.
Thus we must use a separate libvirt_gnutls.syms file for them
instead of libvirt_private.syms
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The virDomainLxcEnterNamespace method mistakenly uses
virCheckFlags, which returns immediately instead of
virCheckFlagsGoto which jumps to the error cleanup
patch where there is a virDispatchError call
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)
Add a new virDomainLxcEnterSecurityLabel() function as a
counterpart to virDomainLxcEnterNamespaces(), which can
change the current calling process to have a new security
context. This call runs client side, not in libvirtd
so we can't use the security driver infrastructure.
When entering a namespace, the process spawned from virsh
will default to running with the security label of virsh.
The actual desired behaviour is to run with the security
label of the container most of the time. So this changes
virsh lxc-enter-namespace command to invoke the
virDomainLxcEnterSecurityLabel method.
The current behaviour is:
LABEL PID TTY TIME CMD
system_u:system_r:svirt_lxc_net_t:s0:c0.c1023 1 pts/0 00:00:00 systemd
system_u:system_r:svirt_lxc_net_t:s0:c0.c1023 3 pts/1 00:00:00 sh
system_u:system_r:svirt_lxc_net_t:s0:c0.c1023 24 ? 00:00:00 systemd-journal
system_u:system_r:svirt_lxc_net_t:s0:c0.c1023 29 ? 00:00:00 dhclient
staff_u:unconfined_r:unconfined_t:s0-s0:c0.c1023 47 ? 00:00:00 ps
Note the ps command is running as unconfined_t, After this patch,
The new behaviour is this:
virsh -c lxc:/// lxc-enter-namespace dan -- /bin/ps -eZ
LABEL PID TTY TIME CMD
system_u:system_r:svirt_lxc_net_t:s0:c0.c1023 1 pts/0 00:00:00 systemd
system_u:system_r:svirt_lxc_net_t:s0:c0.c1023 3 pts/1 00:00:00 sh
system_u:system_r:svirt_lxc_net_t:s0:c0.c1023 24 ? 00:00:00 systemd-journal
system_u:system_r:svirt_lxc_net_t:s0:c0.c1023 32 ? 00:00:00 dhclient
system_u:system_r:svirt_lxc_net_t:s0:c0.c1023 38 ? 00:00:00 ps
The '--noseclabel' flag can be used to skip security labelling.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
With our recent patch (1715c83b5f) we thrive to get the correct
number of maximal VCPUs. However, we are using a constant from
linux/kvm.h which may be not defined in every distro. Hence, we
should guard usage of the constant with ifdef preprocessor
directive. This was introduced in kernel:
commit 8c3ba334f8588e1d5099f8602cf01897720e0eca
Author: Sasha Levin <levinsasha928@gmail.com>
Date: Mon Jul 18 17:17:15 2011 +0300
KVM: x86: Raise the hard VCPU count limit
The patch raises the hard limit of VCPU count to 254.
This will allow developers to easily work on scalability
and will allow users to test high VCPU setups easily without
patching the kernel.
To prevent possible issues with current setups, KVM_CAP_NR_VCPUS
now returns the recommended VCPU limit (which is still 64) - this
should be a safe value for everybody, while a new KVM_CAP_MAX_VCPUS
returns the hard limit which is now 254.
$ git desc 8c3ba334f
v3.1-rc7-48-g8c3ba33
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.
Currently the server determines whether authentication of clients
is complete, by checking whether an identity is set. This patch
removes that lame hack and replaces it with an explicit method
for changing the client auth code
* daemon/remote.c: Update for new APis
* src/libvirt_private.syms, src/rpc/virnetserverclient.c,
src/rpc/virnetserverclient.h: Remove virNetServerClientGetIdentity
and virNetServerClientSetIdentity, adding a new method
virNetServerClientSetAuth.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Add a virThreadCancel function. This functional is inherently
dangerous and not something we want to use in general, but
integration with SELinux requires that we provide this stub.
We leave out any Win32 impl to discourage further use and
because obviously SELinux isn't enabled on Win32
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
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>
At least one caller may call qemuSharedDiskEntryFree with NULL as the
first argument. Let's make the function similar to other *Free functions
and do nothing in such case.
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
By current implementation, network inbound is required in order
to use 'floor' for guaranteeing minimal throughput. This is so,
because we want user to tell us the maximal throughput of the
network instead of finding out ourselves (and detect bogus values
in case of virtual interfaces). However, we are nowadays
requiring this only on documentation level. So if user starts a
domain with 'floor' set on one its interfaces, we silently ignore
the setting. We should error out instead.
'virsh capabilities' will now include a new <memory> element
per <cell> of the topology, as in:
<topology>
<cells num='2'>
<cell id='0'>
<memory unit='KiB'>12572412</memory>
<cpus num='12'>
...
</cell>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
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
When there are two concurrent threads, we may dereference a NULL
pointer, even though it has been checked before:
1. Thread1: starts executing qemuDomainBlockStatsFlags() with nparams != 0.
It finds given disk and successfully pass check for disk->info.alias
not being NULL.
2. Thread2: starts executing qemuDomainDetachDeviceFlags() on the very same
disk as Thread1 is working on.
3. Thread1: gets to qemuDomainObjBeginJob() where it sets a job on a
domain.
4. Thread2: also tries to set a job. However, we are not guaranteed which
thread wins. So assume it's Thread2 who can continue.
5. Thread2: does the actual detach and frees disk->info.alias
6. Thread2: quits the job
7. Thread1: now successfully acquires the job, and accesses a NULL pointer.
Rename AppArmorSetImageFDLabel to AppArmorSetFDLabel which could
be used as a common function for *ALL* fd relabelling in Linux.
In apparmor profile for specific vm with uuid cdbebdfa-1d6d-65c3-be0f-fd74b978a773
Path: /etc/apparmor.d/libvirt/libvirt-cdbebdfa-1d6d-65c3-be0f-fd74b978a773.files
The last line is for the tapfd relabelling.
# DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE DIRECTLY. IT IS MANAGED BY LIBVIRT.
"/var/log/libvirt/**/rhel6qcow2.log" w,
"/var/lib/libvirt/**/rhel6qcow2.monitor" rw,
"/var/run/libvirt/**/rhel6qcow2.pid" rwk,
"/run/libvirt/**/rhel6qcow2.pid" rwk,
"/var/run/libvirt/**/*.tunnelmigrate.dest.rhel6qcow2" rw,
"/run/libvirt/**/*.tunnelmigrate.dest.rhel6qcow2" rw,
"/var/lib/libvirt/images/rhel6u3qcow2.img" rw,
"/dev/tap45" rw,
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>
The current QEMU code for skipping log messages only skips over
'debug' message, switch to virLogProbablyLogMessage to make sure
it skips over all of them
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>
When reading log output from QEMU/LXC we need to skip over any
libvirt log messages. Currently the QEMU driver checks for a
fixed string, but this is better done with a regex. Add a method
virLogProbablyLogMessage to do a regex check
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>
The virNetDevSetupControlFull function was protected by a
conditional on SIOCBRADDBR, which is bogus since it does
not use that symbol. Update the conditionals around all
callers to do stricter checks to ensure we always build
succesfully
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The RHEL4 vintage header files do not define GET_VLAN_VID_CMD.
Conditionally define it in our source, since the kernel can
raise a runtime error if it isn't supported
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The loop.h on RHEL4 is broken and cannot be imported. We already
detect this in configure as a side-effect of looking for whether
LO_FLAGS_AUTOCLEAR is available. We protected the impl with
HAVE_DECL_LO_FLAGS_AUTOCLEAR, but not the header import
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
To avoid a clash with daemon() libc API, rename the
'daemon' param in the header file to 'binary'. The
source file already uses the name 'binary'.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
On RHEL-4 vintage one of the header files is polluted causing a
clash between the clone() syscall and the 'clone' parameter in
a libvirt driver API
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Commit 0df3e89 only touched the header, but the .c file had the
same shadowing potential.
* src/util/viralloc.c (virDeleteElementsN): s/remove/toremove/ to
match the header.
Code that validates the whitelist for the RNG device filename
didn't account for fact that filename may be NULL. This led
to a NULL reference crash. This wasn't caught since the test
suite was not covering this XML syntax
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Resolves the following valgrind error from qemuxml2argvtest:
==20393== 5 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 2 of 60
==20393== at 0x4A0883C: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:270)
==20393== by 0x38D690A167: __vasprintf_chk (in /usr/lib64/libc-2.16.so)
==20393== by 0x4CB0D97: virVasprintf (stdio2.h:210)
==20393== by 0x4CB0E53: virAsprintf (virutil.c:2017)
==20393== by 0x428DC5: qemuAssignDeviceAliases (qemu_command.c:791)
==20393== by 0x41DF93: testCompareXMLToArgvHelper (qemuxml2argvtest.c:151)
==20393== by 0x41F53F: virtTestRun (testutils.c:157)
==20393== by 0x41DA9B: mymain (qemuxml2argvtest.c:885)
==20393== by 0x41FB7A: virtTestMain (testutils.c:719)
==20393== by 0x38D6821A04: (below main) (in /usr/lib64/libc-2.16.so)
==20393==
From qemu_command.c/line 791:
if (def->rng) {
if (virAsprintf(&def->rng->info.alias, "rng%d", 0) < 0)
goto no_memory;
}
This patch plugs two memory leaks, removes some useless and confusing
constructs and renames renames "cleanup" label as "error" since it is
only used for error path rather then being common for both success and
error paths.
1. The virObjectLock() call was unconditional, but Unlock was conditional
on vm being valid. Removed the check
2. A call to virDomainEventNewFromObj() isn't guaranteed to return an
event - that check needs to be made prior to libxlDomainEventQueue()
of the event. Did not add libxlDriverLock/Unlock around the call since
some callers already have lock taken
3. Need to initialize fd = -1 in libxlDoDomainSave() since we can jump
to cleanup before it's set.
4. Missing break;'s in libxlDomainModifyDeviceFlags() for case
LIBXL_DEVICE_UPDATE. The default: case would report an error
A value which is equal to a integer maximum such as LLONG_MAX is
a valid integer value.
The patch fix the following error:
1, virsh memtune vm --swap-hard-limit -1
2, virsh start vm
In debug mode, it shows error like:
virScaleInteger:1813 : numerical overflow:\
value too large: 9007199254740991KiB
This patch adds proper error reporting if parsing of cputune parameters
fails due to incorrect values provided by the user. Previously no errors
were reported in such a case and the failure was silently ignored.
Make the iterator function usable in the next patches. Also refactor
some parts to avoid strcmp if not necessary.
This commit tweaks and shadows the change that was done in commit
babe7dada0 and was needed after the
support for multiple console devices was added. Historically the first
<console> element is alias for the <serial> device.
There is some controversy[1] on the qemu list on whether qemu should
have ever allowed arbitrary file name passthrough, or whether it
should be restricted to JUST /dev/random and /dev/hwrng. It is
always easier to add support for additional filenames than it is
to remove support for something once released, so this patch
restricts libvirt 1.0.3 (where the virtio-random backend was first
supported) to just the two uncontroversial names, letting us defer
to a later date any decision on whether supporting arbitrary files
makes sense. Additionally, since qemu 1.4 does NOT support
/dev/fdset/nnn fd passthrough for the backend, limiting to just
two known names means that we don't get tempted to try fd
passthrough where it won't work.
[1]https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2013-03/threads.html#00023
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainRNGDefParseXML): Only allow
/dev/random and /dev/hwrng.
* docs/schemas/domaincommon.rng: Flag invalid files.
* docs/formatdomain.html.in (elementsRng): Document this.
* tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-virtio-rng-random.args:
Update test to match.
* tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-virtio-rng-random.xml:
Likewise.
19c6ad9a (qemu: Refactor qemuDomainSetMemoryParameters) introduced
a new macro, VIR_GET_LIMIT_PARAMETER(PARAM, VALUE). But if statement
in the macro is not correct and so set_XXXX flags are set to false
in the wrong. As a result, libvirt ignores all memtune parameters.
This patch fixes the conditional expression to work correctly.
Signed-off-by: Satoru Moriya <satoru.moriya@hds.com>
BZ:https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=912021
Without error handler set, virDefaultErrorFunc will be called, the
error message is prefixed with "libvir:". It become a little better
by using prefix "libvirt:" when working with upper application.
For example:
1, stop libvirtd daemon
2, run virt-top.
libvir: XML-RPC error : Failed to connect \
socket to '/var/run/libvirt/libvirt-sock-ro': \
No such file or directory
libvirt: VIR_ERR_SYSTEM_ERROR: VIR_FROM_RPC: \
Failed to connect socket to '/var/run/libvirt/libvirt-sock-ro': \
No such file or directory
Commit f506a4c1 changed virSetUIDGID() to be a noop
when uid/gid are -1, while it used to be a noop when
they are <= 0.
The changes in this commit broke creating new VMs in GNOME Boxes
as qemuDomainCheckDiskPresence gets called during domain creation/startup,
which in turn calls virFileAccessibleAs which fails after calling
virSetUIDGID(0, 0) (Boxes uses session libvirtd). virSetUIDGID is called with
(0, 0) as these are the default user/group values in virQEMUDriverConfig
for session libvirtd.
This commit changes virQEMUDriverConfigNew to use -1 as the unpriviledged
uid/gid. I've also looked at the various places where cfg->user is used,
and they all seem to handle -1 correctly.
Currently, after we removed the qemu driver lock, it may happen
that two or more threads will start up a machine with macvlan and
race over virNetDevMacVLanCreateWithVPortProfile(). However,
there's a racy section in which we are generating a sequence of
possible device names and detecting if they exits. If we found
one which doesn't we try to create a device with that name.
However, the other thread is doing just the same. Assume it will
succeed and we must therefore fail. If this happens more than 5
times (which in massive parallel startup surely will) we return
-1 without any error reported. This patch is a simple hack to
both of these problems. It introduces a mutex, so only one thread
will enter the section, and if it runs out of possibilities,
error is reported. Moreover, the number of retries is raised to 20.
This reverts the hack done in
commit 568a6cda27
Author: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Date: Fri Feb 15 15:11:47 2013 +0100
qemu: Avoid deadlock in autodestroy
since we now have a fix which avoids the deadlock scenario
entirely
There is a lock ordering problem in the QEMU close callback
APIs.
When starting a guest we have a lock on the VM. We then
set a autodestroy callback, which acquires a lock on the
close callbacks.
When running auto-destroy, we obtain a lock on the close
callbacks, then run each callbacks - which obtains a lock
on the VM.
This causes deadlock if anyone tries to start a VM, while
autodestroy is taking place.
The fix is to do autodestroy in 2 phases. First obtain
all the callbacks and remove them from the list under
the close callback lock. Then invoke each callback
from outside the close callback lock.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When the auto-destroy callback runs it is supposed to return
NULL if the virDomainObjPtr is no longer valid. It was not
doing this for transient guests, so we tried to virObjectUnlock
a mutex which had been freed. This often led to a crash.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
qemuProcessStart expects to be run with a job already set and every
caller except for qemuMigrationPrepareAny use it correctly. This bug can
be observed in libvirtd logs during incoming migration as
warning : qemuDomainObjEnterMonitorInternal:979 : This thread seems
to be the async job owner; entering monitor without asking for a
nested job is dangerous
With the apparmor security driver enabled, qemu instances fail
to start
# grep ^security_driver /etc/libvirt/qemu.conf
security_driver = "apparmor"
# virsh start test-kvm
error: Failed to start domain test-kvm
error: internal error security label already defined for VM
The model field of virSecurityLabelDef object is always populated
by virDomainDefGetSecurityLabelDef(), so remove the check for a
NULL model when verifying if a label is already defined for the
instance.
Checking for a NULL model and populating it later in
AppArmorGenSecurityLabel() has been left in the code to be
consistent with virSecuritySELinuxGenSecurityLabel().
As pointed out in
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/libvirt/+bug/1034661
The sentence
"The function of PCI device addresses must less than 8"
does not quite make sense. Update that to read
"The function of PCI device addresses must be less than 8"
Signed-off-by: Serge Hallyn <serge.hallyn@ubuntu.com>
Currently, qemuDomainShutdownFlags() chooses the agent method of
shutdown whenever the agent is configured. However, this
assumption is not enough as the guest agent may be unresponsive
at the moment. So unless guest agent method has been explicitly
requested, we should fall back to the ACPI method.
The unitialized local variable qemuVersion can cause an random value
to be returned for the hypervisor version, observable with virsh version.
Introduced by commit b46f7f4a0b
Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
disk->src is still used for disks->hosts->name, do not free it.
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The QEMU driver has a list of devices nodes that are whitelisted
for all guests. The kernel has recently started returning an
error if you try to whitelist a device which does not exist.
This causes a warning in libvirt logs and an audit error for
any missing devices. eg
2013-02-27 16:08:26.515+0000: 29625: warning : virDomainAuditCgroup:451 : success=no virt=kvm resrc=cgroup reason=allow vm="vm031714" uuid=9d8f1de0-44f4-a0b1-7d50-e41ee6cd897b cgroup="/sys/fs/cgroup/devices/libvirt/qemu/vm031714/" class=path path=/dev/kqemu rdev=? acl=rw
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The code for putting the emulator threads in a separate cgroup
would spam the logs with warnings
2013-02-27 16:08:26.731+0000: 29624: warning : virCgroupMoveTask:887 : no vm cgroup in controller 3
2013-02-27 16:08:26.731+0000: 29624: warning : virCgroupMoveTask:887 : no vm cgroup in controller 4
2013-02-27 16:08:26.732+0000: 29624: warning : virCgroupMoveTask:887 : no vm cgroup in controller 6
This is because it has only created child cgroups for 3 of the
controllers, but was trying to move the processes from all the
controllers. The fix is to only try to move threads in the
controllers we actually created. Also remove the warning and
make it return a hard error to avoid such lazy callers in the
future.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The virQEMUCloseCallbacksRunOne method was passing a uuid string
to virDomainObjListFindByUUID, when it actually expected to get
a raw uuid buffer. This was not caught by the compiler because
the method was using a 'void *uuid' instead of first casting
it to the expected type.
This regression was accidentally caused by refactoring in
commit 568a6cda27
Author: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Date: Fri Feb 15 15:11:47 2013 +0100
qemu: Avoid deadlock in autodestroy
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=896092 mentions that
qemu 1.4 and earlier only accept a simple start-stop range for
the cpu=... argument of -numa. Libvirt would attempt to use
-numa cpu=1,3 for a disjoint range, which did not work as intended.
Upstream qemu will be adding a new syntax for disjoint cpu ranges
in 1.5; but the design for that syntax is still under discussion
at the time of this patch. So for libvirt 1.0.3, it is safest to
just reject attempts to build an invalid qemu command line; in the
future, we can add a capability bit and translate to the final
accepted design for selecting a disjoint cpu range in numa.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuBuildNumaArgStr): Reject disjoint
ranges.
This reverts commit 383ebc4694.
We decided the xml for this feature needed more thought to make sure
we are doing it the best way, in particular wrt option values that
have multiple items.
These two flags in fact are mutually exclusive. Requesting them both
doesn't make any sense regardless of hypervisor driver. Hence, we have
to make it within libvirt.c file instead of fixing it in each driver.
Eugene Marcotte reported that if gcrypt-devel (a prereq of
gnutls-devel) is not present, then compilation fails due to
an unconditional use of <gcrypt.h>.
* src/libvirt.c (includes): Properly guard use of gcrypt.h.
This reverts commit 0bbbd42c30.
The design for this feature is not complete, and may change the
name of the 'schid' attribute. Revert requested by Viktor Mihajlovski.
The parallels storage driver declared some loop variables
inside the for(;;). This is not allowed by libvirt coding
standards
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This change tried to fix a crash with changing CDROM media but
failed to actually do so
commit d0172d2b1b
Author: Osier Yang <jyang@redhat.com>
Date: Tue Feb 19 20:27:45 2013 +0800
qemu: Remove the shared disk entry if the operation is ejecting or updating
It was still accessing disk->src, when the entire 'disk' object
has been free'd already. Even if it weren't free'd, accessing
the 'src' value of virDomainDiskDef is not allowed without
first validating disk->type is file or block. Just remove the
broken code entirely.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
VIR_ERR_NO_CONNECT already contains "no connection driver available".
This patch changes:
no connection driver available for No connection for URI hello
to:
no connection driver available for hello
Bug: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=851413
Currently we call virSetDeviceUnprivSGIO with val == 0 if a block device
has an sgio attribute. But for sgio='filtered', we know that a
kernel with no unpriv_sgio support will always behave as the user
wanted. In this case, there is no need to call the function and
report a (bogus) error.
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
If virCondInit fails (okay, so that's unlikely), then we end up
attempting a virObjectUnlock() on the cleanup path, even though
we don't hold a lock. This is not guaranteed to be safe. While
at it, I noticed a couple places where we were referencing mon->fd
outside locks.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.c (qemuMonitorOpenInternal): Minimize lock
duration. mon->watch doesn't need clean up on error.
(qemuMonitorGetBlockExtent, qemuMonitorBlockResize): Don't
dereference fd outside of lock.
I built without yajl support, and noticed a strange failure message
in qemumonitorjsontest:
2013-02-22 16:12:37.503+0000: 19812: error : virJSONValueToString:1119 : internal error No JSON parser implementation is available
2013-02-22 16:12:37.503+0000: 19812: error : qemuMonitorJSONCommandWithFd:253 : out of memory
While a later patch will fix the test to skip when json is not present,
this patch avoids overriding the more useful error message from
virJSONValueToString returning NULL.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.c (qemuMonitorJSONCommandWithFd):
Don't override message.
(qemuMonitorJSONCheckError): Don't print NULL.
* src/qemu/qemu_agent.c (qemuAgentCommand): Don't override message.
(qemuAgentCheckError): Don't print NULL.
(qemuAgentArbitraryCommand): Properly fail on OOM.
The new TypedParam helper APIs allow to simplify this function
significantly.
This patch integrates the fix in 75e5bec97b
by correctly ordering the setting functions instead of reordering the
parameters.
The bridge device was showing the vnet devices created for the domains
as connected to the bridge. libvirt should only show host devices when
trying to get the interface definition rather than the domain devices as
well.
uid_t and gid_t are opaque types, ranging from s32 to u32 to u64.
Explicitly cast the magic -1 to the appropriate type.
Signed-off-by: Philipp Hahn <hahn@univention.de>
uid_t and gid_t are opaque types, ranging from s32 to u32 to u64.
Explicitly cast them to unsigned int for printing.
Signed-off-by: Philipp Hahn <hahn@univention.de>
The uid_t|gid_t values are explicitly casted to "unsigned long", but the
printf() still used "%d", which is for signed values.
Change the format to "%u".
Signed-off-by: Philipp Hahn <hahn@univention.de>
This patch adds a new capability bit QEMU_CAPS_OBJECT_RNG_EGD and code
to support the egd backend for the VirtIO RNG device.
The device is added by 3 qemu command line options:
-chardev socket,id=charrng0,host=1.2.3.4,port=1234 (communication
backend)
-object rng-egd,chardev=charrng0,id=rng0 (RNG protocol client)
-device virtio-rng-pci,rng=rng0,bus=pci.0,addr=0x4 (the RNG device)
This patch implements support for the virtio-rng-pci device and the
rng-random backend in qemu.
Two capabilities bits are added to track support for those:
QEMU_CAPS_DEVICE_VIRTIO_RNG - for the device support and
QEMU_CAPS_OBJECT_RNG_RANDOM - for the backend support.
qemu is invoked with these additional parameters if the device is
enabled:
-object rng-random,id=rng0,filename=/test/phile (to add the backend)
-device virtio-rng-pci,rng=rng0,bus=pci.0,addr=0x4 (to add the device)
This patch adds basic configuration support for the RNG device
supporting the virtio model with the "random" and "egd" backend types as
described in the schema in the previous patch.
This patch adds a fake switch statement to force the compiler to warn
after a new device type was added. This should remind the contributor to
add the new device also to this iterator function.
Originally, only a host name was used to associate a
DHCPv6 request with a specific IPv6 address. Further testing
demonstrates that this is an unreliable method and, instead,
a client-id or DUID needs to be used. According to DHCPv6
standards, this id can be a duid-LLT, duid-LL, or duid-UUID
even though dnsmasq will accept almost any text string.
Although validity checking of a specified string makes sure it is
hexadecimal notation with bytes separated by colons, there is no
rigorous check to make sure it meets the standard.
Documentation and schemas have been updated.
Signed-off-by: Gene Czarcinski <gene@czarc.net>
Signed-off-by: Laine Stump <laine@laine.org>
For really old qemu-img binaries which do not support specifying
the format of the backing file, display a DEBUG message instead of
INFO that this can't be done.
This function does the source part of NBD magic. It
invokes drive-mirror on each non shared and RW disk with
a source and wait till the mirroring process completes.
When it does we can proceed with migration.
Currently, an active waiting is done: every 500ms libvirt
asks qemu if block-job is finished or not. However, once
the job finishes, qemu doesn't report its progress so we
can only assume if the job finished successfully or not.
The better solution would be to listen to the event which
is sent as soon as the job finishes. The event does
contain the result of job.
We need to start NBD server and feed it with all non-<shared/>,
RW and source-full disks. Moreover, with new virPortAllocator we
must ensure the borrowed port for NBD server will be returned if
either migration completes or qemu process is torn down.
This will be used with new migration scheme.
This patch creates basically just monitor stub
functions. Wiring them into something useful
is done in later patches.
This will be used with new migration scheme.
This patch creates basically just monitor stub
functions. Wiring them into something useful
is done in later patches.
This migration cookie is meant for two purposes. The first is to be sent
in begin phase from source to destination to let it know we support new
implementation of VIR_MIGRATE_NON_SHARED_{DISK,INC} so destination can
start NBD server. Then, the second purpose is, destination can let us
know, on which port the NBD server is running.
This patch adds support for a new <option>-Tag in the <dhcp> block of
network configs, based on a subset of the fifth proposal by Laine
Stump in the mailing list discussion at
https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2012-November/msg01054.html.
Any such defined option will result in a dhcp-option=<number>,"<value>"
statement in the generated dnsmasq configuration file.
Currently, DHCP options can be specified by number only and there is
no whitelisting or blacklisting of option numbers, which should
probably be added.
Signed-off-by: Pieter Hollants <pieter@hollants.com>
Signed-off-by: Laine Stump <laine@laine.org>
The bfree and blocks fields are supposed to be in units of frsize. We were
calculating capacity correctly using those units, but the available
calculation was using bsize instead. Most file systems report these as the
same value specifically because many programs are buggy, but that is no
reason to rely on that behavior, or to behave inconsistently.
This bug has been present since e266ded (2008) and aa296e6c, when the code
was originally introduced (the latter via cut and paste).
Signed-off-by: Sage Weil <sage@newdream.net>
On FreeBSD, I got a 'make check' failure:
GEN check-symsorting
Symbol block at ./libvirt_atomic.syms:4: viratomic.h not found
* src/Makefile.am (SYM_FILES): New define.
(check-symsorting): Check on all symfiles, even when not used.
* src/libvirt_atomic.syms: Fix offender.
As a side effect, this also fixes reporting disk migration process.
It was added to memory migration progress, which was wrong. Disk
progress has dedicated fields in virDomainJobInfo structure.
remoteDeserializeTypedParameters can now be called with either
preallocated params array (size of which is announced by nparams) or it
can allocate params array according to the number of parameters received
from the server.
Refactored the interface device type identification to make it more
clear about the operations. Add support for udev devtype to detect
VLANs on Linux 3.7 and newer. Move VLAN detection based on device
name to fallback case.
Mechanical move to break up udevIfaceGetIfaceDef() into different
helpers for each of the interface types to hopefully make the code
easier to follow. This moves the vlan code to
udevIfaceGetIfaceDefVlan().
Based on feedback from Laine Stump, improve a number of the error
handling cases to report the issue to the user instead of not generating
data or giving vague errors. Added the bridge device name to every error
message as well to make it clear which bridge failed.
Mechanical move to break up udevIfaceGetIfaceDef() into different
helpers for each of the interface types to hopefully make the code
easier to follow. This moves the bridge code to
udevIfaceGetIfaceDefBridge().
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=896685 points out
a regression caused by commit 38c4a9c - libvirt only labels
the backing chain if the backing chain cache is populated, but
the code to populate the cache was only conditionally performed
if cgroup labeling was necessary.
* src/qemu/qemu_cgroup.c (qemuSetupCgroup): Hoist cache setup...
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessStart): ...earlier into
caller, where it is now unconditional.
To avoid having to hold the qemu driver lock while iterating through
close callbacks and calling them. This fixes a real deadlock when a
domain which is being migrated from another host gets autodestoyed as a
result of broken connection to the other host.
The max value of number of cpus to compute(id) should not
be equal or greater than max cpu number.
The bug ocurrs when id value is equal to max cpu number which
leads to the off-by-one error in the following for loop.
# virsh cpu-stats guest --start 1
error: Failed to virDomainGetCPUStats()
error: internal error cpuacct parse error
Don't allow interval to be > MAX_INT/1000 in virKeepAliveStart()
Guard against possible overflow in virKeepAliveTimeout() by setting the
timeout to be MAX_INT/1000 since the math following will multiply it by 1000.
Currently, if lzop decompression binary produces a warning, it
doesn't exit with zero status but 2 instead. Terrifying, but
true. However, warnings may be ignored using '--ignore-warn'
command line argument. Moreover, in which case, the exit status
will be zero.
For both AttachDevice and UpdateDevice APIs, if the disk device
is 'cdrom' or 'floppy', the operations could be ejecting, updating,
and inserting. For either ejecting or updating, the shared disk
entry of the original disk src has to be removed, because it's
not useful anymore.
And since the original disk def will be changed, new disk def passed
as argument will be free'ed in qemuDomainChangeEjectableMedia, so
we need to copy the orignal disk def before
qemuDomainChangeEjectableMedia, to use it for qemuRemoveSharedDisk.
The disk def could be free'ed by qemuDomainChangeEjectableMedia,
which can thus cause crash if we reference the disk pointer. On
the other hand, we have to remove the added shared disk entry from
the table on error codepath.
The hash entry is changed from "ref" to {ref, @domains}. With this, the
caller can simply call qemuRemoveSharedDisk, without afraid of removing
the entry belongs to other domains. qemuProcessStart will obviously
benifit from it on error codepath (which calls qemuProcessStop to do
the cleanup).
Based on moving various checking into qemuAddSharedDisk, this
avoids the caller using it in wrong ways. Also this adds two
new checking for qemuCheckSharedDisk (disk device not 'lun'
and kernel doesn't support unpriv_sgio simply returns 0).
Automating a sorting check is the only way to ensure we don't
regress. Suggested by Dan Berrange.
* src/check-symsorting.pl (check_sorting): Add a parameter,
validate that groups are in order, and that files exist.
* src/Makefile.am (check-symsorting): Adjust caller.
* src/libvirt_private.syms: Fix typo.
* src/libvirt_linux.syms: Fix file name.
* src/libvirt_vmx.syms: Likewise.
* src/libvirt_xenxs.syms: Likewise.
* src/libvirt_sasl.syms: Likewise.
* src/libvirt_libssh2.syms: Likewise.
* src/libvirt_esx.syms: Mention file name.
* src/libvirt_openvz.syms: Likewise.
Due to "feature"/"features" nasty typo, any features marked as mandatory
by one side of a migration are silently considered optional by the other
side. The following is the code that formats mandatory features in
migration cookie:
for (i = 0 ; i < QEMU_MIGRATION_COOKIE_FLAG_LAST ; i++) {
if (mig->flagsMandatory & (1 << i))
virBufferAsprintf(buf, " <feature name='%s'/>\n",
qemuMigrationCookieFlagTypeToString(i));
}
Some functions were using virDomainDeviceInfo where virDevicePCIAddress
would suffice. Some were only using integers for slots and functions,
assuming the bus numbers are always 0.
Switch from virDomainDeviceInfoPtr to virDevicePCIAddressPtr:
qemuPCIAddressAsString
qemuDomainPCIAddressCheckSlot
qemuDomainPCIAddressReserveAddr
qemuDomainPCIAddressReleaseAddr
Switch from int slot to virDevicePCIAddressPtr:
qemuDomainPCIAddressReserveSlot
qemuDomainPCIAddressReleaseSlot
qemuDomainPCIAddressGetNextSlot
Deleted functions (they would take the same parameters
as ReserveAddr/ReleaseAddr do now.)
qemuDomainPCIAddressReserveFunction
qemuDomainPCIAddressReleaseFunction
Recent renames were not reflected into the comments of
libvirt_private.syms; furthermore, since we mix private headers from
several directories into this file, knowing where the file lives
can be helpful.
* src/libvirt_private.sym: Reflect recent names.
We pass over the address/port start/end values many times so we put
them in structs.
Signed-off-by: Natanael Copa <ncopa@alpinelinux.org>
Signed-off-by: Laine Stump <laine@laine.org>
Let users set the port range to be used for forward mode NAT:
...
<forward mode='nat'>
<nat>
<port start='1024' end='65535'/>
</nat>
</forward>
...
Signed-off-by: Natanael Copa <ncopa@alpinelinux.org>
Signed-off-by: Laine Stump <laine@laine.org>
Support setting which public ip to use for NAT via attribute
address in subelement <nat> in <forward>:
...
<forward mode='nat'>
<address start='1.2.3.4' end='1.2.3.10'/>
</forward>
...
This will construct an iptables line using:
'-j SNAT --to-source <start>-<end>'
instead of:
'-j MASQUERADE'
Signed-off-by: Natanael Copa <ncopa@alpinelinux.org>
Signed-off-by: Laine Stump <laine@laine.org>
We need to drop the server lock before calling virObjectUnlock(client)
since in case we had the last reference to the client, its dispose
callback would be called and that could possibly try to lock the server
and cause a deadlock. This is exactly what happens when there is only
one QEMU domain running and it is marked to be autodestroyed when the
connection dies. This results in qemuProcessAutoDestroy ->
qemuProcessStop -> virNetServerRemoveShutdownInhibition call sequence,
where the last function locks the server.
The function does not report any errors so there should be no need too
reset an existing error first. Moreover, virTypedParamsFree is mostly
called in cleanup phase where it has the potential to reset any useful
reported earlier.
Gcc lets you do:
int ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL(1) foo(void *param);
int foo(void *param) ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL(1);
int ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL(1) foo(void *param) { ... }
but chokes on:
int foo(void *param) ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL(1) { ... }
However, since commit eefb881, we have intentionally been disabling
ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL because of lame gcc handling of the attribute (that
is, gcc doesn't do decent warning reporting, then compiles code that
mysteriously fails if you break the contract of the attribute, which
is surprisingly easy to do), leaving it on only for Coverity (which
does a much better job of improved static analysis when the attribute
is present).
But completely eliding the macro makes it too easy to write code that
uses the fourth syntax option, if you aren't using Coverity. So this
patch forces us to avoid syntax errors, even when not using the
attribute under gcc. It also documents WHY we disable the warning
under gcc, rather than forcing you to find the commit log.
* src/internal.h (ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL): Expand to empty attribute,
rather than nothing, when on gcc.
The conversion to qemuCaps dropped the ability with qemu{,-kvm} 1.2 and
newer to set the lost tick policy for the PIT. While the
-no-kvm-pit-reinjection option is depreacated, it is still supported at
least through 1.4, it is better to not lose the functionality.
Coverity found the DACGenLabel was checking for mgr == NULL after a
possible dereference; however, in order to get into the function the
virSecurityManagerGenLabel would have already dereferenced sec_managers[i]
so the check was unnecessary. Same check is made in SELinuxGenSecurityLabel.
Between revision 65fb9d49 and before this patch, an upgrade of libvirt while
VMs are running and instantiating iptables filtering rules due to nwfilter
rules, may leave stray iptables rules behind when shutting VMs down.
Left-over iptables rules may look like this:
Chain FP-vnet0 (1 references)
target prot opt source destination
DROP tcp -- 0.0.0.0/0 0.0.0.0/0 tcp spt:122
ACCEPT all -- 0.0.0.0/0 0.0.0.0/0
[...]
Chain libvirt-out (1 references)
target prot opt source destination
FO-vnet0 all -- 0.0.0.0/0 0.0.0.0/0 [goto] PHYSDEV match --physdev-out vnet0
The reason is that the recent nwfilter code only removed filtering rules in
the libvirt-out chain that contain the --physdev-is-bridged parameter.
Older rules didn't match and were not removed.
Note that the user-defined chain FO-vnet0 could not be removed due to the
reference from the rule in libvirt-out.
Often the work around may be done through
service iptables restart
kill -SIGHUP $(pidof libvirtd)
This patch now also removes older libvirt versions' iptables rules.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Berger <stefanb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
If you have a qcow2 file /path1/to/file pointed to by symlink
/path2/symlink, and pass qemu /path2/symlink, then qemu treats
a relative backing file in the qcow2 metadata as being relative
to /path2, not /path1/to. Yes, this means that it is possible
to create a qcow2 file where the choice of WHICH directory and
symlink you access its contents from will then determine WHICH
backing file (if any) you actually find; the results can be
rather screwy, but we have to match what qemu does.
Libvirt and qemu default to creating absolute backing file
names, so most users don't hit this. But at least VDSM uses
symlinks and relative backing names alongside the
--reuse-external flags to libvirt snapshot operations, with the
result that libvirt was failing to follow the intended chain of
backing files, and then backing files were not granted the
necessary sVirt permissions to be opened by qemu.
See https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=903248 for
more gory details. This fixes a regression introduced in
commit 8250783.
I tested this patch by creating the following chain:
ls /home/eblake/Downloads/Fedora.iso # raw file for base
cd /var/lib/libvirt/images
qemu-img create -f qcow2 \
-obacking_file=/home/eblake/Downloads/Fedora.iso,backing_fmt=raw one
mkdir sub
cd sub
ln -s ../one onelink
qemu-img create -f qcow2 \
-obacking_file=../sub/onelink,backing_fmt=qcow2 two
mv two ..
ln -s ../two twolink
qemu-img create -f qcow2 \
-obacking_file=../sub/twolink,backing_fmt=qcow2 three
mv three ..
ln -s ../three threelink
then pointing my domain at /var/lib/libvirt/images/sub/threelink.
Prior to this patch, I got complaints about missing backing
files; afterwards, I was able to verify that the backing chain
(and hence DAC and SELinux relabels) of the entire chain worked.
* src/util/virstoragefile.h (_virStorageFileMetadata): Add
directory member.
* src/util/virstoragefile.c (absolutePathFromBaseFile): Drop,
replaced by...
(virFindBackingFile): ...better function.
(virStorageFileGetMetadataInternal): Add an argument.
(virStorageFileGetMetadataFromFD, virStorageFileChainLookup)
(virStorageFileGetMetadata): Update callers.
Prior to this patch, we had the callchains:
external users
\-> virStorageFileGetMetadataFromFD
\-> virStorageFileGetMetadataFromBuf
virStorageFileGetMetadataRecurse
\-> virStorageFileGetMetadataFromFD
\-> virStorageFileGetMetadataFromBuf
However, a future patch wants to add an additional parameter to
the bottom of the chain, for use by virStorageFileGetMetadataRecurse,
without affecting existing external callers. Since there is only a
single caller of the internal function, we can repurpose it to fit
our needs, with this patch giving us:
external users
\-> virStorageFileGetMetadataFromFD
\-> virStorageFileGetMetadataInternal
virStorageFileGetMetadataRecurse /
\-> virStorageFileGetMetadataInternal
* src/util/virstoragefile.c (virStorageFileGetMetadataFromFD):
Move most of the guts...
(virStorageFileGetMetadataFromBuf): ...here, and rename...
(virStorageFileGetMetadataInternal): ...to this.
(virStorageFileGetMetadataRecurse): Use internal helper.
virStorageFileGetMetadataFromFD is the only caller of
virStorageFileGetMetadataFromBuf; and it doesn't care about the
difference between a return of 0 (total success) or 1
(metadata was inconsistent, but pointer was populated as best
as possible); only about a return of -1 (could not read metadata
or out of memory). Changing the return type, and normalizing
the variable names used, will make merging the functions easier
in the next commit.
* src/util/virstoragefile.c (virStorageFileGetMetadataFromBuf):
Change return value, and rename some variables.
(virStorageFileGetMetadataFromFD): Rename some variables.
No semantic change; done so the next patch doesn't need a forward
declaration of a static function.
* src/util/virstoragefile.c (virStorageFileProbeFormatFromBuf):
Hoist earlier.
More mingw build failures:
CCLD libvirt-lxc.la
/usr/lib64/gcc/i686-w64-mingw32/4.7.2/../../../../i686-w64-mingw32/bin/ld: cannot find libvirt_lxc.def: No such file or directory
CC virportallocatortest-virportallocatortest.o
../../tests/virportallocatortest.c: In function 'main':
../../tests/virportallocatortest.c:195:1: error: implicit declaration of function 'setenv' [-Werror=implicit-function-declaration]
* src/Makefile.am (GENERATED_SYM_FILES): Also generate
libvirt_lxc.def.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Import setenv.
CC libvirt_util_la-vircommand.lo
../../src/util/vircommand.c:2358:1: error: 'virCommandHandshakeChild' defined but not used [-Werror=unused-function]
The function is only implemented inside #ifndef WIN32.
* src/util/vircommand.c (virCommandHandshakeChild): Hoist earlier,
so that win32 build doesn't hit an unused forward declaration.
No need to use HAVE_REGEX_H - our use of gnulib guarantees that
the header exists and works, regardless of platform. Similarly,
we can unconditionally assume a compiling <sys/wait.h> (although
the mingw version of this header is not full-featured).
* src/storage/storage_backend.c: Drop useless conditional.
* tests/testutils.c: Likewise.
virCommand was previously calling virSetUIDGID() to change the uid and
gid of the child process, then separately calling
virSetCapabilities(). This did not work if the desired uid was != 0,
since a setuid to anything other than 0 normally clears all
capabilities bits.
The solution is to use the new virSetUIDGIDWithCaps(), sending it the
uid, gid, and capabilities bits. This will get the new process setup
properly.
Since the static functions virSetCapabilities() and
virClearCapabilities are no longer called, they have been removed.
NOTE: When combined with "filecap $path-to-qemu sys_rawio", this patch
will make CAP_SYS_RAWIO (which is required for passthrough of generic
scsi commands to a guest - see commits e8daeeb, 177db08, 397e6a7, and
74e0349) be retained by qemu when necessary. Apparently that
capability has been broken for non-root qemu ever since it was
originally added.
Normally when a process' uid is changed to non-0, all the capabilities
bits are cleared, even those explicitly set with calls to
capng_update()/capng_apply() made immediately before setuid. And
*after* the process' uid has been changed, it no longer has the
necessary privileges to add capabilities back to the process.
In order to set a non-0 uid while still maintaining any capabilities
bits, it is necessary to either call capng_change_id() (which
unfortunately doesn't currently call initgroups to setup auxiliary
group membership), or to perform the small amount of calisthenics
contained in the new utility function virSetUIDGIDWithCaps().
Another very important difference between the capabilities
setting/clearing in virSetUIDGIDWithCaps() and virCommand's
virSetCapabilities() (which it will replace in the next patch) is that
the new function properly clears the capabilities bounding set, so it
will not be possible for a child process to set any new
capabilities.
A short description of what is done by virSetUIDGIDWithCaps():
1) clear all capabilities then set all those desired by the caller (in
capBits) plus CAP_SETGID, CAP_SETUID, and CAP_SETPCAP (which is needed
to change the capabilities bounding set).
2) call prctl(), telling it that we want to maintain current
capabilities across an upcoming setuid().
3) switch to the new uid/gid
4) again call prctl(), telling it we will no longer want capabilities
maintained if this process does another setuid().
5) clear the capabilities that we added to allow us to
setuid/setgid/change the bounding set (unless they were also requested
by the caller via the virCommand API).
Because the modification/maintaining of capabilities is intermingled
with setting the uid, this is necessarily done in a single function,
rather than having two independent functions.
Note that, due to the way that effective capabilities are computed (at
time of execve) for a process that has uid != 0, the *file*
capabilities of the binary being executed must also have the desired
capabilities bit(s) set (see "man 7 capabilities"). This can be done
with the "filecap" command. (e.g. "filecap /usr/bin/qemu-kvm sys_rawio").
This is an interim measure to make sure everything still works in this
order. The next step will be to perform capabilities drop and
setuid/gid as a single operation (which is the only way to keep any
capabilities when switching to a non-root uid).
The qemu driver had been calling virSecurityManagerSetProcessLabel()
from a "pre-exec hook" function that is run after the child is forked,
but before exec'ing qemu. This is problematic because the uid and gid
of the child are set by the security driver, but capabilities are
dropped by virCommand - such separation doesn't work; the two
operations must be done together or the capabilities do not transfer
properly to the child process.
This patch switches to using virSecurityManagerSetChildProcessLabel(),
which is called prior to virCommandRun() (rather than being called
*during* virCommandrun() by the hook function), and doesn't set the
UID/GID/security label directly, but instead merely informs virCommand
what it should set them all to when the time is appropriate.
This lets virCommand choose to do the uid/gid and caps dropping all at
the same time if it wants (it does *want* to, but isn't doing so yet;
that's for an upcoming patch).
The existing virSecurityManagerSetProcessLabel() API is designed so
that it must be called after forking the child process, but before
exec'ing the child. Due to the way the virCommand API works, that
means it needs to be put in a "hook" function that virCommand is told
to call out to at that time.
Setting the child process label is a basic enough need when executing
any process that virCommand should have a method of doing that. But
virCommand must be told what label to set, and only the security
driver knows the answer to that question.
The new virSecurityManagerSet*Child*ProcessLabel() API is the way to
transfer the knowledge about what label to set from the security
driver to the virCommand object. It is given a virCommandPtr, and each
security driver calls the appropriate virCommand* API to tell
virCommand what to do between fork and exec.
1) in the case of the DAC security driver, it calls
virCommandSetUID/GID() to set a uid and gid that must be set for the
child process.
2) for the SELinux security driver, it calls
virCommandSetSELinuxLabel() to save a copy of the char* that will be
sent to setexeccon_raw() *after forking the child process*.
3) for the AppArmor security drivers, it calls
virCommandSetAppArmorProfile() to save a copy of the char* that will
be sent to aa_change_profile() *after forking the child process*.
With this new API in place, we will be able to remove
virSecurityManagerSetProcessLabel() from any virCommand pre-exec
hooks.
(Unfortunately, the LXC driver uses clone() rather than virCommand, so
it can't take advantage of this new security driver API, meaning that
we need to keep around the older virSecurityManagerSetProcessLabel(),
at least for now.)
virCommand gets two new APIs: virCommandSetSELinuxLabel() and
virCommandSetAppArmorProfile(), which both save a copy of a
null-terminated string in the virCommand. During virCommandRun, if the
string is non-NULL and we've been compiled with AppArmor and/or
SELinux security driver support, the appropriate security library
function is called for the child process, using the string that was
previously set. In the case of SELinux, setexeccon_raw() is called,
and for AppArmor, aa_change_profile() is called.
This functionality has been added so that users of virCommand can use
the upcoming virSecurityManagerSetChildProcessLabel() prior to running
a child process, rather than needing to setup a hook function to be
called (and in turn call virSecurityManagerSetProcessLabel()) *during*
the setup of the child process.
This makes it simpler to include the necessary system security driver
libraries for a particular system. For this patch, several existing
conditional sections from the Makfile were replaced; I'll later be
adding SECDRIVER_LIBS to libvirt_util_la_LIBADD, because vircommand.c
will be calling a function from $securitylib.
Setting the uid/gid of the child process was the only thing done by
the hook function in this case, and that can now be done more simply
with virCommandSetUID/GID.
Rather than treating uid:gid of 0:0 as a NOP, we blindly pass that
through to the lower layers. However, we *do* check for a requested
value of "-1" to mean "don't change this setting". setregid() and
setreuid() already interpret -1 as a NOP, so this is just an
optimization, but we are also calling getpwuid_r and initgroups, and
it's unclear what the former would do with a uid of -1.
If a uid and/or gid is specified for a command, it will be set just
after the user-supplied post-fork "hook" function is called.
The intent is that this can replace user hook functions that set
uid/gid. This moves the setting of uid/gid and dropping of
capabilities closer to each other, which is important since the two
should really be done at the same time (libcapng provides a single
function that does both, which we will be unable to use, but want to
mimic as closely as possible).
All args except "cmd" in the call to virExec are now redundant, since
they can all be found in cmd, so remove the args and reference the
data directly in cmd. One exception to this is that "infd" was being
modified within virExec, and modifying the original in cmd caused make
check failures, so cmd->infd is copied to a local, and the local is
used during virExec().
virExecWithHook is only called from one place, so it always has the
same "hook" function (virHookCommand), and the data sent to that
function is always a virCommandPtr, so eliminate the function and
generic data from the arglist, and replace it with "virCommandPtr
cmd". The call to (hook)(data) is replaced with
"virHookCommand(cmd)". Finally, virExecWithHook is renamed to virExec.
Indentation has been updated only for code that will remain after the
next patch, which will remove all other args to virExec (since they
are now redundant, as they're all members of virCommandPtr).
With the majority of fields in the virQEMUDriverPtr struct
now immutable or self-locking, there is no need for practically
any methods to be using the QEMU driver lock. Only a handful
of helper APIs in qemu_conf.c now need it
Currently, if a command wants to do asynchronous IO, a callback
is registered in the libvirtd eventloop to handle writes and
reads. However, there's a race in virCommandWait. The eventloop
may already be executing the callback, while virCommandWait is
mangling internal state of virCommand. To deal with it, we need
to either introduce locking or spawn a separate thread where we
poll() on stdio from child. The former, however, requires to
unlock all mutexes held, as the event loop may execute other
callbacks which tries to lock one of the mutexes, deadlock and
thus never wake us up. So it's safer to spawn a separate thread.
Commit 8b55992f added some Coverity comments to silence what was
a real bug in the code. Since then, we've had a miserable run
of trying to fix the underlying problem (commits c059cde and
ba5193c), and still have a problem on 32-bit machines.
This fixes the problem for once and for all, by realizing that
on older xen, cpumap_t is identical to uint64_t, and using the
new virendian.h to do the transformation from the API (documented
to be little-endian) to the host structure.
* src/xen/xen_hypervisor.c (virXen_setvcpumap): Do the conversion
correctly. Finally.
This makes code easier to read, by avoiding lines longer than
80 columns and removing the repetition from the callers.
* src/util/virstoragefile.c (qedGetHeaderUL, qedGetHeaderULL):
Delete in favor of more generic macros.
(qcow2GetBackingStoreFormat, qcowXGetBackingStore)
(qedGetBackingStore, virStorageFileMatchesVersion)
(virStorageFileGetMetadataInternal): Use new macros.
* src/cpu/cpu_x86.c (x86VendorLoad): Likewise.
We have several cases where we need to read endian-dependent
data regardless of host endianness; rather than open-coding
these call sites, it will be nicer to funnel things through
a macro.
The virendian.h file can be expanded to add writer functions,
and/or 16-bit access patterns, if needed. Also, if we need
to turn things into a function to avoid multiple evaluations
of buf, that can be done later. But for now, a macro worked.
* src/util/virendian.h: New file.
* src/Makefile.am (UTIL_SOURCES): Ship it.
* tests/virendiantest.c: New test.
* tests/Makefile.am (test_programs, virendiantest_SOURCES): Run
the test.
* .gitignore: Ignore built file.
When removing a VM from the virDomainObjListPtr, we must not
be holding the VM lock while acquiring the list lock. Re-order
code to ensure that we can release the VM lock early.
The hook scripts used by virCommand must be careful wrt
accessing any mutexes that may have been held by other
threads in the parent process. With the recent refactoring
there are 2 potential flaws lurking, which will become real
deadlock bugs once the global QEMU driver lock is removed.
Remove use of the QEMU driver lock from the hook function
by passing in the 'virQEMUDriverConfigPtr' instance directly.
Add functions to the virSecurityManager to be invoked before
and after fork, to ensure the mutex is held by the current
thread. This allows it to be safely used in the hook script
in the child process.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
On RHEL 5, I got:
security/security_selinux.c: In function 'getContext':
security/security_selinux.c:971: warning: unused parameter 'mgr' [-Wunused-parameter]
* src/security/security_selinux.c (getContext): Mark potentially
unused parameter.
Add necessary handling code for the new s390 CCW address type to
virDomainDeviceInfo. Further, introduce memory management, XML
parsing, output formatting and range validation for the new
virDomainDeviceCCWAddress type.
Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
This just simply changes nodeDeviceLookupByWWN to be not static,
and its name into nodeDeviceLookupSCSIHostByWWN. And use that for
udev and HAL backends.
Like virNodeDeviceCreateXML, virNodeDeviceLookupSCSIHostByWWN
has to be treated specially when generating the RPC codes. Also
new rules are added in fixup_name to keep the name SCSIHostByWWN.
Since the name (like scsi_host10) is not stable for vHBA, (it can
be changed either after recreating or system rebooting), current
API virNodeDeviceLookupByName is not nice to use for management app
in this case. (E.g. one wants to destroy the vHBA whose name has
been changed after system rebooting, he has to find out current
name first).
Later patches will support the persistent vHBA via storage pool,
with which one can identify the vHBA stably by the wwnn && wwpn
pair.
So this new API comes.
The security manager drivers are not allowed to call back
out to top level security manager APIs, since that results
in recursive mutex acquisition and thus deadlock. Remove
calls to virSecurityManagerGetModel from SELinux / AppArmor
drivers
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Turns out the issue regarding ptr_arith and sign_exension weren't false
positives. When shifting an 'unsigned char' as a target, it gets promoted
to an 'int'; however, that 'int' cannot be shifted 32 bits which was how
the algorithm was written. For the ptr_arith rather than index into the
cpumap, change the to address as necessary and assign directly.
Arguments for driver entry points are checked in libvirt.c, so no need to
check again. Make function entry points consistent. Don't type caste the
privateData.
Arguments for driver entry points are checked in libvirt.c, so no need to
check again. Make function entry points consistent. Don't type caste the
privateData.
Arguments for driver entry points are checked in libvirt.c, so no need to
check again. Make function entry points consistent. Don't type caste the
privateData.
Currently the APIs for managing the shared disk list take
a virHashTablePtr as the primary argument. This is bad
because it requires the caller to deal with locking of
the QEMU driver. Switch the APIs to take the full
virQEMUDriverPtr instance
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Add locking to virSecurityManagerXXX APIs, so that use of the
security drivers is internally serialized. This avoids the need
to rely on the global driver locks to achieve serialization
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>
Instead of creating an iptables command in one shot, do it in steps
so we can add conditional options like physdev and protocol.
This removes code duplication while keeping existing behaviour.
Signed-off-by: Natanael Copa <ncopa@alpinelinux.org>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
From qemu's point of view these are still just tap devices, so there's
no reason they shouldn't work with vhost-net; as a matter of fact,
Raja Sivaramakrishnan <srajag00@yahoo.com> verified on libvir-list
that at least the qemu_command.c part of this patch works:
https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2012-December/msg01314.html
(the hotplug case is extrapolation on my part).
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.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
To avoid confusion between 'virCapsPtr' and 'qemuCapsPtr'
do some renaming of various fucntions/variables. All
instances of 'qemuCapsPtr' are renamed to 'qemuCaps'. To
avoid that clashing with the 'qemuCaps' typedef though,
rename the latter to virQEMUCaps.
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>
The virCgroupPtr instance APIs are safe to use without locking
in the QEMU driver, since all internal state they rely on is
immutable. Update the comment to reflect this.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
We are requesting for stderr catching for all cases in
virFileWrapperFdNew(). There is no need to have a separate
function just to report an error, esp. when we can do it in
virFileWrapperFdClose().
The qemuParseGlusterString() replaced dst->src without a VIR_FREE() of
what was in there before.
The qemuBuildCommandLine() did not properly free the boot_buf depending
on various usages.
The qemuParseCommandLineDisk() had numerous paths that didn't clean up
the virDomainDiskDefPtr def properly. Adjust the logic to go through an
error: label before cleanup in order to free the resource.
Commit 2025356 missed uses of PCI functions in the older HAL-related
code, probably because hal-devel is no longer available in latest Fedora.
* src/node_device/node_device_hal.c (gather_pci_cap): Reflect
function rename.
We had an easy way to iterate set bits, but not for iterating
cleared bits.
* src/util/virbitmap.h (virBitmapNextClearBit): New prototype.
* src/util/virbitmap.c (virBitmapNextClearBit): Implement it.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (bitmap.h): Export it.
* tests/virbitmaptest.c (test4): Test it.
The conditional setting of cmdout in networkBuildDhcpDaemonCommandLine()
caused Coverity to complain that 'cmd' could be leaked if !cmdout. Since
the function is local and only called with cmdout being passed those checks
have been removed.
Currently the activePciHostdevs, inactivePciHostdevsd and
activeUsbHostdevs lists are all implicitly protected by the
QEMU driver lock. Now that the lists all inherit from the
virObjectLockable, we can make the locking explicit, removing
the dependency on the QEMU driver lock for correctness.
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 QEMU driver struct has a 'qemuVersion' field that was previously
used to cache the version lookup from capabilities. With the recent
QEMU capabilities rewrite the caching happens at a lower level so
this field is pointless. Removing it avoids worries about locking
when updating it.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Switch virDomainObjList to inherit from virObjectLockable and
make all the APIs acquire/release the mutex when running. This
makes virDomainObjList completely self-locking and no longer
reliant on the hypervisor driver locks
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;
Otherwise, we get a lot of scary (but harmless) noise in the logs:
2013-02-05 15:35:48.555+0000: 8637: error : qemuMonitorJSONCheckError:353 : internal error unable to execute QEMU command 'add-fd': Parameter 'fdset-id' expects an existing fdset-id
one for every qemu 1.2 binary that we probe.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.c (qemuMonitorJSONAddFd): During
probe, avoid logging failures.
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
Currently the virQEMUDriverPtr struct contains an wide variety
of data with varying access needs. Move all the static config
data into a dedicated virQEMUDriverConfigPtr object. The only
locking requirement is to hold the driver lock, while obtaining
an instance of virQEMUDriverConfigPtr. 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.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
If a compression binary prints something to stderr, currently
it is discarded. However, it can contain useful data from
debugging POV, so we should catch it.
If a decompression binary prints something to stderr, currently
it is discarded. However, it can contain useful data from
debugging POV, so we should catch it.
Commit 34e8f63a32 introduced support for catching errors from
libvirt iohelper. However, at those times there wasn't such fancy
API as virCommandDoAsyncIO(), so everything has to be implemented
on our own. But since we do have the API now, we can use it and
drop our implementation then.
Currently, if we want to feed stdin, or catch stdout or stderr of a
virCommand we have to use virCommandRun(). When using virCommandRunAsync()
we have to register FD handles by hand. This may lead to code duplication.
Hence, introduce an internal API, which does this automatically within
virCommandRunAsync(). The intended usage looks like this:
virCommandPtr cmd = virCommandNew*(...);
char *buf = NULL;
...
virCommandSetOutputBuffer(cmd, &buf);
virCommandDoAsyncIO(cmd);
if (virCommandRunAsync(cmd, NULL) < 0)
goto cleanup;
...
if (virCommandWait(cmd, NULL) < 0)
goto cleanup;
/* @buf now contains @cmd's stdout */
VIR_DEBUG("STDOUT: %s", NULLSTR(buf));
...
cleanup:
VIR_FREE(buf);
virCommandFree(cmd);
Note, that both stdout and stderr buffers may change until virCommandWait()
returns.
libvirt.c calls curl_global_init() if WITH_CURL is defined and thus it
should be linked with libcurl. This fixes link failure in case neither
xenapi nor esx driver is enabled (they are the only users of libcurl).
QEMU is fully capable of handling VDI images and we just refuse to
work with them. As qemu-img knows and supports this, there should be
no problem with this addition.
This is of course, just basic functionality, without searching for any
backing files, etc.
Some files have the magic shifted to some offset other than 0, so we
have to support that. I also cleaned up some lines to be more
readable and added missing magic for iso file format.
Commit 4445e16bfa changed the signature
of esxConnectToHost and esxConnectToVCenter by replacing the esxPrivate
pointer with virConnectPtr. The esxPrivate pointer was then retrieved
again from virConnectPtr's privateData. This resulted in a NULL pointer
dereference, because the privateData pointer was not yet initialized at
the point where esxConnectToHost and esxConnectToVCenter are called.
This was fixed in commit b126715a48 that
moved the initialization of privateData before the problematic calls.
Simplify the logic by making the call to esxFreePrivate unconditional and
changing esxConnectToHost and esxConnectToVCenter back to take a esxPrivate
pointer directly. This allows to assign esxPrivate to the virConnectPtr's
privateData pointer as one of the last steps in esxOpen making it more
obvious that it is not initialized during the earlier steps of esxOpen.
Commit 6094ad7b (0.9.3 release) promoted several functions from
internal to public, but forgot to fix the documentation generator
to provide details about those functions.
For an example of what this fixes, look at:
file:///path/to/libvirt/docs/html/libvirt-libvirt.html#virEventAddHandle
before and after the patch.
* docs/apibuild.py (ignored_functions): Don't ignore functions
that were turned into official API.
* src/util/virevent.c: Fix comments to pass through parser.
Add support for QEMU -add-fd command line parameter detection.
This intentionally rejects qemu 1.2, where 'add-fd' QMP did
not allow full control of set ids, and where there was no command
line counterpart, but accepts qemu 1.3.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Add entry points for calling the qemu 'add-fd' and 'remove-fd'
monitor commands. There is no entry point for 'query-fdsets';
the assumption is that a developer can use
virsh qemu-monitor-command domain '{"execute":"query-fdsets"}'
when debugging issues, and that meanwhile, libvirt is responsible
enough to remember what fds it associated with what fdsets.
Likewise, on the 'add-fd' command, it is assumed that libvirt
will always pass a set id, rather than letting qemu autogenerate
the next available id number.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.c (qemuMonitorAddFd, qemuMonitorRemoveFd):
New functions.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.h (qemuMonitorAddFd, qemuMonitorRemoveFd):
New prototypes.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.c (qemuMonitorJSONAddFd)
(qemuMonitorJSONRemoveFd): New functions.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.h (qemuMonitorJSONAddFd)
(qemuMonitorJSONRemoveFd): New prototypes.
Way back when I started making changes for Coverity messages my first set
were to a bunch of CHECKED_RETURN errors. In particular virAsprintf() had
a few callers that Coverity noted didn't check their return (although some
did check if the buffer being printed to was NULL or not).
It was suggested at the time as a further patch an ATTRIBUTE_RETURN_CHECK
should be added to virAsprintf(), see:
https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2013-January/msg00120.html
This patch does that and fixes a few more instances not found by Coverity
that failed the check.
When a disk-only snapshot is requested the domain is treated as if it
was offline. This forbids to mix memory checkpoints with the DISK_ONLY
flag.
This patch improves the error message and mentions the restriction in
the virsh man page.
Commit 60b176c3d0 introduced a bug that
when editing an XML with cputune similar to this:
...
<vcpu placement='static' current='1'>2</vcpu>
<cputune>
<vcpupin vcpu="1" cpuset="0"/>
</cputune>
...
results in formatted XML that looks like this:
...
<vcpu placement='static' current='1'>2</vcpu>
<cputune>
</cputune>
...
That is caused by a condition depending on def->cputune.vcpupin being
set rather than checking def->cputune.nvcpupin. Notice that nvcpupin
can be 0 and vcpupin can still be allocated since it's a pointer to an
array, so no harm done there.
I also changed it on other places in the code where it depended on the
wrong variable.
Setting the log output prefix to 0 is not supported and in fact results
in the following message:
warning : virLogParseOutputs:1021 : Ignoring invalid log output setting.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=894723
Currently, if qemuProcessStart() succeeds, but it's decompression
binary that returns nonzero status, we don't kill the qemu process,
but remove it from internal domain list, leaving the qemu process
hanging around totally uncontrolled.
This patch resolves CVE-2013-0170:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=893450
When reading and dispatching of a message failed the message was freed
but wasn't removed from the message queue.
After that when the connection was about to be closed the pointer for
the message was still present in the queue and it was passed to
virNetMessageFree which tried to call the callback function from an
uninitialized pointer.
This patch removes the message from the queue before it's freed.
* rpc/virnetserverclient.c: virNetServerClientDispatchRead:
- avoid use after free of RPC messages