If systemd is installed, but is not the init system,
systemd-machined fails with an unhelpful error message:
Launch helper exited with unknown return code 1
Currently we only check if the "machine1" service is
available (in ListActivatableNames).
Also check if "systemd1" service is registered with DBus
(ListNames).
This fixes https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=493246#c22
Commit 631923e used a few macros from sys/wait.h without including
it. On Linux, they were also defined in stdlib.h, but on FreeBSD
the build failed:
../../tests/commandtest.c: In function 'test1':
warning: implicit declaration of function 'WIFEXITED'
warning: nested extern declaration of 'WIFEXITED' [-Wnested-externs]
The old semantics of virFork() violates the priciple of good
usability: it requires the caller to check the pid argument
after use, *even when virFork returned -1*, in order to properly
abort a child process that failed setup done immediately after
fork() - that is, the caller must call _exit() in the child.
While uses in virfile.c did this correctly, uses in 'virsh
lxc-enter-namespace' and 'virt-login-shell' would happily return
from the calling function in both the child and the parent,
leading to very confusing results. [Thankfully, I found the
problem by inspection, and can't actually trigger the double
return on error without an LD_PRELOAD library.]
It is much better if the semantics of virFork are impossible
to abuse. Looking at virFork(), the parent could only ever
return -1 with a non-negative pid if it misused pthread_sigmask,
but this never happens. Up until this patch series, the child
could return -1 with non-negative pid if it fails to set up
signals correctly, but we recently fixed that to make the child
call _exit() at that point instead of forcing the caller to do
it. Thus, the return value and contents of the pid argument are
now redundant (a -1 return now happens only for failure to fork,
a child 0 return only happens for a successful 0 pid, and a
parent 0 return only happens for a successful non-zero pid),
so we might as well return the pid directly rather than an
integer of whether it succeeded or failed; this is also good
from the interface design perspective as users are already
familiar with fork() semantics.
One last change in this patch: before returning the pid directly,
I found cases where using virProcessWait unconditionally on a
cleanup path of a virFork's -1 pid return would be nicer if there
were a way to avoid it overwriting an earlier message. While
such paths are a bit harder to come by with my change to a direct
pid return, I decided to keep the virProcessWait change in this
patch.
* src/util/vircommand.h (virFork): Change signature.
* src/util/vircommand.c (virFork): Guarantee that child will only
return on success, to simplify callers. Return pid rather than
status, now that the situations are always the same.
(virExec): Adjust caller, also avoid open-coding process death.
* src/util/virprocess.c (virProcessWait): Tweak semantics when pid
is -1.
(virProcessRunInMountNamespace): Adjust caller.
* src/util/virfile.c (virFileAccessibleAs, virFileOpenForked)
(virDirCreate): Likewise.
* tools/virt-login-shell.c (main): Likewise.
* tools/virsh-domain.c (cmdLxcEnterNamespace): Likewise.
* tests/commandtest.c (test23): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Auditing all callers of virCommandRun and virCommandWait that
passed a non-NULL pointer for exit status turned up some
interesting observations. Many callers were merely passing
a pointer to avoid the overall command dying, but without
caring what the exit status was - but these callers would
be better off treating a child death by signal as an abnormal
exit. Other callers were actually acting on the status, but
not all of them remembered to filter by WIFEXITED and convert
with WEXITSTATUS; depending on the platform, this can result
in a status being reported as 256 times too big. And among
those that correctly parse the output, it gets rather verbose.
Finally, there were the callers that explicitly checked that
the status was 0, and gave their own message, but with fewer
details than what virCommand gives for free.
So the best idea is to move the complexity out of callers and
into virCommand - by default, we return the actual exit status
already cleaned through WEXITSTATUS and treat signals as a
failed command; but the few callers that care can ask for raw
status and act on it themselves.
* src/util/vircommand.h (virCommandRawStatus): New prototype.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (util/command.h): Export it.
* docs/internals/command.html.in: Document it.
* src/util/vircommand.c (virCommandRawStatus): New function.
(virCommandWait): Adjust semantics.
* tests/commandtest.c (test1): Test it.
* daemon/remote.c (remoteDispatchAuthPolkit): Adjust callers.
* src/access/viraccessdriverpolkit.c (virAccessDriverPolkitCheck):
Likewise.
* src/fdstream.c (virFDStreamCloseInt): Likewise.
* src/lxc/lxc_process.c (virLXCProcessStart): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuCreateInBridgePortWithHelper):
Likewise.
* src/xen/xen_driver.c (xenUnifiedXendProbe): Simplify.
* tests/reconnect.c (mymain): Likewise.
* tests/statstest.c (mymain): Likewise.
* src/bhyve/bhyve_process.c (virBhyveProcessStart)
(virBhyveProcessStop): Don't overwrite virCommand error.
* src/libvirt.c (virConnectAuthGainPolkit): Likewise.
* src/openvz/openvz_driver.c (openvzDomainGetBarrierLimit)
(openvzDomainSetBarrierLimit): Likewise.
* src/util/virebtables.c (virEbTablesOnceInit): Likewise.
* src/util/viriptables.c (virIpTablesOnceInit): Likewise.
* src/util/virnetdevveth.c (virNetDevVethCreate): Fix debug
message.
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.c (virQEMUCapsInitQMP): Add comment.
* src/storage/storage_backend_iscsi.c
(virStorageBackendISCSINodeUpdate): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Right now, a caller waiting for a child process either requires
the child to have status 0, or must use WIFEXITED() and friends
itself. But in many cases, we want the middle ground of treating
fatal signals as an error, and directly accessing the normal exit
value without having to use WEXITSTATUS(), in order to easily
detect an expected non-zero exit status. This adds the middle
ground to the low-level virProcessWait; the next patch will add
it to virCommand.
* src/util/virprocess.h (virProcessWait): Alter signature.
* src/util/virprocess.c (virProcessWait): Add parameter.
(virProcessRunInMountNamespace): Adjust caller.
* src/util/vircommand.c (virCommandWait): Likewise.
* src/util/virfile.c (virFileAccessibleAs): Likewise.
* src/lxc/lxc_container.c (lxcContainerHasReboot)
(lxcContainerAvailable): Likewise.
* daemon/libvirtd.c (daemonForkIntoBackground): Likewise.
* tools/virt-login-shell.c (main): Likewise.
* tools/virsh-domain.c (cmdLxcEnterNamespace): Likewise.
* tests/testutils.c (virtTestCaptureProgramOutput): Likewise.
* tests/commandtest.c (test23): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Thanks to namespaces, we have a couple of places in the code
base that want to reflect a child exit status, including the
ability to detect death by a signal, back to a grandparent.
Best to make it a reusable function.
* src/util/virprocess.h (virProcessExitWithStatus): New prototype.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (util/virprocess.h): Export it.
* src/util/virprocess.c (virProcessExitWithStatus): New function.
* tests/commandtest.c (test23): Test it.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
When a child fails without exec'ing, we want a well-known status;
best is to match what env(1), nice(1), su(1), and other wrapper
programs do. This patch adds enum values that later patches will
use, and sets up virFork as the first client of EXIT_CANCELED
for errors detected prior to even attempting exec, as well as
virExec to distinguish between a missing executable vs. a binary
that cannot be executed.
This is a slight semantic change in the unlikely case of a child
process failing to restore its signal mask - we now kill the
child with a known status instead of relying on the caller to
notice and do an appropriate _exit(). A subsequent patch will
make further cleanups based on an audit of all callers.
* src/internal.h (EXIT_CANCELED, EXIT_CANNOT_INVOKE)
(EXIT_ENOENT): New enum.
* src/util/vircommand.c (virFork): Document specific exit value if
child aborts early.
(virExec): Distinguish between various exec failures.
* tests/commandtest.c (test1): Enhance test.
(test22): New test.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Running 'make -C tests check TESTS=qemuagenttest' left a directory
/tmp/libvirt_XXXXXX/ behind. The culprit was failure to cleanup
when short-circuiting an expensive test.
* tests/qemuagenttest.c (testQemuAgentTimeout): Free resources
when skipping expensive test.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Cygwin supports <dlfcn.h> and even has limited LD_PRELOAD
capabilities; but because it does not use ELF binaries it
cannot support RTLD_NEXT lookups.
CC libvirportallocatormock_la-virportallocatortest.lo
virportallocatortest.c: In function 'init_syms':
virportallocatortest.c:47:24: error: 'RTLD_NEXT' undeclared (first use in this function)
realsocket = dlsym(RTLD_NEXT, "socket");
* tests/virportallocatortest.c: Also require RTLD_NEXT.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Running ./autobuild.sh complained during the mingw cross-compile:
CC libvirportallocatormock_la-virportallocatortest.lo
../../tests/virportallocatortest.c:32:20: fatal error: dlfcn.h: No such file or directory
# include <dlfcn.h>
^
compilation terminated. With that fixed, the next failure was:
CCLD qemuxml2argvmock.la
libtool: link: libtool library `qemuxml2argvmock.la' must begin with `lib'
libtool: link: Try `libtool --help --mode=link' for more information.
While we don't need to limit all LD_PRELOAD tests to just Linux, we
do need to limit them to platforms that actually support loading;
we also need to avoid building qemu tests when qemu is not enabled.
* tests/virportallocatortest.c: Make conditional on <dlfcn.h>.
* tests/Makefile.am (test_libraries): Only build qemu mock library
when building qemu tests.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
This moves the call to virNetDevBandwidthFormat() in
virDomainNetDefFormat() to be called right after the call to
virNetDevVPortProfileFormat(), so that a single chunk of that function
can be placed inside an if that conditionally calls
virDomainActualNetDefContentsFormat() instead (next patch). The
re-ordering necessitates modifying a couple of test data files.
Add a virStringSearch method to virstring.{c,h} which performs
a regex match against a string and returns the matching substrings.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
vircgrouptest.c: In function 'testCgroupGetPercpuStats':
vircgrouptest.c:543: warning: integer constatnt is too large for 'long' type
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The virDomainGetRootFilesystem method can be generalized to allow
any filesystem path to be obtained.
While doing this, start a new test case for purpose of testing various
helper methods in the domain_conf.{c,h} files, such as this one.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The previous OOM testing support would re-run the entire "main"
method each iteration, failing a different malloc each time.
When a test suite has 'n' allocations, the number of repeats
requires is (n * (n + 1) ) / 2. This gets very large, very
quickly.
This new OOM testing support instead integrates at the
virtTestRun level, so each individual test case gets repeated,
instead of the entire test suite. This means the values of
'n' are orders of magnitude smaller.
The simple usage is
$ VIR_TEST_OOM=1 ./qemuxml2argvtest
...
29) QEMU XML-2-ARGV clock-utc ... OK
Test OOM for nalloc=36 .................................... OK
30) QEMU XML-2-ARGV clock-localtime ... OK
Test OOM for nalloc=36 .................................... OK
31) QEMU XML-2-ARGV clock-france ... OK
Test OOM for nalloc=38 ...................................... OK
...
the second lines reports how many mallocs have to be failed, and thus
how many repeats of the test will be run.
If it crashes, then running under valgrind will often show the problem
$ VIR_TEST_OOM=1 ../run valgrind ./qemuxml2argvtest
When debugging problems it is also helpful to select an individual
test case
$ VIR_TEST_RANGE=30 VIR_TEST_OOM=1 ../run valgrind ./qemuxml2argvtest
When things get really tricky, it is possible to request that just
specific allocs are failed. eg to fail allocs 5 -> 12, use
$ VIR_TEST_RANGE=30 VIR_TEST_OOM=1:5-12 ../run valgrind ./qemuxml2argvtest
In the worse case, you might want to know the stack trace of the
alloc which was failed then VIR_TEST_OOM_TRACE can be set. If it
is set to 1 then it will only print if it thinks a mistake happened.
This is often not reliable, so setting it to 2 will make it print
the stack trace for every alloc that is failed.
$ VIR_TEST_OOM_TRACE=2 VIR_TEST_RANGE=30 VIR_TEST_OOM=1:5-5 ../run valgrind ./qemuxml2argvtest
30) QEMU XML-2-ARGV clock-localtime ... OK
Test OOM for nalloc=36 !virAllocN
/home/berrange/src/virt/libvirt/src/util/viralloc.c:180
virHashCreateFull
/home/berrange/src/virt/libvirt/src/util/virhash.c:144
virDomainDefParseXML
/home/berrange/src/virt/libvirt/src/conf/domain_conf.c:11745
virDomainDefParseNode
/home/berrange/src/virt/libvirt/src/conf/domain_conf.c:12646
virDomainDefParse
/home/berrange/src/virt/libvirt/src/conf/domain_conf.c:12590
testCompareXMLToArgvFiles
/home/berrange/src/virt/libvirt/tests/qemuxml2argvtest.c:106
virtTestRun
/home/berrange/src/virt/libvirt/tests/testutils.c:250
mymain
/home/berrange/src/virt/libvirt/tests/qemuxml2argvtest.c:418 (discriminator 2)
virtTestMain
/home/berrange/src/virt/libvirt/tests/testutils.c:750
??
??:0
_start
??:?
FAILED
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This patch changes network device type used by default from rtl8139
to virtio when architecture type is aarch64 and machine type is virt.
Qemu doesn't support any other machine types for aarch64 right now and
we can't make any other aarch64-specific tuning in this function yet.
Signed-off-by: Oleg Strikov <oleg.strikov@canonical.com>
There is no keyboard working on PPC64 and PS2 mouse is only for X86
when graphics are enabled.
Add a USB keyboard and USB mouse for PPC64 when graphics are enabled.
Signed-off-by: Li Zhang <zhlcindy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Ján Tomko <jtomko@redhat.com>
Format qemu command line for USB keyboard
and add test cases for it.
Signed-off-by: Li Zhang <zhlcindy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Ján Tomko <jtomko@redhat.com>
PS2 devices only work on X86 platform, other platforms may need
USB devices instead. Athough it doesn't influence the QEMU command line,
it's not right to add PS2 mouse/keyboard for non-X86 platform.
Signed-off-by: Li Zhang <zhlcindy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Ján Tomko <jtomko@redhat.com>
There is no keyboard support currently in libvirt.
For some platforms (PPC64 QEMU) this makes graphics unusable,
since the keyboard is not implicit and it can't be added via libvirt.
Signed-off-by: Li Zhang <zhlcindy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Ján Tomko <jtomko@redhat.com>
Also try to bind on IPv6 to check if the port is occupied.
Change the mocked bind in the test to return EADDRINUSE
for some ports only for the IPv4/IPv6 socket if we're testing
on a host with IPv6 compiled in.
Also mock socket() to make it fail with EAFNOTSUPPORTED
if LIBVIRT_TEST_IPV4ONLY is set in the environment, to
simulate a host without IPv6 support in the kernel. The
tests are repeated again with this variable set.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1025407
Add APIs that will allow to use the storage driver to assist in
operations on files even for remote filesystems without native
representation as files in the host.
The problem with VLAN is that the user still has to manually create the
vlan interface on the host. Then the generated configuration will use
it as a nerwork hostdev device. So the generated configurations of the
following two fragments are equivalent (see rhbz#1059637).
lxc.network.type = phys
lxc.network.link = eth0.5
lxc.network.type = vlan
lxc.network.link = eth0
lxc.network.vlan.id = 5
Some of the LXC configuration properties aren't migrated since they
would only cause problems in libvirt-lxc:
* lxc.network.ipv[46]: LXC driver doesn't setup IP address of guests,
see rhbz#1059624
* lxc.network.name, see rhbz#1059630
If no network configuration is provided, LXC only provides the loopback
interface. To match this, we need to use the privnet feature. LXC will
also define a 'none' network type in its 1.0.0 version that fits
libvirt LXC driver's default.
LXC rootfs can be either a directory or a block device or an image
file. The first two types have been implemented, but the image file is
still to be done since LXC auto-guesses the file format at mount time
and the LXC driver doesn't support the 'auto' format.
This function aims at converting LXC configuration into a libvirt
domain XML description to help users migrate from LXC to libvirt.
Here is an example of how the lxc configuration works:
virsh -c lxc:/// domxml-from-native lxc-tools /var/lib/lxc/migrate_test/config
It is possible that some parts couldn't be properly mapped into a
domain XML fragment, so users should carefully review the result
before creating the domain.
fstab files in lxc.mount lines will need to be merged into the
configuration file as lxc.mount.entry.
As we can't know the amount of memory of the host, we have to set a
default value for max_balloon that users will probably want to adjust.
This test creates a Fake NUMA topology with non-sequential cell ids
to check if libvirt properly handles the same
Signed-off-by: Shivaprasad G Bhat <sbhat@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Pradipta Kr. Banerjee <bpradip@in.ibm.com>
Add a new backend for any character device. This backend uses channel
in spice connection. This channel is similar to spicevmc, but
all-purpose in contrast to spicevmc.
Apart from spicevmc, spiceport-backed chardev will not be formatted
into the command-line if there is no spice to use (with test for that
as well). For this I moved the def->graphics counting to the start
of the function so its results can be used in rest of the code even in
the future.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Add a new <timer> for the HyperV reference time counter enlightenment
and the iTSC reference page for Windows guests.
This feature provides a paravirtual approach to track timer events for
the guest (similar to kvmclock) with the option to use real hardware
clock on systems with a iTSC with compensation across various hosts.
According to the documentation describing various tunables for domain
timers not all the fields are supported by all the driver types. Express
these in the RNG:
- rtc, platform: Only these support the "track" attribute.
- tsc: only one to support "frequency" and "mode" attributes
- hpet, pit: tickpolicy/catchup attribute/element
- kvmclock: no extra attributes are supported
Additionally the attributes of the <catchup> element for
tickpolicy='catchup' are optional according to the parsing code. Express
this in the XML and fix a spurious space added while formatting the
<catchup> element and add tests for it.
With my recent work on the test, both time() and localtime() are used.
While mocking the former one, we get predictable result for UTC. But
since the latter function uses timezone to get local time, the result of
localtime() is not so predictive. Therefore, we must set the TZ variable
at the beginning of the test. To be able to catch some things that work
just by a blind chance, I'm choosing a virtual timezone that (hopefully)
no libvirt developer resides in.
The qemuxml2argvtest is run on more platforms than linux. For instance
FreeBSD. On these platforms we are, however, not mocking time() which
results in current time being fetched from system and hence tests number
32 and 33 failing.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
When trying to introduce a test for previous patch, I've
noticed that the command line is constructed using current
time. This won't work in our test suite (unless you guys
wants to set a specific time prior to each test run :) ).
Therefore we need to mock calls to time(2) to return the
same value every time it's called.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The previous patch fixed "forwardPlainNames" so that it really is
doing only what is intended, but left the default to be
"forwardPlainNames='no'". Discussion around the initial version of
that patch led to the decision that the default should instead be
"forwardPlainNames='yes'" (i.e. the original behavior before commit
f3886825). This patch makes that change to the default.
In commit f386825 we began adding the options
--domain-needed
--local=/$mydomain/
to all dnsmasq commandlines with the stated reason of preventing
forwarding of DNS queries for names that weren't fully qualified
domain names ("FQDN", i.e. a name that included some "."s and a domain
name). This was later changed to
domain-needed
local=/$mydomain/
when we moved the options from the dnsmasq commandline to a conf file.
The original patch on the list, and discussion about it, is here:
https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2012-August/msg01594.html
When a domain name isn't specified (mydomain == ""), the addition of
"domain-needed local=//" will prevent forwarding of domain-less
requests to the virtualization host's DNS resolver, but if a domain
*is* specified, the addition of "local=/domain/" will prevent
forwarding of any requests for *qualified* names within that domain
that aren't resolvable by libvirt's dnsmasq itself.
An example of the problems this causes - let's say a network is
defined with:
<domain name='example.com'/>
<dhcp>
..
<host mac='52:54:00:11:22:33' ip='1.2.3.4' name='myguest'/>
</dhcp>
This results in "local=/example.com/" being added to the dnsmasq options.
If a guest requests "myguest" or "myguest.example.com", that will be
resolved by dnsmasq. If the guest asks for "www.example.com", dnsmasq
will not know the answer, but instead of forwarding it to the host, it
will return NOT FOUND to the guest. In most cases that isn't the
behavior an admin is looking for.
A later patch (commit 4f595ba) attempted to remedy this by adding a
"forwardPlainNames" attribute to the <dns> element. The idea was that
if forwardPlainNames='yes' (default is 'no'), we would allow
unresolved names to be forwarded. However, that patch was botched, in
that it only removed the "domain-needed" option when
forwardPlainNames='yes', and left the "local=/mydomain/".
Really we should have been just including the option "--domain-needed
--local=//" (note the lack of domain name) regardless of the
configured domain of the network, so that requests for names without a
domain would be treated as "local to dnsmasq" and not forwarded, but
all others (including those in the network's configured domain) would
be forwarded. We also shouldn't include *either* of those options if
forwardPlainNames='yes'. This patch makes those corrections.
This patch doesn't remedy the fact that default behavior was changed
by the addition of this feature. That will be handled in a subsequent
patch.
I've received a notice over IRC that on some systems, the
virnetdevbandwidthtest is not linked with libxml:
/usr/bin/ld: virnetdevbandwidthtest.o: undefined reference to symbol 'xmlStrEqual@@LIBXML2_2.4.30'
/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libxml2.so.2: error adding symbols: DSO missing from command line
Trivial way avoiding this is to add LIBXML_LIBS to
virnetdevbandwidthtest_LDADD.
And while doing this, fix one error raised by coverity. With
current code, @actual_cmd is allowed to be NULL for the whole
run of testVirNetDevBandwidthSet. However, if something else
was expected, the @actal_cmd is passed to virtTestDifference
which dereference it immediately.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
On openSuse, (and possibly other distros), tc isn't located in
/sbin/tc. To get rid of that problem, use TC constant instead of hard
coded /sbin/tc in the expected string
Add tests/virscsidata/sg0 and tests/virscsidata/sg8 as the test
input for constructing scsi->sg_path. And change the scsi generic
number of "1:0:0:0", because it's easy to hide the problem (assuming
most machines have a CDROM drive).
Signed-off-by: Osier Yang <jyang@redhat.com>
To support passing the path of the test data to the utils, one
more argument is added to virSCSIDeviceGetSgName,
virSCSIDeviceGetDevName, and virSCSIDeviceNew, and the related
code is changed accordingly.
Later tests for the scsi utils will be based on this patch.
Signed-off-by: Osier Yang <jyang@redhat.com>
This reverts commit 2996e6be19
and some parts of 2636dc8c4d.
The former one tried to implement QoS setting on bridgeless networks.
However, as discussed upstream [1], the patch is far away from being
useful in even a single case. The whole idea of network QoS is to have
aggregated limits over several interfaces. This patch is doing
completely the opposite when merging two QoS settings (from the network
and the domain interface) into one which is then set at the domain
interface itself, not the network.
The latter one is the test for the previous one. Now none of them makes
sense.
1: https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2014-January/msg01441.html
Conflicts:
tests/virnetdevbandwidthtest.c: New test has been introduced since
then.
The test tries to set some QoS limits and check if the commands
that are actually executed are the expected ones.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Add support for specifying various types when doing snapshots. This will
later allow to do snapshots on network backed volumes. Disks of type
'volume' are not supported by snapshots (yet).
Also amend the test suite to check parsing of the various new disk
types that can now be specified.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1049391
When all source CPU XMLs contain just a single CPU model (with a
possibly varying set of additional feature elements),
virConnectBaselineCPU will try to use this CPU model in the computed
guest CPU. Thus, when used on just a single CPU (useful with
VIR_CONNECT_BASELINE_CPU_EXPAND_FEATURES), the result will not use a
different CPU model.
If the computed CPU uses the source model, set fallback mode to 'forbid'
to make sure the guest CPU will always be as close as possible to the
source CPUs.
Windows doesn't allow : in filenames.
Commit 21685c955e added files with a : in
their names. This broke git operations on Windows as git is not able to
create those files on clone or pull.
Replace : with - in the offending filenames and adapt the test case.
Libvirtd would crash if a domain contained an empty cdrom drive of
type='volume' as the disk def->srcpool member would be dereferenced. Fix
it by checking if the source pool is present before dereferencing it.
Also alter tests to catch this issue in the future.
Reported by: Kevin Shanahan
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1056328
spice-server offers an API to disable file transfer messages
on the agent channel between the client and the guest.
This is supported in qemu through the disable-agent-file-xfer option.
This patch exposes this option to libvirt.
Adds a new element 'filetransfer', with one property,
'enable', which accepts a boolean.
Default is enabled, for backward compatibility.
Depends on the capability exported in the first patch of the series.
Signed-off-by: Francesco Romani <fromani@redhat.com>
spice-server offers an API to disable file transfer messages
on the agent channel between the client and the guest.
This is supported in qemu through the disable-agent-file-xfer option.
This patch detects if QEMU supports this option, and add
a capability if does.
Signed-off-by: Francesco Romani <fromani@redhat.com>
--001a11c3e84c4130bc04f03cda95
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
From: Wout Mertens <Wout.Mertens@gmail.com>
Adds test for transient disk translation in vmx files
This file is used by PCI detach and reattach APIs to probe for a driver
that handles a specific device.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
For example:
...
5) testVirPCIDeviceIsAssignable(0005:90:01.0) ... OK
6) testVirPCIDeviceIsAssignable(0001:01:00.0) ... OK
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
This patch introduces virCgroupSetBlkioDeviceReadIops,
virCgroupSetBlkioDeviceWriteIops,
virCgroupSetBlkioDeviceReadBps and
virCgroupSetBlkioDeviceWriteBps,
we can use these interfaces to set up throttle
blkio cgroup for domain.
This patch also adds the new throttle blkio cgroup
elements to the test xml.
Signed-off-by: Guan Qiang <hzguanqiang@corp.netease.com>
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
While working on v1.0.5-maint (the branch in use on Fedora 19)
with the host at Fedora 20, I got a failure in virstoragetest.
I traced it to the fact that we were using qemu-img to create a
qcow2 file, but qemu-img changed from creating v2 files by
default in F19 to creating v3 files in F20. Rather than leaving
it up to qemu-img, it is better to write the test to force
testing of BOTH file formats (better code coverage and all).
This patch alone does not fix all the failures in v1.0.5-maint;
for that, we must decide to either teach the older branch to
understand v3 files, or to reject them outright as unsupported.
But for upstream, making the test less dependent on changing
qemu-img defaults is always a good thing.
* tests/virstoragetest.c (testPrepImages): Simplify creation of
raw file; check if qemu supports compat and if so use it.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
For a "newfd1" the coverity tools thinks that the fd is closed in
a "virCommandPassFD", but with "flags == 0" it cannot be closed.
The code itself is ok, but coverity tool thinks that there is
"double_close" of the "newfd1" and to prevent showing this error
we simply add a comment before the proper close.
This has been found by coverity.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
Strings "file" and "context" may not be freed if "VIR_EXPAND_N" fails
and it leads into memory leak.
This has been found by coverity.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
While running objecteventtest, it was found that valgrind pointed out the
following memory leak:
==125== 538 (56 direct, 482 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 216 of 226
==125== at 0x4A06B6F: calloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:593)
==125== by 0x4C65D8D: virAllocVar (viralloc.c:558)
==125== by 0x4C9F055: virObjectNew (virobject.c:190)
==125== by 0x4D2B2E8: virGetDomain (datatypes.c:220)
==125== by 0x4D79180: testDomainDefineXML (test_driver.c:2962)
==125== by 0x4D4977D: virDomainDefineXML (libvirt.c:8512)
==125== by 0x4029C2: testDomainCreateXMLMixed (objecteventtest.c:226)
==125== by 0x403A21: virtTestRun (testutils.c:138)
==125== by 0x4021C2: mymain (objecteventtest.c:549)
==125== by 0x4040C2: virtTestMain (testutils.c:593)
==125== by 0x341F421A04: (below main) (libc-start.c:225)
Signed-off-by: Ján Tomko <jtomko@redhat.com>
Any test suite which involves a virDomainDefPtr should
call virDomainDefCheckABIStability with itself just as
a basic sanity check that the identity-comparison always
succeeds. This would have caught the recent NULL pointer
access crash.
Make sure we cope with def->name being NULL since the
VMWare config parser produces NULL names.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When idmap was added to LXC, we forgot to cover it in the testsuite.
The schema was missing an <element> layer, and as a result,
virt-xml-validate was failing on valid dumpxml output.
Reported by Eduard - Gabriel Munteanu on IRC.
* docs/schemas/domaincommon.rng (idmap): Include <idmap> element,
and support interleaves.
* tests/lxcxml2xmldata/lxc-idmap.xml: New file.
* tests/lxcxml2xmltest.c (mymain): Test it.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
If a user registers for a domain event filtered to a particular
domain, but the persistent domain is offline at the time, then
the code silently failed to set up the filter. As a result,
the event fires for all domains, rather than being filtered.
Network events were immune, since they always passed an id
0 argument.
The key to this patch is realizing that
virObjectEventDispatchMatchCallback() only cared about uuid;
so refusing to create a meta for a negative id is pointless,
and in fact, malloc'ing meta at all was overkill; instead,
just directly store a uuid and a flag of whether to filter.
Note that virObjectEventPtr still needs all fields of meta,
because this is how we reconstruct a virDomainPtr inside the
dispatch handler before calling the end user's callback
pointer with the correct object, even though only the uuid
portion of meta is used in deciding whether a callback
matches the given event. So while uuid is optional for
callbacks, it is mandatory for events.
The change to testDomainCreateXMLMixed is merely on the setup
scenario (as you can't register for a domain unless it is either
running or persistent). I actually first wrote that test for
this patch, then rebased it to also cover a prior patch (commit
4221d64), but had to adjust it for that patch to use Create
instead of Define for setting up the domain long enough to
register the event in order to work around this bug. But while
the setup is changed, the main body of the test is still about
whether creation events fire as expected.
* src/conf/object_event_private.h (_virObjectEventCallback):
Replace meta with uuid and flag.
(virObjectEventCallbackListAddID): Update signature.
* src/conf/object_event.h (virObjectEventStateRegisterID):
Likewise.
* src/conf/object_event_private.h (virObjectEventNew): Document
use of name and uuid in events.
* src/conf/object_event.c (virObjectEventCallbackListAddID): Drop
arguments that don't affect filtering.
(virObjectEventCallbackListRemoveID)
(virObjectEventDispatchMatchCallback)
(virObjectEventStateRegisterID): Update clients.
* src/conf/domain_event.c (virDomainEventCallbackListAdd)
(virDomainEventStateRegisterID): Likewise.
* src/conf/network_event.c (virNetworkEventStateRegisterID):
Likewise.
* tests/objecteventtest.c (testDomainCreateXMLMixed): Enhance test.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Consider these two calls, in either order:
id1 = virConnectDomainEventRegisterAny(conn, NULL,
VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_ID_LIFECYCLE,
VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_CALLBACK(callback), NULL, NULL);
virConnectDomainEventRegister(conn, callback, NULL, NULL);
Right now, the second call fails, because under the hood, the
old-style function registration is tightly coupled to the
new style lifecycle eventID, and the two calls both try
to register the same global eventID callback representation.
We've alreay documented that users should avoid old-style
registration and deregistration, so anyone heeding the advice
won't run into this situation. But it would be even nicer if
we pretend the two interfaces are completely separate, and
disallow any cross-linking. That is, a call to old-style
deregister should never remove a new-style callback even if it
is the same function pointer, and a call to new-style callback
using only callbackIDs obtained legitimately should never
remove an old-style callback (of course, since our callback
IDs are sequential, and there is still coupling under the
hood, you can easily guess the callbackID of an old style
registration and use new-style deregistration to nuke it - but
that starts to be blatantly bad coding on your part rather
than a surprising result on what looks like reasonable
stand-alone API).
With this patch, you can now register a global lifecycle event
handler twice, by using both old and new APIs; if such an event
occurs, your callback will be entered twice. But that is not a
problem in practice, since it is already possible to use the
new API to register both a global and per-domain event handler
using the same function, which will likewise fire your callback
twice for that domain. Duplicates are still prevented when
using the same API with same parameters twice (old-style twice,
new-style global twice, or new-style per-domain with same domain
twice), and things are still bounded (it is not possible to
register a single function pointer more than N+2 times per event
id, where N is the number of domains available on the connection).
Besides, it has always been possible to register as many
separate function pointers on the same event id as desired,
through either old or new style API, where the bound there is
the physical limitation of writing a program with enough
distinct function pointers.
Adding another event registration in the testsuite is sufficient
to cover this, where the test fails without the rest of the patch.
* src/conf/object_event.c (_virObjectEventCallback): Add field.
(virObjectEventCallbackLookup): Add argument.
(virObjectEventCallbackListAddID, virObjectEventStateCallbackID):
Adjust callers.
* tests/objecteventtest.c (testDomainCreateXMLMixed): Enhance test.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
When determining if a device is behind a PCI bridge, the PCI device
class is checked by reading the config space. However, there are some
devices which have the wrong class on the config space, but the class is
initialized by Linux correctly as a PCI BRIDGE. This class can be read
by the sysfs file '/sys/bus/pci/devices/xxxx:xx:xx.x/class'.
One example of such bridge is IBM PCI Bridge 1014:03b9, which is
identified as a Host Bridge when reading the config space.
Signed-off-by: Thadeu Lima de Souza Cascardo <cascardo@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Right now, the older virConnectDomainEventRegister (takes a
function pointer, returns 0 on success) and the newer
virConnectDomainEventRegisterID (takes an eventID, returns a
callbackID) share the underlying implementation (the older
API ends up consuming a callbackID for eventID 0 under the
hood). We implemented that by a lot of copy and pasted
code between object_event.c and domain_event.c, according to
whether we are dealing with a function pointer or an eventID.
However, our copy and paste is not symmetric. Consider this
sequence:
id1 = virConnectDomainEventRegisterAny(conn, dom,
VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_ID_LIFECYCLE,
VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_CALLBACK(callback), NULL, NULL);
virConnectDomainEventRegister(conn, callback, NULL, NULL);
virConnectDomainEventDeregister(conn, callback);
virConnectDomainEventDeregsiterAny(conn, id1);
the first three calls would succeed, but the third call ended
up nuking the id1 callbackID (the per-domain new-style handler),
then the fourth call failed with an error about an unknown
callbackID, leaving us with the global handler (old-style) still
live and receiving events. It required another old-style
deregister to clean up the mess. Root cause was that
virDomainEventCallbackList{Remove,MarkDelete} were only
checking for function pointer match, rather than also checking
for whether the registration was global.
Rather than playing with the guts of object_event ourselves
in domain_event, it is nicer to add a mapping function for the
internal callback id, then share common code for event removal.
For now, the function-to-id mapping is used only internally;
I thought about whether a new public API to let a user learn
the callback would be useful, but decided exposing this to the
user is probably a disservice, since we already publicly
document that they should avoid the old style, and since this
patch already demonstrates that older libvirt versions have
weird behavior when mixing old and new styles.
And like all good bug fix patches, I enhanced the testsuite,
validating that the changes in tests/ expose the failure
without the rest of the patch.
* src/conf/object_event.c (virObjectEventCallbackLookup)
(virObjectEventStateCallbackID): New functions.
(virObjectEventCallbackLookup): Use helper function.
* src/conf/object_event_private.h (virObjectEventStateCallbackID):
Declare new function.
* src/conf/domain_event.c (virDomainEventStateRegister)
(virDomainEventStateDeregister): Let common code handle the
complexity.
(virDomainEventCallbackListRemove)
(virDomainEventCallbackListMarkDelete)
(virDomainEventCallbackListAdd): Drop unused functions.
* tests/objecteventtest.c (testDomainCreateXMLMixed): New test.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Prior to this patch, every test:/// URI has its own event manager,
which means that registering for an event can only ever receive
events from the connection where it issued the API that triggered
the event. But the whole idea of events is to be able to learn
about something where an API call did NOT trigger the action.
In order to actually test asynchronous events, I wanted to be able
to tie multiple test connections to the same state. Use of a file
in a test URI is still per-connection state, but now parallel
connections to test:///default (from the same binary, of course)
now share common state and can affect one another.
The updated testsuite fails without the rest of this patch.
Valgrind didn't report any leaks.
* src/test/test_driver.c (testConnectOpen): Move per-connection
state initialization...
(testOpenFromFile): ...here.
(defaultConn, defaultConnections, defaultLock, testOnceInit): New
shared state.
(testOpenDefault): Only initialize on first connection.
(testConnectClose): Don't clobber state if still shared.
* tests/objecteventtest.c (testDomainStartStopEvent): Enhance to
cover this.
(timeout, mymain): Ensure test fails rather than blocks.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Ever since their introduction (commit 1509b80 in v0.5.0 for
virConnectDomainEventRegister, commit 4445723 in v0.8.0 for
virConnectDomainEventDeregisterAny), the event deregistration
functions have been documented as returning 0 on success;
likewise for older registration (only the newer RegisterAny
must return a non-zero callbackID). And now that we are
adding virConnectNetworkEventDeregisterAny for v1.2.1, it
should have the same semantics.
Fortunately, all of the stateful drivers have been obeying
the docs and returning 0, thanks to the way the remote_driver
tracks things (in fact, the RPC wire protocol is unable to
send a return value for DomainEventRegisterAny, at least not
without adding a new RPC number). Well, except for vbox,
which was always failing deregistration, due to failure to
set the return value to anything besides its initial -1.
But for local drivers, such as test:///default, we've been
returning non-zero numbers; worse, the non-zero numbers have
differed over time. For example, in Fedora 12 (libvirt 0.8.2),
calling Register twice would return 0 and 1 [the callbackID
generated under the hood]; while in Fedora 20 (libvirt 1.1.3),
it returns 1 and 2 [the number of callbacks registered for
that event type]. Since we have changed the behavior over
time, and since it differs by local vs. remote, we can safely
argue that no one could have been reasonably relying on any
particular behavior, so we might as well obey the docs, as well
as prepare callers that might deal with older clients to not be
surprised if the docs are not strictly followed.
For consistency, this patch fixes the code for all drivers,
even though it only makes an impact for vbox and for local
drivers. By fixing all drivers, future copy and paste from
a remote driver to a local driver is less likely to
reintroduce the bug.
Finally, update the testsuite to gain some coverage of the
issue for local drivers, including the first test of old-style
domain event registration via function pointer instead of
event id.
* src/libvirt.c (virConnectDomainEventRegister)
(virConnectDomainEventDeregister)
(virConnectDomainEventDeregisterAny): Clarify docs.
* src/libxl/libxl_driver.c (libxlConnectDomainEventRegister)
(libxlConnectDomainEventDeregister)
(libxlConnectDomainEventDeregisterAny): Match documentation.
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c (lxcConnectDomainEventRegister)
(lxcConnectDomainEventDeregister)
(lxcConnectDomainEventDeregisterAny): Likewise.
* src/test/test_driver.c (testConnectDomainEventRegister)
(testConnectDomainEventDeregister)
(testConnectDomainEventDeregisterAny)
(testConnectNetworkEventDeregisterAny): Likewise.
* src/uml/uml_driver.c (umlConnectDomainEventRegister)
(umlConnectDomainEventDeregister)
(umlConnectDomainEventDeregisterAny): Likewise.
* src/vbox/vbox_tmpl.c (vboxConnectDomainEventRegister)
(vboxConnectDomainEventDeregister)
(vboxConnectDomainEventDeregisterAny): Likewise.
* src/xen/xen_driver.c (xenUnifiedConnectDomainEventRegister)
(xenUnifiedConnectDomainEventDeregister)
(xenUnifiedConnectDomainEventDeregisterAny): Likewise.
* src/network/bridge_driver.c
(networkConnectNetworkEventDeregisterAny): Likewise.
* tests/objecteventtest.c (testDomainCreateXMLOld): New test.
(mymain): Run it.
(testDomainCreateXML): Check return values.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
AArch64 qemu has similar behavior as armv7l, like use of mmio etc.
This patch adds similar bypass checks what we have for armv7l to aarch64.
E.g. we are enabling mmio transport for Nicdev.
Making addDefaultUSB and addDefaultMemballoon to false etc.
V3:
- Adding missing domain rng schema for aarcg64 and test case in
testutilsqemu.c which was causing test suite failure
while running make check.
V2:
- Added testcase to qemuxml2argvtest as suggested
during review comments of V1.
V1:
- Initial patch.
Signed-off-by: Anup Patel <anup.patel@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Pranavkumar Sawargaonkar <pranavkumar@linaro.org>
Do not leave the PCI address of the primary video card set
to the legacy default (0000:00:02.0) if we're doing two-pass
allocation.
Since QEMU 1.6 (QEMU_CAPS_VIDEO_PRIMARY) we allow the primary
video card to be on other slots than 0000:00:02.0 (as we use
-device instead of -vga).
However we fail to assign it an address if:
* another device explicitly uses 0000:00:02.0 and
* the primary video device has no address specified
On the first pass, we have set the address to default, then checked
if it's available, leaving it set even if it wasn't. This address
got picked up by the second pass, resulting in a conflict:
XML error: Attempted double use of PCI slot 0000:00:02.0
(may need "multifunction='on'" for device on function 0)
Also fix the test that was supposed to catch this.
On AArch64 the kernel prints one "processor" (lower case 'p') line per
core. As this was missing from the test data, virSysinfo was not
parsing any processors at all.
Fix the test data so the test now passes.
On openSUSE 12.x with GNUTLS 3.0.28, virnettlscontexttest fails. It has
been reported to work from GNUTLS 3.1.11 on Fedora 19. Changed the
constraints on gnutls to 3.1+ for unit test cacert4req.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
D-bus introduced some changes in its locking code. Overriding the init
function skips the new locking init and thus crashes later in libvirt
test. Removing the function makes the test pass again.
On a system that is enforcing FIPS, most libraries honor the
current mode by default. Qemu, on the other hand, refused to
honor FIPS mode unless you add the '-enable-fips' command
line option; worse, this option is not discoverable via QMP,
and is only present on binaries built for Linux. So, if we
detect FIPS mode, then we unconditionally ask for FIPS; either
qemu is new enough to have the option and then correctly
cripple insecure VNC passwords, or it is so old that we are
correctly avoiding a FIPS violation by preventing qemu from
starting. Meanwhile, if we don't detect FIPS mode, then
omitting the argument is safe whether the qemu has the option
(but it would do nothing because FIPS is disabled) or whether
qemu lacks the option (including in the case where we are not
running on Linux).
The testsuite was a bit interesting: we don't want our test
to depend on whether it is being run in FIPS mode, so I had
to tweak things to set the capability bit outside of our
normal interaction with capability parsing.
This fixes https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1035474
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.h (QEMU_CAPS_ENABLE_FIPS): New bit.
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.c (virQEMUCapsInitQMP): Conditionally
set capability according to detection of FIPS mode.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuBuildCommandLine): Use it.
* tests/qemucapabilitiestest.c (testQemuCaps): Conditionally set
capability to test expected output.
* tests/qemucapabilitiesdata/caps_1.2.2-1.caps: Update list.
* tests/qemucapabilitiesdata/caps_1.6.0-1.caps: Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The support for <boot rebootTimeout="12345"/> was added before we were
checking for qemu command line options in QMP, so we haven't properly
adapted virQEMUCaps when using it and thus we report unsupported
option with new enough qemu.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1042690
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Map the new <panic> device in XML to the '-device pvpanic' command
line of qemu. Clients can then couple the <panic> device and the
<on_crash> directive to control behavior when the guest reports
a panic to qemu.
Signed-off-by: Hu Tao <hutao@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
When changing memtune limits to unlimited with AFFECT_CONFIG, the
values in virDomainDef are set to PARAM_UNLIMITED, which causes the
whole <memtune> to be formatted. This can be changed in all drivers,
but it also makes sense to use the default (0) as another value for
"unlimited", since zero memory limit makes no sense.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1035118
When outputting the XML for the RNG device, the code didn't format the
PCI address info. Additionally the schema wasn't expecting the info
although it was being parsed and used internally. Fix those mistakes and
add test for the PCI info section.
There were plenty snapshot XMLs in the tests/domainsnapshotxml2xmlin
directory that actually weren't used in XML testing. The upgraded
domainsnapshotxml2xml test now allows us to use them.
Until now the test was only testing redefinition of snapshot XMLs stored
in tests/domainsnapshotxml2xmlout. This patch adds new infrastructure to
allow testing of files that may differ and will allow to utilize files
in tests/domainsnapshotxml2xmlin as new tests too.
The 'internal' variable holds only two states; convert it to a boolean
and the 'fail' label should be called 'cleanup'. This patch also fixes a
minor memory leak of driver capabilities in case the XML config object
can't be allocated.
This resolves:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=888635
(which was already closed as CANTFIX because the qemu "-boot strict"
commandline option wasn't available at the time).
Problem: you couldn't have a domain that used PXE to boot, but also
had an un-bootable disk device *even if that disk wasn't listed in the
boot order*, because if PXE timed out (e.g. due to the bridge
forwarding delay), the BIOS would move on to the next target, which
would be the unbootable disk device (again - even though it wasn't
given a boot order), and get stuck at a "BOOT DISK FAILURE, PRESS ANY
KEY" message until a user intervened.
The solution available since sometime around QEMU 1.5, is to add
"-boot strict=on" to *every* qemu command. When this is done, if any
devices have a boot order specified, then QEMU will *only* attempt to
boot from those devices that have an explicit boot order, ignoring the
rest.
To support testing of "volume" disk backing, we need to implement a few
disk driver backend functions.
The fake storage driver uses files in storagepoolxml2xmlout/POOLNAME.xml
as XML files for pool definitions and volume names are in format
"VOL_TYPE+VOL_PATH". By default type "block" is assumed (for iSCSI test
compatibility).
The choice of this approach along with implemented functions was made so
that <disk type='volume'> can be tested in the xml2argv test.
The code for extracting sub-mounts would just do a STRPREFIX
check on the mount. This was flawed because if there were
the following mounts
/etc/aliases
/etc/aliases.db
and '/etc/aliases' was asked for, it would return both even
though the latter isn't a sub-mount.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Move the code for lxcContainerGetSubtree into the virfile
module creating 2 new functions
int virFileGetMountSubtree(const char *mtabpath,
const char *prefix,
char ***mountsret,
size_t *nmountsret);
int virFileGetMountReverseSubtree(const char *mtabpath,
const char *prefix,
char ***mountsret,
size_t *nmountsret);
Add a new virfiletest.c test case to validate the new code.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
'make distcheck' has been broken since commit 21685c9; basically,
it emulates the case of a read-only $(srcdir) (such as building
from a tarball exploded onto a CD-ROM), but we were creating our
fake pci device as a symlink into $(srcdir) and failing when that
requires opening the config file for writing:
3) testVirPCIDeviceReset ... libvirt: error : Failed to open config space file '/sys/bus/pci/devices/0000:00:01.0/config': Permission denied
Fix it by copying rather than symlinking.
* tests/virpcimock.c (make_file): Add parameter to allow binary
creation; adjust all callers.
(pci_device_new_from_stub): Copy rather than symlink.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
While trying to debug a failure of virpcitest during 'make distcheck',
I noticed that with a VPATH build, 'cd tests; ./virpcitest' fails for
an entirely different reason. To reproduce the distcheck failure, I
had to run 'cd tests; abs_srcdir=/path/to/src ./virpcitest'. But we
document in HACKING that all of our tests are supposed to be runnable
without requiring extra environment variables.
The solution: hardcode the location of srcdir into the just-built
binaries, rather than requiring make to prepopulate environment
variables. With this, './virpcitest' passes even in a VPATH build
(provided that $(srcdir) is writable; a followup patch will fix the
conditions required by 'make distcheck'). [Note: the makefile must
still pass on directory variables to the test environment of shell
scripts, since those aren't compiled. So while this solves the case
of a compiled test, it still requires environment variables to pass
a VPATH build of any shell script test case that relies on srcdir.]
* tests/Makefile.am (AM_CFLAGS): Define abs_srcdir in all compiled
tests.
* tests/testutils.h (abs_srcdir): Quit declaring.
* tests/testutils.c (virtTestMain): Rely on define rather than
environment variable.
* tests/virpcimock.c (pci_device_new_from_stub): Rely on define.
* tests/cputest.c (mymain): Adjust abs_top_srcdir default.
* tests/qemuxml2argvtest.c (mymain): Likewise.
* tests/qemuxmlnstest.c (mymain): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Take advantage of the previous patch's addition of 'netdir' as
a distinct volume type, to expose rather than silently skip
directories embedded in a gluster pool. Also serves as an XML
validation for the previous patch.
* src/storage/storage_backend_gluster.c
(virStorageBackendGlusterRefreshVol): Don't skip directories.
* tests/storagevolxml2xmltest.c (mymain): Add test.
* tests/storagevolxml2xmlin/vol-gluster-dir.xml: New file.
* tests/storagevolxml2xmlout/vol-gluster-dir.xml: Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Add support for a new <pool type='gluster'>, similar to
RBD and Sheepdog. Terminology wise, a gluster volume
forms a libvirt storage pool, within the gluster volume,
individual files are treated as libvirt storage volumes.
* docs/schemas/storagepool.rng (poolgluster): New pool type.
* docs/formatstorage.html.in: Document gluster.
* docs/storage.html.in: Likewise, and contrast it with netfs.
* tests/storagepoolxml2xmlin/pool-gluster.xml: New test.
* tests/storagepoolxml2xmlout/pool-gluster.xml: Likewise.
* tests/storagepoolxml2xmltest.c (mymain): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
I got annoyed at having to use both 'virsh vol-list $pool --details'
AND 'virsh vol-dumpxml $vol $pool' to learn if I had populated
the volume correctly. Since two-thirds of the data present in
virStorageVolGetInfo() already appears in virStorageVolGetXMLDesc(),
this just adds the remaining piece of information, as:
<volume type='...'>
...
</volume>
* docs/formatstorage.html.in: Document new <volume type=...>.
* docs/schemas/storagevol.rng (vol): Add it to RelaxNG.
* src/conf/storage_conf.h (virStorageVolTypeToString): Declare.
* src/conf/storage_conf.c (virStorageVolTargetDefFormat): Output
the metatype.
(virStorageVolDefParseXML): Parse it, for unit tests.
* tests/storagevolxml2xmlout/vol-*.xml: Update tests to match.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The bus type IDE being enum Zero, the bus type on pseries system appears as IDE for all the -hda/-cdrom and for disk drives with if="none" type. Pseries platform needs this to appear as SCSI instead of IDE. The ide being not supported, the explicit requests for ide devices will return an error.
Signed-off-by: Shivaprasad G Bhat <sbhat@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
The RNG grammar did not allow arbitrary interleaving, which makes
it harder than necessary to create a new volume from handwritten XML.
(Compare also to commit caf516db for pools).
* docs/schemas/storagevol.rng: Support interleaving.
* tests/storagevolxml2xmlin/vol-file-backing.xml: Test it.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
$ touch /var/lib/libvirt/images/'a<b>c'
$ virsh pool-refresh default
$ virsh vol-dumpxml 'a<b>c' default | head -n2
<volume>
<name>a<b>c</name>
Oops. That's not valid XML. And when we fix the XML
generation, it fails RelaxNG validation.
I'm also tired of seeing <key>(null)</key> in the example
output for volume xml; while we used NULLSTR() to avoid
a NULL deref rather than relying on glibc's printf
extension behavior, it's even better if we avoid the issue
in the first place. But this requires being careful that
we don't invalidate any storage backends that were relying
on key being unassigned during virStoragVolCreateXML[From].
I would have split this into two patches (one for escaping,
one for avoiding <key>(null)</key>), but since they both
end up touching a lot of the same test files, I ended up
merging it into one.
Note that this patch allows pretty much any volume name
that can appear in a directory (excluding . and .. because
those are special), but does nothing to change the current
(unenforced) RelaxNG claim that pool names will consist
only of letters, numbers, _, -, and +. Tightening the C
code to match RelaxNG patterns and/or relaxing the grammar
to match the C code for pool names is a task for another
day (but remember, we DID recently tighten C code for
domain names to exclude a leading '.').
* src/conf/storage_conf.c (virStoragePoolSourceFormat)
(virStoragePoolDefFormat, virStorageVolTargetDefFormat)
(virStorageVolDefFormat): Escape user-controlled strings.
(virStorageVolDefParseXML): Parse key, for use in unit tests.
* src/storage/storage_driver.c (storageVolCreateXML)
(storageVolCreateXMLFrom): Ensure parsed key doesn't confuse
volume creation.
* docs/schemas/basictypes.rng (volName): Relax definition.
* tests/storagepoolxml2xmltest.c (mymain): Test it.
* tests/storagevolxml2xmltest.c (mymain): Likewise.
* tests/storagepoolxml2xmlin/pool-dir-naming.xml: New file.
* tests/storagepoolxml2xmlout/pool-dir-naming.xml: Likewise.
* tests/storagevolxml2xmlin/vol-file-naming.xml: Likewise.
* tests/storagevolxml2xmlout/vol-file-naming.xml: Likewise.
* tests/storagevolxml2xmlout/vol-*.xml: Fix fallout.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
These changes allow the correct virtio-blk-device and virtio-net-device
devices to be used for the 'virt' machine type for armv7 rather than the
PCI virtio devices.
A test case was added to qemuxml2argvtest for this change.
Signed-off-by: Clark Laughlin <clark.laughlin@linaro.org>
Most of our code base uses space after comma but not before;
fix the remaining uses before adding a syntax check.
* tests/sysinfotest.c: Consistently use commas.
* tests/viratomictest.c: Likewise.
* tests/vircgroupmock.c: Likewise.
* tools/virsh-domain.c: Likewise.
* tools/virsh-volume.c: Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
In the 730af8f2cd commit we are fixing broken qemu startup on systems
with ancient qemu. This commit introduces the regression test for that
specific case to make sure we don't break it again.
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.
While trying to compare netfs against my new gluster pool, I
discovered two things:
virt-xml-validate chokes on valid xml produced by 'virsh pool-dumpxml'
[yet another reason that ALL patches that add new xml should be adding
corresponding tests]
When using glusterfs FUSE mounts, you cannot access a subdirectory
of a gluster volume. The recommended workaround in the gluster
community is to mount the volume to an intermediate location, then
bind-mount the desired subdirectory to the final location. Maybe
we should teach libvirt to do bind-mounting, but for now I chose to
just document the limitation.
* docs/storage.html.in: Improve documentation.
* docs/schemas/storagepool.rng (sourcefmtnetfs): Allow all
formats, and drop redundant info-vendor.
* tests/storagepoolxml2xmltest.c (mymain): New test.
* tests/storagepoolxml2xmlin/pool-netfs-gluster.xml: New file.
* tests/storagepoolxml2xmlout/pool-netfs-gluster.xml: Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The QOM path in qemu that contains the CPUID registers of a running VM
may not be present (introduced in QEMU 1.5).
Since commit d94b781771 we have a regression with QEMU that don't
support reporting of the CPUID register state via the monitor as the
process startup code expects the path to exist.
This patch adds code that checks with the monitor if the requested path
already exists and uses it only in this case.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1027096
If there's the following snippet in the domain XML, the domain will be
lost upon the daemon restart (if the domain is started prior restart):
<seclabel type='dynamic' relabel='yes'/>
The problem is, the 'label', 'imagelabel' and 'baselabel' are parsed
whenever the VIR_DOMAIN_XML_INACTIVE is *not* present or the label is
static. The latter is not our case, obviously. So, when libvirtd starts
up, it finds domain state xml and parse it. During parsing, many XML
flags are enabled but VIR_DOMAIN_XML_INACTIVE. Hence, our parser tries
to extract 'label', 'imagelabel' and 'baselabel' from the XML which
fails for model='none'. Err, this model - even though not specified in
XML - can be taken from qemu wide config file: /etc/libvirtd/qemu.conf.
However, in order to know we are dealing with model='none' the code in
question must be moved forward a bit. Then a new check must be
introduced. This is what the first two chunks are doing.
But this alone is not sufficient. The domain state XML won't contain the
model attribute without slight modification. The model should be
inserted into the XML even if equal to 'none' and the state XML is being
generated - what if the origin (the @security_driver variable in
qemu.conf) changes during libvirtd restarts?
At the end, a test to catch this scenario is introduced.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The linux kernel recently added support for paravirtual spinlock
handling to avoid performance regressions on overcomitted hosts. This
feature needs to be turned in the hypervisor so that the guest OS is
notified about the possible support.
This patch adds a new feature "paravirt-spinlock" to the XML and
supporting code to enable the "kvm_pv_unhalt" pseudo CPU feature in
qemu.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1008989
The qemu monitor supports retrieval of actual CPUID bits presented to
the guest using QMP monitor. Add APIs to extract these information and
tests for them.
Signed-off-by: Peter Krempa <pkrempa@redhat.com>
Since 21685c955e we have tests/virpcitestdata dir containing the PCI
config files for some dummy PCI devices that are used int virpcitest.
However, the directory containing the config files is not distributed
making 'make rpm' fail.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
This addition, however, requires some refactoring to be done. First of
all, to match the best practice we should detach the device prior
resetting it. That's why testVirPCIDeviceDetach is detaching all devices
within 0000:00:01.0 and 0000:00:03.0 range. Then, the brand new test
will reset the 0000:00:02.0 device, so the last testVirPCIDeviceReattach
can reattach all the devices back.
In order to perform a PCI device reset, the dummy config file is not
sufficient anymore and must be replaced with real PCI config (binary
mess). Such config files are to be stored under tests/virpcitestdata/
and ought to have '.config' suffix.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
In the pci_driver_new function it is possible to set a list of
<vendor:device> IDs that the driver knows. These IDs are passed as
variable arguments and are processed the usual way using va_start() and
va_arg(). However, after all arguments has been processed, we should
call va_end() what we aren't currently doing.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
This commit introduces yet another test under virpcitest:
virPCIDeviceDetach. However, in order to be able to do this, the
virpcimock needs to be extended to model the kernel behavior on PCI
device binding and unbinding (create 'driver' symlinks under the device
tree, check for device ID in driver's ID table, etc.)
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Among with this test introduce virpcimock as we need to mock some
syscalls, e.g. redirect open() of a file under /sys/bus/pci to a
stub sysfs tree.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
To make it easier to forbid future attempts at a confusing typedef
name ending in Ptr that isn't actually a pointer, insist that we
follow our preferred style of 'typedef foo *fooPtr'.
* cfg.mk (sc_forbid_const_pointer_typedef): Enforce consistent
style, to prevent issue fixed in previous storage patch.
* src/conf/capabilities.h (virCapsPtr): Fix offender.
* src/security/security_stack.c (virSecurityStackItemPtr):
Likewise.
* tests/qemucapabilitiestest.c (testQemuDataPtr): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Expand the "secmodel" XML fragment of "host" with a sequence of
baselabel's which describe the default security context used by
libvirt with a specific security model and virtualization type:
<secmodel>
<model>selinux</model>
<doi>0</doi>
<baselabel type='kvm'>system_u:system_r:svirt_t:s0</baselabel>
<baselabel type='qemu'>system_u:system_r:svirt_tcg_t:s0</baselabel>
</secmodel>
<secmodel>
<model>dac</model>
<doi>0</doi>
<baselabel type='kvm'>107:107</baselabel>
<baselabel type='qemu'>107:107</baselabel>
</secmodel>
"baselabel" is driver-specific information, e.g. in the DAC security
model, it indicates USER_ID:GROUP_ID.
Signed-off-by: Giuseppe Scrivano <gscrivan@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
We want to treat 'attach-disk --shareable' as an undocumented
alias for 'attach-disk --mode=shareable'. By improving our
alias handling, we can allow all such --bool -> --opt=value
replacements, and guarantee up front that the alias is not
mixed with its replacement.
* tools/virsh.c (vshCmddefOptParse, vshCmddefGetOption): Add
support for expanding bool alias to --opt=value.
(opts_echo): Add another alias to test it.
* tests/virshtest.c (mymain): Test it.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Currently, if access(path, mode) is invoked, we check if @path has this
special prefix SYSFS_PREFIX. If it does, we modify the path a bit and
call realaccess. If it doesn't we act just like a wrapper and call
realaccess directly. However, we are mocking fopen() as well. And as one
can clearly see there, fopen("/proc/cgroups") will succeed. Hence, we
have an error in our mocked access(): We need to check whether @path is
not equal to /proc/cgroups as it may not exists on real system we're
running however we definitely know how to fopen() it.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
As stated in the comment above introduction of the lv_abs_top_builddir
variable, older automake doesn't provide abs_top_builddir variable.
Hence, we are creating our own one with lv_ prefix. However, when
exporting env variables to the tests, the variables are not evaluated
but only substituted. Hence:
LIBVIRT_DRIVER_DIR="$(abs_top_builddir)/src/.libs"
is set to "/src/.libs" with old automake (even though we *think* we've
set the $abs_top_builddir variable just a few line above).
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Most of the usage of getuid()/getgid() is in cases where we are
considering what privileges we have. As such the code should be
using the effective IDs, not real IDs.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When running setuid, we must be careful about what env vars
we allow commands to inherit from us. Replace the
virCommandAddEnvPass function with two new ones which do
filtering
virCommandAddEnvPassAllowSUID
virCommandAddEnvPassBlockSUID
And make virCommandAddEnvPassCommon use the appropriate
ones
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
QEMU has support for SASL auth for SPICE guests, but libvirt
has no way to enable it. Following the example from VNC where
it is globally enabled via qemu.conf
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The RNG grammar did not allow arbitrary interleaving, which makes
it harder than necessary to create a new pool from handwritten XML.
* docs/schemas/storagepool.rng: Allow interleaving.
* tests/storagepoolxml2xmlin/pool-sheepdog.xml: Test interleave.
* tests/storagepoolxml2xmlin/pool-iscsi-auth.xml: Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Implement the bare minimal sysinfo for AArch64 platforms by
reading the CPU models from /proc/cpuinfo.
Signed-off-by: Anup Patel <anup.patel@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Pranavkumar Sawargaonkar <pranavkumar@linaro.org>
Introduced by commit 3f029fb531 the RPM build
was broken due to a missing LXC textcase.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Hansel <daniel.hansel@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
The vmx file parsing code was reporting errors when parsing floppy.fileName
entries if the filename didn't end in .flp. There is no such restriction in
ESX; even using the GUI to configure floppy filenames you can specify any
arbitrary file with any extension.
Fix by changing the vmx parsing code so that it uses the floppy.fileType
value to determine whether floppy.fileName refers to a block device or a
regular file.
Also remove code that would have generated an error if no floppy.fileName
was specified. This is not an error either.
Updated the floppy tests in vmx2xmltest.c and xml2vmxtest.c.
'const fooPtr' is the same as 'foo * const' (the pointer won't
change, but it's contents can). But in general, if an interface
is trying to be const-correct, it should be using 'const foo *'
(the pointer is to data that can't be changed).
Fix up offenders in the testsuite.
* tests/cputest.c (cpuTestCompareXML): Use intended type.
* tests/qemucapabilitiestest.c (testQemuCaps): Likewise.
* tests/qemumonitorjsontest.c: Drop const.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
'const fooPtr' is the same as 'foo * const' (the pointer won't
change, but it's contents can). But in general, if an interface
is trying to be const-correct, it should be using 'const foo *'
(the pointer is to data that can't be changed).
Fix up virhash to provide a const-correct interface: all actions
that don't modify the table take a const table. Note that in
one case (virHashSearch), we actually strip const away - we aren't
modifying the contents of the table, so much as associated data
for ensuring that the code uses the table correctly (if this were
C++, it would be a case for the 'mutable' keyword).
* src/util/virhash.h (virHashKeyComparator, virHashEqual): Use
intended type.
(virHashSize, virHashTableSize, virHashLookup, virHashSearch):
Make const-correct.
* src/util/virhash.c (virHashEqualData, virHashEqual)
(virHashLookup, virHashSize, virHashTableSize, virHashSearch)
(virHashComputeKey): Fix fallout.
* src/conf/nwfilter_params.c
(virNWFilterFormatParameterNameSorter): Likewise.
* src/nwfilter/nwfilter_ebiptables_driver.c
(ebiptablesFilterOrderSort): Likewise.
* tests/virhashtest.c (testHashGetItemsCompKey)
(testHashGetItemsCompValue): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The log message regex has been
[0-9]{4}-[0-9]{2}-[0-9]{2} [0-9]{2}:[0-9]{2}:[0-9]{2}\.[0-9]{3}\+[0-9]{4}: [0-9]+: debug|info|warning|error :
The precedence of '|' is high though, so this is equivalent to matching
[0-9]{4}-[0-9]{2}-[0-9]{2} [0-9]{2}:[0-9]{2}:[0-9]{2}\.[0-9]{3}\+[0-9]{4}: [0-9]+: debug
Or
info
Or
warning
Or
error :
Which is clearly not what it should have done. This caused the code to
skip over things which are not log messages. The solution is to simply
add brackets.
A test case is also added to validate correctness.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This function takes exactly one argument: an address to check.
It returns true, if the address is an IPv4 or IPv6 address in numeric
format, false otherwise (e.g. for "examplehost").
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
So far, we're unit testing some basic functions and some (so called)
simple functions (e.g. "qmp_capabilities", "system_powerdown"). However,
there are more functions which expect simple "{'return': {}}" reply, but
takes more args to construct the command (for instance "set_link"). This
patch aims on such functions.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@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.
Since 76b644c when the support for RAM filesystems was introduced,
libvirt accepted the following XML:
<source usage='1024' unit='KiB'/>
This was parsed correctly and internally stored in bytes, but it
was formatted as (with an extra 's'):
<source usage='1024' units='KiB'/>
When read again, this was treated as if the units were missing,
meaning libvirt was unable to parse its own XML correctly.
The usage attribute was documented as being in KiB, but it was not
scaled if the unit was missing. Transient domains still worked,
because this was balanced by an extra 'k' in the mount options.
This patch:
Changes the parser to use 'units' instead of 'unit', as the latter
was never documented (fixing persistent domains) and some programs
(libvirt-glib, libvirt-sandbox) already parse the 'units' attribute.
Removes the extra 'k' from the tmpfs mount options, which is needed
because now we parse our own XML correctly.
Changes the default input unit to KiB to match documentation, fixing:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1015689
The following XML is the recommended default clock configuration for
qemu:
<clock offset='utc'>
<timer name='rtc' tickpolicy='catchup'/>
<timer name='pit' tickpolicy='delay'/>
<timer name='hpet' present='no'/>
</clock>
However we weren't testing any of those timer elements.
The test case average timing code has not been used by any test
case ever. Delete it to remove complexity.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The current OOM test impl is too inefficient to be used on the
large test suites. It loops running 'main' multiple times, once
for each alloc in the 'main' method. This has complexity
'n * (n + 1) / 2' in terms of total alloc count. It will be
replaced by a more efficient impl whicih runs individual test
cases instead. This will have same complexity but the values
of 'n' will be much smaller, so a net win.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The qemuxml2xmltest.c function testCompareXMLToXMLHelper would
clobber the 'ret' variable causing it to mis-diagnose OOM
errors.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
qemumonitorjsontest.c: In function 'testQemuMonitorJSONqemuMonitorJSONGetBalloonInfo':
qemumonitorjsontest.c:1134: warning: integer constant is too large for 'long' type
* tests/qemumonitorjsontest.c
(testQemuMonitorJSONqemuMonitorJSONGetBalloonInfo)
(testQemuMonitorJSONqemuMonitorJSONGetBlockStatsInfo): Use correct
type.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
I tried to test ./configure --without-lxc --without-remote.
First, the build failed with some odd errors, such as an
inability to build xen, or link failures for virNetTLSInit.
But when you think about it, once there is no remote code,
all of libvirtd is useless, any stateful driver that depends
on libvirtd is also not worth compiling, and any libraries
used only by RPC code are not needed. So I patched
configure.ac to make for some saner defaults when an
explicit disable is attempted. Similarly, since we have
migrated virnetdevbridge into generic code, the workaround
for Linux kernel stupidity must not depend on stateful
drivers being in use.
Then there's 'make check' that needs segregation.
Wow - quite a bit of cleanup to make --without-remote useful :)
* configure.ac: Let --without-remote toggle defaults on stateful
drivers and other libraries. Pick up Linux kernel workarounds
even when qemu and lxc are not being compiled.
* tests/Makefile.am (test_programs): Factor out programs that
require remote.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (rpc/virnet*.h): Move...
* src/libvirt_remote.syms: ...into new file.
* src/Makefile.am (SYM_FILES): Ship new syms file.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>