The DHCPv6 support includes IPV6 dhcp-range and dhcp-host for one
IPv6 subnetwork on one interface. This support will only work
if dnsmasq version >= 2.64; otherwise an error occurs if
dhcp-range or dhcp-host is specified for an IPv6 address.
Essentially, this change provides the same DHCP support for IPv6
that has been available for IPv4.
With dnsmasq >= 2.64, support for the RA service is also now provided
by dnsmasq (radvd is no longer used/started). (Although at least one
version of dnsmasq prior to 2.64 "supported" IPv6 Router
Advertisement, there were bugs (fixed in 2.64) that rendered it
unusable.)
Documentation and the network schema has been updated
to reflect the new support.
I noticed when writing the backend functions for virNetworkUpdate that
I was repeating the same sequence of memmove, VIR_REALLOC, nXXX-- (and
messed up the args to memmove at least once), and had seen the same
sequence in a lot of other places, so I decided to write a few
utility functions/macros - see the .h file for full documentation.
The intent is to reduce the number of lines of code, but more
importantly to eliminate the need to check the element size and
element count arithmetic every time we need to do this (I *always*
make at least one mistake.)
VIR_INSERT_ELEMENT: insert one element at an arbitrary index within an
array of objects. The size of each object is determined
automatically by the macro using sizeof(*array). The new element's
contents are copied into the inserted space, then the original copy
of contents are 0'ed out (if everything else was
successful). Compile-time assignment and size compatibility between
the array and the new element is guaranteed (see explanation below
[*])
VIR_INSERT_ELEMENT_COPY: identical to VIR_INSERT_ELEMENT, except that
the original contents of newelem are not cleared to 0 (i.e. a copy
is made).
VIR_APPEND_ELEMENT: This is just a special case of VIR_INSERT_ELEMENT
that "inserts" one past the current last element.
VIR_APPEND_ELEMENT_COPY: identical to VIR_APPEND_ELEMENT, except that
the original contents of newelem are not cleared to 0 (i.e. a copy
is made).
VIR_DELETE_ELEMENT: delete one element at an arbitrary index within an
array of objects. It's assumed that the element being deleted is
already saved elsewhere (or cleared, if that's what is appropriate).
All five of these macros have an _INPLACE variant, which skips the
memory re-allocation of the array, assuming that the caller has
already done it (when inserting) or will do it later (when deleting).
Note that VIR_DELETE_ELEMENT* can return a failure, but only if an
invalid index is given (index + amount to delete is > current array
size), so in most cases you can safely ignore the return (that's why
the helper function virDeleteElementsN isn't declared with
ATTRIBUTE_RETURN_CHECK). A warning is logged if this ever happens,
since it is surely a coding error.
[*] One initial problem with the INSERT and APPEND macros was that,
due to both the array pointer and newelem pointer being cast to void*
when passing to virInsertElementsN(), any chance of type-checking was
lost. If we were going to move in newelem with a memmove anyway, we
would be no worse off for this. However, most current open-coded
insert/append operations use direct struct assignment to move the new
element into place (or just populate the new element directly) - thus
use of the new macros would open a possibility for new usage errors
that didn't exist before (e.g. accidentally sending &newelemptr rather
than newelemptr - I actually did this quite a lot in my test
conversions of existing code).
But thanks to Eric Blake's clever thinking, I was able to modify the
INSERT and APPEND macros so that they *do* check for both assignment
and size compatibility of *ptr (an element in the array) and newelem
(the element being copied into the new position of the array). This is
done via clever use of the C89-guaranteed fact that the sizeof()
operator must have *no* side effects (so an assignment inside sizeof()
is checked for validity, but not actually evaluated), and the fact
that virInsertElementsN has a "# of new elements" argument that we
want to always be 1.
QEMU supports setting vendor and product strings for disk since
1.2.0 (only scsi-disk, scsi-hd, scsi-cd support it), this patch
exposes it with new XML elements <vendor> and <product> of disk
device.
virGetGroupIDByName is documented as returning 1 if the groupname
cannot be found. getgrnam_r is documented as returning:
« 0 or ENOENT or ESRCH or EBADF or EPERM or ... The given name
or gid was not found. »
and that:
« The formulation given above under "RETURN VALUE" is from POSIX.1-2001.
It does not call "not found" an error, hence does not specify what
value errno might have in this situation. But that makes it impossible to
recognize errors. One might argue that according to POSIX errno should be
left unchanged if an entry is not found. Experiments on various UNIX-like
systems shows that lots of different values occur in this situation: 0,
ENOENT, EBADF, ESRCH, EWOULDBLOCK, EPERM and probably others. »
virGetGroupIDByName returns an error when the return value of getgrnam_r
is non-0. However on my RHEL system, getgrnam_r returns ENOENT when the
requested user cannot be found, which then causes virGetGroupID not
to behave as documented (it returns an error instead of falling back
to parsing the passed-in value as an gid).
This commit makes virGetGroupIDByName only report an error when errno
is set to one of the values in the posix description of getgrnam_r
(which are the same as the ones described in the manpage on my system).
virGetUserIDByName is documented as returning 1 if the username
cannot be found. getpwnam_r is documented as returning:
« 0 or ENOENT or ESRCH or EBADF or EPERM or ... The given name
or uid was not found. »
and that:
« The formulation given above under "RETURN VALUE" is from POSIX.1-2001.
It does not call "not found" an error, hence does not specify what
value errno might have in this situation. But that makes it impossible to
recognize errors. One might argue that according to POSIX errno should be
left unchanged if an entry is not found. Experiments on various UNIX-like
systems shows that lots of different values occur in this situation: 0,
ENOENT, EBADF, ESRCH, EWOULDBLOCK, EPERM and probably others. »
virGetUserIDByName returns an error when the return value of getpwnam_r
is non-0. However on my RHEL system, getpwnam_r returns ENOENT when the
requested user cannot be found, which then causes virGetUserID not
to behave as documented (it returns an error instead of falling back
to parsing the passed-in value as an uid).
This commit makes virGetUserIDByName only report an error when errno
is set to one of the values in the posix description of getpwnam_r
(which are the same as the ones described in the manpage on my system).
If debugging is enabled, the debug messages are sent to stderr.
Moreover, if a command has catching of stderr set, the messages
gets mixed with stdout output (assuming both outputs are stored
in the same variable). The resulting string then doesn't
necessarily have to start with desired prefix then. This bug
exposes itself when parsing dnsmasq output:
2012-12-06 11:18:11.445+0000: 18491: error :
dnsmasqCapsSetFromBuffer:664 : internal error cannot parse
/usr/sbin/dnsmasq version number in '2012-12-06
11:11:02.232+0000: 18492: debug : virFileClose:72 : Closed fd 22'
We can clearly see that the output of dnsmasq --version doesn't
start with expected "Dnsmasq version " string but a libvirt debug
output.
If the debugging is enabled, the virCommand subsystem catches debug
messages in the command output as well. In that case, we can't assume
the string corresponding to command's stdout will start with specific
prefix. But the prefix can be moved deeper in the string. This bug
shows itself when parsing dnsmasq output:
2012-12-06 11:18:11.445+0000: 18491: error :
dnsmasqCapsSetFromBuffer:664 : internal error cannot parse
/usr/sbin/dnsmasq version number in '2012-12-06 11:11:02.232+0000:
18492: debug : virFileClose:72 : Closed fd 22'
We can clearly see that the output of dnsmasq --version
doesn't start with expected "Dnsmasq version " string but a libvirt
debug output.
The pciWrite32 function assembled the array of data to be written to the
fd with a bad offset on the last byte. This issue was probably caused by
a typo (14, 24).
This introduces a few new APIs for dealing with strings.
One to split a char * into a char **, another to join a
char ** into a char *, and finally one to free a char **
There is a simple test suite to validate the edge cases
too. No more need to use the horrible strtok_r() API,
or hand-written code for splitting strings.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
To be able todo controlled shutdown/reboot of containers an
API to talk to init via /dev/initctl is required. Fortunately
this is quite straightforward to implement, and is supported
by both sysvinit and systemd. Upstart support for /dev/initctl
is unclear.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This new function returns true if the given address is in the range of
any "private" or "local" networks as defined in RFC1918 (IPv4) or
RFC3484/RFC4193 (IPv6), otherwise they return false.
These ranges are:
192.168.0.0/16
172.16.0.0/16
10.0.0.0/24
FC00::/7
FEC0::/10
In order to optionally take advantage of new features in dnsmasq when
the host's version of dnsmasq supports them, but still be able to run
on hosts that don't support the new features, we need to be able to
detect the version of dnsmasq running on the host, and possibly
determine from the help output what options are in this dnsmasq.
This patch implements a greatly simplified version of the capabilities
code we already have for qemu. A dnsmasqCaps device can be created and
populated either from running a program on disk, reading a file with
the concatenated output of "dnsmasq --version; dnsmasq --help", or
examining a buffer in memory that contains the concatenated output of
those two commands. Simple functions to retrieve capabilities flags,
the version number, and the path of the binary are also included.
bridge_driver.c creates a single dnsmasqCaps object at driver startup,
and disposes of it at driver shutdown. Any time it must be used, the
dnsmasqCapsRefresh method is called - it checks the mtime of the
binary, and re-runs the checks if the binary has changed.
networkxml2argvtest.c creates 2 "artificial" dnsmasqCaps objects at
startup - one "restricted" (doesn't support --bind-dynamic) and one
"full" (does support --bind-dynamic). Some of the test cases use one
and some the other, to make sure both code pathes are tested.
Found by coverity:
Error: REVERSE_INULL (CWE-476):
libvirt-0.10.2/src/util/processinfo.c:141: deref_ptr: Directly
dereferencing pointer "map".
libvirt-0.10.2/src/util/processinfo.c:142: check_after_deref:
Null-checking "map" suggests that it may be null, but it has already
been dereferenced on all paths leading to the check.
The virStateInitialize method and several cgroups methods were
using an 'int privileged' parameter or similar for dual-state
values. These are better represented with the bool type.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
because libvirt_lxc's cgroup mountpoint is what it shown
in /proc/self/cgroup.
we can get container's cgroup through virCgroupNew("/", &group),
add interface virCgroupGetAppRoot to help container to
get it's cgroup.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
virCgroupGetMemSwapUsage is used to get container's swap usage,
with this interface,we can get swap usage in fuse filesystem.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
This bug leads to getting incorrect vcpupin information via
qemudDomainGetVcpuPinInfo() API when the number of maximum
cpu on a host falls into a range such as 31 < ncpus < 64.
gcc warning:
left shift count >= width of type
The following bug is such the case
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=876415
In virNetDevVethDelete the virRun method will properly report
errors, but when checking the exit status for non-zero exit
code no error is reported
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When failing to create a macvlan interface, make sure the
error message contains the name of the host interface
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
It is possible for there to be deleted timers when we
calculate the next timeout, and they must be skipped.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The event code is a no-op if requested to update a non-existent
timer/handle watch. This makes it hard to detect bugs in the
caller who have passed bogus data. Add a VIR_WARN output in
such cases, since the API does not allow for return errors.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The docs for virDiskNameToIndex claim it ignores partition
numbers. In actual fact though, a code ordering bug means
that a partition number will cause the code to accidentally
multiply the result by 26.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Commit e0c469e58b that fixes the detection
of image chain wasn't complete. Iteration through the backing image
chain has to stop at the last existing image if some of the images are
missing otherwise the backing chain that is cached contains entries with
paths being set to NULL resulting to:
error: Unable to allow access for disk path (null): Bad address
Fortunately stat() is kind enough not to crash when it's presented with
a NULL argument. At least on Linux.
Fixes this error when building with -Werror on Alpine Linux:
util/processinfo.c: In function 'virProcessInfoSetAffinity':
util/processinfo.c:52:5: error: implicit declaration of function 'malloc' [-Werror=implicit-function-declaration]
Signed-off-by: Natanael Copa <ncopa@alpinelinux.org>
This simplifies the top-level code, at the cost of using a little more
stack space. The primary benefit is being able to send more fields
without knowing in advance how many of them, and of which types, these
fields will be, and without having to individually add buffer variables.
The code imposes an upper limit on the total number of iovs/buffers
used, and fields that wouldn't fit are silently dropped. This is not
significant in this patch, but will affect the following one.
Signed-off-by: Miloslav Trmač <mitr@redhat.com>
... and update all users. No change in functionality, the parameter
will be used later.
The metadata representation is as minimal as possible, but requires
the caller to allocate an array on stack explicitly.
The alternative of using varargs in the virLogMessage() callers:
* Would not allow the caller to optionally omit some metadata elements,
except by having two calls to virLogMessage.
* Would not be as type-safe (e.g. using int vs. size_t), and the compiler
wouldn't be able to do type checking
* Depending on parameter order:
a) virLogMessage(..., message format, message params...,
metadata..., NULL)
can not be portably implemented (parse_printf_format() is a glibc
function)
b) virLogMessage(..., metadata..., NULL,
message format, message params...)
would prevent usage of ATTRIBUTE_FMT_PRINTF and the associated
compiler checking.
Signed-off-by: Miloslav Trmač <mitr@redhat.com>
The "restart" function for locks allocates a new array according to
and pre-sets its length, then reads the owner pids from a JSON
document in a loop. Rather than adding each owner at a different
index, though, it repeatedly overwrites the last element of the array
with all the owners.
82507838 refactored the code to keep both the raw and canonicalized form
of the backingStore, which breaks badly when the storage pool contains a
storage volume, which is missing its backing store file:
# ./daemon/libvirtd -l
2012-11-07 12:43:33.279+0000: 22175: info : libvirt version: 1.0.0
2012-11-07 12:43:33.279+0000: 22175: error : absolutePathFromBaseFile:542 : Can't canonicalize path '/var/lib/libvirt/images/base.qcow2': No such file or directory
2012-11-07 12:43:33.280+0000: 22175: error : storageDriverAutostart:115 : Failed to autostart storage pool 'default': Can't canonicalize path '/var/lib/libvirt/images/base.qcow2': No such file or directory
This is because virStorageFileGetMetadataFromBuf() aborts with -1 if the
filename of the backingStore can not be canonicalized:
#0 absolutePathFromBaseFile () at util/storage_file.c:541
#1 virStorageFileGetMetadataFromBuf () at util/storage_file.c:728
#2 virStorageFileGetMetadataFromFD () at util/storage_file.c:932
#3 virStorageBackendProbeTarget () at storage/storage_backend_fs.c:94
#4 virStorageBackendFileSystemRefresh () at storage/storage_backend_fs.c:849
#5 storagePoolStart () at storage/storage_driver.c:700
#6 virStoragePoolCreate () at libvirt.c:12471
...
Treat files which miss their backing file as standalone files.
Signed-off-by: Philipp Hahn <hahn@univention.de>
Some FDs may not implement fdatasync() functionality,
e.g. pipes. In that case EINVAL or EROFS is returned.
We don't want to fail then nor report any error.
Reported-by: Christophe Fergeau <cfergeau@redhat.com>
The libvirt coding standard is to use 'function(...args...)'
instead of 'function (...args...)'. A non-trivial number of
places did not follow this rule and are fixed in this patch.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
With our fix of mkostemp (pushed as 2b435c15) we define a macro
to compile with uclibc. However, this definition is conditional
and thus needs to be properly indented. Moreover, with this definition
sc_prohibit_mkstemp syntax-check rule keeps yelling:
src/util/logging.c:63:# define mkostemp(x,y) mkstemp(x)
maint.mk: use mkostemp with O_CLOEXEC instead of mkstemp
Therefore we should ignore this file for this rule.
* configure.ac docs/news.html.in libvirt.spec.in: update for the new release
* po/*.po*: update from transifex, a lot of added support e.g. Indian
languages, and regenerate
Currently, when we are doing (managed) save, we insert the
iohelper between the qemu and OS. The pipe is created, the
writing end is passed to qemu and the reading end to the
iohelper. It reads data and write them into given file. However,
with write() being asynchronous data may still be in OS
caches and hence in some (corner) cases, all migration data
may have been read and written (not physically though). So
qemu will report success, as well as iohelper. However, with
some non local filesystems, where ENOSPACE is polled every X
time units, we may get into situation where all operations
succeeded but data hasn't reached the disk. And in fact will
never do. Therefore we ought sync caches to make sure data
has reached the block device on remote host.
virPidFileReadPathIfAlive passed in an 'int *' where a 'pid_t *'
was expected, which breaks on Mingw64 targets. Also a few places
were using '%d' for formatting pid_t, change them to '%lld' and
force a cast to the longer type as done elsewhere in the same
file.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
There are multiple reasons canonicalize_file_name() used in
absolutePathFromBaseFile helper can fail. This patch enhances error
reporting from that helper.
This patch resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=871201
If libvirt is restarted after updating the dnsmasq or radvd packages,
a subsequent "virsh net-destroy" will fail to kill the dnsmasq/radvd
process.
The problem is that when libvirtd restarts, it re-reads the dnsmasq
and radvd pidfiles, then does a sanity check on each pid it finds,
including checking that the symbolic link in /proc/$pid/exe actually
points to the same file as the path used by libvirt to execute the
binary in the first place. If this fails, libvirt assumes that the
process is no longer alive.
But if the original binary has been replaced, the link in /proc is set
to "$binarypath (deleted)" (it literally has the string " (deleted)"
appended to the link text stored in the filesystem), so even if a new
binary exists in the same location, attempts to resolve the link will
fail.
In the end, not only is the old dnsmasq/radvd not terminated when the
network is stopped, but a new dnsmasq can't be started when the
network is later restarted (because the original process is still
listening on the ports that the new process wants).
The solution is, when the initial "use stat to check for identical
inodes" check for identity between /proc/$pid/exe and $binpath fails,
to check /proc/$pid/exe for a link ending with " (deleted)" and if so,
truncate that part of the link and compare what's left with the
original binarypath.
A twist to this problem is that on systems with "merged" /sbin and
/usr/sbin (i.e. /sbin is really just a symlink to /usr/sbin; Fedora
17+ is an example of this), libvirt may have started the process using
one path, but /proc/$pid/exe lists a different path (indeed, on F17
this is the case - libvirtd uses /sbin/dnsmasq, but /proc/$pid/exe
shows "/usr/sbin/dnsmasq"). The further bit of code to resolve this is
to call virFileResolveAllLinks() on both the original binarypath and
on the truncated link we read from /proc/$pid/exe, and compare the
results.
The resulting code still succeeds in all the same cases it did before,
but also succeeds if the binary was deleted or replaced after it was
started.
Currently, we use iohelper when saving/restoring a domain.
However, if there's some kind of error (like I/O) it is not
propagated to libvirt. Since it is not qemu who is doing
the actual write() it will not get error. The iohelper does.
Therefore we should check for iohelper errors as it makes
libvirt more user friendly.
In the XML warning, we print a virsh command line that can be used to
edit that XML. This patch prints UUIDs if the entity name contains
special characters (like shell metacharacters, or "--" that would break
parsing of the XML comment). If the entity doesn't have a UUID, just
print the virsh command that can be used to edit it.
This commit changes the behavior of LIBVIRT_DEBUG=1 libvirtd:
$ git show 7022b09111
commit 7022b09111
Author: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Date: Thu Sep 27 13:13:09 2012 +0100
Automatically enable systemd journal logging
Probe to see if the systemd journal is accessible, and if
so enable logging to the journal by default, rather than
stderr (current default under systemd).
Previously 'LIBVIRT_DEBUG=1 /usr/sbin/libvirtd' would show all debug
output to stderr, now it send debug output to the journal.
Only use the journal by default if running in daemon mode, or
if stdin is _not_ a tty. This should make libvirtd launched from
systemd use the journal, but preserve the old behavior in most
situations.
Sometimes it's handy to know how many bits are set.
* src/util/bitmap.h (virBitmapCountBits): New prototype.
(virBitmapNextSetBit): Use correct type.
* src/util/bitmap.c (virBitmapNextSetBit): Likewise.
(virBitmapSetAll): Maintain invariant of clear tail bits.
(virBitmapCountBits): New function.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (bitmap.h): Export it.
* tests/virbitmaptest.c (test2): Test it.
Add utility functions for Open vSwitch to both save
per-port data before a live migration, and restore the
per-port data after a live migration.
Signed-off-by: Kyle Mestery <kmestery@cisco.com>
We put a comment containing "virsh edit <domain_name>" at the start of
the XML. W3C recommendation forbids the use of "--" in comments [1] and
libvirt can't parse it either. This patch omits the domain name if it
contains a double hyphen.
[1] http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml/#sec-comments
Yet another instance of where using plain open() mishandles files
that live on root-squash NFS, and where improving the API can
improve the chance of a successful probe.
* src/util/storage_file.h (virStorageFileProbeFormat): Alter
signature.
* src/util/storage_file.c (virStorageFileProbeFormat): Use better
method for opening file.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainGetBlockInfo): Update caller.
* src/storage/storage_backend_fs.c (virStorageBackendProbeTarget):
Likewise.
This fixes the problem reported in:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=868389
Previously, the dnsmasq hosts file (used for static dhcp entries, and
addnhosts file (used for additional dns host entries) were only
created/referenced on the dnsmasq commandline if there was something
to put in them at the time the network was started. Once we can update
a network definition while it's active (which is now possible with
virNetworkUpdate), this is no longer a valid strategy - if there were
0 dhcp static hosts (resulting in no reference to the hosts file on the
commandline), then one was later added, the commandline wouldn't have
linked dnsmasq up to the file, so even though we create it, dnsmasq
doesn't pay any attention.
The solution is to just always create these files and reference them
on the dnsmasq commandline (almost always, anyway). That way dnsmasq
can notice when a new entry is added at runtime (a SIGHUP is sent to
dnsmasq by virNetworkUdpate whenever a host entry is added or removed)
The exception to this is that the dhcp static hosts file isn't created
if there are no lease ranges *and* no static hosts. This is because in
this case dnsmasq won't be setup to listen for dhcp requests anyway -
in that case, if the count of dhcp hosts goes from 0 to 1, dnsmasq
will need to be restarted anyway (to get it listening on the dhcp
port). Likewise, if the dhcp hosts count goes from 1 to 0 (and there
are no dhcp ranges) we need to restart dnsmasq so that it will stop
listening on port 67. These special situations are handled in the
bridge driver's networkUpdate() by checking for ((bool)
nranges||nhosts) both before and after the update, and triggering a
dnsmasq restart if the before and after don't match.
In order to temporarily label files read/write during a commit
operation, we need to crawl the backing chain and find the absolute
file name that needs labeling in the first place, as well as the
name of the file that owns the backing file.
* src/util/storage_file.c (virStorageFileChainLookup): New
function.
* src/util/storage_file.h: Declare it.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (storage_file.h): Export it.
In order to search for a backing file name as literally present
in a chain, we need to remember if the chain had relative names.
Also, searching for absolute names is easier if we only have
to canonicalize once, rather than on every iteration.
* src/util/storage_file.h (_virStorageFileMetadata): Add field.
* src/util/storage_file.c (virStorageFileGetMetadataFromBuf):
(virStorageFileFreeMetadata): Manage it
(absolutePathFromBaseFile): Store absolute names in canonical form.
Requiring pre-allocation was an unusual idiom. It allowed iteration
over the backing chain to use fewer mallocs, but made one-shot
clients harder to read. Also, this makes it easier for a future
patch to move away from opening fds on every iteration over the chain.
* src/util/storage_file.h (virStorageFileGetMetadataFromFD): Alter
signature.
* src/util/storage_file.c (virStorageFileGetMetadataFromFD): Allocate
return value.
(virStorageFileGetMetadata): Update clients.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainDiskDefForeachPath): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainGetBlockInfo): Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_backend_fs.c (virStorageBackendProbeTarget):
Likewise.
Previously, no one was using virStorageFileGetMetadata, and for good
reason - it couldn't support root-squash NFS. Change the signature
and make it useful to future patches, including enhancing the metadata
to recursively track the entire chain.
* src/util/storage_file.h (_virStorageFileMetadata): Add field.
(virStorageFileGetMetadata): Alter signature.
* src/util/storage_file.c (virStorageFileGetMetadata): Rewrite.
(virStorageFileGetMetadataRecurse): New function.
(virStorageFileFreeMetadata): Handle recursion.
When an image has no backing file, using VIR_STORAGE_FILE_AUTO
for its type is a bit confusing. Additionally, a future patch
would like to reserve a default value for the case of no file
type specified in the XML, but different from the current use
of -1 to imply probing, since probing is not always safe.
Also, a couple of file types were missing compared to supported
code: libxl supports 'vhd', and qemu supports 'fat' for directories
passed through as a file system.
* src/util/storage_file.h (virStorageFileFormat): Add
VIR_STORAGE_FILE_NONE, VIR_STORAGE_FILE_FAT, VIR_STORAGE_FILE_VHD.
* src/util/storage_file.c (virStorageFileMatchesVersion): Match
documentation when version probing not supported.
(cowGetBackingStore, qcowXGetBackingStore, qcow1GetBackingStore)
(qcow2GetBackingStoreFormat, qedGetBackingStore)
(virStorageFileGetMetadataFromBuf)
(virStorageFileGetMetadataFromFD): Take NONE into account.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainDiskDefForeachPath): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainGetBlockInfo): Likewise.
* src/conf/storage_conf.c (virStorageVolumeFormatFromString): New
function.
(poolTypeInfo): Use it.
Win32 platforms don't have SIGKILL defined, but they do have
SIGABRT. Since our virProcess wrapper treats anything which
isn't SIGTERM/SIGINT as equivalent to SIGKILL, just use
SIGABRT on Win32.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Add two new APIs virLockSpaceNewPostExecRestart and
virLockSpacePreExecRestart which allow a virLockSpacePtr
object to be created from a JSON object and saved to a
JSON object, for the purposes of re-exec'ing a process.
As well as saving the state in JSON format, the second
method will disable the O_CLOEXEC flag so that the open
file descriptors are preserved across the process re-exec()
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The previously introduced virFile{Lock,Unlock} APIs provide a
way to acquire/release fcntl() locks on individual files. For
unknown reason though, the POSIX spec says that fcntl() locks
are released when *any* file handle referring to the same path
is closed. In the following sequence
threadA: fd1 = open("foo")
threadB: fd2 = open("foo")
threadA: virFileLock(fd1)
threadB: virFileLock(fd2)
threadB: close(fd2)
you'd expect threadA to come out holding a lock on 'foo', and
indeed it does hold a lock for a very short time. Unfortunately
when threadB does close(fd2) this releases the lock associated
with fd1. For the current libvirt use case for virFileLock -
pidfiles - this doesn't matter since the lock is acquired
at startup while single threaded an never released until
exit.
To provide a more generally useful API though, it is necessary
to introduce a slightly higher level abstraction, which is to
be referred to as a "lockspace". This is to be provided by
a virLockSpacePtr object in src/util/virlockspace.{c,h}. The
core idea is that the lockspace keeps track of what files are
already open+locked. This means that when a 2nd thread comes
along and tries to acquire a lock, it doesn't end up opening
and closing a new FD. The lockspace just checks the current
list of held locks and immediately returns VIR_ERR_RESOURCE_BUSY.
NB, the API as it stands is designed on the basis that the
files being locked are not being otherwise opened and used
by the application code. One approach to using this API is to
acquire locks based on a hash of the filepath.
eg to lock /var/lib/libvirt/images/foo.img the application
might do
virLockSpacePtr lockspace = virLockSpaceNew("/var/lib/libvirt/imagelocks");
lockname = md5sum("/var/lib/libvirt/images/foo.img");
virLockSpaceAcquireLock(lockspace, lockname);
NB, in this example, the caller should ensure that the path
is canonicalized before calculating the checksum.
It is also possible to do locks directly on resources by
using a NULL lockspace directory and then using the file
path as the lock name eg
virLockSpacePtr lockspace = virLockSpaceNew(NULL);
virLockSpaceAcquireLock(lockspace, "/var/lib/libvirt/images/foo.img");
This is only safe to do though if no other part of the process
will be opening the files. This will be the case when this
code is used inside the soon-to-be-reposted virlockd daemon
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Commit e8fd8757c8 changed 'const char *'
category to virLogSource enum. This changes it in virLogEatParams as
well, thus fixing the build with --disable-debug.
--
Hopefully moving the enum declarations is less ugly than using int.
All USB device lookup functions emit an error when they cannot find the
requested device. With this patch, their caller can choose if a missing
device is an error or normal condition.
Currently virNetSocketNew fails because virSetCloseExec fails as there
is no proper implementation for it on Windows at the moment. Workaround
this by pretending that setting close-on-exec on the fd works. This can
be done because libvirt currently lacks the ability to create child
processes on Windows anyway. So there is no point in failing to set a
flag that isn't useful at the moment anyway.
The code was reporting raw exit status without decoding it into
normal vs. signal exit. virCommandRun already does this, but
with a different error type, so all we have to do is recast
the error to the correct type.
Reported by li guang.
* src/util/hooks.c (virHookCall): Simplify.
This patch updates virGetUserID and virGetGroupID to be able to parse a
user or group name in a similar way to coreutils' chown. This means that
a numeric value with a leading plus sign is always parsed as an ID,
otherwise the functions try to parse the input first as a user or group
name and if this fails they try to parse it as an ID.
This patch includes Peter Krempa's changes to correctly handle errors
returned by getpwnam_r and getgrnam_r.
The output buffer for virFileReadAll was too small for systems with
more than 30 CPUs which leads to a log entry and incorrect behavior.
The new size will be sufficient for the current
architectural limits.
Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Correct the check for the return value of virStrcpyStatic()
when copying port-profile names. Fixes Open vSwitch ports
which utilize port-profiles from network definitions.
Signed-off-by: Kyle Mestery <kmestery@cisco.com>
Commit f6430390 broke builds on RHEL 5, where glibc (2.5) is too
old to support mkostemp (2.7) or htole64 (2.9). While gnulib
has mkostemp, it still lacks htole64; and it's not worth dragging
in replacements on systems where journald is unlikely to exist
in the first place, so we just use an extra configure-time check
as our witness of whether to attempt compiling the code.
* src/util/logging.c (virLogParseOutputs): Don't attempt to
compile journald on older glibc.
* configure.ac (AC_CHECK_DECLS): Check for htole64.
Add support for logging to the systemd journal, using its
simple client library. The benefit over syslog is that it
accepts structured log data, so the journald can store
individual items like code file/line/func separately from
the string message. Tools which require structured log
data can then query the journal to extract exactly what
they desire without resorting to string parsing
While systemd provides a simple client library for logging,
it is more convenient for libvirt to directly write its
own client code. This lets us build up the iovec's on
the stack, avoiding the need to alloc memory when writing
log messages.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The 'const char *category' parameter only has a few possible
values now that the filename has been separated. Turn this
parameter into an enum instead.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Currently the logging APIs have a 'const char *category' parameter
which indicates where the log message comes from. This is typically
a combination of the __FILE__ string and other prefix. Split the
__FILE__ off into a dedicated parameter so it can passed to the
log outputs
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
General whitespace cleanup in the logging files
- Move '{' to a new line after funtion declaration
- Put each parameter on a new line to avoid long lines
- Put return type on new line
- Leave 2 blank lines between functions
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The log destinations are an enum, but most of the code was
just using a plain 'int' for function params / variables.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The __LINE__ macro value is specified to fit in the size_t
type, so use that instead of 'long long' in the logging code
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The log priority levels are an enum, but most of the code was
just using a plain 'int' for function params / variables.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
I hit this problem recently when trying to create a bridge with an IPv6
address on a 3.2 kernel: dnsmasq (and, further, radvd) would not bind to
the given address, waiting 20s and then giving up with -EADDRNOTAVAIL
(resp. exiting immediately with "error parsing or activating the config
file", without libvirt noticing it, BTW). This can be reproduced with (I
think) any kernel >= 2.6.39 and the following XML (to be used with
"virsh net-create"):
<network>
<name>test-bridge</name>
<bridge name='testbr0' />
<ip family='ipv6' address='fd00::1' prefix='64'>
</ip>
</network>
(it happens even when you have an IPv4, too)
The problem is that since commit [1] (which, ironically, was made to
“help IPv6 autoconfiguration”) the linux bridge code makes bridges
behave like “real” devices regarding carrier detection. This makes the
bridges created by libvirt, which are started without any up devices,
stay with the NO-CARRIER flag set, and thus prevents DAD (Duplicate
address detection) from happening, thus letting the IPv6 address flagged
as “tentative”. Such addresses cannot be bound to (see RFC 2462), so
dnsmasq fails binding to it (for radvd, it detects that "interface XXX
is not RUNNING", thus that "interface XXX does not exist, ignoring the
interface" (sic)). It seems that this behavior was enhanced somehow with
commit [2] by avoiding setting NO-CARRIER on empty bridges, but I
couldn't reproduce this behavior on my kernel. Anyway, with the “dummy
tap to set MAC address” trick, this wouldn't work.
To fix this, the idea is to get the bridge's attached device to be up so
that DAD can happen (deactivating DAD altogether is not a good idea, I
think). Currently, libvirt creates a dummy TAP device to set the MAC
address of the bridge, keeping it down. But even if we set this device
up, it is not RUNNING as soon as the tap file descriptor attached to it
is closed, thus still preventing DAD. So, we must modify the API a bit,
so that we can get the fd, keep the tap device persistent, run the
daemons, and close it after DAD has taken place. After that, the bridge
will be flagged NO-CARRIER again, but the daemons will be running, even
if not happy about the device's state (but we don't really care about
the bridge's daemons doing anything when no up interface is connected to
it).
Other solutions that I envisioned were:
* Keeping the *-nic interface up: this would waste an fd for each
bridge during all its life. May be acceptable, I don't really
know.
* Stop using the dummy tap trick, and set the MAC address directly
on the bridge: it is possible since quite some time it seems,
even if then there is the problem of the bridge not being
RUNNING when empty, contrary to what [2] says, so this will need
fixing (and this fix only happened in 3.1, so it wouldn't work
for 2.6.39)
* Using the --interface option of dnsmasq, but I saw somewhere
that it's not used by libvirt for backward compatibility. I am
not sure this would solve this problem, though, as I don't know
how dnsmasq binds itself to it with this option.
This is why this patch does what's described earlier.
This patch also makes radvd start even if the interface is
“missing” (i.e. it is not RUNNING), as it daemonizes before binding to
it, and thus sometimes does it after the interface has been brought down
by us (by closing the tap fd), and then originally stops. This also
makes it stop yelling about it in the logs when the interface is down at
a later time.
[1]
http://git.kernel.org/?p=linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git;a=commit;h=1faa4356a3bd89ea11fb92752d897cff3a20ec0e
[2]
http://git.kernel.org/?p=linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git;a=commit;h=b64b73d7d0c480f75684519c6134e79d50c1b341
In addition to the preformatted text line, pass the raw message as well,
to allow the output functions to use a different output format.
Signed-off-by: Miloslav Trmač <mitr@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Allow for the code converting from libvirt log levels to syslog
log levels to be reused.
Signed-off-by: Miloslav Trmač <mitr@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
In the cgroups APIs we have a virCgroupKillPainfully function
which does the loop sending SIGTERM, then SIGKILL and waiting
for the process to exit. There is similar functionality for
simple processes in qemuProcessKill, but it is tangled with
the QEMU code. Untangle it to provide a virProcessKillPainfuly
function
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Continue consolidation of process functions by moving some
helpers out of command.{c,h} into virprocess.{c,h}
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
There are a number of process related functions spread
across multiple files. Start to consolidate them by
creating a virprocess.{c,h} file
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The virCommand prefix was inappropriate because the API
does not use any virCommandPtr object instance. This
API closely related to waitpid/exit, so use virProcess
as the prefix
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Nothing uses the return value, and creating it requries otherwise
unnecessary strlen () calls.
This cleanup is conceptually independent from the rest of the series
(although the later patches won't apply without it). This just seems
a good opportunity to clean this up, instead of entrenching the unnecessary
return value in the virLogOutputFunc instance that will be added in this
series.
Signed-off-by: Miloslav Trmač <mitr@redhat.com>
When auto-probing hypervisor drivers, the conn->uri field will
initially be NULL. Care must be taken not to access members
when doing auth lookups in the config file
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-howto.html recommends that
the 'If not, see <url>.' phrase be a separate sentence.
* tests/securityselinuxhelper.c: Remove doubled line.
* tests/securityselinuxtest.c: Likewise.
* globally: s/; If/. If/
Commit ee3d3893 missed the fact that (unsigned char)<<(int)
is truncated to int, and therefore failed for any bitmap data
longer than four bytes.
Also, I failed to run 'make syntax-check' on my commit 4bba6579;
for whatever odd reason, ffs lives in a different header than ffsl.
* src/util/bitmap.c (virBitmapNewData): Use correct shift type.
(includes): Glibc (and therefore gnulib) decided ffs is in
<strings.h>, but ffsl is in <string.h>.
* tests/virbitmaptest.c (test5): Test it.
Commit 0fc89098 used functions only available on glibc, completely
botched 32-bit environments, and risked SIGBUS due to unaligned
memory access on platforms that aren't as forgiving as x86_64.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Import ffsl.
* src/util/bitmap.c (includes): Use <strings.h> for ffsl.
(virBitmapNewData, virBitmapToData): Avoid 64-bit assumptions and
non-portable functions.
Two changes are introduced in this patch:
- The first change removes ATTRIBUTE_RETURN_CHECK from
virNetDevBandwidthClear, because it was called with ignore_value
always, anyway. The function is used even when it's not necessary
to call it, just for cleanup purposes.
- The second change is added ignoring of the command's exit status,
since it may report an error even when run just as "to be sure we
clean up" function. No libvirt errors are suppresed by this.
Validates the wwn while parsing, error out if it's malformed.
* src/util/util.h: Declare virValidateWWN
* src/util/util.c: Implement virValidateWWN
* src/libvirt_private.syms: Export virValidateWWN.
* src/conf/domain_conf.h: New member 'wwn' for disk def.
* src/conf/domain_conf.c: Parse and format disk <wwn>
In many places we store bitmap info in a chunk of data
(pointed to by a char *), and have redundant codes to
set/unset bits. This patch extends virBitmap, and convert
those codes to use virBitmap in subsequent patches.
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>
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.
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.
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.
On OpenBSD, clock_gettime() exists in libc rather than librt, and
blindly linking with -lrt made the build fail. Gnulib already
did the work for determining which libraries to use, so we should
reuse that work rather than doing it ourselves.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Pull in clock-time.
* configure.ac (RT_LIBS): Drop.
* src/Makefile.am (libvirt_util_la_LIBADD): Use gnulib variable
instead.
* src/util/virtime.c (includes): Simplify.
Without this patch, logged command executions can be ambiguous if
the command contained any shell metacharacters. This has caused
more than one person to attempt to patch clients to add unnecessary
quoting, without realizing that the command itself was run with
correct args, and only the logged output was ambiguous.
* src/util/command.c (virCommandToString): Add shell escapes.
* tests/commandtest.c (test16): Test new behavior.
* tests/commanddata/test16.log: Update expected output.
* tests/qemuxml2argvdata/qemuxml2argv-*.args: Likewise.
* tests/networkxml2argvdata/*.argv: Likewise.
The codes were updated to allow to reset the device as long as
there is no devices/functions behind the same bus. However, the
comments were kept without touched.
On NUMA machine, the length of string got from file
cpuacct.usage_percpu is quite large, so expand the
limit of 1024 bytes.
errors like:
Failed to read file \
'/cgroup/cpuacct/libvirt/qemu/rhel6q/cpuacct.usage_percpu': \
Value too large for defined data type
The introduction of the new VLAN code, along with the fix
from 5e465df6be, caused the
addition of OVS ports to fail with the following message:
ovs-vsctl: 00002|vsctl|ERR|: missing column name
This fix takes into account the VLAN arguments are optional,
and correctly sets up the command line to run the "ovs-vsctl"
command to add ports to the OVS bridge.
Signed-off-by: Kyle Mestery <kmestery@cisco.com>
CC: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
If a 8021.Qbh network device supports SRIOV and its VF is being used
in pci passthrough mode, when the guest is shutdown or destroyed, the
PF inteface is also brought down. qemuDomainHostdevNetConfigRestore()
finds out the PF for provided hostdev (which is VF) and passes it to
virNetDevPortProfileDisassociate() as linkdev. Later, linkdev gets passed
to virNetDevSetOnline() where the interface is brought down by clearing
IFF_UP flag.
Bringing down a PF, when only VF is being brought down is not expected
behavior. This patch adds a check so that virNetDevSetOnline() is called
only for PF and not if device is a VF.
Signed-off-by: Nishank Trivedi <nistrive@cisco.com>
Fixup buffer usage when handling VLANs. Also fix the logic
used to determine if the virNetDevVlanPtr is valid or not.
Fixes crashes in the latest code when using Open vSwitch
virtualports.
Signed-off-by: Kyle Mestery <kmestery@cisco.com>
* src/util/virnetdevopenvswitch.c (virNetDevOpenvswitchAddPort): avoid libvirtd
crash due to derefing a NULL virtVlan->tag.
RHBZ: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=852383
Signed-off-by: Alex Jia <ajia@redhat.com>
getpwuid_r returns success but sets the return structure to NULL when it
fails to deliver data about the requested uid. In our helper code this
created following strange error messages:
" ... cannot getpwuid_r(1234): Success"
This patch creates a more helpful message:
" ... getpwuid_r failed to retrieve data for uid '1234'"
Previous commit 0b4b53bb80 defined 'inline' to prevent broken build on
systems with libnl1 headers. However, it broke build on systems with
libnl3 headers. Therefore we must make that fix conditional.
Ubuntu 10.04 shipped with out-of-the-box libnl1 headers, which
assumed the old gcc semantics of 'extern inline' as a C89 extension:
the function will _always_ be inline if it is used, and that
it may be declared extern inline in headers without a definition,
as long as the definition occurs before any use. But when C99
added 'extern inline' as a mandatory feature of the language, with
slightly different semantics than gcc (the function MUST have
external linkage, and the inline definition MUST be present
alongside any declaration, where the compiler can then choose
which of the two versions to use), this rendered the use of
'inline' in libnl's header obsolete. Most distros already solved
this by removing 'inline' (the resulting 'extern' is correct,
regardless of gcc semantics), and libnl-3 does not have the
problem (where it has switched to 'static inline' instead, again
with the definition present, and again, our hack will result in
plain 'static' with no ill effects). But for the case of building
out of the box, we hack around the broken Ubuntu header.
* src/util/virnetlink.h: Work around libnl issue.
Currently, when guest agent is configured but not responsive
(e.g. due to appropriate service not running in the guest)
we return VIR_ERR_INTERNAL_ERROR. Both are wrong. Therefore
we need to introduce new error code to reflect this case.
libvirt's network config documents that a bridge's STP "forward delay"
(called "delay" in the XML) should be specified in seconds, but
virNetDevBridgeSetSTPDelay() assumes that it is given a delay in
milliseconds (although the comment at the top of the function
incorrectly says "seconds".
This fixes the comment, and converts the delay to milliseconds before
calling virNetDevBridgeSetSTPDelay().
Several VIR_DEBUG()'s were changed to VIR_WARN() while I was testing
the firewalld support patch, and I neglected to change them back
before I pushed.
In the meantime I've decided that it would be useful to have them be
VIR_INFO(), just so there will be logged evidence of which method is
being used (firewall-cmd vs. (eb|ip)tables) without needing to crank
logging to 11. (at most this adds 2 lines to libvirtd's logs per
libvirtd start).
The virNetlinkEventAddClient / virNetlinkEventRemoveClient stub
impls had syntax errors in their parameter lists, using a ')'
after the second-to-last parameter instead of a ','
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This patch introduce virNetlinkEventServiceStopAll() to stop
all the monitors to receive netlink messages for libvirtd.
Signed-off-by: Tang Chen <tangchen@cn.fujitsu.com>
This patch improve all the API in virnetlink.c to support
all kinds of netlink protocols, and make all netlink sockets
be able to join in groups.
Signed-off-by: Tang Chen <tangchen@cn.fujitsu.com>
vcpu threads pin are implemented using sched_setaffinity(), but
not controlled by cgroup. This patch does the following things:
1) enable cpuset cgroup
2) reflect all the vcpu threads pin info to cgroup
Signed-off-by: Tang Chen <tangchen@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Hu Tao <hutao@cn.fujitsu.com>
Introduce a new API to move tasks of one controller from a cgroup to another cgroup
Signed-off-by: Wen Congyang <wency@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Tang Chen <tangchen@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Hu Tao <hutao@cn.fujitsu.com>
Introduce the function virCgroupForEmulator() to create sub directory
for simulator thread(include I/O thread, vhost-net thread)
Signed-off-by: Wen Congyang <wency@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Tang Chen <tangchen@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Hu Tao <hutao@cn.fujitsu.com>
When gcc atomic intrinsics are not available (such as on RHEL 5
with gcc 4.1.2), we were getting link errors due to multiple
definitions:
./.libs/libvirt_util.a(libvirt_util_la-virobject.o): In function `virAtomicIntXor':
/home/dummy/l,ibvirt/src/util/viratomoic.h:404: multiple definition of `virAtomicIntXor'
./.libs/libvirt_util.a(libvirt_util_la-viratomic.o):/home/dummy/libvirt/src/util/viratomic.h:404: first defined here
Solve this by conditionally marking the functions static (the
condition avoids falling foul of gcc warnings about unused
static function declarations).
* src/util/viratomic.h: When not using gcc intrinsics, use static
functions to avoid linker errors on duplicate functions.
We already skip out on building the LXC under RHEL 5, because the
kernel is too old (commits 4c18acf, 2dee896); but commit 9612e4b
moved some LXC-only code into common files, resulting in this
build failure:
util/virfile.c: In function 'virFileLoopDeviceAssociate':
util/virfile.c:580: error: 'LO_FLAGS_AUTOCLEAR' undeclared (first use in this function)
Unfortunately, the kernel folks only made it an enum, rather than
also a #define, so we have to modify configure.ac to record when
it is usable.
* configure.ac (with_lxc): Mark when LO_FLAGS_AUTOCLEAR was found.
* src/util/virfile.c (virFileLoopDeviceAssociate): Avoid
compilation when kernel is too old.
Fix possible double close in the child process after the fork in case
infd and outfd are equal, just like they are after being called from
virNetSocketNewConnectCommand.
* configure.ac, spec file: firewalld defaults to enabled if dbus is
available, otherwise is disabled. If --with_firewalld is explicitly
requested and dbus is not available, configure will fail.
* bridge_driver: add dbus filters to get the FirewallD1.Reloaded
signal and DBus.NameOwnerChanged on org.fedoraproject.FirewallD1.
When these are encountered, reload all the iptables reuls of all
libvirt's virtual networks (similar to what happens when libvirtd is
restarted).
* iptables, ebtables: use firewall-cmd's direct passthrough interface
when available, otherwise use iptables and ebtables commands. This
decision is made once the first time libvirt calls
iptables/ebtables, and that decision is maintained for the life of
libvirtd.
* Note that the nwfilter part of this patch was separated out into
another patch by Stefan in V2, so that needs to be revised and
re-reviewed as well.
================
All the configure.ac and specfile changes are unchanged from Thomas'
V3.
V3 re-ran "firewall-cmd --state" every time a new rule was added,
which was extremely inefficient. V4 uses VIR_ONCE_GLOBAL_INIT to set
up a one-time initialization function.
The VIR_ONCE_GLOBAL_INIT(x) macro references a static function called
vir(Ip|Eb)OnceInit(), which will then be called the first time that
the static function vir(Ip|Eb)TablesInitialize() is called (that
function is defined for you by the macro). This is
thread-safe, so there is no chance of any race.
IMPORTANT NOTE: I've left the VIR_DEBUG messages in these two init
functions (one for iptables, on for ebtables) as VIR_WARN so that I
don't have to turn on all the other debug message just to see
these. Even if this patch doesn't need any other modification, those
messages need to be changed to VIR_DEBUG before pushing.
This one-time initialization works well. However, I've encountered
problems with testing:
1) Whenever I have enabled the firewalld service, *all* attempts to
call firewall-cmd from within libvirtd end with firewall-cmd hanging
internally somewhere. This is *not* the case if firewall-cmd returns
non-0 in response to "firewall-cmd --state" (i.e. *that* command runs
and returns to libvirt successfully.)
2) If I start libvirtd while firewalld is stopped, then start
firewalld later, this triggers libvirtd to reload its iptables rules,
however it also spits out a *ton* of complaints about deletion failing
(I suppose because firewalld has nuked all of libvirt's rules). I
guess we need to suppress those messages (which is a more annoying
problem to fix than you might think, but that's another story).
3) I noticed a few times during this long line of errors that
firewalld made a complaint about "Resource Temporarily
unavailable. Having libvirtd access iptables commands directly at the
same time as firewalld is doing so is apparently problematic.
4) In general, I'm concerned about the "set it once and never change
it" method - if firewalld is disabled at libvirtd startup, causing
libvirtd to always use iptables/ebtables directly, this won't cause
*terrible* problems, but if libvirtd decides to use firewall-cmd and
firewalld is later disabled, libvirtd will not be able to recover.
This patch adds helper functions that enable us to use libssh2 in
conjunction with libvirt's virNetSockets for ssh transport instead of
spawning "ssh" client process.
This implemetation supports tunneled plaintext, keyboard-interactive,
private key, ssh agent based and null authentication. Libvirt's Auth
callback is used for interaction with the user. (Keyboard interactive
authentication, adding of host keys, private key passphrases). This
enables seamless integration into the application using libvirt. No
helpers as "ssh-askpass" are needed.
Reading and writing of OpenSSH style "known_hosts" files is supported.
Communication is done using SSH exec channel, where the user may specify
arbitrary command to be executed on the remote side and reads and writes
to/from stdin/out are sent through the ssh channel. Usage of stderr is
not (yet) supported.
The network pool should be able to keep track of both network device
names and PCI addresses, and return the appropriate one in the
actualDevice when networkAllocateActualDevice is called.
Signed-off-by: Shradha Shah <sshah@solarflare.com>
Move the functions the parse/format, and validate PCI addresses to
their own file so they can be conveniently used in other places
besides device_conf.c
Refactoring existing code without causing any functional changes to
prepare for new code.
This patch makes the code reusable.
Signed-off-by: Shradha Shah <sshah@solarflare.com>
Add the ability to support VLAN tags for Open vSwitch virtual port
types. To accomplish this, modify virNetDevOpenvswitchAddPort and
virNetDevTapCreateInBridgePort to take a virNetDevVlanPtr
argument. When adding the port to the OVS bridge, setup either a
single VLAN or a trunk port based on the configuration from the
virNetDevVlanPtr.
Signed-off-by: Kyle Mestery <kmestery@cisco.com>
When a network device that is a VF of an SR-IOV card was assigned to a
guest using <interface type='hostdev'>, only the MAC address was being
saved/restored, but the VLAN tag was left untouched. Up to now we
haven't actually used vlan tags on SR-IOV devices, so the guest would
have used whatever was set, and left it the same at the end.
The patch following this one will hook up the <vlan> element from the
interface config, so save/restore of the device state needs to also
include the vlan tag.
MAC address is being saved as a simple ASCII string in a file named
for the device under /var/run. The VLAN tag is now just added at the
end of that file, after a newline. It might be nicer if the file was
XML (in case it ever gets more complicated) but at the moment there's
nothing else on the horizon, and this makes backward compatibility
easier.
To allow for the possibility of vlan "trunks", which have more than
one vlan tag associated with them, we need a vlan struct. Since it
will be used by multiple files in src/util, src/conf, src/network, and
src/qemu, it must be defined in src/util. Unfortunately there isn't
currently a common file for simple netdev data definitions, so I
created a new file.
This caused compilation of virnetdevvportprofile.c to fail on systems
without IFLA support in netlink (these are netlink commands used to
configure the VF's of SR-IOV network devices).
It is desirable to be able to query the config params of
the thread pool, in order to save the server state. Add
virThreadPoolGetMinWorkers, virThreadPoolGetMaxWorkers
and virThreadPoolGetPriorityWorkers APIs.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
While the QEMU monitor/agent do not want JSON strings pretty
printed, other parts of libvirt might. Instead of hardcoding
QEMU's desired behaviour in virJSONValueToString(), add a
boolean flag to control pretty printing
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Use of ldexp() requires -lm on some platforms; use gnulib to determine
this for our makefile. Also, optimize virRandomInt() for the case
of a power-of-two limit (actually rather common, given that Daniel
has a pending patch to replace virRandomBits(10) with code that will
default to virRandomInt(1024) on default SELinux settings).
* .gnulib: Update to latest, for ldexp.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Import ldexp.
* src/Makefile.am (libvirt_util_la_CFLAGS): Link with -lm when
needed.
* src/util/virrandom.c (virRandomInt): Optimize powers of 2.
This patch adds three utility functions that operate on
virNetDevVPortProfile objects.
* virNetDevVPortProfileCheckComplete() - verifies that all attributes
required for the type of the given virtport are specified.
* virNetDevVPortProfileCheckNoExtras() - verifies that there are no
attributes specified which are inappropriate for the type of the
given virtport.
* virNetDevVPortProfileMerge3() - merges 3 virtports into a single,
newly allocated virtport. If any attributes are specified in
more than one of the three sources, and do not exactly match,
an error is logged and the function fails.
These new functions depend on new fields in the virNetDevVPortProfile
object that keep track of whether or not each attribute was
specified. Since the higher level parse function doesn't yet set those
fields, these functions are not actually usable yet (but that's okay,
because they also aren't yet used - all of that functionality comes in
a later patch.)
Note that these three functions return 0 on success and -1 on
failure. This may seem odd for the first two Check functions, since
they could also easily return true/false, but since they actually log
an error when the requested condition isn't met (and should result in
a failure of the calling function), I thought 0/-1 was more
appropriate.
virNetDevVPortProfile has (had) a type field that can be set to one of
several values, and a union of several structs, one for each
type. When a domain's interface object is of type "network", the
domain config may not know beforehand which type of virtualport is
going to be provided in the actual device handed down from the network
driver at runtime, but may want to set some values in the virtualport
that may or may not be used, depending on the type. To support this
usage, this patch replaces the union of structs with toplevel fields
in the struct, making it possible for all of the fields to be set at
the same time.
Both of these functions returned void, but it's convenient for them to
return a const char* of the char* that is passed in. This was you can
call the function and use the result in the same expression/arg.
The current virRandomBits() API is only usable if the caller wants
a random number in the range [0, n-1) where n is a power of two.
This adds a virRandom() API which generates a double in the
range [0.0,1.0) with 48 bits of entropy. It then also adds a
virRandomInt(uint32_t max) API which generates an unsigned
in the range [0,@max)
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
libvirt creates invalid commands if wrong locale is selected. For
example with locale that uses comma as a decimal point, JSON commands
created with decimal numbers are invalid because comma separates the
entries in JSON. Fortunately even when decimal point is affected,
thousands grouping is not, because for grouping to be enabled with
*printf, there has to be an apostrophe flag specified (and supported).
This patch adds specific internal function for converting doubles to
strings with C locale.
This patch introduces a new error code VIR_ERR_OPERATION_UNSUPPORTED to
mark error messages regarding operations that failed due to lack of
support on the hypervisor or other than libvirt issues.
The code is first used in reporting error if qemu does not support block
IO tuning variables yielding error message:
error: Unable to get block I/O throttle parameters
error: Operation not supported: block_io_throttle field
'total_bytes_sec' missing in qemu's output
instead of:
error: Unable to get block I/O throttle parameters
error: internal error cannot read total_bytes_sec
Otherwise, in locations like virobject.c where PROBE is used,
for certain configure options, the compiler warns:
util/virobject.c:110:1: error: 'intptr_t' undeclared (first use in this function)
As long as we are making this header always available, we can
clean up several other files.
* src/internal.h (includes): Pull in <stdint.h>.
* src/conf/nwfilter_conf.h: Rely on internal.h.
* src/storage/storage_backend.c: Likewise.
* src/storage/storage_backend.h: Likewise.
* src/util/cgroup.c: Likewise.
* src/util/sexpr.h: Likewise.
* src/util/virhashcode.h: Likewise.
* src/util/virnetdevvportprofile.h: Likewise.
* src/util/virnetlink.h: Likewise.
* src/util/virrandom.h: Likewise.
* src/vbox/vbox_driver.c: Likewise.
* src/xenapi/xenapi_driver.c: Likewise.
* src/xenapi/xenapi_utils.c: Likewise.
* src/xenapi/xenapi_utils.h: Likewise.
* src/xenxs/xenxs_private.h: Likewise.
* tests/storagebackendsheepdogtest.c: Likewise.
Both LVM volumes and SCSI LUNs have a globally unique
identifier associated with them. It is useful to be able
to query this identifier to then perform disk locking,
rather than try to figure out a stable pathname.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Prevents libvirt from treating RBD backing stores as files. Without this
patch, creating a domain with a qcow2 overlay on an RBD would fail.
This patch essentially extends 9c7c4a4fc5,
which allows nbd backing stores, to allow rbd backing stores.
From man poll(2), poll does not set errno=EAGAIN on interrupt, however
it does set errno=EINTR. Have libvirt retry on the appropriate errno.
Under heavy load, a program of mine kept getting libvirt errors 'poll on
socket failed: Interrupted system call'. The signals were SIGCHLD from
processes forked by threads unrelated to those using libvirt.
This patch is in response to:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=818467
If a caller to virCommandRun doesn't ask for the exitstatus of the
program it's running, the virCommand functions assume that they should
log an error message and return failure if the exit code isn't
0. However, only the commandline and exit status are logged, while
potentially useful information sent by the program to stderr is
discarded.
Fortunately, virCommandRun is already checking if the caller had asked
for stderr to be saved and, if not, sets things up to save it in
*cmd->errbuf. This makes it fairly simple for virCommandWait to
include *cmd->errbuf in the error log (there are still other callers
that don't setup errbuf, and even virCommandRun won't set it up if the
command is being daemonized, so we have to check that it's non-zero).
This introduces a fairly basic reference counted virObject type
and an associated virClass type, that use atomic operations for
ref counting.
In a global initializer (recommended to be invoked using the
virOnceInit API), a virClass type must be allocated for each
object type. This requires a class name, a "dispose" callback
which will be invoked to free memory associated with the object's
fields, and the size in bytes of the object struct.
eg,
virClassPtr connclass = virClassNew("virConnect",
sizeof(virConnect),
virConnectDispose);
The struct for the object, must include 'virObject' as its
first member
eg
struct _virConnect {
virObject object;
virURIPtr uri;
};
The 'dispose' callback is only responsible for freeing
fields in the object, not the object itself. eg a suitable
impl for the above struct would be
void virConnectDispose(void *obj) {
virConnectPtr conn = obj;
virURIFree(conn->uri);
}
There is no need to reset fields to 'NULL' or '0' in the
dispose callback, since the entire object will be memset
to 0, and the klass pointer & magic integer fields will
be poisoned with 0xDEADBEEF before being free()d
When creating an instance of an object, one needs simply
pass the virClassPtr eg
virConnectPtr conn = virObjectNew(connclass);
if (!conn)
return NULL;
conn->uri = virURIParse("foo:///bar")
Object references can be manipulated with
virObjectRef(conn)
virObjectUnref(conn)
The latter returns a true value, if the object has been
freed (ie its ref count hit zero)
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
All callers used the same initialization seed (well, the new
viratomictest forgot to look at getpid()); so we might as well
make this value automatic. And while it may feel like we are
giving up functionality, I documented how to get it back in the
unlikely case that you actually need to debug with a fixed
pseudo-random sequence. I left that crippled by default, so
that a stray environment variable doesn't cause a lack of
randomness to become a security issue.
* src/util/virrandom.c (virRandomInitialize): Rename...
(virRandomOnceInit): ...and make static, with one-shot call.
Document how to do fixed-seed debugging.
* src/util/virrandom.h (virRandomInitialize): Drop prototype.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (virrandom.h): Don't export it.
* src/libvirt.c (virInitialize): Adjust caller.
* src/lxc/lxc_controller.c (main): Likewise.
* src/security/virt-aa-helper.c (main): Likewise.
* src/util/iohelper.c (main): Likewise.
* tests/seclabeltest.c (main): Likewise.
* tests/testutils.c (virtTestMain): Likewise.
* tests/viratomictest.c (mymain): Likewise.
There are a few issues with the current virAtomic APIs
- They require use of a virAtomicInt struct instead of a plain
int type
- Several of the methods do not implement memory barriers
- The methods do not implement compiler re-ordering barriers
- There is no Win32 native impl
The GLib library has a nice LGPLv2+ licensed impl of atomic
ops that works with GCC, Win32, or pthreads.h that addresses
all these problems. The main downside to their code is that
the pthreads impl uses a single global mutex, instead of
a per-variable mutex. Given that it does have a Win32 impl
though, we don't expect anyone to seriously use the pthread.h
impl, so this downside is not significant.
* .gitignore: Ignore test case
* configure.ac: Check for which atomic ops impl to use
* src/Makefile.am: Add viratomic.c
* src/nwfilter/nwfilter_dhcpsnoop.c: Switch to new atomic
ops APIs and plain int datatype
* src/util/viratomic.h: inline impls of all atomic ops
for GCC, Win32 and pthreads
* src/util/viratomic.c: Global pthreads mutex for atomic
ops
* tests/viratomictest.c: Test validate to validate safety
of atomic ops.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Remove the use of a manually run virLogStartup and
virNodeSuspendInitialize methods. Instead make sure they
are automatically run using VIR_ONCE_GLOBAL_INIT
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Add function virCommandNewVAList which is equivalent to the
virCommandNewArgList but with va_list instead of a variable number
of arguments.
Signed-off-by: Dmitry Guryanov <dguryanov@parallels.com>
Parallels Cloud Server is a cloud-ready virtualization
solution that allows users to simultaneously run multiple virtual
machines and containers on the same physical server.
More information can be found here: http://www.parallels.com/products/pcs/
Also beta version of Parallels Cloud Server can be downloaded there.
Signed-off-by: Dmitry Guryanov <dguryanov@parallels.com>
This is a follow up patch of commit f9ce7dad6, it modifies all
the files which declare the copyright like "See COPYING.LIB for
the License of this software" to use the detailed/consistent one.
And deserts the outdated comments like:
* libvirt-qemu.h:
* Summary: qemu specific interfaces
* Description: Provides the interfaces of the libvirt library to handle
* qemu specific methods
*
* Copy: Copyright (C) 2010, 2012 Red Hat, Inc.
Uses the more compact style like:
* libvirt-qemu.h: Interfaces specific for QEMU/KVM driver
*
* Copyright (C) 2010, 2012 Red Hat, Inc.
Change the permissible minimum value of nodesuspend duration time
to 60 seconds. If option is less than the value, reports error.
Update virsh help and manpage the infomation.
No check for conn->uri being NULL in virAuthGetConfigFilePath (valid
state) made the client segfault. This happens for example with these
settings:
- no virtualbox driver installed (modifies conn->uri)
- no default URI set (VIRSH_DEFAULT_CONNECT_URI="",
LIBVIRT_DEFAULT_URI="", uri_default="")
- auth_sock_rw="sasl"
- virsh run as root
That are unfortunately the settings with fresh Fedora 17 installation
with VDSM.
The check ought to be enough as conn->uri being NULL is valid in later
code and is handled properly.
Per the FSF address could be changed from time to time, and GNU
recommends the following now: (http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-howto.html)
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with Foobar. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
This patch removes the explicit FSF address, and uses above instead
(of course, with inserting 'Lesser' before 'General').
Except a bunch of files for security driver, all others are changed
automatically, the copyright for securify files are not complete,
that's why to do it manually:
src/security/security_selinux.h
src/security/security_driver.h
src/security/security_selinux.c
src/security/security_apparmor.h
src/security/security_apparmor.c
src/security/security_driver.c
When reporting a system error (VIR_ERR_SYSTEM_ERROR) via
virReportSystemError, we should copy the errno value into
the 'int1' field of the virErrorPtr struct. This allows
callers to detect certain errno conditions & discard the
error
* src/util/virterror.c: Place errno value in int1 field
ensures that initialization will always take place when it is
needed, and guarantees it only occurs once. The problem is that
the code to setup a global initializer with proper error
propagation is tedious. This introduces VIR_ONCE_GLOBAL_INIT
macro to simplify this.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This removes nearly all the per-file error reporting macros
from the code in src/util/. A few custom macros remain for the
case, where the file needs to report errors with a variety of
different codes or parameters
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The virnetdevtap.c and viruri.c files had two error report
messages which were not annotated with _(...)
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Nearly every source file does something like
#define VIR_FROM_THIS VIR_FROM_FOO
#define virFooReportErorr(code, ...) \
virReportErrorHelper(VIR_FROM_THIS, code, __FILE__, \
__FUNCTION__, __LINE__, \
__VA_ARGS__)
This creates needless duplication and inconsistent error
reporting function names in each file. It is trivial to
just have virterror_internal.h provide a virReportError
macro that is equivalent
* src/util/virterror_internal.h: Define virReportError(code, ...)
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Introduce new members in the virMacAddr 'class'
- virMacAddrSet: set virMacAddr from a virMacAddr
- virMacAddrSetRaw: setting virMacAddr from raw 6 byte MAC address buffer
- virMacAddrGetRaw: writing virMacAddr into raw 6 byte MAC address buffer
- virMacAddrCmp: comparing two virMacAddr
- virMacAddrCmpRaw: comparing a virMacAddr with a raw 6 byte MAC address buffer
then replace raw MAC addresses by replacing
- 'unsigned char *' with virMacAddrPtr
- 'unsigned char ... [VIR_MAC_BUFLEN]' with virMacAddr
and introduce usage of above functions where necessary.
When building with --disable-debug, VIR_DEBUG expands to a nop.
But parameters to VIR_DEBUG can be variables that are passed only
to VIR_DEBUG. In the case the building system complains about unused
variables.
Instead of changing the existed virFileMakePath to accept mode
argument and modifying a pile of its uses, this patch introduces
virFileMakePathWithMode, and use it instead of mkdir() to create
the readline history dir.
While it is not currently used elsewhere in libvirt, the code
for finding a free loop device & associating a file with it
is not LXC specific. Move it into the viffile.{c,h} file where
potentially shared code is more commonly kept.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Hello,
This is a patch to fix vm's outbound traffic control problem.
Currently, vm's outbound traffic control by libvirt doesn't go well.
This problem was previously discussed at libvir-list ML, however
it seems that there isn't still any answer to the problem.
http://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2011-August/msg00333.html
I measured Guest(with virtio-net) to Host TCP throughput with the
command "netperf -H".
Here are the outbound QoS parameters and the results.
outbound average rate[kilobytes/s] : Guest to Host throughput[Mbit/s]
======================================================================
1024 (8Mbit/s) : 4.56
2048 (16Mbit/s) : 3.29
4096 (32Mbit/s) : 3.35
8192 (64Mbit/s) : 3.95
16384 (128Mbit/s) : 4.08
32768 (256Mbit/s) : 3.94
65536 (512Mbit/s) : 3.23
The outbound traffic goes down unreasonably and is even not controled.
The cause of this problem is too large mtu value in "tc filter" command run by
libvirt. The command uses burst value to set mtu and the burst is equal to
average rate value if it's not set. This value is too large. For example
if the average rate is set to 1024 kilobytes/s, the mtu value is set to 1024
kilobytes. That's too large compared to the size of network packets.
Here libvirt applies tc ingress filter to Host's vnet(tun) device.
Tc ingress filter is implemented with TBF(Token Buckets Filter) algorithm. TBF
uses mtu value to calculate the amount of token consumed by each packet. With too
large mtu value, the token consumption rate is set too large. This leads to
token starvation and deterioration of TCP throughput.
Then, should we use the default mtu value 2 kilobytes?
The anser is No, because Guest with virtio-net device uses 65536 bytes
as mtu to transmit packets to Host, and the tc filter with the default mtu
value 2k drops packets whose size is larger than 2k. So, the most packets
is droped and again leads to deterioration of TCP throughput.
The appropriate mtu value is 65536 bytes which is equal to the maximum value
of network interface device defined in <linux/netdevice.h>. The value is
not so large that it causes token starvation and not so small that it
drops most packets.
Therefore this patch set the mtu value to 64kb(== 65535 bytes).
Again, here are the outbound QoS parameters and the TCP throughput with
the libvirt patched.
outbound average rate[kilobytes/s] : Guest to Host throughput[Mbit/s]
======================================================================
1024 (8Mbit/s) : 8.22
2048 (16Mbit/s) : 16.42
4096 (32Mbit/s) : 32.93
8192 (64Mbit/s) : 66.85
16384 (128Mbit/s) : 133.88
32768 (256Mbit/s) : 271.01
65536 (512Mbit/s) : 547.32
The outbound traffic conforms to the given limit.
Thank you,
Signed-off-by: Eiichi Tsukata <eiichi.tsukata.xh@hitachi.com>
In order to retrieve some sysinfo data we need to parse /proc/sysinfo and
/proc/cpuinfo.
Signed-off-by: Thang Pham <thang.pham@us.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Some GNULIB headers (eg unistd.h) will often need to include
winsock2.h for various symbols. There is a rule that winsock2.h
must be included before windows.h. This means that any file
which does
#ifdef WIN32
#include <windows.h>
#endif
#include <unistd.h>
is potentially broken. A simple rule is that /all/ includes of
windows.h must be matched with a preceding include of winsock2.h
regardless of whether unistd.h is used currently
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
A core use case of the hook scripts is to be able to do things
to a guest's network configuration. It is possible to hook into
the 'start' operation for a QEMU guest which runs just before
the guest is started. The TAP devices will exist at this point,
but the QEMU process will not. It can be desirable to have a
'started' hook too, which runs once QEMU has started.
If libvirtd is restarted it will re-populate firewall rules,
but there is no QEMU hook to trigger for existing domains.
This is solved with a 'reconnect' hook.
Finally, if attaching to an external QEMU process there needs
to be an 'attach' hook script.
This all also applies to the LXC driver
* docs/hooks.html.in: Document new operations
* src/util/hooks.c, src/util/hooks.c: Add 'started', 'reconnect'
and 'attach' operations for QEMU. Add 'prepare', 'started',
'release' and 'reconnect' operations for LXC
* src/lxc/lxc_driver.c: Add hooks for 'prepare', 'started',
'release' and 'reconnect' operations
* src/qemu/qemu_process.c: Add hooks for 'started', 'reconnect'
and 'reconnect' operations
Right now, the only way to get at the contents of a virBuffer is
to destroy it. But there are cases in my upcoming patches where
peeking at the contents makes life easier. I suppose this does
open up the potential for bad code to dereference a stale pointer,
by disregarding the docs that the return value is invalid on the
next virBuf operation, but such is life.
* src/util/buf.h (virBufferCurrentContent): New declaration.
* src/util/buf.c (virBufferCurrentContent): Implement it.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (buf.h): Export it.
* tests/virbuftest.c (testBufAutoIndent): Test it.
When libvirtd forks off a new child, the child then calls virLogReset(),
which ends up closing file descriptors used as log outputs. However, we
recently started logging closed file descriptors, which means we need to
lock logging mutex which was already locked by virLogReset(). We don't
really want to log anything when we are in the process of closing log
outputs.
There is a theoretical problem of an extreme bug where we can get
into deadlock due to command handshaking. Thanks to a pair of pipes,
we have a situation where the parent thinks the child reported an
error and is waiting for a message from the child to explain the
error; but at the same time the child thinks it reported success
and is waiting for the parent to acknowledge the success; so both
processes are now blocked.
Thankfully, I don't think this deadlock is possible without at
least one other bug in the code, but I did see exactly that sort
of situation prior to commit da831af - I saw a backtrace where a
double close bug in the parent caused the parent to read from the
wrong fd and assume the child failed, even though the child really
sent success.
This potential deadlock is not quite like commit 858c247 (a deadlock
due to multiple readers on one pipe preventing a write from completing),
although the solution is similar - always close unused pipe fds before
blocking, rather than after.
* src/util/command.c (virCommandHandshakeWait): Close unused fds
sooner.
It is possible to deadlock libvirt by having a domain with XML
longer than PIPE_BUF, and by writing a hook script that closes
stdin early. This is because libvirt was keeping a copy of the
child's stdin read fd open, which means the write fd in the
parent will never see EPIPE (remember, libvirt should always be
run with SIGPIPE ignored, so we should never get a SIGPIPE signal).
Since there is no error, libvirt blocks waiting for a write to
complete, even though the only reader is also libvirt. The
solution is to ensure that only the child can act as a reader
before the parent does any writes; and then dealing with the
fallout of dealing with EPIPE.
Thankfully, this is not a security hole - since the only way to
trigger the deadlock is to install a custom hook script, anyone
that already has privileges to install a hook script already has
privileges to do any number of other equally disruptive things
to libvirt; it would only be a security hole if an unprivileged
user could install a hook script to DoS a privileged user.
* src/util/command.c (virCommandRun): Close parent's copy of child
read fd earlier.
(virCommandProcessIO): Don't let EPIPE be fatal; the child may
be done parsing input.
* tests/commandhelper.c (main): Set up a SIGPIPE situation.
* tests/commandtest.c (test20): Trigger it.
* tests/commanddata/test20.log: New file.
EBADF errors are logged as warnings as they normally indicate a double
close bug. This patch also provides VIR_MASS_CLOSE helper to be user in
the only case of mass close after fork when EBADF should rather be
ignored.
KAMEZAWA Hiroyuki reported a nasty double-free bug when virCommand
is used to convert a string into input to a child command. The
problem is that the poll() loop of virCommandProcessIO would close()
the write end of the pipe in order to let the child see EOF, then
the caller virCommandRun() would also close the same fd number, with
the second close possibly nuking an fd opened by some other thread
in the meantime. This in turn can have all sorts of bad effects.
The bug has been present since the introduction of virCommand in
commit f16ad06f.
This is based on his first attempt at a patch, at
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=823716
* src/util/command.c (_virCommand): Drop inpipe member.
(virCommandProcessIO): Add argument, to avoid closing caller's fd
without informing caller.
(virCommandRun, virCommandNewArgs): Adjust clients.
Currently, we are logging only one side of pipes we
create in virCommandRequireHandshake(); This is enough
in cases where pipe2() returns two consecutive FDs. However,
it is not guaranteed and it may return any FDs.
Therefore, it's wise to log the other ends as well.
To ensure consistent error reporting of invalid arguments,
provide a number of predefined helper methods & macros.
- An arg which must not be NULL:
virCheckNonNullArgReturn(argname, retvalue)
virCheckNonNullArgGoto(argname, label)
- An arg which must be NULL
virCheckNullArgGoto(argname, label)
- An arg which must be positive (ie 1 or greater)
virCheckPositiveArgGoto(argname, label)
- An arg which must not be 0
virCheckNonZeroArgGoto(argname, label)
- An arg which must be zero
virCheckZeroArgGoto(argname, label)
- An arg which must not be negative (ie 0 or greater)
virCheckNonNegativeArgGoto(argname, label)
* src/libvirt.c, src/libvirt-qemu.c,
src/nodeinfo.c, src/datatypes.c: Update to use
virCheckXXXX macros
* po/POTFILES.in: Add libvirt-qemu.c and virterror_internal.h
* src/internal.h: Define macros for checking invalid args
* src/util/virterror_internal.h: Define macros for reporting
invalid args
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Add an impl of +virGetUserRuntimeDirectory, virGetUserCacheDirectory
virGetUserConfigDirectory and virGetUserDirectory for Win32 platform.
Also create stubs for non-Win32 platforms which lack getpwuid_r()
In adding these two helpers were added virFileIsAbsPath and
virFileSkipRoot, along with some macros VIR_FILE_DIR_SEPARATOR,
VIR_FILE_DIR_SEPARATOR_S, VIR_FILE_IS_DIR_SEPARATOR,
VIR_FILE_PATH_SEPARATOR, VIR_FILE_PATH_SEPARATOR_S
All this code was adapted from GLib2 under terms of LGPLv2+ license.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Remove the uid param from virGetUserConfigDirectory,
virGetUserCacheDirectory, virGetUserRuntimeDirectory,
and virGetUserDirectory
These functions were universally called with the
results of getuid() or geteuid(). To make it practical
to port to Win32, remove the uid parameter and hardcode
geteuid()
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Add a VIR_ERR_DOMAIN_LAST sentinel for virErrorDomain and
replace the virErrorDomainName function by a VIR_ENUM_IMPL
In the process the naming of error domains is sanitized
* src/util/virterror.c: Use VIR_ENUM_IMPL for converting
error domains to strings
* include/libvirt/virterror.h: Add VIR_ERR_DOMAIN_LAST
The libvirt_private.syms file exports virNetlinkEventServiceLocalPid
so there needs to be a no-op stub for Win32 to avoid linker errors
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
I'm tired of writing:
bool sep = false;
while (...) {
if (sep)
virBufferAddChar(buf, ',');
sep = true;
virBufferAdd(buf, str);
}
This makes it easier, allowing one to write:
while (...)
virBufferAsprintf(buf, "%s,", str);
virBufferTrim(buf, ",", -1);
to trim any remaining comma.
* src/util/buf.h (virBufferTrim): Declare.
* src/util/buf.c (virBufferTrim): New function.
* tests/virbuftest.c (testBufTrim): Test it.
We were being lazy - virnetlink.c was getting uint32_t as a
side-effect from glibc 2.14's <unistd.h>, but older glibc 2.11
does not provide uint32_t from <unistd.h>. In fact, POSIX states
that <unistd.h> need only provide intptr_t, not all of <stdint.h>,
so the bug really is ours. Reported by Jonathan Alescio.
* src/util/virnetlink.h: Include <stdint.h>.
This involves setting the cpuacct cgroup to a per-vcpu granularity,
as well as summing the each vcpu accounting into a common array.
Now that we are reading more than one cgroup file, we double-check
that cpus weren't hot-plugged between reads to invalidate our
summing.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Allow the logging APIs to be called with a va_list for format
args, instead of requiring var-args usage.
* src/util/logging.h, src/util/logging.c: Add virLogVMessage
The use of readlink() in lxc_container.c is intentional; we don't
want an absolute pathname there.
* src/util/cgroup.h (VIR_CGROUP_SYSFS_MOUNT): Indent properly.
* cfg.mk (exclude_file_name_regexp--sc_prohibit_readlink): Add
exemption.
Normal practice is for cgroups controllers to be mounted at
/sys/fs/cgroup. When setting up a container, /sys is mounted
with a new sysfs instance, thus we must re-mount all the
cgroups controllers. The complexity is that we must mount
them in the same layout as the host OS. ie if 'cpu' and 'cpuacct'
were mounted at the same location in the host we must preserve
this in the container. Also if any controllers are co-located
we must setup symlinks from the individual controller name to
the co-located mount-point
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Callers of virGetUser{Config,Runtime,Cache}Directory all
append further path component. We should not be
adding a trailing slash in the return path otherwise we
get paths containing '//'
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Sometimes it is useful to see the callpath for log messages.
This change enhances the log filter syntax so that stack traces
can be show by setting '1:+NAME' instead of '1:NAME'.
This results in output like:
2012-05-09 14:18:45.136+0000: 13314: debug : virInitialize:414 : register drivers
/home/berrange/src/virt/libvirt/src/.libs/libvirt.so.0(virInitialize+0xd6)[0x7f89188ebe86]
/home/berrange/src/virt/libvirt/tools/.libs/lt-virsh[0x431921]
/lib64/libc.so.6(__libc_start_main+0xf5)[0x3a21e21735]
/home/berrange/src/virt/libvirt/tools/.libs/lt-virsh[0x40a279]
2012-05-09 14:18:45.136+0000: 13314: debug : virRegisterDriver:775 : driver=0x7f8918d02760 name=Test
/home/berrange/src/virt/libvirt/src/.libs/libvirt.so.0(virRegisterDriver+0x6b)[0x7f89188ec717]
/home/berrange/src/virt/libvirt/src/.libs/libvirt.so.0(+0x11b3ad)[0x7f891891e3ad]
/home/berrange/src/virt/libvirt/src/.libs/libvirt.so.0(virInitialize+0xf3)[0x7f89188ebea3]
/home/berrange/src/virt/libvirt/tools/.libs/lt-virsh[0x431921]
/lib64/libc.so.6(__libc_start_main+0xf5)[0x3a21e21735]
/home/berrange/src/virt/libvirt/tools/.libs/lt-virsh[0x40a279]
* docs/logging.html.in: Document new syntax
* configure.ac: Check for execinfo.h
* src/util/logging.c, src/util/logging.h: Add support for
stack traces
* tests/testutils.c: Adapt to API change
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
As defined in:
http://standards.freedesktop.org/basedir-spec/basedir-spec-latest.html
This offers a number of advantages:
* Allows sharing a home directory between different machines, or
sessions (eg. using NFS)
* Cleanly separates cache, runtime (eg. sockets), or app data from
user settings
* Supports performing smart or selective migration of settings
between different OS versions
* Supports reseting settings without breaking things
* Makes it possible to clear cache data to make room when the disk
is filling up
* Allows us to write a robust and efficient backup solution
* Allows an admin flexibility to change where data and settings are stored
* Dramatically reduces the complexity and incoherence of the
system for administrators
Until now, the nl_pid of the source address of every message sent by
virNetlinkCommand has been set to the value of getpid(). Most of the
time this doesn't matter, and in the one case where it does
(communication with lldpad), it previously was the proper thing to do,
because the netlink event service (which listens on a netlink socket
for unsolicited messages from lldpad) coincidentally always happened
to bind with a local nl_pid == getpid().
With the fix for:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=816465
that particular nl_pid is now effectively a reserved value, so the
netlink event service will always bind to something else
(coincidentally "getpid() + (1 << 22)", but it really could be
anything). The result is that communication between lldpad and
libvirtd is broken (lldpad gets a "disconnected" error when it tries
to send a directed message).
The solution to this problem caused by a solution, is to query the
netlink event service's nlhandle for its "local_port", and send that
as the source nl_pid (but only when sending to lldpad, of course - in
other cases we maintain the old behavior of sending getpid()).
There are two cases where a message is being directed at lldpad - one
in virNetDevLinkDump, and one in virNetDevVPortProfileOpSetLink.
The case of virNetDevVPortProfileOpSetLink is simplest to explain -
only if !nltarget_kernel, i.e. the message isn't targetted for the
kernel, is the dst_pid set (by calling
virNetDevVPortProfileGetLldpadPid()), so only in that case do we call
virNetlinkEventServiceLocalPid() to set src_pid.
For virNetDevLinkDump, it's a bit more complicated. The call to
virNetDevVPortProfileGetLldpadPid() was effectively up one level (in
virNetDevVPortProfileOpCommon), although obscured by an unnecessary
passing of a function pointer. This patch removes the function
pointer, and calls virNetDevVPortProfileGetLldpadPid() directly in
virNetDevVPortProfileOpCommon - if it's doing this, it knows that it
should also call virNetlinkEventServiceLocalPid() to set src_pid too;
then it just passes src_pid and dst_pid down to
virNetDevLinkDump. Since (src_pid == 0 && dst_pid == 0) implies that
the kernel is the destination, there is no longer any need to send
nltarget_kernel as an arg to virNetDevLinkDump, so it's been removed.
The disparity between src_pid being int and dst_pid being uint32_t may
be a bit disconcerting to some, but I didn't want to complicate
virNetlinkEventServiceLocalPid() by having status returned separately
from the value.
This value will be needed to set the src_pid when sending netlink
messages to lldpad. It is part of the solution to:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=816465
Note that libnl's port generation algorithm guarantees that the
nl_socket_get_local_port() will always be > 0 (since it is "getpid() +
(n << 22>" where n is always < 1024), so it is okay to cast the
uint32_t to int (thus allowing us to use -1 as an error sentinel).
Until now, virNetlinkCommand has assumed that the nl_pid in the source
address of outgoing netlink messages should always be the return value
of getpid(). In most cases it actually doesn't matter, but in the case
of communication with lldpad, lldpad saves this info and later uses it
to send netlink messages back to libvirt. A recent patch to fix Bug
816465 changed the order of the universe such that the netlink event
service socket is no longer bound with nl_pid == getpid(), so lldpad
could no longer send unsolicited messages to libvirtd. Adding src_pid
as an argument to virNetlinkCommand() is the first step in notifying
lldpad of the proper address of the netlink event service socket.
usbFindDevice():get usb device according to
idVendor, idProduct, bus, device
it is the exact match of the four parameters
usbFindDeviceByBus():get usb device according to bus, device
it returns only one usb device same as usbFindDevice
usbFindDeviceByVendor():get usb device according to idVendor,idProduct
it probably returns multiple usb devices.
usbDeviceSearch(): a helper function to do the actual search
These two functions are called from main() on all platforms, and
always return success on platforms that don't support libnl. They
still log an error message, though, which doesn't make sense - they
should just be NOPs on those platforms. (Per a suggestion during
review, I've turned the logs into debug messages rather than removing
them completely).
Error: STRING_NULL:
/libvirt/src/util/uuid.c:273:
string_null_argument: Function "getDMISystemUUID" does not terminate string "*dmiuuid".
/libvirt/src/util/uuid.c:241:
string_null_argument: Function "saferead" fills array "*uuid" with a non-terminated string.
/libvirt/src/util/util.c:101:
string_null_argument: Function "read" fills array "*buf" with a non-terminated string.
/libvirt/src/util/uuid.c:274:
string_null: Passing unterminated string "dmiuuid" to a function expecting a null-terminated string.
/libvirt/src/util/uuid.c:138:
var_assign_parm: Assigning: "cur" = "uuidstr". They now point to the same thing.
/libvirt/src/util/uuid.c:164:
string_null_sink_loop: Searching for null termination in an unterminated array "cur".
configure.ac: check for libnl-3 in addition to libnl-1
src/Makefile.am: link against libnl when needed
src/util/virnetlink.c:
support libnl3 api. To minimize impact on code flow, wrap the
differences under the virNetlink* namespace.
Unfortunately libnl3 moves netlink/msg.h to
/usr/include/libnl3/netlink/msg.h, so the LIBNL_CFLAGS need to be added
to a bunch of places where they weren't needed with libnl1.
Signed-off-by: Serge Hallyn <serge.hallyn@canonical.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Add function virJSONValueObjectKeysNumber, virJSONValueObjectGetKey
and virJSONValueObjectGetValue, which allow you to iterate over all
fields of json object: you can get number of fields and then get
name and value, stored in field with that name by index.
Signed-off-by: Dmitry Guryanov <dguryanov@parallels.com>
In fact, the 'tapfd' is always NULL, the function 'virNetDevTapCreate()' hasn't
assign 'fd' to 'tapfd', when the function 'virNetDevSetMAC()' is failed then
goto 'error' label, finally, the VIR_FORCE_CLOSE() will deref a NULL 'tapfd'.
* util/virnetdevtap.c (virNetDevTapCreateInBridgePort): fix a NULL pointer derefing.
* How to reproduce?
$ cat > /tmp/net.xml <<EOF
<network>
<name>test</name>
<forward mode='nat'/>
<bridge name='br1' stp='off' delay='1' />
<mac address='00:00:00:00:00:00'/>
<ip address='192.168.100.1' netmask='255.255.255.0'>
<dhcp>
<range start='192.168.100.2' end='192.168.100.254' />
</dhcp>
</ip>
</network>
EOF
$ virsh net-define /tmp/net.xml
$ virsh net-start test
error: Failed to start network brTest
error: End of file while reading data: Input/output error
Signed-off-by: Alex Jia <ajia@redhat.com>
When libvirtd is started, we create "libvirt/qemu" directories under
hugetlbfs mount point. Only the "qemu" subdirectory is chowned to qemu
user and "libvirt" remains owned by root. If umask was too restrictive
when libvirtd started, qemu user may lose access to "qemu"
subdirectory. Let's explicitly grant search permissions to "libvirt"
directory for all users.
Below patch fixes the following coverity findings
Error: OVERRUN_STATIC:
/libvirt/src/qemu/qemu_command.c:152:
overrun-buffer-val: Overrunning static array "net->mac" of size 6 bytes by passing it as an argument to a function which indexes it at byte position 15.
/libvirt/src/util/virnetdevmacvlan.c:948:
access_dbuff_const: Calling "virNetDevMacVLanVPortProfileRegisterCallback" indexes array "macaddress" at byte position 15.
/libvirt/src/util/virnetdevmacvlan.c:773:
access_dbuff_const: Calling "memcpy" indexes array "macaddress" with index "16UL" at byte position 15.
Error: OVERRUN_STATIC:
/libvirt/src/qemu/qemu_migration.c:2744:
overrun-buffer-val: Overrunning static array "net->mac" of size 6 bytes by passing it as an argument to a function which indexes it at byte position 15.
/libvirt/src/util/virnetdevmacvlan.c:773:
access_dbuff_const: Calling "memcpy" indexes array "macaddress" with index "16UL" at byte position 15.
Error: OVERRUN_STATIC:
/libvirt/src/qemu/qemu_driver.c:435:
overrun-buffer-val: Overrunning static array "net->mac" of size 6 bytes by passing it as an argument to a function which indexes it at byte position 15.
/libvirt/src/util/virnetdevmacvlan.c:1036:
access_dbuff_const: Calling "virNetDevMacVLanVPortProfileRegisterCallback" indexes array "macaddress" at byte position 15.
/libvirt/src/util/virnetdevmacvlan.c:773:
access_dbuff_const: Calling "memcpy" indexes array "macaddress" with index "16UL" at byte position 15.
Some of the error messages in this function should have been
virReportSystemError (since they have an errno they want to log), but
were mistakenly written as netlinkError, which expects a libvirt error
code instead. The result was that when one of the errors was
encountered, "No error message provided" would be printed instead of
something meaningful (see
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=816465 for an example).
This patch resolves https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=815270
The function virNetDevMacVLanVPortProfileRegisterCallback() takes an
arg "virtPortProfile", and was checking it for non-NULL before using
it. However, the prototype for
virNetDevMacVLanPortProfileRegisterCallback had marked that arg with
ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL(). Contrary to what one may think,
ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL() does not provide any guarantee that an arg marked
as such really is always non-null; the only effect to the code
generated by gcc, is that gcc *assumes* it is non-NULL; this results
in, for example, the check for a non-NULL value being optimized out.
(Unfortunately, this code removal only occurs when optimization is
enabled, and I am in the habit of doing local builds with optimization
off to ease debugging, so the bug didn't show up in my earlier local
testing).
In general, virPortProfile might always be NULL, so it shouldn't be
marked as ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL. One other function prototype made this
same error, so this patch fixes it as well.
Add 2 new functions to the virSocketAddr 'class':
- virSocketAddrEqual: tests whether two IP addresses and their ports are equal
- virSocketaddSetIPv4Addr: set a virSocketAddr given a 32 bit int
This patch improves the previously added virAtomicInt implementation
by using gcc-builtins if possible. The needed builtins are available
since GCC >= 4.1. At least the 4.0 docs don't mention them.
This patch introduces a new block job, useful for live storage
migration using pre-copy streaming. Justification for including
this under virDomainBlockRebase rather than adding a new command
includes: 1) there are now two possible block jobs in qemu, with
virDomainBlockRebase starting either type of command, and
virDomainBlockJobInfo and virDomainBlockJobAbort working to end
either type; 2) reusing this command allows distros to backport
this feature to the libvirt 0.9.10 API without a .so bump.
Note that a future patch may add a more powerful interface named
virDomainBlockJobCopy, dedicated to just the block copy job, in
order to expose even more options (such as setting an arbitrary
format type for the destination without having to probe it from a
pre-existing destination file); adding a new command for targetting
just block copy would be similar to how we already have
virDomainBlockPull for targetting just the block pull job.
Using a live VM with the backing chain:
base <- snap1 <- snap2
as the starting point, we have:
- virDomainBlockRebase(dom, disk, "/path/to/copy", 0,
VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_COPY)
creates /path/to/copy with the same format as snap2, with no backing
file, so entire chain is copied and flattened
- virDomainBlockRebase(dom, disk, "/path/to/copy", 0,
VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_COPY|VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_COPY_RAW)
creates /path/to/copy as a raw file, so entire chain is copied and
flattened
- virDomainBlockRebase(dom, disk, "/path/to/copy", 0,
VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_COPY|VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_SHALLOW)
creates /path/to/copy with the same format as snap2, but with snap1 as
a backing file, so only snap2 is copied.
- virDomainBlockRebase(dom, disk, "/path/to/copy", 0,
VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_COPY|VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_REUSE_EXT)
reuse existing /path/to/copy (must have empty contents, and format is
probed[*] from the metadata), and copy the full chain
- virDomainBlockRebase(dom, disk, "/path/to/copy", 0,
VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_COPY|VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_REUSE_EXT|
VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_SHALLOW)
reuse existing /path/to/copy (contents must be identical to snap1,
and format is probed[*] from the metadata), and copy only the contents
of snap2
- virDomainBlockRebase(dom, disk, "/path/to/copy", 0,
VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_COPY|VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_REUSE_EXT|
VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_SHALLOW|VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_COPY_RAW)
reuse existing /path/to/copy (must be raw volume with contents
identical to snap1), and copy only the contents of snap2
Less useful combinations:
- virDomainBlockRebase(dom, disk, "/path/to/copy", 0,
VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_COPY|VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_SHALLOW|
VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_COPY_RAW)
fail if source is not raw, otherwise create /path/to/copy as raw and
the single file is copied (no chain involved)
- virDomainBlockRebase(dom, disk, "/path/to/copy", 0,
VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_COPY|VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_REUSE_EXT|
VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_COPY_RAW)
makes little sense: the destination must be raw but have no contents,
meaning that it is an empty file, so there is nothing to reuse
The other three flags are rejected without VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_COPY.
[*] Note that probing an existing file for its format can be a security
risk _if_ there is a possibility that the existing file is 'raw', in
which case the guest can manipulate the file to appear like some other
format. But, by virtue of the VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_COPY_RAW flag,
it is possible to avoid probing of raw files, at which point, probing
of any remaining file type is no longer a security risk.
It would be nice if we could issue an event when pivoting from phase 1
to phase 2, but qemu hasn't implemented that, and we would have to poll
in order to synthesize it ourselves. Meanwhile, qemu will give us a
distinct job info and completion event when we either cancel or pivot
to end the job. Pivoting is accomplished via the new:
virDomainBlockJobAbort(dom, disk, VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_JOB_ABORT_PIVOT)
Management applications can pre-create the copy with a relative
backing file name, and use the VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_REBASE_REUSE_EXT
flag to have qemu reuse the metadata; if the management application
also copies the backing files to a new location, this can be used
to perform live storage migration of an entire backing chain.
* include/libvirt/libvirt.h.in (VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_JOB_TYPE_COPY):
New block job type.
(virDomainBlockJobAbortFlags, virDomainBlockRebaseFlags): New enums.
* src/libvirt.c (virDomainBlockRebase): Document the new flags,
and implement general restrictions on flag combinations.
(virDomainBlockJobAbort): Document the new flag.
(virDomainSaveFlags, virDomainSnapshotCreateXML)
(virDomainRevertToSnapshot, virDomainDetachDeviceFlags): Document
restrictions.
* include/libvirt/virterror.h (VIR_ERR_BLOCK_COPY_ACTIVE): New
error.
* src/util/virterror.c (virErrorMsg): Define it.
virThreadSelf tries to access the virThreadPtr stored in TLS for the
current thread via TlsGetValue. When virThreadSelf is called on a thread
that was not created via virThreadCreate (e.g. the main thread) then
TlsGetValue returns NULL as TlsAlloc initializes TLS slots to NULL.
virThreadSelf can be called on the main thread via this call chain from
virsh
vshDeinit
virEventAddTimeout
virEventPollAddTimeout
virEventPollInterruptLocked
virThreadIsSelf
triggering a segfault as virThreadSelf unconditionally dereferences the
return value of TlsGetValue.
Fix this by making virThreadSelf check the TLS slot value for NULL and
setting the given virThreadPtr accordingly.
Reported by Marcel Müller.
Ensure we don't introduce any more lousy integer parsing in new
code, while avoiding a scrub-down of existing legacy code.
Note that we also need to enable sc_prohibit_atoi_atof (see cfg.mk
local-checks-to-skip) before we are bulletproof, but that also
entails scrubbing I'm not ready to do at the moment.
* src/util/util.c (virStrToLong_i, virStrToLong_ui)
(virStrToLong_l, virStrToLong_ul, virStrToLong_ll)
(virStrToLong_ull, virStrToDouble): Mark exemptions.
* src/util/virmacaddr.c (virMacAddrParse): Likewise.
* cfg.mk (sc_prohibit_strtol): New syntax check.
(exclude_file_name_regexp--sc_prohibit_strtol): Ignore files that
I'm not willing to fix yet.
(local-checks-to-skip): Re-enable sc_prohibit_atoi_atof.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=617711 reported that
even with my recent patched to allow <memory unit='G'>1</memory>,
people can still get away with trying <memory>1G</memory> and
silently get <memory unit='KiB'>1</memory> instead. While
virt-xml-validate catches the error, our C parser did not.
Not to mention that it's always fun to fix bugs while reducing
lines of code. :)
* src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainParseMemory): Check for parse error.
(virDomainDefParseXML): Avoid strtoll.
* src/conf/storage_conf.c (virStorageDefParsePerms): Likewise.
* src/util/xml.c (virXPathLongBase, virXPathULongBase)
(virXPathULongLong, virXPathLongLong): Likewise.
DBus connection. The HAL device code further requires that
the DBus connection is integrated with the event loop and
provides such glue logic itself.
The forthcoming FirewallD integration also requires a
dbus connection with event loop integration. Thus we need
to pull the current event loop glue out of the HAL driver.
Thus we create src/util/virdbus.{c,h} files. This contains
just one method virDBusGetSystemBus() which obtains a handle
to the single shared system bus instance, with event glue
automagically setup.