The gluster volume name extraction code was copied from the XML parser
without changing the VIR_ERR_XML_ERROR error code. Use
VIR_ERR_CONFIG_UNSUPPORTED instead.
Similar to commit fdb80ed4f6563928b9942a0d1450e0c725aa6c06 libvirtd
would crash if a gluster URI without path would be used in the backing
chain of a volume. The crash happens in the gluster specific part of the
parser that extracts the gluster volume name from the path.
Fix the crash by checking that the PATH is NULL.
This patch does not contain a test case as it's not possible to test it
with the current infrastructure as the test suite would attempt to
contact the gluster server in the URI. I'm working on the test suite
addition but that will be post-release material.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1196528
Previously this function relied on having ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL(1) in its
prototype rather than explicitly checking for a null
ifname. Unfortunately, ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL is just a hint to the
optimizer and code analyzers like Coverity, it doesn't actually check
anything at execution time, so the result was possible warnings from
Coverity, along with the possibility of null dereferences when ifname
wasn't available.
This patch removes the ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL from the prototype, and
checks ifname inside the function, logging an error if it's NULL (once
we've determined that the user really is trying to set a bandwidth).
libvirt was unconditionally calling virNetDevBandwidthClear() for
every interface (and network bridge) of a type that supported
bandwidth, whether it actually had anything set or not. This doesn't
hurt anything (unless ifname == NULL!), but is wasteful.
This patch makes sure that all calls to virNetDevBandwidthClear() are
qualified by checking that the interface really had some bandwidth
setup done, and checks for a null ifname inside
virNetDevBandwidthClear(), silently returning success if it is null
(as well as removing the ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL from that function's
prototype, since we can't guarantee that it is never null,
e.g. sometimes a type='ethernet' interface has no ifname as it is
provided on the fly by qemu).
This API joins the following two lines:
char *s = virBufferContentAndReset(buf1);
virBufferAdd(buf2, s, -1);
into one:
virBufferAddBuffer(buf2, buf1);
With one exception: there's no re-indentation applied to @buf1.
The idea is, that in general both can have different indentation
(like the test I'm adding proves)
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Not all files we want to find using virFileFindResource{,Full} are
generated when libvirt is built, some of them (such as RNG schemas) are
distributed with sources. The current API was not able to find source
files if libvirt was built in VPATH.
Both RNG schemas and cpu_map.xml are distributed in source tarball.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Commit b6a2828e introduced new functions to set process scheduler. There
is a small typo in ELSE path for systems where scheduler is not
available.
Also some of the definitions were introduced later in kernel. For
example RHEL-5 is running on kernel 2.6.18, but SCHED_IDLE was introduces
in 2.6.23 [1] and SCHED_BATCH in 2.6.16 [1]. We should not count only on
existence of function sched_setscheduler(), we must also check for
existence of used macros as they might not be defined.
[1] see 'man 7 sched'
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
This function uses sched_setscheduler() function so it works with
processes and threads as well (even threads not created by us, which is
what we'll need in the future).
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Rather than have a dummy waitpid loop and return of the failure status
from recvfd, adjust the logic to save the recvfd error & fd and then
in priority order:
- if waitpid failed, use that errno value
- waitpid succeeded, but if the child exited abnormally, report failure
(use EACCES to report as return failure, since either EACCES or EPERM is
what caused us to fall into the fork+setuid path)
- waitpid succeeded, but if the child reported non-zero status, report
failure (use the errno value that the child encoded into exit status)
- waitpid succeeded, but if recvfd failed, report recvfd_errno
- waitpid and recvfd succeeded, use the fd
NOTE: Original logic to retry the open and force owner mode was
"documented" as only being attempted if we had already tried opening
with the fork+setuid, but checked flags vs. VIR_FILE_OPEN_NOFORK which
is counter to how we would get to that point. So that code was removed.
It is often helpful to know which version of libvirt and QEMU
was present when a guest was first launched. Ensure this info
is written into the QEMU log file for each guest.
If a storage file would be backed with a NBD device without path
(nbd://localhost) libvirt would crash when parsing the backing path for
the disk as the URI structure's path element is NULL in such case but
the NBD parser would access it shamelessly.
Commit b38da584 introduced two new functions to get a page size but it
won't work on Windows. We should take care of this.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
Commit e562a61a introduced new function to get/set interface state but
there was misuse of ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL on non-pointer attributes and also
we need to wrap that functions by #ifdef to not break mingw build.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
Some code paths have special logic depending on the page size
reported by sysconf, which in turn affects the test results.
We must mock this so tests always have a consistent page size.
e562a61a0739 added these two new helper functions and only used them
within virnetdev.c, but declared them in the .h file. If some
currently unsupported interface flags need to be accessed in the
future, it will make more sense to write the appropriate higher level
function rather than require us to artificially define IFF_* on some
mythical platform that doesn't have SIOC[SG]IFFLAGS (and therefore
doesn't have IFF_*) just so we can call virNetDevSetIFFFlags() to
return an error.
To help someone in not going down the wrong road, this patch makes the
two helper functions static, hopefully making it less likely that
someone will want to use them outside of virnetdev.c.
This helper eases iterating all key=value pairs stored in a JSON
object. Usually we pick only certain known keys from a JSON object, but
this will allow to walk complete objects and have the callback act on
those.
To be able to easily represent nodesets and other data stored in
virBitmaps in libvirt, this patch introduces a set of helpers that allow
to convert the bitmap to and from JSON value objects.
This patch provides the utility functions needed to synchronize
the rxfilter changes made to a guest domain with the corresponding
macvtap devices on the host:
* Get/set PROMISC flag
* Get/set ALLMULTI, MULTICAST
Signed-off-by: Tony Krowiak <akrowiak@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
A gnulib change (commit id 'beae0bdc') causes ENOTCONN to be returned
from recvfd which causes us to fall into the throwaway waitpid() call
and return ENOTCONN to the caller, this then gets displayed during
a 'virsh save' when using a root squashed NFS environment that's trying
to save the file as something other than root:root.
This patch will add the additional check for ENOTCONN to force the code
into the waitpid loop looking for the actual status from the _exit()'d
child fork.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
When compiling without WITH_MACVTAP, we can get:
'unsupported flags (0x1) in function
virNetDevMacVLanCreateWithVPortProfile'
on an attempt to start a domain.
Remove the flag check to reach the more helpful error:
Cannot create macvlan devices on this platform
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1186928
In many cases where we invoke virSystemdTerminateMachine the
process(es) will have already gone away on their own accord.
In these cases we log an error message that the machine does
not exist. We should catch this particular error and simply
ignore it, so we don't pollute the logs.
Coverity reports that my commit af1c98e introduced
two memory leaks:
the cpumap if ncpus == 0 in virCgroupGetPercpuStats
and the params array in the test of the function.
The virDBusMethodCall method has a DBusError as one of its
parameters. If the caller wants to pass a non-NULL value
for this, it immediately makes the calling code require
DBus at build time. This has led to breakage of non-DBus
builds several times. It is desirable that only the virdbus.c
file should need WITH_DBUS conditionals, so we must ideally
remove the DBusError parameter from the method.
We can't simply raise a libvirt error, since the whole point
of this parameter is to give the callers a way to check if
the error is one they want to ignore, without having the logs
polluted with an error message. So, we add a virErrorPtr
parameter which the caller can then either ignore or raise
using the new virReportErrorObject method.
This new method is distinct from virSetError in that it
ensures the logging hooks are run.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Per-cpu stats are only shown for present CPUs in the cgroups,
but we were only parsing the largest CPU number from
/sys/devices/system/cpu/present and looking for stats even for
non-present CPUs.
This resulted in:
internal error: cpuacct parse error
Every dtrace/systemd probe also include a libvirt log message.
These are logged at level DEBUG currently, which means if you
want to see all probes they are drowned by the rest of the
DEBUG messages. Since we don't really use the INFO log level
for much, it seems reasonable to suggest we log all probes at
level INFO.
When debugging libvirt it is helpful to set probes around RPC
calls. We already have probes for libvirt's native RPC layer,
so it makes sense to add them for the DBus RPC layer too.
systemd-machined introduced a new method CreateMachineWithNetwork
that obsoletes CreateMachine. It expects to be given a list of
VETH/TAP device indexes for the host side device(s) associated
with a container/machine.
This falls back to the old CreateMachine method when the new
one is not supported.
The virsh start <domain> fails with qemu error when the hostdevices of the
same iommu group are used actively by other vms. It is not clear which
hostdev from the same iommu group is used by any of the running guests.
User has to go through every guest xml to figure out who is using the
hostdev of same iommu group.
Solution:
Iterate the iommu group of the hostdev and error our neatly in case a
device in the same iommu group is busy. Reattach code also does the same
kind of check, remove duplicate code as well.
Signed-off-by: Shivaprasad G Bhat <sbhat@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Basically a getter function which is implemented for accessing the
address fields in virPCIDevice.
Signed-off-by: Shivaprasad G Bhat <sbhat@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Found this one by inspection... The API claims to "own" the input
value even in the case of error. However, in the initial entry
to the API if the value exists, was STRING, but without a str value
it just returned without freeing the 'value' which it claims to now
own. So I added the virConfFreeValue() call in order to resolve.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Remove the resize flag and use the same code path for all callers.
This flag was added by commit 18f0316 to allow virStorageFileResize
use 'safezero' while preserving the behavior.
Explicitly return -2 when a fallback to a different method should
be done, to make the code path more obvious.
Fail immediately when ftruncate fails in the mmap method,
as we did before commit 18f0316.
Commit 4dc04d3a added virNetlinkGetErrorCode, but forgot to provide
a fallback, which kills the build on mingw (among others):
CCLD libvirt.la
Cannot export virNetlinkGetErrorCode: symbol not defined
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
* src/util/virnetlink.c (virNetlinkGetErrorCode): Provide fallback.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>