Ethernet interfaces in libvirt currently do not support bandwidth setting.
For example, following xml file for an interface will not apply these
settings to corresponding qdiscs.
<interface type="ethernet">
<mac address="02:36:1d:18:2a:e4"/>
<model type="virtio"/>
<script path=""/>
<target dev="tap361d182a-e4"/>
<bandwidth>
<inbound average="984" peak="1024" burst="64"/>
<outbound average="2000" peak="2048" burst="128"/>
</bandwidth>
</interface>
Signed-off-by: Anirban Chakraborty <abchak@juniper.net>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Commit 6e5c79a1 tried to fix deadlock between nwfilter{Define,Undefine}
and starting of guest, but this same deadlock exists for
updating/attaching network device to domain.
The deadlock was introduced by removing global QEMU driver lock because
nwfilter was counting on this lock and ensure that all driver locks are
locked inside of nwfilter{Define,Undefine}.
This patch extends usage of virNWFilterReadLockFilterUpdates to prevent
the deadlock for all possible paths in QEMU driver. LXC and UML drivers
still have global lock.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1143780
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
In one of my previous patches (3a3c3780b) I've tried to fix the
problem of nvram path disappearing on a domain that's been
started and shut down again. I fixed this by explicitly saving
domain's config file. However, I did a bit of clumsy without
realizing we have a transient domains for which we don't save the
config file. Hence, any domain using UEFI became persistent.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1160084
As of b6d4dad1 (1.2.5) libvirt keeps track if domain disks have been
frozen. However, this falls into that set of information which don't
survive domain restart. Therefore, we need to clear the flag upon some
state transitions. Moreover, once we clear the flag we must update the
status file too.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
This is a reaction to Michal's fix [1] for non-NUMA systems that also
splits out conf/ out of util/ because libvirt_util shouldn't require
libvirt_conf if it is the other way around. This particular use case
worked, but we're trying to avoid it as mentioned [2], many times.
The only functions from virnuma.c that needed numatune_conf were
virDomainNumatuneNodesetIsAvailable() and virNumaSetupMemoryPolicy().
The first one should be in numatune_conf as it works with
virDomainNumatune, the second one just needs nodeset and mode, both of
which can be passed without the need of numatune_conf.
Apart from fixing that, this patch also fixes recently added
code (between commits d2460f85^..5c8515620) that doesn't support
non-contiguous nodesets. It uses new function
virNumaNodesetIsAvailable(), which doesn't need a stub as it doesn't use
any libnuma functions, to check if every specified nodeset is available.
[1] https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2014-November/msg00118.html
[2] http://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2011-June/msg01040.html
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Particularly in qemuBuildNumaArgStr(), there was a need for the advice
due to memory backing, which needs to know the nodeset it will be pinned
to. With newer qemu this caused the following error when starting
domain:
error: internal error: Advice from numad is needed in case of
automatic numa placement
even when starting perfectly valid domain, e.g.:
...
<vcpu placement='auto'>4</vcpu>
<numatune>
<memory mode='strict' placement='auto'/>
</numatune>
<cpu>
<numa>
<cell id='0' cpus='0' memory='524288'/>
<cell id='1' cpus='1' memory='524288'/>
</numa>
</cpu>
...
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1138545
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
commit 3e1e16aa8d (Use a port from the
migration range for NBD as well) changed ndb port allocation from
remotePorts to migrationPorts, but did not change the port releasing
process, which makes an error when migrating several times (above 64):
error: internal error: Unable to find an unused port in range
'migration' (49152-49215)
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1159245
Signed-off-by: Weiwei Li <nuonuoli@tencent.com>
Signed-off-by: Ján Tomko <jtomko@redhat.com>
If VM is configured with many devices(including passthrough devices)
and large memory, libvirtd will take seconds(in the worst case) to
wait for monitor. In this period the qemu process may run on any
PCPU though I intend to pin emulator to the specified PCPU in xml
configuration.
Actually qemu process takes high cpu usage during vm startup.
So this is not the strict CPU isolation in this case.
Signed-off-by: Zhou yimin <zhouyimin@huawei.com>
NIC_RX_FILTER_CHANGED is sent by qemu any time a NIC driver in the
guest modified the NIC's RX Filter (for example, if the MAC address of
the NIC is changed by the guest).
This patch doesn't do anything useful with that event; it just sets up
all the plumbing to get news of the event into a worker thread with
all proper locking/reference counting, and provide an easy place to
add in desired functionality.
See src/qemu/EVENTHANDLERS.txt for information/instructions on adding
a libvirt-internal handler for a qemu event (using
NIC_RX_FILTER_CHANGED as an example).
If we don't properly clean up all processes in the
machine-<vmname>.scope systemd won't remove the cgroup and subsequent vm
starts fail with
'CreateMachine: File exists'
Additional processes can e.g. be added via
echo $PID > /sys/fs/cgroup/systemd/machine.slice/machine-${VMNAME}.scope/tasks
but there are other cases like
http://bugs.debian.org/761521
Invoke TerminateMachine to be on the safe side since systemd tracks the
cgroup anyway. This is a noop if all processes have terminated already.
Commit fba6bc4 introduced the non-migratable invtsc feature,
breaking save/migration with host-model and host-passthrough.
On hosts with this feature present it was automatically included
in the CPU definition, regardless of QEMU support.
Commit de0aeaf stopped including it by default for host-model,
but failed to fix host-passthrough.
This commit ignores checking of CPU features with host-passthrough,
since we don't pass them to QEMU (only -cpu host is passed),
allowing domains using host-passthrough that were saved with
the broken version of libvirtd to be restored.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1147584
On a domain startup, the variable store path is generated if needed.
The path is intended to be generated only once. However, the updated
domain definition is not saved into config dir rather than state XML
only. So later, whenever the domain is destroyed and the daemon is
restarted, the generated path is forgotten and the file may be left
behind on virDomainUndefine() call.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Request erroring out from the backing chain traveller and drop qemu's
internal backing chain integrity tester.
The backing chain traveller reports errors by itself with possibly more
detail than qemuDiskChainCheckBroken ever could.
We also need to make sure that we reconnect to existing qemu instances
even at the cost of losing the backing chain info (this really should be
stored in the XML rather than reloaded from disk, but that needs some
work).
Commit id '9a2f36ec' added a build conditional of CAP_SYS_RAWIO
in order to determine whether or not a disk definition using rawio
should be allowed on platforms without CAP_SYS_RAWIO. If one was
found, virReportError was used but the code didn't goto cleanup.
This patch adds the goto.
We are not detecting the presence of FIPS from QEMU, but from procfs and
that means it's not QEMU capability. It was decided that we will pass
this flag to QEMU even if it's not supported by old QEMU binaries.
This patch also reverts changes done by commit a21cfb0f to
qemucapabilitestest and implements a new test case in qemuxml2argvtest.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1135431
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
If there are no iothreads, then return from qemuProcessDetectIOThreadPIDs
without error; otherwise, the following occurs:
error: Failed to start domain $dom
error: An error occurred, but the cause is unknown
Modify qemuProcessStart() in order to allowing setting affinity to
specific CPU's for IOThreads. The process followed is similar to
that for the vCPU's.
This involves adding a function to fetch the IOThread id's via
qemuMonitorGetIOThreads() and adding them to iothreadpids[] list.
Then making sure all the cgroup data has been properly set up and
finally assigning affinity.
In qemuProcessInitPCIAddresses() if qemuMonitorGetAllPCIAddresses()
returns a negative (or zero) value, then no need to call the
qemuProcessDetectPCIAddresses().
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
When using split UEFI image, it may come handy if libvirt manages per
domain _VARS file automatically. While the _CODE file is RO and can be
shared among multiple domains, you certainly don't want to do that on
the _VARS file. This latter one needs to be per domain. So at the
domain startup process, if it's determined that domain needs _VARS
file it's copied from this master _VARS file. The location of the
master file is configurable in qemu.conf.
Temporary, on per domain basis the location of master NVRAM file can
be overridden by this @template attribute I'm inventing to the
<nvram/> element. All it does is holding path to the master NVRAM file
from which local copy is created. If that's the case, the map in
qemu.conf is not consulted.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Acked-by: Laszlo Ersek <lersek@redhat.com>
Total time of a migration and total downtime transfered from a source to
a destination host do not count with the transfer time to the
destination host and with the time elapsed before guest CPUs are
resumed. Thus, source libvirtd remembers when migration started and when
guest CPUs were paused. Both timestamps are transferred to destination
libvirtd which uses them to compute total migration time and total
downtime. Obviously, this requires the time to be synchronized between
the two hosts. The reported times are useless otherwise but they would
be equally useless if we didn't do this recomputation so don't lose
anything by doing it.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
When QEMU fails during incoming migration after we successfully started
it (i.e., during Perform or Finish phase), we report a rather unhelpful
message
Unable to read from monitor: Connection reset by peer
We already have a code that takes error messages from QEMU's error
output but we disable it once QEMU successfully starts. This patch
postpones this until the end of Finish phase during incoming migration
so that we can report a much better error message:
internal error: early end of file from monitor: possible problem:
Unknown savevm section or instance '0000:00:05.0/virtio-balloon' 0
load of migration failed
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1090093
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Add umask to _virCommand, allow user to set umask to command.
Set umask(002) to qemu process to overwrite the default umask
of 022 set by many distros, so that unix sockets created for
virtio-serial has expected permissions.
Fix problem reported here:
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=13078#c11https://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=888166
To use virtio-serial device, unix socket created for chardev with
default umask(022) has insufficient permissions.
e.g.:
-device virtio-serial \
-chardev socket,path=/tmp/foo,server,nowait,id=foo \
-device virtserialport,chardev=foo,name=org.fedoraproject.port.0
srwxr-xr-x 1 qemu qemu 0 21. Jul 14:19 /tmp/somefile.sock
Other users in the same group (like real user, test engines, etc)
cannot write to this socket.
Signed-off-by: Chunyan Liu <cyliu@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The 'min_guarantee' is used by VMware ESX and OpenVZ drivers,
with qemu however, libvirt should report error when starting a domain,
because this element is not used.
Resolves https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1122455
Currently, qemu driver uses qemuTranslateDiskSourcePool()
to translate disk volume information. This function is
general enough and could be used for other drivers as well,
so move it to conf/domain_conf.c along with its helpers.
- qemuTranslateDiskSourcePool: move to storage/storage_driver.c
and rename to virStorageTranslateDiskSourcePool,
- qemuAddISCSIPoolSourceHost: move to storage/storage_driver.c
and rename to virStorageAddISCSIPoolSourceHost,
- qemuTranslateDiskSourcePoolAuth: move to storage/storage_driver.c
and rename to virStorageTranslateDiskSourcePoolAuth,
- Update users of qemuTranslateDiskSourcePool to use a
new name.
Pin existing vcpus rather than existing vcpu pinning infos. This
increases the complexity of the lookup, but avoids pinning cpus that are
not enabled actually.
When editing guest's XML (on QEMU), it was possible to add multiple
listen elements into graphics parent element. However QEMU does not
support listening on multiple addresses. Configuration is tested for
multiple 'listen address' and if positive, an error is raised.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1119212
During a QEMU live migration several warning messages about job
handling could be written to syslog on the destination host:
"entering monitor without asking for a nested job is dangerous"
The messages are written because the job handling during migration
uses hard coded asyncJob values in several places that are incorrect.
This patch passes the required asyncJob value around and prevents
the warnings as well as any issues that the warnings may be referring
to.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1130089
Signed-off-by: Sam Bobroff <sam.bobroff@au1.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Ján Tomko <jtomko@redhat.com>
A future patch is going to wire up qemu active block commit jobs;
but as they have similar events and are canceled/pivoted in the
same way as block copy jobs, it is easiest to track all bookkeeping
for the commit job by reusing the <mirror> element. This patch
adds domain XML to track which job was responsible for creating a
mirroring situation, and adds a job='copy' attribute to all
existing uses of <mirror>. Along the way, it also massages the
qemu monitor backend to read the new field in order to generate
the correct type of libvirt job (even though it requires a
future patch to actually cause a qemu event that can be reported
as an active commit). It also prepares to update persistent XML
to match changes made to live XML when a copy completes.
* docs/schemas/domaincommon.rng: Enhance schema.
* docs/formatdomain.html.in: Document it.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h (_virDomainDiskDef): Add a field.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainBlockJobType): String conversion.
(virDomainDiskDefParseXML): Parse job type.
(virDomainDiskDefFormat): Output job type.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessHandleBlockJob): Distinguish
active from regular commit.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainBlockCopy): Set job type.
(qemuDomainBlockPivot, qemuDomainBlockJobImpl): Clean up job type
on completion.
* tests/qemuxml2xmloutdata/qemuxml2xmlout-disk-mirror-old.xml:
Update tests.
* tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-disk-mirror.xml: Likewise.
* tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-disk-active-commit.xml: New
file.
* tests/qemuxml2xmltest.c (mymain): Drive new test.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
We were not directly saving the domain XML to file after starting
or finishing a blockcopy. Without the startup write, a libvirtd
restart in the middle of a copy job would forget that the job was
underway. Then at pivot, we were indirectly writing new XML in
reaction to events that occur as we stop and restart the guest CPUs.
But there was a race: since pivot is an async action, it is possible
that libvirtd is restarted before the pivot completes, so if XML
changes during the event, that change was not written. The original
blockcopy code cleared out the <mirror> element prior to restarting
the CPUs, but this is also a race, observed if a user does an async
pivot and a dumpxml before the event occurs. Furthermore, this race
will interfere with active commit in a future patch, because that
code will rely on the <mirror> element at the time of the qemu event
to determine whether to inform the user of a normal commit or an
active commit.
Fix things by saving state any time we modify live XML, while
delaying XML disk modifications until after the event completes. We
still need a to teach libvirtd restarts to examine all existing
<mirror> elements to see if the job completed in the meantime (that
is, if libvirtd misses the event, the updated state still needs to be
updated in live XML), but that will be a later patch, in part because
we also need to to start taking advantage of newer qemu's ability to
keep the job around after completion rather than the current usage
where the job disappears both on error and on success.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainBlockCopy): Track XML change
on disk.
(qemuDomainBlockJobImpl, qemuDomainBlockPivot): Move job-end XML
rewrites...
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessHandleBlockJob): ...here.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Doing a blockcopy operation across a libvirtd restart is not very
robust at the moment. In particular, we are clearing the <mirror>
element prior to telling qemu to finish the job. Also, thanks to the
ability to request async completion, the user can easily regain
control prior to qemu actually finishing the effort, and they should
be able to poll the domain XML to see if the job is still going.
A future patch will fix things to actually wait until qemu is done
before modifying the XML to reflect the job completion. But since
qemu issues identical BLOCK_JOB_COMPLETE events regardless of whether
the job was cancelled (kept the original disk) or completed (pivoted
to the new disk), we have to track which of the two operations were
used to end the job. Furthermore, we'd like to avoid attempts to
end a job where we are already waiting on an earlier request to qemu
to end the job. Likewise, if we miss the qemu event (perhaps because
it arrived during a libvirtd restart), we still need enough state
recorded to be able to determine how to modify the domain XML once
we reconnect to qemu and manually learn whether the job still exists.
Although this patch doesn't actually fix the problem, it is a
preliminary step that makes it possible to track whether a job
has already begun steps towards completion.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h (virDomainDiskMirrorState): New enum.
(_virDomainDiskDef): Convert bool mirroring to new enum.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainDiskDefParseXML)
(virDomainDiskDefFormat): Handle new values.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessHandleBlockJob): Adjust
client.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainBlockPivot)
(qemuDomainBlockJobImpl): Likewise.
* docs/schemas/domaincommon.rng (diskMirror): Expose new values.
* docs/formatdomain.html.in (elementsDisks): Document it.
* tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-disk-mirror.xml: Test it.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Use better detection of hugetlbfs mount points. Yes, there can be
multiple mount points each serving different huge page size.
Since we already have ability to override the mount point in the
qemu.conf file, this crazy backward compatibility code is brought in.
Now we allow multiple mount points, so the "hugetlbfs_mount" option
must take an list of strings (mount points). But previously, it was
just a string, so we must accept both types now.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
When domain is started with numatune memory mode strict and the
nodeset does not include host NUMA node with DMA and DMA32 zones, KVM
initialization fails. This is because cgroup restrict even kernel
allocations. We are already doing numa_set_membind() which does the
same thing, only it does not restrict kernel allocations.
This patch leaves the userspace numa_set_membind() in place and moves
the cpuset.mems setting after the point where monitor comes up, but
before vcpu and emulator sub-groups are created.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
There were numerous places where numatune configuration (and thus
domain config as well) was changed in different ways. On some
places this even resulted in persistent domain definition not to be
stable (it would change with daemon's restart).
In order to uniformly change how numatune config is dealt with, all
the internals are now accessible directly only in numatune_conf.c and
outside this file accessors must be used.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Since there was already public virDomainNumatune*, I changed the
private virNumaTune to match the same, so all the uses are unified and
public API is kept:
s/vir\(Domain\)\?Numa[tT]une/virDomainNumatune/g
then shrunk long lines, and mainly functions, that were created after
that:
sed -i 's/virDomainNumatuneMemPlacementMode/virDomainNumatunePlacement/g'
And to cope with the enum name, I haad to change the constants as
well:
s/VIR_NUMA_TUNE_MEM_PLACEMENT_MODE/VIR_DOMAIN_NUMATUNE_PLACEMENT/g
Last thing I did was at least a little shortening of already long
name:
s/virDomainNumatuneDef/virDomainNumatune/g
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
This saves a few lines of code and catches the error when:
<spice autoport ='yes' defaultMode='any' ..>
<channel name='main' mode='secure'/>
</spice>
is specified with spice_tls = 0 in qemu.conf.
Instead of this error in qemuBuildGraphicsSPICECommandLine:
error: unsupported configuration: spice secure channels set in XML
configuration, but TLS port is not provided
an error is reported in qemuProcessSPICEAllocatePorts:
error: unsupported configuration: Auto allocation of spice TLS port
requested but spice TLS is disabled in qemu.conf
Inspired by:
https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2014-June/msg01408.html
As we are doing with the enum structures, a cleanup in "src/qemu/"
directory was done now. All the enums that were defined in the
header files were converted to typedefs in this directory. This
patch includes all the adjustments to remove conflicts when you do
this kind of change. "Enum-to-typedef"'s conversions were made in
"src/qemu/qemu_{capabilities, domain, migration, hotplug}.h".
Signed-off-by: Julio Faracco <jcfaracco@gmail.com>
When looking for a port to allocate, the port allocator didn't take in
consideration ports that are statically set by the user. Defining
these two graphics elements in the XML would cause an error, as the
port allocator would try to use the same port for the spice graphics
element:
<graphics type='spice' autoport='yes'/>
<graphics type='vnc' port='5900' autoport='no'/>
The new *[pP]ortReserved variables keep track of the ports that were
successfully tracked as used by the port allocator but that weren't
bound.
Closes: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1081881
Signed-off-by: Giuseppe Scrivano <gscrivan@redhat.com>
When the block job event was first added, it was for block pull,
where the active layer of the disk remains the same name. It was
also in a day where we only cared about local files, and so we
always had a canonical absolute file name. But two things have
changed since then: we now have network disks, where determining
a single absolute string does not really make sense; and we have
two-phase jobs (copy and active commit) where the name of the
active layer changes between the first event (ready, on the old
name) and second (complete, on the pivoted name).
Adam Litke reported that having an unstable string between events
makes life harder for clients. Furthermore, all of our API that
operate on a particular disk of a domain accept multiple strings:
not only the absolute name of the active layer, but also the
destination device name (such as 'vda'). As this latter name is
stable, even for network sources, it serves as a better string
to supply in block job events.
But backwards-compatibility demands that we should not change the
name handed to users unless they explicitly request it. Therefore,
this patch adds a new event, BLOCK_JOB_2 (alas, I couldn't think of
any nicer name - but at least Migrate2 and Migrate3 are precedent
for a number suffix). We must double up on emitting both old-style
and new-style events according to what clients have registered for
(see also how IOError and IOErrorReason emits double events, but
there the difference was a larger struct rather than changed
meaning of one of the struct members).
Unfortunately, adding a new event isn't something that can easily
be broken into pieces, so the commit is rather large.
* include/libvirt/libvirt.h.in (virDomainEventID): Add a new id
for VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_ID_BLOCK_JOB_2.
(virConnectDomainEventBlockJobCallback): Document new semantics.
* src/conf/domain_event.c (_virDomainEventBlockJob): Rename field,
to ensure we catch all clients.
(virDomainEventBlockJobNew): Add parameter.
(virDomainEventBlockJobDispose)
(virDomainEventBlockJobNewFromObj)
(virDomainEventBlockJobNewFromDom)
(virDomainEventDispatchDefaultFunc): Adjust clients.
(virDomainEventBlockJob2NewFromObj)
(virDomainEventBlockJob2NewFromDom): New functions.
* src/conf/domain_event.h: Add new prototypes.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (domain_event.h): Export new functions.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainBlockJobImpl): Generate two
different events.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessHandleBlockJob): Likewise.
* src/remote/remote_protocol.x
(remote_domain_event_block_job_2_msg): New struct.
(REMOTE_PROC_DOMAIN_EVENT_BLOCK_JOB_2): New RPC.
* src/remote/remote_driver.c
(remoteDomainBuildEventBlockJob2): New handler.
(remoteEvents): Register new event.
* daemon/remote.c (remoteRelayDomainEventBlockJob2): New handler.
(domainEventCallbacks): Register new event.
* tools/virsh-domain.c (vshEventCallbacks): Likewise.
(vshEventBlockJobPrint): Adjust client.
* src/remote_protocol-structs: Regenerate.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The current implementation of 'virsh blockcopy' (virDomainBlockRebase)
is limited to copying to a local file name. But future patches want
to extend it to also copy to network disks. This patch converts over
to a virStorageSourcePtr, although it should have no semantic change
visible to the user, in anticipation of those future patches being
able to use more fields for non-file destinations.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h (_virDomainDiskDef): Change type of
mirror information.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainDiskDefParseXML): Localize
mirror parsing into new object.
(virDomainDiskDefFormat): Adjust clients.
* src/qemu/qemu_domain.c (qemuDomainDeviceDefPostParse):
Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainBlockPivot)
(qemuDomainBlockJobImpl, qemuDomainBlockCopy): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
As part of the work on backing chains, I'm finding that it would
be easier to directly manipulate chains of pointers (adding a
snapshot merely adjusts pointers to form the correct list) rather
than copy data from one struct to another. This patch converts
domain disk source to be a pointer.
In this patch, the pointer is ALWAYS allocated (thanks in part to
the previous patch forwarding all disk def allocation through a
common point), and all other changse are just mechanical fallout of
the new type; there should be no functional change. It is possible
that we may want to leave the pointer NULL for a cdrom with no
medium in a later patch, but as that requires a closer audit of the
source to ensure we don't fault on a null dereference, I didn't do
it here.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h (_virDomainDiskDef): Change type of src.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c: Adjust all clients.
* src/security/security_selinux.c: Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_domain.c: Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c: Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_conf.c: Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c: Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_migration.c: Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c: Likewise.
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c: Likewise.
* src/lxc/lxc_controller.c: Likewise.
* tests/securityselinuxlabeltest.c: Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Currently, we don not acquire any job when removing a device after
DEVICE_DELETED event was received from QEMU. This means that if there is
another API running at the time DEVICE_DELETED is delivered and the API
acquired a job, we may happily change the definition of the domain the
API is working with whenever it unlocks the domain object (e.g., to talk
with its monitor). That said, we have to acquire a job before finishing
device removal to make things safe. However, doing so in the main event
loop would cause a deadlock so we need to move most of the event handler
into a separate thread.
Another good reason for both acquiring a job and handling the event in a
separate thread is that we currently remove a device backend immediately
after removing its frontend while we should only remove the backend once
we already received DEVICE_DELETED event. That is, we will have to talk
to QEMU monitor from the event handler.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
If QEMU supports DEVICE_DELETED event, we always call
qemuDomainRemoveDevice from the event handler. However, we will need to
push this call away from the main event loop and begin a job for it (see
the following commit), we need to make sure the device is fully removed
by the original thread (and within its existing job) in case the
DEVICE_DELETED event arrives before qemuDomainWaitForDeviceRemoval times
out.
Without this patch, device removals would be guaranteed to never finish
before the timeout because the could would be blocked by the original
job being still active.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1088787
Clean up unix socket files for chardevs using mode='bind',
like we clean up the monitor socket.
They are created by QEMU on startup and not really useful
after shutting it down.
commit e31b5cf393 attempted to fix libvirt's
VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_ID_RTC_CHANGE, which is documentated to always
provide the new offset of the domain's real time clock from UTC. The
problem was that, in the case that qemu is provided with an "-rtc
base=x" where x is an absolute time (rather than "utc" or
"localtime"), the offset sent by qemu's RTC_CHANGE event is *not* the
new offset from UTC, but rather is the sum of all changes to the
domain's RTC since it was started with base=x.
So, despite what was said in commit e31b5cf393, if we assume that
the original value stored in "adjustment" was the offset from UTC at
the time the domain was started, we can always determine the current
offset from UTC by simply adding the most recent (i.e. current) offset
from qemu to that original adjustment.
This patch accomplishes that by storing the initial adjustment in the
domain's status as "adjustment0". Each time a new RTC_CHANGE event is
received from qemu, we simply add adjustment0 to the value sent by
qemu, store that as the new adjustment, and forward that value on to
any event handler.
This patch (*not* e31b5cf393, which should be reverted prior to
applying this patch) fixes:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=964177
(for the case where basis='utc'. It does not fix basis='localtime')
This reverts commit e31b5cf393.
This commit attempted to work around a bug in the offset value
reported by qemu's RTC_CHANGE event in the case that a variable base
date was given on the qemu commandline. The patch mixed up the math
involved in arriving at the corrected offset to report, and in the
process added an unnecessary private attribute to the clock
element. Since that element is private/internal and not used by anyone
else, it makes sense to simplify things by removing it.
Refresh the disk backing chains when reconnecting to a qemu process
after daemon restart. There are a few internal fields that don't get
refreshed from the XML. Until we are able to do that, let's reload all
the metadata by the backing chain crawler.
As a side effect, the return value of qemuDomainObjEnterMonitorAsync is
not directly used as the return value of qemuProcess{Start,Stop}CPUs.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Move sharable PCI handling functions to domain_addr.[ch], and
change theirs prefix from 'qemu' to 'vir':
- virDomainPCIAddressAsString;
- virDomainPCIAddressBusSetModel;
- virDomainPCIAddressEnsureAddr;
- virDomainPCIAddressFlagsCompatible;
- virDomainPCIAddressGetNextSlot;
- virDomainPCIAddressReleaseSlot;
- virDomainPCIAddressReserveAddr;
- virDomainPCIAddressReserveNextSlot;
- virDomainPCIAddressReserveSlot;
- virDomainPCIAddressSetFree;
- virDomainPCIAddressSetGrow;
- virDomainPCIAddressSlotInUse;
- virDomainPCIAddressValidate;
The only change here is function names, the implementation itself
stays untouched.
Extract common allocation code from DomainPCIAddressSetCreate
into virDomainPCIAddressSetAlloc.
In "src/util/" there are many enumeration (enum) declarations.
Sometimes, it's better using a typedef for variable types,
function types and other usages. Other enumeration will be
changed to typedef's in the future.
Signed-off-by: Julio Faracco <jcfaracco@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
I almost wrote a hash value free function that just called
VIR_FREE, then realized I couldn't be the first person to
do that. Sure enough, it was worth factoring into a common
helper routine.
* src/util/virhash.h (virHashValueFree): New function.
* src/util/virhash.c (virHashValueFree): Implement it.
* src/util/virobject.h (virObjectFreeHashData): New function.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (virhash.h, virobject.h): Export them.
* src/nwfilter/nwfilter_learnipaddr.c (virNWFilterLearnInit): Use
common function.
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.c (virQEMUCapsCacheNew): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuDomainCCWAddressSetCreate):
Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.c (qemuMonitorGetBlockInfo): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessWaitForMonitor): Likewise.
* src/util/virclosecallbacks.c (virCloseCallbacksNew): Likewise.
* src/util/virkeyfile.c (virKeyFileParseGroup): Likewise.
* tests/qemumonitorjsontest.c
(testQemuMonitorJSONqemuMonitorJSONGetBlockInfo): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
In order to reuse the newly-created host-side disk struct in
the virstoragefile backing chain code, I first have to move
it to util/. This starts the process, by first moving the
security label structures.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h (virDomainDefGenSecurityLabelDef)
(virDomainDiskDefGenSecurityLabelDef, virSecurityLabelDefFree)
(virSecurityDeviceLabelDefFree, virSecurityLabelDef)
(virSecurityDeviceLabelDef): Move...
* src/util/virseclabel.h: ...to new file.
(virSecurityLabelDefNew, virSecurityDeviceLabelDefNew): Rename the
GenSecurity functions.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessAttach): Adjust callers.
* src/security/security_manager.c (virSecurityManagerGenLabel):
Likewise.
* src/security/security_selinux.c
(virSecuritySELinuxSetSecurityFileLabel): Likewise.
* src/util/virseclabel.c: New file.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c: Move security code, and fix fallout.
* src/Makefile.am (UTIL_SOURCES): Build new file.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (domain_conf.h): Move symbols...
(virseclabel.h): ...to new section.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
It's finally time to start tracking disk backing chains in
<domain> XML. The first step is to start refactoring code
so that we have an object more convenient for representing
each host source resource in the context of a single guest
<disk>. Ultimately, I plan to move the new type into src/util
where it can be reused by virStorageFile, but to make the
transition easier to review, this patch just creates the
new type then fixes everything until it compiles again.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h (_virDomainDiskDef): Split...
(_virDomainDiskSourceDef): ...to new struct.
(virDomainDiskAuthClear): Use new type.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainDiskDefFree): Split...
(virDomainDiskSourceDefClear): ...to new function.
(virDomainDiskGetType, virDomainDiskSetType)
(virDomainDiskGetSource, virDomainDiskSetSource)
(virDomainDiskGetDriver, virDomainDiskSetDriver)
(virDomainDiskGetFormat, virDomainDiskSetFormat)
(virDomainDiskAuthClear, virDomainDiskGetActualType)
(virDomainDiskDefParseXML, virDomainDiskSourceDefFormat)
(virDomainDiskDefFormat, virDomainDiskDefForeachPath)
(virDomainDiskDefGetSecurityLabelDef)
(virDomainDiskSourceIsBlockType): Adjust all users.
* src/lxc/lxc_controller.c (virLXCControllerSetupDisk):
Likewise.
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c (lxcDomainAttachDeviceMknodHelper):
Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuAddRBDHost, qemuParseRBDString)
(qemuParseDriveURIString, qemuParseGlusterString)
(qemuParseISCSIString, qemuParseNBDString)
(qemuDomainDiskGetSourceString, qemuBuildDriveStr)
(qemuBuildCommandLine, qemuParseCommandLineDisk)
(qemuParseCommandLine): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_conf.c (qemuCheckSharedDevice)
(qemuAddISCSIPoolSourceHost, qemuTranslateDiskSourcePool):
Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainUpdateDeviceConfig)
(qemuDomainPrepareDiskChainElement)
(qemuDomainSnapshotCreateInactiveExternal)
(qemuDomainSnapshotPrepareDiskExternalBackingInactive)
(qemuDomainSnapshotPrepareDiskInternal)
(qemuDomainSnapshotPrepare)
(qemuDomainSnapshotCreateSingleDiskActive)
(qemuDomainSnapshotUndoSingleDiskActive)
(qemuDomainBlockPivot, qemuDomainBlockJobImpl)
(qemuDomainBlockCopy, qemuDomainBlockCommit): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_migration.c (qemuMigrationIsSafe): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessGetVolumeQcowPassphrase)
(qemuProcessInitPasswords): Likewise.
* src/security/security_selinux.c
(virSecuritySELinuxSetSecurityFileLabel): Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_driver.c (virStorageFileInitFromDiskDef):
Likewise.
* tests/securityselinuxlabeltest.c (testSELinuxLoadDef):
Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Wire up all the pieces to send arbitrary qemu events to a
client using libvirt-qemu.so. If the extra bookkeeping of
generating event objects even when no one is listening turns
out to be noticeable, we can try to further optimize things
by adding a counter for how many connections are using events,
and only dump events when the counter is non-zero; but for
now, I didn't think it was worth the code complexity.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c
(qemuConnectDomainQemuMonitorEventRegister)
(qemuConnectDomainQemuMonitorEventDeregister): New functions.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.h (qemuMonitorEmitEvent): New prototype.
(qemuMonitorDomainEventCallback): New typedef.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.c (qemuMonitorJSONIOProcessEvent):
Report events.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.c (qemuMonitorEmitEvent): New function, to
pass events through.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessHandleEvent): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Any source file which calls the logging APIs now needs
to have a VIR_LOG_INIT("source.name") declaration at
the start of the file. This provides a static variable
of the virLogSource type.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
We have to explicitly destroy TAP devices on FreeBSD because
they're not freed after being closed, otherwise we end up with
orphaned TAP devices after destroying a domain.
Change any method names with Usb, Pci or Scsi to use
USB, PCI and SCSI since they are abbreviations.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
For extracting hostdev codes from qemu_hostdev.c to common library, change qemu
specific COLD_BOOT handling to be a flag, and pass it to hostdev functions.
For extracting hostdev codes from qemu_hostdev.c to common library, change qemu
specific cfg->relaxedACS handling to be a flag, and pass it to hostdev
functions.
When attaching to a QEMU process, the def->seclabels array is
going to be empty. The qemuProcessAttach method must thus
populate it with data for the security drivers.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The qemu_bridge_filter.c file had some helpers for calling
the ebtablesXXX functions todo bridge filtering. The only
thing these helpers did was to overwrite the original error
message from the ebtables code. For added fun, the callers
of these helpers overwrote the errors yet again. For even
more fun, one of the helpers called another helper and
overwrite its errors too.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
There might be some use cases, where user wants to prepare the host or
its environment prior to starting a network and do some cleanup after
the network has been shut down. Consider all the functionality that
libvirt doesn't currently have as an example what a hook script can
possibly do.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
On some platforms like IBM PowerNV the NUMA node numbers can be
non-sequential. For eg. numactl --hardware o/p from such a machine looks
as given below
node distances:
node 0 1 16 17
0: 10 40 40 40
1: 40 10 40 40
16: 40 40 10 40
17: 40 40 40 10
The NUMA nodes are 0,1,16,17
Libvirt uses sequential index as NUMA node numbers and this can
result in crash or incorrect results.
Signed-off-by: Shivaprasad G Bhat <sbhat@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Pradipta Kr. Banerjee <bpradip@in.ibm.com>
The code took into account only the global permissions. The domains now
support per-vm DAC labels and per-image DAC labels. Use the most
specific label available.
The public virConnectRef and virConnectClose API are just thin
wrappers around virObjectRef/virObjectRef, with added object
validation and an error reset. Within our backend drivers, use
of the object validation is just an inefficiency since we always
pass valid objects. More important to think about is what
happens with the error reset; our uses of virConnectRef happened
to be safe (since we hadn't encountered any earlier errors), but
in several cases the use of virConnectClose could lose a real
error.
Ideally, we should also avoid calling virConnectOpen() from
within backend drivers - but that is a known situation that
needs much more design work.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessReconnectHelper)
(qemuProcessReconnect): Avoid nested public API call.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuAutostartDomains)
(qemuStateInitialize, qemuStateStop): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_migration.c (doPeer2PeerMigrate): Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_driver.c (storageDriverAutostart):
Likewise.
* src/uml/uml_driver.c (umlAutostartConfigs): Likewise.
* src/lxc/lxc_process.c (virLXCProcessAutostartAll): Likewise.
(virLXCProcessReboot): Likewise, and avoid leaking conn on error.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1047659
If a VM dies very early during an attempted connect to the guest agent
while the locks are down the domain monitor object will be freed. The
object is then accessed later as any failure during guest agent startup
isn't considered fatal.
In the current upstream version this doesn't lead to a crash as
virObjectLock called when entering the monitor in
qemuProcessDetectVcpuPIDs checks the pointer before attempting to
dereference (lock) it. The NULL pointer is then caught in the monitor
helper code.
Before the introduction of virObjectLockable - observed on 0.10.2 - the
pointer is locked directly via virMutexLock leading to a crash.
To avoid this problem we need to differentiate between the guest agent
not being present and the VM quitting when the locks were down. The fix
reorganizes the code in qemuConnectAgent to add the check and then adds
special handling to the callers.
Currently, the qemuProcessStop tries to open the domain log file
and saves the original error afterwards. Then all the cleanup is
done after which the error is restored back. This has however one
flaw: if opening of the log file fails an error is reported,
which results in previous error being overwritten (the useful
one, e.g. "PCI device XXXX:XXXX could not be found"). Hence, user
sees something like:
error: failed to create logfile /var/log/libvirt/qemu/ovirt_usb.log: No such file or directory
instead of:
error: internal error: Did not find USB device 8644:8003
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Reported-by: Zhou Yimin <zhouyimin@huawei.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1035955
There's a window when starting a qemu process between fork() and exec()
during which we are doing things that may fail but not tunnelling the
error to the daemon. This is basically all within qemuProcessHook().
So whenever we fail in something, e.g. placing a process onto numa node,
users are left with:
error: Child quit during startup handshake: Input/output error
while the original error is thrown into the domain log:
libvirt: error : internal error: NUMA memory tuning in 'preferred'
mode only supports single node
Hence, we should read the log file and search for the error message and
report it to users.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Report the error in virPortAllocatorAcquire instead
of doing it in every caller.
The error contains the port range name instead of the intended
use for the port, e.g.:
Unable to find an unused port in range 'display' (65534-65535)
instead of:
Unable to find an unused port for SPICE
This also adds error reporting when the QEMU driver could not
find an unused port for VNC, VNC WebSockets or NBD migration.
In the qemuProcessReconnectHelper() a new thread that does all the
interesting work is spawned. The rationale is to not block the daemon
startup process in case of unresponsive qemu. However, the thread
handler is a local variable which gets lost once the control goes out of
scope. Hence the thread gets leaked. We can avoid this if the thread
isn't made joinable.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
When starting a VM the qemu process may filter out some requested
features of a domain as it's not supported either by the host or by
qemu. Libvirt didn't check if this happened which might end up in
changing of the guest ABI when migrating.
The proof of concept implementation adds the check for the recently
introduced kvm_pv_unhalt cpuid feature bit. This feature depends on both
qemu and host kernel support and thus increase the possibility of guest
ABI breakage.
One of my previous patches (c7ac2519b7) did try to fix the issue when
domain dies too soon during migration. However, this clumsy approach was
missing removal of qemuProcessHandleMonitorDestroy resulting in double
unrefing of mon->vm and hence producing the daemon crash:
==11843== Invalid read of size 4
==11843== at 0x50C28C5: virObjectUnref (virobject.c:255)
==11843== by 0x1148F7DB: qemuMonitorDispose (qemu_monitor.c:258)
==11843== by 0x50C2991: virObjectUnref (virobject.c:262)
==11843== by 0x50C2D13: virObjectFreeCallback (virobject.c:388)
==11843== by 0x509C37B: virEventPollCleanupHandles (vireventpoll.c:583)
==11843== by 0x509C711: virEventPollRunOnce (vireventpoll.c:652)
==11843== by 0x509A620: virEventRunDefaultImpl (virevent.c:274)
==11843== by 0x520D21C: virNetServerRun (virnetserver.c:1112)
==11843== by 0x11F368: main (libvirtd.c:1513)
==11843== Address 0x13b88864 is 4 bytes inside a block of size 136 free'd
==11843== at 0x4A07F5C: free (in /usr/lib64/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
==11843== by 0x5079A2F: virFree (viralloc.c:580)
==11843== by 0x50C29E3: virObjectUnref (virobject.c:270)
==11843== by 0x114770E4: qemuProcessHandleMonitorDestroy (qemu_process.c:1103)
==11843== by 0x1148F7CB: qemuMonitorDispose (qemu_monitor.c:257)
==11843== by 0x50C2991: virObjectUnref (virobject.c:262)
==11843== by 0x50C2D13: virObjectFreeCallback (virobject.c:388)
==11843== by 0x509C37B: virEventPollCleanupHandles (vireventpoll.c:583)
==11843== by 0x509C711: virEventPollRunOnce (vireventpoll.c:652)
==11843== by 0x509A620: virEventRunDefaultImpl (virevent.c:274)
==11843== by 0x520D21C: virNetServerRun (virnetserver.c:1112)
==11843== by 0x11F368: main (libvirtd.c:1513)
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Include reference of the VM object pointer and name in debug
logs for QEMU start/stop functions. Also make sure we log the
PID that we started, since it isn't available elsewhere in the
logs.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The following sequence
1. Define a persistent QMEU guest
2. Start the QEMU guest
3. Stop libvirtd
4. Kill the QEMU process
5. Start libvirtd
6. List persistent guests
At the last step, the previously running persistent guest
will be missing. This is because of a race condition in the
QEMU driver startup code. It does
1. Load all VM state files
2. Spawn thread to reconnect to each VM
3. Load all VM config files
Only at the end of step 3, does the 'virDomainObjPtr' get
marked as "persistent". There is therefore a window where
the thread reconnecting to the VM will remove the persistent
VM from the list.
The easy fix is to simply switch the order of steps 2 & 3.
In addition to this though, we must only attempt to reconnect
to a VM which had a non-zero PID loaded from its state file.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The 'error' cleanup block in qemuProcessReconnect() had a
'return' statement in the middle of it. This caused a leak
of virConnectPtr & virQEMUDriverConfigPtr instances. This
was identified because netcf recently started checking its
refcount in libvirtd shutdown:
netcfStateCleanup:109 : internal error: Attempt to close netcf state driver with open connections
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Prefer using VFIO (if available) to the legacy KVM device passthrough.
With this patch a PCI passthrough device without the driver configured
will be started with VFIO if it's available on the host. If not legacy
KVM passthrough is checked and error is reported if it's not available.
The change in ef29de14c3 that introduced
better error logging from qemu introduced a warning from coverity about
unused return value from lseek. Silence this warning and fix typo in the
corresponding error message.
Reported by: John Ferlan
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1011330 (case D)
qemuProcessStart created two references to virQEMUDriverConfigPtr before
calling fork():
cfg = virQEMUDriverGetConfig(driver);
...
hookData.cfg = virObjectRef(cfg);
However, the child only unreferenced hookData.cfg and the parent only
removed the cfg reference. That said, we don't need to increment the
reference counter when assigning cfg to hookData. Both the child and the
parent will correctly remove the reference on cfg (the child will do
that through hookData).
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
The previous patches added infrastructure to report better errors from
monitor in some cases. This patch finalizes this "feature" by enabling
this enhanced error reporting on early phases of VM startup. In these
phases the possibility of qemu producing a useful error message is
really high compared to running it during the whole life cycle. After
the start up is complete, the feature is disabled to provide the usual
error messages so that users are not confused by possibly irrelevant
messages that may be in the domain log.
The original motivation to do this enhancement is to capture errors when
using VFIO device passthrough, where qemu reports errors after the
monitor is initialized and the existing error catching code couldn't
catch this producing a unhelpful message:
# virsh start test
error: Failed to start domain test
error: Unable to read from monitor: Connection reset by peer
With this change, the message is changed to:
# virsh start test
error: Failed to start domain test
error: internal error: early end of file from monitor: possible problem:
qemu-system-x86_64: -device vfio-pci,host=00:1a.0,id=hostdev0,bus=pci.0,addr=0x5: vfio: error, group 8 is not viable, please ensure all devices within the iommu_group are bound to their vfio bus driver.
qemu-system-x86_64: -device vfio-pci,host=00:1a.0,id=hostdev0,bus=pci.0,addr=0x5: vfio: failed to get group 8
qemu-system-x86_64: -device vfio-pci,host=00:1a.0,id=hostdev0,bus=pci.0,addr=0x5: Device 'vfio-pci' could not be initialized
Teach the function to skip character device definitions printed by qemu
at startup in addition to libvirt log messages and make it usable from
outside of qemu_process.c. Also add documentation about the func.
While debugging a failure of 'virsh qemu-attach', I noticed that
we were leaking the count of active domains on failure. This
means that a libvirtd session that is supposed to quit after
active domains disappear will hang around forever.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessAttach): Undo count of
active domains on failure.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
QEMU ARM boards don't give us any way to explicitly wire in
a -chardev, so use the old style -serial options.
Unfortunately this isn't as simple as just turning off the CHARDEV flag
for qemu-system-arm, as upcoming virtio support _will_ use device/chardev.
When using a <interface type="network"> that points to a network with
hostdev forwarding mode a hostdev alias is created for the network. This
allias is inserted into the hostdev list, but is backed with a part of
the network object that it is connected to.
When a VM is being stopped qemuProcessStop() calls
networkReleaseActualDevice() which eventually frees the memory for the
hostdev object. Afterwards when the domain definition is being freed by
virDomainDefFree() an invalid pointer is accessed by
virDomainHostdevDefFree() and may cause a crash of the daemon.
This patch removes the entry in the hostdev list before freeing the
depending memory to avoid this issue.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1000973
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=822052
When doing a live migration, if the destination fails for any
reason after the point in which files should be labeled, then
the cleanup of the destination would restore the labels to their
defaults, even though the source is still trying to continue
running with the image open. Bug 822052 mentioned one source
of live migration failure - a mismatch in SELinux virt_use_nfs
settings (on for source, off for destination); but I found other
situations that would also trigger it (for example, having a
graphics device tied to port 5999 on the source, and a different
domain on the destination already using that port, so that the
destination cannot reuse the port).
In short, just as cleanup of the source on a successful migration
must not relabel files (because the destination would be crippled
by the relabel), cleanup of the destination on a failed migration
must not relabel files (because the source would be crippled).
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessStart): Set flag to avoid
label restoration when cleaning up on failed migration.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The VIR_DOMAIN_PAUSED_GUEST_PANICKED constant is badly named,
leaking the QEMU event name. Elsewhere in the API we use
'CRASHED' rather than 'PANICKED', and the addition of 'GUEST'
is redundant since all events are guest related.
Thus rename it to VIR_DOMAIN_PAUSED_CRASHED, which matches
with VIR_DOMAIN_RUNNING_CRASHED and VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_CRASHED.
It was added in commit 14e7e0ae8d
which post-dates v1.1.0, so is safe to rename before 1.1.1
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Currently the QEMU driver creates the VM's cgroup prior to
forking, and then uses a virCommand hook to move the child
into the cgroup. This won't work with systemd whose APIs
do the creation of cgroups + attachment of processes atomically.
Fortunately we have a handshake taking place between the
QEMU driver and the child process prior to QEMU being exec()d,
which was introduced to allow setup of disk locking. By good
fortune this synchronization point can be used to enable the
QEMU driver to do atomic setup of cgroups removing the use
of the hook script.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Use the new virCgroupNewDetect function to determine cgroup
placement of existing running VMs. This will allow the legacy
cgroups creation APIs to be removed entirely
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The translation must be done before both of cgroup and security
setting, otherwise since the disk source is not translated yet,
it might be skipped on cgroup and security setting.
In case libvirtd is asked to unplug a device but the device is actually
unplugged later when libvirtd is not running, we need to detect that and
remove such device when libvirtd starts again and reconnects to running
domains.
A future patch wants the DAC security manager to be able to safely
get the supplemental group list for a given uid, but at the time
of a fork rather than during initialization so as to pick up on
live changes to the system's group database. This patch adds the
framework, including the possibility of a pre-fork callback
failing.
For now, any driver that implements a prefork callback must be
robust against the possibility of being part of a security stack
where a later element in the chain fails prefork. This means
that drivers cannot do any action that requires a call to postfork
for proper cleanup (no grabbing a mutex, for example). If this
is too prohibitive in the future, we would have to switch to a
transactioning sequence, where each driver has (up to) 3 callbacks:
PreForkPrepare, PreForkCommit, and PreForkAbort, to either clean
up or commit changes made during prepare.
* src/security/security_driver.h (virSecurityDriverPreFork): New
callback.
* src/security/security_manager.h (virSecurityManagerPreFork):
Change signature.
* src/security/security_manager.c (virSecurityManagerPreFork):
Optionally call into driver, and allow returning failure.
* src/security/security_stack.c (virSecurityDriverStack):
Wrap the handler for the stack driver.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessStart): Adjust caller.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
When virAsprintf was changed from a function to a macro
reporting OOM error in dc6f2da, it was documented as returning
0 on success. This is incorrect, it returns the number of bytes
written as asprintf does.
Some of the functions were converted to use virAsprintf's return
value directly, changing the return value on success from 0 to >= 0.
For most of these, this is not a problem, but the change in
virPCIDriverDir breaks PCI passthrough.
The return value check in virhashtest pre-dates virAsprintf OOM
conversion.
vmwareMakePath seems to be unused.
At vm startup and attach attempt to set the balloon driver statistics
collection period based on the value found in the domain xml file. This
is not done at reconnect since it's possible that a collection period
was set on the live guest and making the set period call would reset to
whatever value is stored in the config file.
Setting the stats collection period has a side effect of searching through
the qom-list output for the virtio balloon driver and making sure that it
has the right properties in order to allow setting of a collection period
and eventually fetching of statistics.
The walk through the qom-list is expensive and thus the balloonpath will
be saved in the monitor private structure as well as a flag indicating
that the initialization has already been attempted (in the event that a
path is not found, no sense to keep checking).
This processing model conforms to the qom object model model which
requires setting object properties after device startup. That is, it's
not possible to pass the period along via the startup code as it won't
be recognized.
Convert the type of loop iterators named 'i', 'j', k',
'ii', 'jj', 'kk', to be 'size_t' instead of 'int' or
'unsigned int', also santizing 'ii', 'jj', 'kk' to use
the normal 'i', 'j', 'k' naming
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Whenever virPortAllocatorRelease is called with port == 0, it complains
that the port is not in an allowed range, which is expectable as the
port was never allocated. Let's make virPortAllocatorRelease ignore 0
ports in a similar way free() ignores NULL pointers.
Add monitor callback API domainGuestPanic, that implements
'destroy', 'restart' and 'preserve' events of the 'on_crash'
in the XML when domain crashed.
Implement check whether (maximum) vCPUs doesn't exceed machine
type's cpu-max settings.
On older versions of QEMU the check is disabled.
Signed-off-by: Michal Novotny <minovotn@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=971485
As of d7f9d82753 we copy the listen
address from the qemu.conf config file in case none has been provided
via XML. But later, when migrating, we should not include such listen
address in the migratable XML as it is something autogenerated, not
requested by user. Moreover, the binding to the listen address will
likely fail, unless the address is '0.0.0.0' or its IPv6 equivalent.
This patch introduces a new boolean attribute to virDomainGraphicsListenDef
to distinguish autofilled listen addresses. However, we must keep the
attribute over libvirtd restarts, so it must be kept within status XML.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=964177
Though both libvirt and QEMU's document say RTC_CHANGE returns
the offset from the host UTC, qemu actually returns the offset
from the specified date instead when specific date is provided
(-rtc base=$date).
It's not safe for qemu to fix it in code, it worked like that
for 3 years, changing it now may break other QEMU use cases.
What qemu tries to do is to fix the document:
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2013-05/msg04782.html
And in libvirt side, instead of replying on the value from qemu,
this converts the offset returned from qemu to the offset from
host UTC, by:
/*
* a: the offset from qemu RTC_CHANGE event
* b: The specified date (-rtc base=$date)
* c: the host date when libvirt gets the RTC_CHANGE event
* offset: What libvirt will report
*/
offset = a + (b - c);
The specified date (-rtc base=$date) is recorded in clock's def as
an internal only member (may be useful to exposed outside?).
Internal only XML tag "basetime" is introduced to not lose the
guest's basetime after libvirt restarting/reloading:
<clock offset='variable' adjustment='304' basis='utc' basetime='1370423588'/>
Currently qemuDomainReboot() does reboot in two phases:
qemuMonitorSystemPowerdown() and qemuProcessFakeReboot().
qemuMonitorSystemPowerdown() shutdowns the domain and saves domain
state/reason as VIR_DOMAIN_SHUTDOWN_UNKNOWN.
qemuProcessFakeReboot() sets domain state/reason to
VIR_DOMAIN_RESUMED_UNPAUSED but does not save domain state changes.
Subsequent restart of libvirtd leads to restoring domain state/reason to
saved that is VIR_DOMAIN_SHUTDOWN_UNKNOWN and to automatic shutdown of
the domain. This commit adds virDomainSaveStatus() into
qemuProcessFakeReboot() to avoid unexpected shutdowns.
Since 0d70656afd, it starts to access the sysfs files to build
the qemu command line (by virSCSIDeviceGetSgName, which is to find
out the scsi generic device name by adpater🚌target:unit), there
is no way to work around, qemu wants to see the scsi generic device
like "/dev/sg6" anyway.
And there might be other places which need to access sysfs files
when building qemu command line in future.
Instead of increasing the arguments of qemuBuildCommandLine, this
introduces a new callback for qemuBuildCommandLine, and thus tests
can register their own callbacks for sysfs test input files accessing.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.h: (New callback struct
qemuBuildCommandLineCallbacks;
extern buildCommandLineCallbacks)
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c: (wire up the callback struct)
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c: (Use the new syntax of qemuBuildCommandLine)
* src/qemu/qemu_hotplug.c: Likewise
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c: Likewise
* tests/testutilsqemu.[ch]: (Helper testSCSIDeviceGetSgName;
callback struct testCallbacks;)
* tests/qemuxml2argvtest.c: (Use testCallbacks)
* src/tests/qemuxmlnstest.c: (Like above)
Resolves:https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=927620
#kill -STOP `pidof qemu-kvm`
#virsh destroy $guest --graceful
error: Failed to destroy domain testVM
error: An error occurred, but the cause is unknown
With --graceful, SIGTERM always is emitted to kill driver
process, but it won't success till burning out waiting time
in case of process being stopped.
But domain destroy without --graceful can work, SIGKILL will
be emitted to the stopped process after 10 secs which always
kills a process even one that is currently stopped.
So report an error after burning out waiting time in this case.
This changes the helpers qemu{Add,Remove}SharedDisk into
qemu{Add,Remove}SharedDevice, as most of the code in the helpers
can be reused for scsi host device.
To track the shared scsi host device, first it finds out the
device path (e.g. /dev/s[dr]*) which is mapped to the sg device,
and use device ID of the found device path (/dev/s[dr]*) as the
hash key. This is because of the device ID is not unique between
between /dev/s[dr]* and /dev/sg*, e.g.
% sg_map
/dev/sg0 /dev/sda
/dev/sg1 /dev/sr0
% ls -l /dev/sda
brw-rw----. 1 root disk 8, 0 May 2 19:26 /dev/sda
%ls -l /dev/sg0
crw-rw----. 1 root disk 21, 0 May 2 19:26 /dev/sg0
"Shared disk" is not only the thing we should care about after "scsi
hostdev" is introduced. A same scsi device can be used as "disk" for
one domain, and as "scsi hostdev" for another domain at the same time.
That's why this patch renames qemu_driver->sharedDisks. Related functions
and structs are also renamed.
Adding a VNC WebSocket support for QEMU driver. This functionality is
in upstream qemu from commit described as v1.3.0-982-g7536ee4, so the
capability is being recognized based on QEMU version for now.
Although virtio-scsi supports SCSI PR (Persistent Reservations),
the device on host may do not support it. To avoid losing data,
Just like PCI and USB pass through devices, only one live guest
is allowed per SCSI host pass through device."
Signed-off-by: Han Cheng <hanc.fnst@cn.fujitsu.com>
VFIO device assignment requires a cgroup ACL to be setup for access to
the /dev/vfio/nn "group" device for any devices that will be assigned
to a guest. In the case of a host device that is allocated from a
pool, it was being allocated during qemuBuildCommandLine(), which is
called by qemuProcessStart() *after* the all-encompassing
qemuSetupCgroup() was called, meaning that the standard Cgroup ACL
setup wasn't creating ACLs for these devices allocated from pools.
One possible solution was to manually add a single ACL down inside
qemuBuildCommandLine() when networkAllocateActualDevice() is called,
but that has two problems: 1) the function that adds the cgroup ACL
requires a virDomainObjPtr, which isn't available in
qemuBuildCommandLine(), and 2) we really shouldn't be doing network
device setup inside qemuBuildCommandLine() anyway.
Instead, I've created a new function called
qemuNetworkPrepareDevices() which is called just before
qemuPrepareHostDevices() during qemuProcessStart() (explanation of
ordering in the comments), i.e. well before the call to
qemuSetupCgroup(). To minimize code churn in a patch that will be
backported to 1.0.5-maint, qemuNetworkPrepareDevices only does
networkAllocateActualDevice() and the bare amount of setup required
for type='hostdev network devices, but it eventually should do *all*
device setup for guest network devices.
Note that some of the code that was previously needed in
qemuBuildCommandLine() is no longer required when
networkAllocateActualDevice() is called earlier:
* qemuAssignDeviceHostdevAlias() is already done further down in
qemuProcessStart().
* qemuPrepareHostdevPCIDevices() is called by
qemuPrepareHostDevices() which is called after
qemuNetworkPrepareDevices() in qemuProcessStart().
As hinted above, this new function should be moved into a separate
qemu_network.c (or similarly named) file along with
qemuPhysIfaceConnect(), qemuNetworkIfaceConnect(), and
qemuOpenVhostNet(), and expanded to call those functions as well, then
the nnets loop in qemuBuildCommandLine() should be reduced to only
build the commandline string (which itself can be in a separate
qemuInterfaceBuilldCommandLine() function as suggested by
Michal). However, this will require storing away an array of tapfd and
vhostfd that are needed for the commandline, so I would rather do that
in a separate patch and leave this patch at the minimum to fix the
bug.
The source code base needs to be adapted as well. Some files
include virutil.h just for the string related functions (here,
the include is substituted to match the new file), some include
virutil.h without any need (here, the include is removed), and
some require both.
Commit eca3fdf inadvertantly caused a failure to start for any domain
with the following in its config:
<graphics type='spice' autoport='yes'/>
The problem is that when tlsPort == 0 and defaultMode == "any" (which
is the default for defaultMode), this would be flagged in the code as
"needTLSPort", and if there was then no spice tls config, the new
error+fail would happen.
This patch checks for the case of defaultMode == "any", and in that
case simply doesn't allocate a TLS port (since that's probably not
what the user wanted, and it would have failed later anyway.). It does
leave the error in place for cases when the user specifically asked to
use tls in one way or another, though.
When a user requests auto-allocation of the spice TLS port but spice TLS
is disabled in qemu.conf, we start the machine and let qemu fail instead
of erroring out sooner.
Add an error message so that this doesn't happen.
These were previously being set in a custom hook function, but now
that virCommand directly supports setting them, we can eliminate that
part of the hook and call the APIs directly.
Ensure that the driver struct field names match the public
API names. For an API virXXXX we must have a driver struct
field xXXXX. ie strip the leading 'vir' and lowercase any
leading uppercase letters.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Historically QEMU/LXC guests have been placed in a cgroup layout
that is
$LOCATION-OF-LIBVIRTD/libvirt/{qemu,lxc}/$VMNAME
This is bad for a number of reasons
- The cgroup hierarchy gets very deep which seriously
impacts kernel performance due to cgroups scalability
limitations.
- It is hard to setup cgroup policies which apply across
services and virtual machines, since all VMs are underneath
the libvirtd service.
To address this the default cgroup location is changed to
be
/system/$VMNAME.{lxc,qemu}.libvirt
This puts virtual machines at the same level in the hierarchy
as system services, allowing consistent policy to be setup
across all of them.
This also honours the new resource partition location from the
XML configuration, for example
<resource>
<partition>/virtualmachines/production</partitions>
</resource>
will result in the VM being placed at
/virtualmachines/production/$VMNAME.{lxc,qemu}.libvirt
NB, with the exception of the default, /system, path which
is intended to always exist, libvirt will not attempt to
auto-create the partitions in the XML. It is the responsibility
of the admin/app to configure the partitions. Later libvirt
APIs will provide a way todo this.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Instead of calling virCgroupForDomain every time we need
the virCgrouPtr instance, just do it once at Vm startup
and cache a reference to the object in qemuDomainObjPrivatePtr
until shutdown of the VM. Removing the virCgroupPtr from
the QEMU driver state also means we don't have stale mount
info, if someone mounts the cgroups filesystem after libvirtd
has been started
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 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.
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.
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>
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>
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.
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>
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.
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
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
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>
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>
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.
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 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).
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).
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
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>
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>
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>
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>
This will allow storing additional topology data in the NUMA topology
definition.
This patch changes the storage type and fixes fallout of the change
across the drivers using it.
This patch also changes semantics of adding new NUMA cell information.
Until now the data were re-allocated and copied to the topology
definition. This patch changes the addition function to steal the
pointer to a pre-allocated structure to simplify the code.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=892079
One of my previous patches (f2a4e5f176) tried to fix crashing
libvirtd on domain detroy. However, we need to copy pattern from
qemuProcessHandleMonitorEOF() instead of decrementing reference
counter. The rationale for this is, if qemu process is dying due
to domain being destroyed, we obtain EOF on both the monitor and
agent sockets. However, if the exit is expected, qemuProcessStop
is called, which cleans both agent and monitor sockets up. We
want qemuAgentClose() to be called iff the EOF is not expected,
so we don't leak an FD and memory. Moreover, there could be race
with qemuProcessHandleMonitorEOF() which could have already
closed the agent socket, in which case we don't want to do
anything.
The virDomainObj, qemuAgent, qemuMonitor, lxcMonitor classes
all require a mutex, so can be switched to use virObjectLockable
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=892079
With current code, if user calls virDomainPMSuspendForDuration()
followed by virDomainDestroy(), the former API checks for qemu agent
presence, which will evaluate as true (if agent is configured). While
talking to qemu agent, the qemu driver is unlocked, so the latter API
starts executing. However, if machine dies meanwhile, libvirtd gets
EOF on the agent socket and qemuProcessHandleAgentEOF() is called. The
handler clears reference to qemu agent while the destroy API already
holding a reference to it. This leads to NULL dereferencing later in
the code. Therefore, the agent pointer should be set to NULL only if
we are the exclusive owner of it.
Perform all the appropriate plumbing.
When qemu/KVM VMs are paused manually through a monitor not-owned by libvirt,
libvirt will think of them as "paused" event after they are resumed and
effectively running. With this patch the discrepancy goes away.
This is meant to address bug 892791.
Signed-off-by: Andres Lagar-Cavilla <andres@lagarcavilla.org>
This prevents domain starting and disk attaching if the shared disk's
setting conflicts with other active domain(s), E.g. A domain with
"sgio" set as "filtered", however, another active domain is using
it set as "unfiltered".
This introduces a hash table for qemu driver, to store the shared
disk's info as (@major:minor, @ref_count). @ref_count is the number
of domains which shares the disk.
Since we only care about if the disk support unprivileged SG_IO
commands, and the SG_IO commands only make sense for block disk,
this patch only manages (add/remove hash entry) the shared disk for
block disk.
* src/qemu/qemu_conf.h: (Add member 'sharedDisks' of type
virHashTablePtr; Declare helpers
qemuGetSharedDiskKey, qemuAddSharedDisk
and qemuRemoveSharedDisk)
* src/qemu/qemu_conf.c (Implement the 3 helpers)
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (Update 'sharedDisks' when domain
starting and shutdown)
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (Update 'sharedDisks' when attaching
or detaching disk).
Commit b3f2b4ca5c left buf unallocated in
the case of QMP capability probing being used, leading to a segfault in
strlen in the cleanup path.
This patch opens the log and allocates the buffer if QMP probing was
used, so we can display the helpful error message.
Despite our great effort we still parsed qemu log output.
We wouldn't notice unless upcoming qemu 1.4 changed the
format of the logs slightly. Anyway, now we should gather
all interesting knobs like pty paths from monitor. Moreover,
since for historical reasons the first console can be just
an alias to the first serial port, we need to check this and
copy the pty path if that's the case to the first console.
This reverts commit 28224c4d2a
which shouldn't be needed at all because with current qemu
we obtain all paths from 'query-chardev' output. We ought
not parse log output at all anymore.
Since 586502189edf9fd0f89a83de96717a2ea826fdb0 qemu commit, the log
lines reporting chardev's path has changed from:
$ ./x86_64-softmmu/qemu-system-x86_64 -serial pty -serial pty -monitor pty
char device redirected to /dev/pts/5
char device redirected to /dev/pts/6
char device redirected to /dev/pts/7
to:
$ ./x86_64-softmmu/qemu-system-x86_64 -serial pty -serial pty -monitor pty
char device compat_monitor0 redirected to /dev/pts/5
char device serial0 redirected to /dev/pts/6
char device serial1 redirected to /dev/pts/7
However, with current code we are not prepared for such change, which
results in us being unable to start any domain.
* 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
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>
Currently to deal with auto-shutdown libvirtd must periodically
poll all stateful drivers. Thus sucks because it requires
acquiring both the driver lock and locks on every single virtual
machine. Instead pass in a "inhibit" callback to virStateInitialize
which drivers can invoke whenever they want to inhibit shutdown
due to existance of active VMs.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Remove the obsolete 'qemud' naming prefix and underscore
based type name. Introduce virQEMUDriverPtr as the replacement,
in common with LXC driver naming style
Change some legacy function names to use 'qemu' as their
prefix instead of 'qemud' which was a hang over from when
the QEMU driver ran inside a separate daemon
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Although we require various C99 features, we don't yet require a
complete C99 compiler. On RHEL 5, compilation complained:
qemu/qemu_command.c: In function 'qemuBuildGraphicsCommandLine':
qemu/qemu_command.c:4688: error: 'for' loop initial declaration used outside C99 mode
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuBuildGraphicsCommandLine): Declare
variable sooner.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessInitPasswords): Likewise.
When the libvirt daemon is restarted it tries to reconnect to running
qemu domains. Since commit d38897a5d4 the
re-connection code runs in separate threads. In the original
implementation the maximum of domain ID's (that is used as an
initializer for numbering guests created next) while libvirt was
reconnecting to the guest.
With the threaded implementation this opens a possibility for race
conditions with the thread that is autostarting guests. When there's a
guest running with id 1 and the daemon is restarted. The autostart code
is reached first and spawns the first guest that should be autostarted
as id 1. This results into the following unwanted situation:
# virsh list
Id Name State
----------------------------------------------------
1 guest1 running
1 guest2 running
This patch extracts the detection code before the re-connection threads
are started so that the maximum id of the guests being reconnected to is
known.
The only semantic change created by this is if the guest with greatest ID
quits before we are able to reconnect it's ID is used anyway as the
greatest one as without this patch the greatest ID of a process we could
successfuly reconnect to would be used.
The new external system checkpoints will require an async job while the
snapshot is taken. This patch adds QEMU_ASYNC_JOB_SNAPSHOT to track this
job type.
Handle the new type of block copy event and info. Of course,
this patch does nothing until a later patch actually allows the
creation/abort of a block copy job.
* include/libvirt/libvirt.h.in (VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_JOB_READY): New
block job status.
* src/libvirt.c (virDomainBlockRebase): Document the event.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.c (eventHandlers): New event.
(qemuMonitorJSONHandleBlockJobReady): New function.
(qemuMonitorJSONGetBlockJobInfoOne): Translate new job type.
(qemuMonitorJSONHandleBlockJobImpl): Handle new event and job type.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessHandleBlockJob): Recognize
the event to minimize snooping.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainBlockJobImpl): Snoop a successful
info query to save effort on a pivot request.
When the cpu placement model is "auto", it sets the affinity for
domain process with the advisory nodeset from numad, however,
creating cgroup for the domain process (called emulator thread
in some contexts) later overrides that with pinning it to all
available pCPUs.
How to reproduce:
* Configure the domain with "auto" placement for <vcpu>, e.g.
<vcpu placement='auto'>4</vcpu>
* % virsh start dom
* % cat /proc/$dompid/status
Though the emulator cgroup cause conflicts, but we can't simply
prohibit creating it, as other tunables are still useful, such
as "emulator_period", which is used by API
virDomainSetSchedulerParameter. So this patch doesn't prohibit
creating the emulator cgroup, but inherit the nodeset from numad,
and reset the affinity for domain process.
* src/qemu/qemu_cgroup.h: Modify definition of qemuSetupCgroupForEmulator
to accept the passed nodenet
* src/qemu/qemu_cgroup.c: Set the affinity with the passed nodeset
Abstract the codes to prepare cpumap into a helper a function,
which can be used later.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.h: Declare qemuPrepareCpumap
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c: Implement qemuPrepareCpumap, and use it.
qemu 1.3 will be adding a 'block-commit' monitor command, per
qemu.git commit ed61fc1. It matches nicely to the libvirt API
virDomainBlockCommit.
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.h (QEMU_CAPS_BLOCK_COMMIT): New bit.
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.c (qemuCapsProbeQMPCommands): Set it.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.h (qemuMonitorBlockCommit): New prototype.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.h (qemuMonitorJSONBlockCommit):
Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.c (qemuMonitorBlockCommit): Implement it.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.c (qemuMonitorJSONBlockCommit):
Likewise.
(qemuMonitorJSONHandleBlockJobImpl)
(qemuMonitorJSONGetBlockJobInfoOne): Handle new event type.
Technically, we should not be re-probing any file that qemu might
be currently writing to. As such, we should cache the backing
file chain prior to starting qemu. This patch adds the cache,
but does not use it until the next patch.
Ultimately, we want to also store the chain in domain XML, so that
it is remembered across libvirtd restarts, and so that the only
kosher way to modify the backing chain of an offline domain will be
through libvirt API calls, but we aren't there yet. So for now, we
merely invalidate the cache any time we do a live operation that
alters the chain (block-pull, block-commit, external disk snapshot),
as well as tear down the cache when the domain is not running.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h (_virDomainDiskDef): New field.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainDiskDefFree): Clean new field.
* src/qemu/qemu_domain.h (qemuDomainDetermineDiskChain): New
prototype.
* src/qemu/qemu_domain.c (qemuDomainDetermineDiskChain): New
function.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainAttachDeviceDiskLive)
(qemuDomainChangeDiskMediaLive): Pre-populate chain.
(qemuDomainSnapshotCreateSingleDiskActive): Uncache chain before
snapshot.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessHandleBlockJob): Update
chain after block pull.
According to our recent changes (clarifications), we should be pinning
qemu's emulator processes using the <vcpu> 'cpuset' attribute in case
there is no <emulatorpin> specified. This however doesn't work
entirely as expected and this patch should resolve all the remaining
issues.
This patch adds support for SUSPEND_DISK event; both lifecycle and
separated. The support is added for QEMU, machines are changed to
PMSUSPENDED, but as QEMU sends SHUTDOWN afterwards, the state changes
to shut-off. This and much more needs to be done in order for libvirt
to work with transient devices, wake-ups etc. This patch is not
aiming for that functionality.
Using VIR_DOMAIN_XML_MIGRATABLE flag, one can request domain's XML
configuration that is suitable for migration or save/restore. Such XML
may contain extra run-time stuff internal to libvirt and some default
configuration may be removed for better compatibility of the XML with
older libvirt releases.
This flag may serve as an easy way to get the XML that can be passed
(after desired modifications) to APIs that accept custom XMLs, such as
virDomainMigrate{,ToURI}2 or virDomainSaveFlags.
The qemuMonitorSetCapabilities() API is used to initialize the QMP
protocol capabilities. It has since been abused to initialize some
libvirt internal capabilities based on command/event existance too.
Move the latter code out into qemuCapsProbeQMP() in the QEMU
capabilities source file instead
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Remove all use of the existing APIs for querying QEMU
capability flags. Instead obtain a qemuCapsPtr object
from the global cache. This avoids the execution of
'qemu -help' (and related commands) when launching new
guests.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
If the qemuAgentClose method is called from a place which holds
the domain lock, it is theoretically possible to get a deadlock
in the agent destroy callback. This has not been observed, but
the equivalent code in the QEMU monitor destroy callback has seen
a deadlock.
Remove the redundant locking while unrefing the object and the
bogus assignment
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Some users report (very rarely) seeing a deadlock in the QEMU
monitor callbacks
Thread 10 (Thread 0x7fcd11e20700 (LWP 26753)):
#0 0x00000030d0e0de4d in __lll_lock_wait () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
#1 0x00000030d0e09ca6 in _L_lock_840 () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
#2 0x00000030d0e09ba8 in pthread_mutex_lock () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
#3 0x00007fcd162f416d in virMutexLock (m=<optimized out>)
at util/threads-pthread.c:85
#4 0x00007fcd1632c651 in virDomainObjLock (obj=<optimized out>)
at conf/domain_conf.c:14256
#5 0x00007fcd0daf05cc in qemuProcessHandleMonitorDestroy (mon=0x7fcccc0029e0,
vm=0x7fcccc00a850) at qemu/qemu_process.c:1026
#6 0x00007fcd0db01710 in qemuMonitorDispose (obj=0x7fcccc0029e0)
at qemu/qemu_monitor.c:249
#7 0x00007fcd162fd4e3 in virObjectUnref (anyobj=<optimized out>)
at util/virobject.c:139
#8 0x00007fcd0db027a9 in qemuMonitorClose (mon=<optimized out>)
at qemu/qemu_monitor.c:860
#9 0x00007fcd0daf61ad in qemuProcessStop (driver=driver@entry=0x7fcd04079d50,
vm=vm@entry=0x7fcccc00a850,
reason=reason@entry=VIR_DOMAIN_SHUTOFF_DESTROYED, flags=flags@entry=0)
at qemu/qemu_process.c:4057
#10 0x00007fcd0db323cf in qemuDomainDestroyFlags (dom=<optimized out>,
flags=<optimized out>) at qemu/qemu_driver.c:1977
#11 0x00007fcd1637ff51 in virDomainDestroyFlags (
domain=domain@entry=0x7fccf00c1830, flags=1) at libvirt.c:2256
At frame #10 we are holding the domain lock, we call into
qemuProcessStop() to cleanup QEMU, which triggers the monitor
to close, which invokes qemuProcessHandleMonitorDestroy() which
tries to obtain the domain lock again. This is a non-recursive
lock, hence hang.
Since qemuMonitorPtr is a virObject, the unref call in
qemuProcessHandleMonitorDestroy no longer needs mutex
protection. The assignment of priv->mon = NULL, can be
instead done by the caller of qemuMonitorClose(), thus
removing all need for locking.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
If QEMU quits immediately after we opened the monitor it was
possible we would skip the clearing of the SELinux process
socket context
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
In the cgroups APIs we have a virCgroupKillPainfully function
which does the loop sending SIGTERM, then SIGKILL and waiting
for the process to exit. There is similar functionality for
simple processes in qemuProcessKill, but it is tangled with
the QEMU code. Untangle it to provide a virProcessKillPainfuly
function
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
There are a number of process related functions spread
across multiple files. Start to consolidate them by
creating a virprocess.{c,h} file
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-howto.html recommends that
the 'If not, see <url>.' phrase be a separate sentence.
* tests/securityselinuxhelper.c: Remove doubled line.
* tests/securityselinuxtest.c: Likewise.
* globally: s/; If/. If/
Currently, we mark domain PAUSED (but not emit an event)
just before we issue 'stop' on monitor; This command can
take ages to finish, esp. when domain's doing a lot of
IO - users can enforce qemu to open files with O_DIRECT
which doesn't return from write() until data reaches the
block device. Having said that, we report PAUSED even if
domain is not paused yet.
On agent EOF the qemuProcessHandleAgentEOF() callback is called
which locks virDomainObjPtr. Then qemuAgentClose() is called
(with domain object locked) which eventually calls qemuAgentDispose()
and qemuProcessHandleAgentDestroy(). This tries to lock the
domain object again. Hence the deadlock.
The current qemu capabilities are stored in a virBitmapPtr
object, whose type is exposed to callers. We want to store
more data besides just the flags, so we need to move to a
struct type. This object will also need to be reference
counted, since we'll be maintaining a cache of data per
binary. This change introduces a 'qemuCapsPtr' virObject
class. Most of the change is just renaming types and
variables in all the callers
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When reboot using qemu guest agent was requested, qemu driver kept
waiting for SHUTDOWN event from qemu. However, such event is never
emitted during guest reboot and qemu driver would keep waiting forever.
After fixing the last review comments on remote port searching (commit
a14b4aea51), the commit right after that
wasn't modified accordingly, therefore two values weren't changed as
they should and the configurable ports don't work as expected.
This simple commit changes last two values missed and fixes the issue.
In my quest for reusing variables I failed to edit one variable when
fixing details between two patch versions. That results in a failure
to start qemu with autoport and spice tls, because qemu is trying to
bind two sockets to the same port.
Emulator threads should also be pinned by sched_setaffinity(), just
the same as vcpu threads.
Signed-off-by: Tang Chen <tangchen@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Hu Tao <hutao@cn.fujitsu.com>
Create a new cgroup and move all emulator threads to the new cgroup.
And then we can do the other things:
1. limit only vcpu usage rather than the whole qemu
2. limit for emulator threads(include vhost-net threads)
Signed-off-by: Wen Congyang <wency@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Tang Chen <tangchen@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Hu Tao <hutao@cn.fujitsu.com>
After the cleanup of remote display port allocation, I noticed some
messages that didn't make a lot of sense the way they were written. So
I rephrased them.
The defines QEMU_REMOTE_PORT_MIN and QEMU_REMOTE_PORT_MAX were used to
find free port when starting domains. As this was hard-coded to the
same ports as default VNC servers, there were races with these other
programs. This patch includes the possibility to change the default
starting port as well as the maximum port (mostly for completeness) in
qemu config file.
Support for two new config options in qemu.conf is added:
- remote_port_min (defaults to QEMU_REMOTE_PORT_MIN and
must be >= than this value)
- remote_port_max (defaults to QEMU_REMOTE_PORT_MAX and
must be <= than this value)
Port allocations for SPICE and VNC behave almost the same (with
default ports), but there is some mess in the code. This patch clears
these inconsistencies and makes sure the same behavior will be used
when ports for remote displays are changed.
Changes:
- hard-coded number 5900 removed (handled elsewhere like with VNC)
- reservedVNCPorts renamed to reservedRemotePorts (it's not just for
VNC anymore)
- QEMU_VNC_PORT_{MIN,MAX} renamed to QEMU_REMOTE_PORT_{MIN,MAX}
- port allocation unified for VNC and SPICE
These changes make the security drivers able to find and handle the
correct security label information when more than one label is
available. They also update the DAC driver to be used as an usual
security driver.
Signed-off-by: Marcelo Cerri <mhcerri@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
This patch updates the structures that store information about each
domain and each hypervisor to support multiple security labels and
drivers. It also updates all the remaining code to use the new fields.
Signed-off-by: Marcelo Cerri <mhcerri@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Rename qemuDefaultScsiControllerModel to qemuCheckScsiControllerModel.
When scsi model is given explicitly in XML(model > 0) checking if the
underlying QEMU supports it or not first, raise an error on checking
failure.
When the model is not given(mode <= 0), return LSI by default, if
the QEMU doesn't support it, raise an error.
Switch virDomainObjPtr to use the virObject APIs for reference
counting. The main change is that virObjectUnref does not return
the reference count, merely a bool indicating whether the object
still has any refs left. Checking the return value is also not
mandatory.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This converts the following public API datatypes to use the
virObject infrastructure:
virConnectPtr
virDomainPtr
virDomainSnapshotPtr
virInterfacePtr
virNetworkPtr
virNodeDevicePtr
virNWFilterPtr
virSecretPtr
virStreamPtr
virStorageVolPtr
virStoragePoolPtr
The code is significantly simplified, since the mutex in the
virConnectPtr object now only needs to be held when accessing
the per-connection virError object instance. All other operations
are completely lock free.
* src/datatypes.c, src/datatypes.h, src/libvirt.c: Convert
public datatypes to use virObject
* src/conf/domain_event.c, src/phyp/phyp_driver.c,
src/qemu/qemu_command.c, src/qemu/qemu_migration.c,
src/qemu/qemu_process.c, src/storage/storage_driver.c,
src/vbox/vbox_tmpl.c, src/xen/xend_internal.c,
tests/qemuxml2argvtest.c, tests/qemuxmlnstest.c,
tests/sexpr2xmltest.c, tests/xmconfigtest.c: Convert
to use virObjectUnref/virObjectRef
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Per the FSF address could be changed from time to time, and GNU
recommends the following now: (http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-howto.html)
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with Foobar. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
This patch removes the explicit FSF address, and uses above instead
(of course, with inserting 'Lesser' before 'General').
Except a bunch of files for security driver, all others are changed
automatically, the copyright for securify files are not complete,
that's why to do it manually:
src/security/security_selinux.h
src/security/security_driver.h
src/security/security_selinux.c
src/security/security_apparmor.h
src/security/security_apparmor.c
src/security/security_driver.c
The previous check for YAJL would have many undesirable
consequences, the most important being that it caused the
capabilities XML to lose all <guest> elements. There is
no user visible feedback as to what is wrong in this respect,
merely a syslog message. The empty capabilities causes
libvirtd to then throw away all guest XML configs that are
stored.
This changes the code so that the check for YAJL is only
performed at the time we attempt to spawn a QEMU process
error: Failed to start domain vm-vnc
error: unsupported configuration: this qemu binary requires libvirt to be compiled with yajl
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Introduce new members in the virMacAddr 'class'
- virMacAddrSet: set virMacAddr from a virMacAddr
- virMacAddrSetRaw: setting virMacAddr from raw 6 byte MAC address buffer
- virMacAddrGetRaw: writing virMacAddr into raw 6 byte MAC address buffer
- virMacAddrCmp: comparing two virMacAddr
- virMacAddrCmpRaw: comparing a virMacAddr with a raw 6 byte MAC address buffer
then replace raw MAC addresses by replacing
- 'unsigned char *' with virMacAddrPtr
- 'unsigned char ... [VIR_MAC_BUFLEN]' with virMacAddr
and introduce usage of above functions where necessary.
If QEMU supports the BALLOON_EVENT QMP event, then we can
avoid invoking 'query-balloon' when returning XML or the
domain info.
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.c, src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.h:
Add QEMU_CAPS_BALLOON_EVENT
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c: Skip query-balloon in
qemudDomainGetInfo and qemuDomainGetXMLDesc if we have
QEMU_CAPS_BALLOON_EVENT set
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.c, src/qemu/qemu_monitor.h: Check
for BALLOON_EVENT at connect to monitor. Add callback
for balloon change notifications
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.c, src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.h:
Add handling of BALLOON_EVENT and impl 'query-events'
check
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This is in preparation of the enablement of s390 guests with virtio devices.
The assignment of device addresses happens in different places, i.e. the
qemu driver and process modules as well as in the unit tests in slightly
different flavors. Currently, these are PPC spapr-vio and PCI
devices, virtio-s390 (not PCI based) will follow.
By optionally passing to qemuDomainAssignAddresses the domain
object and the capabilities it is now possible to call the function
from most of the places (except for hotplug) where address assignment
is done.
Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
If no 'listen' attribute or <listen> element is set in the
guest XML, the default driver configured listen address is
used. There is no way to client applications to determine
what this address is though. When starting the guest, we
should update the live XML to include this default listen
address
With latest changes to qemu-ga success on some commands is not reported
anymore, e.g. guest-shutdown or guest-suspend-*. However, errors are
still being reported. Therefore, we need to find different source of
indication if operation was successful. Events.
A core use case of the hook scripts is to be able to do things
to a guest's network configuration. It is possible to hook into
the 'start' operation for a QEMU guest which runs just before
the guest is started. The TAP devices will exist at this point,
but the QEMU process will not. It can be desirable to have a
'started' hook too, which runs once QEMU has started.
If libvirtd is restarted it will re-populate firewall rules,
but there is no QEMU hook to trigger for existing domains.
This is solved with a 'reconnect' hook.
Finally, if attaching to an external QEMU process there needs
to be an 'attach' hook script.
This all also applies to the LXC driver
* docs/hooks.html.in: Document new operations
* src/util/hooks.c, src/util/hooks.c: Add 'started', 'reconnect'
and 'attach' operations for QEMU. Add 'prepare', 'started',
'release' and 'reconnect' operations for LXC
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c: Add hooks for 'prepare', 'started',
'release' and 'reconnect' operations
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c: Add hooks for 'started', 'reconnect'
and 'reconnect' operations
Currently, if qemuProcessStart fail at some point, e.g. because
domain being started wants a PCI/USB device already assigned to
a different domain, we jump to cleanup label where qemuProcessStop
is performed. This unconditionally calls virSecurityManagerRestoreAllLabel
which is wrong because the other domain is still using those devices.
However, once we successfully label all devices/paths in
qemuProcessStart() from that point on, we have to perform a rollback
on failure - that is - we have to virSecurityManagerRestoreAllLabel.
When libvirtd is started and there is an unusable/not-connectable
leftover from earlier started machine, it's more reasonable to say
that the machine "crashed" if we know it was started with
"-no-shutdown".
This patch fixes that and also changes the other result (when machine
was started without "-no-shutdown") to "unknown", because the previous
"failed" reason means (according to include/libvirt/libvirt.h.in:174),
that the machine failed to start.
Like for 'static' placement, when the memory policy mode is
'strict', set the memory policy by writing the advisory nodeset
returned from numad to cgroup file cpuset.mems,
On some of the NUMA platforms, the CPU index in each NUMA node
grows non-consecutive. While on other platforms, it can be inconsecutive,
E.g.
% numactl --hardware
available: 4 nodes (0-3)
node 0 cpus: 0 4 8 12 16 20 24 28
node 0 size: 131058 MB
node 0 free: 86531 MB
node 1 cpus: 1 5 9 13 17 21 25 29
node 1 size: 131072 MB
node 1 free: 127070 MB
node 2 cpus: 2 6 10 14 18 22 26 30
node 2 size: 131072 MB
node 2 free: 127758 MB
node 3 cpus: 3 7 11 15 19 23 27 31
node 3 size: 131072 MB
node 3 free: 127226 MB
node distances:
node 0 1 2 3
0: 10 20 20 20
1: 20 10 20 20
2: 20 20 10 20
3: 20 20 20 10
This patch is to fix the problem by using the CPU index in
caps->host.numaCell[i]->cpus[i] to set the bitmask instead of
assuming the CPU index of the NUMA nodes are always sequential.
This patch lifts the limit of calling thread detection code only on KVM
guests. With upstream qemu the thread mappings are reported also on
non-KVM machines.
QEMU adopted the thread_id information from the kvm branch.
To remain compatible with older upstream versions of qemu the check is
attempted but the failure to detect threads (or even run the monitor
command - on older versions without SMP support) is treated non-fatal
and the code reports one vCPU with pid of the hypervisor (in same
fashion this was done on non-KVM guests).
Though numad will manage the memory allocation of task dynamically,
it wants management application (libvirt) to pre-set the memory
policy according to the advisory nodeset returned from querying numad,
(just like pre-bind CPU nodeset for domain process), and thus the
performance could benefit much more from it.
This patch introduces new XML tag 'placement', value 'auto' indicates
whether to set the memory policy with the advisory nodeset from numad,
and its value defaults to the value of <vcpu> placement, or 'static'
if 'nodeset' is specified. Example of the new XML tag's usage:
<numatune>
<memory placement='auto' mode='interleave'/>
</numatune>
Just like what current "numatune" does, the 'auto' numa memory policy
setting uses libnuma's API too.
If <vcpu> "placement" is "auto", and <numatune> is not specified
explicitly, a default <numatume> will be added with "placement"
set as "auto", and "mode" set as "strict".
The following XML can now fully drive numad:
1) <vcpu> placement is 'auto', no <numatune> is specified.
<vcpu placement='auto'>10</vcpu>
2) <vcpu> placement is 'auto', no 'placement' is specified for
<numatune>.
<vcpu placement='auto'>10</vcpu>
<numatune>
<memory mode='interleave'/>
</numatune>
And it's also able to control the CPU placement and memory policy
independently. e.g.
1) <vcpu> placement is 'auto', and <numatune> placement is 'static'
<vcpu placement='auto'>10</vcpu>
<numatune>
<memory mode='strict' nodeset='0-10,^7'/>
</numatune>
2) <vcpu> placement is 'static', and <numatune> placement is 'auto'
<vcpu placement='static' cpuset='0-24,^12'>10</vcpu>
<numatune>
<memory mode='interleave' placement='auto'/>
</numatume>
A follow up patch will change the XML formatting codes to always output
'placement' for <vcpu>, even it's 'static'.
When we added the default USB controller into domain XML, we efficiently
broke migration to older versions of libvirt that didn't support USB
controllers at all (0.9.4 and earlier) even for domains that don't use
anything that the older libvirt can't provide. We still want to present
the default USB controller in any XML seen by a user/app but we can
safely remove it from the domain XML used during migration. If we are
migrating to a new enough libvirt, it will add the controller XML back,
while older libvirt won't be confused with it although it will still
tell qemu to create the controller.
Similar approach can be used in the future whenever we find out we
always enabled some kind of device without properly advertising it in
domain XML.
More bug extermination in the category of:
Error: CHECKED_RETURN:
/libvirt/src/conf/network_conf.c:595:
check_return: Calling function "virAsprintf" without checking return value (as is done elsewhere 515 out of 543 times).
/libvirt/src/qemu/qemu_process.c:2780:
unchecked_value: No check of the return value of "virAsprintf(&msg, "was paused (%s)", virDomainPausedReasonTypeToString(reason))".
/libvirt/tests/commandtest.c:809:
check_return: Calling function "setsid" without checking return value (as is done elsewhere 4 out of 5 times).
/libvirt/tests/commandtest.c:830:
unchecked_value: No check of the return value of "virTestGetDebug()".
/libvirt/tests/commandtest.c:831:
check_return: Calling function "virTestGetVerbose" without checking return value (as is done elsewhere 41 out of 42 times).
/libvirt/tests/commandtest.c:833:
check_return: Calling function "virInitialize" without checking return value (as is done elsewhere 18 out of 21 times).
One note about the error in commandtest line 809: setsid() seems to fail when running the test -- could be removed ?
If console[0] is an alias for serial[0], do not enforce the former to
have a PTY source type. This breaks serial consoles on stdio and makes
no sense.
Signed-off-by: Jan Kiszka <jan.kiszka@siemens.com>
Currently, we have 3 boolean arguments we have to pass
to qemuProcessStart(). As libvirt grows it is harder and harder
to remember them and their position. Therefore we should
switch to flags instead.
Instead of returning a CPUs list, numad returns NUMA node
list instead, this patch is to convert the node list to
cpumap before affinity setting. Otherwise, the domain
processes will be pinned only to CPU[$numa_cell_num],
which will cause significiant performance losses.
Also because numad will balance the affinity dynamically,
reflecting the cpuset from numad back doesn't make much
sense then, and it may just could produce confusion for
the users. Thus the better way is not to reflect it back
to XML. And in this case, it's better to ignore the cpuset
when parsing XML.
The codes to update the cpuset is removed in this patch
incidentally, and there will be a follow up patch to ignore
the manually specified "cpuset" if "placement" is "auto",
and document will be updated too.
In case an API fails with "cannot acquire state change lock", searching
for the API that possibly forgot to end its job is not always easy.
Let's keep track of the job owner and print it out for easier
identification.
As reported by Daniel Berrangé, we have a huge performance regression
for virDomainGetInfo() due to the change which makes virDomainEndJob()
save the XML status file every time it is called. Previous to that
change, 2000 calls to virDomainGetInfo() took ~2.5 seconds. After that
change, 2000 calls to virDomainGetInfo() take 2 *minutes* 45 secs.
We made the change to be able to recover from libvirtd restart in the
middle of a job. However, only destroy and async jobs are taken care of.
Thus it makes more sense to only save domain state XML when these jobs
are started/stopped.
If the daemon is restarted it will lose list of active
USB devices assigned to active domains. Therefore we need
to rebuild this list on qemuProcessReconnect().
Originally, qemuDomainCheckEjectableMedia was entering monitor with qemu
driver lock. Commit 2067e31bf9, which I
made to fix that, revealed another issue we had (but didn't notice it
since the driver was locked): we didn't set nested job when
qemuDomainCheckEjectableMedia is called during migration. Thus the
original fix I made was wrong.
Since Xen 3.1 the clock=variable semantic is supported. In addition to
qemu/kvm Xen also knows about a variant where the offset is relative to
'localtime' instead of 'utc'.
Extends the libvirt structure with a flag 'basis' to specify, if the
offset is relative to 'localtime' or 'utc'.
Extends the libvirt structure with a flag 'reset' to force the reset
behaviour of 'localtime' and 'utc'; this is needed for backward
compatibility with previous versions of libvirt, since they report
incorrect XML.
Adapt the only user 'qemu' to the new name.
Extend the RelaxNG schema accordingly.
Document the new 'basis' attribute in the HTML documentation.
Adapt test for the new attribute.
Signed-off-by: Philipp Hahn <hahn@univention.de>
The code is splattered with a mix of
sizeof foo
sizeof (foo)
sizeof(foo)
Standardize on sizeof(foo) and add a syntax check rule to
enforce it
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When qemu cannot start, we may call qemuProcessStop() twice.
We have check whether the vm is running at the beginning of
qemuProcessStop() to avoid libvirt deadlock. We call
qemuProcessStop() with driver and vm locked. It seems that
we can avoid libvirt deadlock. But unfortunately we may
unlock driver and vm in the function qemuProcessKill() while
vm->def->id is not -1. So qemuProcessStop() will be run twice,
and monitor will be freed unexpectedly. So we should set
vm->def->id to -1 at the beginning of qemuProcessStop().
Found when attempting to build on Fedora 17 alpha with:
./autogen.sh --system --enable-compile-warnings=error
(this same build command works without problem on Fedora 16). Since
the consumer of the qemuProcessReconnectData doesn't assume that the
other fields of the struct are initialized (although it uses them
internally), the simpler solution is to just switch to C99-style
struct initialization (which doesn't require specification of all
fields).
Return statements with parameter enclosed in parentheses were modified
and parentheses were removed. The whole change was scripted, here is how:
List of files was obtained using this command:
git grep -l -e '\<return\s*([^()]*\(([^()]*)[^()]*\)*)\s*;' | \
grep -e '\.[ch]$' -e '\.py$'
Found files were modified with this command:
sed -i -e \
's_^\(.*\<return\)\s*(\(\([^()]*([^()]*)[^()]*\)*\))\s*\(;.*$\)_\1 \2\4_' \
-e 's_^\(.*\<return\)\s*(\([^()]*\))\s*\(;.*$\)_\1 \2\3_'
Then checked for nonsense.
The whole command looks like this:
git grep -l -e '\<return\s*([^()]*\(([^()]*)[^()]*\)*)\s*;' | \
grep -e '\.[ch]$' -e '\.py$' | xargs sed -i -e \
's_^\(.*\<return\)\s*(\(\([^()]*([^()]*)[^()]*\)*\))\s*\(;.*$\)_\1 \2\4_' \
-e 's_^\(.*\<return\)\s*(\([^()]*\))\s*\(;.*$\)_\1 \2\3_'
This introduces a new running reason VIR_DOMAIN_RUNNING_WAKEUP,
and new suspend event type VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_STARTED_WAKEUP.
While a wakeup event is emitted, the domain which entered into
VIR_DOMAIN_PMSUSPENDED will be transferred to "running"
with reason VIR_DOMAIN_RUNNING_WAKEUP, and a new domain lifecycle
event emitted with type VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_STARTED_WAKEUP.
This patch introduces a new event type for the QMP event
SUSPEND:
VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_ID_PMSUSPEND
The event doesn't take any data, but considering there might
be reason for wakeup in future, the callback definition is:
typedef void
(*virConnectDomainEventSuspendCallback)(virConnectPtr conn,
virDomainPtr dom,
int reason,
void *opaque);
"reason" is unused currently, always passes "0".
This patch introduces a new event type for the QMP event
WAKEUP:
VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_ID_PMWAKEUP
The event doesn't take any data, but considering there might
be reason for wakeup in future, the callback definition is:
typedef void
(*virConnectDomainEventWakeupCallback)(virConnectPtr conn,
virDomainPtr dom,
int reason,
void *opaque);
"reason" is unused currently, always passes "0".
This patch introduces a new event type for the QMP event
DEVICE_TRAY_MOVED, which occurs when the tray of a removable
disk is moved (i.e opened or closed):
VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_ID_TRAY_CHANGE
The event's data includes the device alias and the reason
for tray status' changing, which indicates why the tray
status was changed. Thus the callback definition for the event
is:
enum {
VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_TRAY_CHANGE_OPEN = 0,
VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_TRAY_CHANGE_CLOSE,
\#ifdef VIR_ENUM_SENTINELS
VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_TRAY_CHANGE_LAST
\#endif
} virDomainEventTrayChangeReason;
typedef void
(*virConnectDomainEventTrayChangeCallback)(virConnectPtr conn,
virDomainPtr dom,
const char *devAlias,
int reason,
void *opaque);
numad is an user-level daemon that monitors NUMA topology and
processes resource consumption to facilitate good NUMA resource
alignment of applications/virtual machines to improve performance
and minimize cost of remote memory latencies. It provides a
pre-placement advisory interface, so significant processes can
be pre-bound to nodes with sufficient available resources.
More details: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Features/numad
"numad -w ncpus:memory_amount" is the advisory interface numad
provides currently.
This patch add the support by introducing a new XML attribute
for <vcpu>. e.g.
<vcpu placement="auto">4</vcpu>
<vcpu placement="static" cpuset="1-10^6">4</vcpu>
The returned advisory nodeset from numad will be printed
in domain's dumped XML. e.g.
<vcpu placement="auto" cpuset="1-10^6">4</vcpu>
If placement is "auto", the number of vcpus and the current
memory amount specified in domain XML will be used for numad
command line (numad uses MB for memory amount):
numad -w $num_of_vcpus:$current_memory_amount / 1024
The advisory nodeset returned from numad will be used to set
domain process CPU affinity then. (e.g. qemuProcessInitCpuAffinity).
If the user specifies both CPU affinity policy (e.g.
(<vcpu cpuset="1-10,^7,^8">4</vcpu>) and placement == "auto"
the specified CPU affinity will be overridden.
Only QEMU/KVM drivers support it now.
See docs update in patch for more details.
Even though we say in documentation setting (tls-)port to -1 is legacy
compat style for enabling autoport, we're roughly doing this for VNC.
However, in case of SPICE auto enable autoport iff both port & tlsPort
are equal -1 as documentation says autoport plays with both.
Currently, startupPolicy='requisite' was determining cold boot
by migrateFrom != NULL. That means, if domain was started up
with migrateFrom set we didn't require disk source path and allowed
it to be dropped. However, on snapshot-revert domain wasn't migrated
but according to documentation, requisite should drop disk source
as well.
Using 'unsigned long' for memory values is risky on 32-bit platforms,
as a PAE guest can have more than 4GiB memory. Our API is
(unfortunately) locked at 'unsigned long' and a scale of 1024, but
the rest of our system should consistently use 64-bit values,
especially since the previous patch centralized overflow checking.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h (_virDomainDef): Always use 64-bit values
for memory. Change hugepage_backed to a bool.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainDefParseXML)
(virDomainDefCheckABIStability, virDomainDefFormatInternal): Fix
clients.
* src/vmx/vmx.c (virVMXFormatConfig): Likewise.
* src/xenxs/xen_sxpr.c (xenParseSxpr, xenFormatSxpr): Likewise.
* src/xenxs/xen_xm.c (xenXMConfigGetULongLong): New function.
(xenXMConfigGetULong, xenXMConfigSetInt): Avoid truncation.
(xenParseXM, xenFormatXM): Fix clients.
* src/phyp/phyp_driver.c (phypBuildLpar): Likewise.
* src/openvz/openvz_driver.c (openvzDomainSetMemoryInternal):
Likewise.
* src/vbox/vbox_tmpl.c (vboxDomainDefineXML): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuBuildCommandLine): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessStart): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.h (qemuMonitorGetBalloonInfo): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_text.h (qemuMonitorTextGetBalloonInfo):
Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_text.c (qemuMonitorTextGetBalloonInfo):
Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.h (qemuMonitorJSONGetBalloonInfo):
Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.c (qemuMonitorJSONGetBalloonInfo):
Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemudDomainGetInfo)
(qemuDomainGetXMLDesc): Likewise.
* src/uml/uml_conf.c (umlBuildCommandLine): Likewise.
No thanks to 64-bit windows, with 64-bit pid_t, we have to avoid
constructs like 'int pid'. Our API in libvirt-qemu cannot be
changed without breaking ABI; but then again, libvirt-qemu can
only be used on systems that support UNIX sockets, which rules
out Windows (even if qemu could be compiled there) - so for all
points on the call chain that interact with this API decision,
we require a different variable name to make it clear that we
audited the use for safety.
Adding a syntax-check rule only solves half the battle; anywhere
that uses printf on a pid_t still needs to be converted, but that
will be a separate patch.
* cfg.mk (sc_correct_id_types): New syntax check.
* src/libvirt-qemu.c (virDomainQemuAttach): Document why we didn't
use pid_t for pid, and validate for overflow.
* include/libvirt/libvirt-qemu.h (virDomainQemuAttach): Tweak name
for syntax check.
* src/vmware/vmware_conf.c (vmwareExtractPid): Likewise.
* src/driver.h (virDrvDomainQemuAttach): Likewise.
* tools/virsh.c (cmdQemuAttach): Likewise.
* src/remote/qemu_protocol.x (qemu_domain_attach_args): Likewise.
* src/qemu_protocol-structs (qemu_domain_attach_args): Likewise.
* src/util/cgroup.c (virCgroupPidCode, virCgroupKillInternal):
Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c(qemuParseProcFileStrings): Likewise.
(qemuParseCommandLinePid): Use pid_t for pid.
* daemon/libvirtd.c (daemonForkIntoBackground): Likewise.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h (_virDomainObj): Likewise.
* src/probes.d (rpc_socket_new): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.h (qemuParseCommandLinePid): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemudGetProcessInfo, qemuDomainAttach):
Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessAttach): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.h (qemuProcessAttach): Likewise.
* src/uml/uml_driver.c (umlGetProcessInfo): Likewise.
* src/util/virnetdev.h (virNetDevSetNamespace): Likewise.
* src/util/virnetdev.c (virNetDevSetNamespace): Likewise.
* tests/testutils.c (virtTestCaptureProgramOutput): Likewise.
* src/conf/storage_conf.h (_virStoragePerms): Use mode_t, uid_t,
and gid_t rather than int.
* src/security/security_dac.c (virSecurityDACSetOwnership): Likewise.
* src/conf/storage_conf.c (virStorageDefParsePerms): Avoid
compiler warning.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuFindAgentConfig): avoid crash libvirtd due to
deref a NULL pointer.
* How to reproduce?
1. virsh edit the following xml into guest configuration:
<channel type='pty'>
<target type='virtio'/>
</channel>
2. virsh start <domain>
or
% virt-install -n foo -r 1024 --disk path=/var/lib/libvirt/images/foo.img,size=1 \
--channel pty,target_type=virtio -l <installation tree>
Signed-off-by: Alex Jia <ajia@redhat.com>
This patch allows libvirt to add interfaces to already
existing Open vSwitch bridges. The following syntax in
domain XML file can be used:
<interface type='bridge'>
<mac address='52:54:00:d0:3f:f2'/>
<source bridge='ovsbr'/>
<virtualport type='openvswitch'>
<parameters interfaceid='921a80cd-e6de-5a2e-db9c-ab27f15a6e1d'/>
</virtualport>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x00'
slot='0x03' function='0x0'/>
</interface>
or if libvirt should auto-generate the interfaceid use
following syntax:
<interface type='bridge'>
<mac address='52:54:00:d0:3f:f2'/>
<source bridge='ovsbr'/>
<virtualport type='openvswitch'>
</virtualport>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x00'
slot='0x03' function='0x0'/>
</interface>
It is also possible to pass an optional profileid. To do that
use following syntax:
<interface type='bridge'>
<source bridge='ovsbr'/>
<mac address='00:55:1a:65:a2:8d'/>
<virtualport type='openvswitch'>
<parameters interfaceid='921a80cd-e6de-5a2e-db9c-ab27f15a6e1d'
profileid='test-profile'/>
</virtualport>
</interface>
To create Open vSwitch bridge install Open vSwitch and
run the following command:
ovs-vsctl add-br ovsbr
The current default method of terminating the qemu process is to send
a SIGTERM, wait for up to 1.6 seconds for it to cleanly shutdown, then
send a SIGKILL and wait for up to 1.4 seconds more for the process to
terminate. This is problematic because occasionally 1.6 seconds is not
long enough for the qemu process to flush its disk buffers, so the
guest's disk ends up in an inconsistent state.
Since this only occasionally happens when the timeout prior to SIGKILL
is 1.6 seconds, this patch increases that timeout to 10 seconds. At
the very least, this should reduce the occurrence from "occasionally"
to "extremely rarely". (Once SIGKILL is sent, it waits another 5
seconds for the process to die before returning).
Note that in the cases where it takes less than this for qemu to
shutdown cleanly, libvirt will *not* wait for any longer than it would
without this patch - qemuProcessKill polls the process and returns as
soon as it is gone.
This patch is based on an earlier patch by Eric Blake which was never
committed:
https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2011-November/msg00243.html
Aside from rebasing, this patch only drops the driver lock once (prior
to the first time the function sleeps), then leaves it dropped until
it returns (Eric's patch would drop and re-acquire the lock around
each call to sleep).
At the time Eric sent his patch, the response (from Dan Berrange) was
that, while it wasn't a good thing to be holding the driver lock while
sleeping, we really need to rethink locking wrt the driver object,
switching to a finer-grained approach that locks individual items
within the driver object separately to allow for greater concurrency.
This is a good plan, and at the time it made sense to not apply the
patch because there was no known bug related to the driver lock being
held in this function.
However, we now know that the length of the wait in qemuProcessKill is
sometimes too short to allow the qemu process to fully flush its disk
cache before SIGKILL is sent, so we need to lengthen the timeout (in
order to improve the situation with management applications until they
can be updated to use the new VIR_DOMAIN_DESTROY_GRACEFUL flag added
in commit 72f8a7f197). But, if we
lengthen the timeout, we also lengthen the amount of time that all
other threads in libvirtd are essentially blocked from doing anything
(since just about everything needs to acquire the driver lock, if only
for long enough to get a pointer to a domain).
The solution is to modify qemuProcessKill to drop the driver lock
while sleeping, as proposed in Eric's patch. Then we can increase the
timeout with a clear conscience, and thus at least lower the chances
that someone running with existing management software will suffer the
consequence's of qemu's disk cache not being flushed.
In the meantime, we still should work on Dan's proposal to make
locking within the driver object more fine grained.
(NB: although I couldn't find any instance where qemuProcessKill() was
called with no jobs active for the domain (or some other guarantee
that the current thread had at least one refcount on the domain
object), this patch still follows Eric's method of temporarily adding
a ref prior to unlocking the domain object, because I couldn't
convince myself 100% that this was the case.)
In the future (my next patch in fact) we may want to make
decisions depending on qemu having a monitor command or not.
Therefore, we want to set qemuCaps flag instead of querying
on the monitor each time we are about to make that decision.
When libvirt's virDomainDestroy API is shutting down the qemu process,
it first sends SIGTERM, then waits for 1.6 seconds and, if it sees the
process still there, sends a SIGKILL.
There have been reports that this behavior can lead to data loss
because the guest running in qemu doesn't have time to flush its disk
cache buffers before it's unceremoniously whacked.
This patch maintains that default behavior, but provides a new flag
VIR_DOMAIN_DESTROY_GRACEFUL to alter the behavior. If this flag is set
in the call to virDomainDestroyFlags, SIGKILL will never be sent to
the qemu process; instead, if the timeout is reached and the qemu
process still exists, virDomainDestroy will return an error.
Once this patch is in, the recommended method for applications to call
virDomainDestroyFlags will be with VIR_DOMAIN_DESTROY_GRACEFUL
included. If that fails, then the application can decide if and when
to call virDomainDestroyFlags again without
VIR_DOMAIN_DESTROY_GRACEFUL (to force the issue with SIGKILL).
(Note that this does not address the issue of existing applications
that have not yet been modified to use VIR_DOMAIN_DESTROY_GRACEFUL.
That is a separate patch.)
This patch revises qemuProcessStart() function for qemu
processes to retain CAP_SYS_RAWIO if needed.
And in case of that, add taint flag to domain.
Signed-off-by: Taku Izumi <izumi.taku@jp.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Shota Hirae <m11g1401@hibikino.ne.jp>
There is now a standard QEMU guest agent that can be installed
and given a virtio serial channel
<channel type='unix'>
<source mode='bind' path='/var/lib/libvirt/qemu/f16x86_64.agent'/>
<target type='virtio' name='org.qemu.guest_agent.0'/>
</channel>
The protocol that runs over the guest agent is JSON based and
very similar to the JSON monitor. We can't use exactly the same
code because there are some odd differences in the way messages
and errors are structured. The qemu_agent.c file is based on
a combination and simplification of qemu_monitor.c and
qemu_monitor_json.c
* src/qemu/qemu_agent.c, src/qemu/qemu_agent.h: Support for
talking to the agent for shutdown
* src/qemu/qemu_domain.c, src/qemu/qemu_domain.h: Add thread
helpers for talking to the agent
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c: Connect to agent whenever starting
a guest
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.c: Make variable static
When sVirt is integrated with the LXC driver, it will be neccessary
to invoke the security driver APIs using only a virDomainDefPtr
since the lxc_container.c code has no virDomainObjPtr available.
Aside from two functions which want obj->pid, every bit of the
security driver code only touches obj->def. So we don't need to
pass a virDomainObjPtr into the security drivers, a virDomainDefPtr
is sufficient. Two functions also gain a 'pid_t pid' argument.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c, src/qemu/qemu_hotplug.c,
src/qemu/qemu_migration.c, src/qemu/qemu_process.c,
src/security/security_apparmor.c,
src/security/security_dac.c,
src/security/security_driver.h,
src/security/security_manager.c,
src/security/security_manager.h,
src/security/security_nop.c,
src/security/security_selinux.c,
src/security/security_stack.c: Change all security APIs to use a
virDomainDefPtr instead of virDomainObjPtr
This *kind of* addresses:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=772395
(it doesn't eliminate the failure to start, but causes libvirt to give
a better idea about the cause of the failure).
If a guest uses a kvm emulator (e.g. /usr/bin/qemu-kvm) and the guest
is started when kvm isn't available (either because virtualization is
unavailable / has been disabled in the BIOS, or the kvm modules
haven't been loaded for some reason), a semi-cryptic error message is
logged:
libvirtError: internal error Child process (LC_ALL=C
PATH=/sbin:/usr/sbin:/bin:/usr/bin /usr/bin/qemu-kvm -device ? -device
pci-assign,? -device virtio-blk-pci,? -device virtio-net-pci,?) status
unexpected: exit status 1
This patch notices at process start that a guest needs kvm, and checks
for the presence of /dev/kvm (a reasonable indicator that kvm is
available) before trying to execute the qemu binary. If kvm isn't
available, a more useful (too verbose??) error is logged.
This patch adds max_files option to qemu.conf which can be used to
override system default limit on number of opened files that are
allowed for qemu user.
When destroying a domain qemuDomainDestroy kills its qemu process and
starts a new job, which means it unlocks the domain object and locks it
again after some time. Although the object is usually unlocked for a
pretty short time, chances are another thread processing an EOF event on
qemu monitor is able to lock the object first and does all the cleanup
by itself. This leads to wrong shutoff reason and lifecycle event detail
and virDomainDestroy API incorrectly reporting failure to destroy an
inactive domain.
Reported by Charlie Smurthwaite.
A preparatory patch for DHCP snooping where we want to be able to
differentiate between a VM's interface using the tuple of
<VM UUID, Interface MAC address>. We assume that MAC addresses could
possibly be re-used between different networks (VLANs) thus do not only
want to rely on the MAC address to identify an interface.
At the current 'final destination' in virNWFilterInstantiate I am leaving
the vmuuid parameter as ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED until the DHCP snooping patches arrive.
(we may not post the DHCP snooping patches for 0.9.9, though)
Mostly this is a pretty trivial patch. On the lowest layers, in lxc_driver
and uml_conf, I am passing the virDomainDefPtr around until I am passing
only the VM's uuid into the NWFilter calls.
This patch cleans up return codes in the nwfilter subsystem.
Some functions in nwfilter_conf.c (validators and formatters) are
keeping their bool return for now and I am converting their return
code to true/false.
All other functions now have failure return codes of -1 and success
of 0.
[I searched for all occurences of ' 1;' and checked all 'if ' and
adapted where needed. After that I did a grep for 'NWFilter' in the source
tree.]
With security_driver set to "none" in /etc/libvirt/qemu.conf,
libvirtd would crash when attempted to attach to an existing
qemu process. Only copy the security model if it actually exists.
During virDomainDestroy, QEMU may emit SHUTDOWN event as a response to
SIGTERM and since domain object is still locked, the event is processed
after the domain is destroyed. We need to ignore this event in such case
to avoid changing domain state from shutoff to shutdown.
When QEMU guest finishes its shutdown sequence, qemu stops virtual CPUs
and when started with -no-shutdown waits for us to kill it using
SGITERM. Since QEMU is flushing its internal buffers, some time may pass
before QEMU actually dies. We mistakenly used "paused" state (and
events) for this which is quite confusing since users may see a domain
going to pause while they expect it to shutdown. Since we already have
"shutdown" state with "the domain is being shut down" semantics, we
should use it for this state.
However, the state didn't have a corresponding event so I created one
and called its detail as VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_SHUTDOWN_FINISHED (guest OS
finished its shutdown sequence) with the intent to add
VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_SHUTDOWN_STARTED in the future if we have a
sufficiently capable guest agent that can notify us when guest OS starts
to shutdown.
The virTimestamp and virTimeMs functions in src/util/util.h
duplicate functionality from virtime.h, in a non-async signal
safe manner. Remove them, and convert all code over to the new
APIs.
* src/util/util.c, src/util/util.h: Delete virTimeMs and virTimestamp
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c, src/qemu/qemu_domain.c,
src/qemu/qemu_driver.c, src/qemu/qemu_migration.c,
src/qemu/qemu_process.c, src/util/event_poll.c: Convert to use
virtime APIs
Now, when we support multiple consoles per domain,
the vm->def->console[0] can still remain an alias
for vm->def->serial[0]; However, we need to copy
it's source definition as well otherwise we'll regress
on virDomainOpenConsole.
Rename virNetDevMacVLanCreate to virNetDevMacVLanCreateWithVPortProfile
and virNetDevMacVLanDelete to virNetDevMacVLanDeleteWithVPortProfile
To make way for renaming the other macvlan creation APIs in
interface.c
* util/virnetdevmacvlan.c, util/virnetdevmacvlan.h,
qemu/qemu_command.c, qemu/qemu_hotplug.c, qemu/qemu_process.c:
Rename APIs
Rename the macvtap.c file to virnetdevmacvlan.c to reflect its
functionality. Move the port profile association code out into
virnetdevvportprofile.c. Make the APIs available unconditionally
to callers
* src/util/macvtap.h: rename to src/util/virnetdevmacvlan.h,
* src/util/macvtap.c: rename to src/util/virnetdevmacvlan.c
* src/util/virnetdevvportprofile.c, src/util/virnetdevvportprofile.h:
Pull in vport association code
* src/Makefile.am, src/conf/domain_conf.h, src/qemu/qemu_conf.c,
src/qemu/qemu_conf.h, src/qemu/qemu_driver.c: Update include
paths & remove conditional compilation
In preparation for code re-organization, rename the Macvtap
management APIs to have the following patterns
virNetDevMacVLanXXXXX - macvlan/macvtap interface management
virNetDevVPortProfileXXXX - virtual port profile management
* src/util/macvtap.c, src/util/macvtap.h: Rename APIs
* src/conf/domain_conf.c, src/network/bridge_driver.c,
src/qemu/qemu_command.c, src/qemu/qemu_command.h,
src/qemu/qemu_driver.c, src/qemu/qemu_hotplug.c,
src/qemu/qemu_migration.c, src/qemu/qemu_process.c,
src/qemu/qemu_process.h: Update for renamed APIs
While Xen only has a single paravirt console, UML, and
QEMU both support multiple paravirt consoles. The LXC
driver can also be trivially made to support multiple
consoles. This patch extends the XML to allow multiple
<console> elements in the XML. It also makes the UML
and QEMU drivers support this config.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c, src/conf/domain_conf.h: Allow
multiple <console> devices
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c, src/xen/xen_driver.c,
src/xenxs/xen_sxpr.c, src/xenxs/xen_xm.c: Update for
internal API changes
* src/security/security_selinux.c, src/security/virt-aa-helper.c:
Only label consoles that aren't a copy of the serial device
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c, src/qemu/qemu_driver.c,
src/qemu/qemu_process.c, src/uml/uml_conf.c,
src/uml/uml_driver.c: Support multiple console devices
* tests/qemuxml2xmltest.c, tests/qemuxml2argvtest.c: Extra
tests for multiple virtio consoles. Set QEMU_CAPS_CHARDEV
for all console /channel tests
* tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-channel-virtio-auto.args,
tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-channel-virtio.args
tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-console-virtio.args: Update
for correct chardev syntax
* tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-console-virtio-many.args,
tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-console-virtio-many.xml: New
test file
Rather than making all clients of monitor commands that are JSON-only
check whether yajl support was compiled in, it is simpler to just
avoid setting the capability bit up front if we can't use the capability.
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.c (qemuCapsComputeCmdFlags): Only set
capability bit if we also have yajl library to use it.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainReboot): Drop #ifdefs.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessStart): Likewise.
* tests/qemuhelptest.c (testHelpStrParsing): Pass test even
without yajl.
* tests/qemuxml2argvtest.c (mymain): Simplify use of json flag.
* tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-disk-drive-error-*.args:
Update expected results to match.
If a disk source gets dropped because it is not accessible,
mgmt application might want to be informed about this. Therefore
we need to emit an event. The event presented in this patch
is however a bit superset of what written above. The reason is simple:
an intention to be easily expanded, e.g. on 'user ejected disk
in guest' events. Therefore, callback gets source string and disk alias
(which should be unique among a domain) and reason (an integer);
This patch implements on_missing feature in qemu driver.
Upon qemu startup process an accessibility of CDROMs
and floppy disks is checked. The source might get dropped
if unavailable and on_missing is set accordingly.
No event is emit thought. Look for follow up patch.
This patch is rather cosmetic as it only moves device alias
assignation from command line construction just before that.
However, it is needed in connotation of previous and next patch.
If the daemon is restarted so we reconnect to monitor, cdrom media
can be ejected. In that case we don't want to show it in domain xml,
or require it on migration destination.
To check for disk status use 'info block' monitor command.
If a domain started with -no-shutdown shuts down while libvirtd is not
running, it will be seen as paused when libvirtd reconnects to it. Use
the paused reason to detect if a domain was stopped because of shutdown
and finish the process just as if a SHUTDOWN event is delivered from
qemu.
Commit 282fe1f0 documented that transient domains will auto-delete
any snapshot metadata when the last reference to the domain is
removed, and that management apps are in charge of grabbing any
snapshot metadata prior to that point. However, this was not
actually implemented for qemu until now.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemudDomainCreate)
(qemuDomainDestroyFlags, qemuDomainSaveInternal)
(qemudDomainCoreDump, qemuDomainRestoreFlags, qemudDomainDefine)
(qemuDomainUndefineFlags, qemuDomainMigrateConfirm3)
(qemuDomainRevertToSnapshot): Clean up snapshot metadata.
* src/qemu/qemu_migration.c (qemuMigrationPrepareAny)
(qemuMigrationPerformJob, qemuMigrationPerformPhase)
(qemuMigrationFinish): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessHandleMonitorEOF)
(qemuProcessReconnect, qemuProcessReconnectHelper)
(qemuProcessAutoDestroyDom): Likewise.
This patch is mostly code motion - moving some functions out
of qemu_driver and into qemu_domain so they can be reused by
multiple qemu_* files (since qemu_driver.h must not grow).
It also adds a new helper function, qemuDomainRemoveInactive,
which will be used in the next patch.
* src/qemu/qemu_domain.h (qemuFindQemuImgBinary)
(qemuDomainSnapshotWriteMetadata, qemuDomainSnapshotForEachQcow2)
(qemuDomainSnapshotDiscard, qemuDomainSnapshotDiscardAll)
(qemuDomainRemoveInactive): New prototypes.
(struct qemu_snap_remove): New struct.
* src/qemu/qemu_domain.c (qemuDomainRemoveInactive)
(qemuDomainSnapshotDiscardAllMetadata): New functions.
(qemuFindQemuImgBinary, qemuDomainSnapshotWriteMetadata)
(qemuDomainSnapshotForEachQcow2, qemuDomainSnapshotDiscard)
(qemuDomainSnapshotDiscardAll): Move here...
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuFindQemuImgBinary)
(qemuDomainSnapshotWriteMetadata, qemuDomainSnapshotForEachQcow2)
(qemuDomainSnapshotDiscard, qemuDomainSnapshotDiscardAll): ...from
here.
(qemuDomainUndefineFlags): Update caller.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainRemoveInactive): Doc fixes.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c: Taking if (qemuDomainObjEndJob(driver, obj) == 0)
true branch then 'obj' is NULL, virDomainObjIsActive(obj) and
virDomainObjUnref(obj) will dereference NULL pointer.
Signed-off-by: Alex Jia <ajia@redhat.com>
Once virDomainReboot is called for a domain, guest OS initiated shutdown
would always result in reboot instead of shutdown. Only
virDomainShutdown would actually shutd such domain down. That's because
we forgot to reset fakeReboot flag once we asked the domain to reboot.
Qemu sends STOP event as part of the shutdown process. Detect such STOP
event and consider shutdown to be reason of emitting such event. That's
the best we can do until qemu provides us the reason directly in STOP
event. This allows us to report shutdown reason for paused state so that
apps can detect domains that failed to finish the shutdown process
(e.g., because qemu is buggy and doesn't exit on SIGTERM or it is
blocked in flushing disk buffers).
Ever since we introduced fake reboot, we call qemuProcessKill as a
reaction to SHUTDOWN event. Unfortunately, qemu doesn't guarantee it
flushed all internal buffers before sending SHUTDOWN, in which case
killing the process forcibly may result in (virtual) disk corruption.
By sending just SIGTERM without SIGKILL we give qemu time to to flush
all buffers and exit. Once qemu exits, we will see an EOF on monitor
connection and tear down the domain. In case qemu ignores SIGTERM or
just hangs there, the process stays running but that's not any different
from a possible hang anytime during the shutdown process so I think it's
just fine.
Also qemu (since 0.14 until it's fixed) has a bug in SIGTERM processing
which causes it not to exit but instead send new SHUTDOWN event and keep
waiting. I think the best we can do is to ignore duplicate SHUTDOWN
events to avoid a SHUTDOWN-SIGTERM loop and leave the domain in paused
state.
When a domain is rebooted using libvirt API, we use fake reboot
consisting of shutting down and resetting the domain. Thus we see a
SHUTDOWN event and set gotShutdown flag. But we never reset it back and
if the domain crashes after it was rebooted this way, we consider it was
a normal shutdown and not a crash.
Commit 4454a9efc7 changed shutoff reason
from VIR_DOMAIN_SHUTOFF_CRASHED to VIR_DOMAIN_SHUTOFF_FAILED in case we
see an unexpected EOF on monitor connection. But FAILED reason is
dedicated for domains that fail to start. CRASHED reason is the right
one to use in this situation.
This patch fixes the bug shown in bugzilla 738778. It's not an nwfilter problem but a connection sharing / closure issue.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=738778
Depending on the speed / #CPUs of the machine you are using you may not see this bug all the time.
This patch enables modifying network device configuration using the
virUpdateDeviceFlags API method. Matching of devices is accomplished
using MAC addresses.
While updating live configuration of a running domain, the user is
allowed only to change link state of the interface. Additional
modifications may be added later. For now the code checks for
unsupported changes and thereafter changes the link state, if
applicable.
When updating persistent configuration of guest's network interface the
whole configuration (except for the MAC address) may be modified and
is stored for the next startup.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c - Add dispatching of virUpdateDevice for
network devices update (live/config)
* src/qemu/qemu_hotplug.c - add setting of initial link state on live
device addition
- add function to change network device
configuration. By now it supports only
changing of link state
* src/qemu/qemu_hotplug.h - Headers to above functions
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c - set link states before virtual machine
start. Qemu does not support setting of
this on the command line.
If libvirt daemon gets restarted and there is (at least) one
unresponsive qemu, the startup procedure hangs up. This patch creates
one thread per vm in which we try to reconnect to monitor. Therefore,
blocking in one thread will not affect other APIs.
This patch annotates APIs with low or high priority.
In low set MUST be all APIs which might eventually access monitor
(and thus block indefinitely). Other APIs may be marked as high
priority. However, some must be (e.g. domainDestroy).
For high priority calls (HPC), there are some high priority workers
(HPW) created in the pool. HPW can execute only HPC, although normal
worker can process any call regardless priority. Therefore, only those
APIs which are guaranteed to end in reasonable small amount of time
can be marked as HPC.
The size of this HPC pool is static, because HPC are expected to end
quickly, therefore jobs assigned to this pool will be served quickly.
It can be configured in libvirtd.conf via prio_workers variable.
Default is set to 5.
To mark API with low or high priority, append priority:{low|high} to
it's comment in src/remote/remote_protocol.x. This is similar to
autogen|skipgen. If not marked, the generator assumes low as default.
I got confused when 'virsh domblkinfo dom disk' required the
path to a disk (which can be ambiguous, since a single file
can back multiple disks), rather than the unambiguous target
device name that I was using in disk snapshots. So, in true
developer fashion, I went for the best of both worlds - all
interfaces that operate on a disk (aka block) now accept
either the target name or the unambiguous path to the backing
file used by the disk.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h (virDomainDiskIndexByName): Add
parameter.
(virDomainDiskPathByName): New prototype.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (domain_conf.h): Export it.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainDiskIndexByName): Also allow
searching by path, and decide whether ambiguity is okay.
(virDomainDiskPathByName): New function.
(virDomainDiskRemoveByName, virDomainSnapshotAlignDisks): Update
callers.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemudDomainBlockPeek)
(qemuDomainAttachDeviceConfig, qemuDomainUpdateDeviceConfig)
(qemuDomainGetBlockInfo, qemuDiskPathToAlias): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessFindDomainDiskByPath):
Likewise.
* src/libxl/libxl_driver.c (libxlDomainAttachDeviceDiskLive)
(libxlDomainDetachDeviceDiskLive, libxlDomainAttachDeviceConfig)
(libxlDomainUpdateDeviceConfig): Likewise.
* src/uml/uml_driver.c (umlDomainBlockPeek): Likewise.
* src/xen/xend_internal.c (xenDaemonDomainBlockPeek): Likewise.
* docs/formatsnapshot.html.in: Update documentation.
* tools/virsh.pod (domblkstat, domblkinfo): Likewise.
* docs/schemas/domaincommon.rng (diskTarget): Tighten pattern on
disk targets.
* docs/schemas/domainsnapshot.rng (disksnapshot): Update to match.
* tests/domainsnapshotxml2xmlin/disk_snapshot.xml: Update test.
It is not possible to change the label of a TCP socket once it
has been opened. When creating a TCP socket care must be taken
to ensure the socket creation label is set & then cleared.
Remove the bogus call to virSecurityManagerSetProcessFDLabel
from the lock driver guest setup code and instead make use of
virSecurityManagerSetSocketLabel
The APIs are designed to label a socket in a way that the libvirt daemon
itself is able to access it (i.e., in SELinux the label is virtd_t based
as opposed to svirt_* we use for labeling resources that need to be
accessed by a vm). The new name reflects this.
Changing the current vm, and writing that change to the file
system, all before a new qemu starts, is risky; it's hard to
roll back if starting the new qemu fails for some reason.
Instead of abusing vm->current_snapshot and making the command
line generator decide whether the current snapshot warrants
using -loadvm, it is better to just directly pass a snapshot all
the way through the call chain if it is to be loaded.
This frees up the last use of snapshot->def->active for qemu's
use, so the next patch can repurpose that field for tracking
which snapshot is current.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuBuildCommandLine): Don't use active
field of snapshot.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessStart): Add a parameter.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.h (qemuProcessStart): Update prototype.
* src/qemu/qemu_migration.c (qemuMigrationPrepareAny): Update
callers.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemudDomainCreate)
(qemuDomainSaveImageStartVM, qemuDomainObjStart)
(qemuDomainRevertToSnapshot): Likewise.
(qemuDomainSnapshotSetCurrentActive)
(qemuDomainSnapshotSetCurrentInactive): Delete unused functions.
The functions for manipulating pidfiles are in util/util.{c,h}.
We will shortly be adding some further pidfile related functions.
To avoid further growing util.c, this moves the pidfile related
functions into a dedicated virpidfile.{c,h}. The functions are
also all renamed to have 'virPidFile' as their name prefix
* util/util.h, util/util.c: Remove all pidfile code
* util/virpidfile.c, util/virpidfile.h: Add new APIs for pidfile
handling.
* lxc/lxc_controller.c, lxc/lxc_driver.c, network/bridge_driver.c,
qemu/qemu_process.c: Add virpidfile.h include and adapt for API
renames
Detected by ccc-analyzer, reported by Alex Jia.
qemuProcessStart always calls qemuProcessWaitForMonitor with a
non-negative position, but qemuProcessAttach always calls with -1.
In the latter case, there is no log file we can scrape, so we
also should not be trying to scrape the logs if the qemu process
died at the very end.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessWaitForMonitor): Don't try
to read from log in qemuProcessAttach case.
Value stored to 'ret' is never read, in fact, 'cleanup' section will
directly return -1 when function is fail, so remove this dead assignment.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c: kill dead assignment.
Signed-off-by: Alex Jia <ajia@redhat.com>
Currently, we attempt to run sync job and async job at the same time. It
means that the monitor commands for two jobs can be run in any order.
In the function qemuDomainObjEnterMonitorInternal():
if (priv->job.active == QEMU_JOB_NONE && priv->job.asyncJob) {
if (qemuDomainObjBeginNestedJob(driver, obj) < 0)
We check whether the caller is an async job by priv->job.active and
priv->job.asynJob. But when an async job is running, and a sync job is
also running at the time of the check, then priv->job.active is not
QEMU_JOB_NONE. So we cannot check whether the caller is an async job
in the function qemuDomainObjEnterMonitorInternal(), and must instead
put the burden on the caller to tell us when an async command wants
to do a nested job.
Once the burden is on the caller, then only async monitor enters need
to worry about whether the VM is still running; for sync monitor enter,
the internal return is always 0, so lots of ignore_value can be dropped.
* src/qemu/THREADS.txt: Reflect new rules.
* src/qemu/qemu_domain.h (qemuDomainObjEnterMonitorAsync): New
prototype.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.h (qemuProcessStartCPUs)
(qemuProcessStopCPUs): Add parameter.
* src/qemu/qemu_migration.h (qemuMigrationToFile): Likewise.
(qemuMigrationWaitForCompletion): Make static.
* src/qemu/qemu_domain.c (qemuDomainObjEnterMonitorInternal): Add
parameter.
(qemuDomainObjEnterMonitorAsync): New function.
(qemuDomainObjEnterMonitor, qemuDomainObjEnterMonitorWithDriver):
Update callers.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainSaveInternal)
(qemudDomainCoreDump, doCoreDump, processWatchdogEvent)
(qemudDomainSuspend, qemudDomainResume, qemuDomainSaveImageStartVM)
(qemuDomainSnapshotCreateActive, qemuDomainRevertToSnapshot):
Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessStopCPUs)
(qemuProcessFakeReboot, qemuProcessRecoverMigration)
(qemuProcessRecoverJob, qemuProcessStart): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_migration.c (qemuMigrationToFile)
(qemuMigrationWaitForCompletion, qemuMigrationUpdateJobStatus)
(qemuMigrationJobStart, qemuDomainMigrateGraphicsRelocate)
(doNativeMigrate, doTunnelMigrate, qemuMigrationPerformJob)
(qemuMigrationPerformPhase, qemuMigrationFinish)
(qemuMigrationConfirm): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_hotplug.c: Drop unneeded ignore_value.
Although most functions in libvirt return 0 on success and < 0 on
failure, there are a few functions lingering around that return errno
(a positive value) on failure, and sometimes code calling those
functions incorrectly assumes the <0 standard. I noticed one of these
the other day when auditing networkStartDhcpDaemon after Guido Gunther
found a place where success was improperly returned on failure (that
patch has been acked and is pending a push). The problem was that it
expected the return value from virFileReadPid to be < 0 on failure,
but it was actually positive (it was also neglected to set the return
code in this case, similar to the bug found by Guido).
This all led to the fact that *all* of the virFile*Pid functions in
util.c are returning errno on failure. This patch remedies that
problem by changing them all to return -errno on failure, and makes
any necessary changes to callers of the functions. (In the meantime, I
also properly set the return code on failure of virFileReadPid in
networkStartDhcpDaemon).
When an operation started by virDomainBlockPull completes (either with
success or with failure), raise an event to indicate the final status.
This API allow users to avoid polling on virDomainGetBlockJobInfo if
they would prefer to use an event mechanism.
* daemon/remote.c: Dispatch events to client
* include/libvirt/libvirt.h.in: Define event ID and callback signature
* src/conf/domain_event.c, src/conf/domain_event.h,
src/libvirt_private.syms: Extend API to handle the new event
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c: Connect to the QEMU monitor event
for block_stream completion and emit a libvirt block pull event
* src/remote/remote_driver.c: Receive and dispatch events to application
* src/remote/remote_protocol.x: Wire protocol definition for the event
* src/remote_protocol-structs: structure definitions for protocol verification
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.c, src/qemu/qemu_monitor.h,
src/qemu/qemu_monitor_json.c: Watch for BLOCK_STREAM_COMPLETED event
from QEMU monitor
The network driver needs to assign physical devices for use by modes
that use macvtap, keeping track of which physical devices are in use
(and how many instances, when the devices can be shared). Three calls
are added:
networkAllocateActualDevice - finds a physical device for use by the
domain, and sets up the virDomainActualNetDef accordingly.
networkNotifyActualDevice - assumes that the domain was already
running, but libvirtd was restarted, and needs to be notified by each
already-running domain about what interfaces they are using.
networkReleaseActualDevice - decrements the usage count of the
allocated physical device, and frees the virDomainActualNetDef to
avoid later accidentally using the device.
bridge_driver.[hc] - the new APIs. When WITH_NETWORK is false, these
functions are all #defined to be "0" in the .h file (effectively
becoming a NOP) to prevent link errors.
qemu_(command|driver|hotplug|process).c - add calls to the above APIs
in the appropriate places.
tests/Makefile.am - we need to include libvirt_driver_network.la
whenever libvirt_driver_qemu.la is linked, to avoid unreferenced
symbols (in functions that are never called by the test
programs...)
The qemu driver accesses fields in the virDomainNetDef directly, but
with the advent of the virDomainActualNetDef, some pieces of
information may be found in a different place (the ActualNetDef) if
the network connection is of type='network' and that network is of
forward type='bridge|private|vepa|passthrough'. The previous patch
added functions to mask this difference from callers - they hide the
decision making process and just pick the value from the proper place.
This patch uses those functions in the qemu driver as a first step in
making qemu work with the new network types. At this point, the
virDomainActualNetDef is guaranteed always NULL, so the GetActualX()
function will return exactly what the def->X that's being replaced
would have returned (ie bisecting is not compromised).
There is one place (in qemu_driver.c) where the internal details of
the NetDef are directly manipulated by the code, so the GetActual
functions cannot be used there without extra additional code; that
file will be treated in a separate patch.
The virtPortProfile in the domain interface struct is now a separately
allocated object *pointed to by* (rather than contained in) the main
virDomainNetDef object. This is done to make it easier to figure out
when a virtualPortProfile has/hasn't been specified in a particular
config.
There were two API in driver.c that were silently masking flags
bits prior to calling out to the drivers, and several others
that were explicitly masking flags bits. This is not
forward-compatible - if we ever have that many flags in the
future, then talking to an old server that masks out the
flags would be indistinguishable from talking to a new server
that can honor the flag. In general, libvirt.c should forward
_all_ flags on to drivers, and only the drivers should reject
unknown flags.
In the case of virDrvSecretGetValue, the solution is to separate
the internal driver callback function to have two parameters
instead of one, with only one parameter affected by the public
API. In the case of virDomainGetXMLDesc, it turns out that
no one was ever mixing VIR_DOMAIN_XML_INTERNAL_STATUS with
the dumpxml path in the first place; that internal flag was
only used in saving and restoring state files, which happened
to be in functions internal to a single file, so there is no
mixing of the internal flag with a public flags argument.
Additionally, virDomainMemoryStats passed a flags argument
over RPC, but not to the driver.
* src/driver.h (VIR_DOMAIN_XML_FLAGS_MASK)
(VIR_SECRET_GET_VALUE_FLAGS_MASK): Delete.
(virDrvSecretGetValue): Separate out internal flags.
(virDrvDomainMemoryStats): Provide missing flags argument.
* src/driver.c (verify): Drop unused check.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h (virDomainObjParseFile): Delete
declaration.
(virDomainXMLInternalFlags): Move...
* src/conf/domain_conf.c: ...here. Delete redundant include.
(virDomainObjParseFile): Make static.
* src/libvirt.c (virDomainGetXMLDesc, virSecretGetValue): Update
clients.
(virDomainMemoryPeek, virInterfaceGetXMLDesc)
(virDomainMemoryStats, virDomainBlockPeek, virNetworkGetXMLDesc)
(virStoragePoolGetXMLDesc, virStorageVolGetXMLDesc)
(virNodeNumOfDevices, virNodeListDevices, virNWFilterGetXMLDesc):
Don't mask unknown flags.
* src/interface/netcf_driver.c (interfaceGetXMLDesc): Reject
unknown flags.
* src/secret/secret_driver.c (secretGetValue): Update clients.
* src/remote/remote_driver.c (remoteSecretGetValue)
(remoteDomainMemoryStats): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessGetVolumeQcowPassphrase):
Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemudDomainMemoryStats): Likewise.
* daemon/remote.c (remoteDispatchDomainMemoryStats): Likewise.
When creating new qemu process we saved domain status XML only after the
process was fully setup and running. In case libvirtd was killed before
the whole process finished, once libvirtd started again it didn't know
anything about the new process and we end up with an orphaned qemu
process. Let's save the domain status XML as soon as we know the PID so
that libvirtd can kill the process on restart.