Convert the type of loop iterators named 'i', 'j', k',
'ii', 'jj', 'kk', to be 'size_t' instead of 'int' or
'unsigned int', also santizing 'ii', 'jj', 'kk' to use
the normal 'i', 'j', 'k' naming
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Ensure that all APIs which list nwfilter objects filter
them against the access control system.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This patch is in relation to Bug 966449:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=966449
This is a patch addressing the coredump.
Thread 1 must be calling nwfilterDriverRemoveDBusMatches(). It does so with
nwfilterDriverLock held. In the patch below I am now moving the
nwfilterDriverLock(driverState) further up so that the initialization, which
seems to either take a long time or is entirely stuck, occurs with the lock
held and the shutdown cannot occur at the same time.
Remove the lock in virNWFilterDriverIsWatchingFirewallD to avoid
double-locking.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=903480
During domain destruction it's possible that the learnIPAddressThread has
already removed the interface prior to the teardown filter path being run.
The teardown code would only be telling the thread to terminate.
Remove error reporting when calling the virNWFilterDHCPSnoopEnd
function with an interface for which no thread is snooping traffic.
Document the usage of this function.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Berger <stefanb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Linux netfilter at some point (Linux 2.6.39) inverted the meaning of the
'--ctdir reply' and newer netfilter implementations now expect
'--ctdir original' instead and vice-versa.
We check for the kernel version and assume that all Linux kernels with version
2.6.39 have the newer inverted logic.
Any distro backporting the Linux kernel patch that inverts the --ctdir logic
(Linux commit 96120d86f) must also backport this patch for Linux and
adapt the kernel version being tested for.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Berger <stefanb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
The source code base needs to be adapted as well. Some files
include virutil.h just for the string related functions (here,
the include is substituted to match the new file), some include
virutil.h without any need (here, the include is removed), and
some require both.
Ensure that all drivers implementing public APIs use a
naming convention for their implementation that matches
the public API name.
eg for the public API virDomainCreate make sure QEMU
uses qemuDomainCreate and not qemuDomainStart
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
It will simplify later work if the sub-drivers have dedicated
APIs / field names. ie virNetworkDriver should have
virDrvNetworkOpen and virDrvNetworkClose methods
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Ensure that the driver struct field names match the public
API names. For an API virXXXX we must have a driver struct
field xXXXX. ie strip the leading 'vir' and lowercase any
leading uppercase letters.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
There are a number of places which generate cast alignment
warnings, which are difficult or impossible to address. Use
pragmas to disable the warnings in these few places
conf/nwfilter_conf.c: In function 'virNWFilterRuleDetailsParse':
conf/nwfilter_conf.c:1806:16: warning: cast increases required alignment of target type [-Wcast-align]
item = (nwItemDesc *)((char *)nwf + att[idx].dataIdx);
conf/nwfilter_conf.c: In function 'virNWFilterRuleDefDetailsFormat':
conf/nwfilter_conf.c:3238:16: warning: cast increases required alignment of target type [-Wcast-align]
item = (nwItemDesc *)((char *)def + att[i].dataIdx);
storage/storage_backend_mpath.c: In function 'virStorageBackendCreateVols':
storage/storage_backend_mpath.c:247:17: warning: cast increases required alignment of target type [-Wcast-align]
names = (struct dm_names *)(((char *)names) + next);
nwfilter/nwfilter_dhcpsnoop.c: In function 'virNWFilterSnoopDHCPDecode':
nwfilter/nwfilter_dhcpsnoop.c:994:15: warning: cast increases required alignment of target type [-Wcast-align]
pip = (struct iphdr *) pep->eh_data;
nwfilter/nwfilter_dhcpsnoop.c:1004:11: warning: cast increases required alignment of target type [-Wcast-align]
pup = (struct udphdr *) ((char *) pip + (pip->ihl << 2));
nwfilter/nwfilter_learnipaddr.c: In function 'procDHCPOpts':
nwfilter/nwfilter_learnipaddr.c:327:33: warning: cast increases required alignment of target type [-Wcast-align]
uint32_t *tmp = (uint32_t *)&dhcpopt->value;
nwfilter/nwfilter_learnipaddr.c: In function 'learnIPAddressThread':
nwfilter/nwfilter_learnipaddr.c:501:43: warning: cast increases required alignment of target type [-Wcast-align]
struct iphdr *iphdr = (struct iphdr*)(packet +
nwfilter/nwfilter_learnipaddr.c:538:43: warning: cast increases required alignment of target type [-Wcast-align]
struct iphdr *iphdr = (struct iphdr*)(packet +
nwfilter/nwfilter_learnipaddr.c:544:48: warning: cast increases required alignment of target type [-Wcast-align]
struct udphdr *udphdr= (struct udphdr *)
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Between revision 65fb9d49 and before this patch, an upgrade of libvirt while
VMs are running and instantiating iptables filtering rules due to nwfilter
rules, may leave stray iptables rules behind when shutting VMs down.
Left-over iptables rules may look like this:
Chain FP-vnet0 (1 references)
target prot opt source destination
DROP tcp -- 0.0.0.0/0 0.0.0.0/0 tcp spt:122
ACCEPT all -- 0.0.0.0/0 0.0.0.0/0
[...]
Chain libvirt-out (1 references)
target prot opt source destination
FO-vnet0 all -- 0.0.0.0/0 0.0.0.0/0 [goto] PHYSDEV match --physdev-out vnet0
The reason is that the recent nwfilter code only removed filtering rules in
the libvirt-out chain that contain the --physdev-is-bridged parameter.
Older rules didn't match and were not removed.
Note that the user-defined chain FO-vnet0 could not be removed due to the
reference from the rule in libvirt-out.
Often the work around may be done through
service iptables restart
kill -SIGHUP $(pidof libvirtd)
This patch now also removes older libvirt versions' iptables rules.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Berger <stefanb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
As a step towards making virDomainObjList thread-safe turn it
into an opaque virObject, preventing any direct access to its
internals.
As part of this a new method virDomainObjListForEach is
introduced to replace all existing usage of virHashForEach
Although the nwfilter driver skips startup when running in a
session libvirtd, it did not skip reload or shutdown. This
caused errors to be reported when sending SIGHUP to libvirtd,
and caused an abort() in libdbus on shutdown due to trying
to remove a dbus filter that was never added
When starting a VM, /var/log/messages was spammed with the following message:
xt_physdev: using --physdev-out in the OUTPUT, FORWARD and POSTROUTING chains for non-bridged traffic is not supported anymore.
With each extra VM I start, the messages get amplified
exponentially. This results in longer starting times every new VM,
relative the the previously started VM. When I ran a test with
starting 100 equal VM's, the first VM started in about 2 seconds, the
100th VM took 48 seconds to start. I'm running a vanilla 3.7.1 kernel,
but I have the same issue on VM hosts with kernel 3.2.28 or 3.2.0,
running libvirt 0.9.12 and 0.9.8 respectively.
Looking into the warning, it seemed that iptables need an extra argument,
--physdev-is-bridged, in commands like:
iptables -A libvirt-out -m physdev --physdev-is-bridged --physdev-out vnet99 -g FP-vnet99
With that, the warnings in /var/log/messages are gone and running the
test again proved the 100th VM started in 3.8 seconds.
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 to deal with auto-shutdown libvirtd must periodically
poll all stateful drivers. Thus sucks because it requires
acquiring both the driver lock and locks on every single virtual
machine. Instead pass in a "inhibit" callback to virStateInitialize
which drivers can invoke whenever they want to inhibit shutdown
due to existance of active VMs.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The only important state that should prevent libvirtd shutdown
is from running VMs. Networks, host devices, network filters
and storage pools are all long lived resources that have no
significant in-memory state. They should not block shutdown.
Also removed some unreachable code found by coverity:
libvirt-0.10.2/src/nwfilter/nwfilter_driver.c:259: unreachable: This
code cannot be reached: "nwfilterDriverUnlock(driver...".
The virStateInitialize method and several cgroups methods were
using an 'int privileged' parameter or similar for dual-state
values. These are better represented with the bool type.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Commit cb022152 went overboard and introduced a dead conditional
while trying to get rid of a potential NULL dereference.
* src/nwfilter/nwfilter_dhcpsnoop.c (virNWFilterSnoopReqNew):
Remove redundant conditional.
This can't lead to a crash since virNWFilterSnoopReqNew is only called
with a static array as the argument, but if we check for NULL we should
do it right.
The libvirt coding standard is to use 'function(...args...)'
instead of 'function (...args...)'. A non-trivial number of
places did not follow this rule and are fixed in this patch.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-howto.html recommends that
the 'If not, see <url>.' phrase be a separate sentence.
* tests/securityselinuxhelper.c: Remove doubled line.
* tests/securityselinuxtest.c: Likewise.
* globally: s/; If/. If/
virNWFilterSnoopAdjustPoll() uses a struct pollfd but poll.h is never included
nwfilter/nwfilter_dhcpsnoop.c:1297: error: 'struct pollfd' declared inside parameter list
Commit 2a41bc9 dropped a dependency on gawk, but we can go one step
further and avoid awk altogether.
* src/nwfilter/nwfilter_ebiptables_driver.c
(iptablesLinkIPTablesBaseChain): Simplify command.
(ebiptablesDriverInit, ebiptablesDriverShutdown): Drop awk probe.
FreeBSD and OpenBSD have a <net/if.h> that is not self-contained;
and mingw lacks the header altogether. But gnulib has just taken
care of that for us, so we might as well simplify our code. In
the process, I got a syntax-check failure if we don't also take
the gnulib execinfo module.
* .gnulib: Update to latest, for execinfo and net_if.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Add execinfo and net_if modules.
* configure.ac: Let gnulib check for headers. Simplify check for
'struct ifreq', while also including enough prereq headers.
* src/internal.h (IF_NAMESIZE): Drop, now that gnulib guarantees it.
* src/nwfilter/nwfilter_learnipaddr.h: Use correct header for
IF_NAMESIZE.
* src/util/virnetdev.c (includes): Assume <net/if.h> exists.
* src/util/virnetdevbridge.c (includes): Likewise.
* src/util/virnetdevtap.c (includes): Likewise.
* src/util/logging.c (includes): Assume <execinfo.h> exists.
(virLogStackTraceToFd): Handle gnulib's fallback implementation.