This commit moves a few directories into more appropriate subpackages.
In a few cases a directory is owned by two subpackages, however this is
OK as long as the permissions and ownership for the directory are
consistent between them.
- %{_sysconfdir}/libvirt/qemu/
Used by the qemu and network drivers.
When building with separate driver modules, this directory is only
owned by l-d-d-network. l-d-d-qemu has a hard dependency on
l-d-d-network, which means this directory is created with the
correct permissions and ownership, however it's clearer if both
subpackages own the directory independently.
- %{_sysconfdir}/libvirt/nwfilter/
Used by the nwfilter driver only.
This directory is currently always owned by libvirt-daemon. This
commit moves it into l-d-d-nwfilter when building with separate
driver modules.
- %{_localstatedir}/run/libvirt/network/
Used by the network and nwfilter drivers.
When building without separate driver modules, this directory is
should be owned by libvirt-daemon only if either of these drivers
are enabled. When building with separate driver modules, this
directory should be owned by l-d-d-nwfilter in addition to
l-d-d-network.
- %{_datadir}/libvirt/networks/ and
%{_datadir}/libvirt/networks/default.xml
Used only by the %post scriptlet in libvirt-daemon-config-network.
Signed-off-by: Michael Chapman <mike@very.puzzling.org>
Libvirt tarball contains po/stamp-po file which prevents any po/*.gmo
file to be regenerated even if a corresponding po/*.po file is newer. By
removing the stamp-po file, all *.gmo files are properly updated if
required. This allows downstreams to provide patches that update
translations.
On Fedora 20, I added this to my '~/.rpmmacros':
%_without_udev 1
%_without_storage_mpath 1
%_without_storage_disk 1
and uninstalled systemd-devel (which also removed device-mapper-devel).
Then I ran 'make rpm', and inspected the results:
$ ldd ~/rpmbuild/BUILD/libvirt-1.2.2/daemon/.libs/libvirtd | grep syst
$
Then I reinstalled systemd-devel, where I now see:
$ ldd ~/rpmbuild/BUILD/libvirt-1.2.2/daemon/.libs/libvirtd | grep syst
libsystemd-daemon.so.0 => /lib64/libsystemd-daemon.so.0 (0x00007ffb858ba000)
$
Oops - the build is non-deterministic, where the final binary
depends on my build environment. The fix is to require
systemd-devel in all situations where the code base uses it.
Now ~/.rpmmacros can contain "%define _without_systemd_daemon 1"
to explicitly disable use of the library, but the library is now
a strict build requirement for normal builds; if systemd-devel
is not installed, the user now gets an up-front warning:
$ rpmbuild -ta libvirt-1.2.2.tar.gz
error: Failed build dependencies:
systemd-devel is needed by libvirt-1.2.2-1.fc20.x86_64
* libvirt.spec.in (with_systemd_daemon): New variable.
(BuildRequires): Require systemd-devel for more than just udev.
(%configure): Make choice of systemd_daemon explicit.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
On Fedora 20, with the following in my ~/.rpmmacros:
%_without_udev 1
%_without_storage_mpath 1
and with device-mapper-devel uninstalled, 'make rpm' fails with:
checking for libdevmapper.h... no
configure: error: You must install device-mapper-devel/libdevmapper >= 1.0.0 to compile libvirt
error: Bad exit status from /var/tmp/rpm-tmp.Wo9pOG (%build)
This is a rather late point to be issuing an error; better is
to flag missing packages up front. The fix is to match the logic
in configure.ac on when devmapper is required (for both mpath and
storage). While at it, rbd storage is not dependent on mpath.
With this patch applied, I now get:
$ rpmbuild -ta libvirt-1.2.2.tar.gz
error: Failed build dependencies:
device-mapper-devel is needed by libvirt-1.2.2-1.fc20.x86_64
until either installing the package or further modifying
~/.rpmmacros to add "%_without_storage_disk 1".
* libvirt.spec.in (BuildRequires): Fix build when mpath is
disabled.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Generally, we try to make the spec file tweakable via user
variables, so that they can select a different subset of sub-rpms
to build. We also try to explicitly list all driver config
options, rather than leaving the chance that the rpm build may be
non-deterministic based on what the user had installed locally.
But in the case of the recent bhyve hypervisor driver, there is
no port of bhyve to Linux, so it is easier to just blindly
disable it for now. If someone ever does try to port bhyve to
Fedora, we can make the spec file conditional at that point.
* libvirt.spec.in (%configure): Don't try to build bhyve.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Similar to cf76c4b, if modules are used, then nwfilter configuration
requires the nwfilter driver module.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
This reverts commit 8d6c3659b8.
After further list discussion, it was decided that pulling in
wireshark as a dependency is a bit too much for the base 'libvirt'
package. Remember also that 'libvirt-devel' is also not pulled in
by the base 'libvirt' - the metapackage exists for full
functionality of libvirtd, rather than to pull in all subpackages.
In general, the 'libvirt' metapackage should pull in all subpackages.
Fix this for the wireshark subpackage created in commit f9ada9f.
* libvirt.spec.in (Requires): Add dependency.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
When building modules, libvirt-daemon-config-network requires
libvirt-daemon-driver-network to ensure the 'default' network
is setup properly
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
On Fedora 20, with wireshark-devel installed, 'make rpm' failed
due to installed but unpackaged files related to wireshark. As
F20 is already released without wireshark, I chose to add a new
sub-package that is enabled only for F21 and later. Furthermore,
all existing wireshark plugins belong to the wireshark package,
so I got to invent behavior of how the first third-party wireshark
module will behave.
* libvirt.spec.in (with_wireshark): Add new conditional.
* configure.ac (ws-plugindir): Improve wording.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
This partially reverts 5eb4b04211 and 62774afb6b.
Rewrite the domsuspend example from scratch. This time do it right.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Commit ff76566 moved around things in the specfiles to put
driver-specific files into their appropriate sub-packages (when
with_driver_modules == 1), but accidentally changed things so that the
deamon-driver-network and daemon-config-network files were only
included in a package when with_driver_modules == 0. This broke "make
rpm" on fedora (where with_driver_modules == 1).
This patch follows the pattern (already used for the files in other
sub-modules) of duplicating the files for the main package
(!with_driver_modules) and the sub-package (with_driver_modules).
The domain events demo program isn't really tied to domain
events anymore, so rename it to object events.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
- systemctl and the %systemd_* RPM macros can take multiple unit names
in the one invocation. Make use of this to avoid repeated systemd
daemon reloads.
- virtlockd was only properly enabled and disabled when using systemd,
but when systemd RPM macros were not available (e.g. on Fedora < 18).
Make sure it's enabled when systemd RPM macros are present, or when
using initscripts.
- Always use "reload" on virtlockd, not "condrestart". This allows it to
cleanly re-execute itself without losing running state. Ignore any
error should the reload fail.
- Move the reloading of virtlockd and libvirtd via their initscripts
into the daemon package's %postun scriptlet. These services must be
restarted after all of the libvirt-daemon-driver-* packages have
been upgraded during the same RPM transaction.
- Add a %triggerpostun executed only when upgrading an older
libvirt-daemon. As an older package would only reload libvirtd during
%post, and the newer package would only reload libvirtd during
%postun, such an upgrade would not reload libvirtd at all without the
trigger.
Signed-off-by: Michael Chapman <mike@very.puzzling.org>
The libvirt-daemon package contains several driver-specific files,
directories, and script, which can be problematic when building the
package with multiple hypervisor support, e.g. both QEMU and Xen.
E.g. installing a QEMU+Xen enabled libvirt-daemon on a Xen-only system
will result in the creation of qemu and kvm groups and a qemu user.
Move the driver-specific files, directories, and script to the
respective driver subpackages.
The daemon-config-{network,nwfilter} subpackages are built regardless
of whether or not with_driver_modules is defined, therefore don't
conditionally define their files list.
The domsuspend example code is a really old and bad exmample of (how not
to use) the libvirt API. Remove it as it's apparent that nobody tried to
use it. It was broken and nobody complained.
We support gluster volumes in domain XML, so we also ought to
support them as a storage pool. Besides, a future patch will
want to take advantage of libgfapi to handle the case of a
gluster device holding qcow2 rather than raw storage, and for
that to work, we need a storage backend that can read gluster
storage volume contents. This sets up the framework.
Note that the new pool is named 'gluster' to match a
<disk type='network'><source protocol='gluster'> image source
already supported in a <domain>; it does NOT match the
<pool type='netfs'><source><target type='glusterfs'>,
since that uses a FUSE mount to a local file name rather than
a network name.
This and subsequent patches have been tested against glusterfs
3.4.1 (available on Fedora 19); there are likely bugs in older
versions that may prevent decent use of gfapi, so this patch
enforces the minimum version tested. A future patch may lower
the minimum. On the other hand, I hit at least two bugs in
3.4.1 that will be fixed in 3.5/3.4.2, where it might be worth
raising the minimum: glfs_readdir is nicer to use than
glfs_readdir_r [1], and glfs_fini should only return failure on
an actual failure [2].
[1] http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/gluster-devel/2013-10/msg00085.html
[2] http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/gluster-devel/2013-10/msg00086.html
* configure.ac (WITH_STORAGE_GLUSTER): New conditional.
* m4/virt-gluster.m4: new file.
* libvirt.spec.in (BuildRequires): Support gluster in spec file.
* src/conf/storage_conf.h (VIR_STORAGE_POOL_GLUSTER): New pool
type.
* src/conf/storage_conf.c (poolTypeInfo): Treat similar to
sheepdog and rbd.
(virStoragePoolDefFormat): Don't output target for gluster.
* src/storage/storage_backend_gluster.h: New file.
* src/storage/storage_backend_gluster.c: Likewise.
* po/POTFILES.in: Add new file.
* src/storage/storage_backend.c (backends): Register new type.
* src/Makefile.am (STORAGE_DRIVER_GLUSTER_SOURCES): Build new files.
* src/storage/storage_backend.h (_virStorageBackend): Documet
assumption.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The python binding now lives in
http://libvirt.org/git/?p=libvirt-python.git
that repo also provides an RPM which is upgrade compatible
with the old libvirt-python sub-RPM.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The previous attempt (commit d65e0e1) removed just one of two
libvirt-guests restarts that happened on libvirt-client update. Let's
remove the last one too :-)
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=962225
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Restarting an active libvirt-guests.service is the equivalent of
doing:
/usr/libexec/libvirt-guests.sh stop
/usr/libexec/libvirt-guests.sh start
Which in a default configuration will managedsave every running VM,
and then restore them. Certainly not something we should do every
time the libvirt-client RPM is updated.
Just drop the try-restart attempt, I don't know what purpose it
serves anyways.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=962225
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1033614
As virt-login-shell is an SUID binary, we should restrict its usage to
just the users chosen by an administrator to use virt-login-shell as
their login shell. This can easily be done by making the binary
executable only by users from a new virtlogin group.
RHEL-6's rpmbuild wipes the docdir for a (sub-)package if any %doc
directives are present, prior to copying in the marked documentation.
This means we can't prepopulate this directory with the HTML
documentation during the %install phase.
Instead, move the HTML documentation to a temporary directory during
%install and mark the contents of this temporary directory with %doc.
This fixes a build regression introduced in
commit e23216da9a
Author: Cole Robinson <crobinso@redhat.com>
Date: Wed Sep 25 13:20:40 2013 -0400
spec: Clean up distribution of ChangeLog (and others)
where the libvirt-docs sub-RPM gained a %doc directive, thus
triggering the RPM bug.
Signed-off-by: Michael Chapman <mike@very.puzzling.org>
For inexplicable reasons, many of the 3rd party package deps
were left against the 'libvirt-daemon' RPM when the drivers
were split out. This makes a minimal install heavier that
it should be. Push them all down into libvirt-daemon-driver-XXX
so they're only pulled in when truly needed
With this change applied, a minimal install of just the
libvirt-daemon-driver-lxc RPM is reduced by 41 MB on a
Fedora 19 host.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Many people will not want the setuid virt-login-shell binary
installed by default, so move it into a separate sub-RPM
named libvirt-login-shell. This RPM is only generated if
LXC is enabled
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
- Move COPYING* to libvirt-client, so every package pulls them in
- Move AUTHORS ChangeLog.gz NEWS README TODO from -daemon to -docs
- Drop duplicate distribution of docs in -python
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=977099
With the existing pkcheck (pid, start time) tuple for identifying
the process, there is a race condition, where a process can make
a libvirt RPC call and in another thread exec a setuid application,
causing it to change to effective UID 0. This in turn causes polkit
to do its permission check based on the wrong UID.
To address this, libvirt must get the UID the caller had at time
of connect() (from SO_PEERCRED) and pass a (pid, start time, uid)
triple to the pkcheck program.
This fix requires that libvirt is re-built against a version of
polkit that has the fix for its CVE-2013-4288, so that libvirt
can see 'pkg-config --variable pkcheck_supports_uid polkit-gobject-1'
Signed-off-by: Colin Walters <walters@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Several recent patches cleaned up 'make rpm' for the situation
when client_only is true; these were done by manual spec file
editing (since it's relatively hard to come by a RHEL 5 s390
box). Make it easier to do in the future via a simpler command
line override.
* libvirt.spec.in (client_only): Allow for override.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Commit ba5f3c7 moved virtualBox support into libvirtd, but the spec
file was still unconditionally requesting it even when not building
the server side. Thankfully there were no ill effects for a
client_only build, as most uses of %{with_vbox} were guarded by
%{with_libvirtd}; but we might as well avoid confusion by more
closely matching the makefile.
* libvirt.spec.in (with_vbox): Hoist to server conditionals.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
'make rpm' failed if ~/.rpmmacros contains '%_without_lxc 1',
which simulates the case of not having lxc available.
RPM build errors:
File not found: /home/eblake/rpmbuild/BUILDROOT/libvirt-1.1.1-1.fc19.x86_64/etc/libvirt/virt-login-shell.conf
File not found by glob: /home/eblake/rpmbuild/BUILDROOT/libvirt-1.1.1-1.fc19.x86_64/usr/share/man/man1/virt-login-shell.1*
File not found: /home/eblake/rpmbuild/BUILDROOT/libvirt-1.1.1-1.fc19.x86_64/usr/bin/virt-login-shell
make: *** [rpm] Error 1
Reported by Dan Berrange.
* libvirt.spec.in: Mark virt-login-shell as conditional on lxc.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The gnulib testsuite is relatively stable - the only times it is
likely to have a test change from pass to fail is on a gnulib
submodule update or a major system change (such as moving from
Fedora 18 to 19, or other large change to libc). While it is an
important test for end users on arbitrary machines (to make sure
that the portability glue works for their machine), it mostly
wastes time for development testing (as most developers aren't
making any of the major changes that would cause gnulib tests
to alter behavior). Thus, it pays to make the tests optional
at configure time, defaulting to off for development, on for
tarballs, with autobuilders requesting it to be on. It also
helps to allow a make-time override, via VIR_TEST_EXPENSIVE=[01]
(much the way automake sets up V=[01] for overriding the configure
time default of how verbose to be).
Automake has some pretty hard-coded magic with regards to the
TESTS variable; I had quite a job figuring out how to keep
'make distcheck' passing regardless of the configure option
setting in use, while still disabling the tests at runtime
when I did not configure them on and did not use the override
variable. Thankfully, we require GNU make, which lets me
hide some information from Automake's magic handling of TESTS.
* bootstrap.conf (bootstrap_epilogue): Munge gnulib test variable.
* configure.ac (--enable-expensive-tests): Add new enable switch.
(VIR_TEST_EXPENSIVE_DEFAULT, WITH_EXPENSIVE_TESTS): Set new
witnesses.
* gnulib/tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Make tests conditional on
configure settings and the VIR_TEST_EXPENSIVE variable.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS_ENVIRONMENT): Expose VIR_TEST_EXPENSIVE
to all tests.
* autobuild.sh: Enable all tests during autobuilds.
* libvirt.spec.in (%configure): Likewise.
* mingw-libvirt.spec.in (%mingw_configure): Likewise.
* docs/hacking.html.in: Document the option.
* HACKING: Regenerate.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=951637
Newer gnutls uses nettle, rather than gcrypt, which is a lot nicer
regarding initialization. Yet we were unconditionally initializing
gcrypt even when gnutls wouldn't be using it, and having two crypto
libraries linked into libvirt.so is pointless, but mostly harmless
(it doesn't crash, but does interfere with certification efforts).
There are three distinct version ranges to worry about when
determining which crypto lib gnutls uses, per these gnutls mails:
2.12: http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/gnutls-devel/2011-03/msg00034.html
3.0: http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/gnutls-devel/2011-07/msg00035.html
If pkg-config can prove version numbers and/or list the crypto
library used for static linking, we have our proof; if not, it
is safer (even if pointless) to continue to use gcrypt ourselves.
* configure.ac (WITH_GNUTLS): Probe whether to add -lgcrypt, and
define a witness WITH_GNUTLS_GCRYPT.
* src/libvirt.c (virTLSMutexInit, virTLSMutexDestroy)
(virTLSMutexLock, virTLSMutexUnlock, virTLSThreadImpl)
(virGlobalInit): Honor the witness.
* libvirt.spec.in (BuildRequires): Make gcrypt usage conditional,
no longer needed in Fedora 19.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The virtlockd daemon supports an /etc/libvirt/virtlockd.conf
config file, but we never installed a default config, nor
created any augeas scripts. This change addresses that omission.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Add a virt-login-shell binary that can be set as a user's
shell, such that when they login, it causes them to enter
the LXC container with a name matching their user name.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>