CVE-2016-5008
Setting an empty graphics password is documented as a way to disable
VNC/SPICE access, but QEMU does not always behaves like that. VNC would
happily accept the empty password. Let's enforce the behavior by setting
password expiration to "now".
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1180092
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit bb848feec0)
(cherry picked from commit d933f68ee6)
The libvirt file system storage driver determines what file to
act on by concatenating the pool location with the volume name.
If a user is able to pick names like "../../../etc/passwd", then
they can escape the bounds of the pool. For that matter,
virStoragePoolListVolumes() doesn't descend into subdirectories,
so a user really shouldn't use a name with a slash.
Normally, only privileged users can coerce libvirt into creating
or opening existing files using the virStorageVol APIs; and such
users already have full privilege to create any domain XML (so it
is not an escalation of privilege). But in the case of
fine-grained ACLs, it is feasible that a user can be granted
storage_vol:create but not domain:write, and it violates
assumptions if such a user can abuse libvirt to access files
outside of the storage pool.
Therefore, prevent all use of volume names that contain "/",
whether or not such a name is actually attempting to escape the
pool.
This changes things from:
$ virsh vol-create-as default ../../../../../../etc/haha --capacity 128
Vol ../../../../../../etc/haha created
$ rm /etc/haha
to:
$ virsh vol-create-as default ../../../../../../etc/haha --capacity 128
error: Failed to create vol ../../../../../../etc/haha
error: Requested operation is not valid: volume name '../../../../../../etc/haha' cannot contain '/'
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit 034e47c338)
Since commit 8eb55d782a2b9afacc7938694891cc6fad7b42a5 libxml2 removes
two slashes from the URI when there is no server part. This is fixed
with beb7281055dbf0ed4d041022a67c6c5cfd126f25, but only if the calling
application calls xmlSaveUri() on URI that xmlURIParse() parsed. And
that is not the case in virURIFormat(). virURIFormat() accepts
virURIPtr that can be created without parsing it and we do that when we
format network storage paths for gluster for example. Even though
virStorageSourceParseBackingURI() uses virURIParse(), it throws that data
structure right away.
Since we want to format URIs as URIs and not absolute URIs or opaque
URIs (see RFC 3986), we can specify that with a special hack thanks to
commit beb7281055dbf0ed4d041022a67c6c5cfd126f25, by setting port to -1.
This fixes qemuxml2argvtest test where the disk-drive-network-gluster
case was failing.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit 8f17d0eaae)
In systemd >= 218, the udev_set_log_fn method has been marked
deprecated and turned into a no-op. Nothing in the udev client
library will print to stderr by default anymore, so we can
just stop installing a logging hook for new enough udev.
(cherry picked from commit a93a3b975c)
The call to virDomainSnapshotRedefinePrep() had a spurrious ! in front of
it which caused Coverity to complan that the expression is always false.
(cherry picked from commit 9d7254de43)
It returns NULL on failure. Checking if the negation of it
is less than zero makes no sense. (Found by coverity after moving
the code)
In another case, the return value wasn't checked at all.
(cherry picked from commit 3fe9d75ab6)
Conflicts:
src/conf/domain_addr.c - no code movement from commit b2626755
libxl interface for vcpu pinning is changing in Xen 4.5. Basically,
libxl_set_vcpuaffinity() now wants one more parameter. That is
representative of 'VCPU soft affinity', which libvirt does not use.
To mark such change, the macro LIBXL_HAVE_VCPUINFO_SOFT_AFFINITY is
defined. Use it as a gate and, if present, re-#define the calls from
the old to the new interface, to avoid breaking the build.
Signed-off-by: Dario Faggioli <dario.faggioli@citrix.com>
Cc: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
Cc: Ian Campbell <Ian.Campbell@citrix.com>
Cc: Ian Jackson <Ian.Jackson@eu.citrix.com>
(cherry picked from commit bfc72e9992)
Well, in 8ad126e6 we tried to fix a memory corruption problem.
However, the fix was not as good as it could be. I mean, the
commit has one line more than it should. I've noticed this output
just recently:
# ./run valgrind --leak-check=full --show-reachable=yes ./tools/virsh domblklist gentoo
==17019== Memcheck, a memory error detector
==17019== Copyright (C) 2002-2013, and GNU GPL'd, by Julian Seward et al.
==17019== Using Valgrind-3.10.1 and LibVEX; rerun with -h for copyright info
==17019== Command: /home/zippy/work/libvirt/libvirt.git/tools/.libs/virsh domblklist gentoo
==17019==
Target Source
------------------------------------------------
fda /var/lib/libvirt/images/fd.img
vda /var/lib/libvirt/images/gentoo.qcow2
hdc /home/zippy/tmp/install-amd64-minimal-20150402.iso
==17019== Thread 2:
==17019== Invalid read of size 4
==17019== at 0x4EFF5B4: virObjectUnref (virobject.c:258)
==17019== by 0x5038CFF: remoteClientCloseFunc (remote_driver.c:552)
==17019== by 0x5069D57: virNetClientCloseLocked (virnetclient.c:685)
==17019== by 0x506C848: virNetClientIncomingEvent (virnetclient.c:1852)
==17019== by 0x5082136: virNetSocketEventHandle (virnetsocket.c:1913)
==17019== by 0x4ECD64E: virEventPollDispatchHandles (vireventpoll.c:509)
==17019== by 0x4ECDE02: virEventPollRunOnce (vireventpoll.c:658)
==17019== by 0x4ECBF00: virEventRunDefaultImpl (virevent.c:308)
==17019== by 0x130386: vshEventLoop (vsh.c:1864)
==17019== by 0x4F1EB07: virThreadHelper (virthread.c:206)
==17019== by 0xA8462D3: start_thread (in /lib64/libpthread-2.20.so)
==17019== by 0xAB441FC: clone (in /lib64/libc-2.20.so)
==17019== Address 0x139023f4 is 4 bytes inside a block of size 240 free'd
==17019== at 0x4C2B1F0: free (in /usr/lib64/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
==17019== by 0x4EA8949: virFree (viralloc.c:582)
==17019== by 0x4EFF6D0: virObjectUnref (virobject.c:273)
==17019== by 0x4FE74D6: virConnectClose (libvirt.c:1390)
==17019== by 0x13342A: virshDeinit (virsh.c:406)
==17019== by 0x134A37: main (virsh.c:950)
The problem is, when registering remoteClientCloseFunc(), it's
conn->closeCallback which is ref'd. But in the function itself
it's conn->closeCallback->conn what is unref'd. This is causing
imbalance in reference counting. Moreover, there's no need for
the remote driver to increase/decrease conn refcount since it's
not used anywhere. It's just merely passed to client registered
callback. And for that purpose it's correctly ref'd in
virConnectRegisterCloseCallback() and then unref'd in
virConnectUnregisterCloseCallback().
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit e689300770)
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The function is called from all {Attach,Update,Detach}Device APIs to
create config strings that are later passed to the xend to perform the
desired action. The function is intended to handle all supported
devices. However, as of 5b05358aba we
are trying to get disk driver of the device without checking if the
device really is a disk. This leads to an segmentation fault:
#0 0x00007ffff7571815 in virDomainDiskGetDriver () from /usr/lib/libvirt.so.0
#1 0x00007fffeb9ad471 in ?? () from /usr/lib/libvirt/connection-driver/libvirt_driver_xen.so
#2 0x00007fffeb9b1062 in xenDaemonAttachDeviceFlags () from /usr/lib/libvirt/connection-driver/libvirt_driver_xen.so
#3 0x00007fffeb9a8a86 in ?? () from /usr/lib/libvirt/connection-driver/libvirt_driver_xen.so
#4 0x00007ffff7609266 in virDomainAttachDevice () from /usr/lib/libvirt.so.0
#5 0x0000555555593c9d in ?? ()
#6 0x00007ffff76743c9 in virNetServerProgramDispatch () from /usr/lib/libvirt.so.0
#7 0x00005555555a678d in ?? ()
#8 0x00007ffff755460e in ?? () from /usr/lib/libvirt.so.0
#9 0x00007ffff7553b06 in ?? () from /usr/lib/libvirt.so.0
#10 0x00007ffff4998b50 in start_thread () from /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libpthread.so.0
#11 0x00007ffff46e30ed in clone () from /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6
#12 0x0000000000000000 in ?? ()
Reported-by: Xiaolin Su <linxxnil@126.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit cd7702d456)
The ACL check didn't check the VIR_DOMAIN_XML_SECURE flag and the
appropriate permission for it. Found via code inspection while fixing
permissions for save images.
(cherry picked from commit b347c0c2a3)
Avoid leaving the domain locked on a failed ACL check in
qemuDomainMigratePerform() and qemuDomainMigrateFinish2().
Introduced in commit abf75aea24 (Add ACL checks into the QEMU driver).
(cherry picked from commit 2bdcd29c71)
https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=508336
At wireshark, they have this promise to change public dissector APIs
only with minor version number change. Which they did when releasing
the version of 1.12.
Firstly, they've changed tvb_memdup() in
a0c53ffaa1bb46d8c9db2ec739401aa411c9790e so now it takes four arguments
instead of three. The new argument is placed at the very beginning of
the list of arguments and basically says the scope where we'd like to
allocate the memory. According to the documentation NULL should be the
default value.
Then, the tcp_dissect_pdus() signature changed too. Well, the function
that actually dissects reassembled packets as tcp_dissect_pdus()
reorder TCP packets into one big chunk and then calls a user function
to dissect the PDU at once. The change is dated back to
8081cf1d90397cbbb4404f9720595e1537ed5e14.
Then, WS_DLL_PUBLIC_NOEXTERN was replaced with WS_DLL_PUBLIC_DEF in
5d87a8c46171f572568db5a47c093423482e342f.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit e74fa5702a)
The rationale is to not duplicate code which is done in
packet-libvirt.h for instance. Moreover, this way we can drop
__attribute_((unused)) used int packet-libvirt.c in favor of
ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit 906d0abfe7)
Commit 292d3f2d fixed the build with libselinux 2.3, but missed
some suggestions by eblake
https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2014-May/msg00977.html
This patch changes the macro introduced in 292d3f2d to either be
empty in the case of newer libselinux, or contain 'const' in the
case of older libselinux. The macro is then used directly in
tests/securityselinuxhelper.c.
(cherry picked from commit b109c09765)
Several function signatures changed in libselinux 2.3, now taking
a 'const char *' instead of 'security_context_t'. The latter is
defined in selinux/selinux.h as
typedef char *security_context_t;
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit 292d3f2d38)
virNetDevLinkDump() gets a message from netlink into "resp", then
calls nlmsg_parse() to fill the table "tb" with pointers into resp. It
then returns tb to its caller, but not before freeing the buffer at
resp. That means that all the callers of virNetDevLinkDump() are
examining memory that has already been freed. This can be verified by
filling the buffer at resp with garbage prior to freeing it (or, I
suppose, just running libvirtd under valgrind) then performing some
operation that calls virNetDevLinkDump().
The upstream commit log incorrectly states that the code has been like
this ever since virNetDevLinkDump() was written. In reality, the
problem was introduced with commit e95de74d, first in libvirt-1.0.5,
which was attempting to eliminate a typecast that caused compiler
warnings. It has only been pure luck (or maybe a lack of heavy load,
and/or maybe an allocation algorithm in malloc() that delays re-use of
just-freed memory) that has kept this from causing errors, for example
when configuring a PCI passthrough or macvtap passthrough network
interface.
The solution taken in this patch is the simplest - just return resp to
the caller along with tb, then have the caller free it after they are
finished using the data (pointers) in tb. I alternately could have
made a cleaner interface by creating a new struct that put tb and resp
together along with a vir*Free() function for it, but this function is
only used in a couple places, and I'm not sure there will be
additional new uses of virNetDevLinkDump(), so the value of adding a
new type, extra APIs, etc. is dubious.
(cherry picked from commit f9f9699f40)
Commit 28f8dfd (v1.0.0) introduced a security hole: in at least
the qemu implementation of virDomainGetXMLDesc, the use of the
flag VIR_DOMAIN_XML_MIGRATABLE (which is usable from a read-only
connection) triggers the implicit use of VIR_DOMAIN_XML_SECURE
prior to calling qemuDomainFormatXML. However, the use of
VIR_DOMAIN_XML_SECURE is supposed to be restricted to read-write
clients only. This patch treats the migratable flag as requiring
the same permissions, rather than analyzing what might break if
migratable xml no longer includes secret information.
Fortunately, the information leak is low-risk: all that is gated
by the VIR_DOMAIN_XML_SECURE flag is the VNC connection password;
but VNC passwords are already weak (FIPS forbids their use, and
on a non-FIPS machine, anyone stupid enough to trust a max-8-byte
password sent in plaintext over the network deserves what they
get). SPICE offers better security than VNC, and all other
secrets are properly protected by use of virSecret associations
rather than direct output in domain XML.
* src/remote/remote_protocol.x (REMOTE_PROC_DOMAIN_GET_XML_DESC):
Tighten rules on use of migratable flag.
* src/libvirt-domain.c (virDomainGetXMLDesc): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit b1674ad5a9)
Conflicts:
src/libvirt-domain.c - file split from older src/libvirt.c
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
If you use public api virConnectListAllDomains() with second parameter
set to NULL to get only the number of domains you will lock out all
other operations with domains.
Introduced by commit 2c680804.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit fc22b2e748)
Live definition was used to look up the disk index while persistent one
was indexed leading to a crash in qemuDomainGetBlockIoTune. Use the
correct def and report a nice error.
Unfortunately it's accessible via read-only connection, though it can
only crash libvirtd in the cases where the guest is hot-plugging disks
without reflecting those changes to the persistent definition. So
avoiding hotplug, or doing hotplug where persistent is always modified
alongside live definition, will avoid the out-of-bounds access.
Introduced in: eca96694a7f992be633d48d5ca03cedc9bbc3c9aa (v0.9.8)
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1140724
Reported-by: Luyao Huang <lhuang@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Krempa <pkrempa@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit 3e745e8f77)
We have the following matrix of possible arguments handled by the logic
statement touched by this patch:
| flags & _REUSE_EXT | !(flags & _REUSE_EXT)
-------+--------------------+----------------------
format| (1) | (2)
-------+--------------------+----------------------
!format| (3) | (4)
-------+--------------------+----------------------
In cases 1 and 2 the user provided a format, in cases 3 and 4 not. The
user requests to use a pre-existing image in 1 and 3 and libvirt will
create a new image in 2 and 4.
The difference between cases 3 and 4 is that for 3 the format is probed
from the user-provided image, whereas in 4 we just use the existing disk
format.
The current code would treat cases 1,3 and 4 correctly but in case 2 the
format provided by the user would be ignored.
The particular piece of code was broken in commit 35c7701c64
but since it was introduced a few commits before that it was never
released as working.
(cherry picked from commit 42619ed05d)
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Conflicts:
src/qemu/qemu_driver.c - no refactoring of commit 7b7bf001
We publish libvirt-api.xml for others to use, and in fact, the
libvirt-python bindings use it to generate python constants that
correspond to our enum values. However, we had an off-by-one bug
that any enum that relied on C's rules for implicit initialization
of the first enum member to 0 got listed in the xml as having a
value of 1 (and all later members of the enum were equally
botched).
The fix is simple - since we add one to the previous value when
encountering an enum without an initializer, the previous value
must start at -1 so that the first enum member is assigned 0.
The python generator code has had the off-by-one ever since DV
first wrote it years ago, but most of our public enums were immune
because they had an explicit = 0 initializer. The only affected
enums are:
- virDomainEventGraphicsAddressType (such as
VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_GRAPHICS_ADDRESS_IPV4), since commit 987e31e
(libvirt v0.8.0)
- virDomainCoreDumpFormat (such as VIR_DOMAIN_CORE_DUMP_FORMAT_RAW),
since commit 9fbaff0 (libvirt v1.2.3)
- virIPAddrType (such as VIR_IP_ADDR_TYPE_IPV4), since commit
03e0e79 (not yet released)
Thanks to Nehal J Wani for reporting the problem on IRC, and
for helping me zero in on the culprit function.
* docs/apibuild.py (CParser.parseEnumBlock): Fix implicit enum
values.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit 9b291bbe20)
When creating a new disk mirror the new struct is stored in a separate
variable until everything went well. The removed hunk would actually
remove existing mirror information for example when the api would be run
if a mirror still exists.
(cherry picked from commit 02b364e186)
This fixes a regression introduced in commit ff5f30b.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Conflicts:
src/qemu/qemu_driver.c - no refactoring of commit 7b7bf001
Jim Fehlig reported a regression found by libvirt-TCK tests:
> ~ # perl /usr/share/libvirt-tck/tests/qemu/100-disk-encryption.t
...
> ok 4 - defined persistent domain config
> # Starting inactive domain config
> libvirt error code: 1, message: internal error: unable to execute QEMU command
> 'cont': 'drive-ide0-0-1'
> (/var/cache/libvirt-tck/300-disk-encryption/demo.qcow2) is encrypted
Commit 2279d560 converted a boolean into a pointer with the intent of
transferring that pointer out of a temporary object into the caller's
data structure. The temporary structure meant that meta->encryption
was always NULL on entry, so we could get away with blindly allocating
the pointer when the header said so. But later, commit 8823272d
tweaked things to do backing chain detection in-place, rather than via
a temporary object; this has the net result that meta->encryption can
be non-NULL on entry. Not only did this turn the latent behavior into
a memory leak, it is also a behavior regression: blindly allocating a
new pointer wipes out what secrets we already knew about the chain,
making it impossible to restart the domain.
Of course, no one in their right mind should be relying on qcow2
encryption - it is fundamentally flawed. And sadly, the TCK tests
don't get run often enough, and this shows that our virstoragetest
does not exercise encrypted images at all. Otherwise, we could
have avoided a release containing this regression.
* src/util/virstoragefile.c (virStorageFileGetMetadataInternal):
Don't nuke an already-existing encryption.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit 1c7eb95c84)
If the XML_PARSE_NOENT flag is passed to libxml2, then any
entities in the input document will be fully expanded. This
allows the user to read arbitrary files on the host machine
by creating an entity pointing to a local file. Removing
the XML_PARSE_NOENT flag means that any entities are left
unchanged by the parser, or expanded to "" by the XPath
APIs.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit d6b27d3e4c)
This fixes link failures like:
CCLD virfirewalltest
/usr/bin/ld: virfirewalltest-virfirewalltest.o: undefined reference to
symbol 'dbus_message_iter_init_append'
When building packages in a clean chroot the QEMU_USER and QEMU_GROUP
don't exist making VirQemuDriverConfigNew fail with privileged=true.
Avoid that by not requiring privileged mode upfront but setting it later
so we skip the user/group existence check.
This solution was suggested by Daniel P. Berrange and tested by Martin
Kletzander.
Commit id 'ac9a0963' refactored out the 'withCapacity' for the
virStorageBackendUpdateVolInfo() API. See:
http://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2014-April/msg00043.html
This resulted in a difference in how 'virsh vol-info --pool <poolName>
<volume>' or 'virsh vol-list vol-list --pool <poolName> --details' outputs
the capacity information for a directory pool with a qcow2 sparse file.
For example, using the following XML
mkdir /home/TestPool
cat testpool.xml
<pool type='dir'>
<name>TestPool</name>
<uuid>6bf80895-10b6-75a6-6059-89fdea2aefb7</uuid>
<source>
</source>
<target>
<path>/home/TestPool</path>
<permissions>
<mode>0755</mode>
<owner>0</owner>
<group>0</group>
</permissions>
</target>
</pool>
virsh pool-create testpool.xml
virsh vol-create-as --pool TestPool temp_vol_1 \
--capacity 1048576 --allocation 1048576 --format qcow2
virsh vol-info --pool TestPool temp_vol_1
Results in listing a Capacity value. Prior to the commit, the value would
be '1.0 MiB' (1048576 bytes). However, after the commit the output would be
(for example) '192.50 KiB', which for my system was the size of the volume
in my file system (eg 'ls -l TestPool/temp_vol_1' results in '197120' bytes
or 192.50 KiB). While perhaps technically correct, it's not necessarily
what the user expected (certainly virt-test didn't expect it).
This patch restores the code to not update the target capacity for this path
gnutls-3.3.0 and newer leaves 2 FDs open in order to be backwards
compatible when it comes to chrooted binaries [1]. Linking
commandhelper with gnutls then leaves these two FDs open and
commandtest fails thanks to that. This patch does not link
commandhelper with libvirt.la, but rather only the utilities making
the test pass.
Based on suggestion from Daniel [2].
[1] http://lists.gnutls.org/pipermail/gnutls-help/2014-April/003429.html
[2] https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2014-April/msg01119.html
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Older gcc (4.1.2-55.el5, 4.2.1 on FreeBSD) reports bogus warnings:
../../src/conf/nwfilter_conf.c:2111: warning: 'protocol' may be used
uninitialized in this function
../../src/conf/nwfilter_conf.c:2110: warning: 'dataProtocolID' may be
used uninitialized in this function
Initialize them to NULL to make the compiler happy.
Commit f22b7899 stumbled across a difference between 32-bit and
64-bit platforms when parsing "-1" as an int. Now that we've
fixed that difference, it's time to fix the testsuite.
* src/util/virstoragefile.c (virStorageFileParseChainIndex):
Require a positive index.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
strtoul() is required to parse negative numbers as their
twos-complement positive counterpart. But sometimes we want
to reject negative numbers. Add new functions to do this.
The 'p' suffix is a mnemonic for 'positive' (technically it
also parses 0, but 'non-negative' doesn't lend itself to a
nice one-letter suffix).
* src/util/virstring.h (virStrToLong_uip, virStrToLong_ulp)
(virStrToLong_ullp): New prototypes.
* src/util/virstring.c (virStrToLong_uip, virStrToLong_ulp)
(virStrToLong_ullp): New functions.
* src/libvirt_private.syms (virstring.h): Export them.
* tests/virstringtest.c (testStringToLong): Test them.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Commit f22b7899 called to light a long-standing latent bug: the
behavior of virStrToLong_ui was different on 32-bit platforms
than on 64-bit platforms. Curse you, C type promotion and
narrowing rules, and strtoul specification. POSIX says that for
a 32-bit long, strtol handles only 2^32 values [LONG_MIN to
LONG_MAX] while strtoul handles 2^33 - 1 values [-ULONG_MAX to
ULONG_MAX] with twos-complement wraparound for negatives. Thus,
parsing -1 as unsigned long produces ULONG_MAX, rather than a
range error. We WANT[1] this same shortcut for turning -1 into
UINT_MAX when parsing to int; and get it for free with 32-bit
long. But with 64-bit long, ULONG_MAX is outside the range
of int and we were rejecting it as invalid; meanwhile, we were
silently treating -18446744073709551615 as 1 even though it
textually exceeds INT_MIN. Too bad there's not a strtoui() in
libc that does guaranteed parsing to int, regardless of the size
of long.
The bug has been latent since 2007, introduced by Jim Meyering
in commit 5d25419 in the attempt to eradicate unsafe use of
strto[u]l when parsing ints and longs. How embarrassing that we
are only discovering it now - so I'm adding a testsuite to ensure
that it covers all the corner cases we care about.
[1] Ideally, we really want the caller to be able to choose whether
to allow negative numbers to wrap around to their 2s-complement
counterpart, as in strtoul, or to force a stricter input range
of [0 to UINT_MAX] by rejecting negative signs; this will be added
in a later patch for all three int types.
This patch is tested on both 32- and 64-bit; the enhanced
virstringtest passes on both platforms, while virstoragetest now
reliably fails on both platforms instead of just 32-bit platforms.
That test will be fixed later.
* src/util/virstring.c (virStrToLong_ui): Ensure same behavior
regardless of platform long size.
* tests/virstringtest.c (testStringToLong): New function.
(mymain): Comprehensively test string to long parsing.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
A couple of places in the QEMU XML -> ARGV conversion code
raised an error but then forgot to return an error status
due to missing gotos. While fixing this also tweak style
of a couple of other error reports
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
If a domain network interface that contains a <filterref> is modified
"live" using "virsh update-device --live", libvirtd would crash. This
was because the code supporting live update of an interface's
filterref was assuming that a filterref might be added or modified,
but didn't account for removing the filterref, resulting in a null
dereference of the filter name.
Introduced with commit 258fb278, which was first in libvirt v1.0.1.
This addresses https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1093301
To avoid memory leak of the "backingStoreRaw" field when reparsing
backing chains a new function is being introduced by this patch that
shall be used to clear backing store information.
The memory leak was introduced in commit 8823272d41.
Refactor the ebiptablesTearNewRules function so that the teardown of temporary
filters can also be called by the ebiptablesAllTeardown function.
This fixes a problem that leaves temporary filters behind when a VM shuts down
while its filters are modified.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Berger <stefanb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
v1->v2:
- test cases adjusted to expect more commands
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=808463
Well, libvirt doesn't distinguish between domain poweroff and
hibernation (S4). It's hard to differentiate these two on a real
machine anyway. As a result, any device that is hot(un-)plugged is
lost (appears again) when domain is started again as from our POV
it is a fresh cold boot. Instead of doing anything wise here, we
should just document this as known limitation.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The LXC controller itself needs to mknod the USB device
node in /dev/bus/usb, so we can't block mknod permission
from the cgroup.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
An IP or IPv6 rule with port specification but without protocol
specification cannot be instantiated by ebtables. The documentation
points to 'protocol' being required but implementation does not
enforce it to be given.
Implement a rule validation function that checks whether the rule is
valid when it is defined. This for example prevents the definition
of rules like:
<ip dstportstart='53'>
where a protocol attribute would be required for it to be valid and for
ebtables to be able to instantiate it. A valid rule then is:
<ip protocol='udp' dstportstart='53'>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Berger <stefanb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
This commit adds a new example to illustrate peer to
peer domain migration with virDomainMigrateToURI.
Signed-off-by: Sahid Orentino Ferdjaoui <sahid.ferdjaoui@cloudwatt.com>
This commit provides the ability to virDomainMigrateToURI to
check for SASL credentials when attempts to migrate a domain
with the driver QEMU.
Signed-off-by: Sahid Orentino Ferdjaoui <sahid.ferdjaoui@cloudwatt.com>
Commit 5c43e2e introduced a NULL deref if there is a failure
in virStorageFileGetMetadataInternal.
* src/util/virstoragefile.c (virStorageFileGetMetadataFromBuf):
Fix error handling.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
We don't support building libvirtd on Win32 since we lack the
fork/exec feature needed for the stateful drivers. Disable this
by default, so users can just do 'mingw32-configure' with no
special args required.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
SO_REUSEADDR on Windows is actually akin to SO_REUSEPORT
on Linux/BSD. ie it allows 2 apps to listen to the same
port at once. Thus we must not set it on Win32 platforms
See http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/ms740621.aspx
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
When EIO comes to qemu while it's replying to
qemuMigrationUpdateJobStatus(), qemu blocks, the migration of RAM can
complete in the meantime, and when qemu unblocks, it sends us
BLOCK_IO_ERROR plus migrations "status": "complete". Even though we
act upon the BLOCK_IO_ERROR by setting the proper state of the domain,
the call still waits for the proper reply on monitor for query_migrate
and after it gets it, it checks that migration is completed and the
migration is finished. This is what abort_on_error flag was meant for
(we can migrate with these errors, but this flag must inhibit such
behaviour). Changing the order of the steps guarantees the flag works
properly.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1045833
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>