Since we switched to QMP probing, the object types are spelled out
explicitly, i.e. virtio-net-pci. This has effectively disabled
the capability detection of s390 virtio devices. The trivial fix
is to add the s390 virtio types explicitly to qemuCapsObjectProps.
Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=888426
The code for doing a block-copy was supposed to track the destination
file in drive->mirror, but was set up to do all mallocs prior to
starting the copy so that OOM wouldn't leave things partially started.
However, the wrong variable was being written; later in the code we
silently did 'disk->mirror = mirror' which was still NULL, and thus
leaking memory and leaving libvirt to think that the mirror job was
never started, which prevented a pivot operation after a copy.
Problem introduced in commit 35c7701c6.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainBlockCopy): Initialize correct
variable.
To bring in line with new naming practice, rename the=
src/util/cgroup.{h,c} files to vircgroup.{h,c}
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Currently, it only considers PTY backend serial devices for pseries.
It need to support all kinds of serial devices.
This patch is to fix the problem which is that it doesn't work
when specifying source type as file.
Signed-off-by: Li Zhang <zhlcindy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
ACPI is only supported on x86 platform, PPC can't support it.
So QEMU_CAPS_NO_ACPI shouldn't be set.
This patch is to remove QEMU_CAPS_NO_ACPI capability for
non-x86 platform.
Signed-off-by: Li Zhang <zhlcindy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Historically there was an inconsistency in handling of the
itanium arch. The xen driver & CPU model code treated it
as 'ia64' but the QEMU capabilities code used 'itanium'. On
the grounds that no one has ever seriously used itanium
with QEMU, while RHEL shipped itanium with Xen, we should
favour 'ia64' as the canonical format
Convert the host capabilities and domain config structs to
use the virArch datatype. Update the parsers and all drivers
to take account of datatype change
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When LXC labels USB devices during hotplug, it is running in
host context, so it needs to pass in a vroot path to the
container root.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
'-device VGA' maps to '-vga std'
'-device cirrus-vga' maps to '-vga cirrus'
'-device qxl-vga' maps to '-vga qxl'
(there is also '-device qxl' for secondary devices)
'-device vmware-svga' maps to '-vga vmware'
For qemu(>=1.2), we can use -device to replace -vga for video
device. For the primary video device, the patch tries to use 0x2
slot for matching old qemu. If the 0x2 slot is allocated already,
the addr property could help for using any available slot.
For qemu(< 1.2), we keep using -vga for primary device.
QEMU_CAPS_DEVICE_QXL -device qxl
QEMU_CAPS_DEVICE_VGA -device VGA
QEMU_CAPS_DEVICE_CIRRUS_VGA -device cirrus-vga
QEMU_CAPS_DEVICE_VMWARE_SVGA -device vmware-svga
QEMU_CAPS_DEVICE_VIDEO_PRIMARY /* safe to use -device XXX
for primary video device */
Fix a typo in qemuCapsObjectTypes, the string 'qxl' here
should be -device qxl rather than -vga [...|qxl|..]
Noticed these while building on FreeBSD.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.c (qemuMonitorBlockInfoLookup): Rename
variable to avoid 'devname' collision.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainInterfaceStats): Mark unused
variable.
When a network device's bridge connection is changed by
virDomainUpdateDevice, libvirt first removes the netdev's tap from its
old bridge, then adds it to the new bridge. Sometimes, due to a
network being destroyed while a guest device is still attached, the
tap may already be "removed" from the old bridge (or the old bridge
may not even exist any more); the existing code was needlessly failing
the update when this happened, making it impossible to recover from
the situation without completely detaching (i.e. removing) the netdev
from the guest and re-attaching.
Instead of failing the entire operation when removal of the tap from
the old bridge fails, this patch changes qemuDomainChangeNetBridge to
just log a warning and continue, allowing a reasonable recover from
the situation.
(you'll appreciate this change if you ever accidentally destroy a
network while your guests are still using it).
Refactor virLockManagerPluginNew() so that the caller does
not need to pass in the config file path itself - just the
config directory and driver name.
Fix QEMU to actually pass in a config file when creating the
default lock manager plugin, rather than NULL.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
* Autotools changes:
- Don't assume Qemu is Linux-only
- Check Linux headers only on Linux
- Disable firewalld on FreeBSD
* Initctl:
Initctl seem to present only on Linux, so stub it on other platforms
* Raw I/O: Linux-only as well
* Headers cleanup
This patch adds a new domain lookup helper qemuDomObjFromDomainDriver
that lookups the domain and leaves the driver locked. The driver is
returned as the second argument of that function. If the lookup fails
the driver is unlocked to help avoid cleanup codepaths.
This patch also improves docs for the helpers.
When a qemu domain is backed by huge pages, apparmor needs to grant the domain
rw access to files under the hugetlbfs mount point. Add a hook, called in
qemu_process.c, which ends up adding the read-write access through
virt-aa-helper. Qemu will be creating a randomly named file under the
mountpoint and unlinking it as soon as it has mmap()d it, therefore we
cannot predict the full pathname, but for the same reason it is generally
safe to provide access to $path/**.
Signed-off-by: Serge Hallyn <serge.hallyn@ubuntu.com>
This patch exports qemuMigrationIsAllowed and adds a new parameter to it
to denote if it's a remote migration or a local migration. Local
migrations are used in snapshots and saving of the machine state and
have fewer restrictions. This patch also adjusts callers of the function
and tweaks some error messages to be more universal.
Currently there is no way to detect it via QMP and requesting "-sandbox
off" works correctly even if it was compiled out, so this will work
unless someone both requests the sandbox in qemu.conf and builds QEMU
without the support for it.