virDomainLiveConfigHelperMethod that is used for this job now does
modify the flags but still requires the callers to extract the correct
definition objects.
In addition coverity and other static analyzers are usually unhappy as
they don't grasp the fact that @flags are upadted according to the
correct def to be present.
To work this issue around and simplify the calling chain let's add a new
helper that will work only on drivers that always copy the persistent
def to a transient at start of a vm. This will allow to drop a few
arguments. The new function syntax will also fill two definition
pointers rather than modifying the @flags parameter.
The vCPU pinning definition gets removed when the domain definition is
being freed later. If there is no next configuration it would remove the
configured pinning.
This reverts commit 01692bb167.
Quoting the original commit message:
"Not sure if it's the correct way to add cputune xml for xend driver..."
It is not. The defition created that is converted from the internal xend
structures would also be leaked since it isn't used any more.
Revert the commit since it does not make sense to keep the info
internally.
In the pre-NUMA ages pinning a vCPU to all pCPUs was eaqual to deleting
the pinning info. Now it does not entirely work that way. Pinning a vCPU
to all pCPUs might be a desired operation. Additionally removal of the
pinning will result into using the default pinning information at the
next boot which might be different from all vcpus.
This patch removes the false assumption that we should remove the
pinning after pinning to all vCPUs and tweaks the documentation for
virsh.
A later patch will implement a new flag for the virDomainPinVcpuFlags
API that will allow to remove the pinning in a sane way.
While we probably won't see machines with more than 65536 cpus for a
while lets store the cpu count as an integer so that we can avoid quite
a lot of overflow checks in our code.
Since the returned structure uses "unsigned long" for memory sizes add a
few overflow checks to notify the user in case we are not able to
represent given values.
When qemu does not support the balloon event the current memory size
needs to be queried. Since there are two places that implement the same
logic, split it out into a function and reuse.
After libvirt issues the balloon resize command, the current balloon
size needs to be changed to the maximum memory size since the vCPUs were
not started and thus the balloon driver could not return the memory.
Since GetXMLDesc and other APIs return the balloon size without updating
it in case they are not able to obtain the job and the memory balloon
does not support the asynchronous event the sizing might be incorrect.
We have been formatting the first serial device also
as a console device, but only if there were no other consoles.
If there is a <serial> device present in the XML, but no serial
<console>, or if there isn't any <console> at all but the domain
definition hasn't gone through a parse->format->parse round-trip,
the <console> device would not be formatted.
Change the code to always add the stub device for the first
serial device.
Fixes https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1089914
Console/channel devices have their pty devices assigned when the emulator is
actually started. If time is spent in guest preparation, someone attempts
to open the console/channel, the libvirt crashes in virChrdevLockFilePath().
The patch attempts to fix the crash by adding a check before attempting to
open.
Signed-off-by: Shivaprasad G Bhat <sbhat@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
There was a couple of problems with the style fixes applied to the original
patch:
1.) virFileReadAllQuiet comparison was incorrectly parenthesized when moved
into a condition, causing the len to be set to the result of comparison. This,
together with the removed underflow check would underflow the phy buffer.
2.) The logic was broken. Failure to call "ip" would abort the function, thus
the "iw" branch would never be reached.
This aims to fix the issues and work around possible style complains :)
Signed-off-by: Lubomir Rintel <lkundrak@v3.sk>
Refactor the function to return the bitmap instead of an integer and the
inner workings so that they make more sense.
This patch also fixes possible segfault on old systems that was
introduced by commit:
commit f1a43a8e41
Author: Hu Tao <hutao@cn.fujitsu.com>
Date: Fri Sep 14 15:46:59 2012 +0800
use virBitmap to store cpu affinity info
Since commit 55ace7c478, the sockettest
fails without VIR_TEST_DEBUG set. The problem is found by test number
42 (co-incidence?), which tests range '192.168.122.1' -
'192.168.122.255' in network '192.168.122.0/24'. That is supposed to
fail because the end address is equal to the broadcast address.
When comparing these two in 'virSocketAddrEqual(end, &broadcast)',
there is a check for sin_addr as well as for sin_port. That port,
however, is different when we do not enable test debugging. With the
testing enabled, the port is 0 (correctly initialized), but without that
it has a random number there. And that's because the structure is not
initialized anywhere.
By zeroing the structure before filling in the info, we make sure we
return only the address and not any information that was not requested.
And the test work once again.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Since the monitor code now supports ullongs when setting balloon size,
drop the legacy code with overflow checking.
Additionally the comment mentioning that the job is treated as a sync
job does not make sense any more since the monitor is entered
asynchronously.
Since some functions can be optimized by reusing the buffers that they
already have instead of allocating and copying new ones, lets split
virBitmapToData to two functions where one only converts the data and
the second one is a wrapper that allocates the buffer if necessary.
Store the emulator pinning cpu mask as a pure virBitmap rather than the
virDomainPinDef since it stores only the bitmap and refactor
qemuDomainPinEmulator to do the same operations in a much saner way.
As a side effect virDomainEmulatorPinAdd and virDomainEmulatorPinDel can
be removed since they don't add any value.
In case when <vcpu ... cpuset=""> is not specified, the vcpupin array is
not guaranteed to be allocated to def->vcpus. This would cause a crash
for TCG since it does not report thread IDs for vCPUs.
We remember driver name in a new field 'drivername' within
private parallels connection structure. When a new domain
is defined we use this name to set corresponding virtType.
We set VIR_DOMAIN_VIRT_VZ for 'vz' driver and
VIR_DOMAIN_VIRT_PARALLELS for 'Parallels'.
Signed-off-by: Maxim Nestratov <mnestratov@parallels.com>
Though parallels:///system is still accepted we will encourage users
to use vz:///system instead.
Signed-off-by: Maxim Nestratov <mnestratov@parallels.com>
We add this connection driver just as an exact copy with different
name to keep backward compatibility.
Vz stands for Virtuozzo, which is a new name of Parallels Cloud Server.
Signed-off-by: Maxim Nestratov <mnestratov@parallels.com>
If 'parallels:///system' uri is specified then connection is made to
'Parallels' driver and domain type will be VIR_DOMAIN_VIRT_PARALLELS.
In case of 'vz:///system' connection is established to 'vz' driver
and domain type will be VIR_DOMAIN_VIRT_VZ.
Signed-off-by: Maxim Nestratov <mnestratov@parallels.com>
As soon as we keep backward compatibility we treat this constant
as synonym to VIR_DOMAIN_VIRT_PARALLELS.
Signed-off-by: Maxim Nestratov <mnestratov@parallels.com>
Commit id '980b265d' neglected to check for a successful status when
deciding whether to release the device address for the RNG attach thus
the address would be released even though the device was added.
Signed-off-by: Luyao Huang <lhuang@redhat.com>
Commit id '862473fa' neglected to return the status from the
qemuDomainRemoveRNGDevice call in qemuDomainRemoveDevice causing
the function to always fail when receiving an RNG device unplug
event. Additionally the domain status/state would not be updated
in the processDeviceDeletedEvent path.
Signed-off-by: Luyao Huang <lhuang@redhat.com>
There are now many more reasons that virSocketAddrGetRange() could
fail, so it is much more informative to report the error there instead
of in the caller. (one of the two callers was previously assuming
success, which is almost surely safe based on the parsing that has
already happened to the config by that time, but it still is nicer to
account for an error "just in case")
Part of fix for: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=985653
This loop had automatic variable definitions mixed with code. This
patch moves the definitions to the top of the function and puts
cleanup for them at the bottom. No functional change.
Part of fix for: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=985653
virSocketAddrGetRange() has been updated to take the network address
and prefix, and now checks that both the start and end of the range
are within that network, thus validating that the entire range of
addresses is in the network. For IPv4, it also checks that ranges to
not start with the "network address" of the subnet, nor end with the
broadcast address of the subnet (this check doesn't apply to IPv6,
since IPv6 doesn't have a broadcast or network address)
Negative tests have been added to the network update and socket tests
to verify that bad ranges properly generate an error.
This resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=985653
We do update pool volume object list before we actually create any
volume. If buildVol fails, we then try to delete the volume in the
storage as well as remove it from our structures. The problem is, that
any backend that supports both buildVol and deleteVol would fail in this
case which is completely unnecessary. This patch causes the update to
take place after we know a volume has been created successfully, thus no
removal in case of a buildVol failure is necessary.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1223177
We allocate 16 bytes for IPv4 address and 55 bytes for interface
key, therefore we should read up to 15/54 bytes and let the last byte
reserved for terminating null byte in sscanf.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1226400
The libxl tries to check if it's running in dom0 by parsing
/proc/xen/capabilities and if that fails it doesn't load.
There's no procfs interface in Xen on FreeBSD, so this check always
fails.
In addition to checking procfs, check if /dev/xen/xenstored, that's enough to
check if we're running in dom0 in FreeBSD case.
The guest firmware provides the same functionality as the pvpanic
device, and the relevant element should always be present in the
domain XML to reflect this fact, so add it after parsing the
definition if it wasn't there already.
The guest firmware provides the same functionality as the pvpanic
device, which is not available in QEMU on pSeries, so the domain
XML should be allowed to contain the <panic> element.
On the other hand, unlike the pvpanic device, the guest firmware
can't be configured, so report an error if an address has been
provided in the XML.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1182388
When attempting to hotplug a virtio-serial console to a domain
that had no virtio-serial controllers (not even those that
are added by libvirt when some devices need them) at daemon startup,
report a user-friendly error:
error: Failed to attach device from console.xml
error: internal error: no virtio-serial controllers are available
instead of crashing the daemon:
Process terminating with default action of signal 11 (SIGSEGV): dumping core
Access not within mapped region at address 0x8
at 0x531028F: virDomainVirtioSerialAddrNext (domain_addr.c:916)
by 0x531028F: virDomainVirtioSerialAddrAssign (domain_addr.c:1029)
by 0x1CBF68: qemuDomainAttachChrDevice (qemu_hotplug.c:1565)
by 0x1BCD5E: qemuDomainAttachDeviceLive (qemu_driver.c:7997)
by 0x1BCD5E: qemuDomainAttachDeviceFlags (qemu_driver.c:8743)
Introduced in v1.2.14-30-g5903378.
Use xmlFreeDoc instead of plain xmlFree.
4 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 9 of 1,084
at 0x4C29F80: malloc (in /usr/lib64/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
by 0x70730D6: xmlStrndup (in /usr/lib64/libxml2.so.2.9.2)
by 0x701E3DC: xmlNewDoc (in /usr/lib64/libxml2.so.2.9.2)
by 0x70C39F8: xmlSAX2StartDocument (in /usr/lib64/libxml2.so.2.9.2)
by 0x7017245: xmlParseDocument (in /usr/lib64/libxml2.so.2.9.2)
by 0x7017606: xmlDoRead (in /usr/lib64/libxml2.so.2.9.2)
by 0x5309DAD: virXMLParseHelper (virxml.c:742)
by 0x5367584: virStoragePoolLoadState (storage_conf.c:1863)
For HVM domains, vfb info must be populated in the libxl_domain_build_info
struct. Currently this is done in the libxlMakeVfbList function, but IMO
it would be cleaner to populate the build_info vfb in a separate
libxlMakeBuildInfoVfb function. libxlMakeVfbList would then handle only
vfb devices, simiar to the other libxlMake<device>List functions.
A future patch will extend libxlMakeBuildInfoVfb to support SPICE.
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1224018
The disk pool recalculates the pool allocation, capacity, and available
values each time through processing a newly created disk partition. This
created an issue with the allocation setting since the code used is shared
with the refresh path. Each path calls virStorageBackendDiskReadPartitions
which initializes the pool values and then processes the partition table
from the 'libvirt_parthelper' utility output with the only difference being
create passes a specific volume to be processed while refresh pass a NULL
indicating to process all volumes. That passed volume is check during the
virStorageBackendDiskMakeVol call to see if the current partition described
by the volume key already exists. If it exists, then no adjustments are
made to the allocation and the next entry in the output is checked.
For the create path this resulted in only the most recently created
partition size would be accounted for in the 'allocation' setting. This
patch thus checks whether the incoming volume is NULL before clearing
the pool allocation value.
Commit id '2ac0e647' for https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1206521
was meant to be a generic check for the CreateVol, CreateVolFrom, and
DeleteVol paths to check if the storage backend's changed the pool's view
of allocation or available values.
Unfortunately as it turns out this caused a side effect when the disk backend
created an extended partition there would be no actual storage removed from
the pool, thus the changes would not find any change in allocation or
available and incorrectly update the pool values using the size of the
extended partition. A subsequent refresh of the pool would reset the
values appropriately.
This patch modifies those checks in order to specifically not update the
pool allocation and available for only the disk backend rather than be
generic before and after checks.
There are also a couple that were very uninformatively just logging
the value of the pointer rather than the string itself:
* the "name" arg to virNodeDeviceLookupByName()
* wwnn and wwpn args to virNodeDeviceLookupSCSIHostByWWN()
All char*'s that make sense should now have their contents logged
rather than the pointer, and all %s args should now be inside
NULLSTR().
In a couple of cases, the node device driver (and the test node device
driver which likely copied it) was only logging "Node device not
found" when it couldn't find the requested device. This patch changes
those cases to log the name (and in the case when it's relevant, the
wwnn and wwpn) as well.
Virsh capabilities will list offline cpus as online when
libvirt is compiled with numactl option disabled. This
fix will list correct set of online cpus.
This never worked.
In 0.9.10 when this API was introduced, it was intended that
the SHRINK flag combined with DELTA would shrink the volume by
the specified capacity (to avoid passing negative numbers).
See commit 055bbf4.
When the SHRINK flag was finally implemented for the first backend
in 1.2.13 (commit aa9aa6a), it was only implemented for the absolute
values and with the delta flag the volume is always extended,
regardless of the SHRINK flag.
Treat the SHRINK flag as a minus sign when used together with DELTA,
to allow shrinking volumes as was documented in the API since 0.9.10.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1220213
Since shrinking a volume below existing allocation is not allowed,
it is not possible for a successful resize with VOL_RESIZE_ALLOCATE
to increase the pool's available value.
Even with the SHRINK flag it is possible to extend the current
allocation or even the capacity. Remove the overflow when
computing delta with this flag and do the check even if the
flag was specified.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1073305
It is necessary to have unpolluted screen when connecting to
parallels driver via virsh.
Otherwise a lot of unexpected output one will get on the console.
Signed-off-by: Maxim Nestratov <mnestratov@parallels.com>
It's not a problem at all and causes virt-manager to break down.
Note: netcf 0.2.8 and earlier generates invalid XML for a bond with no
interfaces anyway, so in that case this error in libvirt is never
reached since we fail earlier.
Signed-off-by: Lubomir Rintel <lkundrak@v3.sk>
The QMP command, like the interrupt reinjection logic it's connected
to, is only implemented in QEMU when TARGET_I386 is defined, so
checking for its availability on any other architecture is pointless.
On the other hand, when we're on x86, we shouldn still make sure that
rtc-reset-reinjection is available and refuse to set the time
otherwise.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1211938
The code already exists there, it just modified different flags. I just
noticed this when looking at the code. This patch is better to view
with bigger context or '-W'.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
When we change system clock to years ago, a certain CPU may use up 100% cputime.
The reason is that in function virEventPollCalculateTimeout(), we assign the
unsigned long long result to an INT variable,
*timeout = then - now; // timeout is INT, and then/now are long long
if (*timeout < 0)
*timeout = 0;
there's a chance that variable @then minus variable @now may be a very large number
that overflows INT value expression, then *timeout will be negative and be assigned to 0.
Next the 'poll' in function virEventPollRunOnce() will get into an 'endless' while loop there.
thus, the cpu that virEventPollRunOnce() thread runs on will go up to 100%.
Although as we discussed before in https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2015-May/msg00400.html
it should be prohibited to set-time while other applications are running, but it does
seems to have no harm to make the codes more robust.
Signed-off-by: Wang Yufei <james.wangyufei@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Zhang Bo <oscar.zhangbo@huawei.com>
Since commit bcd9a564b6 virDomainNumatuneGetMode returns the value
via a pointer rather than in the return value. The change triggered
problems with platforms where the compiler decides to use a data type of
size different than integer at the point where we typecast it.
Work around the issue by using an intermediate variable of the correct
type that gets casted back by the default typecasting rules.
If the <sysinfo type='smbios'...> ends up not formatting any sub-elements,
then rather than formatting as:
<sysinfo type='smbios'>
</sysinfo>
Just format it more cleanly as:
<sysinfo type='smbios'/>
Signed-off-by: Luyao Huang <lhuang@redhat.com>
If the redirfilter has no usbdev sub-elements, then do not format anything
rather than formatting an empty pair of elements:
<redirfilter>
</redirfilter>
Signed-off-by: Luyao Huang <lhuang@redhat.com>
Rather than an algorithm based solely on libvirtd ctime to refresh the
capabilities add the element of the libvirt build version into the equation.
Since that version wouldn't be there prior to this code being run - don't
fail on reading the capabilities if not found. In this case, the cache
will always be rebuilt when a new libvirt version is installed.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1195882
Original commit id 'cbde3589' indicates that the cache file would be
discarded if either the QEMU binary or libvirtd 'ctime' changes; however,
the code only discarded if the QEMU binary time didn't match or if the
new libvirtd ctime was later than what created the cache file.
Since many factors come into play with 'ctime' adjustments (including
perhaps turning back the hands of time), change the logic to also force
a refresh if the ctime of libvirt is different than what's in the cache.
Recent changes to the -M/--machine processing code in qemuParseCommandLine
caused Coverity to determine there was a possible resource leak with how
the 'list' is managed. Rather than try to add virStringFreeList calls
everywhere - just promote list to the top of the variables and free it
within the error processing code. Also required a couple of other tweaks
in order to avoid double free's.
Commit id '73eda710' added virDomainKeyWrapDefParseXML which uses
virXPathNodeSet, but does not handle a -1 return thus causing a possible
loop condition exit problem later when the return value is used.
Change the logic to return the value from virXPathNodeSet if <= 0
Only set directory permissions at pool build time, if:
- User explicitly requested a mode via the XML
- The directory needs to be created
- We need to do the crazy NFS root-squash workaround
This allows qemu:///session to call build on an existing directory
like /tmp.
The XML parser sets a default <mode> if none is explicitly passed in.
This is then used at pool/vol creation time, and unconditionally reported
in the XML.
The problem with this approach is that it's impossible for other code
to determine if the user explicitly requested a storage mode. There
are some cases where we want to make this distinction, but we currently
can't.
Handle <mode> parsing like we handle <owner>/<group>: if no value is
passed in, set it to -1, and adjust the internal consumers to handle
it.
Cleanup code in prlsdkLoadDomain doesn't take into account the fact
if private domain structure along with freeing function is assigned
or not. In case it is, we shouldn't call it manually because
virDomainObjListRemove calls it and frees pdom.
Also, allocated def structure should be freed only if it's not
assigned to domain. Otherwise it will be called twice: one time by
virDomainObjListRemove and the second by prlsdkLoadDomain itself.
Signed-off-by: Maxim Nestratov <mnestratov@parallels.com>
It is better to get all necessary parameters and check them on newly
created configuration before actually creating a domain with them or
applying them to an existing domain.
Signed-off-by: Maxim Nestratov <mnestratov@parallels.com>
To silence Coverity just add a 'p &&' in front of the check in
networkFindUnusedBridgeName after the strchr() call. Even though
we know it's not possible to have strchr return NULL since the only
way into the function is if there is a '%' in def->bridge or it's NULL.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Coverity points out it's possible for one of the virCommand{Output|Error}*
API's to have not allocated 'output' and/or 'error' in which case the
strstr comparison will cause a NULL deref
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Build with gcc 4.8 fails with:
bhyve/bhyve_monitor.c: In function 'bhyveMonitorIO':
bhyve/bhyve_monitor.c:51:18: error: missing initializer for field 'tv_sec' of 'const struct timespec' [-Werror=missing-field-initializers]
const struct timespec zerowait = {};
Explicitly initialize zerowait to fix the build.
Fixes build problems on x86_64-cygwin host for aarch64 target:
CC lxc/libvirt_driver_lxc_impl_la-lxc_monitor_protocol.lo
In file included from lxc/lxc_monitor_protocol.c:7:0:
lxc/lxc_monitor_protocol.h:9:21: fatal error: rpc/rpc.h: No such file or directory
CC rpc/libvirt_setuid_rpc_client_la-virnetmessage.lo
In file included from rpc/virnetmessage.h:24:0,
from rpc/virnetmessage.c:26:
rpc/virnetprotocol.h:9:21: fatal error: rpc/rpc.h: No such file or directory
CC lxc/libvirt_lxc-lxc_monitor_protocol.o
In file included from lxc/lxc_monitor_protocol.c:7:0:
lxc/lxc_monitor_protocol.h:9:21: fatal error: rpc/rpc.h: No such file or directory
Signed-off-by: Pavel Fedin <p.fedin@samsung.com>
If the firewalld backend wasn't available and libvirt decides to try
setting up a "direct" backend, it checks for the presence of iptables,
ip6tables, and ebtables. If they are not found, a message like this is logged:
error : virFirewallValidateBackend:193 : direct firewall backend
requested, but /usr/sbin/ip6tables is not available:
No such file or directory
But then at a later time if an attempt is made to use the virFirewall
API, failure will be indicated with:
error : virFirewallApply:936 : out of memory
This patch changes virFirewallApply to first check if a firewall
backend hadn't been successfully setup, and logs a slightly more
informative message in that case:
error : virFirewallApply:940 : internal error:
Failed to initialize a valid firewall backend
This resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1223876
If an SRIOV PF is offline, the kernel won't complain if you set the
mac address and vlan tag for a VF via this PF, and it will even let
you assign the VF to a guest using PCI device assignment or macvtap
passthrough. But in this case (the PF isn't online), the device won't
be usable in the guest.
Silently setting the PF online would solve the connectivity problem,
but as pointed out by Dan Berrange, when an interface is set online
with no associated config, the kernel will by default turn on IPv6
autoconf, which could create unexpected security problems for the
host. For this reason, this patch instead logs an error and fails the
operation.
This resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=893738
Originally filed against RHEL6, but present in every version of
libvirt until today.
commit ffc40b63b5 changed uniond _virNodeDevCapData into a typedef
named virNodeDevCapData with a struct that contains the union as well
as a type enum. This change necessitated changing every reference to
"caps->type" into "caps->data.type", but the author of that patch
failed to test a build "WITH_HAL". This patch fixes the one place in
the hal backend that needed changing.
Due to a kernel commit (b4b8f770e), cpuinfo format has changed on
ARMs. Firstly, 'Processor: ...' may not be reported, it's
replaced by 'model name: ...'. Secondly, the "Processor" string
may occur in CPU name, e.g. 'ARMv7 Processor rev 5 (v7l)'.
Therefore, we must firstly look for 'model name' and then for
'Processor' if not found.
Moreover, lines in the cpuinfo file are shuffled, so we better
not manipulate the pointer to start of internal buffer as we may
lost some info.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Not every chardev is plugged onto virtio-serial bus. However, the
code introduced in 89e991a2aa assumes that. Incorrectly.
With previous patches we have three options where a chardev can
be plugged: virtio-serial, USB and PCI. This commit fixes the
detach part. However, since we are not auto allocating USB
addresses yet, I'm just marking the place where appropriate code
should go.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Not every chardev is plugged onto virtio-serial bus. However, the
code introduced in 89e991a2aa assumes that. Incorrectly.
With previous patches we have three options where a chardev can
be plugged: virtio-serial, USB and PCI. This commit fixes the
attach part. However, since we are not auto allocating USB
addresses yet, I'm just marking the place where appropriate code
should go.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=998813
Implementation is pretty straight-forward. Of course, not all qemus
out there supports the device, so new capability is introduced and
checked prior each use of the device.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=998813
Like usb-serial, the pci-serial device allows a serial device to be
attached to PCI bus. An example XML looks like this:
<serial type='dev'>
<source path='/dev/ttyS2'/>
<target type='pci-serial' port='0'/>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x00' slot='0x04' function='0x0'/>
</serial>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Old compilers whine:
src/util/virutil.c: In function 'virMemoryMaxValue':
src/util/virutil.c:2612: error: declaration of 'ulong' shadows a global declaration [-Wshadow]
/usr/include/sys/types.h:151: error: shadowed declaration is here [-Wshadow]
s/ulong/capped/ to work around the problem
For setting passwords of users inside the domain.
With the VIR_DOMAIN_PASSWORD_ENCRYPTED flag set, the password
is assumed to be already encrypted by the method required
by the guest OS.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1174177
Using joinable threads does not help anything, but it can lead to memory
leaks.
When a worker thread exits, it decreases nWorkers or nPrioWorkers and
once both nWorkers and nPrioWorkers are zero (i.e., the last worker is
gone), quit_cond is signaled. When freeing the pool we first tell all
threads to die and then we are waiting for both nWorkers and
nPrioWorkers to become zero. At this point we already know all threads
are gone. So the only reason for calling virThreadJoin of all workers is
to free the memory allocated for joinable threads. If we avoid
allocating this memory, we don't need to take care of freeing it.
Moreover, any memory associated with a worker thread which died before
we asked it to die (e.g., because virCondWait failed in the thread)
would be lost anyway since virThreadPoolFree calls virThreadJoin only
for threads which were running at the time virThreadPoolFree was called.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Most virDomainDiskIndexByName callers do not care about the index; what
they really want is a disk def pointer.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Sometimes the only thing we need is the pointer to virDomainDiskDef and
having to call virDomainDiskIndexBy* APIs, storing the disk index, and
looking it up in the disks array is ugly. After this patch, we can just
call virDomainDiskBy* and get the pointer in one step.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
When starting a domain, if a domain specifies security drivers we do not have
loaded, we fail. However we don't check for this during
reconnect, so any operation relying on security driver functionality would fail.
If someone e.g. starts a domain with selinux driver loaded, then they change
the security driver to 'none' in config, restart the daemon and call dump/save/..,
QEMU will return an error.
As we shouldn't kill the domain, we should at least log an error to let the
user know that domain reconnect wasn't completely clean.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1183893
After parsing the memory device XML the function would not restore the
XML parser context causing invalid XPath starting point for the rest of
the elements. This is a regression since 3e4230d2.
The test case addition uses the <idmap> element that is currently unused
by qemu, but parsed after the memory device definition and formatted
always.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1223631
Signed-off-by: Luyao Huang <lhuang@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Krempa <pkrempa@redhat.com>
virDomainParseMemory parses the size and then rounds up while converting
it to kibibytes. Since the number is limit-checked before the rounding
it's possible to use a number that would be correctly parsed the first
time, but not the second time. For numbers not limited to 32 bit systems
the magic is 9223372036854775807 bytes. That number then can't be parsed
back in kibibytes.
To solve the issue add a second overflow check for the few values that
would cause the problem. Since virDomainParseMemory is used in config
parsing, this avoids vanishing VMs.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1221504
So far, we are not reporting if numatune was even defined. The
value of zero is blindly returned (which maps onto
VIR_DOMAIN_NUMATUNE_MEM_STRICT). Unfortunately, we are making
decisions based on this value. Instead, we should not only return
the correct value, but report to the caller if the value is valid
at all.
For better viewing of this patch use '-w'.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=976387
For a domain configured using the host cdrom, we should taint the domain
due to problems encountered when the host and guest try to control the tray.
Since af2a1f0587,
qemuDomainGetNumaParameters() returns invalid value for a running
guest. The problem is that it is getting the information from cgroups,
but the parent cgroup is being left alone since the mentioned commit.
Since the running guest's XML is in sync with cgroups, there is no need
to look into cgroups (unless someone changes the configuration behind
libvirt's back). Returning the info from the definition fixes a bug and
is also a cleanup.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1221047
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
From xl.cfg950 man page:
spiceagent_mouse=BOOLEAN
Whether SPICE agent is used for client mouse mode. The default is
true (1) (turn on)
spicevdagent=BOOLEAN
Enables spice vdagent. The Spice vdagent is an optional component for
enhancing user experience and performing guest-oriented management
tasks. Its features includes: client mouse mode (no need to grab
mouse by client, no mouse lag), automatic adjustment of screen
resolution, copy and paste (text and image) between client and domU.
It also requires vdagent service installed on domU o.s. to work.
The default is 0.
spice_clipboard_sharing=BOOLEAN
Enables Spice clipboard sharing (copy/paste). It requires spicevdagent
enabled. The default is false (0).
So if spiceagent_mouse is enabled (client mouse mode) or
spice_clipboard_sharing is enabled, spicevdagent must be enabled.
Along with this change, s/spicedvagent/spicevdagent, set
spiceagent_mouse correctly, and add a test for these spice
features.
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
The logic related to spicedisable_ticketing and spicepasswd was
inverted. As per man xl.cfg(5), 'spicedisable_ticketing = 1'
means no passwd is required. On the other hand, a passwd is
required if 'spicedisable_ticketing = 0'. Fix the logic and
produce and error if 'spicedisable_ticketing = 0' but spicepasswd
is not provided. Also fix the spice cfg test file.
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
Move formating of spice listenAddr to the section of code
where spice ports are formatted. It is more logical to
format address and ports together. Account for the change
in spice cfg test file by moving 'spicehost'.
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
Both the hal and udev drivers call virPCI*() functions to the the
SRIOV VF/PF info about PCI devices, and the UDEV backend calls
virPCI*() to get IOMMU group info. Since there is now a single
function call in node_device_linux_sysfs.c to do all of this, replace
all that code in the two backends with calls to
nodeDeviceSysfsGetPCIRelatedDevCaps().
Note that this results in the HAL driver (probably) unnecessarily
calling virPCIDevieAddressGetIOMMUGroupNum(), but in the case that the
host doesn't support IOMMU groups, that function turns into a NOP (it
returns -2, which causes the caller to skip the call to
virPCIDeviceAddressGetIOMMUGroupAddresses()). So in the worst case it
is a few extra cycles spent, and in the best case a mythical platform
that supported IOMMU groups but used HAL rather than UDEV would gain
proper reporting of IOMMU group info.
Because reloading a PF driver with a different number of VFs doesn't
result in any sort of event sent from udev to the libvirt node_device
driver, libvirt's cache of that info can be out of date when a request
arrives for the info about a device. To fix this, we refresh that data
at the time of the dumpxml request, similar to what is already done
for netdev link info and SCSI host capabilities.
Since the same is true for iommu group information (for example, some
other device in the same iommu group could have been detached from the
host), we also create a function to update the iommu group info from
sysfs, and a common function that does both. (a later patch will call
this common function from the udev and hal backends).
This resolves:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=981546
The udev and hal drivers both already call the same functions as these
new functions added to node_device_linux_sysfs.c, but 1) we need to
call them from node_device_driver.c, and 2) it would be nice to
eliminate the duplicated code from the hal and udev backends.
This file contains only a single function, detect_scsi_host_caps(),
which is declared in node_device_driver.h and called from both the hal
and udev backends. Other things common to the hal and udev drivers
can be placed in that file though. As a prelude to adding further
functions, this patch renames the existing function to something
closer in line with other internal libvirt function names
(nodeDeviceSysfsGetSCSIHostCaps()), and puts the declarations into a
separate .h file.
For some reason a union (_virNodeDevCapData) that had only been
declared inside the toplevel struct virNodeDevCapsDef was being used
as an argument to functions all over the place. Since it was only a
union, the "type" attribute wasn't necessarily sent with it. While
this works, it just seems wrong.
This patch creates a toplevel typedef for virNodeDevCapData and
virNodeDevCapDataPtr, making it a struct that has the type attribute
as a member, along with an anonymous union of everything that used to
be in union _virNodeDevCapData. This way we only have to change the
following:
s/union _virNodeDevCapData */virNodeDevCapDataPtr /
and
s/caps->type/caps->data.type/
This will make me feel less guilty when adding functions that need a
pointer to one of these.
Introduces two new -machine option parameters to the QEMU command to
enable/disable the CPACF protected key management operations for a guest:
aes-key-wrap='on|off'
dea-key-wrap='on|off'
The QEMU code maps the corresponding domain configuration elements to the
QEMU -machine option parameters to create the QEMU command:
<cipher name='aes' state='on'> --> aes-key-wrap=on
<cipher name='aes' state='off'> --> aes-key-wrap=off
<cipher name='dea' state='on'> --> dea-key-wrap=on
<cipher name='dea' state='off'> --> dea-key-wrap=off
Signed-off-by: Tony Krowiak <akrowiak@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Hansel <daniel.hansel@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Boris Fiuczynski <fiuczy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Boris Fiuczynski <fiuczy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Two new domain configuration XML elements are added to enable/disable
the protected key management operations for a guest:
<domain>
...
<keywrap>
<cipher name='aes|dea' state='on|off'/>
</keywrap>
...
</domain>
Signed-off-by: Tony Krowiak <akrowiak@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Hansel <daniel.hansel@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Boris Fiuczynski <fiuczy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Currently, the libxl driver does not support any security drivers.
When the qemu driver has no security driver configued,
nodeGetSecurityModel succeeds but returns an empty virSecurityModel
object. Do the same in the libxl driver instead of reporting
this function is not supported by the connection driver:
virNodeGetSecurityModel
We have previously effectively ignored all <controller type='ide'>
elements in a domain definition.
On the i440fx-based machinetypes there is an IDE controller that is
included in the chipset and can't be removed (which is the ide
controller with index='0'>), so it makes sense to ignore that one
controller. However, if an i440fx domain definition has a 2nd
controller, nothing catches this error (unless you also have a disk
attached to it, in which case qemu will complain that you're trying to
use the ide controller named "ide1", which doesn't exist), and if any
other type of domain has even a single controller defined, it will be
incorrectly ignored.
Ignoring a bogus controller definition isn't such a big problem, as
long as an error is logged when any disk is attached to that
non-existent controller. But in the case of q35-based machinetypes,
the hardcoded id ("alias" in libvirt terms) of its builtin SATA
controller is "ide", which happens to be the same id as the builtin
IDE controller on i440fx machinetypes. So libvirt creates a
commandline believing that it is connecting the disk to the builtin
(but actually nonexistent) IDE controller, qemu thinks that libvirt
wanted that disk connected to the builtin SATA controller, and
everybody is happy.
Until you try to connect a 2nd disk to the IDE controller. Then qemu
will complain that you're trying to set unit=1 on a controller that
requires unit=0 (SATA controllers are organized differently than IDE
controllers).
After this patch, if a domain has an IDE controller defined for a
machinetype that has no IDE controllers, libvirt will log an error
about the controller itself as it is building the qemu commandline
(rather than a (possible) error from qemu about disks attached to that
controller). This is done by adding IDE to the list of controller
types that are handled in the loop that creates controller command
strings in qemuBuildCommandline() (previously it would *always* skip
IDE controllers). Then qemuBuildControllerDevStr() is modified to log
an appropriate error in the case of IDE controllers.
In the future, if we add support for extra IDE controllers (piix3-ide
and/or piix4-ide) we can just add it into the IDE case in
qemuBuildControllerDevStr(). For now, nobody seems anxious to add
extra support for an aging and very slow controller, when there are so
many better options available.
Resolves:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1176071 (Fedora)
This makes sure that that the commandlines generated for devices and
controller devices are all using the alias that has been set in the
controller's object as the id of the controller, rather than
hardcoding a printf (or worse, encoding exceptions to the standard
${controller}${index} into the logic)
Since this "fixes" the controller name used for the sata controller,
the commandline arg for the sata controller in the sata test case had
to be adjusted to be "sata0" instead of "ahci0". All other tests
remain unchanged, verifying that the patch causes no other functional
change.
Because the function that finds a controller alias based on a device
def requires a pointer to the full domainDef in order to get the list
of controllers, the arglist of a few functions had to have this added.
There are a few extra exceptions that weren't being accounted for when
creating the alias for a controller. This resulted in 1) incorrect
status XML, and 2) exceptions/printfs of what *should* have been
directly available in the controller alias when constructing device
commandline arguments:
1) The primary (and only) IDE controller on a 440FX machinetype is
hardcoded to be "ide" in qemu.
2) The primary SATA controller on a 440FX machinetype is also
hardcoded to be "ide" in qemu.
3) On machinetypes that don't support multiple PCI buses, the PCI bus
is hardcoded in qemu to have the name "pci".
4) The first usb master controller is "usb", all others are the normal
"usb%d". (note that usb controllers that are not a "master" will have
the same index, and thus alias, as the master).
We needed to pass in the full domainDef and qemuCaps in order to
properly make the decisions about these exceptions.
Because there are multiple potential reasons for an error, this
function logs any errors before returning NULL (since the caller won't
have the information needed to determine which was the reason for
failure).
When cancelling drive mirror, always try to do that for all disks even
if it fails for some of them. Report the first error we saw.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Instead of redoing the same filtering over and over everytime we need to
walk through all disks which are being migrated.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
The APIs take the memory value in KiB and we store it in KiB
internally, but we cannot parse the whole ULONG_MAX range
on 64-bit systems, because virDomainParseScaledValue
needs to fit the value in bytes in an unsigned long long.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1176739
We don't allow it in normal code, why would it need to be in the
generated one. IT also splits the line in perl code so it's readable.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Since we don't have syntax-check for this, it has to be checked
manually. Let's hope this is the only place it happened.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
This only affected the servers that re-exec themselves, which is only
virtlockd and it didn't do any mess, so this is mostly a clenaup.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Since 'autofill'd iothreadid entries are not written during XML format
processing, it is possible that if an iothreadid in the middle of an
autofilled list would then change it's id on a subsequent restart.
Thus during the iothreadid deletion, if we determine the delete is not
the "last" thread, then clear the autofill bit for all iothreadid's
following the one being deleted (either the first or one in the middle).
This way, iothreadid's will be printed/saved.
We have a lot of passing arguments code just to pass connection
object cause it holds jobTimeout. Taking into account that
right now this value is defined at compile time let's just
get rid of it and make arguments list more clear in many
places.
In case we later need some runtime configurable timeout
value we can provide this value through arguments
function already operate such as a parallels domain
object etc as this timeouts are operation( and thus
object) specific in practice.
Signed-off-by: Nikolay Shirokovskiy <nshirokovskiy@parallels.com>
As of eeb008dbfc the variable is not used anymore. Drop it.
Signed-off-by: Wang Yufei <james.wangyufei@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Zhang Bo <oscar.zhangbo@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
In order not to bring in any link dependencies, bridge driver doesn't
use the usual stubs as other conditionally-built code does. However,
having the function as a macro imposes a problem with possibly unused
variables if just defined as "0". This was worked around by using
(dom=dom, iface=iface, 0) which should act like a 0 if used in a
condition. However, gcc still bugs about that, so I came up with
another way how to fix that.
Using static inline functions in the header won't collide with anything,
it fixes the bug and does one thing that the macro didn't do. It checks
whenther passed variables are pointers of compatible type. It has only
one downside, and that is that we need to either a) define it with
ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED, which needs an exception in cfg.mk or b) do something
like ignore_value(variable); in the function body. I went with the
first variant.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
In the XML we have the vnc port number, but QEMU takes on command line
a vnc screen number, it's port-5900. We should fail with error message
that only ports in range [5900,65535] are valid.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1164966
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
While implementing support for SPICE, I noticed VNC passwd was
never copied to libxl_device_vfb's vnc.passwd field.
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1171984https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1188463
Remove the check for the source host name for iSCSI source XML processing
declaring duplicate sources when the source device path and if present the
initiator of a proposed storage pool matches an existing storage pool.
The backend iSCSI storage driver uses 'iscsiadm --mode session' to query
available iscsid target sessions. The output displayed is the IP address
and the IQN (target path) of known targets. The displayed IP address
is a resolved address based on the session --login. Additionally, iscsid
keeps track of the various ways to define the host name (IPv4 Address,
IPv6 Address, /etc/hosts, etc.) for that IQN (see output of an 'iscsiadm
--mode node'). If an incoming IQN matches and the host name provided by
libvirt is resolved to the existing IQN, then iscsid will "reuse" the
session. Although libvirt could do the same name resolution, if there
is a difference, iscsid could still declare two seemingly different sources
to be the same and not create a new session which means libvirt now has
two storage pools looking at the same source. Thus to avoid any strange
host name resolution issues, just rely on iscsid for that and do not
allow multiple pools on the same host to use the same device path (IQN).
Only perform the port number check if the incoming definition actually
provides it. Since the port number is optional we could erroneously pass
a duplicate source host check since some storage pool backends which fill
in the default port number (e.g., iSCSI and sheepdog) for the started pool.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1220809
When cold-plugging an RNG device but something fails in
qemuDomainAssignAddresses, we will double free the RNG device.
Once a device is plugged into the domain, we should set the
device pointer to NULL to fix this issue.
...
5 0x00007fb7d180ac8a in virFree at util/viralloc.c:582
6 0x00007fb7d1895cdd in virDomainRNGDefFree at conf/domain_conf.c:19786
7 0x00007fb7d1895d99 in virDomainDeviceDefFree at conf/domain_conf.c:2022
8 0x00007fb7b92b8baf in qemuDomainAttachDeviceFlags at qemu/qemu_driver.c:8785
9 0x00007fb7d190c5d7 in virDomainAttachDeviceFlags at libvirt-domain.c:8488
10 0x00007fb7d23af9d2 in remoteDispatchDomainAttachDeviceFlags at remote_dispatch.h:2842
...
Signed-off-by: Luyao Huang <lhuang@redhat.com>
There is a lot of places, were it's pretty easy for user to enter some
characters that we need to escape to create a valid XML description.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1197580
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
The code to add device type to the commandline was identical for lsi
and other models of SCSI controllers, but was duplicated (with the
exception of a minor ordering difference of the if-else clauses) for
the two cases. This patch replaces those two with a single instance of
the code just before the if().
This patch makes qemuValideDevicePCISlotsChipsets() more consistent in
appearance by replacing several clauses of an if with the equivalent
call to qemuDomainMachineIsI440FX. The if was checking exactly the
same items, just in a slightly different order.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1220265
Passing the return value to an enum directly is not safe. Fix this by
comparing the true integer result of virTristateSwitchTypeFromString().
Signed-off-by: Luyao Huang <lhuang@redhat.com>
For some reason, we allow a bridge name with %d in it, which we replace
with an unsigned integer to form a bridge name that does not yet exist
on the host.
Do not blindly pass it to virAsprintf if it's not the only conversion,
to prevent crashing on input like:
<network>
<name>test</name>
<forward mode='none'/>
<bridge name='virbr%d%s%s%s%s%s%s%s%s%s%s%s%s%s%s%s%s'/>
</network>
Ignore any template strings that do not have exactly one %d conversion,
like we do in various drivers before calling virNetDevTapCreateInBridgePort.
Since libvirt doesn't call to update the new balloon size in qemu add
code that will handle tweaking of the size of the current balloon
statistic until qemu reports the new size using the event.
Specifying a balloon size more than the memory size of a guest isn't
something that should be rejected when parsing the XML. Truncate the
size to the maximum memory size.
Use the new domain list collection helpers to avoid going through
virDomainPtrs.
This additionally implements filter capability when called through the
api that accepts domain list filters.
Until now the virDomainListAllDomains API would lock the domain list and
then every single domain object to access and filter it. This would
potentially allow a unresponsive VM to block the whole daemon if a
*listAllDomains call would get stuck.
To avoid this problem this patch collects a list of referenced domain
objects first from the list and then unlocks it right away. The
expensive operation requiring locking of the domain object is executed
after the list lock is dropped. While a single blocked domain will still
lock up a listAllDomains call, the domain list won't be held locked and
thus other APIs won't be blocked.
Additionally this patch also fixes the lookup code, where we'd ignore
the vm->removing flag and thus potentially return domain objects that
would be deleted very soon so calling any API wouldn't make sense.
As other clients also could benefit from operating on a list of domain
objects rather than the public domain descriptors a new intermediate
API - virDomainObjListCollect - is introduced by this patch.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1181074
Extend it to a universal helper used for clearing lists of any objects.
Note that the argument type is specifically void * to allow implicit
typecasting.
Additionally add a helper that works on non-NULL terminated arrays once
we know the length.
My commit 747761a79 (v1.2.15 only) dropped this bit of logic when filling
in a default arch in the XML:
- /* First try to find one matching host arch */
- for (i = 0; i < caps->nguests; i++) {
- if (caps->guests[i]->ostype == ostype) {
- for (j = 0; j < caps->guests[i]->arch.ndomains; j++) {
- if (caps->guests[i]->arch.domains[j]->type == domain &&
- caps->guests[i]->arch.id == caps->host.arch)
- return caps->guests[i]->arch.id;
- }
- }
- }
That attempt to match host.arch is important, otherwise we end up
defaulting to i686 on x86_64 host for KVM, which is not intended.
Duplicate it in the centralized CapsLookup function.
Additionally add some testcases that would have caught this.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1219191
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=890648
So, imagine you've issued an API that involves guest agent. For
instance, you want to query guest's IP addresses. So the API acquires
QUERY_JOB, locks the guest agent and issues the agent command.
However, for some reason, guest agent replies to initial ping
correctly, but then crashes tragically while executing real command
(in this case guest-network-get-interfaces). Since initial ping went
well, libvirt thinks guest agent is accessible and awaits reply to the
real command. But it will never come. What will is a monitor event.
Our handler (processSerialChangedEvent) will try to acquire
MODIFY_JOB, which will fail obviously because the other thread that's
executing the API already holds a job. So the event handler exits
early, and the QUERY_JOB is never released nor ended.
The way how to solve this is to put flag somewhere in the monitor
internals. The flag is called @running and agent commands are issued
iff the flag is set. The flag itself is set when we connect to the
agent socket. And unset whenever we see DISCONNECT event from the
agent. Moreover, we must wake up all the threads waiting for the
agent. This is done by signalizing the condition they're waiting on.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Running shutdown with mode agent on a shutoff domain gives cryptic
error message:
virsh # shutdown --mode agent gentoo
error: Failed to shutdown domain gentoo
error: Guest agent is not responding: QEMU guest agent is not connected
After this patch, the error is more clear:
virsh # shutdown --mode agent gentoo
error: Failed to shutdown domain gentoo
error: Requested operation is not valid: domain is not running
Reported-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Upping an interface for no reason and not configuring it is a cardinal sin.
With the default addrgenmode if eui64 it sticks a link-local address to the
interface. That is not good, as NetworkManager would see an address configured,
assume the interface is already configured and won't touch it iself and the
interface might stay unconfigured until the end of the days.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1124721
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Allow ccw devices to be used with multiqueues. ccw provides a one to
one relation of fds to queues and does not support the vectors option.
Signed-off-by: Boris Fiuczynski <fiuczy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthew Rosato <mjrosato@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Hansel <daniel.hansel@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Cornelia Huck <cornelia.huck@de.ibm.com>
Coverity points out that qemuMonitorGetAllBlockStatsInfo could return a
-1 and thus not fill in 'stats' (leaving it NULL). Then the call to
qemuMonitorBlockStatsUpdateCapacity will dereference it.
Coverity complains over the [n]values pairing in virQEMUCapsFreeStringList
and rather than make a bunch if "if values" checks prior to calling, by
just adding the values check inside the free function we avoid the chance
that somehow nvalues is > 0, while values == NULL
Coverity points out it was possible to have a zero return from
qemuBuildRNGBackendProps thus not filling in 'props' and then
causing a NULL dereference on the next call.
Coverity found that xenXMConfigCacheAddFile has an error path in which
no error message and a -1 was not returned which could have resulted in
a NULL dereference in a VIR_DEBUG statement and of course an erroneous
0 value returned!
Coverity notes that ->ifname is used after the VIR_FREE done in the
code path after the call to virNetDevMacVLanDeleteWithVPortProfile
by a call to virNetDevOpenvswitchRemovePort.
Since the ->ifname will be VIR_FREE()'d eventually in virDomainNetDefFree
just remove the extraneous VIR_FREE here.
When originally added, the Openvswitch code wasn't present and checks
were made for non NULL prior to use.
Coverity complains that in the error paths both the < 0 condition and
the success path after the qemuDomainObjExitMonitor failure will end
up going to cleanup. So just use ignore_value in this error path to
resolve the complaint.
If the virStringSearch() returns a 0 (zero), then each of the uses
of the call will just jump to cleanup forgetting to free the returned
empty list. Expand the scope a bit of each use and free at cleanup.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1176020
We had a check for the vcpu count total number in <numa>
before, however this check is not good enough. There are
some examples:
1. one of cpu id is out of maxvcpus, can set success(cpu count = 5 < 10):
<vcpu placement='static'>10</vcpu>
<cell id='0' cpus='0-3,100' memory='512000' unit='KiB'/>
2. use the same cpu in 2 cell, can set success(cpu count = 8 < 10):
<vcpu placement='static'>10</vcpu>
<cell id='0' cpus='0-3' memory='512000' unit='KiB'/>
<cell id='1' cpus='0-3' memory='512000' unit='KiB'/>
3. use the same cpu in 2 cell, cannot set success(cpu count = 11 > 10):
<vcpu placement='static'>10</vcpu>
<cell id='0' cpus='0-6' memory='512000' unit='KiB'/>
<cell id='1' cpus='0-3' memory='512000' unit='KiB'/>
Add a check for numa cpus, check if duplicate use one cpu in more
than one cell.
Signed-off-by: Luyao Huang <lhuang@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The only version that's supported in QEMU is version 2, currently.
Fortunately, it is enabled by aarch64 automatically, so there's
nothing for us that needs to be put onto command line.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Some platforms, like aarch64, don't have APIC but GIC. So there's
no reason to have <apic/> feature turned on. However, we are
still missing <gic/> feature. This commit introduces the feature
to XML parser and formatter, adds documentation and updates RNG
schema.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
When migrating a domain while changing its name and using
VIR_MIGRATE_PERSIST_DEST flag, libvirt would fail to properly change the
name in the persistent definition. The inconsistency results in weird
behavior when dumping domain XML, destroying the domain, restarting
libvirtd and likely in several other situations.
Since the new name is already stored in vm->def->name, we just need to
make sure the persistent definition uses this new name too.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1076354
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Currently we try to chown any directory passed to virDirCreate,
even if the user didn't request any explicit owner/group via the
pool/vol XML.
This causes issues with qemu:///session: try to build a pool of
a root owned directory like /tmp, and it fails trying to chown the
directory to the session user. Instead it should just leave things
as they are, unless the user requests changing permissions via
the pool XML.
Similarly this is annoying if creating a storage pool via system
libvirtd of an existing directory in user $HOME, it's now owned
by root.
The virDirCreate function is pretty convoluted, since it needs to
fork off in certain specific cases. Try to document that, to make
it clear where exactly we are changing behavior.
The current code attempts to handle this, but it only catches mkdir
failing with EEXIST. However if say trying to build /tmp for an
unprivileged qemu:///session, mkdir will fail with EPERM.
Rather than catch any errors, just don't attempt mkdir if the directory
already exists.
Set the capability based on qmp query, or qemu version. The qmp query
includes vmport with 2.2, but no longer with 2.3. It lists only
non-machine specific capabilities, so check the qemu version too until a
machine-specific query is supported.
Now that we have macros for exclusive flags and flag requirements we can
use them to cleanup the code for setvcpus and error out for all wrong
flag combination.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
Inspired by commit 7e437ee7 that introduced similar macros for virsh
commands so we don't have to repeat the same code all over.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
Found by Laine and discussed a bit on internal IRC.
Commit id c56fe7f1d6 added support for creating a command line to support
scsi-disk.channel.
Series was here:
http://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2012-February/msg01052.html
Which pointed to a design proposal here:
http://permalink.gmane.org/gmane.comp.emulators.libvirt/50428
Which states (in part):
Libvirt should check for the QEMU "scsi-disk.channel" property. If it
is unavailable, QEMU will only support channel=lun=0 and 0<=target<=7.
However, the check added was ensuring that bus != lun *and* bus != 0. So
if bus == lun and both were non zero, we'd never make the second check.
Changing this to an *or* check fixes the check, but still is less readable
than the just checking each for 0
Since the qemu capabilities are not initialized for offline VMs the
caller might get suboptimal error message:
$ virsh blockjob VM PATH --bandwidth 1
error: unsupported configuration: block jobs not supported with this QEMU binary
Move the checks after we make sure that the VM is alive.
Just as we allow stopping filesystem pools when they were unmounted
externally, do not fail to stop an iscsi pool when someone else
closed the session externally.
Reported at:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1171984
The phyp driver stuffed it into a DomainDefPtr during its attachdevice
routine, but the value is never advertised via capabilities so it should
be safe to drop.
Have the phyp driver use OSTYPE_LINUX, which is what it advertises via
capabilities.
In qemuMigrationDriveMirror we can start all disk mirrors in parallel.
We wait until they are all ready, or one of them aborts.
In qemuMigrationCancelDriveMirror, we wait until all mirrors are
properly stopped. This is necessary to ensure that destination VM is
fully in sync with the (paused) source VM.
If a drive mirror can not be cancelled, then the destination is not in a
consistent state. In this case it is not safe to continue with the
migration.
Signed-off-by: Michael Chapman <mike@very.puzzling.org>
The !modern code path needs to call qemuBlockJobEventProcess directly.
the modern code path will call it via qemuBlockJobSyncWait.
Signed-off-by: Michael Chapman <mike@very.puzzling.org>
Other threads may be blocked in qemuBlockJobSyncWait. Ensure that
they're woken up when the domain is stopped.
Signed-off-by: Michael Chapman <mike@very.puzzling.org>
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>
We will want to use synchronous block jobs from qemu_migration as well,
so split this function out into a new source file.
Signed-off-by: Michael Chapman <mike@very.puzzling.org>
The documentation states that for shallow block copy the image has to
have the same guest visible content as backing file of the current
image if the file is being reused. This condition can be achieved also
with a raw file (or a qcow without a backing file) so remove the
condition that would disallow it.
(This patch additionally fixes crash described in
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1215569 )
It would be used in qemumonitorjsontest, thus we make it non-static.
Signed-off-by: Zhang Bo <oscar.zhangbo@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Zhou Yimin <zhouyimin@huawei.com>
Trying to use qemu:///session to create a storage pool pointing at
/tmp will usually fail with something like:
$ virsh pool-start tmp
error: Failed to start pool tmp
error: cannot open volume '/tmp/systemd-private-c38cf0418d7a4734a66a8175996c384f-colord.service-kEyiTA': Permission denied
If any volume in an FS pool can't be opened by the daemon, the refresh
fails, and the pool can't be used.
This causes pain for virt-install/virt-manager though. Imaging a user
downloads a disk image to /tmp. virt-manager wants to import /tmp as
a storage pool, so we can detect what disk format it is, and set the
XML correctly. However this case will likely fail as explained above.
Change the logic here to skip volumes that fail to open. This could
conceivably cause user complaints along the lines of 'why doesn't
libvirt show $ROOT-OWNED-VOLUME-FOO', but figuring that currently
the pool won't even startup, I don't think there are any current
users that care about that case.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1103308
If you end up with a state file for a pool that no longer starts up
or refreshes correctly, the state file is never removed and adds
noise to the logs everytime libvirtd is started.
If the initial state syncing fails, delete the statefile.
After pool startup we call refreshPool(). If that fails, we leave
a stale pool state file hanging around.
Hit this trying to create a pool with qemu:///session containing
root owned files.
If we received zero iothreads from the monitor, but were perhaps
expecting to receive something, then the code was skipping the check
to ensure what's in the monitor matches our expectations. So invert
the checks to check that what we get back matches expectations and
then check there are zero iothreads returned.
Rather than have a separate routine to parse the alias of an iothread
returned from qemu in order to get the iothread_id value, parse the alias
when returning and just return the iothread_id in qemuMonitorIOThreadInfoPtr
This set of patches removes the function, changes the "char *name" to
"unsigned int" and handles all the fallout.
Build with clang fails with:
CC conf/libvirt_conf_la-domain_conf.lo
conf/domain_conf.c:13377:9: error: variable 'cpumask' is used
uninitialized whenever 'if' condition is true
[-Werror,-Wsometimes-uninitialized]
if (!(tmp = virXMLPropString(node, "cpuset"))) {
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
and many other similar errors regarding the 'cpuset' variable.
Fix by explicitly initializing it with NULL.
If someone has updated a network to change its bridge name, but the
network is still active (so that bridge name hasn't taken effect yet),
we still want to disallow another network from taking that new name.
Since some people use the same naming convention as libvirt for bridge
devices they create outside the context of libvirt, it is much nicer
if we check for those devices when looking for a bridge device name to
auto-assign to a new network.
We already check that any auto-assigned bridge device name for a
virtual network (e.g. "virbr1") doesn't conflict with the bridge name
for any existing libvirt network (via virNetworkSetBridgeName() in
conf/network_conf.c).
We also want to check that the name doesn't conflict with any bridge
device created on the host system outside the control of libvirt
(history: possibly due to the ploriferation of references to libvirt's
bridge devices in HOWTO documents all around the web, it is not
uncommon for an admin to manually create a bridge in their host's
system network config and name it "virbrX"). To add such a check to
virNetworkBridgeInUse() (which is called by virNetworkSetBridgeName())
we would have to call virNetDevExists() (from util/virnetdev.c); this
function calls ioctl(SIOCGIFFLAGS), which everyone on the mailing list
agreed should not be done from an XML parsing function in the conf
directory.
To remedy that problem, this patch removes virNetworkSetBridgeName()
from conf/network_conf.c and puts an identically functioning
networkBridgeNameValidate() in network/bridge_driver.c (because it's
reasonable for the bridge driver to call virNetDevExists(), although
we don't do that yet because I wanted this patch to have as close to 0
effect on function as possible).
There are a couple of inevitable changes though:
1) We no longer check the bridge name during
virNetworkLoadConfig(). Close examination of the code shows that
this wasn't necessary anyway - the only *correct* way to get XML
into the config files is via networkDefine(), and networkDefine()
will always call networkValidate(), which previously called
virNetworkSetBridgeName() (and now calls
networkBridgeNameValidate()). This means that the only way the
bridge name can be unset during virNetworkLoadConfig() is if
someone edited the config file on disk by hand (which we explicitly
prohibit).
2) Just on the off chance that somebody *has* edited the file by hand,
rather than crashing when they try to start their malformed
network, a check for non-NULL bridge name has been added to
networkStartNetworkVirtual().
(For those wondering why I don't instead call
networkValidateBridgeName() there to set a bridge name if one
wasn't present - the problem is that during
networkStartNetworkVirtual(), the lock for the network being
started has already been acquired, but the lock for the network
list itself *has not* (because we aren't adding/removing a
network). But virNetworkBridgeInuse() iterates through *all*
networks (including this one) and locks each network as it is
checked for a duplicate entry; it is necessary to lock each network
even before checking if it is the designated "skip" network because
otherwise some other thread might acquire the list lock and delete
the very entry we're examining. In the end, permitting a setting of
the bridge name during network start would require that we lock the
entire network list during any networkStartNetwork(), which
eliminates a *lot* of parallelism that we've worked so hard to
achieve (it can make a huge difference during libvirtd startup). So
rather than try to adjust for someone playing against the rules, I
choose to instead give them the error they deserve.)
3) virNetworkAllocateBridge() (now removed) would leak any "template"
string set as the bridge name. Its replacement
networkFindUnusedBridgeName() doesn't leak the template string - it
is properly freed.
Coverity notes that the switch() used to check 'connected' values has
two DEADCODE paths (_DEFAULT & _LAST). Since 'connected' is a boolean
it can only be one or the other (CONNECTED or DISCONNECTED), so it just
seems pointless to use a switch to get "all" values. Convert to if-else
Add qemuDomainAddIOThread and qemuDomainDelIOThread in order to add or
remove an IOThread to/from the host either for live or config optoins
The implementation for the 'live' option will use the iothreadpids list
in order to make decision, while the 'config' option will use the
iothreadids list. Additionally, for deletion each may have to adjust
the iothreadpin list.
IOThreads are implemented by qmp objects, the code makes use of the existing
qemuMonitorAddObject or qemuMonitorDelObject APIs.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
We're about to allow IOThreads to be deleted, but an iothreadid may be
included in some domain thread sched, so add a new API to allow removing
an iothread from some entry.
Then during the writing of the threadsched data and an additional check
to determine whether the bitmap is all clear before writing it out.
With iothreadid's allowing any 'id' value for an iothread_id, the
iothreadsched code needs a slight adjustment to allow for "any"
unsigned int value in order to create the bitmap of ids that will
have scheduler adjustments. Adjusted the doc description as well.
Remove the iothreadspin array from cputune and replace with a cpumask
to be stored in the iothreadids list.
Adjust the test output because our printing goes in order of the iothreadids
list now.
Since it's only ever referenced in domain_conf.c, make the function
static, but also will need to move it to somewhere before it's referenced
rather than forward referencing it.
Add 'thread_id' to the virDomainIOThreadIDDef as a means to store the
'thread_id' as returned from the live qemu monitor data.
Remove the iothreadpids list from _qemuDomainObjPrivate and replace with
the new iothreadids 'thread_id' element.
Rather than use the default numbering scheme of 1..number of iothreads
defined for the domain, use the iothreadid's list for the iothread_id
Since iothreadids list keeps track of the iothread_id's, these are
now used in place of the many places where a for loop would "know"
that the ID was "+ 1" from the array element.
The new tests ensure usage of the <iothreadid> values for an exact number
of iothreads and the usage of a smaller number of <iothreadid> values than
iothreads that exist (and usage of the default numbering scheme).
Adding a new XML element 'iothreadids' in order to allow defining
specific IOThread ID's rather than relying on the algorithm to assign
IOThread ID's starting at 1 and incrementing to iothreads count.
This will allow future patches to be able to add new IOThreads by
a specific iothread_id and of course delete any exisiting IOThread.
Each iothreadids element will have 'n' <iothread> children elements
which will have attribute "id". The "id" will allow for definition
of any "valid" (eg > 0) iothread_id value.
On input, if any <iothreadids> <iothread>'s are provided, they will
be marked so that we only print out what we read in.
On input, if no <iothreadids> are provided, the PostParse code will
self generate a list of ID's starting at 1 and going to the number
of iothreads defined for the domain (just like the current algorithm
numbering scheme). A future patch will rework the existing algorithm
to make use of the iothreadids list.
On output, only print out the <iothreadids> if they were read in.
In a lot places we use path like this:
$(srcdir)/../src/....
when in fact it can be:
$(top_srcdir)/src/
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The lookup is just for check whether a domain we are about to add does
not already exists. Well, the virDomainObjListAdd() function does that
for us already so there's no need to duplicate the check.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
use virNetworkRouteDefFree() instead of VIR_FREE to free routes, otherwise
the element 'family' would not be freed.
Signed-off-by: Zhang Bo <oscar.zhangbo@huawei.com>
use cleanup instead of error, so that the allocated strings could also get freed
when there's no error.
Signed-off-by: Zhang Bo <oscar.zhangbo@huawei.com>
virBufferContentAndReset() doesn't free buf contents, we should use
virBufferFreeAndReset() to get buf freed.
Signed-off-by: Zhang Bo <oscar.zhangbo@huawei.com>
If a user hot-attaches the guest agent channel libvirt would ignore it
until the restart of libvirtd or shutdown/destroy and start of the VM
itself.
This patch adds code that opens or closes the guest agent connection
according to the state of the guest agent channel according to
connect/disconnect events.
To allow opening the channel from the event handler qemuConnectAgent
needed to be exported.
When the guest agent channel gets hotplugged to a VM, libvirt would
still report that "QEMU guest agent is not configured" rather than
stating that the connection was not established yet.
Currently the code won't be able to connect to the agent after hotplug
but that will change in a later patch.
As the qemuFindAgentConfig() helper is quite helpful in this case move
it to a more usable place and export it.
Rearrange code so that the local variable is always initialized and
disposed.
Signed-off-by: Olaf Hering <olaf@aepfle.de>
Cc: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
Commit bf32462b missed initializing sdl.opengl. Without the
initialization, libvirtd will be terminated by an assert from libxl:
Assertion `!libxl_defbool_is_default(db)' failed.
Reported-by: Olaf Hering <olaf@aepfle.de>
If the domU configu has sdl enabled libvirtd crashes:
libvirtd[5158]: libvirtd: libxl.c:343: libxl_defbool_val:
Assertion `!libxl_defbool_is_default(db)' failed.
Initialize the relevant defbool variables in libxl_device_vfb.
Signed-off-by: Olaf Hering <olaf@aepfle.de>
Cc: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
Since net->model is not defined for containers we shouldn't touch it.
In case network adapter model is defined, a warning about ignoring
it is shown.
Signed-off-by: Maxim Nestratov <mnestratov@parallels.com>
Fix for such a case:
1. Domain A and B xml contain the same SRIOV net hostdev(<interface
type='hostdev' /> with same pci address).
2. virsh start A (Successfully, and configure the SRIOV net with
custom mac)
3. virsh start B (Fail because of the hostdev used by domain A or other
reason.)
In step 3, 'virHostdevNetConfigRestore' is called for the hostdev
which is still used by domain A. It makes the mac/vlan of the SRIOV net
change.
Code Change in this fix:
1. As the pci used by other domain have been removed from
'pcidevs' in previous loop, we only restore the nic config for
the hostdev still in 'pcidevs'(used by this domain)
2. update the comments to make it more clear
Signed-off-by: Huanle Han <hanxueluo@gmail.com>
Refactor some code to create a static function virHostdevIsPCINetDevice
which will detect whether the hostdev is a pci net device or not.
Signed-off-by: Huanle Han <hanxueluo@gmail.com>
virDomainGetJobStats is able to report statistics of a completed
migration, however to get usable downtime and total time statistics both
hosts have to keep synchronized time. To provide at least some
estimation of the times even when NTP daemons are not running on both
hosts we can just ignore the time needed to transfer a migration cookie
to the destination host. The result will be also inaccurate but a bit
more predictable. The total/down time will just be at least what we
report.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1213434
Commit 1268820a removed obsolete index() function and replaced it by
strchr. Few versions of gcc has a bug and reports a warning about
strchr:
../../src/util/virstring.c:1006: error: logical '&&' with non-zero
constant will always evaluate as true [-Wlogical-op]
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
ListFindByID() still requires to step through items in the hash table
(in the worst case scenario through all of them), lock each one and
compare whether we've found what we're looking for. This is suboptimal
as locking a domain object means we need to wait for the current API
running over the object to finish.
Unfortunately, we can't drop the function completely because we have
this public API virDomainLookupByID which we can't drop.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
This hash table will contain the same data as already existing one.
The only difference is that while the first table uses domain uuid as
key, the new table uses domain name. This will allow much faster (and
lockless) lookups by domain name.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Every domain that grabs a domain object to work over should
reference it to make sure it won't disappear meanwhile.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
This is basically turning qemuDomObjEndAPI into a more general
function. Other drivers which gets a reference to domain objects may
benefit from this function too.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Since we haven't implemented balloon parameters tuning
we can just return amount of memory in this function.
Signed-off-by: Dmitry Guryanov <dguryanov@parallels.com>
Commit 2a530a3e5 is not portable to mingw, which intentionally
avoids declaring the obsolete index(). See also:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1214605
* src/util/virstring.c (virStringStripControlChars): Use strchr.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
CT stands for containers, i.e. def->os.type should be compared with VIR_DOMAIN_OSTYPE_EXE
rather than VIR_DOMAIN_OSTYPE_HVM
Signed-off-by: Maxim Nestratov <mnestratov@parallels.com>
Instead of each API copying the same lines of code, lets use the
generic function designed just for that purpose.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Instead of each API copying the same lines of code, lets use the
generic function designed just for that purpose. At the same time,
drop useless connection object locking in some functions.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
This function is practically copied over from qemu driver. Its
only purpose in life is to lookup a domain object and print an
error if no object is found.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The pointer does not change throughout the while life of a
parallels connection. Mark it as such.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
just as what b8e25c35d7 did, we
fall back to the ACPI method when the guest agent is unresponsive
in qemuDomainReboot().
Signed-off-by: YueWenyuan <yuewenyuan@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Zhang Bo <oscar.zhangbo@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Some hypervisors like Xen do not have PIDs associated with domains.
Relax the requirement for PID != 0 in the locking code so it can
be used by hypervisors that do not represent domains as a process
running on the host.
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
When running on FreeBSD, there's a bug in virCommandProcessIO
polling that is triggered by the commandtest.
A test that triggers EPIPE in commandtest (named "test20") hungs
forever on FreeBSD.
Apparently, this happens because FreeBSD sets POLLHUP flag on revents
when stdin in closed. And as the current implementation only checks for
POLLOUT and POLLERR, it ends up looping forever inside
virCommandProcessIO and not trying to do one more write() that would
trigger EPIPE.
To fix that check for the POLLHUP flag along with POLLOUT and POLLERR.
When a user would specify a backing chain index that is above the start
point libvirt would report a rather unhelpful error:
invalid argument: could not find backing store 1 in chain for 'sub/link2'
This patch adds an explicit check that the index is below start point in
the backing store and reports the following error if not:
invalid argument: requested backing store index 1 is above 'sub/../qcow2' in chain for 'sub/link2'
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1177062
Some storage protocols allow to have the @path field in struct
virStorageSource set to NULL. Add NULLSTR() wrappers to handle this
possibility until I finish the storage source error formatter.
Build fails on non-Linux systems with this error:
CC util/libvirt_util_la-virnetdev.lo
util/virnetdev.c:364:1: error: unused function 'virNetDevReplaceMacAddress' [-Werror,-Wunused-function]
virNetDevReplaceMacAddress(const char *linkdev,
^
util/virnetdev.c:406:1: error: unused function 'virNetDevRestoreMacAddress' [-Werror,-Wunused-function]
virNetDevRestoreMacAddress(const char *linkdev,
^
2 errors generated.
The virNetDev{Restore,Replace}MacAddress() functions are only used
by VF-related routines that are available on Linux only. So move these
functions under the same #ifdef.
Because packets going through the egress from a bridge (where our
bandwidth limiting takes place) have no information about which
interface they came from, the QoS rules that we create instead
use the source MAC address of the packets to make their decisions
about which QDisc the packet should be in.
One flaw in this is that when a guest changed the MAC address it
used, packets from the guest would no longer be put into the
correct QDisc, but would instead be put in an "unprivileged"
class, resulting in the bandwidth "floor" (minimum guaranteed)
being no longer honored.
Now that libvirt has infrastructure to capture and respond to
RX_FILTER_CHANGE events from qemu (sent whenever a guest
interface modifies its MAC address, among other things), we can
notice when a guest MAC address changes, and update the QoS rules
accordingly, so that bandwidth floor is honored even after a
guest MAC address change.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
In one of my previous patches (b68a56bcfe) I made class_id to
format more frequently. Well, now it's formatting way too
frequent - even for regular active XML. Users don't need to see
it, so lets format it only for the status XML where it's really
needed.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
qemuDomainSetMemoryFlags() would allow to set the initial memory greater
than the <maxMemory> field. While the configuration would not work as
memory hotplug requires NUMA to be enabled and the
qemuDomainSetMemoryFlags() API does not work on NUMA guests this just
fixes a corner case.
The fix is still worth though as it allows to induce an invalid
configuration and make the VM vanish on libvirt restart.
Additionally this tweaks error message to be more accurate.
Signed-off-by: Luyao Huang <lhuang@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Krempa <pkrempa@redhat.com>
Introduce libxl.conf configuration file, adding the 'autoballoon'
setting as the first knob for controlling the libxl driver.
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
A further fix for:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1113474
Since there is no possibility that any type of macvtap will work if
the parent physdev it's attached to is offline, we should bring the
physdev online at the same time as the macvtap. When taking the
macvtap offline, it's also necessary to take the physdev offline for
macvtap passthrough mode (because the physdev has the same MAC address
as the macvtap device, so could potentially cause problems with
misdirected packets during migration, as outlined in commits 829770
and 879c13). We can't set the physdev offline for other macvtap modes
1) because there may be other macvtap devices attached to the same
physdev (and/or the host itself may be using the device) in the other
modes whereas passthrough mode is exclusive to one macvtap at a time,
and 2) there's no practical reason to do so anyway.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1113474
When we set the MAC address of a network device as a part of setting
up macvtap "passthrough" mode (where the domain has an emulated netdev
connected to a host macvtap device that has exclusive use of the
physical device, and sets the device MAC address to match its own,
i.e. "<interface type='direct'> <source mode='passthrough' .../>"), we
use ioctl(SIOCSIFHWADDR) giving it the name of that device. This is
true even if it is an SRIOV Virtual Function (VF).
But, when we are setting the MAC address / vlan ID of a VF in
preparation for "hostdev network" passthrough (this is where we set
the MAC address and vlan id of the VF after detaching the host net
driver and before assigning the device to the domain with PCI
passthrough, i.e. "<interface type='hostdev'>", we do the setting via
a netlink RTM_SETLINK message for that VF's Physical Function (PF),
telling it the VF# we want to change. This sets an "administratively
changed MAC" flag for that VF in the PF's driver, and from that point
on (until the PF driver is reloaded, *not* merely the VF driver) that
VF's MAC address can't be changed using ioctl(SIOCSIFHWADDR) - the
only way to change it is via the PF with RTM_SETLINK.
This means that if a VF is used for hostdev passthrough, it will have
the admin flag set, and future attempts to use that VF for macvtap
passthrough will fail.
The solution to this problem is to check if the device being used for
macvtap passthrough is actually a VF; if so, we use the netlink
RTM_SETLINK message to the PF to set the VF's mac address instead of
ioctl(SIOCSIFHWADDR) directly to the VF; if not, behavior does not
change from previously.
There are three pieces to making this work:
1) virNetDevMacVLan(Create|Delete)WithVPortProfile() now call
virNetDev(Replace|Restore)NetConfig() rather than
virNetDev(Replace|Restore)MacAddress() (simply passing -1 for VF#
and vlanid).
2) virNetDev(Replace|Restore)NetConfig() check to see if the device is
a VF. If so, they find the PF's name and VF#, allowing them to call
virNetDev(Replace|Restore)VfConfig().
3) To prevent mixups when detaching a macvtap passthrough device that
had been attached while running an older version of libvirt,
virNetDevRestoreVfConfig() is potentially given the preserved name
of the VF, and if the proper statefile for a VF can't be found in
the stateDir (${stateDir}/${pfname}_vf${vfid}),
virNetDevRestoreMacAddress() is called instead (which will look in
the file named ${stateDir}/${vfname}).
This problem has existed in every version of libvirt that has both
macvtap passthrough and interface type='hostdev'. Fortunately people
seem to use one or the other though, so it hasn't caused any real
world problem reports.
- Remove all qemu emulators
- Restart libvirtd
- Install qemu emulators
- Call 'virsh version' -> errors
The only thing that will force the qemu driver to refresh it's cached
capablities info is an explict API call to GetCapabilities.
However in the case when the initial caps lookup at driver connect didn't
find a single qemu emulator to poll, the driver is effectively useless
and really can't do anything until it's populated some qemu capabilities
info.
With the above steps, the user would have to either know about the
magic refresh capabilities call, or restart libvirtd to pick up the
changes.
Instead, this patch changes things so that every time a part of th
driver requests access to capabilities info, check to see if
we've previously seen any emulators. If not, force a refresh.
In the case of 'still no emulators found', this is still very quick, so
I can't think of a downside.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1000116
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1171933
Adjust the processLU error returns to be a bit more logical. Currently,
the calling code cannot determine the difference between a non disk/lun
volume and a processed/found disk/lun. It can also not differentiate
between perhaps real/fatal error and one that won't necessarily stop
the code from finding other volumes.
After this patch virStorageBackendSCSIFindLUsInternal will stop processing
as soon as a "fatal" message occurs rather than continuting processing
for no apparent reason. It will also only set the *found value when
at least one of the processLU's was successful.
With the failed return, if the reason for the stop was that the pool
target path did not exist, was /dev, was /dev/, or did not start with
/dev, then iSCSI pool startup and refresh will fail.
Rather than passing/returning a pointer to a boolean to indicate that
perhaps we should try again - adjust the return of the call to return
the count of LU's found during processing, then let the caller decide
what to do with that value.
Use virStorageBackendPoolUseDevPath API to determine whether creation of
stable target path is possible for the volume.
This will differentiate a failed virStorageBackendStablePath which won't
need to be fatal. Thus, we'll add a -2 return value to differentiate that
the failure was a result of either the inability to find the symlink for
the device or failure to open the target path directory
For virStorageBackendStablePath, in order to make decisions in other code
split out the checks regarding whether the pool's target is empty, using /dev,
using /dev/, or doesn't start with /dev
Commit 70f446631f (from 2008) introduced
some functions for testing whether xend was returning correct sound
models. Those functions have long gone, but the function prototypes
remain. This commit removes the unused prototypes.
Signed-off-by: Richard W.M. Jones <rjones@redhat.com>
This needs to specified in way too many places for a simple validation
check. The ostype/arch/virttype validation checks later in
DomainDefParseXML should catch most of the cases that this was covering.
This revealed that GuestDefaultEmulator was a bit buggy, capable
of returning an emulator that didn't match the passed domain type. Fix
up the test suite input to continue to pass.
This is a helper function to look up all capabilities data for all
the OS bits that are relevant to <domain>. This is
- os type
- arch
- domain type
- emulator
- machine type
This will be used to replace several functions in later commits.
But the internal API stays the same, and we just convert the value as
needed. Not useful yet, but this is the beginning step of using an enum
for ostype throughout the code.
When parsing XML, we validate the passed ostype + arch combo against
the detected hypervisor capabilities. This has led to the following
problem:
- Define x86 qemu guest
- qemu is inadvertently removed from the host
- libvirtd is restarted. fails to parse VM config since arch is removed
- 'virsh list --all' is now empty, user is wondering where their VMs went
Add a new internal flag VIR_DOMAIN_DEF_PARSE_SKIP_OSTYPE_CHECKS. Use
it when loading VM and snapshot configs from disk.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1043572
If no <os><type> was specified:
before: unknown OS type no OS type
after : xml error: an os <type> must be specified
If an <os><type> is specified that's not in our capabiliities data:
before: unknown OS type: $type
after : unsupported configuration: no support found for os <type> '$type'
VIR_ERR_OS_TYPE is now unused (as it should be frankly) so drop its strings
as well to save our translators some effort.
In Parallels we do not support device name hints
aka <target dev=../> option and full-fledged device
disk device addressing through
<address type=.. controller=.. bus=.. target=.. unit=../>
and have only one index instead.
In this situation to be consistent we can only take
one-to-one mapping from some reasonable subset
of full address. Values outside this subset are
invalid to create Parallels VMs.
Reasonable mapping is default one defined in virDomainDiskDefAssignAddress.
Signed-off-by: Nikolay Shirokovskiy <nshirokovskiy@parallels.com>
We should return VIR_DRV_OPEN_ERROR in case
if we handle scheme in query but some
error occur. Previously we sometimes
return VIR_DRV_OPEN_DECLINE.
Signed-off-by: Nikolay Shirokovskiy <nshirokovskiy@parallels.com>
# virsh -c lxc:/// start helloworld
error: Failed to start domain helloworld
error: internal error: guest failed to start: Unknown
failure in libvirt_lxc startup
Return success when there are no cpuset.mems to be set,
instead of failing without setting an error.
Signed-off-by: Ján Tomko <jtomko@redhat.com>
# virsh -c lxc:/// start helloworld
error: Failed to start domain helloworld
error: internal error: guest failed to start: Invalid value '1-3'
for 'cpuset.mems': Invalid argument
Free the cpu mask to avoid reusing it as a mem mask
in virCgroupSetCpusetMems
if virDomainNumatuneMaybeFormatNodeset does not set a mask.
Signed-off-by: Luyao Huang <lhuang@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Ján Tomko <jtomko@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1209948
So we have this bug. The virConnectGetDomainCapabilities() API
performs a couple of checks before it produces any result. One of
the checks is if the architecture requested by user can be run by
the binary (again user provided). However, the check is pretty
dumb. It merely compares if the default binary architecture
matches the one provided by user. However, a qemu binary can run
multiple architectures. For instance: qemu-system-ppc64 can run:
ppc, ppcle, ppc64, ppc64le and ppcemb. The default is ppc64, so
if user requested something else, like ppc64le, the check would
have failed without obvious reason.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
When a qemu domain is to be rebooted, from outside, at libvirt
level it looks like regular shutdown. To really restart the
domain, libvirt needs to issue reset command on the monitor once
SHUTDOWN event appeared. So, in order to differentiate bare
shutdown and reboot libvirt uses a variable within domain private
data. It's called fakeReboot. When the reboot API is called, the
variable is set, but when the shutdown API is called it must be
cleared out. But it was not for every possible case. So if user
called virDomainReboot(), and there was no ACPI daemon running
inside the guest (so guest didn't initiated shutdown sequence)
and then virDomainShutdown(mode=agent) was called bad thing
happened. We remembered the fakeReboot and instead of shutting
the domain down, we just rebooted it.
Signed-off-by: Zhang Bo <oscar.zhangbo@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Wang Yufei <james.wangyufei@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
This is a simple wrapper around virNetDevBandwidthManipulateFilter() that
will update the desired filter on an interface (usually a network bridge)
with a new MAC address. Although, the MAC address in question usually
refers to some other interface - the one that the filter is constructed
for. Yeah, hard to parse. Thing is, our NATed network has a bridge where
some part of QoS takes place. And vNICs from guests are plugged into
the bridge. However, if a guest decides to change the MAC of its vNIC,
the corresponding qemu process emits an event which we can use to
update the QoS configuration based on the new MAC address.. However,
our QoS hierarchy is currently not notified, therefore it falls apart.
This function (when called in response to the aforementioned event)
will update our QoS hierarchy and duct tape it together again.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Not only this simplifies the code a bit, it prepares the
environment for upcoming patches. The new
virNetDevBandwidthManipulateFilter() function is capable of both
removing a filter and adding a new one. At the same time! Yeah,
this is not currently used anywhere but look at the next commit
where you'll see it.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Currently, when constructing traffic shaping rules, the ingress
filter is created without any priority specified on the command
line. This makes kernel to make up one. While this works, it
simplifies things a bit if we provide the filter priority. In
this case, since it's the root filter lets give it the highest
priority of number 1.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
After a360912179 the formatting of virDomainActualNetDefPtr was
changed a bit. However, during the function rewrite, iface's class_id
is not formatted as frequently as it could be. In fact, after rewrite
it's formatted only for iface of type VIR_DOMAIN_NET_TYPE_DIRECT where
it makes no sense and is unused. While where needed (_TYPE_NETWORK) is
not formatted at all. This makes the daemon forget it upon daemon
restart resulting in bad behaviour.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1211436
This reverts commit b7829f959b.
The previous fix was not correct. Like everywhere else, a driver is a
global variable allocated in stateInitialize function (or something
similar for stateless drivers). Later, when a driver API is called,
it's possible that the global variable is accessed and dereferenced.
Now, some drivers require root privileges because they undertake some
actions reserved only for the system admin (e.g. manipulating host
firewall). And here's the trouble, the NWFilter state initializer
exited too early when finding out it's running unprivileged, leaving
the global NWFilter driver variable uninitialized. Any subsequent
API call that tried to lock the driver resulted in dereferencing the
driver and thus crash.
On the other hand, in order to not resurrect the bug the original
commit was fixing, Let's forbid the nwfilter define in session mode.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Conflicts:
src/nwfilter/nwfilter_driver.c: Context. Code changed a bit
since 2013.
There is a possibility that we jump onto error label with @lockpath
still initialized to NULL. Here, the @lockpath should be unlink()-ed,
but passing there a NULL is not a good idea. Don't do that. In fact,
we should call unlink() only if we created the lock file successfully.
Reported-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The 802.11 interfaces can not be moved by themselves, their Phy has to move too.
If there are other interfaces, they have to move too -- hopefully it's not too
confusing. This is a less-invasive alternative to defining a new hostdev type
for PHYs.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
A destroy operation can take considerable time on large memory
domains due to scrubbing the domain's memory. Unlock the
virDomainObj while libxl_domain_destroy is executing.
Implement libxlDomainDestroyInternal wrapper to handle unlocking,
calling destroy, and locking. Change all callers of
libxl_domain_destroy to use the wrapper.
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
A job should be acquired at the beginning of a domain destroy operation,
not at the end when cleaning up the domain. Fix two occurrences of this
late job acquisition in the libxl driver. Doing so renders
libxlDomainCleanupJob unused, so it is removed.
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
Let callers of libxlDomainStart decide when it is appropriate to
acquire a job on the associated virDomainObj.
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
Add support for HVM direct kernel boot in libxl. Also add a
test to verify domXML <-> native conversions.
Signed-off-by: Chunyan Liu <cyliu@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
In xl config, hvmloader is implied for hvm guests. It is not
specified with the "kernel" option like xm config. The "kernel"
option, along with "ramdisk" and "extra", is used for HVM direct
kernel boot. Instead of using "kernel" option to populate
virDomainDef object's os.loader->path, use hvmloader discovered
when gathering capabilities.
This change required fixing initialization of capabilities in
the test utils and removing 'kernel = "/usr/lib/xen/boot/hvmloader"'
from the test config files.
xl and xm differ a bit in how <os> configuration is represented.
E.g. xl config supports <os><nvram .../></os> via its "bios"
setting.
Move the xenParseOS and xenFormatOS functions from xen_common.c
and copy to xen_xl.c and xen_xm.c so they can be customized for
xm vs xl config. An unfortunate fallout is reordering of entries
in the test config files.
device_model is parsed in xenParseOS(), then later in
xenParseConfigCommon(). <emulator> is not part of <os>,
so makes sense to remove the parsing in xenParseOS().
On rhel-6 is broken gcc that reports this warning:
util/virbuffer.c:500: error: logical '&&' with non-zero constant will
always evaluate as true [-Wlogical-op]
Move the pragma directive before function virBufferEscapeString because
since commit aeb5262e this function uses 'strchr' too.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
ts.tv_nsec was off by a factor of 1000, making timeouts less than a
second in the future often expiring immediately.
Signed-off-by: Michael Chapman <mike@very.puzzling.org>
Among all the monitor APIs some where checking if mon is NULL and some
were not. Since it's possible to have mon equal to NULL in case a second
call is attempted once entered the monitor. This requires that every
single API checks for the monitor.
This patch adds a macro that helps checking the state of the monitor and
either refactors existing checking code to use the macro or adds it in
case it was missing.
Rather than erroring out make the best attempt to retrieve other data if
disks are inaccessible or missing. The failure will still be logged
though.
Since the bulk stats API is called on multiple domains an error like
this makes the API unusable. This regression was introduced by commit
596a137134
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1209394
The comment is describing arguments passed to the function.
However, there's no @ifmac argument. In 955af4d4 it was replaced
with @ifmac_ptr. Unfortunately, the comment wasn't updated.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Add virStringHasControlChars that checks if the string has
any control characters other than \t\r\n,
and virStringStripControlChars that removes them in-place.
Throughout the code, we have several places need to construct a path
somewhere in /sys/class/net/... They are not consistent and nearly
each code piece invents its own way how to do it. So unify this by:
1) use virNetDevSysfsFile() wherever possible
2) At least use common macro SYSFS_NET_DIR declared in virnetdev.h at
the rest of places which can't go with 1)
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
If a virAsprintf() within the function fails, we call VIR_FREE()
over @rundir variable and jump onto cleanup label, where it is
freed again. It doesn't hurt, but not make much sense too.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Commit f6563bc3 introduced HMP impl of the function (so that a different
uglier function could be removed). Before the HMP code is called there's
a leftover check that the monitor is JSON which inhibits the code from
working.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1200149
Even though we have a mutex mechanism so that two clients don't spawn
two daemons, it's not strong enough. It can happen that while one
client is spawning the daemon, the other one fails to connect.
Basically two possible errors can happen:
error: Failed to connect socket to '/home/mprivozn/.cache/libvirt/libvirt-sock': Connection refused
or:
error: Failed to connect socket to '/home/mprivozn/.cache/libvirt/libvirt-sock': No such file or directory
The problem in both cases is, the daemon is only starting up, while we
are trying to connect (and fail). We should postpone the connecting
phase until the daemon is started (by the other thread that is
spawning it). In order to do that, create a file lock 'libvirt-lock'
in the directory where session daemon would create its socket. So even
when called from multiple processes, spawning a daemon will serialize
on the file lock. So only the first to come will spawn the daemon.
Tested-by: Richard W. M. Jones <rjones@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Two non-static functions in virjson.c were missing their export info in
libvirt_private.syms, so they couldn't be used anywhere it the code (and
that's about to get changed).
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Luckily we are allocating structs as clean memory and
PTHREAD_MUTEX_INITIALIZER is "{ 0 }", so nothing happened, but it should
still be created as lockable object.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Check the proposed pool source host XML definition against existing gluster
pools to ensure the incoming definition doesn't use the same source dir and
soure host XML definition as an existing pool.
Check the proposed pool source host XML definition against existing sheepdog
pools to ensure the incoming definition doesn't use the same source host XML
definition as an existing pool.
Rather than have duplicate code doing the same check, have the netfs
matching processing code use the new virStoragePoolSourceMatchSingleHost.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Create a separate iSCSI Source matching subroutine. Makes the calling
code a bit cleaner as well as sets up for future patches which need to
do better source hosts[0].name processing/checking.
As part of the effort the logic will be inverted from a multi-level
if statement to a series of single level checks for better readability
and further separation
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
When acquiring resource via sanlock fails, we would report it as
VIR_ERR_INTERNAL_ERROR, which is not very friendly to applications using
libvirt. Moreover, the lockd driver would report the same failure as
VIR_ERR_RESOURCE_BUSY, which looks better.
Unfortunately, in sanlock driver we don't really know if acquiring the
resource failed because it was already locked or there was another
reason behind. But the end result is the same and I think using
VIR_ERR_RESOURCE_BUSY reason for all acquire failures is still better
than what we have now.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1165119
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Commit 49ed6cff is broken on mingw and other non-linux platforms:
CCLD libvirt.la
Cannot export virNetDevSysfsFile: symbol not defined
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
* src/util/virnetdev.c: Provide virNetDevSysfsFile fallback.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Found by ./autobuild.sh during a mingw cross-compile:
Commit 8a96e87 was not innocuous - glibc happens to leak the
definition of time() through other headers, so that even without
<sys/select.h>, virrandom.c compiled just fine. But on mingw,
we were not so lucky; <sys/select.h> was important for its side
effect of dragging in <time.h>, and we now have nothing providing
the declaration of time():
../../src/util/virrandom.c: In function 'virRandomOnceInit':
../../src/util/virrandom.c:65:5: error: implicit declaration of function 'time' [-Werror=implicit-function-declaration]
unsigned int seed = time(NULL) ^ getpid();
^
../../src/util/virrandom.c:65:5: error: nested extern declaration of 'time' [-Werror=nested-externs]
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Changing the prototype to not have "int *index" since we'll soon be
disallowing index as a name. Curiously the original commit (a4504ac)
for the function used 'int idx' in the function - so they didn't match.
Now they do.
It is there even with -nodefaults and -no-user-config, so count with
that so we can start sparc domains.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
The variable 'last_processed_hostdev_vf' indicates index of the last
successfully configed vf. When resetvfnetconfig because of failure,
hostdevs[last_processed_hostdev_vf] should also be reset.
Signed-off-by: Huanle Han <hanxueluo@gmail.com>
1. 'last_good_net' indicates the index of last successfully configured
net. so def->nets[last_good_net] should also be clean up if error occurs.
2. if error occurs in 'virNetDevMacVLanVPortProfileRegisterCallback'
(second 'goto err_exit' in loop), we should also do
'virNetDevVPortProfileDisassociate' cleanup for the
'virNetDevVPortProfileAssociate'(first code block in loop). So we should
consider the net is successfully configured after first code block in
loop finishes.
Signed-off-by: Huanle Han <hanxueluo@gmail.com>
After set memory parameters for running domain, save the change to live
xml is needed otherwise it will disappear after restart libvirtd.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1211548
Signed-off-by: Shanzhi Yu <shyu@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Ján Tomko <jtomko@redhat.com>
Apparently for Xen-devel 'index' is a global and causes a build failure,
so just use the shortened 'idx' instead to avoid the conflict.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
QEMU does not abandon the mirror. The job carries on in the synchronised
phase and it might be either pivoted again or cancelled. The commit
hints that the described behavior was happening in a downstream version.
If the command returns false there are two possible options:
1) qemu did not reach the point where it would ask the block job to
pivot
2) pivotting failed in the actual qemu coroutine
If either of those would happen we return failure and reset the
condition that waits for the block job to complete. This makes the API
fail but in case where qemu would actually abandon the mirror the fact
is notified via the event and handled asynchronously.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1202704