When user does not specify any model for scsi controller, or worse, no
controller at all, but libvirt automatically adds scsi controller with
no model, we are not searching for virtio-scsi and thus this can fail
for example on qemu which doesn't support lsi logic adapter.
This means that when qemu on x86 doesn't support lsi53c895a and the
user adds the following to an XML without any scsi controller:
<disk ...>
...
<target dev='sda'>
</disk>
libvirt fails like this:
# virsh define asdf.xml
error: Failed to define domain from asdf.xml
error: internal error Unable to determine model for scsi controller
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=974943
When virAsprintf was changed from a function to a macro
reporting OOM error in dc6f2da, it was documented as returning
0 on success. This is incorrect, it returns the number of bytes
written as asprintf does.
Some of the functions were converted to use virAsprintf's return
value directly, changing the return value on success from 0 to >= 0.
For most of these, this is not a problem, but the change in
virPCIDriverDir breaks PCI passthrough.
The return value check in virhashtest pre-dates virAsprintf OOM
conversion.
vmwareMakePath seems to be unused.
Merge the virCommandPreserveFD / virCommandTransferFD methods
into a single virCommandPasFD method, and use a new
VIR_COMMAND_PASS_FD_CLOSE_PARENT to indicate their difference
in behaviour
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Introduced in commit 24b08219; compilation on RHEL 6.4 complained:
qemu/qemu_hotplug.c: In function 'qemuDomainAttachChrDevice':
qemu/qemu_hotplug.c:1257: error: declaration of 'remove' shadows a global declaration [-Wshadow]
/usr/include/stdio.h:177: error: shadowed declaration is here [-Wshadow]
* src/qemu/qemu_hotplug.c (qemuDomainAttachChrDevice): Avoid the
name 'remove'.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
A part of the returned monitor response was freed twice and caused
crashes of the daemon when using guest agent cpu count retrieval.
# virsh vcpucount dom --guest
Introduced in v1.0.6-48-gc6afcb0
Implement the new API that will handle setting the balloon driver statistics
collection period in order to enable or disable the collection dynamically.
This patch will add the qemuMonitorJSONGetMemoryStats() to execute a
"guest-stats" on the balloonpath using "get-qom" replacing the former
mechanism which looked through the "query-ballon" returned data for
the fields. The "query-balloon" code only returns 'actual' memory.
Rather than duplicating the existing code, have the JSON API use the
GetBalloonInfo API.
A check in the qemuMonitorGetMemoryStats() will be made to ensure the
balloon driver path has been set. Since the underlying JSON code can
return data not associated with the balloon driver, we don't fail on
a failure to get the balloonpath. Of course since we've made the check,
we can then set the ballooninit flag. Getting the path here is primarily
due to the process reconnect path which doesn't attempt to set the
collection period.
At vm startup and attach attempt to set the balloon driver statistics
collection period based on the value found in the domain xml file. This
is not done at reconnect since it's possible that a collection period
was set on the live guest and making the set period call would reset to
whatever value is stored in the config file.
Setting the stats collection period has a side effect of searching through
the qom-list output for the virtio balloon driver and making sure that it
has the right properties in order to allow setting of a collection period
and eventually fetching of statistics.
The walk through the qom-list is expensive and thus the balloonpath will
be saved in the monitor private structure as well as a flag indicating
that the initialization has already been attempted (in the event that a
path is not found, no sense to keep checking).
This processing model conforms to the qom object model model which
requires setting object properties after device startup. That is, it's
not possible to pass the period along via the startup code as it won't
be recognized.
If users haven't configured guest agent then qemuAgentCommand() will
dereference a NULL 'mon' pointer, which causes crash of libvirtd when
using agent based cpu (un)plug.
With the patch, when the qemu-ga service isn't running in the guest,
a expected error "error: Guest agent is not responding: Guest agent
not available for now" will be raised, and the error "error: argument
unsupported: QEMU guest agent is not configured" is raised when the
guest hasn't configured guest agent.
GDB backtrace:
(gdb) bt
#0 virNetServerFatalSignal (sig=11, siginfo=<value optimized out>, context=<value optimized out>) at rpc/virnetserver.c:326
#1 <signal handler called>
#2 qemuAgentCommand (mon=0x0, cmd=0x7f39300017b0, reply=0x7f394b090910, seconds=-2) at qemu/qemu_agent.c:975
#3 0x00007f39429507f6 in qemuAgentGetVCPUs (mon=0x0, info=0x7f394b0909b8) at qemu/qemu_agent.c:1475
#4 0x00007f39429d9857 in qemuDomainGetVcpusFlags (dom=<value optimized out>, flags=9) at qemu/qemu_driver.c:4849
#5 0x00007f3957dffd8d in virDomainGetVcpusFlags (domain=0x7f39300009c0, flags=8) at libvirt.c:9843
How to reproduce?
# To start a guest without guest agent configuration
# then run the following cmdline
# virsh vcpucount foobar --guest
error: End of file while reading data: Input/output error
error: One or more references were leaked after disconnect from the hypervisor
error: Failed to reconnect to the hypervisor
RHBZ: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=984821
Signed-off-by: Alex Jia <ajia@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Krempa <pkrempa@redhat.com>
There are two levels on which a device may be hotplugged: config
and live. The config level requires just an insert or remove from
internal domain definition structure, which is exactly what this
patch does. There is currently no implementation for a chardev
update action, as there's not much to be updated. But more
importantly, the only thing that can be updated is path or socket
address by which chardevs are distinguished. So the update action
is currently not supported.
Add a new qemuMonitorJSONSetObjectProperty() method to support invocation
of the 'qom-set' JSON monitor command with a provided path, property, and
expected data type to set.
NOTE: The set API was added only for the purpose of the qemumonitorjsontest
The test code uses the same "/machine/i440fx" property as the get test and
attempts to set the "realized" property to "true" (which it should be set
at anyway).
Add a new qemuMonitorJSONGetObjectProperty() method to support invocation
of the 'qom-get' JSON monitor command with a provided path, property, and
expected data type return. The qemuMonitorJSONObjectProperty is similar to
virTypedParameter; however, a future patch will extend it a bit to include
a void pointer to balloon driver statistic data.
NOTE: The ObjectProperty structures and API are added only for the
purpose of the qemumonitorjsontest
The provided test will execute a qom-get on "/machine/i440fx" which will
return a property "realized".
Add a new qemuMonitorJSONGetObjectListPaths() method to support invocation
of the 'qom-list' JSON monitor command with a provided path.
NOTE: The ListPath structures and API's are added only for the
purpose of the qemumonitorjsontest
The returned list of paired data fields of "name" and "type" that can
be used to peruse QOM configuration data and eventually utilize for the
balloon statistics.
The test does a "{"execute":"qom-list", "arguments": { "path": "/"}}" which
returns "{"return": [{"name": "machine", "type": "child<container>"},
{"name": "type", "type": "string"}]}" resulting in a return of an array
of 2 elements with [0].name="machine", [0].type="child<container>". The [1]
entry appears to be a header that could be used some day via a command such
as "virsh qemuobject --list" to format output.
If an error occurs during qemuDomainAttachNetDevice after the macvtap
was created in qemuPhysIfaceConnect, the macvtap device gets left behind.
This patch adds code to the cleanup routine to delete the macvtap.
Signed-off-by: Matthew Rosato <mjrosato@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
I recently patches the callers to virPCIDeviceReset() to not call it
if the current driver for a device was vfio-pci (since that driver
will always reset the device itself when appropriate. At the time, Dan
Berrange suggested that I could instead modify virPCIDeviceReset
to check the currently bound driver for the device, and decide
for itself whether or not to go ahead with the reset.
This patch removes the previously added checks, and replaces them with
a check down in virPCIDeviceReset(), as suggested.
The functional difference here is that previously we were deciding
based on either the hostdev configuration or the value of
stubDriverName in the virPCIDevice object, but now we are actually
comparing to the "driver" link in the device's sysfs entry
directly. In practice, both should be the same.
The function being introduced is responsible for creating command
line argument for '-device' for given character device. Based on
the chardev type, it calls appropriate qemuBuild.*ChrDeviceStr(),
e.g. qemuBuildSerialChrDeviceStr() for serial chardev and so on.
The chardev alias assignment is going to be needed in a separate
places, so it should be moved into a separate function rather
than copying code randomly around.
The function being introduced is responsible for preparing and
executing 'chardev-add' qemu monitor command. Moreover, in case
of PTY chardev, the corresponding pty path is updated.
Currently, we are building InetSocketAddress qemu json type
within the qemuMonitorJSONNBDServerStart function. However, other
future functions may profit from the code as well. So it should
be moved into a static function.
Recent changes uncovered a possibility that 'last_processed_hostdev_vf'
was set to -1 in 'qemuPrepareHostdevPCIDevices' and would cause problems
in for loop end condition in the 'resetvfnetconfig' label if the
variable was never set to 'i' due to 'qemuDomainHostdevNetConfigReplace'
failure.
With current code, error reporting for unsupported devices for hot plug,
unplug and update is total mess. The VIR_ERR_CONFIG_UNSUPPORTED error
code is reported instead of VIR_ERR_OPERATION_UNSUPPORTED. Moreover, the
error messages are not helping to find the root cause (lack of
implementation).
For low-memory domains (roughly under 400MB) our automatic memory limit
computation comes up with a limit that's too low. This is because the
0.5 multiplication does not add enough for such small values. Let's
increase the constant part of the computation to fix this.
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>
Whenever virPortAllocatorRelease is called with port == 0, it complains
that the port is not in an allowed range, which is expectable as the
port was never allocated. Let's make virPortAllocatorRelease ignore 0
ports in a similar way free() ignores NULL pointers.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=981139
If a domain is paused before migration starts, we need to tell that to
the destination libvirtd to prevent it from resuming the domain at the
end of migration. This regression was introduced by commit 5379bb0.
Since commit 23e8b5d8, the code is refactored in a way that supports
domains with multiple graphics elements and commit 37b415200 allows
starting such domains. However none of those commits take migration
into account. Even though qemu doesn't support relocation for
anything else than SPICE and for no more than one graphics, there is no
reason to hardcode one graphics into this part of the code as well.
Add monitor callback API domainGuestPanic, that implements
'destroy', 'restart' and 'preserve' events of the 'on_crash'
in the XML when domain crashed.
After abf75aea24 the compiler screams:
qemu/qemu_driver.c: In function 'qemuNodeDeviceDetachFlags':
qemu/qemu_driver.c:10693:9: error: 'domain' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
pci = virPCIDeviceNew(domain, bus, slot, function);
^
qemu/qemu_driver.c:10693:9: error: 'bus' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
qemu/qemu_driver.c:10693:9: error: 'slot' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
qemu/qemu_driver.c:10693:9: error: 'function' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
Since the other functions qemuNodeDeviceReAttach and qemuNodeDeviceReset
looks exactly the same, I've initialized the variables there as well.
However, I am still wondering why those functions don't matter to gcc
while the first one does.
Implement check whether (maximum) vCPUs doesn't exceed machine
type's cpu-max settings.
On older versions of QEMU the check is disabled.
Signed-off-by: Michal Novotny <minovotn@redhat.com>
A loop in qemuPrepareHostdevPCIDevices() intended to cycle through all
the objects on the list pcidevs was doing "while (listcount > 0)", but
nothing in the body of the loop was reducing the size of the list - it
was instead removing items from a *different* list. It has now been
safely changed to a for() loop.
(This isn't as bad as it sounds - it's only a problem in case of an
OOM error.)
qemuGetActivePciHostDeviceList() had been creating a list that
contained pointers to objects that were also on the activePciHostdevs
list. In case of an OOM error, this newly created list would be
virObjectUnref'ed, which would cause everything on the list to be
freed. But all of those objects would still be on the
activePciHostdevs list, which could have very bad consequences if that
list was ever again accessed.
The solution used here is to populate the new list with *copies* of
the objects from the original list. It turns out that on return from
qemuGetActivePciHostDeviceList(), the caller would almost immediately
go through all the device objects and "steal" them (i.e. remove the
pointer from the list but not delete it) all from either one list or
the other; we now instead just *delete* (remove from the list and
free) each device from one list or the other, so in the end we have
the same state.
I realized after the fact that it's probably better in the long run to
give this function a name that matches the name of the link used in
sysfs to hold the group (iommu_group).
I'm changing it now because I'm about to add several more functions
that deal with iommu groups.
The driver arg to virPCIDeviceDetach is no longer used (the name of the stub driver is now set in the virPCIDevice object, and virPCIDeviceDetach retrieves it from there). Remove it.
I just learned that VFIO resets PCI devices when they are assigned to
guests / returned to the host, so it is redundant for libvirt to reset
the devices. This patch inhibits calling virPCIDeviceReset to devices
that will be/were assigned using VFIO.
virPCIDeviceDetach would previously sometimes consume the input device
object (to put it on the inactive list) and sometimes not. Avoiding
memory leaks required checking beforehand to see if the device was
already on the list, and freeing the device object in the caller only
if there wasn't already an identical object on the inactive list.
This patch makes it consistent - virPCIDeviceDetach will *never*
consume the input virPCIDevice object; if it needs to put one on the
inactive list, it will create a copy and put *that* on the list. This
way the caller knows that it is always their responsibility to free
the device object they created.
Previously stubDriver was always set from a string literal, so it was
okay to use a const char * that wasn't freed when the virPCIDevice was
freed. This will not be the case in the near future, so it is now a
char* that is allocated in virPCIDeviceSetStubDriver() and freed
during virPCIDeviceFree().
Add new CPU features for HyperV:
vapic for virtual APIC support
spinlocks for setting spinlock support
<features>
<hyperv>
<vapic state='on'/>
<spinlocks state='on' retries='4096'/>
</hyperv>
</features>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=784836
Commit 752596b5 broke the build with -Werror
qemu/qemu_hotplug.c: In function 'qemuDomainChangeGraphics':
qemu/qemu_hotplug.c:1980:39: error: declaration of 'listen' shadows a
global declaration [-Werror=shadow]
Fix with s/listen/newlisten/
Currently, we have a bug when updating a graphics device. A graphics device can
have a listen address set. This address is either defined by user (in which case
it's type is VIR_DOMAIN_GRAPHICS_LISTEN_TYPE_ADDRESS) or it can be inherited
from a network (in which case it's type is
VIR_DOMAIN_GRAPHICS_LISTEN_TYPE_NETWORK). However, in both cases we have a
listen address to process (e.g. during migration, as I've tried to fix in
7f15ebc7).
Later, when a user tries to update the graphics device (e.g. set a password),
we check if listen addresses match the original as qemu doesn't know how to
change listen address yet. Hence, users are required to not change the listen
address. The implementation then just dumps listen addresses and compare them.
Previously, while dumping the listen addresses, NULL was returned for NETWORK.
After my patch, this is no longer true, and we get a listen address for olddev
even if it is a type of NETWORK. So we have a real string on one side, the NULL
from user's XML on the other side and hence we think user wants to change the
listen address and we refuse it.
Therefore, we must take the type of listen address into account as well.
As a consequence of the cgroup layout changes from commit '632f78ca', the
qemuDomainGetSchedulerParameters[Flags]()' and qemuGetSchedulerType() APIs
failed to return data for a non running domain. This can be seen through
a 'virsh schedinfo <domain>' command which returns:
Scheduler : Unknown
error: Requested operation is not valid: cgroup CPU controller is not mounted
Prior to that change a non running domain would return:
Scheduler : posix
cpu_shares : 0
vcpu_period : 0
vcpu_quota : 0
emulator_period: 0
emulator_quota : 0
This patch will restore the capability to return configuration only data
for a non running domain regardless of whether cgroups are available.
This flag is meant for errors happening on the source of the migration
and isn't used on the destination. To allow better migration
compatibility, don't propagate it to the destination.
Paolo Bonzini pointed out that it's actually possible to migrate a qemu
instance that was paused due to I/O error and it will be able to work on
the destination if the storage is accessible.
This patch introduces flag VIR_MIGRATE_ABORT_ON_ERROR that cancels the
migration in case an I/O error happens while it's being performed and
allows migration without this flag. This flag can be possibly used for
other error reasons that may be introduced in the future.
Currently, we wait for SPICE to migrate in the very same loop where we
wait for qemu to migrate. This has a disadvantage of slowing seamless
migration down. One one hand, we should not kill the domain until all
SPICE data has been migrated. On the other hand, there is no need to
wait in the very same loop and hence slowing down 'cont' on the
destination. For instance, if users are watching a movie, they can
experience the movie to be stopped for a couple of seconds, as
processors are not running nor on src nor on dst as libvirt waits for
SPICE to migrate. We should move the waiting phase to migration CONFIRM
phase.
When qemu >= 1.20, it is safe to use -device for primary video
device as described in 4c993d8ab.
So, we are missing the cap flag in QMP capabilities detection, this
flag can be initialized safely in virQEMUCapsInitQMPBasic.
Convert input XML to migratable before using it in
qemuDomainSaveImageOpen.
XML in the save image is migratable, i.e. doesn't contain implicit
controllers. If these controllers were in a non-default order in the
input XML, the ABI check would fail. Removing and re-adding these
controllers fixes it.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=834196
During a live migration the guest may receive a disk access I/O error.
In this state the guest is unable to continue running on a remote host
after migration as some state may be present in the kernel and not
migrated.
With this patch, the migration is canceled in such case so it can either
continue on the source if the I/O issues are recovered or has to be
destroyed anyways.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=971485
As of d7f9d82753 we copy the listen
address from the qemu.conf config file in case none has been provided
via XML. But later, when migrating, we should not include such listen
address in the migratable XML as it is something autogenerated, not
requested by user. Moreover, the binding to the listen address will
likely fail, unless the address is '0.0.0.0' or its IPv6 equivalent.
This patch introduces a new boolean attribute to virDomainGraphicsListenDef
to distinguish autofilled listen addresses. However, we must keep the
attribute over libvirtd restarts, so it must be kept within status XML.
This patch fixes changes done in commit 29c1e913e4
that was pushed without implementing review feedback.
The flag introduced by the patch is changed to VIR_DOMAIN_VCPU_GUEST and
documentation makes the difference between regular hotplug and this new
functionality more explicit.
The virsh options that enable the use of the new flag are changed to
"--guest" and the documentation is fixed too.
Currently, there's a path to use the ncpuinfo variable uninitialized,
which leads to a compiler warning:
qemu/qemu_driver.c: In function 'qemuDomainGetVcpusFlags':
qemu/qemu_driver.c:4573:9: error: 'ncpuinfo' may be used
uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
for (i = 0; i < ncpuinfo; i++) {
^
This patch implements support for the "cpu-add" QMP command that plugs
CPUs into a live guest. The "cpu-add" command was introduced in QEMU
1.5. For the hotplug to work machine type "pc-i440fx-1.5" is required.
The qemu guest agent allows to online and offline CPUs from the
perspective of the guest. This patch adds helpers that call
'guest-get-vcpus' and 'guest-set-vcpus' guest agent functions and
convert the data for internal libvirt usage.