Add an access control driver that uses the pkcheck command
to check authorization requests. This is fairly inefficient,
particularly for cases where an API returns a list of objects
and needs to check permission for each object.
It would be desirable to use the polkit API but this links
to glib with abort-on-OOM behaviour, so can't be used. The
other alternative is to speak to dbus directly
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-howto.html states:
You should also include a copy of the license itself somewhere in the
distribution of your program. All programs, whether they are released
under the GPL or LGPL, should include the text version of the GPL. In
GNU programs the license is usually in a file called COPYING.
If you are releasing your program under the LGPL, you should also
include the text version of the LGPL, usually in a file called
COPYING.LESSER. Please note that, since the LGPL is a set of
additional permissions on top of the GPL, it's important to include
both licenses so users have all the materials they need to understand
their rights.
* configure.ac (COPYING): No more games with non-git file.
* COPYING: New file, copied from gnulib.
* COPYING.LIB: Rename...
* COPYING.LESSER: ...to this.
* .gitignore: Track licenses in git.
* cfg.mk (exclude_file_name_regexp--sc_copyright_address): Tweak
rule.
* libvirt.spec.in (daemon, client, python): Reflect rename.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Add a test case which exercises the virFDStreamOpenFile
and virFDStreamCreateFile methods. Ensure that both the
synchronous and non-blocking iohelper code paths work.
This validates the regression recently fixed which
broke reading in non-blocking mode
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Some aspects of the cgroups setup / detection code are quite subtle
and easy to break. It would greatly benefit from unit testing, but
this is difficult because the test suite won't have privileges to
play around with cgroups. The solution is to use monkey patching
via LD_PRELOAD to override the fopen, open, mkdir, access functions
to redirect access of cgroups files to some magic stubs in the
test suite.
Using this we provide custom content for the /proc/cgroup and
/proc/self/mounts files which report a fixed cgroup setup. We
then override open/mkdir/access so that access to the cgroups
filesystem gets redirected into files in a temporary directory
tree in the test suite build dir.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
To prevent confusion with configure's popular name
for a file, rename conftest.c to test_conf.c which
is consistent with the invoking test_conf.sh
Signed-off-by: Gene Czarcinski <gene@czarc.net>
Introduce a local object virIdentity for managing security
attributes used to form a client application's identity.
Instances of this object are intended to be used as if they
were immutable, once created & populated with attributes
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Testing our backing chain handling will make it much easier to
ensure that we avoid issues in the future. If only I had written
this test before I first caused several regressions...
* tests/virstoragetest.c: New test.
* tests/Makefile.am (test_programs): Build it.
* .gitignore: Ignore new files.
We have several cases where we need to read endian-dependent
data regardless of host endianness; rather than open-coding
these call sites, it will be nicer to funnel things through
a macro.
The virendian.h file can be expanded to add writer functions,
and/or 16-bit access patterns, if needed. Also, if we need
to turn things into a function to avoid multiple evaluations
of buf, that can be done later. But for now, a macro worked.
* src/util/virendian.h: New file.
* src/Makefile.am (UTIL_SOURCES): Ship it.
* tests/virendiantest.c: New test.
* tests/Makefile.am (test_programs, virendiantest_SOURCES): Run
the test.
* .gitignore: Ignore built file.
When doing checks with automake, there are '<testname>.trs' files left
behind, that might or might not be usable, however these show up in
'git status' even though we definitely don't want them to be tracked
in the repository'. Automake adds the '--trs-files' option by default
since commit 0c81b43f711fb861f04227ced8dba889596d9c43 [1], which
consequently (from 1.13 in my case) started leaving these files behind
along with '<testname>.log' files as well (which we already ignore).
[1] http://git.savannah.gnu.org/gitweb/?p=automake.git;a=commitdiff;h=0c81b43
This patch introduces support for LXC specific public APIs. In
common with what was done for QEMU, this creates a libvirt_lxc.so
library and libvirt/libvirt-lxc.h header file.
The actual APIs are
int virDomainLxcOpenNamespace(virDomainPtr domain,
int **fdlist,
unsigned int flags);
int virDomainLxcEnterNamespace(virDomainPtr domain,
unsigned int nfdlist,
int *fdlist,
unsigned int *noldfdlist,
int **oldfdlist,
unsigned int flags);
which provide a way to use the setns() system call to move the
calling process into the container's namespace. It is not
practical to write in a generically applicable manner. The
nearest that we could get to such an API would be an API which
allows to pass a command + argv to be executed inside a
container. Even if we had such a generic API, this LXC specific
API is still useful, because it allows the caller to maintain
the current process context, in particular any I/O streams they
have open.
NB the virDomainLxcEnterNamespace() API is special in that it
runs client side, so does not involve the internal driver API.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
There are many aspects of the guest XML which result in the
SELinux driver applying file labelling. With the increasing
configuration options it is desirable to test this behaviour.
It is not possible to assume that the test suite has the
ability to set SELinux labels. Most filesystems though will
support extended attributes. Thus for the purpose of testing,
it is possible to extend the existing LD_PRELOAD hack to
override setfilecon() and getfilecon() to simply use the
'user.libvirt.selinux' attribute for the sake of testing.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
To avoid confusion between the LXC driver <-> controller
monitor RPC protocol and the libvirt-lxc.so <-> libvirtd public
RPC protocol, rename the former to lxc_monitor_protocol.x
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This adds a 'lockd' lock driver which is just a client which
talks to the lockd daemon to perform all locking. This will
be the default lock driver for any hypervisor which needs one.
* src/Makefile.am: Add lockd.so plugin
* src/locking/lock_driver_lockd.c: Lockd driver impl
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Introduce a lock_daemon_dispatch.c file which implements the
server side dispatcher the RPC APIs previously defined in the
lock protocol.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The virtlockd daemon will be responsible for managing locks
on virtual machines. Communication will be via the standard
RPC infrastructure. This provides the XDR protocol definition
* src/locking/lock_protocol.x: Wire protocol for virtlockd
* src/Makefile.am: Include lock_protocol.[ch] in virtlockd
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The virtlockd daemon will maintain locks on behalf of libvirtd.
There are two reasons for it to be separate
- Avoid risk of other libvirtd threads accidentally
releasing fcntl() locks by opening + closing a file
that is locked
- Ensure locks can be preserved across libvirtd restarts.
virtlockd will need to be able to re-exec itself while
maintaining locks. This is simpler to achieve if its
sole job is maintaining locks
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Most of this deals with moving the libvirt-guests.sh script which
does all the work to /usr/libexec, so it can be shared by both
systemd and traditional init. Previously systemd depended on
the script being in /etc/init.d
Required to fix https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=789747
This introduces a few new APIs for dealing with strings.
One to split a char * into a char **, another to join a
char ** into a char *, and finally one to free a char **
There is a simple test suite to validate the edge cases
too. No more need to use the horrible strtok_r() API,
or hand-written code for splitting strings.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
I did a 'git add .', then realized that it ended up trying to
add the emacs lock file for a corresponding file that I had not
yet saved all my edits; thankfully I noticed it in time. Since
we already exclude other temporary files, this makes the most
sense for preventing such a mistake from actually hitting upstream.
* .gitignore: Add .#* to the exclude list.
AUTHORS.in tracks the maintainers, as well as some folks who were
previously in AUTHORS but don't have a git commit with proper
attribution.
Generated output is sorted alphabetically and lacks pretty spacing, so
tweak AUTHORS.in to follow the same format.
Additionally, drop the syntax-check rule that previously validated
AUTHORS against git log.
The previously introduced virFile{Lock,Unlock} APIs provide a
way to acquire/release fcntl() locks on individual files. For
unknown reason though, the POSIX spec says that fcntl() locks
are released when *any* file handle referring to the same path
is closed. In the following sequence
threadA: fd1 = open("foo")
threadB: fd2 = open("foo")
threadA: virFileLock(fd1)
threadB: virFileLock(fd2)
threadB: close(fd2)
you'd expect threadA to come out holding a lock on 'foo', and
indeed it does hold a lock for a very short time. Unfortunately
when threadB does close(fd2) this releases the lock associated
with fd1. For the current libvirt use case for virFileLock -
pidfiles - this doesn't matter since the lock is acquired
at startup while single threaded an never released until
exit.
To provide a more generally useful API though, it is necessary
to introduce a slightly higher level abstraction, which is to
be referred to as a "lockspace". This is to be provided by
a virLockSpacePtr object in src/util/virlockspace.{c,h}. The
core idea is that the lockspace keeps track of what files are
already open+locked. This means that when a 2nd thread comes
along and tries to acquire a lock, it doesn't end up opening
and closing a new FD. The lockspace just checks the current
list of held locks and immediately returns VIR_ERR_RESOURCE_BUSY.
NB, the API as it stands is designed on the basis that the
files being locked are not being otherwise opened and used
by the application code. One approach to using this API is to
acquire locks based on a hash of the filepath.
eg to lock /var/lib/libvirt/images/foo.img the application
might do
virLockSpacePtr lockspace = virLockSpaceNew("/var/lib/libvirt/imagelocks");
lockname = md5sum("/var/lib/libvirt/images/foo.img");
virLockSpaceAcquireLock(lockspace, lockname);
NB, in this example, the caller should ensure that the path
is canonicalized before calculating the checksum.
It is also possible to do locks directly on resources by
using a NULL lockspace directory and then using the file
path as the lock name eg
virLockSpacePtr lockspace = virLockSpaceNew(NULL);
virLockSpaceAcquireLock(lockspace, "/var/lib/libvirt/images/foo.img");
This is only safe to do though if no other part of the process
will be opening the files. This will be the case when this
code is used inside the soon-to-be-reposted virlockd daemon
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
With this script you can run libvirt programs without needing to
install them first. You just have to do for example:
./run ./tools/virsh [args ...]
If you are already in the tools/ subdirectory, then the following
command will also work:
../run ./virsh [...]
You can also run the C programs under valgrind like this:
./run valgrind [valgrind opts...] ./program
or under gdb:
./run gdb --args ./program
This also works with sudo (eg. if you need root access for libvirt):
sudo ./run ./tools/virsh list --all
Derived from libguestfs and simplified. The ./run script in
libguestfs is much more sophisticated:
https://github.com/libguestfs/libguestfs/blob/master/run.in
In many places we store bitmap info in a chunk of data
(pointed to by a char *), and have redundant codes to
set/unset bits. This patch extends virBitmap, and convert
those codes to use virBitmap in subsequent patches.
Take advantage of the previously added monitor helpers to
create a test suite for the QEMU JSON monitor impl. As a
proof of concept, this tests the 'qemuMonitorGetStatus'
implementation
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This test case validates the correct generation of SELinux labels
for VMs, wrt the current process label. Since we can't actually
change the label of the test program process, we create a shared
library libsecurityselinuxhelper.so which overrides the getcon()
and setcon() libselinux.so functions. When started the test case
will check to see if LD_PRELOAD is set, and if not, it will
re-exec() itself setting LD_PRELOAD=libsecurityselinuxhelper.so
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This patch makes search.php autogenerated from search.php.in, thus
removing hardcoded menus, footer etc. and the search.php is added to
.gitignore.
There is new rule added for *.php files (to make it bit less
hardcoded) that takes *.php.code.in and injects it inside the
generated *.php (xslt was not happy about php code in the source xml).
There are a few issues with the current virAtomic APIs
- They require use of a virAtomicInt struct instead of a plain
int type
- Several of the methods do not implement memory barriers
- The methods do not implement compiler re-ordering barriers
- There is no Win32 native impl
The GLib library has a nice LGPLv2+ licensed impl of atomic
ops that works with GCC, Win32, or pthreads.h that addresses
all these problems. The main downside to their code is that
the pthreads impl uses a single global mutex, instead of
a per-variable mutex. Given that it does have a Win32 impl
though, we don't expect anyone to seriously use the pthread.h
impl, so this downside is not significant.
* .gitignore: Ignore test case
* configure.ac: Check for which atomic ops impl to use
* src/Makefile.am: Add viratomic.c
* src/nwfilter/nwfilter_dhcpsnoop.c: Switch to new atomic
ops APIs and plain int datatype
* src/util/viratomic.h: inline impls of all atomic ops
for GCC, Win32 and pthreads
* src/util/viratomic.c: Global pthreads mutex for atomic
ops
* tests/viratomictest.c: Test validate to validate safety
of atomic ops.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
One of our latest patches added some files to .gitignore. However,
not in the right place leaving the file not sorted. Since my git
is set up to sort these files contents, fix this issue as it keeps
showing up in git status.
This defines a new RPC protocol to be used between the LXC
controller and the libvirtd LXC driver. There is only a
single RPC message defined thus far, an asynchronous "EXIT"
event that is emitted just before the LXC controller process
exits. This provides the LXC driver with details about how
the container shutdown - normally, or abnormally (crashed),
thus allowing the driver to emit better libvirt events.
Emitting the event in the LXC controller requires a few
little tricks with the RPC service. Simply calling the
virNetServiceClientSendMessage does not work, since this
merely queues the message for asynchronous processing.
In addition the main event loop is no longer running at
the point the event is emitted, so no I/O is processed.
Thus after invoking virNetServiceClientSendMessage it is
necessary to mark the client as being in "delayed close"
mode. Then the event loop is run again, until the client
completes its close - this happens only after the queued
message has been fully transmitted. The final complexity
is that it is not safe to run virNetServerQuit() from the
client close callback, since that is invoked from a
context where the server is locked. Thus a zero-second
timer is used to trigger shutdown of the event loop,
causing the controller to finally exit.
* src/Makefile.am: Add rules for generating RPC protocol
files and dispatch methods
* src/lxc/lxc_controller.c: Emit an RPC event immediately
before exiting
* src/lxc/lxc_domain.h: Record the shutdown reason
given by the controller
* src/lxc/lxc_monitor.c, src/lxc/lxc_monitor.h: Register
RPC program and event handler. Add callback to let
driver receive EXIT event.
* src/lxc/lxc_process.c: Use monitor exit event to decide
what kind of domain event to emit
* src/lxc/lxc_protocol.x: Define wire protocol for LXC
controller monitor.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
If from a clean GIT checkout 'make -j 8' is run, the ESX
and Hyper-V code will be generated multiple times over.
This is because there are multiple files being generated
from one invocation of the generator script. make does not
realize this and so invokes the generator once per file.
This doesn't matter with serialized builds, but with
parallel builds multiple instances of the generator get
run at once.
make[2]: Entering directory `/home/berrange/src/virt/libvirt/src'
GEN util/virkeymaps.h
GEN remote/remote_protocol.h
GEN remote/remote_client_bodies.h
GEN remote/qemu_protocol.h
GEN remote/qemu_client_bodies.h
GEN esx/esx_vi_methods.generated.c
GEN esx/esx_vi_methods.generated.h
GEN esx/esx_vi_methods.generated.macro
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.c
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.h
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.typedef
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.typedef
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.typeenum
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.typetostring
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.typefromstring
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.h
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.c
GEN esx/esx_vi_methods.generated.h
GEN esx/esx_vi_methods.generated.c
GEN esx/esx_vi_methods.generated.macro
GEN esx/esx_vi.generated.h
GEN esx/esx_vi.generated.c
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.typeenum
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.typedef
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.typeenum
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.typetostring
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.typefromstring
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.h
GEN esx/esx_vi_types.generated.c
GEN esx/esx_vi_methods.generated.h
...snip...
GEN hyperv/hyperv_wmi.generated.h
GEN libvirt_qemu_probes.h
GEN locking/qemu-sanlock.conf
GEN hyperv/hyperv_wmi.generated.c
GEN rpc/virnetprotocol.h
GEN hyperv/hyperv_wmi_classes.generated.typedef
GEN hyperv/hyperv_wmi_classes.generated.h
GEN hyperv/hyperv_wmi_classes.generated.c
GEN rpc/virkeepaliveprotocol.h
GEN remote/remote_protocol.c
GEN remote/qemu_protocol.c
GEN rpc/virkeepaliveprotocol.c
GEN rpc/virnetprotocol.c
GEN libvirt.def
Prevent this using a timestamp file to control generation,
as was previously done for the python bindings in commit
a7868e0131
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This patch brings support to manage sheepdog pools and volumes to libvirt.
It uses the "collie" command-line utility that comes with sheepdog for that.
A sheepdog pool in libvirt maps to a sheepdog cluster.
It needs a host and port to connect to, which in most cases
is just going to be the default of localhost on port 7000.
A sheepdog volume in libvirt maps to a sheepdog vdi.
To create one specify the pool, a name and the capacity.
Volumes can also be resized later.
In the volume XML the vdi name has to be put into the <target><path>.
To use the volume as a disk source for virtual machines specify
the vdi name as "name" attribute of the <source>.
The host and port information from the pool are specified inside the host tag.
<disk type='network'>
...
<source protocol="sheepdog" name="vdi_name">
<host name="localhost" port="7000"/>
</source>
</disk>
To work right this patch parses the output of collie,
so it relies on the raw output option. There recently was a bug which caused
size information to be reported wrong. This is fixed upstream already and
will be in the next release.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Wiedenroth <wiedi@frubar.net>
The Mingw32 toolchain is broadly obsoleted by the Mingw64 toolchain.
The latter has been adopted by Fedora 17 and newer. Maintaining a
RPM spec for Mingw32 is a needless burden, so switch to a Mingw64
RPM spec (which provides 32 & 64 bit builds).
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Without this fix, a VPATH build (such as used by ./autobuild.sh)
fails with messages like:
make[3]: Entering directory `/home/remote/eblake/libvirt-tmp2/build/daemon'
../../build-aux/augeas-gentest.pl libvirtd.conf ../../daemon/test_libvirtd.aug.in test_libvirtd.aug
cannot read libvirtd.conf: No such file or directory at ../../build-aux/augeas-gentest.pl line 38.
Since the test files are not part of the tarball, we can generate
them into the build dir, but rather than create a subdirectory
just for the test file, it is easier to test them directly in
libvirt.git/src.
* daemon/Makefile.am (AUG_GENTEST): Factor out definition.
(test_libvirtd.aug): Look for correct file.
* src/Makefile.am (AUG_GENTEST): Use $(PERL).
(qemu/test_libvirtd_qemu.aug, lxc/test_libvirtd_lxc.aug)
(locking/test_libvirt_sanlock.aug): Rename to avoid subdirectories.
(check-augeas-qemu, check-augeas-lxc, check-augeas-sanlock): Reflect
location of built tests.
* configure.ac (PERL): Substitute perl.
When adding new config file parameters, the corresponding
additions to the augeas lens' are constantly forgotten.
Also there are augeas test cases, these don't catch the
error, since they too are never updated.
To address this, the augeas test cases need to be auto-generated
from the example config files.
* build-aux/augeas-gentest.pl: Helper to generate an
augeas test file, substituting in elements from the
example config files
* src/Makefile.am, daemon/Makefile.am: Switch to
auto-generated augeas test cases
* daemon/test_libvirtd.aug, daemon/test_libvirtd.aug.in,
src/locking/test_libvirt_sanlock.aug,
src/locking/test_libvirt_sanlock.aug.in,
src/lxc/test_libvirtd_lxc.aug,
src/lxc/test_libvirtd_lxc.aug.in,
src/qemu/test_libvirtd_qemu.aug,
src/qemu/test_libvirtd_qemu.aug.in: Remove example
config file data, replacing with a ::CONFIG:: placeholder
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The daemon-conf test script continues to be very fragile to
changes in libvirt. It currently fails 1 time in 3/4 due
to race conditions in startup/shutdown of the test script.
Replace it with a proper test case tailored to the code
being tested
* tests/Makefile.am: Remove daemon-conf, add libvirtdconftest
* tests/daemon-conf: Delete obsolete test
* tests/libvirtdconftest.c: Test config file handling
Otherwise, 'make check' breaks since commit bc1ff160 deleted
qparams.h. A later patch will ensure that viruri takes over
what qparams used to do.
* tests/qparamtest.c (mymain): Delete, now that we have viruri.
* tests/Makefile.am (check_PROGRAMS, TESTS, qparamtest_SOURCES):
Delete old test.
* .gitignore: Add recent test additions.
The file daemon/probes.h used to be generated as part of a build, but
is no longer used. However, a stale copy of it lying around could
cause a build to fail. Removing it from .gitignore will make it more
likely someone will notice that they have it lying around.
QMP commands don't need to be escaped since converting them to json
also escapes special characters. When a QMP command fails, however,
libvirt falls back to HMP commands. These fallback functions
(qemuMonitorText*) do their own escaping, and pass the result directly
to qemuMonitorHMPCommandWithFd. If the monitor is in json mode, these
pre-escaped commands will be escaped again when converted to json,
which can result in the wrong arguments being sent.
For example, a filename test\file would be sent in json as
test\\file.
This prevented attaching an image file with a " or \ in its name in
qemu 1.0.50, and also broke rbd attachment (which uses backslashes to
escape some internal arguments.)
Reported-by: Masuko Tomoya <tomoya.masuko@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Josh Durgin <josh.durgin@dreamhost.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Unlike .cvsignore under CVS, git allows for ignoring nested
names. We weren't very consistent where new tests were
being ignored (some in .gitignore, some in tests/.gitignore),
and I found it easier to just consolidate everything.
* .gitignore: Subsume entries from subdirectories.
* daemon/.gitignore: Delete.
* docs/.gitignore: Likewise.
* docs/devhelp/.gitignore: Likewise.
* docs/html/.gitignore: Likewise.
* examples/dominfo/.gitignore: Likewise.
* examples/domsuspend/.gitignore: Likewise.
* examples/hellolibvirt/.gitignore: Likewise.
* examples/openauth/.gitignore: Likewise.
* examples/domain-events/events-c/.gitignore: Likewise.
* include/libvirt/.gitignore: Likewise.
* src/.gitignore: Likewise.
* src/esx/.gitignore: Likewise.
* tests/.gitignore: Likewise.
* tools/.gitignore: Likewise.
Fix a build failure:
virt-host-validate.c: In function 'main':
virt-host-validate.c:82:5: error: implicit declaration of function 'setlocale' [-Werror=implicit-function-declaration]
virt-host-validate.c:82:5: error: nested extern declaration of 'setlocale' [-Werror=nested-externs]
virt-host-validate.c:82:20: error: 'LC_ALL' undeclared (first use in this function)
* tools/virt-host-validate.c: Add <locale.h>.
* .gitignore: Ignore built executable.
On RHEL5, I got:
util/virrandom.c:66: warning: nested extern declaration of '_gl_verify_function66' [-Wnested-externs]
The fix is to hoist the verify earlier. Also some other hodge-podge
fixes I noticed while reviewing Dan's recent series.
* .gitignore: Ignore new test.
* src/util/cgroup.c: Bump copyright year.
* src/util/virhash.c: Fix typo in description.
* src/util/virrandom.c (virRandomBits): Mark doc comment, and
hoist assert to silence older gcc.
The keepalive program has two procedures: PING, and PONG.
Both are used only in asynchronous messages and the sender doesn't wait
for any reply. However, the party which receives PING messages is
supposed to react by sending PONG message the other party, but no
explicit binding between PING and PONG messages is made. For backward
compatibility neither server nor client are allowed to send keepalive
messages before checking that remote party supports them.
Add a test for the simple parts of my indentation changes, and
fix the fallout.
* tests/domainsnapshotxml2xmltest.c: New test.
* tests/Makefile.am (domainsnapshotxml2xmltest_SOURCES): Build it.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainSnapshotDefFormat): Avoid NULL
deref, match documented order.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h (virDomainSnapshotDefFormat): Add const.
* tests/domainsnapshotxml2xmlout/all_parameters.xml: Tweak output.
* tests/domainsnapshotxml2xmlout/disk_snapshot.xml: Likewise.
* tests/domainsnapshotxml2xmlout/full_domain.xml: Likewise.
* .gitignore: Exempt new binary.
When libvirt calls virInitialize it creates a thread local
for the virErrorPtr storage, and registers a callback to
cleanup memory when a thread exits. When libvirt is dlclose()d
or otherwise made non-resident, the callback function is
removed from memory, but the thread local may still exist
and if a thread later exists, it will invoke the callback
and SEGV. There may also be other thread locals with callbacks
pointing to libvirt code, so it is in general never safe to
unload libvirt.so from memory once initialized.
To allow dlclose() to succeed, but keep libvirt.so resident
in memory, link with '-z nodelete'. This issue was first
found with the libvirt CIM provider, but can potentially
hit many of the dynamic language bindings which all ultimately
involve dlopen() in some way, either on libvirt.so itself,
or on the glue code for the binding which in turns links
to libvirt
* configure.ac, src/Makefile.am: Ensure libvirt.so is linked
with -z nodelete
* cfg.mk, .gitignore, tests/Makefile.am, tests/shunloadhelper.c,
tests/shunloadtest.c: A test case to unload libvirt while
a thread is still running.
Add a generator script to generate the structs and serialization
information for OpenWSMAN.
openwsman.h collects workarounds for problems in OpenWSMAN <= 2.2.6.
There are also disabled sections that would use ws_serializer_free_mem
but can't because it's broken in OpenWSMAN <= 2.2.6. Patches to fix
this have been posted upstream.
I did 'git add .' while in the middle of 'make syntax-check', and
it picked up a temporary file that should not be committed.
* .gitignore: Ignore sc_* from syntax check.
Gettext annoyingly modifies CPPFLAGS in-place, putting
-I/usr/local/include into the search patch if libintl headers
must be used from that location. But since we must support
automake 1.9.6 which lacks AM_CPPFLAGS, and since CPPFLAGS is used
prior to INCLUDES, this means that the build picks up the _old_
installed libvirt.h in priority to the in-tree version, leading
to all sorts of weird build failures on FreeBSD.
Fix this by teaching configure to undo gettext's actions, but
to keep any changes required by gettext at the end of INCLUDES
after all in-tree locations are used first. Also requires
adding a wrapper Makefile.am and making gnulib-tool create
just gnulib.mk files during the bootstrap process.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Add virtkey lib for usage-improvment and keycode translating.
Add 4 internal API for the aim
const char *virKeycodeSetTypeToString(int codeset);
int virKeycodeSetTypeFromString(const char *name);
int virKeycodeValueFromString(virKeycodeSet codeset, const char *keyname);
int virKeycodeValueTranslate(virKeycodeSet from_codeset,
virKeycodeSet to_offset,
int key_value);
* include/libvirt/libvirt.h.in: extend virKeycodeSet enum
* src/Makefile.am: add new virtkeycode module and rule to generate
virkeymaps.h
* src/util/virkeycode.c src/util/virkeycode.h: new module
* src/util/virkeycode-mapgen.py: python generator for virkeymaps.h
out of keymaps.csv
* src/libvirt_private.syms: extend private symbols for new module
* .gitignore: add generated virkeymaps.h
Commit 8665f85 introduced a slight regression in doc generation,
since make only quits a rule on the first failed command ending
with a newline rather than a semicolon.
* docs/Makefile.am (html/index.html): Don't use xmllint unless
xsltproc succeeded.
* .gitignore: Ignore recently updated stamp file name.
This guts the libvirtd daemon, removing all its networking and
RPC handling code. Instead it calls out to the new virServerPtr
APIs for all its RPC & networking work
As a fallout all libvirtd daemon error reporting now takes place
via the normal internal error reporting APIs. There is no need
to call separate error reporting APIs in RPC code, nor should
code use VIR_WARN/VIR_ERROR for reporting fatal problems anymore.
* daemon/qemu_dispatch_*.h, daemon/remote_dispatch_*.h: Remove
old generated dispatcher code
* daemon/qemu_dispatch.h, daemon/remote_dispatch.h: New dispatch
code
* daemon/dispatch.c, daemon/dispatch.h: Remove obsoleted code
* daemon/remote.c, daemon/remote.h: Rewrite for new dispatch
APIs
* daemon/libvirtd.c, daemon/libvirtd.h: Remove all networking
code
* daemon/stream.c, daemon/stream.h: Update for new APIs
* daemon/Makefile.am: Link to libvirt-net-rpc-server.la
This patch defines the basics of a generic RPC protocol in XDR.
This is wire ABI compatible with the original remote_protocol.x.
It takes everything except for the RPC calls / events from that
protocol
- The basic header virNetMessageHeader (aka remote_message_header)
- The error object virNetMessageError (aka remote_error)
- Two dummy objects virNetMessageDomain & virNetMessageNetwork
sadly needed to keep virNetMessageError ABI compatible with
the old remote_error
The RPC protocol supports method calls, async events and
bidirectional data streams as before
* src/Makefile.am: Add rules for generating RPC code from
protocol & define a new libvirt-net-rpc.la helper library
* src/rpc/virnetprotocol.x: New generic RPC protocol
Stop storing the generated files for the remote protocol client
and server in source control. The generated files will still be
included in the result of 'make dist' to avoid end-users needing
to generate the files
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Unfortunately, this means that the strings marked for translation
in generated files are not picked up by gnulib's syntax-check,
I'm working on fixing that in gnulib.
* .gitignore, cfg.mk, po/POTFILES.in: Reflect deletion.
Make it so we don't have to 'git add -f' particular files like
po/POTFILES.in all the time (tested by fixing one of our
special-case files as part of the patch).
* .gnulib: Update to latest.
* bootstrap: Resync from coreutils.
* .gitignore: Sort whitelist entries correctly, including ignoring
files rather than directories.
* m4/virt-compile-warnings.m4: Convert tabs to space.
Split the bit acinclude.m4 file into smaller pieces named
as m4/virt-XXXXX.m4
* .gitignore: Ignore gettext related files
* acinclude.m4: Delete
* m4/virt-compile-warnings.m4: Checks for GCC compiler flags
* m4/virt-pkgconfig-back-compat.m4: Backcompat check for
pkgconfig program
Allows bootstrap to work on FreeBSD, where gzip doesn't have a '.'
in its version; and silences false positives in the new
'make syntax-check' rule.
* .gnulib: Update to latest.
* bootstrap: Synchronize to upstream.
* .x-sc_bindtextdomain: New exemptions.
* Makefile.am (syntax_check_exceptions): Ship new file.
* .gitignore: Regenerate per latest bootstrap, anchor entries that
are only in the root directory, and consolidate entries from other
generated .gitignore files.
* build-aux/.gitignore, m4/.gitignore, po/.gitignore: Remove from
version control, since bootstrap generates them.
A missing shell was noisy, and the use of command to decipher a
shell's absolute path requires "" rather than ''.
* configure.ac (lv_cv_wrapper_shell): Fix logic errors if candidate
shell is not available.
* .gitignore: Ignore file created when /bin/sh is old dash.
Reported by Matthias Bolte.
'./autobuild.sh' with lcov installed discovered that our
coverage support has been bit-rotting for a while. This
restores it back to a successful state, although I have
not yet spent any time looking through the resulting files to
look for low-hanging fruit in the unit test coverage front.
* configure.ac: Clear COMPILER_FLAGS at right place.
* Makefile.am (cov): Newer genhtml no longer likes plain -s.
* m4/compiler-flags.m4 (gl_COMPILER_FLAGS): Don't AC_SUBST
COMPILER_FLAGS; it is a shell variable for use in configure only.
* src/Makefile.am (AM_CFLAGS, AM_LDFLAGS): New variables, to make
it easier to provide global flag additions. Use throughout, to
uniformly apply coverage flags.
* .gitignore: Globally ignore gcov output.
* daemon/.gitignore: Simplify.
* src/.gitignore: Likewise.
* tests/.gitignore: Likewise.
Necessary on cygwin, where uid_t and gid_t are 4-byte long rather
than int, causing gcc -Wformat warnings.
* src/util/util.c (virFileOperationNoFork, virDirCreateNoFork)
(virFileOperation, virDirCreate, virGetUserEnt): Cast uid_t and
gid_t before passing to printf.
* .gitignore: Ignore Windows executables.
Removes some auto-generated files still under version control.
It also moves the rule for generating NEWS into the Makefile.am
that's in the same directory as the output file to avoid confusion
* docs/libvirt-api.xml, docs/libvirt-refs.xml, NEWS: Remove
auto-generated files from source control
* Makefile.am: Add rule for generating NEWS file
* docs/Makefile.am: Remove rule for generating NEWS file
When "git pull" (or any other operation) brings in a new version of the
gnulib git submodule, you must rerun the autogen.sh script. With this
change, "make" now fails and tells you to run ./autogen.sh, when needed.
* autogen.sh: Maintain a new file, .git-module-status, containing
the current submodule status. If it doesn't exist or its content
is different from what "git submodule status" prints, then run
./bootstrap
* .gitignore: Add .git-module-status
* cfg.mk: Diagnose out of date submodule and fail.
* README-hacking: Update not to mention bootstrap.
* Makefile.am (MAINTAINERCLEANFILES): Add .git-module-status,
so that "make maintainerclean" will remove it.
* bootstrap (modules): Add gnumakefile and maintainer-makefile.
* GNUmakefile: Remove file, now provided by gnulib.
* Makefile.maint: Remove. Replaced by maint.mk from gnulib.
.gitignore: Add GNUmakefile and maint.mk.
* cfg.mk (prev_version_file): Disable this feature.
Setting this to /dev/null avoids an otherwise harmless diagnostic.
This makes it so we record (via a git submodule)
a snapshot of whatever version of gnulib we're using,
and none of gnulib sources are in the libvirt repository.
The result is that we have as much reproducibility as when
we version-controlled imported copies of the gnulib sources,
but without the hassle of the manual process we used when
syncing with upstream.
Note that when you clone libvirt, you get only the libvirt
repository, but when you first run ./bootstrap, it clones
gnulib (at the SHA1 recorded via the submodule), creating
the .gnulib/ hierarchy. Then, the bootstrap script runs
gnulib-tool to populate gnulib/ with the files that make
up the selected modules.
Put the following in your ~/.gitconfig file.
[alias]
syncsub = submodule foreach git pull origin master
The update procedure is simple:
git syncsub
...build & test...
git commit -m 'gnulib: sync submodule to latest' .gnulib
* .gitmodules: New file.
* .gnulib: Initialize.
* bootstrap: Set up to use the new submodule.
Stop using --no-vc-files.
Don't remove .gitignore files.
Don't use or create .cvsignore.
Diagnose an invalid --gnulib-srcdir=DIR argument.
* build-aux/vc-list-files: Delete file, now pulled from gnulib.
* build-aux/useless-if-before-free: Likewise.
* po/POTFILES.in: Remove gnulib/lib/gai_strerror.c, since
it no longer contains translatable strings.
* gnulib/*: Remove gnulib/ hierarchy.