Only perform the port number check if the incoming definition actually
provides it. Since the port number is optional we could erroneously pass
a duplicate source host check since some storage pool backends which fill
in the default port number (e.g., iSCSI and sheepdog) for the started pool.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1220809
When cold-plugging an RNG device but something fails in
qemuDomainAssignAddresses, we will double free the RNG device.
Once a device is plugged into the domain, we should set the
device pointer to NULL to fix this issue.
...
5 0x00007fb7d180ac8a in virFree at util/viralloc.c:582
6 0x00007fb7d1895cdd in virDomainRNGDefFree at conf/domain_conf.c:19786
7 0x00007fb7d1895d99 in virDomainDeviceDefFree at conf/domain_conf.c:2022
8 0x00007fb7b92b8baf in qemuDomainAttachDeviceFlags at qemu/qemu_driver.c:8785
9 0x00007fb7d190c5d7 in virDomainAttachDeviceFlags at libvirt-domain.c:8488
10 0x00007fb7d23af9d2 in remoteDispatchDomainAttachDeviceFlags at remote_dispatch.h:2842
...
Signed-off-by: Luyao Huang <lhuang@redhat.com>
There is a lot of places, were it's pretty easy for user to enter some
characters that we need to escape to create a valid XML description.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1197580
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
The code to add device type to the commandline was identical for lsi
and other models of SCSI controllers, but was duplicated (with the
exception of a minor ordering difference of the if-else clauses) for
the two cases. This patch replaces those two with a single instance of
the code just before the if().
This patch makes qemuValideDevicePCISlotsChipsets() more consistent in
appearance by replacing several clauses of an if with the equivalent
call to qemuDomainMachineIsI440FX. The if was checking exactly the
same items, just in a slightly different order.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1220265
Passing the return value to an enum directly is not safe. Fix this by
comparing the true integer result of virTristateSwitchTypeFromString().
Signed-off-by: Luyao Huang <lhuang@redhat.com>
For some reason, we allow a bridge name with %d in it, which we replace
with an unsigned integer to form a bridge name that does not yet exist
on the host.
Do not blindly pass it to virAsprintf if it's not the only conversion,
to prevent crashing on input like:
<network>
<name>test</name>
<forward mode='none'/>
<bridge name='virbr%d%s%s%s%s%s%s%s%s%s%s%s%s%s%s%s%s'/>
</network>
Ignore any template strings that do not have exactly one %d conversion,
like we do in various drivers before calling virNetDevTapCreateInBridgePort.
Since libvirt doesn't call to update the new balloon size in qemu add
code that will handle tweaking of the size of the current balloon
statistic until qemu reports the new size using the event.
Specifying a balloon size more than the memory size of a guest isn't
something that should be rejected when parsing the XML. Truncate the
size to the maximum memory size.
Use the new domain list collection helpers to avoid going through
virDomainPtrs.
This additionally implements filter capability when called through the
api that accepts domain list filters.
Until now the virDomainListAllDomains API would lock the domain list and
then every single domain object to access and filter it. This would
potentially allow a unresponsive VM to block the whole daemon if a
*listAllDomains call would get stuck.
To avoid this problem this patch collects a list of referenced domain
objects first from the list and then unlocks it right away. The
expensive operation requiring locking of the domain object is executed
after the list lock is dropped. While a single blocked domain will still
lock up a listAllDomains call, the domain list won't be held locked and
thus other APIs won't be blocked.
Additionally this patch also fixes the lookup code, where we'd ignore
the vm->removing flag and thus potentially return domain objects that
would be deleted very soon so calling any API wouldn't make sense.
As other clients also could benefit from operating on a list of domain
objects rather than the public domain descriptors a new intermediate
API - virDomainObjListCollect - is introduced by this patch.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1181074
Extend it to a universal helper used for clearing lists of any objects.
Note that the argument type is specifically void * to allow implicit
typecasting.
Additionally add a helper that works on non-NULL terminated arrays once
we know the length.
My commit 747761a79 (v1.2.15 only) dropped this bit of logic when filling
in a default arch in the XML:
- /* First try to find one matching host arch */
- for (i = 0; i < caps->nguests; i++) {
- if (caps->guests[i]->ostype == ostype) {
- for (j = 0; j < caps->guests[i]->arch.ndomains; j++) {
- if (caps->guests[i]->arch.domains[j]->type == domain &&
- caps->guests[i]->arch.id == caps->host.arch)
- return caps->guests[i]->arch.id;
- }
- }
- }
That attempt to match host.arch is important, otherwise we end up
defaulting to i686 on x86_64 host for KVM, which is not intended.
Duplicate it in the centralized CapsLookup function.
Additionally add some testcases that would have caught this.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1219191
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=890648
So, imagine you've issued an API that involves guest agent. For
instance, you want to query guest's IP addresses. So the API acquires
QUERY_JOB, locks the guest agent and issues the agent command.
However, for some reason, guest agent replies to initial ping
correctly, but then crashes tragically while executing real command
(in this case guest-network-get-interfaces). Since initial ping went
well, libvirt thinks guest agent is accessible and awaits reply to the
real command. But it will never come. What will is a monitor event.
Our handler (processSerialChangedEvent) will try to acquire
MODIFY_JOB, which will fail obviously because the other thread that's
executing the API already holds a job. So the event handler exits
early, and the QUERY_JOB is never released nor ended.
The way how to solve this is to put flag somewhere in the monitor
internals. The flag is called @running and agent commands are issued
iff the flag is set. The flag itself is set when we connect to the
agent socket. And unset whenever we see DISCONNECT event from the
agent. Moreover, we must wake up all the threads waiting for the
agent. This is done by signalizing the condition they're waiting on.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Running shutdown with mode agent on a shutoff domain gives cryptic
error message:
virsh # shutdown --mode agent gentoo
error: Failed to shutdown domain gentoo
error: Guest agent is not responding: QEMU guest agent is not connected
After this patch, the error is more clear:
virsh # shutdown --mode agent gentoo
error: Failed to shutdown domain gentoo
error: Requested operation is not valid: domain is not running
Reported-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Upping an interface for no reason and not configuring it is a cardinal sin.
With the default addrgenmode if eui64 it sticks a link-local address to the
interface. That is not good, as NetworkManager would see an address configured,
assume the interface is already configured and won't touch it iself and the
interface might stay unconfigured until the end of the days.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1124721
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Allow ccw devices to be used with multiqueues. ccw provides a one to
one relation of fds to queues and does not support the vectors option.
Signed-off-by: Boris Fiuczynski <fiuczy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthew Rosato <mjrosato@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Hansel <daniel.hansel@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Cornelia Huck <cornelia.huck@de.ibm.com>
Coverity points out that qemuMonitorGetAllBlockStatsInfo could return a
-1 and thus not fill in 'stats' (leaving it NULL). Then the call to
qemuMonitorBlockStatsUpdateCapacity will dereference it.
Coverity complains over the [n]values pairing in virQEMUCapsFreeStringList
and rather than make a bunch if "if values" checks prior to calling, by
just adding the values check inside the free function we avoid the chance
that somehow nvalues is > 0, while values == NULL
Coverity points out it was possible to have a zero return from
qemuBuildRNGBackendProps thus not filling in 'props' and then
causing a NULL dereference on the next call.
Coverity found that xenXMConfigCacheAddFile has an error path in which
no error message and a -1 was not returned which could have resulted in
a NULL dereference in a VIR_DEBUG statement and of course an erroneous
0 value returned!
Coverity notes that ->ifname is used after the VIR_FREE done in the
code path after the call to virNetDevMacVLanDeleteWithVPortProfile
by a call to virNetDevOpenvswitchRemovePort.
Since the ->ifname will be VIR_FREE()'d eventually in virDomainNetDefFree
just remove the extraneous VIR_FREE here.
When originally added, the Openvswitch code wasn't present and checks
were made for non NULL prior to use.
Coverity complains that in the error paths both the < 0 condition and
the success path after the qemuDomainObjExitMonitor failure will end
up going to cleanup. So just use ignore_value in this error path to
resolve the complaint.
If the virStringSearch() returns a 0 (zero), then each of the uses
of the call will just jump to cleanup forgetting to free the returned
empty list. Expand the scope a bit of each use and free at cleanup.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1176020
We had a check for the vcpu count total number in <numa>
before, however this check is not good enough. There are
some examples:
1. one of cpu id is out of maxvcpus, can set success(cpu count = 5 < 10):
<vcpu placement='static'>10</vcpu>
<cell id='0' cpus='0-3,100' memory='512000' unit='KiB'/>
2. use the same cpu in 2 cell, can set success(cpu count = 8 < 10):
<vcpu placement='static'>10</vcpu>
<cell id='0' cpus='0-3' memory='512000' unit='KiB'/>
<cell id='1' cpus='0-3' memory='512000' unit='KiB'/>
3. use the same cpu in 2 cell, cannot set success(cpu count = 11 > 10):
<vcpu placement='static'>10</vcpu>
<cell id='0' cpus='0-6' memory='512000' unit='KiB'/>
<cell id='1' cpus='0-3' memory='512000' unit='KiB'/>
Add a check for numa cpus, check if duplicate use one cpu in more
than one cell.
Signed-off-by: Luyao Huang <lhuang@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The only version that's supported in QEMU is version 2, currently.
Fortunately, it is enabled by aarch64 automatically, so there's
nothing for us that needs to be put onto command line.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Some platforms, like aarch64, don't have APIC but GIC. So there's
no reason to have <apic/> feature turned on. However, we are
still missing <gic/> feature. This commit introduces the feature
to XML parser and formatter, adds documentation and updates RNG
schema.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
When migrating a domain while changing its name and using
VIR_MIGRATE_PERSIST_DEST flag, libvirt would fail to properly change the
name in the persistent definition. The inconsistency results in weird
behavior when dumping domain XML, destroying the domain, restarting
libvirtd and likely in several other situations.
Since the new name is already stored in vm->def->name, we just need to
make sure the persistent definition uses this new name too.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1076354
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Currently we try to chown any directory passed to virDirCreate,
even if the user didn't request any explicit owner/group via the
pool/vol XML.
This causes issues with qemu:///session: try to build a pool of
a root owned directory like /tmp, and it fails trying to chown the
directory to the session user. Instead it should just leave things
as they are, unless the user requests changing permissions via
the pool XML.
Similarly this is annoying if creating a storage pool via system
libvirtd of an existing directory in user $HOME, it's now owned
by root.
The virDirCreate function is pretty convoluted, since it needs to
fork off in certain specific cases. Try to document that, to make
it clear where exactly we are changing behavior.
The current code attempts to handle this, but it only catches mkdir
failing with EEXIST. However if say trying to build /tmp for an
unprivileged qemu:///session, mkdir will fail with EPERM.
Rather than catch any errors, just don't attempt mkdir if the directory
already exists.
Set the capability based on qmp query, or qemu version. The qmp query
includes vmport with 2.2, but no longer with 2.3. It lists only
non-machine specific capabilities, so check the qemu version too until a
machine-specific query is supported.
Now that we have macros for exclusive flags and flag requirements we can
use them to cleanup the code for setvcpus and error out for all wrong
flag combination.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
Inspired by commit 7e437ee7 that introduced similar macros for virsh
commands so we don't have to repeat the same code all over.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
Found by Laine and discussed a bit on internal IRC.
Commit id c56fe7f1d6 added support for creating a command line to support
scsi-disk.channel.
Series was here:
http://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2012-February/msg01052.html
Which pointed to a design proposal here:
http://permalink.gmane.org/gmane.comp.emulators.libvirt/50428
Which states (in part):
Libvirt should check for the QEMU "scsi-disk.channel" property. If it
is unavailable, QEMU will only support channel=lun=0 and 0<=target<=7.
However, the check added was ensuring that bus != lun *and* bus != 0. So
if bus == lun and both were non zero, we'd never make the second check.
Changing this to an *or* check fixes the check, but still is less readable
than the just checking each for 0
Since the qemu capabilities are not initialized for offline VMs the
caller might get suboptimal error message:
$ virsh blockjob VM PATH --bandwidth 1
error: unsupported configuration: block jobs not supported with this QEMU binary
Move the checks after we make sure that the VM is alive.
Just as we allow stopping filesystem pools when they were unmounted
externally, do not fail to stop an iscsi pool when someone else
closed the session externally.
Reported at:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1171984
The phyp driver stuffed it into a DomainDefPtr during its attachdevice
routine, but the value is never advertised via capabilities so it should
be safe to drop.
Have the phyp driver use OSTYPE_LINUX, which is what it advertises via
capabilities.
In qemuMigrationDriveMirror we can start all disk mirrors in parallel.
We wait until they are all ready, or one of them aborts.
In qemuMigrationCancelDriveMirror, we wait until all mirrors are
properly stopped. This is necessary to ensure that destination VM is
fully in sync with the (paused) source VM.
If a drive mirror can not be cancelled, then the destination is not in a
consistent state. In this case it is not safe to continue with the
migration.
Signed-off-by: Michael Chapman <mike@very.puzzling.org>
The !modern code path needs to call qemuBlockJobEventProcess directly.
the modern code path will call it via qemuBlockJobSyncWait.
Signed-off-by: Michael Chapman <mike@very.puzzling.org>
Other threads may be blocked in qemuBlockJobSyncWait. Ensure that
they're woken up when the domain is stopped.
Signed-off-by: Michael Chapman <mike@very.puzzling.org>
qemuBlockJobSyncBegin and qemuBlockJobSyncEnd delimit a region of code
where block job events are processed "synchronously".
qemuBlockJobSyncWait and qemuBlockJobSyncWaitWithTimeout wait for an
event generated by a block job.
The Wait* functions may be called multiple times while the synchronous
block job is active. Any pending block job event will be processed by
only when Wait* or End is called. disk->blockJobStatus is reset by
these functions, so if it is needed a pointer to a
virConnectDomainEventBlockJobStatus variable should be passed as the
last argument. It is safe to pass NULL if you do not care about the
block job status.
All functions assume the VM object is locked. The Wait* functions will
unlock the object for as long as they are waiting. They will return -1
and report an error if the domain exits before an event is received.
Typical use is as follows:
virQEMUDriverPtr driver;
virDomainObjPtr vm; /* locked */
virDomainDiskDefPtr disk;
virConnectDomainEventBlockJobStatus status;
qemuBlockJobSyncBegin(disk);
... start block job ...
if (qemuBlockJobSyncWait(driver, vm, disk, &status) < 0) {
/* domain died while waiting for event */
ret = -1;
goto error;
}
... possibly start other block jobs
or wait for further events ...
qemuBlockJobSyncEnd(driver, vm, disk, NULL);
To perform other tasks periodically while waiting for an event:
virQEMUDriverPtr driver;
virDomainObjPtr vm; /* locked */
virDomainDiskDefPtr disk;
virConnectDomainEventBlockJobStatus status;
unsigned long long timeout = 500 * 1000ull; /* milliseconds */
qemuBlockJobSyncBegin(disk);
... start block job ...
do {
... do other task ...
if (qemuBlockJobSyncWaitWithTimeout(driver, vm, disk,
timeout, &status) < 0) {
/* domain died while waiting for event */
ret = -1;
goto error;
}
} while (status == -1);
qemuBlockJobSyncEnd(driver, vm, disk, NULL);
Signed-off-by: Michael Chapman <mike@very.puzzling.org>
We will want to use synchronous block jobs from qemu_migration as well,
so split this function out into a new source file.
Signed-off-by: Michael Chapman <mike@very.puzzling.org>
The documentation states that for shallow block copy the image has to
have the same guest visible content as backing file of the current
image if the file is being reused. This condition can be achieved also
with a raw file (or a qcow without a backing file) so remove the
condition that would disallow it.
(This patch additionally fixes crash described in
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1215569 )
It would be used in qemumonitorjsontest, thus we make it non-static.
Signed-off-by: Zhang Bo <oscar.zhangbo@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Zhou Yimin <zhouyimin@huawei.com>
Trying to use qemu:///session to create a storage pool pointing at
/tmp will usually fail with something like:
$ virsh pool-start tmp
error: Failed to start pool tmp
error: cannot open volume '/tmp/systemd-private-c38cf0418d7a4734a66a8175996c384f-colord.service-kEyiTA': Permission denied
If any volume in an FS pool can't be opened by the daemon, the refresh
fails, and the pool can't be used.
This causes pain for virt-install/virt-manager though. Imaging a user
downloads a disk image to /tmp. virt-manager wants to import /tmp as
a storage pool, so we can detect what disk format it is, and set the
XML correctly. However this case will likely fail as explained above.
Change the logic here to skip volumes that fail to open. This could
conceivably cause user complaints along the lines of 'why doesn't
libvirt show $ROOT-OWNED-VOLUME-FOO', but figuring that currently
the pool won't even startup, I don't think there are any current
users that care about that case.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1103308
If you end up with a state file for a pool that no longer starts up
or refreshes correctly, the state file is never removed and adds
noise to the logs everytime libvirtd is started.
If the initial state syncing fails, delete the statefile.
After pool startup we call refreshPool(). If that fails, we leave
a stale pool state file hanging around.
Hit this trying to create a pool with qemu:///session containing
root owned files.
If we received zero iothreads from the monitor, but were perhaps
expecting to receive something, then the code was skipping the check
to ensure what's in the monitor matches our expectations. So invert
the checks to check that what we get back matches expectations and
then check there are zero iothreads returned.
Rather than have a separate routine to parse the alias of an iothread
returned from qemu in order to get the iothread_id value, parse the alias
when returning and just return the iothread_id in qemuMonitorIOThreadInfoPtr
This set of patches removes the function, changes the "char *name" to
"unsigned int" and handles all the fallout.
Build with clang fails with:
CC conf/libvirt_conf_la-domain_conf.lo
conf/domain_conf.c:13377:9: error: variable 'cpumask' is used
uninitialized whenever 'if' condition is true
[-Werror,-Wsometimes-uninitialized]
if (!(tmp = virXMLPropString(node, "cpuset"))) {
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
and many other similar errors regarding the 'cpuset' variable.
Fix by explicitly initializing it with NULL.
If someone has updated a network to change its bridge name, but the
network is still active (so that bridge name hasn't taken effect yet),
we still want to disallow another network from taking that new name.
Since some people use the same naming convention as libvirt for bridge
devices they create outside the context of libvirt, it is much nicer
if we check for those devices when looking for a bridge device name to
auto-assign to a new network.
We already check that any auto-assigned bridge device name for a
virtual network (e.g. "virbr1") doesn't conflict with the bridge name
for any existing libvirt network (via virNetworkSetBridgeName() in
conf/network_conf.c).
We also want to check that the name doesn't conflict with any bridge
device created on the host system outside the control of libvirt
(history: possibly due to the ploriferation of references to libvirt's
bridge devices in HOWTO documents all around the web, it is not
uncommon for an admin to manually create a bridge in their host's
system network config and name it "virbrX"). To add such a check to
virNetworkBridgeInUse() (which is called by virNetworkSetBridgeName())
we would have to call virNetDevExists() (from util/virnetdev.c); this
function calls ioctl(SIOCGIFFLAGS), which everyone on the mailing list
agreed should not be done from an XML parsing function in the conf
directory.
To remedy that problem, this patch removes virNetworkSetBridgeName()
from conf/network_conf.c and puts an identically functioning
networkBridgeNameValidate() in network/bridge_driver.c (because it's
reasonable for the bridge driver to call virNetDevExists(), although
we don't do that yet because I wanted this patch to have as close to 0
effect on function as possible).
There are a couple of inevitable changes though:
1) We no longer check the bridge name during
virNetworkLoadConfig(). Close examination of the code shows that
this wasn't necessary anyway - the only *correct* way to get XML
into the config files is via networkDefine(), and networkDefine()
will always call networkValidate(), which previously called
virNetworkSetBridgeName() (and now calls
networkBridgeNameValidate()). This means that the only way the
bridge name can be unset during virNetworkLoadConfig() is if
someone edited the config file on disk by hand (which we explicitly
prohibit).
2) Just on the off chance that somebody *has* edited the file by hand,
rather than crashing when they try to start their malformed
network, a check for non-NULL bridge name has been added to
networkStartNetworkVirtual().
(For those wondering why I don't instead call
networkValidateBridgeName() there to set a bridge name if one
wasn't present - the problem is that during
networkStartNetworkVirtual(), the lock for the network being
started has already been acquired, but the lock for the network
list itself *has not* (because we aren't adding/removing a
network). But virNetworkBridgeInuse() iterates through *all*
networks (including this one) and locks each network as it is
checked for a duplicate entry; it is necessary to lock each network
even before checking if it is the designated "skip" network because
otherwise some other thread might acquire the list lock and delete
the very entry we're examining. In the end, permitting a setting of
the bridge name during network start would require that we lock the
entire network list during any networkStartNetwork(), which
eliminates a *lot* of parallelism that we've worked so hard to
achieve (it can make a huge difference during libvirtd startup). So
rather than try to adjust for someone playing against the rules, I
choose to instead give them the error they deserve.)
3) virNetworkAllocateBridge() (now removed) would leak any "template"
string set as the bridge name. Its replacement
networkFindUnusedBridgeName() doesn't leak the template string - it
is properly freed.
Coverity notes that the switch() used to check 'connected' values has
two DEADCODE paths (_DEFAULT & _LAST). Since 'connected' is a boolean
it can only be one or the other (CONNECTED or DISCONNECTED), so it just
seems pointless to use a switch to get "all" values. Convert to if-else
Add qemuDomainAddIOThread and qemuDomainDelIOThread in order to add or
remove an IOThread to/from the host either for live or config optoins
The implementation for the 'live' option will use the iothreadpids list
in order to make decision, while the 'config' option will use the
iothreadids list. Additionally, for deletion each may have to adjust
the iothreadpin list.
IOThreads are implemented by qmp objects, the code makes use of the existing
qemuMonitorAddObject or qemuMonitorDelObject APIs.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
We're about to allow IOThreads to be deleted, but an iothreadid may be
included in some domain thread sched, so add a new API to allow removing
an iothread from some entry.
Then during the writing of the threadsched data and an additional check
to determine whether the bitmap is all clear before writing it out.
With iothreadid's allowing any 'id' value for an iothread_id, the
iothreadsched code needs a slight adjustment to allow for "any"
unsigned int value in order to create the bitmap of ids that will
have scheduler adjustments. Adjusted the doc description as well.
Remove the iothreadspin array from cputune and replace with a cpumask
to be stored in the iothreadids list.
Adjust the test output because our printing goes in order of the iothreadids
list now.
Since it's only ever referenced in domain_conf.c, make the function
static, but also will need to move it to somewhere before it's referenced
rather than forward referencing it.
Add 'thread_id' to the virDomainIOThreadIDDef as a means to store the
'thread_id' as returned from the live qemu monitor data.
Remove the iothreadpids list from _qemuDomainObjPrivate and replace with
the new iothreadids 'thread_id' element.
Rather than use the default numbering scheme of 1..number of iothreads
defined for the domain, use the iothreadid's list for the iothread_id
Since iothreadids list keeps track of the iothread_id's, these are
now used in place of the many places where a for loop would "know"
that the ID was "+ 1" from the array element.
The new tests ensure usage of the <iothreadid> values for an exact number
of iothreads and the usage of a smaller number of <iothreadid> values than
iothreads that exist (and usage of the default numbering scheme).
Adding a new XML element 'iothreadids' in order to allow defining
specific IOThread ID's rather than relying on the algorithm to assign
IOThread ID's starting at 1 and incrementing to iothreads count.
This will allow future patches to be able to add new IOThreads by
a specific iothread_id and of course delete any exisiting IOThread.
Each iothreadids element will have 'n' <iothread> children elements
which will have attribute "id". The "id" will allow for definition
of any "valid" (eg > 0) iothread_id value.
On input, if any <iothreadids> <iothread>'s are provided, they will
be marked so that we only print out what we read in.
On input, if no <iothreadids> are provided, the PostParse code will
self generate a list of ID's starting at 1 and going to the number
of iothreads defined for the domain (just like the current algorithm
numbering scheme). A future patch will rework the existing algorithm
to make use of the iothreadids list.
On output, only print out the <iothreadids> if they were read in.
In a lot places we use path like this:
$(srcdir)/../src/....
when in fact it can be:
$(top_srcdir)/src/
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The lookup is just for check whether a domain we are about to add does
not already exists. Well, the virDomainObjListAdd() function does that
for us already so there's no need to duplicate the check.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
use virNetworkRouteDefFree() instead of VIR_FREE to free routes, otherwise
the element 'family' would not be freed.
Signed-off-by: Zhang Bo <oscar.zhangbo@huawei.com>
use cleanup instead of error, so that the allocated strings could also get freed
when there's no error.
Signed-off-by: Zhang Bo <oscar.zhangbo@huawei.com>