src/conf/network_conf.c: Add virNetworkMatch to filter the networks;
and virNetworkList to iterate over all the networks with the filter.
src/conf/network_conf.h: Declare virNetworkList and define the macros
for filters.
src/libvirt_private.syms: Export virNetworkList.
The RPC generator doesn't support returning list of object, this patch
do the work manually.
* daemon/remote.c:
Implemente the server side handler remoteDispatchConnectListAllNetworks.
* src/remote/remote_driver.c:
Add remote driver handler remoteConnectListAllNetworks.
* src/remote/remote_protocol.x:
New RPC procedure REMOTE_PROC_CONNECT_LIST_ALL_NETWORKS and
structs to represent the args and ret for it.
* src/remote_protocol-structs: Likewise.
This is to list the network objects, supported filtering flags
are: active|inactive, persistent|transient, autostart|no-autostart.
include/libvirt/libvirt.h.in: Declare enum virConnectListAllNetworkFlags
and virConnectListAllNetworks.
python/generator.py: Skip auto-generating
src/driver.h: (virDrvConnectListAllNetworks)
src/libvirt.c: Implement the public API
src/libvirt_public.syms: Export the symbol to public
e5a1bee07 introduced a regression in Boxes: when Boxes is left idle
(it's still doing some libvirt calls in the background), the
libvirt connection gets closed after a few minutes. What happens is
that this code in virNetClientIOHandleOutput gets triggered:
if (!thecall)
return -1; /* Shouldn't happen, but you never know... */
and after the changes in e5a1bee07, this causes the libvirt connection
to be closed.
Upon further investigation, what happens is that
virNetClientIOHandleOutput is called from gvir_event_handle_dispatch
in libvirt-glib, which is triggered because the client fd became
writable. However, between the times gvir_event_handle_dispatch
is called, and the time the client lock is grabbed and
virNetClientIOHandleOutput is called, another thread runs and
completes the current call. 'thecall' is then NULL when the first
thread gets to run virNetClientIOHandleOutput.
After describing this situation on IRC, danpb suggested this:
11:37 < danpb> In that case I think the correct thing would be to change
'return -1' above to 'return 0' since that's not actually an
error - its a rare, but expected event
which is what this patch is doing. I've tested it against master
libvirt, and I didn't get disconnected in ~10 minutes while this
happens in less than 5 minutes without this patch.
The implementation is done manually as the generator does not support
wrapping lists of C pointers into Python objects.
python/libvirt-override-api.xml: Document
python/libvirt-override-virStoragePool.py:
* New file, includes implementation of listAllVolumes.
python/libvirt-override.c: Implementation for the wrapper.
tools/virsh-volume.c:
* vshStorageVolSorter to sort storage vols by name
* vshStorageVolumeListFree to free the volume objects list
* vshStorageVolumeListCollect to collect the volume objects, trying
to use new API first, fall back to older APIs if it's not supported.
The RPC generator doesn't returning support list of object, this
patch do the work manually.
* daemon/remote.c:
Implemente the server side handler remoteDispatchStoragePoolListAllVolumes
* src/remote/remote_driver.c:
Add remote driver handler remoteStoragePoolListAllVolumes
* src/remote/remote_protocol.x:
New RPC procedure REMOTE_PROC_STORAGE_POOL_LIST_ALL_VOLUMES and
structs to represent the args and ret for it.
* src/remote_protocol-structs: Likewise.
Simply returns the storage volume objects. No supported filter
flags.
include/libvirt/libvirt.h.in: Declare the API
python/generator.py: Skip the function for generating. virStoragePool.py
will be added in later patch.
src/driver.h: virDrvStoragePoolListVolumesFlags
src/libvirt.c: Implementation for the API.
src/libvirt_public.syms: Export the symbol to public
An email came to libvir-list wondering why the git send-email command
was missing in spite of having git installed; this is due to the
send-email command being in a sub-package of the main git package.
While touching the hacking file, I thought it would be useful to 1)
indicate the location of the source (docs/hacking.html.in) in the
message at the top of HACKING, and also to make the note about running
"make check" and "make syntax-check" a bit more stern.
On RHEL 6.2, gcc 4.4.6 complains:
cc1: warning: command line option "-Wenum-compare" is valid for C++/ObjC++ but not for C
which in turn breaks a -Werror build.
Meanwhile, in Fedora 17, gcc 4.7.0, -Wenum-compare has been enhanced
to also work on C, but at the same time, it is documented that -Wall
now implicitly includes -Wenum-compare.
Therefore, it is sufficient to remove explicit checks for this option,
avoiding the warning from older gcc while still getting the
compile-time safety from newer gcc.
* m4/virt-compile-warnings.m4 (-Wenum-compare): Omit explicit check.
GNOME Boxes sometimes stops getting domain events from libvirtd, even
after restarting it. Further investigation in libvirtd shows that
events are properly queued with virDomainEventStateQueue, but the
timer virDomainEventTimer which flushes the events and sends them to
the clients never gets called. Looking at the event queue in gdb
shows that it's non-empty and that its size increases with each new
events.
virDomainEventTimer is set up in virDomainEventStateRegister[ID]
when going from 0 client connecte to 1 client connected, but is
initially disabled. The timer is removed in
virDomainEventStateRegister[ID] when the last client is disconnected
(going from 1 client connected to 0).
This timer (which handles sending the events to the clients) is
enabled in virDomainEventStateQueue when queueing an event on an
empty queue (queue containing 0 events). It's disabled in
virDomainEventStateFlush after flushing the queue (ie removing all
the elements from it). This way, no extra work is done when the queue
is empty, and when the next event comes up, the timer will get
reenabled because the queue will go from 0 event to 1 event, which
triggers enabling the timer.
However, with this Boxes bug, we have a client connected (Boxes), a
non-empty queue (there are events waiting to be sent), but a disabled
timer, so something went wrong.
When Boxes connects (it's the only client connecting to the libvirtd
instance I used for debugging), the event timer is not set as expected
(state->timer == -1 when virDomainEventStateRegisterID is called),
but at the same time the event queue is not empty. In other words,
we had no clients connected, but pending events. This also explains
why the timer never gets enabled as this is only done when an event
is queued on an empty queue.
I think this can happen if an event gets queued using
virDomainEventStateQueue and the client disconnection happens before
the event timer virDomainEventTimer gets a chance to run and flush
the event. In this situation, virDomainEventStateDeregister[ID] will
get called with a non-empty event queue, the timer will be destroyed
if this was the only client connected. Then, when other clients connect
at a later time, they will never get notified about domain events as
the event timer will never get enabled because the timer is only
enabled if the event queue is empty when virDomainEventStateRegister[ID]
gets called, which will is no longer the case.
To avoid this issue, this commit makes sure to remove all events from
the event queue when the last client in unregistered. As there is
no longer anyone interested in receiving these events, these events
are stale so there is no need to keep them around. A client connecting
later will have no interest in getting events that happened before it
got connected.
When building RPMs the host kernel cannot be assumed to match
the target OS kernel. Thus auto-detecting /selinux vs
/sys/fs/selinux based on the host kernel can result in the
wrong choice (eg F18 builds on a RHEL6 host kernel)
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The introduction of /sys/fs/cgroup came in fairly recent kernels.
Prior to that time distros would pick a custom directory like
/cgroup or /dev/cgroup. We need to auto-detect where this is,
rather than hardcoding it
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Take advantage of the previously added monitor helpers to
create a test suite for the QEMU JSON monitor impl. As a
proof of concept, this tests the 'qemuMonitorGetStatus'
implementation
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
To be able to test the QEMU monitor code, we need to have a fake
QEMU monitor server. This introduces a simple (dumb) framework
that can do this. The test case registers a series of items to
be sent back as replies to commands that will be executed. A
thread runs the event loop looking for incoming replies and
sending back this pre-registered data. This allows testing all
QEMU monitor code that deals with parsing responses and errors
from QEMU, without needing QEMU around
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Add some non-null annotations to qemuMonitorOpen and also
check that the error callback is set, since it is mandatory
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
If there is only one detail string for a particular event, we need to pu
comma after the string otherwise the string itself will be taken as a
list and only its first character will be printed out. For example,
myDomainEventCallback1 EVENT: Domain fedora17(12) Shutdown F
instead of the desired
myDomainEventCallback1 EVENT: Domain fedora17(12) Shutdown Finished
The unused reason parameter of PM{Suspend,Wakeup} event callbacks was
completely ignored in lot of places and those events were not actually
working at all.
When setting the cpu tunables in virsh you are able to update only a
subset of them. Virsh while doing the update updated all of the
tunables, changed ones with new values and unchanged with old ones.
This is unfortunate as it:
a) might overwrite some other change by a race condition (unprobable)
b) fails with range checking as some of the old values saved might be
out of range
This patch changes the update procedure so that only the changed value
is updated on the host.
This patch also fixes a very unprobable memory leak if the daemon would
return a string tunable parameter, as the typed parameter array was not
cleared.
This patch adds a helper to deal with assigning values to
virTypedParameter structures from strings. The helper parses the value
from the string and assigns it to the corresponding union value.
The quota and period tunables for cpu scheduler accept only a certain
range of values. When changing the live configuration invalid values get
rejected. This check is not performed when changing persistent config.
This patch adds a separate range check, that improves error messages
when changing live config and adds the check for persistent config.
This check is done only when using the API. It is still possible to
specify invalid values in the XML.
This patch tries to clean the code up a little bit and shorten very long
lines.
The apparent semantic change from moving the condition before calling
the setter function is a non-issue here as the setter function is a
no-op when called with both arguments zero.
Commit 2a41bc9 dropped a dependency on gawk, but we can go one step
further and avoid awk altogether.
* src/nwfilter/nwfilter_ebiptables_driver.c
(iptablesLinkIPTablesBaseChain): Simplify command.
(ebiptablesDriverInit, ebiptablesDriverShutdown): Drop awk probe.
This patch removed the "--filterwin2k" dnsmasq command line
parameter which was unnecessary for domain specification,
possibly blocked some usage, and was command line clutter.
Gene Czarcinski <gene@czarc.net>
FreeBSD and OpenBSD have a <net/if.h> that is not self-contained;
and mingw lacks the header altogether. But gnulib has just taken
care of that for us, so we might as well simplify our code. In
the process, I got a syntax-check failure if we don't also take
the gnulib execinfo module.
* .gnulib: Update to latest, for execinfo and net_if.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Add execinfo and net_if modules.
* configure.ac: Let gnulib check for headers. Simplify check for
'struct ifreq', while also including enough prereq headers.
* src/internal.h (IF_NAMESIZE): Drop, now that gnulib guarantees it.
* src/nwfilter/nwfilter_learnipaddr.h: Use correct header for
IF_NAMESIZE.
* src/util/virnetdev.c (includes): Assume <net/if.h> exists.
* src/util/virnetdevbridge.c (includes): Likewise.
* src/util/virnetdevtap.c (includes): Likewise.
* src/util/logging.c (includes): Assume <execinfo.h> exists.
(virLogStackTraceToFd): Handle gnulib's fallback implementation.
A last minute rename in commit fc122e1a to virsh.h was not properly
reflected when rebasing virsh-pool.c in commit 93a346d.
* tools/virsh-pool.c (vshStoragePoolListCollect): Use VSH_MATCH,
not MATCH.
When the event symbols were added to the public API, not all
of them were removed from the private exports list. Solaris
gets unhappy when there are duplicated symbols. Extend the
symfile check to test for this scenario
The implementation is done manually as the generator does not support
wrapping lists of C pointers into Python objects.
python/libvirt-override-api.xml: Document
python/libvirt-override-virConnect.py: Add listAllStoragePools
python/libvirt-override.c: Implementation for the wrapper.
tools/virsh-pool.c:
* vshStoragePoolSorter to sort the pool list by pool name.
* struct vshStoragePoolList to present the pool list, pool info
is collected by list->poolinfo if 'details' is specified by
user.
* vshStoragePoolListFree to free the pool list
* vshStoragePoolListCollect to collect the pool list, new API
virStorageListAllPools is tried first, if it's not supported,
fall back to older APIs.
* New options --persistent, --transient, --autostart, --no-autostart
and --type for pool-list. --persistent or --transient is to filter
the returned pool list by whether the pool is persistent or not.
--autostart or --no-autostart is to filter the returned pool list
by whether the pool is autostarting or not. --type is to filter
the pools by pool types. E.g.
% virsh pool-list --all --persistent --type dir,disk
tools/virsh.pod:
* Add documentations for the new options.
Move definition of MATCH from virsh-domain-monitor.c into
virsh.h, and rename it as VSH_MATCH for further use.
* tools/virsh-domain-monitor.c: Change MATCH into VSH_MATCH
* tools/virsh.h: Define VSH_MATCH
The storage pool's management doesn't relate with a domain, it
probably was an intention, but not achieved yet. And the fact
is only active pools are listed by default.
The RPC generator doesn't support returning list of object, this patch does
the work manually.
* daemon/remote.c:
Implement the server side handler remoteDispatchConnectListAllStoragePools
* src/remote/remote_driver.c:
Add remote driver handler remoteConnectListAllStoragePools.
* src/remote/remote_protocol.x:
New RPC procedure REMOTE_PROC_CONNECT_LIST_ALL_STORAGE_POOLS and
structs to represent the args and ret for it.
* src/remote_protocol-structs: Likewise.
src/conf/storage_conf.c: Add virStoragePoolMatch to filter the
pools; Add virStoragePoolList to iterate over the pool objects
with filter.
src/conf/storage_conf.h: Declare virStoragePoolMatch,
virStoragePoolList, and the macros for filters.
src/libvirt_private.syms: Export helper virStoragePoolList.
This introduces a new API to list the storage pool objects,
4 groups of flags are provided to filter the returned pools:
* Active or not
* Autostarting or not
* Persistent or not
* And the pool type.
include/libvirt/libvirt.h.in: New enum virConnectListAllStoragePoolFlags;
Declare the API.
python/generator.py: Skip the generating
src/driver.h: (virDrvConnectListAllStoragePools)
src/libvirt.c: Implementation for the API.
src/libvirt_public.syms: Export the symbol.
ESX doesn't use the common virDomainObj implementation so this patch
adds a separate implementation.
This driver supports all currently defined filtering flags, but as with
other drivers some combinations yield a empty result list.
Hyperv doesn't use the common virDomainObj implementation so this patch
adds a separate implementation.
This driver supports all currently added flags for filtering although
some of those don't make sense with this driver (no support yet) and
thus produce no output when used.
On systems without cyrus-sasl-devel available (I happened to be
in that situation on my FreeBSD testing), this test fails rather
miserably:
TEST: libvirtdconftest
.....!!!!!!...!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 39 FAIL
FAIL: libvirtdconftest
with verbose output showing things like:
39) Test corruption ... libvir: Config File error : unsupporeted configuration: remoteReadConfigFile: /usr/home/dummy/libvirt/tests/../daemon/libvirtd.conf: auth_tcp: unsupported auth sasl
* tests/libvirtdconftest.c (testCorrupt): Avoid failure when sasl
is missing.
I tested both OpenBSD and cygwin; both failed 'make check' with:
GEN check-symfile
Can't return outside a subroutine at ./check-symfile.pl line 13.
Perl requires 'exit 77' instead of 'return 77' in that context,
but even with that tweak, the build still fails, since the exit
code of 77 is only special to explicit TESTS=foo listings, and
not to make-only dependency rules where we are not going through
automake's test framework.
* src/check-symfile.pl: Kill bogus platform check...
* src/Makefile.am (check-symfile): ...and replace with an automake
conditional.
This fixes https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=852984
If a network or interface is configured to use Open vSwitch, but
ovs-vswitchd (the Open vSwitch database service) isn't running, the
ovs-vsctl add-port/del-port commands will hang indefinitely rather
than returning an error. There is a --nowait option, but that appears
to have no effect on add-port and del-port commands, so instead we add
a --timeout=5 to the commands - they will retry for up to 5 seconds,
then fail if there is no response.