This patch implement a set of interfaces for perf event. Based on
these interfaces, we can implement internal driver API for perf,
and get the results of perf conuter you care about.
Signed-off-by: Qiaowei Ren <qiaowei.ren@intel.com>
Message-id: 1459171833-26416-4-git-send-email-qiaowei.ren@intel.com
API agreed on in
https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2015-October/msg00872.html
* include/libvirt/libvirt-domain.h (virDomainGetPerfEvents,
virDomainSetPerfEvents): New declarations.
* src/libvirt_public.syms: Export new symbols.
* src/driver-hypervisor.h (virDrvDomainGetPerfEvents,
virDrvDomainSetPerfEvents): New typedefs.
* src/libvirt-domain.c: Implement virDomainGetPerfEvents and
virDomainSetPerfEvents.
Signed-off-by: Qiaowei Ren <qiaowei.ren@intel.com>
Message-id: 1459171833-26416-2-git-send-email-qiaowei.ren@intel.com
To use post-copy one has to start the migration with
VIR_MIGRATE_POSTCOPY flag and, while migration is in progress, call
virDomainMigrateStartPostCopy() to switch from pre-copy to post-copy.
Signed-off-by: Cristian Klein <cristiklein@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_SUSPENDED_POSTCOPY and VIR_DOMAIN_PAUSED_POSTCOPY are
used on the source host once migration enters post-copy mode (which
means the domain gets paused on the source. After the destination host
takes over the execution of the domain, its virtual CPUs are resumed and
the domain enters VIR_DOMAIN_RUNNING_POSTCOPY state and
VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_RESUMED_POSTCOPY event is emitted.
In case migration fails during post-copy mode and none of the hosts have
complete state of the domain, both domains will remain paused with
VIR_DOMAIN_PAUSED_POSTCOPY_FAILED reason and an upper layer may decide
what to do.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
It does not have a suffix ByName because there are no other means of
looking up the server and since the name is known, this should be the
preferred one.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Some hypervisors (namely qemu) can have a separate connecton for
non-shared disks migration of active domains. Currently we have
no means to control the port of such a connection. At the same
time we have options to control port of memory migration traffic
(thru migration uri) as well as interfaces that target server
is bound to for incoming migration (thru VIR_MIGRATE_PARAM_LISTEN_ADDRESS).
Let's add the option for setting disks port too.
Signed-off-by: Nikolay Shirokovskiy <nshirokovskiy@virtuozzo.com>
This serves the same purpose as VIR_ERR_NO_xxx where xxx is any object
that API can be called upon. Only this particular one is used for
daemon's servers.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
The VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_ID_JOB_COMPLETED event will be triggered once a job
(such as migration) finishes and it will contain statistics for the job
as one would get by calling virDomainGetJobStats. Thanks to this event
it is now possible to get statistics of a completed migration of a
transient domain on the source host.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
This parameter represents top level period cgroup
that limits whole domain enforcement period for a quota
Signed-off-by: Alexander Burluka <aburluka@virtuozzo.com>
When there isn't a ssh -X type session running and a user has not
been added to the libvirt group, attempts to run 'virsh -c qemu:///system'
commands from an otherwise unprivileged user will fail with rather
generic or opaque error message:
"error: authentication failed: no agent is available to authenticate"
This patch will adjust the error code and message to help reflect the
situation that the problem is the requested mechanism is UNAVAILABLE and
a slightly more descriptive error. The result on a failure then becomes:
"error: authentication unavailable: no polkit agent available to
authenticate action 'org.libvirt.unix.manage'"
A bit more history on this - at one time a failure generated the
following type message when running the 'pkcheck' as a subprocess:
"error: authentication failed: polkit\56retains_authorization_after_challenge=1
Authorization requires authentication but no agent is available."
but, a patch was generated to adjust the error message to help provide
more details about what failed. This was pushed as commit id '96a108c99'.
That patch prepended a "polkit: " to the output. It really didn't solve
the problem, but gave a hint.
After some time it was deemed using DBus API calls directly was a
better way to go (since pkcheck calls them anyway). So, commit id
'1b854c76' (more or less) copied the code from remoteDispatchAuthPolkit
and adjusted it. Then commit id 'c7542573' adjusted the remote.c
code to call the new API (virPolkitCheckAuth). Finally, commit id
'308c0c5a' altered the code to call DBus APIs directly. In doing
so, it reverted the failing error message to the generic message
that would have been received from DBus anyway.
This API is merely a convenience API, i.e. when managing clients connected to
daemon's servers, we should know (convenience) which server the specific client
is connected to. This implies a client-side representation of a server along
with a basic API to let the administrating client know what servers are actually
available on the daemon.
Signed-off-by: Erik Skultety <eskultet@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
This is the key structure of all management operations performed on the
daemon/clients. An admin client needs to be able to identify
another client (either admin or non-privileged client) to perform an
action on it. This identification includes a server the client is
connected to, thus a client-side representation of a server is needed.
Signed-off-by: Erik Skultety <eskultet@redhat.com>
In my previous commit a70f3b1c77 I've tried to fix case
when building from VPATH and a file wasn't being installed.
However, my fix broke non-VPATH build.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The libvirt-common.h is build time generated file from .in.
Obviously, it's generated into builddir and not srcdir. Problem
is, the list of header files to install, virinc_HEADERS contains
only $(srcdir)/*.h and this misses libvirt-common.h. This problem
is pretty obvious when doing a VPATH build.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
This new algorithm adds support for wiping volumes using TRIM.
It does not overwrite all the data in a volume, but it tells the
backing storage pool/driver that all bytes in a volume can be
discarded.
It depends on the backing storage pool how this is handled.
A SCSI backend might send UNMAP commands to remove all data present
on a LUN.
A Ceph backend might use rbd_discard() to instruct the Ceph cluster
that all data on that RBD volume can be discarded.
Signed-off-by: Wido den Hollander <wido@widodh.nl>
The VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_ID_MIGRATION_ITERATION event will be triggered
whenever VIR_DOMAIN_JOB_MEMORY_ITERATION changes its value, i.e.,
whenever a new iteration over guest memory pages is started during
migration.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
So after da176bf6b7 and friend we have switched to $(wildcard
some/path/*.xml) instead of enumerating the files explicitly.
This is nice, however it makes distcheck build from VPATH fail.
The reason is that it's is not obvious to what does the wildcard
refer to: srcdir or builddir?
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
memory_dirty_rate corresponds to dirty-pages-rate in QEMU and
memory_iteration is what QEMU reports in dirty-sync-count.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Commmit df8192aa introduced admin related rename and some minor
(caused by automated approach, aka sed) and some more severe isues along with
it. First reason to revert is the inconsistency with libvirt library.
Although we deal with the daemon directly rather than with a specific
hypervisor, we still do have a connection. That being said, contributors might
get under the impression that AdmDaemonNew would spawn/start a new daemon
(since it's admin API, why not...), or AdmDaemonClose would do the exact
opposite or they might expect DaemonIsAlive report overall status of the daemon
which definitely isn't the case.
The second reason to revert this patch is renaming virt-admin client. The
client tool does not necessarily have to reflect the names of the API's it's
using in his internals. An example would be 's/vshAdmConnect/vshAdmDaemon'
where noone can be certain of what the latter function really does. The former
is quite expressive about some connection magic it performs, but the latter does
not say anything, especially when vshAdmReconnect and vshAdmDisconnect were
left untouched.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=830056
Add flags handling to the virStoragePoolCreate and virStoragePoolCreateXML
API's which will allow the caller to provide the capability for the storage
pool create API's to also perform a pool build during creation rather than
requiring the additional buildPool step. This will allow transient pools
to be defined, built, and started.
The new flags are:
* VIR_STORAGE_POOL_CREATE_WITH_BUILD
Perform buildPool without any flags passed.
* VIR_STORAGE_POOL_CREATE_WITH_BUILD_OVERWRITE
Perform buildPool using VIR_STORAGE_POOL_BUILD_OVERWRITE flag.
* VIR_STORAGE_POOL_CREATE_WITH_BUILD_NO_OVERWRITE
Perform buildPool using VIR_STORAGE_POOL_BUILD_NO_OVERWRITE flag.
It is up to the backend to handle the processing of build flags. The
overwrite and no-overwrite flags are mutually exclusive.
NB:
This patch is loosely based upon code originally authored by Osier
Yang that were not reviewed and pushed, see:
https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2012-July/msg01328.html
virAdmConnect was named after virConnect, but after some discussions,
most of the APIs called will be working with remote daemon and starting
them virAdmDaemon will make more sense. Only possibly controversal name
is CloseCallback (de)registration, and connecting to the daemon (which
will still be Open/Close), but even this makes sense if one thinks about
the daemon being opened and closed, e.g. as file, etc.
This way all the APIs working with the daemon will start with
virAdmDaemon prefix, they will accept virAdmDaemonPtr as first parameter
and that will better suit with other namings as well (virDomain*,
virAdmServer*, etc.).
Because in virt-admin, the connection name does not refer to a struct
that would have a connect in its name, also adjust 'connname' in
clients. And because it is not used anywhere in the vsh code, move it
from there into each client.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Introduce a new API to get libvirt version. It is worth noting, that
libvirt-admin and libvirt share the same version number. Unfortunately,
our existing API isn't generic enough to be used with virAdmConnectPtr
as well. Also this patch wires up this API to the virt-admin client
as a generic cmdVersion command.
As we need a client disconnect handler, we also need a mechanism to register
such handlers for a client. This patch introduced both the close callbacks and
also the client vshAdmCatchDisconnect handler to be registered with it. By
registering the handler we still need to make sure the client can react to
daemon's events like disconnect or keepalive, so asynchronous I/O event polling
is necessary to be enabled too.
Since most of our APIs rely on an acive functional connection to a daemon and
we have such a mechanism in libvirt already, there's need to have such a way in
libvirt-admin as well. By introducing a new public API, this patch provides
support to check for an active connection.
Unfortunately, client side version retrieval API virGetVersion uses
one-time initialization (due to the fact we might not have initialized the
library by calling connect prior to this) which is not completely compatible
with admin initialization. This API is rather simplistic and reimplementing
it for admin might be the preferred method of reusing it. Note that even though
the method will be reimplemented, the version number is still the same for both
the libvirt and libvirt-admin library.
As it turned out, we need to share some enums and declarations between
libvirt.h and libvirt-admin.h, but since our policy forbids direct includes of
libvirt*.h, there has to be some header exempt from this rule. This patch moves
the relevant part of code from libvirt.h.in to libvirt-common.h.in. Moreover,
since there is no need to have libvirt.h generated anymore, introduce a new
header libvirt.h which was previosly ignored from git and make the common
header ignored and generated instead.
Copy the virtlockd codebase across to form the initial virlogd
code. Simple search & replace of s/lock/log/ and gut the remote
protocol & dispatcher. This gives us a daemon that starts up
and listens for connections, but does nothing with them.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When a RBD volume has snapshots it can not be removed.
This patch introduces a new flag to force volume removal,
VIR_STORAGE_VOL_DELETE_WITH_SNAPSHOTS.
With this flag any existing snapshots will be removed prior to
removing the volume.
No existing mechanism in libvirt allowed us to pass such information,
so that's why a new flag was introduced.
Signed-off-by: Wido den Hollander <wido@widodh.nl>
Also, among with this new API new ACL that restricts rename
capability is invented too.
Signed-off-by: Tomas Meszaros <exo@tty.sk>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
This is a public library, it shouldn't include anything that is
internal. Including the library in it's current state to an example
application fails the preprocessor phase.
virDomainMigrateFinish* APIs were unfortunately designed to return the
pointer to the domain on destination and NULL on error. This looks OK in
normal cases but the same API is also called when we know migration
failed and thus we expect Finish to return NULL even if it actually did
all it was supposed to do without any error. The call is defined to
return nonnull domain pointer over RPC, which means returning NULL will
always result in an error being send. If this was not in fact an error,
the API itself wouldn't set anything to the thread local virError, which
makes the RPC layer come up with it's own "Library function returned
error but did not set virError" error.
This is quite confusing and also hard to detect by the caller. This
patch adds a special error code which can be used to check that Finish
successfully aborted migration.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Don't listen on the admin socket in the daemon and comment out the
admin devel files out of specfile.
Library is still being compiled and installed in order to link easily
without any disturbing modifications to the daemon code.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
This patch provides support for a new watchdog action "inject-nmi" which
allows to define an inject of a non-maskable interrupt into a guest.
Signed-off-by: Boris Fiuczynski <fiuczy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Hansel <daniel.hansel@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Stefan Zimmermann <stzi@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Krowiak <akrowiak@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1203032
Implement a `migrate_disks' parameters for the QEMU driver. This multi-
value parameter can be used to explicitly specify what block devices
are to be migrated using the NBD server. Tunnelled migration using NBD
is to be done.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Boldin <pboldin@mirantis.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The `virTypedParamsAddStringList' function provides interface to add a
NULL-terminated array of string values as a multi-value to the params.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Boldin <pboldin@mirantis.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Just one of the simplest functions that returns string "Clients: X"
where X is the number of connected clients to daemon's first
subserver (the original one), so it can be tested using virsh, ipython,
etc.
The subserver is gathered by incrementing its reference
counter (similarly to getting qemu capabilities), so there is no
deadlock with admin subserver in this API.
Here you can see how functions should be named in the client (virAdm*)
and server (adm*).
There is also a parameter @flags that must be 0, which helps testing
proper error propagation into the client.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Initial scratch of the admin library. It has its own virAdmConnectPtr
that inherits from virAbstractConnectPtr and thus trivially supports
error reporting.
There's pkg-config file added and spec-file adjusted as well.
Since the library should be "minimalistic" and not depend on any other
library, the list of files is especially crafted for it. Most of them
could've been put to it's own sub-libraries that would be LIBADD'd to
libvirt_util, libvirt_net_rpc and libvirt_setuid_rpc_client to minimize
the number of object files being built, but that's a refactoring that
isn't the orginal aim of this commit.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
For setting passwords of users inside the domain.
With the VIR_DOMAIN_PASSWORD_ENCRYPTED flag set, the password
is assumed to be already encrypted by the method required
by the guest OS.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1174177
On the s/390x architecture, libvirt may already return 0 in the
node_info->mhz field (see src/nodeinfo.c:linuxNodeInfoCPUPopulate).
We may also want to return this on aarch64 in future, because
calculating the proper value requires SMBIOS, which is not available
on non-server-class systems (specifically on systems which don't
adhere to the SBSA standard).
Therefore this change documents the existing behaviour and provides a
valid path for aarch64.
Signed-off-by: Richard W.M. Jones <rjones@redhat.com>
Bug-URL: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/1206353
virDomainGetJobStats is able to report statistics of a completed
migration, however to get usable downtime and total time statistics both
hosts have to keep synchronized time. To provide at least some
estimation of the times even when NTP daemons are not running on both
hosts we can just ignore the time needed to transfer a migration cookie
to the destination host. The result will be also inaccurate but a bit
more predictable. The total/down time will just be at least what we
report.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1213434
When we shutdown/reboot a guest using agent-mode, if the guest itself blocks infinitely,
libvirt would block in qemuAgentShutdown() forever.
Thus, we set a timeout for shutdown/reboot, from our experience, 60 seconds would be fine.
Signed-off-by: Zhang Bo <oscar.zhangbo@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Wang Yufei <james.wangyufei@huawei.com>
Each thread can use a thread local variable to keep the name of a job
which is currently running in the job.
The virThreadJobSetWorker API is supposed to be called once by any
thread which is used as a worker, i.e., it is waiting in a pool, woken
up to do a job, and returned back to the pool.
The virThreadJobSet/virThreadJobClear APIs are to be called at the
beginning/end of each job.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Wikipedia's list of common misspellings [1] has a machine-readable
version. This patch fixes those misspellings mentioned in the list
which don't have multiple right variants (as e.g. "accension", which can
be both "accession" and "ascension"), such misspellings are left
untouched. The list of changes was manually re-checked for false
positives.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Lists_of_common_misspellings/For_machines
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
When libvirt is starting a domain, it reports the state as SHUTOFF until
it's RUNNING. This is not ideal because domain startup may take a long
time (usually because of some configuration issues, firewalls blocking
access to network disks, etc.) and domain lists provided by libvirt look
awkward. One can see weird shutoff domains with IDs in a list of active
domains or even shutoff transient domains. In any case, it looks more
like a bug in libvirt than a normal state a domain goes through.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Not all NICs (esp. the virtual ones like TUN) must have a hardware
address. Teach our RPC that it's possible.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Define helper function virDomainInterfaceFree, which allows
the upper layer application to free the domain interface object
conveniently.
The API is going to provide multiple methods by flags, e.g.
* Query guest agent
* Parse DHCP lease file
include/libvirt/libvirt-domain.h
* Define virDomainInterfaceAddresses, virDomainInterfaceFree
* Define structs virDomainInterface, virDomainIPAddress
src/driver-hypervisor.h:
* Define domainInterfaceAddresses
src/libvirt-domain.c:
* Implement virDomainInterfaceAddresses
* Implement virDomainInterfaceFree
src/libvirt_public.syms:
* Export the new symbols
Signed-off-by: Nehal J Wani <nehaljw.kkd1@gmail.com>
Add virDomainPinIOThread to allow setting the CPU affinity for a specific
IOThread based on the output generated from virDomainGetIOThreadsInfo
The API supports updating both the --live domain and the --config data
Add virDomainGetIOThreadInfo in order to return a list of
virDomainIOThreadInfoPtr structures which list the IOThread ID
and the CPU Affinity map for each IOThread for the domain.
For an active domain, the live data will be returned, while for
an inactive domain, the config data will be returned.
The API supports either the --live or --config flag, but not both.
Also added virDomainIOThreadsInfoFree in order to free the cpumap
and the IOThreadInfo structure.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Previously when a domain would get stuck in a domain job due to a
programming mistake we'd report the following control state:
$ virsh domcontrol domain
occupied (1424343406.150s)
The timestamp is invalid as the monitor was not entered for that domain.
We can use that to detect that the domain has an active job and report a
better error instead:
$ virsh domcontrol domain
error: internal (locking) error
When creating a RAW file, we don't take advantage
of clone of btrfs.
Add a VIR_STORAGE_VOL_CREATE_REFLINK flag to request
a reflink copy.
Signed-off-by: Chen Hanxiao <chenhanxiao@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Ján Tomko <jtomko@redhat.com>
The virDomainDefineXMLFlags and virDomainCreateXML APIs both
gain new flags allowing them to be told to validate XML.
This updates all the drivers to turn on validation in the
XML parser when the flags are set
The virDomainDefineXML method is one of the few that still lacks
an 'unsigned int flags' parameter. This will be needed for adding
XML validation to this API. virDomainCreateXML fortunately already
has flags.
The members of struct virSecurityLabel and struct virSecurityModel
were not shown in the libvirt API docs because the corresponding
<field> elements were missing from the libvirt-api.xml.
The reason is that apibuild.py does not cope well with typedef's
using inline struct definitions. It fails to associate the comment
with the typedef and because of this refuses to write out the
field of the struct.
This patch introduces access to allocation information about
a backing chain of a live domain. While querying storage
volumes for read-only disks could provide some of the details,
we do NOT want to read() a file while qemu is writing it.
Also, there is one case where we have to rely on qemu: when
doing a block commit into a backing file, where that file is
stored in qcow2 format on a host block device, we want to know
the current highest write offset into that image, in order to
know if the disk must be resized larger. qemu-img does not
(currently) show this information, and none of the earlier
block APIs were extensible enough to expose it. But
virDomainListGetStats is perfect for the job!
We don't need a new group of statistics, as the existing block
group is sufficient. On the other hand, as existing libvirt
releases already report 1:1 mapping of block.count to <disk>
devices, changing the array size could confuse older clients;
and even with newer clients, the time and memory taken to
report additional statistics is not always necessary (backing
files are generally read-only except for block-commit, so while
read statistics may change, sizing statistics will not). So
the choice here is to add a new flag that only newer callers
will pass, when they are prepared for the additional information.
This patch introduces the new API, but it will take more
patches to get it implemented for qemu.
* include/libvirt/libvirt-domain.h
(VIR_CONNECT_GET_ALL_DOMAINS_STATS_BACKING): New flag.
* src/libvirt-domain.c (virConnectGetAllDomainStats): Document it,
and add a new field when it is in use.
* tools/virsh-domain-monitor.c (cmdDomstats): Use new flag.
* tools/virsh.pod (domstats): Document it.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The documentation for virDomainBlockInfo was confusing: it stated
that 'physical' was the size of the container, then gave an example
of it being the amount of storage used by a sparse file (that is,
for a sparse raw image on a regular file, the wording implied
capacity==physical, while allocation was smaller; but the example
instead claimed physical==allocation). Since we use 'physical' for
the last offset of a block device, we should do likewise for
regular files.
Furthermore, the example claimed that for a qcow2 regular file,
allocation==physical. At the time the code was first written,
this was true (qcow2 files were allocated sequentially, and were
never sparse, so the last sector written happened to also match
the disk space occupied); but modern qemu does much better and
can punch holes for a qcow2 with allocation < physical.
Basically, after this patch, the three fields are now reliably
mapped as:
'capacity' - how much storage the guest can see (equal to
physical for raw images, determined by image metadata otherwise)
'allocation' - how much storage the image occupies (similar to
what 'du' would report)
'physical' - the last offset of the image (similar to what 'ls'
would report)
'capacity' can be larger than 'physical' (such as for a qcow2
image that does not vary much from a backing file) or smaller
(such as for a qcow2 file with lots of internal snapshots).
Likewise, 'allocation' can be (slightly) larger than 'physical'
(such as counting the tail of cluster allocations required to
round a file size up to filesystem granularity) or smaller
(for a sparse file). A block-resize operation changes capacity
(which, for raw images, also changes physical); many non-raw
images automatically grow physical and allocation as necessary
when starting with an allocation smaller than capacity; and even
when capacity and physical stay unchanged, allocation can change
when converting sectors from holes to data or back.
Note that this does not change semantics for qcow2 images stored
on block devices; there, we still rely on qemu to report the
highest written extent for allocation. So using this API to
track when to extend a block device because a qcow2 image is
about to exceed a threshold will not see any changes.
Also, note that virStorageVolInfo is unfortunately limited to
just 'capacity' and 'allocation' (we can't expand it to add
'physical', although we can expand the XML to add it there);
historically, that struct's 'allocation' value has reported
file size for qcow2 files (what this patch terms 'physical'
for a domain block device), but disk usage for raw files (what
this patch terms 'allocation'). So follow-up patches will be
needed to make storage volumes report the same allocation
values and get at physical values, where those differ.
* include/libvirt/libvirt-domain.h (_virDomainBlockInfo): Tweak
documentation to match saner definition.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainGetBlockInfo): For regular
files, physical size is capacity, not allocation.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The apibuild.py script did not handle whitespace in preprocessor
macros, so it failed to detect constants declared with '# define'
instead of '#define'. Since we now correctly indent our public
header files, we have silently lost all constants from
libvirt-api.xml. This also caused us to not detect formatting
errors in constant docs
This changes the display from:
libvirt-storage: APIs for management of storages
to
libvirt-storage: APIs for management of storage pools and volumes
In making that change I expected my build tree html output to be
regenerated; however, it wasn't because the dependency for the separated
libvirt-storage.h wasn't there. It was only present for libvirt.h.in
So I added each in the order displayed on the docs/html/index.html page
virDomainGetFSInfo returns a list of filesystems information mounted in the
guest, which contains mountpoints, device names, filesystem types, and
device aliases named by libvirt. This will be useful, for example, to
specify mountpoints to fsfreeze when taking snapshot of a part of disks.
Signed-off-by: Tomoki Sekiyama <tomoki.sekiyama@hds.com>
As qemu is now able to notify us about change of the channel state used
for communication with the guest agent we now can more precisely track
the state of the guest agent.
To allow notifying management apps this patch implements a new event
that will be triggered on changes of the guest agent state.
Add support for bps_max and friends in the driver part.
In the part checking if a qemu is running, check if the running binary
support bps_max, if not print an error message, if yes add it to
"info" variable
Signed-off-by: Matthias Gatto <matthias.gatto@outscale.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The cfg.mk rule for checking preprocessor indentation was
mistakenly missing the libvirt.h.in file due to bad file
extension matching rule. Fix that and the resolve the
incorrect indentation that is identified.
Create a new libvirt-host.h file to hold the public
API definitions for the virConnect type. This header
file is not self-contained, so applications will not directly
include it. They will continue to #include <libvirt/libvirt.h>
Create a new libvirt-domain.h file to hold the public
API definitions for the virDomain type. This header
file is not self-contained, so applications will not directly
include it. They will continue to #include <libvirt/libvirt.h>
Create a new libvirt-event.h file to hold the public
API definitions for the virEvent type. This header
file is not self-contained, so applications will not directly
include it. They will continue to #include <libvirt/libvirt.h>
Create a new libvirt-storage.h file to hold the public
API definitions for the virStorage/Vol type. This header
file is not self-contained, so applications will not directly
include it. They will continue to #include <libvirt/libvirt.h>
Create a new libvirt-stream.h file to hold the public
API definitions for the virStream type. This header
file is not self-contained, so applications will not directly
include it. They will continue to #include <libvirt/libvirt.h>
Note the definition of virStreamPtr is not moved, since that
must be declared early for all other libvirt APIs to be able
to reference it.
Create a new libvirt-secret.h file to hold the public
API definitions for the virSecret type. This header
file is not self-contained, so applications will not directly
include it. They will continue to #include <libvirt/libvirt.h>
Create a new libvirt-nodedev.h file to hold the public
API definitions for the virNodeDevice type. This header
file is not self-contained, so applications will not directly
include it. They will continue to #include <libvirt/libvirt.h>
Create a new libvirt-nwfilter.h file to hold the public
API definitions for the virNWFilter type. This header
file is not self-contained, so applications will not directly
include it. They will continue to #include <libvirt/libvirt.h>
Create a new libvirt-interface.h file to hold the public
API definitions for the virInterface type. This header
file is not self-contained, so applications will not directly
include it. They will continue to #include <libvirt/libvirt.h>
Create a new libvirt-network.h file to hold the public
API definitions for the virNetwork type. This header
file is not self-contained, so applications will not directly
include it. They will continue to #include <libvirt/libvirt.h>
Create a new libvirt-domain-snapshot.h file to hold the public
API definitions for the virDomainSnapshot type. This header
file is not self-contained, so applications will not directly
include it. They will continue to #include <libvirt/libvirt.h>
Aeons ago (commit 34dcbbb4, v0.8.2), we added a new libvirt event
(VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_ID_IO_ERROR_REASON) in order to tell the user WHY
the guest halted. This is because at least VDSM wants to react
differently to ENOSPC events (resize the lvm partition to be larger,
and resume the guest as if nothing had happened) from all other events
(I/O is hosed, throw up our hands and flag things as broken). At the
time this was done, downstream RHEL qemu added a vendor extension
'__com.redhat_reason', which would be exactly one of these strings:
"enospc", "eperm", "eio", and "eother". In our stupidity, we exposed
those exact strings to clients, rather than an enum, and we also
return "" if we did not have access to a reason (which was the case
for upstream qemu).
Fast forward to now: upstream qemu commit c7c2ff0c (will be qemu 2.2)
FINALLY adds a 'nospace' boolean, after discussion with multiple
projects determined that VDSM really doesn't care about distinction
between any other error types. So this patch converts 'nospace' into
the string "enospc" for compatibility with RHEL clients that were
already used to the downstream extension, while leaving the reason
blank for all other cases (no change from the status quo).
See also https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1119784
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.c (qewmuMonitorJSONHandleIOError):
Parse reason field from modern qemu.
* include/libvirt/libvirt.h.in
(virConnectDomainEventIOErrorReasonCallback): Document it.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
For the new VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_ID_TUNABLE event we have a bunch of
constants added
VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_CPUTUNE_<blah>
VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_BLKDEVIOTUNE_<blah>
This naming convention is bad for two reasons
- There is no common prefix unique for the events to both
relate them, and distinguish them from other event
constants
- The values associated with the constants were chosen
to match the names used with virConnectGetAllDomainStats
so having EVENT in the constant name is not applicable in
that respect
This patch proposes renaming the constants to
VIR_DOMAIN_TUNABLE_CPU_<blah>
VIR_DOMAIN_TUNABLE_BLKDEV_<blah>
ie, given them a common VIR_DOMAIN_TUNABLE prefix.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Use the universal tunable event to report changes to user. All
blkdeviotune values are prefixed with "blkdeviotune".
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away it has been decided
that libvirt will manage not only domains but host as well. And
with my latest work on qemu driver supporting huge pages, we miss
the cherry on top: an API to allocate huge pages on the run.
Currently users are forced to log into the host and adjust the
huge pages pool themselves. However, with this API the problem
is gone - they can both size up and size down the pool.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
There are now two places in libvirt which use polkit. Currently
they use pkexec, which is set to be replaced by direct DBus API
calls. Add a common API which they will both be able to use for
this purpose.
No tests are added at this time, since the impl will be gutted
in favour of a DBus API call shortly.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Now we have universal tunable event so we can use it for reporting
changes to user. The cputune values will be prefixed with "cputune" to
distinguish it from other tunable events.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>