Commit Graph

5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Gema Gomez
0701abcb3b qemu: Add support for using AES secret for SCSI hotplug
Support for virtio disks was added in commit id 'fceeeda', but not for
SCSI drives. Add the secret for the server when hotplugging a SCSI drive.
No need to make any adjustments for unplug since that's handled during
the qemuDomainDetachDiskDevice call to qemuDomainRemoveDiskDevice in
the qemuDomainDetachDeviceDiskLive switch.

Added a test to/for the command line processing to show the command line
options when adding a SCSI drive for the guest.
2016-10-26 08:07:15 -04:00
John Ferlan
d53d465083 qemu: Fix the command line generation for rbd auth using aes secrets
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1182074

Since libvirt still uses a legacy qemu arg format to add a disk, the
manner in which the 'password-secret' argument is passed to qemu needs
to change to prepend a 'file.' If in the future, usage of the more
modern disk format, then the prepended 'file.' can be removed.

Fix based on Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com> posting and subsequent
upstream list followups, see:

http://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2016-August/msg00777.html

for details. Introduced by commit id 'a1344f70'.
2016-08-17 08:03:48 -04:00
Ján Tomko
4808ebdef6 test-wrap-argv: set cutoff at 78 characters
For every but the last argument, we also need space for a space
and a backslash.

Rewrap everything longer than 78 characters.
2016-07-12 12:35:41 +02:00
Peter Krempa
e114b09157 qemu: caps: Always assume QEMU_CAPS_SMP_TOPOLOGY
Support for SMP topology was added by qemu commit dc6b1c09849484fbbc50
prior to 0.12.0, our minimum supported qemu version.

$ git describe --tags dc6b1c09849484fbbc50803307e4c7a3d81eab62
v0.11.0-rc0-449-gdc6b1c0
$ git describe --tags --contains dc6b1c09849484fbbc50803307e4c7a3d81eab
v0.12.0-rc0~1477
2016-07-07 15:08:35 +02:00
John Ferlan
a1344f70a1 qemu: Utilize qemu secret objects for RBD auth/secret
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1182074

If they're available and we need to pass secrets to qemu, then use the
qemu domain secret object in order to pass the secrets for RBD volumes
instead of passing the base64 encoded secret on the command line.

The goal is to make AES secrets the default and have no user interaction
required in order to allow using the AES mechanism. If the mechanism
is not available, then fall back to the current plain mechanism using
a base64 encoded secret.

New APIs:

qemu_domain.c:
  qemuDomainGetSecretAESAlias:
    Generate/return the secret object alias for an AES Secret Info type.
    This will be called from qemuDomainSecretAESSetup.

  qemuDomainSecretAESSetup: (private)
    This API handles the details of the generation of the AES secret
    and saves the pieces that need to be passed to qemu in order for
    the secret to be decrypted. The encrypted secret based upon the
    domain master key, an initialization vector (16 byte random value),
    and the stored secret. Finally, the requirement from qemu is the IV
    and encrypted secret are to be base64 encoded.

qemu_command.c:
  qemuBuildSecretInfoProps: (private)
    Generate/return a JSON properties object for the AES secret to
    be used by both the command building and eventually the hotplug
    code in order to add the secret object. Code was designed so that
    in the future perhaps hotplug could use it if it made sense.

  qemuBuildObjectSecretCommandLine (private)
    Generate and add to the command line the -object secret for the
    secret. This will be required for the subsequent RBD reference
    to the object.

  qemuBuildDiskSecinfoCommandLine (private)
    Handle adding the AES secret object.

Adjustments:

qemu_domain.c:
  The qemuDomainSecretSetup was altered to call either the AES or Plain
  Setup functions based upon whether AES secrets are possible (we have
  the encryption API) or not, we have secrets, and of course if the
  protocol source is RBD.

qemu_command.c:
  Adjust the qemuBuildRBDSecinfoURI API's in order to generate the
  specific command options for an AES secret, such as:

    -object secret,id=$alias,keyid=$masterKey,data=$base64encodedencrypted,
            format=base64
    -drive file=rbd:pool/image:id=myname:auth_supported=cephx\;none:\
           mon_host=mon1.example.org\:6321,password-secret=$alias,...

  where the 'id=' value is the secret object alias generated by
  concatenating the disk alias and "-aesKey0". The 'keyid= $masterKey'
  is the master key shared with qemu, and the -drive syntax will
  reference that alias as the 'password-secret'. For the -drive
  syntax, the 'id=myname' is kept to define the username, while the
  'key=$base64 encoded secret' is removed.

  While according to the syntax described for qemu commit '60390a21'
  or as seen in the email archive:

    https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2016-01/msg04083.html

  it is possible to pass a plaintext password via a file, the qemu
  commit 'ac1d8878' describes the more feature rich 'keyid=' option
  based upon the shared masterKey.

Add tests for checking/comparing output.

NB: For hotplug, since the hotplug code doesn't add command line
    arguments, passing the encoded secret directly to the monitor
    will suffice.
2016-05-20 11:09:05 -04:00