These callbacks let us to create ploop volumes in dir, fs and etc. pools.
If a ploop volume was created via buildVol callback, then this volume
is an empty ploop device with DiskDescriptor.xml.
If the volume was created via .buildFrom - then its content is similar to
input volume content.
Signed-off-by: Olga Krishtal <okrishtal@virtuozzo.com>
Signed-off-by: Ján Tomko <jtomko@redhat.com>
Do not store the return value of called functions in the same variable
as the (future) return value of the current function.
This makes tracking the origin of the value easier and reduces
the chance of introducing a new point of exit without resetting
the return value back to -1.
This new algorithm adds support for wiping volumes using TRIM.
It does not overwrite all the data in a volume, but it tells the
backing storage pool/driver that all bytes in a volume can be
discarded.
It depends on the backing storage pool how this is handled.
A SCSI backend might send UNMAP commands to remove all data present
on a LUN.
A Ceph backend might use rbd_discard() to instruct the Ceph cluster
that all data on that RBD volume can be discarded.
Signed-off-by: Wido den Hollander <wido@widodh.nl>
Use the cast of (virStorageVolWipeAlgorithm) adding the missing case:'s
(VIR_STORAGE_VOL_WIPE_ALG_ZERO and VIR_STORAGE_VOL_WIPE_ALG_LAST).
Additionally, the old code would also still run the SCRUB command on
default since it didn't go to cleanup when a invalid flag was supplied.
We now go to cleanup and exit if a invalid flag would be provided.
Signed-off-by: Wido den Hollander <wido@widodh.nl>
The only caller always passes 0 for the extent start.
Drop the 'extent_start' parameter, as well as the mention of extents
from the function name.
Change off_t extent_length to unsigned long long wipe_len, as well as the
'remain' variable.
Return -1:
* on all failures of fdatasync. Instead of propagating -errno
all the way up to the virStorageVolWipe API, which is documented
to return 0 or -1.
* after a partial wipe. If safewrite failed, we would re-use the
non-negative return value of lseek (which should be 0 in this case,
because that's the only offset we seek to).
I found this useful while processing a volume that wouldn't end up
showing up in the resulting list of block volumes. In this case, the
partition type wasn't found in the disk_types table.
Similar to the openflags VIR_STORAGE_VOL_OPEN_NOERROR processing, if some
read processing operation fails, check the readflags for the corresponding
error flag being set. If so, rather then causing an error - use VIR_WARN
to flag the error, but return -2 which some callers can use to perform
specific actions. Use a new VIR_STORAGE_VOL_READ_NOERROR flag in a new
VolReadErrorMode enum.
While processing the volume for lseek, virFileReadHeaderFD, and
virStorageFileGetMetadataFromBuf - failure would cause an error,
but ret would not be set. That would result in an error message being
sent, but successful status being returned.
Just so it's clearer what to expect upon input and what types of return
values could be generated. These were loosely copied from existing
virStorageBackendUpdateVolTargetInfoFD.
Similar to the openflags which allow VIR_STORAGE_VOL_OPEN_NOERROR to be
passed to avoid open errors, add a 'readflags' variable so that in the
future read failures could also be ignored.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1282288
Rather than using just open on the path, allow for the possibility that
the path to be opened resides on an NFS root-squash target and was created
under a different uid/gid.
Without using virFileOpenAs an attempt to get the volume size data may fail
if the current user doesn't have permissions to read the volume, such as
would be the case if mode wasn't supplied in the volume XML and the default
VIR_STORAGE_DEFAULT_VOL_PERM_MODE (e.g. 0600) was used. Under this scenario
the owner/group is not root:root, thus this path run under root would fail
to open/read the volume.
NB: The virFileOpenAs code using OPEN_FORK will only work when the failure
is not EACESS/EPERM and the path resolves to a shared file system.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1282288
Although commit id '77346f27' resolves part of the problem regarding creating
a qemu-img image in an NFS root-squash environment, it really didn't fix the
entire problem. Unfortunately it only masked the problem. It seems qemu-img
must open/create the image using 0644, which if used by target.perms would
result in the chmod not being called since the mode desired and set match.
Although qemu-img could conceivably ignore the mode when creating, libvirt
has more knowledge of the environment and can make the adjustment to the
mode far more easily by using virFileOpenAs with VIR_FILE_OPEN_FORCE_MODE.
If that's successful, then we know on return the file will have the right
owner and mode, so we can declare success
After successfully returning from virFileOpenAs, if subsequent calls fail,
then we need to remove the file since our caller expects that failures after
creation will remove the created file.
After a successful qemu-img/qcow-create of the backing file, if we
fail to stat the file, change it owner/group, or mode, then the
cleanup path should remove the file.
Currently the code does not handle the NFS root squash environment
properly since if the file gets created, then the subsequent chmod
will fail in a root squash environment where we're creating a file
in the pool with qemu tools, such as seen via:
$ virsh vol-create-from $pool $file.xml file.img --inputpool $pool
assuming $file.xml is creating a file of "<format type='qcow2'"> from
an existing file.img in the pool of "<format type='raw'>".
This patch will utilize the virCommandSetUmask when creating the file
in the NETFS pool. The virCommandSetUmask API was added in commit id
'0e1a1a8c4', which was after the original code was developed in commit
id 'e1f27784' to attempt to handle the root squash environment.
Also, rather than blindly attempting to chmod, check to see if the
st_mode bits from the stat match what we're trying to set and only
make the chmod if they don't.
Also, a slight adjustment to the fallback algorithm to move the
virCommandSetUID/virCommandSetGID inside the if (!filecreated) since
they're only useful if we need to attempt to create the file again.
Commit id '7c2d65dde2' changed the default value of mode to be -1 if not
supplied in the XML, which should cause creation of the volume using the
default mode of VIR_STORAGE_DEFAULT_VOL_PERM_MODE; however, the check
made was whether mode was '0' or not to use default or provided value.
This patch fixes the issue to check if the 'mode' was provided in the XML
and use that value.
While a zero allocation in safezero should be fine it isn't when we use
posix_fallocate which returns EINVAL on a zero allocation.
While we could skip the zero allocation in safezero_posix_fallocate it's
an optimization to do it for all allocations.
This fixes vm installation via virtinst for me which otherwise aborts
like:
Starting install...
Retrieving file linux... | 5.9 MB 00:01 ...
Retrieving file initrd.gz... | 29 MB 00:07 ...
ERROR Couldn't create storage volume 'virtinst-linux.sBgds4': 'cannot fill file '/var/lib/libvirt/boot/virtinst-linux.sBgds4': Invalid argument'
The error was introduced by e30297b0 as spotted by Chunyan Liu
In commit 155ca616e, a change was introduced that no longer allowed defining
volumes via XML with a capacity of '0'. Because we check for info.size_arg
to be non-zero, this use-case fails. This patch allows info.size_arg to be
zero if no backing store is specified.
Signed-off-by: Chris J Arges <chris.j.arges@canonical.com>
When virsh vol-clone is attempted on a raw file where capacity > allocation,
the resulting cloned volume has a size that matches the virtual-size of
the parent; in place of matching its actual, disk size.
This patch fixes the cloned disk to have same _allocated_size_ as
the parent file from which it was cloned.
Ref: http://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2015-May/msg00050.html
Also fixes: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1130739
Signed-off-by: Prerna Saxena <prerna@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Ján Tomko <jtomko@redhat.com>
Instead of storing the remaining bytes, store the position of the first
unallocated byte. This will allow changing the amount of bytes copied
by virStorageBackendCopyToFD without changing the safezero call.
No functional impact.
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.
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
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
A helper that never returns an error and treats bits out of bitmap range
as false.
Use it everywhere we use ignore_value on virBitmapGetBit, or loop over
the bitmap size.
Instead of just looking at the output of fstat, call
virStorageFileGetMetadata to get the full capacity from
image headers.
Note that the capacity is probed unconditionally. The updateCapacity
bool parameter is ignored and will be removed in the following commit.
During virStorageBackendDiskMakeDataVol processing, if we find an extended
partition, then handle it specially when updating the capacity/allocation
rather than calling virStorageBackendUpdateVolInfo.
As it turns out, once a logical partition exists, any attempt to refresh
the pool or after libvirtd restart/reload will result in a failure to open
the extended partition device resulting in the inability to start the pool.
The downside to this is we will lose the <permissions> and <timestamps> for
the extended partition upon subsequent restart, refresh, reload since the
stat() in virStorageBackendUpdateVolTargetInfoFD will not be called. However,
since it's really only a container and shouldn't directly be used for
storage that seems reasonable.
Therefore, only use the existing code that already had a comment about
getting the allocation wrong for extended partitions for just the setting
of the extended partition data.
When creating a RAW file, we don't take advantage
of clone of btrfs.
Add a VIR_STORAGE_VOL_CREATE_REFLINK flag to request
a reflink copy.
Signed-off-by: Chen Hanxiao <chenhanxiao@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Ján Tomko <jtomko@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.
Currently virStorageFileResize() function uses build conditionals to
choose either the posix_fallocate() or syscall(SYS_fallocate) with no
fallback in order to preallocate the space in the newly resized file.
Since the safezero code has a similar set of conditionals modify the
resize and safezero code in order to allow the resize logic to make use
of safezero to unify the look/feel of the code paths.
Add a new boolean (resize) to safezero() to make the optional decision
whether to try syscall(SYS_fallocate) if the posix_fallocate fails because
HAVE_POSIX_FALLOCATE is not defined (eg, return -1 and errno == 0).
Create a local safezero_sys_fallocate in order to handle the resize
code paths that support that. If not present, the set errno = ENOSYS
in order to allow the caller to handle the failure scenarios.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Since virSecretFree will call virObjectUnref anyway, let's just use that
directly so as to avoid the possibility that we inadvertently clear out
a pending error message when using the public API.
virStorageBackendVolDownloadLocal and virStorageBackendVolUploadLocal
use virFDStreamOpenFile function to work with the volume fd.
virFDStreamOpenFile calls virFDStreamOpenFileInternal that implements
handling of the non-blocking I/O. If a file is not a character device and
not a fifo, it uses libvirt_iohelper.
On FreeBSD, it doesn't work as expected because disk devices (including
ZFS volumes) are exposed as character devices, and ZFS volumes do not
support open(2) with O_NONBLOCK.
To overcome this, introduce a forceIOHelper flag to
virFDStreamOpenFileInternal that forces using libvirt_iohelper. And
introduce virFDStreamOpenBlockDevice that calls
virFDStreamOpenFileInternal with the forceIOHelper set to true.
Implement ZFS storage backend driver. Currently supported
only on FreeBSD because of ZFS limitations on Linux.
Features supported:
- pool-start, pool-stop
- pool-info
- vol-list
- vol-create / vol-delete
Pool definition looks like that:
<pool type='zfs'>
<name>myzfspool</name>
<source>
<name>actualpoolname</name>
</source>
</pool>
The 'actualpoolname' value is a name of the pool on the system,
such as shown by 'zpool list' command. Target makes no sense
here because volumes path is always /dev/zvol/$poolname/$volname.
User has to create a pool on his own, this driver doesn't
support pool creation currently.
A volume could be used with Qemu by adding an entry like this:
<disk type='volume' device='disk'>
<driver name='qemu' type='raw'/>
<source pool='myzfspool' volume='vol5'/>
<target dev='hdc' bus='ide'/>
</disk>
Coverity complains about the return value of ioctl not being checked.
Even though we carry on when this fails (just like qemu-img does),
we can log an error.
The next patch will move the storage volume wiping code into the
individual backends. This patch splits out the common code to wipe a
local volume into a separate backend helper so that the next patch is
simpler.
Add 'nocow' to storage volume xml so that user can have an option
to set NOCOW flag to the newly created volume. It's useful on btrfs
file system to enhance performance.
Btrfs has low performance when hosting VM images, even more when the guest
in those VM are also using btrfs as file system. One way to mitigate this
bad performance is to turn off COW attributes on VM files. Generally, there
are two ways to turn off COW on btrfs: a) by mounting fs with nodatacow,
then all newly created files will be NOCOW. b) per file. Add the NOCOW file
attribute. It could only be done to empty or new files.
This patch tries the second way, according to 'nocow' option, it could set
NOCOW flag per file:
for raw file images, handle 'nocow' in libvirt code; for non-raw file images,
pass 'nocow=on' option to qemu-img, and let qemu-img to handle that (requires
qemu-img version >= 2.1).
Signed-off-by: Chunyan Liu <cyliu@suse.com>
When the backing store of a volume wasn't accessible while updating the
volume definition the call would fail altogether. In cases where we
currently (incorrectly) treat remote backing stores as local one this
might lead to strange errors.
Ignore the opening errors until we figure out how to track proper volume
metadata.
For non-local storage drivers we can't expect to use the FDStream
backend for up/downloading volumes. Split the code into a separate
backend function so that we can add protocol specific code later.
Replace:
if (virBufferError(&buf)) {
virBufferFreeAndReset(&buf);
virReportOOMError();
...
}
with:
if (virBufferCheckError(&buf) < 0)
...
This should not be a functional change (unless some callers
misused the virBuffer APIs - a different error would be reported
then)
Report VIR_ERR_NO_STORAGE_VOL instead of a system error when lstat
fails because the file doesn't exist.
Fixes this problem in virt-install:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1108922
Signed-off-by: Giuseppe Scrivano <gscrivan@redhat.com>
Add a new function wrapper and tweak the storage file backend lookup
function so that it can be used without reporting error. This will be
useful in the metadata crawler code where we need silently break if
metadata retrieval is not supported for the current storage type.
In "src/util/" there are many enumeration (enum) declarations.
Sometimes, it's better using a typedef for variable types,
function types and other usages. Other enumeration will be
changed to typedef's in the future.
Signed-off-by: Julio Faracco <jcfaracco@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Commit id 'ac9a0963' refactored out the 'withCapacity' for the
virStorageBackendUpdateVolInfo() API. See:
http://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2014-April/msg00043.html
This resulted in a difference in how 'virsh vol-info --pool <poolName>
<volume>' or 'virsh vol-list vol-list --pool <poolName> --details' outputs
the capacity information for a directory pool with a qcow2 sparse file.
For example, using the following XML
mkdir /home/TestPool
cat testpool.xml
<pool type='dir'>
<name>TestPool</name>
<uuid>6bf80895-10b6-75a6-6059-89fdea2aefb7</uuid>
<source>
</source>
<target>
<path>/home/TestPool</path>
<permissions>
<mode>0755</mode>
<owner>0</owner>
<group>0</group>
</permissions>
</target>
</pool>
virsh pool-create testpool.xml
virsh vol-create-as --pool TestPool temp_vol_1 \
--capacity 1048576 --allocation 1048576 --format qcow2
virsh vol-info --pool TestPool temp_vol_1
Results in listing a Capacity value. Prior to the commit, the value would
be '1.0 MiB' (1048576 bytes). However, after the commit the output would be
(for example) '192.50 KiB', which for my system was the size of the volume
in my file system (eg 'ls -l TestPool/temp_vol_1' results in '197120' bytes
or 192.50 KiB). While perhaps technically correct, it's not necessarily
what the user expected (certainly virt-test didn't expect it).
This patch restores the code to not update the target capacity for this path
More instances of failure to report (unlikely) readdir errors.
In one case, I chose to ignore them, given that a readdir error
would be no different than timing out on the loop, where the
fallback path behaves correctly either way.
* src/storage/storage_backend.c (virStorageBackendStablePath):
Ignore readdir errors.
* src/storage/storage_backend_fs.c
(virStorageBackendFileSystemRefresh): Report readdir errors.
* src/storage/storage_backend_iscsi.c
(virStorageBackendISCSIGetHostNumber): Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_backend_scsi.c (getNewStyleBlockDevice)
(getBlockDevice, virStorageBackendSCSIFindLUs): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Currently VolOpen notifies the user of a potentially non-fatal failure by
returning -2 and logging a VIR_WARN or VIR_INFO. Unfortunately most
callers treat -2 as fatal but don't actually report any message with
the error APIs.
Rename the VOL_OPEN_ERROR flag to VOL_OPEN_NOERROR. If NOERROR is specified,
we preserve the current behavior of returning -2 (there's only one caller
that wants this).
However in the default case, only return -1, and actually use the error
APIs. Fix up a couple callers as a result.
Now that each virStorageSource can track allocation information,
and given that we already have the information without extra
syscalls, it's easier to just always populate the information
directly into the struct than it is to sometimes pass the address
of the struct members down the call chain.
* src/storage/storage_backend.h (virStorageBackendUpdateVolInfo)
(virStorageBackendUpdateVolTargetInfo)
(virStorageBackendUpdateVolTargetInfoFD): Update signature.
* src/storage/storage_backend.c (virStorageBackendUpdateVolInfo)
(virStorageBackendUpdateVolTargetInfo)
(virStorageBackendUpdateVolTargetInfoFD): Always populate struct
members instead.
* src/storage/storage_backend_disk.c
(virStorageBackendDiskMakeDataVol): Update client.
* src/storage/storage_backend_fs.c (virStorageBackendProbeTarget)
(virStorageBackendFileSystemRefresh)
(virStorageBackendFileSystemVolRefresh): Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_backend_gluster.c
(virStorageBackendGlusterRefreshVol): Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_backend_logical.c
(virStorageBackendLogicalMakeVol): Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_backend_mpath.c
(virStorageBackendMpathNewVol): Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_backend_scsi.c
(virStorageBackendSCSINewLun): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
One of the features of qcow2 is that a wrapper file can have
more capacity than its backing file from the guest's perspective;
what's more, sparse files make tracking allocation of both
the active and backing file worthwhile. As such, it makes
more sense to show allocation numbers for each file in a chain,
and not just the top-level file. This sets up the fields for
the tracking, although it does not modify XML to display any
new information.
* src/util/virstoragefile.h (_virStorageSource): Add fields.
* src/conf/storage_conf.h (_virStorageVolDef): Drop redundant
fields.
* src/storage/storage_backend.c (virStorageBackendCreateBlockFrom)
(createRawFile, virStorageBackendCreateQemuImgCmd)
(virStorageBackendCreateQcowCreate): Update clients.
* src/storage/storage_driver.c (storageVolDelete)
(storageVolCreateXML, storageVolCreateXMLFrom, storageVolResize)
(storageVolWipeInternal, storageVolGetInfo): Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_backend_fs.c (virStorageBackendProbeTarget)
(virStorageBackendFileSystemRefresh)
(virStorageBackendFileSystemVolResize)
(virStorageBackendFileSystemVolRefresh): Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_backend_logical.c
(virStorageBackendLogicalMakeVol)
(virStorageBackendLogicalCreateVol): Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_backend_scsi.c
(virStorageBackendSCSINewLun): Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_backend_mpath.c
(virStorageBackendMpathNewVol): Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_backend_rbd.c
(volStorageBackendRBDRefreshVolInfo)
(virStorageBackendRBDCreateImage): Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_backend_disk.c
(virStorageBackendDiskMakeDataVol)
(virStorageBackendDiskCreateVol): Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_backend_sheepdog.c
(virStorageBackendSheepdogBuildVol)
(virStorageBackendSheepdogParseVdiList): Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_backend_gluster.c
(virStorageBackendGlusterRefreshVol): Likewise.
* src/conf/storage_conf.c (virStorageVolDefFormat)
(virStorageVolDefParseXML): Likewise.
* src/test/test_driver.c (testOpenVolumesForPool)
(testStorageVolCreateXML, testStorageVolCreateXMLFrom)
(testStorageVolDelete, testStorageVolGetInfo): Likewise.
* src/esx/esx_storage_backend_iscsi.c (esxStorageVolGetXMLDesc):
Likewise.
* src/esx/esx_storage_backend_vmfs.c (esxStorageVolGetXMLDesc)
(esxStorageVolCreateXML): Likewise.
* src/parallels/parallels_driver.c (parallelsAddHddByVolume):
Likewise.
* src/parallels/parallels_storage.c (parallelsDiskDescParseNode)
(parallelsStorageVolDefineXML, parallelsStorageVolCreateXMLFrom)
(parallelsStorageVolDefRemove, parallelsStorageVolGetInfo):
Likewise.
* src/vbox/vbox_tmpl.c (vboxStorageVolCreateXML)
(vboxStorageVolGetXMLDesc): Likewise.
* tests/storagebackendsheepdogtest.c (test_vdi_list_parser):
Likewise.
* src/phyp/phyp_driver.c (phypStorageVolCreateXML): Likewise.
A fairly smooth transition. And now that domain disks and
storage volumes share a common struct, it opens the doors for
a future patch to expose more details in the XML for both
objects.
* src/conf/storage_conf.h (_virStorageVolTarget): Delete.
(_virStorageVolDef): Use common type.
* src/conf/storage_conf.c (virStorageVolDefFree)
(virStorageVolTargetDefFormat): Update clients.
* src/storage/storage_backend.h: Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_backend.c
(virStorageBackendDetectBlockVolFormatFD)
(virStorageBackendUpdateVolTargetInfo)
(virStorageBackendUpdateVolTargetInfoFD): Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_backend_fs.c (virStorageBackendProbeTarget):
Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Some preparatory work before consolidating storage volume
structs with the rest of virstoragefile. Making these
changes allows a volume target to be much closer to (a
subset of) the virStorageSource struct.
Making perms be a pointer allows it to be optional if we
have a storage pool that doesn't expose permissions in a
way we can access. It also allows future patches to
optionally expose permissions details learned about a disk
image via domain <disk> listings, rather than just
limiting it to storage volume listings.
Disk partition types was only used by internal code to
control what type of partition to create when carving up
an MS-DOS partition table storage pool (and is not used
for GPT partition tables or other storage pools). It was
not exposed in volume XML, and as it is more closely
related to extent information of the overall block device
than it is to the <target> information describing the host
file. Besides, if we ever decide to expose it in XML down
the road, we can move it back as needed.
* src/conf/storage_conf.h (_virStorageVolTarget): Change perms to
pointer, enhance comments. Move partition type...
(_virStorageVolSource): ...here.
* src/conf/storage_conf.c (virStorageVolDefFree)
(virStorageVolDefParseXML, virStorageVolTargetDefFormat): Update
clients.
* src/storage/storage_backend_fs.c (createFileDir): Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_backend.c (virStorageBackendCreateBlockFrom)
(virStorageBackendCreateRaw, virStorageBackendCreateExecCommand)
(virStorageBackendUpdateVolTargetInfoFD): Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_backend_logical.c
(virStorageBackendLogicalCreateVol): Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_backend_disk.c
(virStorageBackendDiskMakeDataVol)
(virStorageBackendDiskPartTypeToCreate): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1072714
Use the "gluster" command line tool to retrieve information about remote
volumes on a gluster server to allow storage pool source lookup.
Unfortunately gluster doesn't provide a management library so that we
could use that directly, instead the RPC calls are hardcoded in the
command line tool.
If we cannot stat/open a file on pool refresh, returning -1 aborts
the refresh and the pool is undefined.
Only treat missing files as fatal unless VolOpenCheckMode is called
with the VIR_STORAGE_VOL_OPEN_ERROR flag. If this flag is missing
(when it's called from virStorageBackendProbeTarget in
virStorageBackendFileSystemRefresh), only emit a warning and return
-2 to let the caller skip over the file.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=977706
Any source file which calls the logging APIs now needs
to have a VIR_LOG_INIT("source.name") declaration at
the start of the file. This provides a static variable
of the virLogSource type.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Add APIs that will allow to use the storage driver to assist in
operations on files even for remote filesystems without native
representation as files in the host.
When attempting to backport gluster pools to an older versoin
where there is no VIR_STRDUP, I got a crash from calling
strdup(,NULL). Rather than relying on the current else branch
safely doing nothing when there is no fd, it is easier to just
skip it. While at it, there's no need to explicitly set
perms.label to NULL after a VIR_FREE().
* src/storage/storage_backend.c
(virStorageBackendUpdateVolTargetInfoFD): Minor optimization.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Commit 348b4e2 introduced a potential problem (thankfully not
in any release): we are attempting to use virFileReadHeaderFD()
on a file that was opened with O_NONBLOCK. While this
shouldn't be a problem in practice (because O_NONBLOCK
typically doesn't affect regular or block files, and fifos and
sockets cannot be storage volumes), it's better to play it safe
to avoid races from opening an unexpected file type while also
avoiding problems with having to handle EAGAIN while read()ing.
Based on a report by Dan Berrange.
* src/storage/storage_backend.c
(virStorageBackendVolOpenCheckMode): Fix up fd after avoiding race.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
We already had code for handling allocation different than
capacity for sparse files; we just had to wire it up to be
used when inspecting gluster images.
* src/storage/storage_backend.c
(virStorageBackendUpdateVolTargetInfoFD): Handle no fd.
* src/storage/storage_backend_gluster.c
(virStorageBackendGlusterRefreshVol): Handle sparse files.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
We support gluster volumes in domain XML, so we also ought to
support them as a storage pool. Besides, a future patch will
want to take advantage of libgfapi to handle the case of a
gluster device holding qcow2 rather than raw storage, and for
that to work, we need a storage backend that can read gluster
storage volume contents. This sets up the framework.
Note that the new pool is named 'gluster' to match a
<disk type='network'><source protocol='gluster'> image source
already supported in a <domain>; it does NOT match the
<pool type='netfs'><source><target type='glusterfs'>,
since that uses a FUSE mount to a local file name rather than
a network name.
This and subsequent patches have been tested against glusterfs
3.4.1 (available on Fedora 19); there are likely bugs in older
versions that may prevent decent use of gfapi, so this patch
enforces the minimum version tested. A future patch may lower
the minimum. On the other hand, I hit at least two bugs in
3.4.1 that will be fixed in 3.5/3.4.2, where it might be worth
raising the minimum: glfs_readdir is nicer to use than
glfs_readdir_r [1], and glfs_fini should only return failure on
an actual failure [2].
[1] http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/gluster-devel/2013-10/msg00085.html
[2] http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/gluster-devel/2013-10/msg00086.html
* configure.ac (WITH_STORAGE_GLUSTER): New conditional.
* m4/virt-gluster.m4: new file.
* libvirt.spec.in (BuildRequires): Support gluster in spec file.
* src/conf/storage_conf.h (VIR_STORAGE_POOL_GLUSTER): New pool
type.
* src/conf/storage_conf.c (poolTypeInfo): Treat similar to
sheepdog and rbd.
(virStoragePoolDefFormat): Don't output target for gluster.
* src/storage/storage_backend_gluster.h: New file.
* src/storage/storage_backend_gluster.c: Likewise.
* po/POTFILES.in: Add new file.
* src/storage/storage_backend.c (backends): Register new type.
* src/Makefile.am (STORAGE_DRIVER_GLUSTER_SOURCES): Build new files.
* src/storage/storage_backend.h (_virStorageBackend): Documet
assumption.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
vol-clone reports out of memory error with disk type on ppc64.
Currently, wbytes is defined as size_t type (8 bytes), but
args's value in ioctl(fd, args..) in kernel is int (4 bytes).
This makes wbytes 2^32 times larger, causing an out of memory error.
This patch changes size_t to int to synchronize with kernel.
[1] https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/block/ioctl.c?id=5e01dc7b#n363
[2] https://lkml.org/lkml/2013/11/1/620
Signed-off-by: Li Zhang <zhlcindy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Ján Tomko <jtomko@redhat.com>
We are calling fstat() at least twice per storage volume in
a directory storage pool; this is rather wasteful. Refactoring
this is also a step towards making code reusable for gluster,
where gluster can provide struct stat but cannot use fstat().
* src/storage/storage_backend.h
(virStorageBackendVolOpenCheckMode)
(virStorageBackendUpdateVolTargetInfoFD): Update signature.
* src/storage/storage_backend.c
(virStorageBackendVolOpenCheckMode): Pass stat results back.
(virStorageBackendUpdateVolTargetInfoFD): Use existing stats.
(virStorageBackendVolOpen, virStorageBackendUpdateVolTargetInfo):
Update callers.
* src/storage/storage_backend_fs.c (virStorageBackendProbeTarget):
Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_backend_scsi.c
(virStorageBackendSCSIUpdateVolTargetInfo): Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_backend_mpath.c
(virStorageBackendMpathUpdateVolTargetInfo): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Most of the usage of getuid()/getgid() is in cases where we are
considering what privileges we have. As such the code should be
using the effective IDs, not real IDs.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Commit id '532fef36' added a call to fallocate() and some error
handling based on whether or not the function existed. This new
call resulted in libvirt-cim/cimtest failures when attempting to
create a volume with "0" (zero) allocation value. The failure is
logged as:
Oct 9 07:51:33 localhost libvirtd[8030]: cannot allocate 0 bytes in
file '/var/lib/libvirt/images/cimtest-vol.img': Invalid argument
This can also be seen with virsh vol-create-as:
error: Failed to create vol test
error: cannot allocate 0 bytes in file '/home/vm-images/test': Invalid
argument
error: Failed to create vol test
error: cannot allocate 0 bytes in file '/home/vm-images/test': Invalid
argument
It turns out fallocate() will return EINVAL when the incoming 'len'
(or allocation) value is 0 (or less).
On RHEL 5, compilation fails with:
storage/storage_backend.c: In function 'createRawFile':
storage/storage_backend.c:339: warning: implicit declaration of function 'fallocate'
storage/storage_backend.c:339: warning: nested extern declaration of 'fallocate' [-Wnested-externs]
But:
$ grep HAVE_FALLOCATE config.h
/* #undef HAVE_FALLOCATE */
Huh? It turns out that in kernels that old, fallocate() is not
implemented (config.h is correct), but <linux/fs.h> defines
HAVE_FALLOCATE as an empty witness macro for a completely
different purpose. Since storage_backend.c is including
<linux/fs.h> on RHEL 5, we are hosed by the kernel definition.
Newer kernels no longer pollute the namespace, and it's fairly
easy to convert to an expression that works with both the old
kernel witness and the new-style config.h (undefined or 1).
Problem introduced in commit 532fef3.
* src/storage/storage_backend.c (createRawFile): Avoid namespace
pollution from kernel, by checking HAVE_FALLOCATE for a value.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Fixed the safezero call for allocating the rest of the file after cloning
an existing volume; it used to always use a zero offset, causing it to
only allocate the beginning of the file.
Also modified file creation to try to use fallocate(2) to pre-allocate
disk space before copying any data to make sure it fails early on if disk
is full and makes sure we can skip zero blocks when copying file contents.
If fallocate isn't available we will zero out the rest of the file after
cloning and only use sparse cloning if client requested a lower allocation
than the input volume's capacity.
Signed-off-by: Oskari Saarenmaa <os@ohmu.fi>
The VIR_FREE() macro will cast away any const-ness. This masked a
number of places where we passed a 'const char *' string to
VIR_FREE. Fortunately in all of these cases, the variable was not
in fact const data, but a heap allocated string. Fix all the
variable declarations to reflect this.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
qemu-img is going to switch the default for QCOW2
to QCOW2v3 (compat=1.1)
Extend the probing for qemu-img command line options to check
if -o compat is supported. If the volume definition specifies
the qcow2 format but no compat level and -o compat is supported,
specify -o compat=0.10 to create a QCOW2v2 image.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=997977
The switch statement in 'virStorageBackendCreateQemuImgOpts' used the
for loop end condition 'VIR_STORAGE_FILE_FEATURE_LAST' as a possible value,
but since that cannot happen Coverity spits out a DEADCODE message. Adding
the Coverity tag just removes the Coverity message
Convert the type of loop iterators named 'i', 'j', k',
'ii', 'jj', 'kk', to be 'size_t' instead of 'int' or
'unsigned int', also santizing 'ii', 'jj', 'kk' to use
the normal 'i', 'j', 'k' naming
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Commit id '53d5967c' introduced the following:
TEST: storagevolxml2argvtest
.............. 14 OK
==25636== 358 (264 direct, 94 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 67 of 75
==25636== at 0x4A06B6F: calloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:593)
==25636== by 0x4C95791: virAlloc (viralloc.c:124)
==25636== by 0x4CA0BB4: virCommandNewArgs (vircommand.c:805)
==25636== by 0x4CA0C88: virCommandNew (vircommand.c:789)
==25636== by 0x408602: virStorageBackendCreateQemuImgCmd (storage_backend.c:849)
==25636== by 0x405427: testCompareXMLToArgvHelper (storagevolxml2argvtest.c:61)
==25636== by 0x4064DF: virtTestRun (testutils.c:158)
==25636== by 0x40516F: mymain (storagevolxml2argvtest.c:195)
==25636== by 0x406B1A: virtTestMain (testutils.c:722)
==25636== by 0x37C1021A04: (below main) (libc-start.c:225)
==25636==
PASS: storagevolxml2argvtest