Most checks for libraries take the same format
* --with-libFOO=yes|no|check|/some/path argument
* check for a function NNN in libFOO.so
* check for a header file DDD/HHH.h
* Define a WITH_FOO config.h symbol
* Define a WITH_FOO make conditional
* Substitute FOO_CFLAGS and FOO_LIBS make variables
* Print CFLAGS & LIBS summary at the end
Doing all this correctly is rather difficult, typically
done by copy+paste of a previous usage. Further small
improvements people make are not applied to all previous
usages.
Improve this by creating some helper macros to apply
good practice. First, to perform the actual checks:
LIBVIRT_CHECK_LIB([SELINUX], [selinux],
[getfilecon], [selinux/selinux.h])
This checks for 'getfilecon' in -lselinux, and the
existence of 'selinux/selinux.h' header file. If successful
it sets SELINUX_CFLAGS and SELINUX_LIBS. The WITH_SELINUX
config.h macro and WITH_SELINUX make conditional are also
defined.
In some cases we need to check two variants of the same
library
LIBVIRT_CHECK_LIB_ALT([SASL], [sasl2],
[sasl_client_init], [sasl/sasl.h],
[SASL1], [sasl],
[sasl_client_init], [sasl/sasl.h])
This checks for sasl_client_init in libsasl2, and if that
is not found, checks sasl_client_init in libsasl. If the
first check succeeds WITH_SASL is set, while if the second
check succeeds *both* WITH_SASL and WITH_SASL1 are set.
If the library supports pkg-config, then another variant
is available
LIBVIRT_CHECK_PKG([AVAHI], [avahi-client], [0.6.0])
This checks for avahi-client >= 0.6.0 via pkg-config
and sets WITH_AVAHI if found.
Finally to print a summary of CFLAGS & LIBs found (if any):
LIBVIRT_RESULT_LIB([SELINUX])
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
On rhel5, libs of avahi are packaged into avahi instead of avahi-libs.
Actually, there is no avahi-libs package shipped with rhel5. This patch
fixes this by requiring avahi on rhel5.
The phypUUIDTable_Push and phypUUIDTable_Pull leaked their file descriptors
on normal return. Each function had an unnecessary use of creating a buffer
to print conn->uri->user and needed a bit better flow control. I also noted
that the Read function had a cut-n-paste error from the write function on a
couple of VIR_WARN's.
The openSSHSession leaked the sock on the failure path. Additionally that
turns into the internal_socket in the phypOpen code. That was neither saved
nor closed on any path. So I used the connnection_data->sock field to save
the socket for eventual close. Of interest here is that phypExec used the
connection_data->sock field even though it had never been initialized.
I ran 'make dist' in the directory left over from ./autobuild.sh
(which was configured for a mingw cross build); the resulting
tarball had more files than 'make dist' on a normal Linux build.
I traced it to the fact that we were distributing a generated
file, but only when configure said the end user had to generate
the file in the first place. In the process, I noticed that
we had some difference in symbol file names; I added a comment
explaining why the difference exists (after first trying to
normalize the names and hitting VPATH build failures).
* configure.ac (LIBVIRT_QEMU_SYMBOL_FILE): Add some comments.
* src/Makefile.am (EXTRA_DIST): No need to ship a generated file;
particularly since which file is built depends on configure results.
The daemon-driver-{qemu,lxc} packages are only built if
%{with_driver_modules} is specified, so they do not need to
further test this condition. Likewise, the daemon package
is only built if %{with_libvirtd} is specified, so it does
not need to further test this condition.
* libvirt.spec.in (daemon-driver-qemu, daemon-driver-lxc):
Unconditionally require libvirt-daemon-driver-network.
(daemon): Unconditionally include lock-driver files.
There's no need to do lots of readlink() calls to canonicalize
a name if we're only going to use stat() on it, since stat()
already chases symlinks.
* src/util/virutil.c (virGetDeviceID): Let stat() do the symlink
chasing.
Pass stub driver name directly to pciDettachDevice and pciReAttachDevice to fit
for different libvirt drivers. For example, qemu driver prefers pci-stub, but
Xen prefers pciback.
Signed-off-by: Chunyan Liu <cyliu@suse.com>
Add an optional 'type' attribute to <target> element of serial port
device. There are two choices for its value, 'isa-serial' and
'usb-serial'. For backward compatibility, when attribute 'type' is
missing the 'isa-serial' will be chosen as before.
Libvirt XML sample
<serial type='pty'>
<target type='usb-serial' port='0'/>
<address type='usb' bus='0' port='1'/>
</serial>
qemu commandline:
qemu ${other_vm_args} \
-chardev pty,id=charserial0 \
-device usb-serial,chardev=charserial0,id=serial0,bus=usb.0,port=1
With the most recent patch from Claudio, I realized how many
indentation flaws we have in the libvirt.h.in file. Even though
they are harmless, it's still worth fixing them.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=892079
With current code, if user calls virDomainPMSuspendForDuration()
followed by virDomainDestroy(), the former API checks for qemu agent
presence, which will evaluate as true (if agent is configured). While
talking to qemu agent, the qemu driver is unlocked, so the latter API
starts executing. However, if machine dies meanwhile, libvirtd gets
EOF on the agent socket and qemuProcessHandleAgentEOF() is called. The
handler clears reference to qemu agent while the destroy API already
holding a reference to it. This leads to NULL dereferencing later in
the code. Therefore, the agent pointer should be set to NULL only if
we are the exclusive owner of it.
When building libvirt rpms on rhel5, I got the following error:
File must begin with "/": rm
File must begin with "/": -f
File must begin with "/": $RPM_BUILD_ROOT/etc/sysctl.d/libvirtd
Installed (but unpackaged) file(s) found:
/etc/sysctl.d/libvirtd
It is triggerd by the %files list of libvirt daemon:
%if 0%{?fedora} >= 14 || 0%{?rhel} >= 6
%config(noreplace) %{_prefix}/lib/sysctl.d/libvirtd.conf
%else
rm -f $RPM_BUILD_ROOT%{_prefix}/lib/sysctl.d/libvirtd.conf
%endif
After checking document of rpm spec file, I think it would be better
to move the file deleting line from %files list to %install script.
Bug introduced in commit a1fd56c.
While OOM can have knock-on effects that trash a system, generally
the first symptom is one of memory thrashing.
* src/qemu/qemu_cgroup.c (qemuSetupCgroup): Reword slightly.
I did a build --without-libvirtd, then ran 'make dist'. The
resulting tarball was broken, with a complaint that make did not
know how to create libvirtd.service.in. I traced it to a use
of EXTRA_DIST inside a conditional.
* daemon/Makefile.am (EXTRA_DIST): Hoist libvirtd.service.in
outside of WITH_LIBVIRTD conditional.
when we has no host's src mapped to container.
there is no .oldroot dir,so libvirt lxc will fail
to start when mouting meminfo.
in this case,the parameter srcprefix of function
lxcContainerMountProcFuse should be NULL.and make
this method handle NULL correctly.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
Perform all the appropriate plumbing.
When qemu/KVM VMs are paused manually through a monitor not-owned by libvirt,
libvirt will think of them as "paused" event after they are resumed and
effectively running. With this patch the discrepancy goes away.
This is meant to address bug 892791.
Signed-off-by: Andres Lagar-Cavilla <andres@lagarcavilla.org>
Libvirt's HTML documentation is not as easy to the eyes as it could
be since long text has no visual breaks.
Take advantage of the formatting in documentation comments and wrap
each part separated by two consecutive \n into a HTML <p> element.
Coverity determined that 'emulator' could no longer be set and determined the
code was dead. Looking through the history, I discovered commit-id ed769e18
removed code originally added by commit-id 9237e955 and further modified by
commit-id 6a7e7c4f.
In a non-systemd environment the post and preun scripts of libvirt-client
fail, since the required files are in libvirt-daemon. Moved them to client.
Doing that I noticed %{_unitdir}/libvirt-guests.service was contained in
both libvirt-client and libvirt-daemon, which I don't think was intended.
Removed the extra copy from daemon.
Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
gcc 4.1.2 on RHEL 5 warned:
conf/network_conf.c:3136: warning: 'foundIdx' may be used uninitialized in this function
The warning is spurious, but initializing the variable doesn't hurt.
* src/conf/network_conf.c (virNetworkDefUpdateDNSHost): Silence
unused variable warning.
POSIX does not guarantee whether uid_t and gid_t are signed or
unsigned, nor does it guarantee whether they are smaller, same
size, or larger than int (or even the same size as one another).
Therefore, it is possible to have platforms where '(uid_t)-1==-1'
is false or where 'uid = gid = -1' sets uid to the wrong value,
thanks to integer promotion rules. The only portable way to use
the placeholder value of these two types is to always use a cast.
Thankfully, the issue is mostly theoretical - sanlock only
compiles on Linux for now, and on Linux, these types do not
suffer from strange promotion problems.
* src/locking/lock_driver_sanlock.c
(virLockManagerSanlockSetupLockspace, virLockManagerSanlockInit)
(virLockManagerSanlockCreateLease): Cast -1 to proper type before
comparing with uid_t or gid_t.
Currently, if there's no hard memory limit defined for a domain,
libvirt tries to calculate one, based on domain definition and magic
equation and set it upon the domain startup. The rationale behind was,
if there's a memory leak or exploit in qemu, we should prevent the
host system trashing. However, the equation was too tightening, as it
didn't reflect what the kernel counts into the memory used by a
process. Since many hosts do have a swap, nobody hasn't noticed
anything, because if hard memory limit is reached, process can
continue allocating memory on a swap. However, if there is no swap on
the host, the process gets killed by OOM killer. In our case, the qemu
process it is.
To prevent this, we need to relax the hard RSS limit. Moreover, we
should reflect more precisely the kernel way of accounting the memory
for process. That is, even the kernel caches are counted within the
memory used by a process (within cgroups at least). Hence the magic
equation has to be changed:
limit = 1.5 * (domain memory + total video memory) + (32MB for cache
per each disk) + 200MB
This is the QEMU backend code for the SCLP console support.
It includes SCLP capability detection, QEMU command line generation
and a test case.
Signed-off-by: J.B. Joret <jb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
The SCLP console is the native console type for s390 and is preferred
over the virtio console as it doesn't require special drivers and
is more efficient. Recent versions of QEMU come with SCLP support
which is hereby enabled.
The new target types 'sclp' and 'sclplm' can be used to specify a
SCLP console. Adding documentation, domain schema and XML processing
support.
Signed-off-by: J.B. Joret <jb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
To avoid confusion between the LXC driver <-> controller
monitor RPC protocol and the libvirt-lxc.so <-> libvirtd public
RPC protocol, rename the former to lxc_monitor_protocol.x
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Currently the libvirt client can pass FDs to the server, but the
dispatch mechanism provides no way to return FDs back from the
server to the client. Tweak the dispatch code, such that if a
dispatcher returns '1', this indicates that it populated the
virNetMessagePtr with FDs to return
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
A number of bugs handling file descriptors received from the
server caused the FDs to be lost and leaked.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The QEMU specific APIs all operate on domains, not the host,
so should be in the virsh-domain.c file / group
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>