ESX doesn't use the common virDomainObj implementation so this patch
adds a separate implementation.
This driver supports all currently defined filtering flags, but as with
other drivers some combinations yield a empty result list.
Hyperv doesn't use the common virDomainObj implementation so this patch
adds a separate implementation.
This driver supports all currently added flags for filtering although
some of those don't make sense with this driver (no support yet) and
thus produce no output when used.
On systems without cyrus-sasl-devel available (I happened to be
in that situation on my FreeBSD testing), this test fails rather
miserably:
TEST: libvirtdconftest
.....!!!!!!...!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 39 FAIL
FAIL: libvirtdconftest
with verbose output showing things like:
39) Test corruption ... libvir: Config File error : unsupporeted configuration: remoteReadConfigFile: /usr/home/dummy/libvirt/tests/../daemon/libvirtd.conf: auth_tcp: unsupported auth sasl
* tests/libvirtdconftest.c (testCorrupt): Avoid failure when sasl
is missing.
I tested both OpenBSD and cygwin; both failed 'make check' with:
GEN check-symfile
Can't return outside a subroutine at ./check-symfile.pl line 13.
Perl requires 'exit 77' instead of 'return 77' in that context,
but even with that tweak, the build still fails, since the exit
code of 77 is only special to explicit TESTS=foo listings, and
not to make-only dependency rules where we are not going through
automake's test framework.
* src/check-symfile.pl: Kill bogus platform check...
* src/Makefile.am (check-symfile): ...and replace with an automake
conditional.
This fixes https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=852984
If a network or interface is configured to use Open vSwitch, but
ovs-vswitchd (the Open vSwitch database service) isn't running, the
ovs-vsctl add-port/del-port commands will hang indefinitely rather
than returning an error. There is a --nowait option, but that appears
to have no effect on add-port and del-port commands, so instead we add
a --timeout=5 to the commands - they will retry for up to 5 seconds,
then fail if there is no response.
A previous patch forced libnl-3 and netcf-0.2.2 (which itself requires
libnl-3) when *building* for Fedora 18+ (and RHEL 7+), but the
install-time Requires: for netcf has always been implicit due to
libvirtd linking with libnetcf.so. However, the since the API of netcf
didn't change when it was rebuilt to use libnl-3, the internal library
version didn't change either, making it possible (from rpm's point of
view) to upgrade libvirt without upgrading netcf (in reality, that
leads to a segfault - see
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=853381).
The solution is to put an explicit Requires: line in libvirt's
specfile for fedora >= 18 and rhel >= 7.
On a machine without xsltproc, the build failed with:
Scripting search.php
/usr/local/bin/bash: line 1: search.php.tmp: No such file or directory
rm: ./search.php: No such file or directory
Regression introduced in commit 28183590.
* docs/Makefile.am (%.php): Skip in the same conditions when the
.tmp file is skipped.
OpenBSD ships with gcc 4.2.1, which annoyingly treats all format
strings as though they were also attribute((nonnull)). The two
concepts are orthogonal, though, as evidenced by the number of
spurious warnings it generates on uses where we know that
virReportError specifically handles NULL instead of a format
string; worse, since we now force -Werror on git builds, it
prevents development builds on OpenBSD.
I hate to do this, as it disables ALL format checking on older
gcc, and therefore misses out on some useful checks (code that
happened to compile on Linux may still have type mismatches
when compiled on other platforms, as evidenced by the number
of times I have fixed formatting mismatches for uid_t as found
by warnings on Cygwin), but I don't see any other way to keep
-Werror alive and still compile on OpenBSD.
A more invasive change would be to make virReportError() mark
its format attribute as nonnull, and fix (a lot of) fallout;
we may end up doing that anyways as part of danpb's error
refactoring improvements, but not today.
* src/internal.h (ATTRIBUTE_FMT_PRINTF): Use preferred spellings.
* m4/virt-compile-warnings.m4 (-Wformat): Disable on older gcc.
This is another fix for the emulator-pin series. When going through
the cputune pinning settings, the current code is trying to pin all
the CPUs, even when not all of them are specified. This causes error
in the subsequent function which, of course, cannot find the cpu to
pin. Since it's enough to pass the correct VCPU ID to the function,
the fix is trivial.
Based on the similar gnulib commit 96ad9077. The use of
$(_sc_search_regexp) already injects $(ME) into any output
messages, so a failure of these rules would look like this,
pre-patch:
maint.mk: maint.mk: use virStrToLong_*, not strtol variants
* cfg.mk (sc_prohibit_strncmp, sc_prohibit_strtol)
(sc_libvirt_unmarked_diagnostics): Drop redundant $(ME).
Yesterday's commit 15d2c9f pointed out that virsh was still using
localtime(), which is not thread-safe, even though virsh is
definitely multi-threaded. Even if we only ever triggered it from
one thread, it's better safe than sorry for maintenance purposes.
* cfg.mk (exclude_file_name_regexp--sc_prohibit_nonreentrant):
Tighten the rule.
* tools/virsh.c (vshOutputLogFile): Avoid localtime.
(vshEditWriteToTempFile, vshEditReadBackFile, cmdCd, cmdPwd)
(vshCloseLogFile): Avoid strerror.
* tools/console.c (vshMakeStdinRaw): Likewise.
* tools/virsh-domain.c (vshGenFileName): Fix spacing in previous
patch.
The libvirt storage driver uses librbd.so for its functionality.
RPM will automatically add a dependency on the library, so there
is no need to have an explicit dependency on the ceph RPM itself.
This allows newer Fedora distros to avoid pulling in the huge
ceph RPM, in favour of just having the libraries installed
Only VNC_{{DIS,}CONNECTED,INITIALIZED} and SPICE_INITIALIZED events are
documented to support server/auth field and even there it is marked as
optional. Emit "" auth scheme in case QEMU didn't send it.
On 09/04/2012 08:20 AM, Eric Blake wrote:
> tv_sec is required by POSIX to be
> of type time_t; so this is a bug in the OpenBSD header
> [for declaring it as long]
Most likely this problem arose because of the patch I pushed
in gnulib commit e07d7c40f3ca5ec410cf5aa6fa03cfe51e712039.
Previously, gnulib required timeval's tv_sec to be
the same size as time_t. But now, it requires only that
tv_sec be big enough to hold a time_t.
This patch was needed for Emacs. Without the patch, gnulib
replaced struct timeval on OpenBSD, and this messed up
utimens.c, and Emacs wouldn't build.
Alternatively, gnulib could substitute its own struct timeval
for the system's, wrapping every struct timeval-using function
(gettimeofday, futimesat, futimes, lutimes, etc. That'd be
more work, though. And it would introduce some performance
issues with gettimeofday, which is supposed to be fast.
I've been trying to get away from using struct timeval,
and to use the higher-resolution struct timespec instead,
so messing with these obsolescent interfaces has been
lower priority for me. But if someone wants to take the
more-ambitious approach that'd be fine, I expect.
For this particular case, though, how about if we avoid
the problem entirely? libvirt doesn't need to use struct
timeval here at all. It makes libvirt smaller and probably
faster, and it ports to OpenBSD without messing with gnulib.
On OpenBSD, clock_gettime() exists in libc rather than librt, and
blindly linking with -lrt made the build fail. Gnulib already
did the work for determining which libraries to use, so we should
reuse that work rather than doing it ourselves.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Pull in clock-time.
* configure.ac (RT_LIBS): Drop.
* src/Makefile.am (libvirt_util_la_LIBADD): Use gnulib variable
instead.
* src/util/virtime.c (includes): Simplify.
After discussion with DB we decided to rename the new iolimit
element as it creates the impression it would be there to
limit (i.e. throttle) I/O instead of specifying immutable
characteristics of a block device.
This is also backed by the fact that the term I/O Limits has
vanished from newer storage admin documentation.
Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
When reboot using qemu guest agent was requested, qemu driver kept
waiting for SHUTDOWN event from qemu. However, such event is never
emitted during guest reboot and qemu driver would keep waiting forever.
The viratomictest.c was casting from an int to a void* via a
long. This works on Linux or Mingw32, but fails on Mingw64
due to a pointer/integer size mis-match. Replacing 'long'
with 'intptr_t' ensures matching type sizes
This patch adds support for running qemu guests with the required
parameters to forcefully enable or disable BIOS advertising of S3 and
S4 states. The support for this is added to capabilities and there is
also a qemu command parameter parsing implemented.
There is a new <pm/> element implemented that can control what ACPI
sleeping states will be advertised by BIOS and allowed to be switched
to by libvirt. The default keeps defaults on hypervisor, otherwise
forces chosen setting.
The documentation of the pm element is added as well.
A user reported this crash when using python bindings:
File "/home/nox/workspace/NOX/src/NOX/hooks.py", line 134, in trigger
hook.trigger(event)
File "/home/nox/workspace/NOX/src/NOX/hooks.py", line 33, in trigger
self.handlers[event]()
File "/home/nox/workspace/NOX/hooks/volatility.py", line 81, in memory_dump
for block in Memory(self.ctx):
File "/home/see/workspace/NOX/src/NOX/lib/libtools.py", line 179, in next
libvirt.VIR_MEMORY_PHYSICAL)
File "/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/libvirt.py", line 1759, in memoryPeek
ret = libvirtmod.virDomainMemoryPeek(self._o, start, size, flags)
SystemError: error return without exception set
In the python bindings, returning NULL makes python think an
exception was thrown, while returning the None object lets the
wrappers know that a libvirt error exists.
Reported by Nox DaFox, fix suggested by Dan Berrange.
* python/libvirt-override.c (libvirt_virDomainBlockPeek)
(libvirt_virDomainMemoryPeek): Return python's None object, so
wrapper knows to check libvirt error.
Implementation of iolimits for the qemu driver with
capability probing for block size attribute and
command line generation for block sizes.
Including testcase for qemuxml2argvtest.
Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Introducing a new iolimits element allowing to override certain
properties of a guest block device like the physical and logical
block size.
This can be useful for platforms with 'non-standard' disk formats
like S390 DASD with its 4K block size.
Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Without this patch, logged command executions can be ambiguous if
the command contained any shell metacharacters. This has caused
more than one person to attempt to patch clients to add unnecessary
quoting, without realizing that the command itself was run with
correct args, and only the logged output was ambiguous.
* src/util/command.c (virCommandToString): Add shell escapes.
* tests/commandtest.c (test16): Test new behavior.
* tests/commanddata/test16.log: Update expected output.
* tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-*.args: Likewise.
* tests/networkxml2argvdata/*.argv: Likewise.
Now that vshCommandRun() checks for the connection automaticaly, remove
all of the redundant checks in the code.
vshConnectionUsability() no longer needs to be exported and this patch
marks it static.
Almost each virsh command uses the function vshConnectionUsability
before doing anything, to check if the connection is "alive". Commands
that don't need an conection are already conveniently marked with
VSH_CMD_FLAG_NOCONNECT. We can automaticaly check for the connection
before calling any remote command so we don't forget to do so.
This patch also upgrades the connection check to use virConnectIsAlive
along with the current approach.
After fixing the last review comments on remote port searching (commit
a14b4aea51), the commit right after that
wasn't modified accordingly, therefore two values weren't changed as
they should and the configurable ports don't work as expected.
This simple commit changes last two values missed and fixes the issue.
The codes were updated to allow to reset the device as long as
there is no devices/functions behind the same bus. However, the
comments were kept without touched.
To avoid backward compatibility issues, this patch suppresses
auto-generated DAC labels from XML. This change affects commands such as
dumpxml and save.
Signed-off-by: Marcelo Cerri <mhcerri@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
With this patch libvirt tries to assign a model to a single seclabel
when model is missing. Libvirt will look up at host's capabilities and
assign the first model to seclabel.
This patch fixes:
1. The problem with existing guests that have a seclabel defined in its XML.
2. A XML parse error when a guest is restored.
Signed-off-by: Marcelo Cerri <mhcerri@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
When executing virsh -t <command> the reported timing was off
by 3 orders of magnitude if the command took more than one
second.
Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
When domain XML contains any of the elements for setting up CPU
scheduling parameters (period, quota, emulator_period, or
emulator_quota) we need cpu cgroup to enforce the configuration.
However, the existing code would just ignore silently such settings if
either cgroups were not available at all cpu cgroup was not available.
Moreover, APIs for manipulating CPU scheduler parameters were already
failing if cpu cgroup was not available. This patch makes cpu cgroup
mandatory for all domains that use CPU scheduling elements in their XML.
The variable max_id is initialized again in the step of
getting cpu mapping variable map2. But in the next for loop
we still expect original value of max_id, the bug will
crash libvirtd when using on NUMA machine with big number
of cpus.
On NUMA machine, the length of string got from file
cpuacct.usage_percpu is quite large, so expand the
limit of 1024 bytes.
errors like:
Failed to read file \
'/cgroup/cpuacct/libvirt/qemu/rhel6q/cpuacct.usage_percpu': \
Value too large for defined data type
Some DHCP servers send their DHCP replies to the broadcast MAC address
rather than to the MAC address of the VM. The existing DHCP snooping
code assumes that the reply always goes to the MAC address of the VM
thus filtering the traffic of some DHCP servers' replies.
The below patch adapts the code to
1) filter DHCP replies by comparing the MAC address in the reply against
the MAC address of the VM (held in the snoop request)
2) adapts the pcap filter for traffic towards the VM to accept DHCP replies
sent to any MAC address; for further filtering we rely on 1)
3) creates initial rules that are active while waiting for DHCP replies;
these rules now accept DHCP replies to the VM's MAC address or to the
MAC broadcast address