Our domain_conf.* files are big enough. Not only they contain XML
parsing code, but they served as a storage of all functions whose
name is virDomain prefixed. This is just wrong as it gathers not
related functions (and modules) into one big file which is then
harder to maintain. Split virDomainObjList module into a separate
file called virdomainobjlist.[ch].
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Introduce a new API to get libvirt version. It is worth noting, that
libvirt-admin and libvirt share the same version number. Unfortunately,
our existing API isn't generic enough to be used with virAdmConnectPtr
as well. Also this patch wires up this API to the virt-admin client
as a generic cmdVersion command.
This patch introduces virt-admin client which is based on virsh client,
but had to reimplement several methods to meet virt-admin specific needs
or remove unnecessary virsh specific logic.
Add the virLogManager API which allows for communication with
the virtlogd daemon to RPC program. This provides the client
side API to open log files for guest domains.
The virtlogd daemon is setup to auto-spawn on first use when
running unprivileged. For privileged usage, systemd socket
activation is used instead.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Define a new RPC protocol for the virtlogd daemon that provides
for handling of logs. The initial RPC method defined allows a
client to obtain a file handle to use for writing to a log
file for a guest domain. The file handle passed back will not
actually refer to the log file, but rather an anonymous pipe.
The virtlogd daemon will forward I/O between them, ensuring
file rotation happens when required.
Initially the log setup is hardcoded to cap log files at
128 KB, and keep 3 backups when rolling over, which gives
a max usage of 512 KB per guest.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Copy the virtlockd codebase across to form the initial virlogd
code. Simple search & replace of s/lock/log/ and gut the remote
protocol & dispatcher. This gives us a daemon that starts up
and listens for connections, but does nothing with them.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Add virRotatingFileReader and virRotatingFileWriter objects
which allow reading & writing from/to files with automation
rotation to N backup files when a size limit is reached. This
is useful for guest logging when a guaranteed finite size
limit is required. Use of external tools like logrotate is
inadequate since it leaves the possibility for guest to DOS
the host in between invokations of logrotate.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
In fact, it was never used as far as vz has no features supporting it.
That is why there will be no harm to anyone if we just remove this code to
prevent further misunderstanding and efforts to support dead code.
Signed-off-by: Maxim Nestratov <mnestratov@virtuozzo.com>
At the time this code was added we had intentions to support libvirt interface
to manage vz networks. In fact, it was never implemented completely to work
correctly that makes me think that there will be no harm to anyone if we just
rip it off. Moreover, in vz7 we started to use libvirt bridge network driver to
manage networks.
Signed-off-by: Maxim Nestratov <mnestratov@virtuozzo.com>
This patch adds feature for lxc containers to inherit namespaces.
This is very similar to what lxc-tools or docker provides. Look
for "man lxc-start" and you will find that you can pass command
args as [ --share-[net|ipc|uts] name|pid ]. Or check out docker
networking option in which you can give --net=container:NAME_or_ID
as an option for sharing +namespace.
>From this patch you can add extra libvirt option to share
namespace in following way.
<lxc:namespace>
<lxc:sharenet type='netns' value='red'/>
<lxc:shareipc type='pid' value='12345'/>
<lxc:shareuts type='name' value='container1'/>
</lxc:namespace>
The netns option is specific to sharenet. It can be used to
inherit from existing network namespace.
Co-authored: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
In order to share as much virsh' logic as possible with upcomming
virt-admin client we need to split virsh logic into virsh specific and
client generic features.
Since majority of virsh methods should be generic enough to be used by
other clients, it's much easier to rename virsh specific data to virshX
than doing this vice versa. It moved generic virsh commands (including info
and opts structures) to generic module vsh.c.
Besides renaming methods and structures, this patch also involves introduction
of a client specific control structure being referenced as private data in the
original control structure, introduction of a new global vsh Initializer,
which currently doesn't do much, but there is a potential for added
functionality in the future.
Lastly it introduced client hooks which are especially necessary during
client connecting phase.
The driver only supports VIR_ARCH_PPC64 and VIR_ARCH_PPC64LE.
Just shuffling files around and updating the build system
accordingly. No functional changes.
By switching block jobs to use domain conditions, we can drop some
pretty complicated code in NBD storage migration.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
This patch moves all src/parallels/parallels* files to vz/vz*
and fixes build accordingly.
No functional changes.
Signed-off-by: Maxim Nestratov <mnestratov@parallels.com>
Just one of the simplest functions that returns string "Clients: X"
where X is the number of connected clients to daemon's first
subserver (the original one), so it can be tested using virsh, ipython,
etc.
The subserver is gathered by incrementing its reference
counter (similarly to getting qemu capabilities), so there is no
deadlock with admin subserver in this API.
Here you can see how functions should be named in the client (virAdm*)
and server (adm*).
There is also a parameter @flags that must be 0, which helps testing
proper error propagation into the client.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
For this to pe properly separated from other protocols used by the
server, there is second server added which allows access to the whole
virNetDaemon to its clients.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Initial scratch of the admin library. It has its own virAdmConnectPtr
that inherits from virAbstractConnectPtr and thus trivially supports
error reporting.
There's pkg-config file added and spec-file adjusted as well.
Since the library should be "minimalistic" and not depend on any other
library, the list of files is especially crafted for it. Most of them
could've been put to it's own sub-libraries that would be LIBADD'd to
libvirt_util, libvirt_net_rpc and libvirt_setuid_rpc_client to minimize
the number of object files being built, but that's a refactoring that
isn't the orginal aim of this commit.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
qemuBlockJobSyncBegin and qemuBlockJobSyncEnd delimit a region of code
where block job events are processed "synchronously".
qemuBlockJobSyncWait and qemuBlockJobSyncWaitWithTimeout wait for an
event generated by a block job.
The Wait* functions may be called multiple times while the synchronous
block job is active. Any pending block job event will be processed by
only when Wait* or End is called. disk->blockJobStatus is reset by
these functions, so if it is needed a pointer to a
virConnectDomainEventBlockJobStatus variable should be passed as the
last argument. It is safe to pass NULL if you do not care about the
block job status.
All functions assume the VM object is locked. The Wait* functions will
unlock the object for as long as they are waiting. They will return -1
and report an error if the domain exits before an event is received.
Typical use is as follows:
virQEMUDriverPtr driver;
virDomainObjPtr vm; /* locked */
virDomainDiskDefPtr disk;
virConnectDomainEventBlockJobStatus status;
qemuBlockJobSyncBegin(disk);
... start block job ...
if (qemuBlockJobSyncWait(driver, vm, disk, &status) < 0) {
/* domain died while waiting for event */
ret = -1;
goto error;
}
... possibly start other block jobs
or wait for further events ...
qemuBlockJobSyncEnd(driver, vm, disk, NULL);
To perform other tasks periodically while waiting for an event:
virQEMUDriverPtr driver;
virDomainObjPtr vm; /* locked */
virDomainDiskDefPtr disk;
virConnectDomainEventBlockJobStatus status;
unsigned long long timeout = 500 * 1000ull; /* milliseconds */
qemuBlockJobSyncBegin(disk);
... start block job ...
do {
... do other task ...
if (qemuBlockJobSyncWaitWithTimeout(driver, vm, disk,
timeout, &status) < 0) {
/* domain died while waiting for event */
ret = -1;
goto error;
}
} while (status == -1);
qemuBlockJobSyncEnd(driver, vm, disk, NULL);
Signed-off-by: Michael Chapman <mike@very.puzzling.org>
Each thread can use a thread local variable to keep the name of a job
which is currently running in the job.
The virThreadJobSetWorker API is supposed to be called once by any
thread which is used as a worker, i.e., it is waiting in a pool, woken
up to do a job, and returned back to the pool.
The virThreadJobSet/virThreadJobClear APIs are to be called at the
beginning/end of each job.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Adds the port type definitions and methods that will be used to bind
interfaces to the Midonet virtual ports.
virtnetdevmidonet.c adds the way to bind and unbind the ports by
calling into the Midonet Host Agent control command line (installed
with the midolman package).
Signed-off-by: Antoni Segura Puimedon <toni+libvirt@midokura.com>
Delete .po files which contain zero translated strings. Refresh
the .pot file and pull down latest translations from Zanata.
When refreshing the libvirt.pot, it can be pushed to zanata
and .po files resynchonized using
# cd po
# rm libvirt.pot
# make libvirt.pot
# zanata-cli push
# zanata-cli pull
Note there is no need for 'make update-po', as long as you do
a zanata push, immediately followed by zanata pull, as the
Zanata server will ensure the .po files downloaded match the
just pushed .pot file.
Note at time of writing, it is strongly recommended to only
use the zanata Java client binary (zanata-cli), and not the
python client binary (zanata). This is because the moderately
large size of the libvirt pot file is causing errors when the
python client tries to push, which have been known to result
in the loss of all translations on the server, as well as also
preventing uploading of .po files themselves :-(
For a while now there are two places that gather information about NUMA
related guest configuration. While the XML can't be changed we can at
least store the data in one place in the definition.
Rename the numatune_conf.[ch] files to numa_conf as later patches will
move the rest of the definitions from the cpu definition to this one.
The virDBusMethodCall method has a DBusError as one of its
parameters. If the caller wants to pass a non-NULL value
for this, it immediately makes the calling code require
DBus at build time. This has led to breakage of non-DBus
builds several times. It is desirable that only the virdbus.c
file should need WITH_DBUS conditionals, so we must ideally
remove the DBusError parameter from the method.
We can't simply raise a libvirt error, since the whole point
of this parameter is to give the callers a way to check if
the error is one they want to ignore, without having the logs
polluted with an error message. So, we add a virErrorPtr
parameter which the caller can then either ignore or raise
using the new virReportErrorObject method.
This new method is distinct from virSetError in that it
ensures the logging hooks are run.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Moving code for parsing and formatting network routes to
networkcommon_conf helps reusing those routes for domains. The route
definition has been hidden to help reducing the number of unnecessary
checks in the format function.
systemd-machined introduced a new method CreateMachineWithNetwork
that obsoletes CreateMachine. It expects to be given a list of
VETH/TAP device indexes for the host side device(s) associated
with a container/machine.
This falls back to the old CreateMachine method when the new
one is not supported.
Introduce a parser/formatter for the xl config format. Since the
deprecation of xm/xend, the VM config file format has diverged as
new features are added to libxl. This patch adds support for parsing
and formating the xl config format. It supports the existing xm config
format, plus adds support for spice graphics and xl disk config syntax.
Disk config is specified a bit differently in xl as compared to xm. In
xl, disk config consists of comma-separated positional parameters and
keyword/value pairs separated by commas. Positional parameters are
specified as follows
target, format, vdev, access
Supported keys for key=value options are
devtype, backendtype
The positional paramters can also be specified in key/value form. For
example the following xl disk config are equivalent
/dev/vg/guest-volume,,hda
/dev/vg/guest-volume,raw,hda,rw
format=raw, vdev=hda, access=rw, target=/dev/vg/guest-volume
See $xen_sources/docs/misc/xl-disk-configuration.txt for more details.
xl disk config is parsed with the help of xlu_disk_parse() from
libxlutil, libxl's utility library. Although the library exists
in all Xen versions supported by the libxl virt driver, only
recently has the corresponding header file been included. A check
for the header is done in configure.ac. If not found, xlu_disk_parse()
is declared externally.
Signed-off-by: Kiarie Kahurani <davidkiarie4@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
Introduce a Xen xl parser
This parser allows for users to convert the new xl disk format and
spice graphics config to libvirt xml format and vice versa. Regarding
the spice graphics config, the code is pretty much straight forward.
For the disk {formating, parsing}, this parser takes care of the new
xl format which include positional parameters and key/value parameters.
In xl format disk config a <diskspec> consists of parameters separated by
commas. If the parameters do not contain an '=' they are automatically
assigned to certain options following the order below
target, format, vdev, access
The above are the only mandatory parameters in the <diskspec> but there
are many more disk config options. These options can be specified as
key=value pairs. This takes care of the rest of the options such as
devtype, backend, backendtype, script, direct-io-safe,
The positional paramters can also be specified in key/value form
for example
/dev/vg/guest-volume,,hda
/dev/vg/guest-volume,raw,hda,rw
format=raw, vdev=hda, access=rw, target=/dev/vg/guest-volume
are interpleted to one config.
In xm format, the above diskspec would be written as
phy:/dev/vg/guest-volume,hda,w
The disk parser is based on the same parser used successfully by
the Xen project for several years now. Ian Jackson authored the
scanner, which is used by this commit with mimimal changes. Only
the PREFIX option is changed, to produce function and file names
more consistent with libvirt's convention.
Signed-off-by: Kiarie Kahurani <davidkiarie4@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
Reboot requires more sophistication and is left as a future work item --
but at least part of the plumbing is in place.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
If detect_scsi_host_caps reports errors but keeps libvirtd going on
startup, the user is misled by the error messages. Transforming them
into warning still shows the problems, but indicates this is not fatal.
We use typedef IMedium IHardDisk to make IHardDisk hierachy from
IMedium (Actually it did on vbox 2.2 and 3.0's C++ API).
So when calling
VBOX_MEDIUM_FUNC_ARG*(IHardDisk, func, args)
we can directly replace it to
gVBoxAPI.UIMedium.func(IHardDisk, args)
When dealing with this two types, we get some rules from it's
hierachy relationship.
When using IHardDisk and IMedium as input, we can't transfer a
IMedium to IHardDisk. Like:
gVBoxAPI.UIHardDisk.func(IHardDisk *hardDisk, args)
Here, we can't put a *IMedium as a argument.
When using IHardDisk and IMedium as output, we can't transfer a
IHardDisk to IMedium. Like:
gVBoxAPI.UIMachine.GetMedium(IMedium **out)
Here, we can't put a **IHardDisk as a argument. If this case
do happen, we either change the API to GetHardDisk or write a
new one.
This allows to implement libvirt functions that use streams, such as
virDoaminScreenshot, without the need to store the downloaded data in
a temporary file first. The stream driver directly interacts with
libcurl to send and receive data.
The driver uses the libcurl multi interface that allows to do a transfer
in multiple curl_multi_perform() calls. The easy interface would do the
whole transfer in a single curl_easy_perform() call. This doesn't work
with the libvirt stream API that is driven by multiple calls to the
virStreamSend() and virStreamRecv() functions.
The curl_multi_wait() function is used to do blocking operations. But it
was added in libcurl 7.28.0. For older versions it is emulated using the
socket callback of the multi interface.
The current driver only supports blocking operations. There is already
some code in place for non-blocking mode but it is not complete.
This patch rewrites two public APIs. They are vboxNetworkUndefine
and vboxNetworkDestroy. They use the same core function
vboxNetworkUndefineDestroy. I merged it in one patch.
Add files parallels_sdk.c and parallels_sdk.h for code
which works with SDK, so libvirt's code will not mix with
dealing with parallels SDK.
To use Parallels SDK you must first call PrlApi_InitEx function,
and then you will be able to connect to a server with
PrlSrv_LoginLocalEx function. When you've done you must call
PrlApi_Deinit. So let's call PrlApi_InitEx on first .connectOpen,
count number of connections and deinitialize, when this counter
becomes zero.
Signed-off-by: Dmitry Guryanov <dguryanov@parallels.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>
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>
XM and XL config are very similar. Disks are specified differently
in XL, but the old XM disk config is still supported by XL. XL also
supports new config like spice that was never supported by XM.
This patch moves all the common parsing and formatting functions to
the new file xen_common.c and adapts the XM parser/formatter accordingly.
This restructuring paves way for introducing an XL parser/formatter in
the future.
While moving the code, fixup whitespace, comments, and style issues.
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
src/xenxs contains parsing/formating functions for the various xen
config formats, and is better named src/xenconfig.
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
Introduce vbox_uniformed_api to deal with version conflicts. Use
vbox_install_api to register the currect vboxUniformedAPI with
vbox version.
vboxConnectOpen has been rewritten.
Implement ZFS storage backend driver. Currently supported
only on FreeBSD because of ZFS limitations on Linux.
Features supported:
- pool-start, pool-stop
- pool-info
- vol-list
- vol-create / vol-delete
Pool definition looks like that:
<pool type='zfs'>
<name>myzfspool</name>
<source>
<name>actualpoolname</name>
</source>
</pool>
The 'actualpoolname' value is a name of the pool on the system,
such as shown by 'zpool list' command. Target makes no sense
here because volumes path is always /dev/zvol/$poolname/$volname.
User has to create a pool on his own, this driver doesn't
support pool creation currently.
A volume could be used with Qemu by adding an entry like this:
<disk type='volume' device='disk'>
<driver name='qemu' type='raw'/>
<source pool='myzfspool' volume='vol5'/>
<target dev='hdc' bus='ide'/>
</disk>
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>
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.
This new module holds and formats capabilities for emulator. If you
are about to create a new domain, you may want to know what is the
host or hypervisor capable of. To make sure we don't regress on the
XML, the formatting is not something left for each driver to
implement, rather there's general format function.
The domain capabilities is a lockable object (even though the locking
is not necessary yet) which uses reference counter.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
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.
Automatically allocate PCI addresses for devices instead
of hardcoding them in the driver code. The current
allocation schema is to dedicate an entire slot for each devices.
Also, allow having arbitrary number of devices.
This structure contains the data to be saved in the VirtualBox XML file
and can be manipulated with severals exposed functions.
The structure is created by vboxSnapshotLoadVboxFile taking the
machine XML file.
It also can rewrite the XML by using vboxSnapshotSaveVboxFile.
This patch adds initial migration support to the libxl driver,
using the VIR_DRV_FEATURE_MIGRATION_PARAMS family of migration
functions.
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
Introduce helper program to catch events from dnsmasq and maintain a custom
lease file per network. It supports dhcpv4 and dhcpv6. The file is saved as
"<interface-name>.status".
Each lease contains the following info:
<expiry-time (epoch time)> <mac> <iaid> <ip-address> <hostname> <clientid>
Example of custom leases file content:
[
{
"iaid": "1221229",
"ip-address": "2001:db8:ca2:2:1::95",
"mac-address": "52:54:00:12:a2:6d",
"hostname": "Fedora20",
"client-id": "00:04:1a:c1:d9:6b:5a:0a:e2:bc:f8:4b:1e:37:2e:38:22:55",
"expiry-time": 1393244216
},
{
"ip-address": "192.168.150.208",
"mac-address": "52:54:00:11:56:b3",
"hostname": "Wani-PC",
"client-id": "01:52:54:00:11:56:b3",
"expiry-time": 1393244248
}
]
src/Makefile.am:
* Add options to compile the helper program
src/network/bridge_driver.c:
* Introduce networkDnsmasqLeaseFileNameCustom()
* Invoke helper program along with dnsmasq
* Delete the .status file when corresponding n/w is destroyed.
src/network/leaseshelper.c
* Helper program to create the custom lease file
Move sharable PCI handling functions to domain_addr.[ch], and
change theirs prefix from 'qemu' to 'vir':
- virDomainPCIAddressAsString;
- virDomainPCIAddressBusSetModel;
- virDomainPCIAddressEnsureAddr;
- virDomainPCIAddressFlagsCompatible;
- virDomainPCIAddressGetNextSlot;
- virDomainPCIAddressReleaseSlot;
- virDomainPCIAddressReserveAddr;
- virDomainPCIAddressReserveNextSlot;
- virDomainPCIAddressReserveSlot;
- virDomainPCIAddressSetFree;
- virDomainPCIAddressSetGrow;
- virDomainPCIAddressSlotInUse;
- virDomainPCIAddressValidate;
The only change here is function names, the implementation itself
stays untouched.
Extract common allocation code from DomainPCIAddressSetCreate
into virDomainPCIAddressSetAlloc.
The network and nwfilter drivers both have a need to update
firewall rules. The currently share no code for interacting
with iptables / firewalld. The nwfilter driver is fairly
tied to the concept of creating shell scripts to execute
which makes it very hard to port to talk to firewalld via
DBus APIs.
This patch introduces a virFirewallPtr object which is able
to represent a complete sequence of rule changes, with the
ability to have multiple transactional checkpoints with
rollbacks. By formally separating the definition of the rules
to be applied from the mechanism used to apply them, it is
also possible to write a firewall engine that uses firewalld
DBus APIs natively instead of via the slow firewalld-cmd.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Encryption keys can be associated with each source file in a
backing chain; as such, this file belongs more in util/ where
it can be used by virstoragefile.h.
* src/conf/storage_encryption_conf.h: Rename...
* src/util/virstorageencryption.h: ...to this.
* src/conf/storage_encryption_conf.c: Rename...
* src/util/virstorageencryption.c: ...to this.
* src/Makefile.am (ENCRYPTION_CONF_SOURCES, CONF_SOURCES)
(UTIL_SOURCES): Update to new file names.
* src/libvirt_private.syms: Likewise.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h: Update client.
* src/conf/storage_conf.h: Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The qemu_bridge_filter.c file had some helpers for calling
the ebtablesXXX functions todo bridge filtering. The only
thing these helpers did was to overwrite the original error
message from the ebtables code. For added fun, the callers
of these helpers overwrote the errors yet again. For even
more fun, one of the helpers called another helper and
overwrite its errors too.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
GNULIB provides APIs for calculating md5 and sha256 hashes,
but these APIs only return you raw byte arrays. Most users
in libvirt want the hash in printable string format. Add
some helper APIs in util/vircrypto.{c,h} for doing this.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Add a virStringSearch method to virstring.{c,h} which performs
a regex match against a string and returns the matching substrings.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
At this point it has a limited functionality and is highly
experimental. Supported domain operations are:
* define
* start
* destroy
* dumpxml
* dominfo
It's only possible to have only one disk device and only one
network, which should be of type bridge.
This function aims at converting LXC configuration into a libvirt
domain XML description to help users migrate from LXC to libvirt.
Here is an example of how the lxc configuration works:
virsh -c lxc:/// domxml-from-native lxc-tools /var/lib/lxc/migrate_test/config
It is possible that some parts couldn't be properly mapped into a
domain XML fragment, so users should carefully review the result
before creating the domain.
fstab files in lxc.mount lines will need to be merged into the
configuration file as lxc.mount.entry.
As we can't know the amount of memory of the host, we have to set a
default value for max_balloon that users will probably want to adjust.
In datatype.c, virGetDomainSnapshot could result in the message:
error: invalid domain pointer in bad domain
Furthermore, while there are a few functions in libvirt.c that
only care about a virDomainPtr without regards to the connection
(such as virDomainGetName), most functions also require a valid
connection. Yet several functions were blindly dereferencing
the conn member without checking it for validity first (such as
virDomainOpenConsole). Rather than try and correct all usage
of VIR_IS_DOMAIN vs. VIR_IS_CONNECTED_DOMAIN, it is easier to
just blindly require that a valid domain object always has a
valid connection object (which should be true anyways, since
every domain object holds a reference to its connection, so the
connection will not be closed until all domain objects have
also been closed to release their reference).
After this patch, all places that validate a domain consistently
report:
error: invalid domain pointer in someFunc
* src/datatypes.h (virCheckDomainReturn, virCheckDomainGoto): New
macros.
* src/datatypes.c (virGetDomainSnapshot): Use new macro.
(virLibConnError): Delete unused macro.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
We support gluster volumes in domain XML, so we also ought to
support them as a storage pool. Besides, a future patch will
want to take advantage of libgfapi to handle the case of a
gluster device holding qcow2 rather than raw storage, and for
that to work, we need a storage backend that can read gluster
storage volume contents. This sets up the framework.
Note that the new pool is named 'gluster' to match a
<disk type='network'><source protocol='gluster'> image source
already supported in a <domain>; it does NOT match the
<pool type='netfs'><source><target type='glusterfs'>,
since that uses a FUSE mount to a local file name rather than
a network name.
This and subsequent patches have been tested against glusterfs
3.4.1 (available on Fedora 19); there are likely bugs in older
versions that may prevent decent use of gfapi, so this patch
enforces the minimum version tested. A future patch may lower
the minimum. On the other hand, I hit at least two bugs in
3.4.1 that will be fixed in 3.5/3.4.2, where it might be worth
raising the minimum: glfs_readdir is nicer to use than
glfs_readdir_r [1], and glfs_fini should only return failure on
an actual failure [2].
[1] http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/gluster-devel/2013-10/msg00085.html
[2] http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/gluster-devel/2013-10/msg00086.html
* configure.ac (WITH_STORAGE_GLUSTER): New conditional.
* m4/virt-gluster.m4: new file.
* libvirt.spec.in (BuildRequires): Support gluster in spec file.
* src/conf/storage_conf.h (VIR_STORAGE_POOL_GLUSTER): New pool
type.
* src/conf/storage_conf.c (poolTypeInfo): Treat similar to
sheepdog and rbd.
(virStoragePoolDefFormat): Don't output target for gluster.
* src/storage/storage_backend_gluster.h: New file.
* src/storage/storage_backend_gluster.c: Likewise.
* po/POTFILES.in: Add new file.
* src/storage/storage_backend.c (backends): Register new type.
* src/Makefile.am (STORAGE_DRIVER_GLUSTER_SOURCES): Build new files.
* src/storage/storage_backend.h (_virStorageBackend): Documet
assumption.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The kernel automatically destroys veth devices when cleaning
up the container network namespace. During normal shutdown, it
is thus likely that the attempt to run 'ip link del vethN'
will fail. If it fails, check if the device exists, and avoid
reporting an error if it has gone. This switches to use the
virCommand APIs instead of virRun too.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Create libxl_domain.[ch] and move all functions operating on
libxlDomainObjPrivate to these files. This will be useful for
future patches that e.g. add job support for libxlDomainObjPrivate.
Re-arrange the code so that the returned bitmap is always initialized to
NULL even on early failures and return an error message as some callers
are already expecting it. Fix up the rest not to shadow the error.
Add a virt-login-shell binary that can be set as a user's
shell, such that when they login, it causes them to enter
the LXC container with a name matching their user name.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
* Move platform specific things (e.g. firewalling and route
collision checks) into bridge_driver_platform
* Create two platform specific implementations:
- bridge_driver_linux: Linux implementation using iptables,
it's actually the code moved from bridge_driver.c
- bridge_driver_nop: dumb implementation that does nothing
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
These helpers use the remembered host capabilities to retrieve the cpu
map rather than query the host again. The intended usage for this
helpers is to fix automatic NUMA placement with strict memory alloc. The
code doing the prepare needs to pin the emulator process only to cpus
belonging to a subset of NUMA nodes of the host.
Add an access control driver that uses the pkcheck command
to check authorization requests. This is fairly inefficient,
particularly for cases where an API returns a list of objects
and needs to check permission for each object.
It would be desirable to use the polkit API but this links
to glib with abort-on-OOM behaviour, so can't be used. The
other alternative is to speak to dbus directly
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This patch introduces the virAccessManagerPtr class as the
interface between virtualization drivers and the access
control drivers. The viraccessperm.h file defines the
various permissions that will be used for each type of object
libvirt manages
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This patch adds three macros to the virsh source tree that help to
easily check for mutually exclusive parameters.
VSH_EXCLUSIVE_OPTIONS_EXPR has four arguments, two expressions to check
and two names of the parameters to print in the message.
VSH_EXCLUSIVE_OPTIONS is more specific and check the command structure
for the parameters using vshCommandOptBool.
VSH_EXCLUSIVE_OPTIONS_VAR is meant to check boolean variables with the
same name as the parameters.
qemuGetNumadAdvice will be used by LXC driver, rename
it to virNumaGetAutoPlacementAdvice and move it to virnuma.c
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
Introduce a local object virIdentity for managing security
attributes used to form a client application's identity.
Instances of this object are intended to be used as if they
were immutable, once created & populated with attributes
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Add a new virDomainLxcEnterSecurityLabel() function as a
counterpart to virDomainLxcEnterNamespaces(), which can
change the current calling process to have a new security
context. This call runs client side, not in libvirtd
so we can't use the security driver infrastructure.
When entering a namespace, the process spawned from virsh
will default to running with the security label of virsh.
The actual desired behaviour is to run with the security
label of the container most of the time. So this changes
virsh lxc-enter-namespace command to invoke the
virDomainLxcEnterSecurityLabel method.
The current behaviour is:
LABEL PID TTY TIME CMD
system_u:system_r:svirt_lxc_net_t:s0:c0.c1023 1 pts/0 00:00:00 systemd
system_u:system_r:svirt_lxc_net_t:s0:c0.c1023 3 pts/1 00:00:00 sh
system_u:system_r:svirt_lxc_net_t:s0:c0.c1023 24 ? 00:00:00 systemd-journal
system_u:system_r:svirt_lxc_net_t:s0:c0.c1023 29 ? 00:00:00 dhclient
staff_u:unconfined_r:unconfined_t:s0-s0:c0.c1023 47 ? 00:00:00 ps
Note the ps command is running as unconfined_t, After this patch,
The new behaviour is this:
virsh -c lxc:/// lxc-enter-namespace dan -- /bin/ps -eZ
LABEL PID TTY TIME CMD
system_u:system_r:svirt_lxc_net_t:s0:c0.c1023 1 pts/0 00:00:00 systemd
system_u:system_r:svirt_lxc_net_t:s0:c0.c1023 3 pts/1 00:00:00 sh
system_u:system_r:svirt_lxc_net_t:s0:c0.c1023 24 ? 00:00:00 systemd-journal
system_u:system_r:svirt_lxc_net_t:s0:c0.c1023 32 ? 00:00:00 dhclient
system_u:system_r:svirt_lxc_net_t:s0:c0.c1023 38 ? 00:00:00 ps
The '--noseclabel' flag can be used to skip security labelling.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The virDomainObj, qemuAgent, qemuMonitor, lxcMonitor classes
all require a mutex, so can be switched to use virObjectLockable
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Currently all classes must directly inherit from virObject.
This allows for arbitrarily deep hierarchy. There's not much
to this aside from chaining up the 'dispose' handlers from
each class & providing APIs to check types.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
To bring in line with new naming practice, rename the=
src/util/cgroup.{h,c} files to vircgroup.{h,c}
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This adds support for host device passthrough with the
LXC driver. Since there is only a single kernel image,
it doesn't make sense to pass through PCI devices, but
USB devices are fine. For the latter we merely need to
make the /dev/bus/usb/NNN/MMM character device exist
in the container's /dev
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This adds a 'lockd' lock driver which is just a client which
talks to the lockd daemon to perform all locking. This will
be the default lock driver for any hypervisor which needs one.
* src/Makefile.am: Add lockd.so plugin
* src/locking/lock_driver_lockd.c: Lockd driver impl
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>