Although we document 6 types of transport that we support, internally we can
only differentiate between TCP, TLS, and UNIX transports only, since both SSH
and libssh2 transports, due to using netcat, behave in the exactly the same
way as a UNIX socket.
Signed-off-by: Erik Skultety <eskultet@redhat.com>
For now, the list copy is done simply by locking the whole server, walking the
original and increasing the refcount on each object. We may want to change
the list to a lockable object (like list of domains) later in the future if
we discover some performance issues related to locking the whole server in
order to walk the whole list of clients, possibly issuing some 'ForEach'
callback.
Signed-off-by: Erik Skultety <eskultet@redhat.com>
Now that libvirt-admin supports another client-side object and provided that
we want to generate as many both client-side and server-side RPC dispatchers,
support for this needs to be added to gendispatch.
Signed-off-by: Erik Skultety <eskultet@redhat.com>
Besides ID, the object also stores static data like connection transport and
connection timestamp, since once obtained a list of all clients connected to a
server, from user's perspective, it would be nice to know whether a given
client is remote or local only and when did it connect to the daemon.
Along with the object introduction, all necessary client-side methods necessary
to work with the object are added as well.
Signed-off-by: Erik Skultety <eskultet@redhat.com>
Besides ID, libvirt should provide several parameters to help the user
distinguish two clients from each other. One of them is the connection
timestamp. This patch also adds a testcase for proper JSON formatting of the
new attribute too (proper formatting of older clients that did not support
this attribute yet is included in the existing tests) - in order to
testGenerateJSON to work, a mock of time_t time(time_t *timer) needed to be
created.
Signed-off-by: Erik Skultety <eskultet@redhat.com>
Admin API needs a way of addressing specific clients. Unlike servers, which we
are happy to address by names both because its name reflects its purpose (to
some extent) and we only have two of them (so far), naming clients doesn't make
any sense, since a) each client is an anonymous, i.e. not recognized after a
disconnect followed by a reconnect, b) we can't predict what kind of requests
it's going to send to daemon, and c) the are loads of them comming and going,
so the only viable option is to use an ID which is of a reasonably wide data
type.
Signed-off-by: Erik Skultety <eskultet@redhat.com>
If a panic device is being defined without a model in a domain
the default value is always overwritten with model ISA. An ISA
bus does not exist on S390 and therefore specifying a panic device
results in an unsupported configuration.
Since the S390 architecture inherently provides a crash detection
capability the panic device should be defined in the domain xml.
This patch adds an s390 panic device model and prevents setting a
device address on it.
Signed-off-by: Boris Fiuczynski <fiuczy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Cornelia Huck <cornelia.huck@de.ibm.com>
The iohelper dies on SIGPIPE if the stream is closed before all data
is processed. IMO this should be an error condition for virStreamFinish
according to docs like:
* This method is a synchronization point for all asynchronous
* errors, so if this returns a success code the application can
* be sure that all data has been successfully processed.
However for virStreamAbort, not so much:
* Request that the in progress data transfer be cancelled
* abnormally before the end of the stream has been reached.
* For output streams this can be used to inform the driver
* that the stream is being terminated early. For input
* streams this can be used to inform the driver that it
* should stop sending data.
Without this, virStreamAbort will realistically always error for
active streams like domain console. So, treat the SIGPIPE case
as non-fatal if abort is requested.
Note, this will only affect an explicit user requested abort. An
abnormal abort, like from a server error, always raises an error
in the daemon.
libvirt-daemon-config-nwfilter will put a bunch of xml configs
into /etc/libvirt/nwfilter. These configs don't hardcode a UUID
and depends on libvirt to generate one. However the generated UUID
is never saved to disk, unless the user manually calls Define.
This makes daemon reload quite noisy with many errors like:
error : virNWFilterObjAssignDef:3101 : operation failed: filter 'allow-incoming-ipv4' already exists with uuid 50def3b5-48d6-46a3-b005-cc22df4e5c5c
Because a new UUID is generated every time the config is read from
disk, so libvirt constantly thinks it's finding a new nwfilter.
Detect if we generated a UUID when the config file is loaded; if so,
resave the new contents to disk to ensure the UUID is persisteny.
This is similar to what was done in commit a47ae7c0 with virtual
networks and generated MAC addresses
In virNWFilterObjLoad we can still fail after virNWFilterObjAssignDef,
but we don't unlock and free the created virNWFilterObjPtr in the
cleanup path.
The bit we are trying to do after AssignDef is just STRDUP in the
configFile path. However caching the configFile in the NWFilterObj
is largely redundant and doesn't follow the same pattern we use
for domain and network objects.
So just remove all the configFile caching which fixes the latent
bug as a side effect.
We will segfault of a daemon reload picks up a new network config
that needs to be autostarted. We shouldn't be passing NULL for
network_driver here. This seems like it was missed in the larger
rework in commit 1009a61e
The default USB controller is not sent to destination as the older versions
of libvirt(0.9.4 or earlier as I see in commit log of 409b5f54) didn't
support them. For some archs where the support started much later can
safely send the USB controllers without this worry. So, send the controller
to destination for all archs except x86. Moreover this is not very applicable
to x86 as the USB controller has model ich9_ehci1 on q35 and for pc-i440fx,
there cant be any slots before USB as it is fixed on slot 1.
The patch fixes a bug that, if the USB controller happens to occupy
a slot after disks/interfaces and one of them is hot-unplugged, then
the default USB controller added on destination takes the smallest slot
number and that would lead to savestate mismatch and migration
failure. Seen and verified on PPC64.
Signed-off-by: Shivaprasad G Bhat <sbhat@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
We historically format runtime seclabel selinux/apparmor values,
however we skip formatting runtime DAC values. This was added in
commit 990e46c454
Author: Marcelo Cerri <mhcerri@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Date: Fri Aug 31 13:40:41 2012 +0200
conf: Avoid formatting auto-generated DAC labels
to maintain migration compatibility with libvirt < 0.10.0.
However the formatting was skipped unconditionally. Instead only
skip formatting in the VIR_DOMAIN_DEF_FORMAT_MIGRATABLE case.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1215833
Trying to define a pool name containing an embedded '/'
will immediately fail when trying to write the XML to disk.
This patch explicitly rejects names containing a '/'
Besides our stateful driver, there are two other storage impls:
esx and phyp. esx doesn't support pool creation, so this should
doesn't apply.
phyp does support pool creation, and the name is passed to the
'mksp' tool, which google doesn't reveal whether it accepts '/'
or not. IMO the likeliness of this impacting any users is near zero
Trying to define a network name containing an embedded '/'
will immediately fail when trying to write the XML to disk.
This patch explicitly rejects names containing a '/'
Besides the network bridge driver, the only other network
implementation is a very thin one for virtualbox, which seems to
use the network name as a host interface name, which won't
accept '/' anyways, so I think this is fine to do unconitionally.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=787604
Trying to define a domain name containing an embedded '/'
will immediately fail when trying to write the XML to disk for
our stateful drivers. This patch explicitly rejects names
containing a '/', and provides an xmlopt feature for drivers
to avoid this validation check, which is enabled in every
non-stateful driver that already has xmlopt handling wired up.
(Technically this could reject a previously accepted vmname like
'/foo', however at least for the qemu driver that falls over
later when starting qemu)
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=639923
We were lacking tests that are checking for the completeness of our
nodedev XMLs and also whether we output properly formatted ones. This
patch adds parsing for the capability elements inside the <capability
type='pci'> element. Also bunch of tests are added to show everything
works properly.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
We had both and the only difference was that the latter also included
information about multifunction setting. The problem with that was that
we couldn't use functions made for only one of the structs (e.g.
parsing). To consolidate those two structs, use the one in virpci.h,
include that in domain_conf.h and add the multifunction member in it.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Rather than take username and password as parameters, now take
a qemuDomainSecretInfoPtr and decode within the function.
NB: Having secinfo implies having the username for a plain type
from a successful virSecretGetSecretString
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Similar to the qemuDomainSecretDiskPrepare, generate the secret
for the Hostdev's prior to call qemuProcessLaunch which calls
qemuBuildCommandLine. Additionally, since the secret is not longer
added as part of building the command, the hotplug code will need
to make the call to add the secret in the hostdevPriv.
Since this then is the last requirement to pass a virConnectPtr
to qemuBuildCommandLine, we now can remove that as part of these
changes. That removal has cascading effects through various callers.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Modeled after the qemuDomainDiskPrivatePtr logic, create a privateData
pointer in the _virDomainHostdevDef to allow storage of private data
for a hypervisor in order to at least temporarily store auth/secrets
data for usage during qemuBuildCommandLine.
NB: Since the qemu_parse_command (qemuParseCommandLine) code is not
expecting to restore the auth/secret data, there's no need to add
code to handle this new structure there.
Updated copyrights for modules touched. Some didn't have updates in a
couple years even though changes have been made.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Rather than needing to pass the conn parameter to various command
line building API's, add qemuDomainSecretPrepare just prior to the
qemuProcessLaunch which calls qemuBuilCommandLine. The function
must be called after qemuProcessPrepareHost since it's expected
to eventually need the domain masterKey generated during the prepare
host call. Additionally, future patches may require device aliases
(assigned during the prepare domain call) in order to associate
the secret objects.
The qemuDomainSecretDestroy is called after the qemuProcessLaunch
finishes in order to clear and free memory used by the secrets
that were recently prepared, so they are not kept around in memory
too long.
Placing the setup here is beneficial for future patches which will
need the domain masterKey in order to generate an encrypted secret
along with an initialization vector to be saved and passed (since
the masterKey shouldn't be passed around).
Finally, since the secret is not added during command line build,
the hotplug code will need to get the secret into the private disk data.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Introduce a new private structure to hold qemu domain auth/secret data.
This will be stored in the qemuDomainDiskPrivate as a means to store the
auth and fetched secret data rather than generating during building of
the command line.
The initial changes will handle the current username and secret values
for rbd and iscsi disks (in their various forms). The rbd secret is
stored as a base64 encoded value, while the iscsi secret is stored as
a plain text value. Future changes will store encoded/encrypted secret
data as well as an initialization vector needed to be given to qemu
in order to decrypt the encoded password along with the domain masterKey.
The inital assumption will be that VIR_DOMAIN_SECRET_INFO_PLAIN is
being used.
Although it's expected that the cleanup of the secret data will be
done immediately after command line generation, reintroduce the object
dispose function qemuDomainDiskPrivateDispose to handle removing
memory associated with the structure for "normal" cleanup paths.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
After killing one of the conditionals it's now guaranteed to have
@drivealias populated when calling the monitor, so the code attempting
to cleanup can be simplified.
For strange reasons if a perf event type was not supported or failed to
be enabled at VM start libvirt would ignore the failure.
On the other hand on restart if the event could not be re-enabled
libvirt would fail to reconnect to the VM and kill it.
Both don't make really sense. Fix it by failing to start the VM if the
event is not supported and change the event to disabled if it can't be
reconnected (unlikely).
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1329045
Both disk->src->shared and disk->src->readonly can't be modified when
changing disk source for floppy and cdrom drives since both arguments
are passed as arguments of the disk rather than the image in qemu.
Historically these fields have only two possible values since they are
represented as XML thus we need to ignore if user did not provide them
and thus we are treating them as false.
If qemu doesn't support DEVICE_TRAY_MOVED event the code that attempts
to change media would attempt to re-eject the tray even if it wouldn't
be notified when the tray opened. Add a capability bit and skip retrying
for old qemus.
Empty floppy drives start with tray in "open" state and libvirt did not
refresh it after startup. The code that inserts media into the tray then
waited until the tray was open before inserting the media and thus
floppies could not be inserted.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1326660
These are wrappers over virStreamRecv and virStreamSend so that
users have to care about nothing but writing data into / reading
data from a sink (typically a file). Note, that these wrappers
are used exclusively on client side as the daemon has slightly
different approach. Anyway, the wrappers allocate this buffer and
use it for intermediate data storage until the data is passed to
stream to send, or to the client application. So far, we are
using 64KB buffer. This is enough, but suboptimal because server
can send messages up to VIR_NET_MESSAGE_LEGACY_PAYLOAD_MAX bytes
big (262120B, roughly 256KB). So if we make the buffer this big,
a single message containing the data is sent instead of four,
which is current situation. This means lower overhead, because
each message contains a header which needs to be processed, each
message is processed roughly same amount of time regardless of
its size, less bytes need to be sent through the wire, and so on.
Note that since server will never sent us a stream message bigger
than VIR_NET_MESSAGE_LEGACY_PAYLOAD_MAX there's no point in
sizing up the client buffer past this threshold.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
There are two functions on the client that handle incoming stream
data. The first one virNetClientStreamQueuePacket() is a low
level function that just processes the incoming stream data from
the socket and stores it into an internal structure. This happens
in the client event loop therefore the shorter the callbacks are,
the better. The second function virNetClientStreamRecvPacket()
then handles copying data from internal structure into a client
provided buffer.
Change introduced in this commit makes just that: new queue for
incoming stream packets is introduced. Then instead of copying
data into intermediate internal buffer and then copying them into
user buffer, incoming stream messages are queue into the queue
and data is copied just once - in the upper layer function
virNetClientStreamRecvPacket(). In the end, there's just one
copying of data and therefore shorter event loop callback. This
should boost the performance which has proven to be the case in
my testing.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
This reverts commit d9c9e138f2.
Unfortunately, things are going to be handled differently so this
commit must go.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
This reverts commit 6e244c659f, which
added support to qemu for the "peer" attribute in domain interface <ip>
elements.
It's being removed temporarily for the release of libvirt 1.3.4
because the feature doesn't work, and there are concerns that it may
need to be modified in an externally visible manner which could create
backward compatibility problems.
Conflicts:
tests/qemuxml2argvmock.c - a mock of virNetDevSetOnline() was added
which may be assumed by other tests added since the original commit,
so it isn't being reverted.
This reverts commit afee47d07c, which
added support to lxc for the "peer" attribute in domain interface <ip>
elements.
It's being removed temporarily for the release of libvirt 1.3.4
because the feature doesn't work, and there are concerns that it may
need to be modified in an externally visible manner which could create
backward compatibility problems.
This reverts commit 690969af9c, which
added the domain config parts to support a "peer" attribute in domain
interface <ip> elements.
It's being removed temporarily for the release of libvirt 1.3.4
because the feature doesn't work, and there are concerns that it may
need to be modified in an externally visible manner which could create
backward compatibility problems.
FD passing APIs like CreateXMLWithFiles or OpenGraphicsFD will leak
file descriptors. The user passes in an fd, which is dup()'d in
virNetClientProgramCall. The new fd is what is transfered to the
server virNetClientIOWriteMessage.
Once all the fds have been written though, the parent msg->fds list
is immediately free'd, so the individual fds are never closed.
This closes each FD as its send to the server, so all fds have been
closed by the time msg->fds is free'd.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1159766
If we want to delete all disks for container or vm
we should make a loop from 0 to NumberOfDisks and always
use zero index in PrlVmCfg_GetHardDisk to get disk handle.
When we delete first disk after that numbers of other disks
will be changed, start from 0 to NumberOfDisks-1.
That's why we should always use zero index.
Similarly to what commit 7140807917 did with some internal paths,
clear vnc socket paths that were generated by us. Having such path in
the definition can cause trouble when restoring the domain. The path is
generated to the per-domain directory that contains the domain ID.
However, that ID will be different upon restoration, so qemu won't be
able to create that socket because the directory will not be prepared.
To be able to migrate to older libvirt, skip formatting the socket path
in migratable XML if it was autogenerated. And mark it as autogenerated
if it already exists and we're parsing live XML.
Best viewed with '-C'.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1326270
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
When the domain definition describes a machine with NUMA, setting the
maximum vCPU count via the API might lead to an invalid config.
Add a check that will forbid this until we add more advanced cpu config
capabilities.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1327499
Instead of setting the default qemu stdio logging approach in
virQEMUDriverConfigLoadFile set it in virQEMUDriverConfigNew so that
it's properly set even when the config is not present.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1325075
If the domain name is long enough, the timestamp can prolong the
filename for automatic coredump to more than the filesystem's limit.
Simply shorten it like we do in other places. The timestamp helps with
the unification, but having the ID in the name won't hurt.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1289363
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Add virDomainObjGetShortName() and use it. For now that's used in one
place, but we should expose it so that future patches can use it.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Currently we only allow /dev/random and /dev/hwrng as host input
for <rng><backend model='random'/> device. This was added after
various upstream discussions in commit 4932ef45
However this restriction has generated quite a few complaints over
the years, so a new discussion was initiated:
http://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2016-April/msg00987.html
Several people suggested removing the restriction, and nobody really
spoke up to defend it. So this patch drops the path restriction
entirely
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1074464
If you compile a client --without-polkit, and connect to a URI that needs
polkit auth, the connection will fail with:
$ ./tools/virsh --connect qemu+ssh://crobinso@machine/system
error: failed to connect to the hypervisor
error: authentication failed: unsupported authentication type 2
This is because the client side portion of the polkit handling is
compiled out. However, nothing polkit specific is actually required
of the client.
Fix that error by unconditionally compiling the basic polkit client
handling.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=635529
Introduce the final accessor's to _virSecretObject data and move the
structure from virsecretobj.h to virsecretobj.c
The virSecretObjSetValue logic will handle setting both the secret
value and the value_size. Some slight adjustments to the error path
over what was in secretSetValue were made.
Additionally, a slight logic change in secretGetValue where we'll
check for the internalFlags and error out before checking for
and erroring out for a NULL secret->value. That way, it won't be
obvious to anyone that the secret value wasn't set rather they'll
just know they cannot get the secret value since it's private.
Move and rename the secretRewriteFile, secretSaveDef, and secretSaveValue
from secret_driver to virsecretobj
Need to make some slight adjustments since the secretSave* functions
called secretEnsureDirectory, but otherwise mostly just a move of code.
Move and rename secretDeleteSaved from secret_driver into virsecretobj and
split it up into two parts since there is error path code that looks to
just delete the secret data file
Move to secret_conf.c and rename to virSecretLoadAllConfigs. Also includes
moving/renaming the supporting virSecretLoad, virSecretLoadValue, and
virSecretLoadValidateUUID.
This patch replaces most of the guts of secret_driver.c with recently
added secret_conf.c APIs in order manage secret lists and objects
using the hashed virSecretObjList* lookup API's.
Add function to return a "match" filtered list of secret objects. This
function replaces the guts of secretConnectListAllSecrets.
Need to also move and make global virSecretUsageIDForDef since it'll
be used by both secret_driver.c and secret_conf.c
Add the functions to add/remove elements from the hashed secret obj list.
These will replace secret_driver functions secretAssignDef and secretObjRemove.
The virSecretObjListAddLocked will perform the necessary lookups and
decide whether to replace an existing hash entry or create a new one.
This includes setting up the configPath and base64Path as well as being
able to support the caller's need to restore from a previous definition
in case something goes wrong in the caller.
New API's including unlocked and Locked versions in order to be able
to use in either manner.
Support for searching hash object lists instead of linked lists will
replace existing secret_driver functions secretFindByUUID and
secretFindByUsage
Move virSecretObj from secret_driver.c to virsecretobj.h
To support being able to create a hashed secrets list, move the
virSecretObj to virsecretobj.h so that the code can at least find
the definition.
This should be a temporary situation while the virsecretobj.c code
is patched in order to support a hashed secret object while still
having the linked list support in secret_driver.c. Eventually, the
goal is to move the virSecretObj into virsecretobj.c, although it
is notable that the existing model from which virSecretObj was
derived has virDomainObj in src/conf/domain_conf.h and virNetworkObj
in src/conf/network_conf.h, so virSecretObj wouldn't be unique if
it were to remain in virsecretobj.h Still adding accessors to fetch
and store hashed object data will be the end goal.
Add definitions and infrastucture in virsecretobj.c to create and
handle a hashed virSecretObj and virSecretObjList including the class,
object, lock setup, and disposal API's. Nothing will call these yet.
This infrastructure will replace the forward linked list logic
within the secret_driver, eventually.
This function - in contrast with qemuBuildCommandLine - merely
constructs our internal command representation of a domain. This
is then later compared against expected output. Or, this function
is used also in virConnectDomainXMLToNative(). But due to a copy
paste error this function, just like its image - has @forceFips
argument that if enabled forces FIPS, otherwise mimics FIPS state
in the host. If FIPS is enabled or forced the generated command
line is different to state in which FIPS is disabled. Problem is,
while this could be desired in the virConnectDomainXMLToNative()
case, this is undesirable in the test suite as it will produce
unpredicted results.
Solution to this is to rename argument to @enableFips to
specifically tell whether we expect command line to be build in
either of fashions and make virConnectDomainXMLToNative()
implementation fetch FIPS state and pass it to
qemuProcessCreatePretendCmd().
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
This error message was too specific, based on the incorrect assumption
that any error was cause by auto-added bridges:
failed to create PCI bridge on bus 2: too many devices
with fixed addresses
In practice you can't know if a bridge with an index <= the bus it's
connecting to was added automatically, or if it was a mistake in
explicit config, and the auto-add problem is going to be dealt with in
a different way in an upcoming patch. The new message is this:
PCI Controller at index 1 (0x01) has "
bus='0x02', but bus must be <= index
(note that index is given in both decimal and hex because it is
formatted as decimal in the XML, but bus is formatted as hex, and
displaying the hex value of index makes it easier to see the problem
when index > 9 (which will often be the case with PCIe, since most
controllers only have a single port, not 32 slots as with standard
PCI)).
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1004593
We can't use eg. @sysconfdir@ directly in the .pod file, because
pod2man(1) will interpret that as a variable name and format it
accordingly.
Instead, we use eg. SYSCONFDIR and use a subsequent sed(1) call
to turn it into the expected @sysconfdir@.
After this commit, all man pages are generated using the same two
steps:
1. Process a source $command.pod file with pod2man(1) to obtain
a valid man page in $command.$section.in
2. Process $command.$section.in with sed(1) to obtain the final
man page in $command.$section
The values are currently limited to LLONG_MAX which causes some
problems. QEMU conveniently changed their maximum to 1e15 (1 PB) which
is enough for some time and we need to adapt to that so that we don't
throw "Unknown error" messages. Strictly limiting these values actually
fixes some corner case values (off-by-one checks in QEMU probably).
Since values out of the new specified range do not overflow anything,
change the type of error as well.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1317531
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
$ echo -n 'log_level=1' > ~/.config/libvirt/libvirtd.conf
$ libvirtd --timeout=10
2014-10-10 10:30:56.394+0000: 6626: info : libvirt version: 1.1.3.6, package: 1.fc20 (Fedora Project, 2014-09-08-17:50:42, buildvm-05.phx2.fedoraproject.org)
2014-10-10 10:30:56.394+0000: 6626: error : main:1261 : Can't load config file: configuration file syntax error: /home/rjones/.config/libvirt/libvirtd.conf:1: expecting a value: /home/rjones/.config/libvirt/libvirtd.conf
Rather than try to fix this in the depths of the parser, just catch
the case when a config file doesn't end in a newline, and manually
append a newline to the content before parsing
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1151409
According to the dnsmasq manpage, the netmask for IPv4 address ranges
will be auto-deteremined from the interface dnsmasq is listening on,
but it can't do this for IPv6 for some reason - it instead assumes a
network prefix of 64 for all IPv6 address ranges. If this is
incorrect, dnsmasq will refuse to give out an address to clients,
instead logging this message:
dnsmasq-dhcp[2380]: no address range available for DHCPv6 request via virbr0
The solution is for libvirt to add ",$prefix" to all IPv6 dhcp-range
arguments when building the dnsmasq.conf file.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1033739
FreeBSD's sed(1) doesn't support using "\n" to insert a newline,
so the installed default.xml file ends up containing a literal
"n" between tags; to work around this problem, add a tr(1)
invocation as suggested by the sed FAQ[1].
[1] http://sed.sourceforge.net/sedfaq4.html (4.1 c)
The stream serial number is the serial number of the RPC call
that initiated a data transfer. And as such can never be
negative. Moreover, when looking up internal state for a stream,
the serial numbers are compared. But hey, the serial number in
message header is unsigned too!
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
According to the autoconf manual, using '$(LN_S) -f' is not
portable; remove the target explicitly beforehand to work around
this limitation.
Adjust some slightly awkward indentation while at it.
My commit 0d1579572 crashes on a URI without a scheme, like via
'virsh --connect frob'
Add a check on uri->server too while we are at it, and centralize
them all
The current rule fails if the target already exists:
cd /home/jenkins/build/libvirt/lib && \
ln -s libnss_libvirt.so.1 nss_libvirt.so.1
ln: nss_libvirt.so.1: File exists
Makefile:3357: recipe for target 'install-exec-hook' failed
However, all other rules concerned with installation are
idempotent and will happily overwrite an existing target,
so this one should as well.
We don't have input devices in SDK thus for define/dumpxml
operations to be consistent we need to:
1. on dumpxml: infer input devices from other parts of config.
It is already done in prlsdkLoadDomain.
2. on define: check that input devices are the same that
will be infer back on dumpxml operation.
The second part should be fixed.
Signed-off-by: Nikolay Shirokovskiy <nshirokovskiy@virtuozzo.com>
Remove all the plumbing needed for the different qcow-create/kvm-img
non-raw file creation.
We can drop the error messages because CreateQemuImg will thrown an
error for us but with slightly less fidelity (unable to find qemu-img),
which I think is acceptable given the unlikeliness of that error in
practice.
This an ubuntu/debian packaging convention. At one point it may have
been an actually different binary, but at least as of ubuntu precise
(the oldest supported ubuntu distro, released april 2012) kvm-img is
just a symlink to qemu-img for back compat.
I think it's safe to drop support for it
qcow-create was a crippled qemu-img impl that shipped with xen. I
think supporting this was only relevant for really old distros
that didn't have a proper qemu package, like early RHEL5. I think
it's fair to drop support
VIR_ERR_NO_SUPPORT maps to the error string
this function is not supported by the connection driver
and is largely only used for when a driver doesn't have any
implementation for a public API. So its usage with invalid
net-update requests is a bit out of place. Instead use
VIR_ERR_OPERATION_UNSUPPORTED which maps to:
Operation not supported
And is what qemu's hotplug routines use in similar scenarios
QEMU introduced the query-gic-capabilities QMP command
with commit 4468d4e0f383: use the command, if available,
to probe available GIC capabilities.
The information obtained is stored in a virQEMUCaps
instance, and will be later used to fill in a
virDomainCaps instance.
The struct contains a single boolean field, 'supported':
the meaning of this field is too generic to be limited to
devices only, and in fact it's already being used for
other things like loaders and OSs.
Instead of trying to come up with a more generic name just
get rid of the struct altogether.
libvirt handles empty source as NULL, while vz sdk as
"" thus we need a bit of conversion.
Signed-off-by: Nikolay Shirokovskiy <nshirokovskiy@virtuozzo.com>
Current implementation does not detect all incompatible configurations.
For example if we have in vzsdk bootorder "cdrom1, cdrom0" (that is
"hdb, hda" in case of ide cdroms) and cdroms do not have disk
images inserted. In this case boot order check code fails to
distiguish them at all as for both PrlVmDev_GetFriendlyName gives "".
Well the consequences are only missing warnings but as
we just have introduced all the necessary tools to face the problem -
let's fix it.
Signed-off-by: Nikolay Shirokovskiy <nshirokovskiy@virtuozzo.com>
Actually using disk PrlVmDev_GetFriendlyName as id on
detaching volumes is not a problem. We can only detach
hard disks and these can not have empty friendly names.
But upcoming update device functionality for cdroms
can not use disk source as id at all as update operation
typically change this same source value. Thus we will need
to use cdrom bus and cdrom target name as cdrom id. So in attempt
to use same id scheme for all purpuses lets fix hard disk
detach function to use new id.
Signed-off-by: Nikolay Shirokovskiy <nshirokovskiy@virtuozzo.com>
Our intention is to use disk bus and disk target name pair
as disk id instead of name returned by PrlVmDev_GetFriendlyName.
We already have the code that extracts this pair from vzsdk
data. Let's factor it out into a function.
Signed-off-by: Nikolay Shirokovskiy <nshirokovskiy@virtuozzo.com>
Prior to this patch we didn't make any attempt to prevent two entries
in the array of interfaces/PCI devices from pointing to the same
device.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1002423
The common idiom in the driver API implementations is roughly:
- ACL check
- BeginJob (if needed)
- AgentAvailable (if needed)
- !IsActive
A few calls had an extra !IsActive before BeginJob, which doesn't
seem to serve much use. Drop them
It isn't implemented and does not work:
error: internal error: guest failed to start: /usr/lib/libvirt/libvirt_lxc: option '--veth' requires an argument
syntax: /usr/lib/libvirt/libvirt_lxc [OPTIONS] ...
We previously threw an explicit error, but this changed in
22cff52a2b , which I suspect was
untested for LXC
So in glibc-2.23 sys/sysmacros.h is no longer included from sys/types.h
and we don't build because of the usage of major/minor/makedev macros.
Autoconf already has AC_HEADER_MAJOR macro that check where exactly
these functions/macros are defined, so let's use that.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>