When any of the functions modified in commit 214c687b took false branch,
the function itself used none of its parameters resulting in "unused
parameter" error. Rewriting these functions to the stubs we use
elsewhere should fix the problem.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Currently virStorageFileResize() function uses build conditionals to
choose either the posix_fallocate() or syscall(SYS_fallocate) with no
fallback in order to preallocate the space in the newly resized file.
Since the safezero code has a similar set of conditionals modify the
resize and safezero code in order to allow the resize logic to make use
of safezero to unify the look/feel of the code paths.
Add a new boolean (resize) to safezero() to make the optional decision
whether to try syscall(SYS_fallocate) if the posix_fallocate fails because
HAVE_POSIX_FALLOCATE is not defined (eg, return -1 and errno == 0).
Create a local safezero_sys_fallocate in order to handle the resize
code paths that support that. If not present, the set errno = ENOSYS
in order to allow the caller to handle the failure scenarios.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Currently build conditionals decide which of two safezero() functions
should be built - either the posix_fallocate() or mmap() with a fallback
to a slower safewrite() algorithm in order to preallocate space in a raw file.
This patch will refactor safezero to utilize static functions for either
posix_fallocate or mmap/safewrite. The build conditional still exist, but
are only for shorter sections of code.
The posix_fallocate path will make use of the ret/errno setting to contain
the logic for safezero to decide whether it needs to fallback to other
algorithms. A return of -1 with errno not changed will indicate the conditional
is not present; otherwise, a return of -1 with errno change indicates the
call was made and it failed (no functional difference to current algorithm).
The mmap/safewrite option changes only slightly to handle the ftruncate
failure for mmap. That is, previously if the ftruncate failed, there was
no fallback to the slow safewrite option.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1160995
In our config files users are expected to pass several integer values
for different configuration knobs. However, majority of them expect a
nonnegative number and only a few of them accept a negative number too
(notably keepalive_interval in libvirtd.conf).
Therefore, a new type to config value is introduced: VIR_CONF_ULONG
that is set whenever an integer is positive or zero. With this
approach knobs accepting VIR_CONF_LONG should accept VIR_CONF_ULONG
too.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
There's no need for condition of the following form:
if (str && STREQ(str, dst))
since we have STREQ_NULLABLE macro that handles NULL cases.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
When calling virCgroupAllowAllDevices we get these invalid entries
in the device cgroup config.
b -1:-1 rw
c -1:-1 rw
Check for positive values before outputting the major and minor to
avoid that.
Currently, MAC registration occurs during device creation, which is
early enough that, during live migration, you end up with duplicate
MAC addresses on still-running source and target devices, even though
the target device isn't actually being used yet.
This patch proposes to defer MAC registration until right before
the guest can actually use the device -- In other words, right
before starting guest CPUs.
Signed-off-by: Matthew Rosato <mjrosato@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Laine Stump <laine@laine.org>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1172015
The refactoring done as part of commit id '59446096' caused a regression
for the multi initiator IQN commit '6aabcb5b' because the sendtargets was
not done on/for the initiator IQN prior to login (or trying to disable
autologin)
Prior to that commit, the paths were essentially
virStorageBackendISCSIStartPool
virStorageBackendISCSILogin
virStorageBackendISCSIConnection
if initiatoriqn
virStorageBackendCreateIfaceIQN
Issue sendtargets
Perform --login
else
Issue sendtargets
Perform --login
After that commit:
virStorageBackendISCSIStartPool
Issue sendtargets
Call virStorageBackendISCSIConnection
If initiatoriqn
virStorageBackendCreateIfaceIQN
Perform --login
else
Perform --login
So for non initiator IQN paths, nothing changed. For the initiator path,
the --login fails as does any attempts to change autologin via "--op update
--name node.startup --value manual".
These two functions use netlink RTM_NEWNEIGH and RTM_DELNEIGH messages
to add and delete entries from a bridge's fdb. The bridge itself is
not referenced in the arguments to the functions, only the name of the
device that is attached to the bridge (since a device can only be
attached to one bridge at a time, and must be attached for this
function to make sense, the kernel easily infers which bridge's fdb is
being modified by looking at the device name/index).
When user tries to insert element metadata providing a namespace
declaration as well, currently we insert the element without any validation
check for XML prefix (if provided). The next VM start would then
fail with parse error. This patch fixes this issue by adding a call to
xmlValidateNCName function to check for illegal characters in the
prefix.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1143921
Coverity complains that many other callers to return err from
virGetLastError() will check if err is not NULL before dereferencing
it. Just do the same here for safety.
virReportSystemError is reserved for reporting system errors, calling it
with VIR_ERR_* error codes produces error messages that do not make any
sense, such as
internal error: guest failed to start: Kernel doesn't support user
namespace: Link has been severed
We should prohibit wrong usage with a syntax-check rule.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
This reverts commit 433b427ff8.
The patch was added in order to overcome a bug in iproute2 and since it
was properly identified as a bug, particularly in openSUSE 13.2, and it
is being worked on [1], the best solution for libvirt seems to be to
keep the old behaviour.
[1] https://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=907093
Commit 2aa167ca tried to fix the DBus interaction code to allow
callers to use native types instead of 4-byte bools. But in
fixing the issue, I missed the case of an arrayref; Conrad Meyer
shows the following valid complaint issued by clang:
CC util/libvirt_util_la-virdbus.lo
util/virdbus.c:956:13: error: cast from 'bool *' to 'dbus_bool_t *' (aka 'unsigned int *') increases required alignment from 1 to 4 [-Werror,-Wcast-align]
GET_NEXT_VAL(dbus_bool_t, bool_val, bool, "%d");
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
util/virdbus.c:858:17: note: expanded from macro 'GET_NEXT_VAL'
x = (dbustype *)(*xptrptr + (*narrayptr - 1)); \
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1 error generated.
But fixing that points out that we have NEVER supported arrayrefs
of sub-int types (byte, i16, u16, and now bool). Again, while raw
types promote, arrays do not; so the macros HAVE to deal with both
size possibilities rather than assuming that an arrayref uses the
same sizing as the promoted raw type.
Obviously, our testsuite wasn't covering as much as it should have.
* src/util/virdbus.c (GET_NEXT_VAL): Also fix array cases.
(SET_NEXT_VAL): Fix uses of sub-int arrays.
* tests/virdbustest.c (testMessageArray, testMessageArrayRef):
Test it.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Due to a change (or bug?) in ip link implementation, the command
'ip link add vnet0...'
is forced into
'ip link add name vnet0...'
The changed command also works on older versions of iproute2, just the
'name' parameter has been made mandatory.
To be able to express some use cases of the RBD backing with libvirt, we
need to be able to specify a config file for the RBD client to qemu as
that is one of the commonly used options.
Some storage systems have internal support for snapshots. Libvirt should
be able to select a correct snapshot when starting a VM.
This patch adds a XML element to select a storage source snapshot for
the RBD protocol which supports this feature.
As we now have a common function to parse backing store string for RBD
backing store we can reuse it in the backing store walker so that we
don't fail on files backed by RBD storage.
This patch also adds a few tests to verify that the parsing works as
expected.
To allow reuse this non-trivial parser code in the backing store parser
this part of the command line parser needs to be split out into a
separate funciton.
If there are no hosts for a storage source virStorageSourceCopy and
virStorageSourceNewFromBackingRelative would try to copy them anyways.
As the success of virStorageNetHostDefCopy is determined by returning
a pointer and malloc of 0 elements might return NULL according to the
implementation, the result of the copy function may vary.
Fix this by copying the hosts array only if there are hosts defined.
As we now have a deep copy function for struct virStorageSource add a
notice that extensions of the structure require also appropriate changes
to the virStorageSourceCopy func.
When creating a disk image snapshot the libvirt code would blindly copy
the parents label to the newly created image. This runs into problems
when you start a VM from an image hosted on NFS (or other storage system
that doesn't support selinux labels) and the snapshot destination is on
a storage system that does support selinux labels. Libvirt's code in
that case generates a different security label for the image hosted on
NFS. This label is valid only for NFS images and doesn't allow access in
case of a locally stored image.
To fix this issue libvirt needs to refrain from copying security
information in cases where the default domain seclabel is a better
choice.
This patch repurposes the now unused @force argument of
virStorageSourceInitChainElement to denote whether a copy of the
security labelling stuff should be attempted or not. This allows to
fine-control the copy operation for cases where we need to keep the
label of the old disk vs. the cases where we need to keep the label
unset to use the default domain imagelabel.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1151718
Commit c0e7022 breaks on a machine that lacks dbus headers:
In file included from util/virdbus.c:24:0:
util/virdbuspriv.h:31:3: error: unknown type name 'dbus_int16_t'
* src/util/virdbuspriv.h (DBusBasicValue): Only provide fallback
when dbus is compiled.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Compilation on a RHEL 5 host failed, due to the older dbus headers
present on that machine, and triggered by commit 2aa167ca:
util/virdbus.c: In function 'virDBusMessageIterDecode':
util/virdbus.c:952: error: 'DBusBasicValue' undeclared (first use in this function)
* m4/virt-dbus.m4 (LIBVIRT_CHECK_DBUS): Check for DBusBasicValue.
* src/util/virdbuspriv.h (DBusBasicValue): Provide fallback.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Commit dc33e6e4 caused older platforms like Fedora 20 to emit
scary log messages at startup:
2014-11-19 23:12:58.800+0000: 28906: error : virCommandWait:2532 : internal error: Child process (/usr/sbin/iptables -w -L -n) unexpected exit status 2: iptables v1.4.19.1: unknown option "-w"
Try `iptables -h' or 'iptables --help' for more information.
Since we are probing and expect to handle the case where -w is not
supported, we should not let virCommand log it as an error.
* src/util/virfirewall.c (virFirewallCheckUpdateLock): Handle
non-zero status ourselves.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
I noticed this while working on qemuDomainGetBlockInfo. Assigning
a bool value to an int variable compiles fine, but raises red flags
on the maintenance front as it becomes too easy to assign -1 or 2
or any other non-bool value to the same variable.
* cfg.mk (sc_prohibit_int_assign_bool): New rule.
* src/conf/snapshot_conf.c (virDomainSnapshotRedefinePrep): Fix
offenders.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainGetBlockInfo)
(qemuDomainSnapshotCreateXML): Likewise.
* src/test/test_driver.c (testDomainSnapshotAlignDisks):
Likewise.
* src/util/vircgroup.c (virCgroupSupportsCpuBW): Likewise.
* src/util/virpci.c (virPCIDeviceBindToStub): Likewise.
* src/util/virutil.c (virIsCapableVport): Likewise.
* tools/virsh-domain-monitor.c (cmdDomMemStat): Likewise.
* tools/virsh-domain.c (cmdBlockResize, cmdScreenshot)
(cmdInjectNMI, cmdSendKey, cmdSendProcessSignal)
(cmdDetachInterface): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Use of an 'int' to represent a 'bool' value is confusing. Just
because dbus made the mistake of cementing their 4-byte wire
format of dbus_bool_t into their API doesn't mean we have to
repeat the mistake. With a little bit of finesse, we can
guarantee that we provide a large-enough value to the DBus
code, while still copying only the relevant one-byte bool
to the client code, and isolate the rest of our code base from
the DBus stupidity.
* src/util/virdbus.c (GET_NEXT_VAL): Add parameter.
(virDBusMessageIterDecode): Adjust all clients.
* src/util/virpolkit.c (virPolkitCheckAuth): Use nicer type.
* tests/virdbustest.c (testMessageSimple, testMessageStruct):
Test new behavior.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Ethernet interfaces in libvirt currently do not support bandwidth setting.
For example, following xml file for an interface will not apply these
settings to corresponding qdiscs.
<interface type="ethernet">
<mac address="02:36:1d:18:2a:e4"/>
<model type="virtio"/>
<script path=""/>
<target dev="tap361d182a-e4"/>
<bandwidth>
<inbound average="984" peak="1024" burst="64"/>
<outbound average="2000" peak="2048" burst="128"/>
</bandwidth>
</interface>
Signed-off-by: Anirban Chakraborty <abchak@juniper.net>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
A previous commit introduced use of locking with invocation
of iptables in the viriptables.c module
commit ba95426d6f
Author: Serge Hallyn <serge.hallyn@ubuntu.com>
Date: Fri Nov 1 12:36:59 2013 -0500
util: use -w flag when calling iptables
This only ever had effect with the virtual network driver,
as it was not wired up into the nwfilter driver. Unfortunately
in the firewall refactoring the use of the -w flag was
accidentally lost.
This patch introduces it to the virfirewall.c module so that
both the virtual network and nwfilter drivers will be using
it. It also ensures that the equivalent --concurrent flag
to ebtables is used.
This patch fixes the following issues.
1) When an invalid wwn is introduced, libvirt reports
"Malformed wwn: %s". The template won't be replaced.
2) "target" option for dompmsuspend and "xml" option for
save-image-define are required options and should use
VSH_OT_DATA instead of VSH_OT_STRING as an option type.
3) A typo.
Signed-off-by: Hao Liu <hliu@redhat.com>
Introduced by commit c63ef0452b, when nodeset is NULL, validation will
pass in virNumaSetupMemoryPolicy, but virBitmapNextSetBit must ensure
bitmap is not NULL, otherwise that might cause a segmentation fault.
This patch fixes it.
Signed-off-by: Chen Fan <chen.fan.fnst@cn.fujitsu.com>
This adds support for PowerPC Little Endian architecture.,
and allows libvirt to spawn VMs based on 'ppc64le' architecture.
Signed-off-by: Pradipta Kr. Banerjee <bpradip@in.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Prerna Saxena <prerna@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
One of the latest patches (9a8fc3efc2) introduced call of
geteuid(). However, not all systems have the function
implemented, e.g. mingw. Therefore, we fail to build on those
system. The fix consist of including virutil.h which defines
geteuid in needed. Sigh.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
When compiled without full numa support, the stub function for
virNumaNodeIsAvailable() just checks whether specified node is in range
<0, max); where max is maximum NUMA node available on the host. But
because the maximum node number is the highest usabe number (and not the
count of nodes), the check is incorrect as it should check whether the
specified node is in range <0, max> instead.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
This is a reaction to Michal's fix [1] for non-NUMA systems that also
splits out conf/ out of util/ because libvirt_util shouldn't require
libvirt_conf if it is the other way around. This particular use case
worked, but we're trying to avoid it as mentioned [2], many times.
The only functions from virnuma.c that needed numatune_conf were
virDomainNumatuneNodesetIsAvailable() and virNumaSetupMemoryPolicy().
The first one should be in numatune_conf as it works with
virDomainNumatune, the second one just needs nodeset and mode, both of
which can be passed without the need of numatune_conf.
Apart from fixing that, this patch also fixes recently added
code (between commits d2460f85^..5c8515620) that doesn't support
non-contiguous nodesets. It uses new function
virNumaNodesetIsAvailable(), which doesn't need a stub as it doesn't use
any libnuma functions, to check if every specified nodeset is available.
[1] https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2014-November/msg00118.html
[2] http://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2011-June/msg01040.html
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Patch 43b67f2e disallowed network tuning only with qemu driver, however
this patch moved the check for root privileges into
virNetDevBandwidthSet function, so the call should now
fail in all possible cases. A mock function was created so that the test
suite doesn't fail because of unsufficient privileges.
Coverity found out the very obvious problem in the code. That is that
virPidFileReleasePath() was called only if
virPidFileAcquirePath() returned 0. But virPidFileAcquirePath() doesn't
return only 0 on success, but the FD that needs to be closed.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
There was no check for 'nodeset' attribute in numatune-related
elements. This patch adds validation that any nodeset specified does
not exceed maximum host node.
Signed-off-by: Chen Fan <chen.fan.fnst@cn.fujitsu.com>
This function is used to cleanup a pidfile doing whatever it takes, even
killing the owning process.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
This macro seems to be defined only on linux/unix and it fails during
mingw build. Its value is '16' (taken from net/if.h) so define it if
it's not defined.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
The virGetSCSIHostNumber function return type is int, however
its stubbed version returns NULL. That results in a build fail
on systems that use the stubbed version. Fix by using a proper
return type.
Currently, build fails on FreeBSD because its struct ifreq does not
have ifr_hwaddr member. In order to fix that, check if this member
is present, otherwise fall back to the stub version of the
virNetDev{Add,Del}Multi functions.
The complaint is that if cleanup is called when virFileReadAll fails,
then mcast->entries is NULL and could be dereferenced in the clear
function. After following the code some - I saw that the caller to
the function (virNetDevGetMulticastTable) will also call
virNetDevMcastListClear if this function returns -1, so this
isn't necessary, so I removed the call.
Coverity complains that because the for loop is from 0 to 5 (max tokens)
and the impending switch/case statements used each of the #define values
that the 'default' wouldn't reachable. This patch will convert the #define's
into enum's and add the obligatory dead_error_begin marker for these type
situations.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
The code that parses the schema from the URI touches the "hosts[0]"
member of the storage file source structure in case the URI contains a
schema. The hosts array was not yet allocated at the point in the code
where the transport protocol was parsed and set. This lead to a crash of
libvirtd.
Fix the code by allocating the "hosts" array upfront and add a test case
to verify this scenario. (Unfortunately this requires shuffling the test
case numbers too).
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1156288
We weren't ever using the value for anything other than being non-zero.
* src/util/viraudit.h (virAuditLog): Change signature.
* src/util/viraudit.c (virAuditLog): Update user.
* daemon/libvirtd.c (main): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
This patch provides the utility functions to needed to synchronize the
changes made to a guest domain network device's multicast filter
with the corresponding macvtap device's filter on the host:
* Get/add/remove multicast MAC addresses
* Get the macvtap device's RX filter list
Signed-off-by: Tony Krowiak <akrowiak@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Laine Stump <laine@laine.org>
virNetDevLinkDump() gets a message from netlink into "resp", then
calls nlmsg_parse() to fill the table "tb" with pointers into resp. It
then returns tb to its caller, but not before freeing the buffer at
resp. That means that all the callers of virNetDevLinkDump() are
examining memory that has already been freed. This can be verified by
filling the buffer at resp with garbage prior to freeing it (or, I
suppose, just running libvirtd under valgrind) then performing some
operation that calls virNetDevLinkDump().
The code has been like this ever since virNetDevLinkDump() was written
- the original author didn't notice it, and neither did later
additional users of the function. It has only been pure luck (or maybe
a lack of heavy load, and/or maybe an allocation algorithm in malloc()
that delays re-use of just-freed memory) that has kept this from
causing errors, for example when configuring a PCI passthrough or
macvtap passthrough network interface.
The solution taken in this patch is the simplest - just return resp to
the caller along with tb, then have the caller free it after they are
finished using the data (pointers) in tb. I alternately could have
made a cleaner interface by creating a new struct that put tb and resp
together along with a vir*Free() function for it, but this function is
only used in a couple places, and I'm not sure there will be
additional new uses of virNetDevLinkDump(), so the value of adding a
new type, extra APIs, etc. is dubious.
The helper checks whether a string contains only whitespace or is NULL.
This will be helpful to skip cases where a user string is optional, but
may be provided empty with the same meaning.
Newer versions of Debian use '/run/initctl' instead of '/dev/initctl'.
This patch updates the code to search for the FIFO from a list of
well-known locations.
Build with clang fails with:
CC util/libvirt_util_la-virsocketaddr.lo
util/virsocketaddr.c:904:17: error: cast from 'struct sockaddr *' to
'struct sockaddr_in *' increases required alignment from 1 to 4
[-Werror,-Wcast-align]
inet4 = (struct sockaddr_in*) res->ai_addr;
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
util/virsocketaddr.c:909:17: error: cast from 'struct sockaddr *' to
'struct sockaddr_in6 *' increases required alignment from 1 to 4
[-Werror,-Wcast-align]
inet6 = (struct sockaddr_in6*) res->ai_addr;
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2 errors generated.
Fix that by replacing virSocketAddrParseInternal() call with
virSocketAddrParse() in the virSocketAddrIsNumericLocalhost() function.
virSocketAddrParse stores an address in virSocketAddr.
virSocketAddr uses a union to store an address, so it doesn't
need casting.
The JSON structure constructor has an option to add JSON arrays to the
constructed object. The description is inaccurate as it can add any json
object even a dict. Change the docs to cover this option and reject
adding NULL objects.
Our qemu monitor code has a converter from key-value pairs to a json
value object. I want to re-use the code later and having it part of the
monitor command generator is inflexible. Split it out into a separate
helper.
if specifying migration_host to an Ipv6 address without brackets,
it was resolved to an incorrect address, such as:
tcp:2001:0DB8::1428:4444,
but the correct address should be:
tcp:[2001:0DB8::1428]:4444
so we should add brackets when parsing it.
Signed-off-by: Chen Fan <chen.fan.fnst@cn.fujitsu.com>
The actual origin of this so called typo are two commits. The first one
was commit 72f8a7f that came up with the following condition:
if ((i == 8) & (flags & VIR_QEMU_PROCESS_KILL_FORCE))
Fortunately this succeeded thanks to bool being (int)1 and
VIR_QEMU_PROCESS_KILL_FORCE having the value of 1 << 0. The check was
then moved and altered in 8fd3823117 to
current state:
if ((i == 50) & force)
that will work again (both sides of '&' being booleans), but since this
was missed so many times, it may pose a problem in the future in case it
gets copy-pasted again.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
This same structure will be used to retrieve RX filter info for
interfaces on the host via netlink messages, and RX filter info for
interfaces on the guest via the qemu "query-rx-filter" command.
Since commit 8eb55d782a2b9afacc7938694891cc6fad7b42a5 libxml2 removes
two slashes from the URI when there is no server part. This is fixed
with beb7281055dbf0ed4d041022a67c6c5cfd126f25, but only if the calling
application calls xmlSaveUri() on URI that xmlURIParse() parsed. And
that is not the case in virURIFormat(). virURIFormat() accepts
virURIPtr that can be created without parsing it and we do that when we
format network storage paths for gluster for example. Even though
virStorageSourceParseBackingURI() uses virURIParse(), it throws that data
structure right away.
Since we want to format URIs as URIs and not absolute URIs or opaque
URIs (see RFC 3986), we can specify that with a special hack thanks to
commit beb7281055dbf0ed4d041022a67c6c5cfd126f25, by setting port to -1.
This fixes qemuxml2argvtest test where the disk-drive-network-gluster
case was failing.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
A cygwin build of 1.2.9 fails with:
util/virprocess.c:87:27: fatal error: sys/syscall.h: No such file or directory
# include <sys/syscall.h>
But in reality, the ONLY user of setns() is lxc, which is Linux-only.
It's easiest to just limit the setns workarounds to Linux.
* src/util/virprocess.c (setns): Limit definition to Linux.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
If we don't properly clean up all processes in the
machine-<vmname>.scope systemd won't remove the cgroup and subsequent vm
starts fail with
'CreateMachine: File exists'
Additional processes can e.g. be added via
echo $PID > /sys/fs/cgroup/systemd/machine.slice/machine-${VMNAME}.scope/tasks
but there are other cases like
http://bugs.debian.org/761521
Invoke TerminateMachine to be on the safe side since systemd tracks the
cgroup anyway. This is a noop if all processes have terminated already.
The commit 1b854c76 introduced a new function 'virPolkitCheckAuth' and
in the #else section when you don't have polkit all attributes should be
follwed by ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
Spawning the pkcheck program every time a permission check is
required is hugely expensive on CPU. The pkcheck program is just
a dumb wrapper for the DBus API, so rewrite the code to use the
DBus API directly. This also simplifies error handling a bit.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Update virNetServerClientCreateIdentity and virIdentityGetSystem
to use the new typesafe APIs for setting identity attributes
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
There are now two places in libvirt which use polkit. Currently
they use pkexec, which is set to be replaced by direct DBus API
calls. Add a common API which they will both be able to use for
this purpose.
No tests are added at this time, since the impl will be gutted
in favour of a DBus API call shortly.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Clean up all _virDomainInterfaceStats.
Signed-off-by: Wang Yufei <james.wangyufei@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Wang Rui <moon.wangrui@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
virStorageSourceInitChainElement initializes a new storage chain element
for use as a new disk source. If the new element doesn't contain the
driver name, copy it from the old source.
This fixes issue where a disk would forget the driver after a snapshot.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1140984
Currently, the setns() wrapper is supported only for x86_64 and i686
which leaves us failing to build on other platforms like arm, aarch64
and so on. This means, that the wrapper needs to be extended to those
platforms and make to fail on runtime not compile time.
The syscall numbers for other platforms was fetched using this
command:
kernel.git $ git grep "define.*__NR_setns" | grep -e arm -e powerpc -e s390
arch/arm/include/uapi/asm/unistd.h:#define __NR_setns (__NR_SYSCALL_BASE+375)
arch/arm64/include/asm/unistd32.h:#define __NR_setns 375
arch/powerpc/include/uapi/asm/unistd.h:#define __NR_setns 350
arch/s390/include/uapi/asm/unistd.h:#define __NR_setns 339
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The backing store string location offset 0 determines that the file
isn't present. The string size shouldn't be then checked:
from qemu.git/docs/specs/qcow2.txt
== Header ==
The first cluster of a qcow2 image contains the file header:
Byte 0 - 3: magic
QCOW magic string ("QFI\xfb")
4 - 7: version
Version number (valid values are 2 and 3)
8 - 15: backing_file_offset
Offset into the image file at which the backing file name
is stored (NB: The string is not null terminated). 0 if the
image doesn't have a backing file.
16 - 19: backing_file_size
Length of the backing file name in bytes. Must not be
longer than 1023 bytes. Undefined if the image doesn't have
a backing file. ^^^^^^^^^
This patch intentionally leaves the backing file string size check in
place in case a malformatted file would be presented to libvirt. Also
according to the docs the string size is maximum 1023 bytes, thus this
patch adds a check to verify that.
I was also able to verify that the check was done the same way in the
legacy qcow fromat (in qemu's code).
Coverity complains that because of how 'offset' is initialized to
0 (zero), the resulting math and comparison on rem is pointless.
According to the origin commit id '3ec128989', the code is a
replacement for gmtime(), but without the localtime() or GMT
calculations - so just remove this code and add a comment
indicating the removal
With the virGetGroupList() change in place - Coverity further complains
that if we fail to virFork(), the groups will be leaked - which aha seems
to be the case. Adjust the logic to save off the -errno, free the groups,
and then return the value we saved
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
This ends up being a very bizarre false positive. With an assist from
eblake, the claim is that mgetgroups() could return a -1 value, but yet
still have a groups buffer allocated, yet the example shown doesn't
seem to prove that.
Rather than fret about it, by adding a well placed sa_assert() on the
returned *list value we can "assure" ourselves that the mgetgroups()
failure path won't signal this condition.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
To express empty drive we historically use storage source with empty
path. Unfortunately NBD disks may be declared without a path.
Add a helper to wrap this logic.
Test suites using the port allocator don't want to have different
behaviour depending on whether a port is in use on the host. Add
a VIR_PORT_ALLOCATOR_SKIP_BIND_CHECK which test suites can use
to skip the bind() test. The port allocator will thus only track
ports in use by the test suite process itself. This is fine when
using the port allocator to generate guest configs which won't
actually be launched
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
Perhaps a false positive, but since Coverity doesn't understand the
relationship between the 'count' and the 'strings', rather than leave
the chance the on input 'strings' is NULL and causes a deref - just
check for it and return
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Adjust the parentheses in/for the waitpid loops; otherwise, Coverity
points out:
(1) Event assignment: Assigning: "waitret" = "waitpid(pid, &status, 0) == -1"
(2) Event between: At condition "waitret == -1", the value of "waitret"
must be between 0 and 1.
(3) Event dead_error_condition: The condition "waitret == -1" cannot
be true.
(4) Event dead_error_begin: Execution cannot reach this statement:
"ret = -*__errno_location();".
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
From time to time weird bugreports occur on the list, e.g [1].
Even though the kernel supports setns syscall, there's an older
glibc in the system that misses a wrapper over the syscall.
Hence, after the configure phase we think there's no setns
support in the system, which is obviously wrong. On the other
hand, we can't rely on linux distributions to provide newer glibc
soon. Therefore we need to introduce the wrapper on or own.
1: https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2014-September/msg00492.html
Signed-off-by: Stephan Sachse <ste.sachse@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
virProcessTranslateStatus is used on error paths that should not spoil
the returned error. As the errors are ignored, use the quiet versions of
virAsprintf to create the message.
Our style overwhelmingly uses hanging braces (the open brace
hangs at the end of the compound condition, rather than on
its own line), with the primary exception of the top level function
body. Fix the few remaining outliers, before adding a syntax
check in a later patch.
* src/interface/interface_backend_netcf.c (netcfStateReload)
(netcfInterfaceClose, netcf_to_vir_err): Correct use of { in
compound statement.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainHostdevDefFormatSubsys)
(virDomainHostdevDefFormatCaps): Likewise.
* src/network/bridge_driver.c (networkAllocateActualDevice):
Likewise.
* src/util/virfile.c (virBuildPathInternal): Likewise.
* src/util/virnetdev.c (virNetDevGetVirtualFunctions): Likewise.
* src/util/virnetdevmacvlan.c
(virNetDevMacVLanVPortProfileCallback): Likewise.
* src/util/virtypedparam.c (virTypedParameterAssign): Likewise.
* src/util/virutil.c (virGetWin32DirectoryRoot)
(virFileWaitForDevices): Likewise.
* src/vbox/vbox_common.c (vboxDumpNetwork): Likewise.
* tests/seclabeltest.c (main): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Commit 0e1a1a8c introduced umask for virCommand, but the variables
used emit a warning on older compilers about shadowed global
declaration.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Add umask to _virCommand, allow user to set umask to command.
Set umask(002) to qemu process to overwrite the default umask
of 022 set by many distros, so that unix sockets created for
virtio-serial has expected permissions.
Fix problem reported here:
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=13078#c11https://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=888166
To use virtio-serial device, unix socket created for chardev with
default umask(022) has insufficient permissions.
e.g.:
-device virtio-serial \
-chardev socket,path=/tmp/foo,server,nowait,id=foo \
-device virtserialport,chardev=foo,name=org.fedoraproject.port.0
srwxr-xr-x 1 qemu qemu 0 21. Jul 14:19 /tmp/somefile.sock
Other users in the same group (like real user, test engines, etc)
cannot write to this socket.
Signed-off-by: Chunyan Liu <cyliu@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Currently, there is one flag passed in during macvtap creation
(withTap) -- Let's convert this field to an unsigned int flag
field for future expansion.
Signed-off-by: Matthew Rosato <mjrosato@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
That sets a new flag, but that flag does mean the child will get
LISTEN_FDS and LISTEN_PID environment variables properly set and
passed FDs reordered so that it corresponds with LISTEN_FDS (they must
start right after STDERR_FILENO).
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Since not only systemd can do this (we'll be doing it as well few
patches later), change 'systemd' to 'caller' and fix LISTEN_FDS to
LISTEN_PID where applicable.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
In case the host has 2 or more NUMA nodes, we fetch CPU map for each
node. However, we need to free the CPU map in between loops:
==29513== 96 (72 direct, 24 indirect) bytes in 3 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 951 of 1,264
==29513== at 0x4C2A700: calloc (in /usr/lib64/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
==29513== by 0x52AD24B: virAlloc (viralloc.c:144)
==29513== by 0x52AF0E6: virBitmapNew (virbitmap.c:78)
==29513== by 0x52FB720: virNumaGetNodeCPUs (virnuma.c:294)
==29513== by 0x53C700B: nodeCapsInitNUMA (nodeinfo.c:1886)
==29513== by 0x11759708: vboxCapsInit (vbox_common.c:398)
==29513== by 0x11759CC4: vboxConnectOpen (vbox_common.c:514)
==29513== by 0x53C965F: do_open (libvirt.c:1147)
==29513== by 0x53C9EBC: virConnectOpen (libvirt.c:1317)
==29513== by 0x142905: remoteDispatchConnectOpen (remote.c:1215)
==29513== by 0x126ADF: remoteDispatchConnectOpenHelper (remote_dispatch.h:2346)
==29513== by 0x5453D21: virNetServerProgramDispatchCall (virnetserverprogram.c:437)
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Otherwise we fail like
libvirt version: 1.2.7, package: 6 (root 2014-08-08-16:09:22 bogon)
virAuditOpen:62 : Unable to initialize audit layer: Protocol not supported
virFileGetDefaultHugepageSize:2958 : internal error: Unable to parse /proc/meminfo
virStateInitialize:749 : Initialization of QEMU state driver failed: internal error: Unable to parse /proc/meminfo
daemonRunStateInit:922 : Driver state initialization failed
if the data can't be determined.
Reference: http://bugs.debian.org/757609
This fixes compilation on kFreeBSD which otherwise fails like
CC util/libvirt_util_la-virprocess.lo
In file included from /usr/include/sys/cpuset.h:35:0,
from util/virprocess.c:43:
/usr/include/sys/_cpuset.h:49:43: error: 'NBBY' undeclared here (not in
a function)
long __bits[howmany(CPU_SETSIZE, _NCPUBITS)];
^
In file included from util/virprocess.c:43:0:
/usr/include/sys/cpuset.h:215:12: error: unknown type name 'cpusetid_t'
int cpuset(cpusetid_t *);
^
/usr/include/sys/cpuset.h:216:30: error: expected ')' before 'id_t'
int cpuset_setid(cpuwhich_t, id_t, cpusetid_t);
^
/usr/include/sys/cpuset.h:217:42: error: expected ')' before 'id_t'
int cpuset_getid(cpulevel_t, cpuwhich_t, id_t, cpusetid_t *);
^
/usr/include/sys/cpuset.h:218:48: error: expected ')' before 'id_t'
int cpuset_getaffinity(cpulevel_t, cpuwhich_t, id_t, size_t, cpuset_t
*);
^
/usr/include/sys/cpuset.h:219:48: error: expected ')' before 'id_t'
int cpuset_setaffinity(cpulevel_t, cpuwhich_t, id_t, size_t, const
cpuset_t *);
And it's the correct usage as documented in
http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=cpuset_setid
Also change the #ifdef HAVE_BSH_CPU_AFFINITY to #if for consistency.
Valgrind caught a memory leak:
==2018== 9 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 143 of 927
==2018== at 0x4A0645D: malloc (in /usr/lib64/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
==2018== by 0x8C42369: strdup (strdup.c:42)
==2018== by 0x50EACC9: virStrdup (virstring.c:676)
==2018== by 0x50E79E5: virStorageSourceCopy (virstoragefile.c:1845)
==2018== by 0x20A3FAA7: qemuDomainBlockCommit (qemu_driver.c:15620)
==2018== by 0x51DC6B2: virDomainBlockCommit (libvirt.c:20092)
I traced it to the fact that blockcopy and blockcommit end up
reparsing a backing chain on pivot, but the chain parsing code
doesn't gracefully handle the case where the backing file is
already known.
I'm not exactly sure when this was introduced, but suspect that the
refactoring in commit 9944b71 and friends that moved towards probing
in-place rather than into a temporary structure are part of the cause.
* src/util/virstoragefile.c (virStorageFileGetMetadataInternal):
Don't leak any prior value.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Since commit be0782e1 we are parsing /proc/meminfo to find out the
default huge page size. However, if the host we are running at does
not support any huge pages (e.g. CONFIG_HUGETLB_PAGE is turned off),
we will not successfully parse the meminfo file and hence the whole
qemu driver init process fails. Moreover, the default huge page size
is needed if and only if there's at least one hugetlbfs mount point.
So the fix consists of moving the virFileGetDefaultHugepageSize
function call after the first hugetlbfs mount point is found.
With this fix, we fail to start with one or more hugetlbfs mounts and
malformed meminfo file, but that's expected (how can one mount
hugetlbfs without kernel supporting huge pages?). Workaround in that
case is to umount all the hugetlbfs mounts.
Reported-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Otherwise this beautiful error would be overwritten when
the function is called with a really high rate number:
2014-07-28 12:51:47.920+0000: 2304: error : virCommandWait:2399 :
internal error: Child process (/sbin/tc class add dev vnet0 parent 1:
classid 1:1 htb rate 4294968kbps) unexpected exit status 1: Illegal "rate"
Usage: ... qdisc add ... htb [default N] [r2q N]
default minor id of class to which unclassified packets are sent {0}
r2q DRR quantums are computed as rate in Bps/r2q {10}
debug string of 16 numbers each 0-3 {0}
... class add ... htb rate R1 [burst B1] [mpu B] [overhead O]
[prio P] [slot S] [pslot PS]
[ceil R2] [cburst B2] [mtu MTU] [quantum Q]
rate rate allocated to this class (class can still borrow)
burst max bytes burst which can be accumulated during idle period {computed}
mpu minimum packet size used in rate computations
overhead per-packet size overhead used in rate computations
linklay adapting to a linklayer e.g. atm
ceil definite upper class rate (no borrows) {rate}
cburst burst but for ceil {computed}
mtu max packet size we create rate map for {1600}
prio priority of leaf; lowe
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1043735
Cygwin has getifaddrs(), but not AF_LINK, leading to:
util/virstats.c: In function 'virNetInterfaceStats':
util/virstats.c:138:41: error: 'AF_LINK' undeclared (first use in this function)
if (ifa->ifa_addr->sa_family != AF_LINK)
...
* src/util/virstats.c (virNetInterfaceStats): Only use getifaddrs
if AF_LINK is present.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
This should iterate over mount tab and search for hugetlbfs among with
looking for the default value of huge pages.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Leak introduced in commit 16ebf10f (v1.2.6), detected by valgrind:
==9816== 216 (96 direct, 120 indirect) bytes in 6 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 665 of 821
==9816== at 0x4A081D4: calloc (in /usr/lib64/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
==9816== by 0x50836FB: virAlloc (viralloc.c:144)
==9816== by 0x1DBDBE27: udevProcessPCI (node_device_udev.c:546)
==9816== by 0x1DBDD79D: udevGetDeviceDetails (node_device_udev.c:1293)
* src/util/virpci.h (virPCIEDeviceInfoFree): New prototype.
* src/util/virpci.c (virPCIEDeviceInfoFree): New function.
* src/conf/node_device_conf.c (virNodeDevCapsDefFree): Clear
pci_express under pci case.
(virNodeDevCapPCIDevParseXML): Avoid leak.
* src/node_device/node_device_udev.c (udevProcessPCI): Likewise.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (virpci.h): Export it.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Finding virPCIE* code is more intuitive if located in virpci.h
instead of node_device_conf.h.
* src/conf/node_device_conf.h (virPCIELinkSpeed, virPCIELink)
(virPCIEDeviceInfo): Move...
* src/util/virpci.h: ...here.
* src/conf/node_device_conf.c (virPCIELinkSpeed): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
virTimeFieldsThenRaw will never return negative result, so I clean up
the related meaningless judgements to make it better.
Signed-off-by: James <james.wangyufei@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Create the structures and API's to hold and manage the iSCSI host device.
This extends the 'scsi_host' definitions added in commit id '5c811dce'.
A future patch will add the XML parsing, but that code requires some
infrastructure to be in place first in order to handle the differences
between a 'scsi_host' and an 'iSCSI host' device.
Split virDomainHostdevSubsysSCSI further. In preparation for having
either SCSI or iSCSI data, create a union in virDomainHostdevSubsysSCSI
to contain just a virDomainHostdevSubsysSCSIHost to describe the
'scsi_host' host device
Added <capabilities> in the <features> section of LXC domains
configuration. This section can contain elements named after the
capabilities like:
<mknod state="on"/>, keep CAP_MKNOD capability
<sys_chroot state="off"/> drop CAP_SYS_CHROOT capability
Users can restrict or give more capabilities than the default using
this mechanism.
Under ./configure --without-numactl but with numactl-devel installed,
the build fails with:
../../src/util/virnuma.c: In function 'virNumaNodeIsAvailable':
../../src/util/virnuma.c:407:5: error: implicit declaration of function 'numa_bitmask_isbitset' [-Werror=implicit-function-declaration]
return numa_bitmask_isbitset(numa_nodes_ptr, node);
^
and other failures, all because the configure results for particular
functions were used without regard to whether libnuma was even being
linked in.
* src/util/virnuma.c (virNumaGetPages): Fix message typo.
(virNumaNodeIsAvailable): Correct build when not using numactl.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Commit ef48a1b introduced virFindSCSIHostByPCI for Linux and
a stub for other platforms that returns -1 while the function
should return 'char *', so use 'return NULL' instead.
Commit fbd91d4 introduced virReadSCSIUniqueId with the third
argument 'int *result', however the stub for non-Linux patform
uses 'unsigned int *result', so change it to 'int *result'.
Pushed under the build breaker rule.
Introduce a new function to parse the provided scsi_host parent address
and unique_id value in order to find the /sys/class/scsi_host directory
which will allow a stable SCSI host address
Add a test to scsihosttest to lookup the host# name by using the PCI address
and unique_id value
Introduce a new function to read the current scsi_host entry and return
the value found in the 'unique_id' file.
Add a 'scsihosttest' test (similar to the fchosttest, but incorporating some
of the concepts of the mocked pci test library) in order to read the
unique_id file like would be found in the /sys/class/scsi_host tree.
We do so in the vast majority of places, so there's no problem of adding
the attribute to enforce it by the complier and fix a few leftover
places.
This was originally pointed out by Coverity as a recent change triggered
it's warning that our code checked the vast majority of returns from
virStrToLong_ui.
There's no need to use it since we have this shiny functions
that even checks for conversion and overflow errors.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1091866
Add a new boolean 'sparse'. This will be used by the logical backend
storage driver to determine whether the target volume is sparse or not
(also known by a snapshot or thin logical volume). Although setting sparse
to true at creation could be seen as duplicitous to setting during
virStorageBackendLogicalMakeVol() in case there are ever other code paths
between Create and FindLVs that need to know about the volume be sparse.
Use the 'sparse' in a new virStorageBackendLogicalVolWipe() to decide whether
to attempt to wipe the logical volume or not. For now, I have found no
means to wipe the volume without writing to it. Writing to the sparse
volume causes it to be filled. A sparse logical volume is not completely
writeable as there exists metadata which if overwritten will cause the
sparse lv to go INACTIVE which means pool-refresh will not find it.
Access to whatever lvm uses to manage data blocks is not provided by
any API I could find.
There were numerous places where numatune configuration (and thus
domain config as well) was changed in different ways. On some
places this even resulted in persistent domain definition not to be
stable (it would change with daemon's restart).
In order to uniformly change how numatune config is dealt with, all
the internals are now accessible directly only in numatune_conf.c and
outside this file accessors must be used.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Since there was already public virDomainNumatune*, I changed the
private virNumaTune to match the same, so all the uses are unified and
public API is kept:
s/vir\(Domain\)\?Numa[tT]une/virDomainNumatune/g
then shrunk long lines, and mainly functions, that were created after
that:
sed -i 's/virDomainNumatuneMemPlacementMode/virDomainNumatunePlacement/g'
And to cope with the enum name, I haad to change the constants as
well:
s/VIR_NUMA_TUNE_MEM_PLACEMENT_MODE/VIR_DOMAIN_NUMATUNE_PLACEMENT/g
Last thing I did was at least a little shortening of already long
name:
s/virDomainNumatuneDef/virDomainNumatune/g
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
There are many places with numatune-related code that should be put
into special numatune_conf and this patch creates a basis for that.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Now that we've finally fixed all the violators, it's time to
enforce that any pointer to a const object is never freed (it
is aliasing some other memory, where the non-const original
should be freed instead). Alas, the code still needs a normal
vs. Coverity version, but at least we are still guaranteeing
that the macro call evaluates its argument exactly once.
I verified that we still get the following compiler warnings,
which in turn halts the build thanks to -Werror on gcc (hmm,
gcc 4.8.3's placement of the ^ for ?: type mismatch is a bit
off, but that's not our problem):
int oops1 = 0;
VIR_FREE(oops1);
const char *oops2 = NULL;
VIR_FREE(oops2);
struct blah { int dummy; } oops3;
VIR_FREE(oops3);
util/virauthconfig.c:159:35: error: pointer/integer type mismatch in conditional expression [-Werror]
VIR_FREE(oops1);
^
util/virauthconfig.c:161:5: error: passing argument 1 of 'virFree' discards 'const' qualifier from pointer target type [-Werror]
VIR_FREE(oops2);
^
In file included from util/virauthconfig.c:28:0:
util/viralloc.h:79:6: note: expected 'void *' but argument is of type 'const void *'
void virFree(void *ptrptr) ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL(1);
^
util/virauthconfig.c:163:35: error: type mismatch in conditional expression
VIR_FREE(oops3);
^
* src/util/viralloc.h (VIR_FREE): No longer cast away const.
* src/xenapi/xenapi_utils.c (xenSessionFree): Work around bogus
header.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Add 'nocow' to storage volume xml so that user can have an option
to set NOCOW flag to the newly created volume. It's useful on btrfs
file system to enhance performance.
Btrfs has low performance when hosting VM images, even more when the guest
in those VM are also using btrfs as file system. One way to mitigate this
bad performance is to turn off COW attributes on VM files. Generally, there
are two ways to turn off COW on btrfs: a) by mounting fs with nodatacow,
then all newly created files will be NOCOW. b) per file. Add the NOCOW file
attribute. It could only be done to empty or new files.
This patch tries the second way, according to 'nocow' option, it could set
NOCOW flag per file:
for raw file images, handle 'nocow' in libvirt code; for non-raw file images,
pass 'nocow=on' option to qemu-img, and let qemu-img to handle that (requires
qemu-img version >= 2.1).
Signed-off-by: Chunyan Liu <cyliu@suse.com>
Rename linuxDomainInterfaceStats to virNetInterfaceStats in order
to allow adding platform specific implementations without
making consumer worrying about specific implementation to be used.
Also, rename util/virstatslinux.c to util/virstats.c so placing
other platform specific implementations into this file don't
look unexpected from the file name.
If the openvswitch service is stopped, and is followed by destroying a
VM, the openvswitch bridge translates into a state where it doesn't
recover the port configuration. While it successfully fetches data
from the internal DB, since the corresponding virtual interface does
not exists anymore the whole recovery process fails leaving restarted
VM with inability to connect to the bridge. The following set of
commands will trigger the problem:
virsh start vm
service openvswitch-switch stop
virsh destroy vm
service openvswitch-switch start
virsh start vm
Signed-off-by: Chunhe Li <lichunhe@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
This negation in names of boolean variables is driving me insane. The
code is much more readable if we drop the 'no-' prefix. Well, at least
for me.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The commit referenced above changed function arguments of
virStorageFileGetMetadataFromBuf() but didn't tweak the
ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL tied to them. This was caught by coverity as it
actually obeys them. We disabled them for GCC and thus it didn't show
up.
Additionally in commit 3ea661deea I passed
NULL to the backingFormat argument which was also marked as nonnull. Use
a dummy int's address when the argument isn't supplied so that the code
doesn't need to change much.
When dispatching events from the event loop, the array of registered
handles is searched to see what handles happened an event on. However,
the array is searched in weird way: the check for the array boundaries
is at the end, so we may touch the elements after the end of the
array:
==10434== Invalid read of size 4
==10434== at 0x52D06B6: virEventPollDispatchHandles (vireventpoll.c:486)
==10434== by 0x52D10E4: virEventPollRunOnce (vireventpoll.c:660)
==10434== by 0x52CF207: virEventRunDefaultImpl (virevent.c:308)
==10434== by 0x1639D1: virNetServerRun (virnetserver.c:1139)
==10434== by 0x1220DC: main (libvirtd.c:1507)
==10434== Address 0xc11ff04 is 4 bytes after a block of size 960 alloc'd
==10434== at 0x4C2CA5E: realloc (in /usr/lib64/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
==10434== by 0x52AD378: virReallocN (viralloc.c:245)
==10434== by 0x52AD46E: virExpandN (viralloc.c:294)
==10434== by 0x52AD5B1: virResizeN (viralloc.c:352)
==10434== by 0x52CF2EC: virEventPollAddHandle (vireventpoll.c:116)
==10434== by 0x52CEF5B: virEventAddHandle (virevent.c:78)
==10434== by 0x11F69A90: nodeStateInitialize (node_device_udev.c:1797)
==10434== by 0x53C3C89: virStateInitialize (libvirt.c:743)
==10434== by 0x120563: daemonRunStateInit (libvirtd.c:919)
==10434== by 0x5317719: virThreadHelper (virthread.c:197)
==10434== by 0x8376F39: start_thread (in /lib64/libpthread-2.17.so)
==10434== by 0x8A7F9FC: clone (in /lib64/libc-2.17.so)
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Commit a48f445100 introduced a helper
function to convert cgroup device mode to string. The function was only
conditionally compiled on platforms that support cgroup. This broke the
build when attempting to export the symbol:
CCLD libvirt.la
Cannot export virCgroupGetDevicePermsString: symbol not defined
Move the function out of the ifdef, as it doesn't really depend on the
cgroup code being present.
Cgroups code uses VIR_CGROUP_DEVICE_* flags to specify the mode but in
the end it needs to be converted to a string. Add a helper to do it and
use it in the cgroup code before introducing it into the rest of the
code.
When discovering a disk backing chain the parent disk's metadata need to
be populated into the guest images so that each piece of the backing
chain contains a copy of those. This will allow us to refactor the
security driver so that it will not need to carry around the original
disk definition.
We are going to modify storage source chains in place. Add a helper that
will copy relevant information such as security labels to the new
element if that doesn't contain it.
In the future we might need to track state of individual images. Move
the readonly and shared flags to the virStorageSource struct so that we
can keep them in a per-image basis.
The qemu block info function relied on working with local storage. Break
this assumption by adding support for remote volumes. Unfortunately we
still need to take a hybrid approach as some of the operations require a
filedescriptor.
Previously you'd get:
$ virsh domblkinfo gl vda
error: cannot stat file '/img10': Bad file descriptor
Now you get some stats:
$ virsh domblkinfo gl vda
Capacity: 10485760
Allocation: 197120
Physical: 197120
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1110198
To allow reusing this function in the qemu driver we need to allow
specifying the storage format. Also separate return of the backing store
path now isn't necessary.
There's a lot of places where we skip doing actions based on the
locality of given storage type. The usual pattern is to skip it if:
virStorageSourceGetActualType(src) == VIR_STORAGE_TYPE_NETWORK
Add a simple helper to simplify the pattern to
virStorageSourceIsLocalStorage(src)
Replace the inline "auth" struct in virStorageSource with a pointer
to a virStorageAuthDefPtr and utilize between the domain_conf, qemu_conf,
and qemu_command sources for finding the auth data for a domain disk
Introduce virStorageAuthDef and friends. Future patches will merge/utilize
their view of storage source/pool auth/secret definitions.
New API's include:
virStorageAuthDefParse: Parse the "<auth/>" XML data for either the
domain disk or storage pool returning a
virStorageAuthDefPtr
virStorageAuthDefCopy: Copy a virStorageAuthDefPtr - to be used by
the qemuTranslateDiskSourcePoolAuth when it
copies storage pool auth data into domain
disk auth data
virStorageAuthDefFormat: Common output of the "<auth" in the domain
disk or storage pool XML
virStorageAuthDefFree: Free memory associated with virStorageAuthDef
Subsequent patches will utilize the new functions for the domain disk and
storage pools.
Future work in the hostdev pass through can then make use of common data
structures and code.
Replace:
if (virBufferError(&buf)) {
virBufferFreeAndReset(&buf);
virReportOOMError();
...
}
with:
if (virBufferCheckError(&buf) < 0)
...
This should not be a functional change (unless some callers
misused the virBuffer APIs - a different error would be reported
then)
Check if the buffer is in error state and report an error if it is.
This replaces the pattern:
if (virBufferError(buf)) {
virReportOOMError();
goto cleanup;
}
with:
if (virBufferCheckError(buf) < 0)
goto cleanup;
Document typical buffer usage to favor this.
Also remove the redundant FreeAndReset - if an error has
been set via virBufferSetError, the content is already freed.
virFileReadAll already logs an error. If reading the 'speed' file
fails with EINVAL, we log an error even though we ignore it. If it
fails with other errors, we log two errors.
Use virFileReadAllQuiet - ignore EINVAL and report just one error
in other cases.
Fixes this error on libvirtd startup:
2014-06-30 12:47:14.583+0000: 20971: error : virFileReadAll:1297 :
Failed to read file '/sys/class/net/wlan0/speed': Invalid argument
When CPU comparison APIs return VIR_CPU_COMPARE_INCOMPATIBLE, the caller
has no clue why the CPU is considered incompatible with host CPU. And in
some cases, it would be nice to be able to get such info in a client
rather than having to look in logs.
To achieve this, the APIs can be told to return VIR_ERR_CPU_INCOMPATIBLE
error for incompatible CPUs and the reason will be described in the
associated error message.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
The parent directory doesn't necessarily need to be stored after we
don't mangle the path stored in the image. Remove it and tweak the code
to avoid using it.
Store backing chain paths as non-canonical. The canonicalization step
will be already taken. This will allow to avoid storing unnecessary
amounts of data.
Now that we store only relative names in virStorageSource's member
relPath the backingRelative member is obsolete. Remove it and adapt the
code to the removal.
Due to various refactors and compatibility with the virstoragetest the
relPath field of the virStorageSource structure was always filled either
with the relative name or the full path in case of absolutely backed
storage. Return its original purpose to store only the relative name of
the disk if it is backed relatively and tweak the tests.
This patch introduces a function that will allow us to resolve a
relative difference between two elements of a disk backing chain. This
function will be used to allow relative block commit and block pull
where we need to specify the new relative name of the image to qemu.
This patch also adds unit tests for the function to verify that it works
correctly.
virPortAllocatorSetUsed permits to set a port as already used and
prevent the port allocator to use it without any attempt to bind it.
Signed-off-by: Giuseppe Scrivano <gscrivan@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
If we are running on a system that is not capable of huge pages (e.g.
because the kernel is not configured that way) we still try to open
"/sys/kernel/mm/hugepages/" which however does not exist. We should
be tolerant to this specific use case.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
On the Linux kernel, if huge pages are allocated the size they cut off
from memory is accounted under the 'MemUsed' in the meminfo file.
However, we want the sum to be subtracted from 'MemTotal'. This patch
implements this feature. After this change, we can enable reporting
of the ordinary system pages in the capability XML:
<capabilities>
<host>
<uuid>01281cda-f352-cb11-a9db-e905fe22010c</uuid>
<cpu>
<arch>x86_64</arch>
<model>Haswell</model>
<vendor>Intel</vendor>
<topology sockets='1' cores='1' threads='1'/>
<feature/>
<pages unit='KiB' size='4'/>
<pages unit='KiB' size='2048'/>
<pages unit='KiB' size='1048576'/>
</cpu>
<power_management/>
<migration_features/>
<topology>
<cells num='4'>
<cell id='0'>
<memory unit='KiB'>4048248</memory>
<pages unit='KiB' size='4'>748382</pages>
<pages unit='KiB' size='2048'>3</pages>
<pages unit='KiB' size='1048576'>1</pages>
<distances/>
<cpus num='1'>
<cpu id='0' socket_id='0' core_id='0' siblings='0'/>
</cpus>
</cell>
...
</cells>
</topology>
</host>
</capabilities>
You can see the beautiful thing about this: if you sum up all the
<pages/> you'll get <memory/>.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Introduce a common function that will take a callback to resolve links
that will be used to canonicalize paths on various storage systems and
add extensive tests.
To free string lists with some strings stolen from the middle we need to
walk the complete array. Introduce a new helper that takes the string
list size to free such string lists.
virNumaGetPages calls closedir(dir) in cleanup and dir could
be NULL if we jump there from the failed opendir() call.
While it's not harmful on Linux, FreeBSD libc crashes [1], so
make sure that dir is not NULL before calling closedir.
1: http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-standards/2014-January/002704.html
One of previous commits (e6258a33) tried to build the huge page code
only on Linux since it's Linux centric indeed. But it failed miserably
as it used 'WITH_LINUX' which is an automake conditional not a gcc
one. In the sources we need to use __linux__.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Only three other callers possibly call closedir on a NULL argument.
Even though these probably won't be used on FreeBSD where this crashes,
let's be nice and only call closedir on an actual directory stream.
==== Invalid write of size 4
==== at 0x52E678C: virNumaGetDistances (virnuma.c:479)
==== by 0x5396890: nodeCapsInitNUMA (nodeinfo.c:1796)
==== by 0x203C2B: virQEMUCapsInit (qemu_capabilities.c:960)
==== Address 0xe10a1e0 is 0 bytes after a block of size 0 alloc'd
==== at 0x4C2A6D0: calloc (in /usr/lib64/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
==== by 0x52A10D6: virAllocN (viralloc.c:191)
==== by 0x52E674D: virNumaGetDistances (virnuma.c:470)
==== by 0x5396890: nodeCapsInitNUMA (nodeinfo.c:1796)
==== by 0x203C2B: virQEMUCapsInit (qemu_capabilities.c:960)
The hugepage sizing and counting code gathers the information from sysfs
and thus isn't portable. Stub it out for non-Linux so that we can report
a better error. This patch also avoids calling sysinfo() on Mingw where
it isn't supported.
So far, we are doing compile time decisions on which architecture is
used. However, for testing purposes it's much easier if we pass host
architecture as parameter and then let the function decide which code
snippet for extracting host CPU info will be used.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The image labels are stored in the virStorageSource struct. Convert the
virDomainDiskDefGetSecurityLabelDef helper not to use the full disk def
and move it appropriately.
For future work we need two functions that fetches total number of
pages and number of free pages for given NUMA node and page size
(virNumaGetPageInfo()).
Then we need to learn pages of what sizes are supported on given node
(virNumaGetPages()).
Note that system page size is disabled at the moment as there's one
issue connected. If you have a NUMA node with huge pages allocated the
kernel would return the normal size of memory for that node. It
basically ignores the fact that huge pages steal size from the system
memory. Until we resolve this, it's safer to not confuse users and
hence not report any system pages yet.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Not on all hosts the set of NUMA nodes IDs is continuous. This is
critical, because our code currently assumes the set doesn't contain
holes. For instance in nodeGetFreeMemory() we can see the following
pattern:
if ((max_node = virNumaGetMaxNode()) < 0)
return 0;
for (n = 0; n <= max_node; n++) {
...
}
while it should be something like this:
if ((max_node = virNumaGetMaxNode()) < 0)
return 0;
for (n = 0; n <= max_node; n++) {
if (!virNumaNodeIsAvailable(n))
continue;
...
}
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
These functions will handle PCIe devices and their link capabilities
to query some info about it.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The block commit code looks for an explicit base file relative
to the discovered top file; so for a chain of:
base <- snap1 <- snap2 <- snap3
and a command of:
virsh blockcommit $dom vda --base snap2 --top snap1
we got a sane message (here from libvirt 1.0.5):
error: invalid argument: could not find base 'snap2' below 'snap1' in chain for 'vda'
Meanwhile, recent refactoring has slightly reduced the quality of the
libvirt error messages, by losing the phrase 'below xyz':
error: invalid argument: could not find image 'snap2' in chain for 'snap3'
But we had a one-off, where we were not excluding the top file
itself in searching for the base; thankfully qemu still reports
the error, but the quality is worse:
virsh blockcommit $dom vda --base snap2 --top snap2
error: internal error unable to execute QEMU command 'block-commit': Base '/snap2' not found
Fix the one-off in blockcommit by changing the semantics of name
lookup - if a starting point is specified, then the result must
be below that point, rather than including that point. The only
other call to chain lookup was blockpull code, which was already
forcing the lookup to omit the active layer and only needs a
tweak to use the new semantics.
This also fixes the bug exposed in the testsuite, where when doing
a lookup pinned to an intermediate point in the chain, we were
unable to return the name of the parent also in the chain.
* src/util/virstoragefile.c (virStorageFileChainLookup): Change
semantics for non-NULL startFrom.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainBlockJobImpl): Adjust caller,
to keep existing semantics.
* tests/virstoragetest.c (mymain): Adjust to expose new semantics.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The kernel's more broken than one would think. Various drivers report
various (usually spurious) values if the interface is in other state
than 'up' . While on some we experience -EINVAL when read()-ing the
speed sysfs file, with other drivers we might get anything from 0 to
UINT_MAX. If that's the case it's better to not report link speed.
Well, the interface is not up anyway.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
If we're compiling on non-Linux platform, the virNetDevGetLinkInfo()
is a dummy function which barely logs debug message that getting link
info is not supported. However, while the debug message was prepared
for printing the interface name too, I actually forgot to pass the
variable which resulted in build error on platforms like mingw or
FreeBSD.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The purpose of this function is to fetch link state
and link speed for given NIC name from the SYSFS.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Jim Fehlig reported a regression found by libvirt-TCK tests:
> ~ # perl /usr/share/libvirt-tck/tests/qemu/100-disk-encryption.t
...
> ok 4 - defined persistent domain config
> # Starting inactive domain config
> libvirt error code: 1, message: internal error: unable to execute QEMU command
> 'cont': 'drive-ide0-0-1'
> (/var/cache/libvirt-tck/300-disk-encryption/demo.qcow2) is encrypted
Commit 2279d560 converted a boolean into a pointer with the intent of
transferring that pointer out of a temporary object into the caller's
data structure. The temporary structure meant that meta->encryption
was always NULL on entry, so we could get away with blindly allocating
the pointer when the header said so. But later, commit 8823272d
tweaked things to do backing chain detection in-place, rather than via
a temporary object; this has the net result that meta->encryption can
be non-NULL on entry. Not only did this turn the latent behavior into
a memory leak, it is also a behavior regression: blindly allocating a
new pointer wipes out what secrets we already knew about the chain,
making it impossible to restart the domain.
Of course, no one in their right mind should be relying on qcow2
encryption - it is fundamentally flawed. And sadly, the TCK tests
don't get run often enough, and this shows that our virstoragetest
does not exercise encrypted images at all. Otherwise, we could
have avoided a release containing this regression.
* src/util/virstoragefile.c (virStorageFileGetMetadataInternal):
Don't nuke an already-existing encryption.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
This simplifies the usage in {libxl,qemu}DomainGetNumaParameters
and it's needed for consistent error reporting in virBitmapFormat.
Also remove the forgotten ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL marker.
On some systems, libnuma can be present but it's so ancient that
it misses some symbols that virNumaGetDistances() needs. To be
more precise: numa_bitmask_isbitset() and numa_nodes_ptr are the
symbols in question. Fortunately, they were both introduced in
the same release so it's sufficient for us to check for only one
of them. And the winner is numa_bitmask_isbitset().
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
In case the libvirt is built without numactl support, we're
missing the virNumaGetDistances() stub so the linking fails:
CCLD libvirt_lxc
libvirt_lxc-nodeinfo.o: In function `virNodeCapsGetSiblingInfo':
/home/zippy/tmp/libvirt.git/src/nodeinfo.c:1763: undefined reference to `virNumaGetDistances'
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
make[3]: *** [libvirt_lxc] Error 1
The issue was introduced in 77c830d8c4.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The API gets a NUMA node and find distances to other nodes. The
distances are returned in an array. If an item X within the array
equals to value of zero, then there's no such node as X.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
To allow using the array manipulation macros on the arrays returned by
virStringSplit we need to know the count of the elements in the array.
Modify virStringSplit to return this value, rename it and add a helper
with the old name so that we don't need to update all the code.
Add parsers for relative and absolute backing names for local and remote
storage files.
This parser parses relative paths as relative to their parents and
absolute paths according to the protocol or local access.
For remote storage volumes, all URI based backing file names are
supported and for the qemu colon syntax the NBD protocol is supported.
Use virStorageFileReadHeader() to read headers of storage files possibly
on remote storage to retrieve the image metadata.
The backend information is now parsed by
virStorageFileGetMetadataInternal which is now exported from the util
source and virStorageFileGetMetadataFromFDInternal now doesn't need to
be exported.
My future work will modify the metadata crawler function to use the
storage driver file APIs to access the files instead of accessing them
directly so that we will be able to request the metadata for remote
files too. To avoid linking the storage driver to every helper file
using the utils code, the backing chain traversal function needs to be
moved to the storage driver source.
Additionally the virt-aa-helper and virstoragetest programs need to be
linked with the storage driver as a result of this change.
In 9dd02965 the virNumaGetNodeMemory was introduced, however the
comment describing the function mentions virNumaGetNodeMemorySize.
And there's one typo in virNumaIsAvailable() description.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
For guests backed by gluster volumes (or other network storage) we don't
fill the backing chain (see qemuDomainDetermineDiskChain). This leaves
the "relPath" field of the top image NULL. This causes a crash in
virStorageFileChainLookup() when looking up a backing element for such a
disk.
Since I'm working on adding support for network storage and one of the
steps will make the "relPath" field optional let's use STREQ_NULLABLE
instead of STREQ in virStorageFileChainLookup() to avoid the problem.
The original version of virTimeLocalOffsetFromUTC() would fail for
certain times of the day if daylight savings time was active. This
could most easily be seen by uncommenting the TEST_LOCALOFFSET() cases
that include a DST setting.
After a lot of experimenting, I found that the way to solve it in
almost all test cases is to set tm_isdst = -1 in the struct tm prior
to calling mktime(). Once this is done, the correct offset is returned
for all test cases at all times except the two hours just after
00:00:00 Jan 1 UTC - during that time, any timezone that is *behind*
UTC, and that is supposed to always be in DST will not have DST
accounted for in its offset.
I believe that the code of virTimeLocalOffsetFromUTC() actually is
correct for all cases, but the problem still encountered is due to our
inability to come up with a TZ string that properly forces DST to
*always* be active. Since a modfication of the (currently fixed)
expected result data to account for this would necessarily use the
same functions that we're trying to test, I've instead just made the
test program conditionally bypass the problematic cases if the current
date is either December 31 or January 1. This way we get maximum
testing during 363 days of the year, but don't get false failures on
Dec 31 and Jan 1.
Add argument to return backing file format of a file probed by
virStorageFileGetMetadataFromFD so that it can be used in place of
virStorageFileGetMetadataFromBuf.
Since there isn't a single libc API to get this value, this patch
supplies one which gets the value by grabbing current time, then
converting that into a struct tm with gmtime_r(), then back to a
time_t using mktime.
The returned value is the difference between UTC and localtime in
seconds. If localtime is ahead of UTC (east) the offset will be a
positive number, and if localtime is behind UTC (west) the offset will
be negative.
This function should be POSIX-compliant, and is threadsafe, but not
async signal safe. If it was ever necessary to know this value in a
child process, we could cache it with a one-time init function when
libvirtd starts, then just supply the cached value, but that
complexity isn't needed for current usage; that would also have the
problem that it might not be accurate after a local daylight savings
boundary.
(If it weren't for DST, we could simply replace this entire function
with "-timezone"; timezone contains the offset of the current timezone
(negated from what we want) but doesn't account for DST. And in spite
of being guaranteed by POSIX, it isn't available on older versions of
mingw.)
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Currently the protocol type with index 0 was NBD which made it hard to
distinguish whether the protocol type was actually assigned. Add a new
protocol type with index 0 to distinguish it explicitly.
The gluster volume name was previously stored as part of the source path
string. This is unfortunate when we want to do operations on the path as
the volume is used separately.
Parse and store the volume name separately for gluster storage volumes
and use the newly stored variable appropriately.
If you trigger bug 1033369, we get the error message:
error from service: Invalid argument
Which is a bit too generic to pinpoint what is actually failing. This
changes it to:
error from service: CreateMachine: Invalid argument
Acked-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>