Currently the function would deflatten the object by dropping the 'file'
prefix from the attributes. This does not really scale well or adhere to
the documentation.
Until we refactor the worker to properly deflatten everything we at
least simulate it by adding the "file" wrapper object back.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1371892
As it turns out the volume create, build, and refresh path was not peeking
at the meta data, so immediately after a create operation the value displayed
for capacity was still incorrect. However, if a pool refresh was done the
correct value was fetched as a result of a meta data peek.
The reason is it seems historically if the file type is RAW then peeking
at the file just took the physical value for the capacity. However, since
we know if it's an encrypted file, then peeking at the meta data will be
required in order to get a true capacity value.
So check for encryption in the source and if present, use the meta data
in order to fill in the capacity value and set the payload_offset.
Starting from qemu 2.9, more granular options are supported. Add parser
for the relevant bits.
With this patch libvirt is able to parse the host and target IQN of from
the JSON pseudo-protocol specification.
This corresponds to BlockdevOptionsIscsi in qemu qapi.
'SocketAddress' structure was changed to contain 'inet' instead of
'tcp' since qemu commit c5f1ae3ae7b. Existing entries have a backward
compatibility layer.
Libvirt will parse 'inet' and 'tcp' as equivalents.
The same json strucutre is used for NBD and sheepdog volumes for
specifying of the host. Rename the function and fix up error messages to
be more universal.
The host address or the socket path have already been checked at the
begining of the function virStorageSourceParseNBDColonString(). So,
when the parameter is not a unix socket, there is no reason to check
the address again because if it does not exists, the logic will fail
in the first IF conditional.
Signed-off-by: Julio Faracco <jcfaracco@gmail.com>
VIR_STRDUP returns -1 if the string copy was not successful. So, the
current comparison/logic is throwing an error when VIR_STRDUP() returns
1. Only when source is NULL, it is considering as a success which is
not right.
Signed-off-by: Julio Faracco <jcfaracco@gmail.com>
The metadata libvirt cares about is identical for version 3
as for previous versions, so we merely need list the new
version number.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Imagine that this function is called twice over the same disk
source. While in the first run all allocated memory is freed, not
all pointers are set to NULL (e.g. def->srcpool). So when called
again, these poitners are freed again resulting in double free.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1371892
The 'capacity' value (e.g. guest logical size) for a LUKS volume is
smaller than the 'physical' value of the file in the file system, so
we need to account for that.
When peeking at the encryption information about the volume add a fetch
of the payload_offset which is described as the offset to the start of
the volume data (in 512 byte sectors) in QEMU's QCryptoBlockLUKSHeader.
Then adjust the ->capacity appropriately when we determine that the
volume target encryption has a payload_offset value.
We keep forgetting that older setups don't like 'index':
CC util/libvirt_util_la-virsysinfo.lo
cc1: warnings being treated as errors
util/virstoragefile.c: In function 'virStorageSourceFindByNodeName':
util/virstoragefile.c:3804: error: declaration of 'index' shadows a global declaration [-Wshadow]
/usr/include/string.h:489: error: shadowed declaration is here [-Wshadow]
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
STREQ_NULLABLE returns true if both parameters are NULL. And that's
not what we want here. We just want to skop comparing source nodes
that don't have that info set. The function wouldn't make much sense
with nodeName == NULL, so we don't need to check that. Moreover, the
function's declaration uses ATTRIBUDE_NONNULL for nodeName, which not
only means that function expects the parameter not to be NULL, but
actually tells the compiler that it can optimize out the NULL checks.
That way it could end up calling strcmp on NULL (either nodeformat or
nodebacking). GCC figures this out if libvirt is compiled with
lv_cv_static_analysis=yes, unfortunately not everyone uses that.
Caused by cbc6d53513.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
The function has very specific semantics. Split out the part that parses
the backing store specification string into a separate helper so that it
can be reused later while keeping the wrapper with existing semantics.
Note that virStorageFileParseChainIndex is pretty well covered by the
test suite.
The 'raw' block driver in Qemu is not directly interesting from
libvirt's perspective, but it can be layered above some other block
drivers and this may be interesting for the user.
The patch adds support for the 'raw' block driver. The driver is treated
simply as a pass-through and child driver in JSON is queried to get the
necessary information.
Signed-off-by: Tomáš Golembiovský <tgolembi@redhat.com>
Split virStorageSourceParseBackingJSON into two functions so that the
core can be reused by other functions. The new function called
virStorageSourceParseBackingJSONInternal accepts virJSONValuePtr.
Signed-off-by: Tomáš Golembiovský <tgolembi@redhat.com>
The code at the very bottom of the DAC secdriver that calls
chown() should be fine with read-only data. If something needs to
be prepared it should have been done beforehand.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Almost none of our virJSONValue*Get* functions accept const virJSONValue
pointers and it wouldn't even make sense since we sometimes modify what
we get. And because there is no reason for preventing callers of
virJSONValueObjectForeachKeyValue from modifying the values they get in
each iteration we can just stop doing it.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Instead of having duplicated code in qemuStorageLimitsRefresh and
virStorageBackendUpdateVolTargetInfo to get capacity specific data
about the storage backing source or volume -- create a common API
to handle the details for both.
As a side effect, virStorageFileProbeFormatFromBuf returns to being
a local/static helper to virstoragefile.c
For the QEMU code - if the probe is done, then the format is saved so
as to avoid future such probes.
For the storage backend code, there is no need to deal with the probe
since we cannot call the new API if target->format == NONE.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Instead of having duplicated code in qemuStorageLimitsRefresh and
virStorageBackendUpdateVolTargetInfoFD to fill in the storage backing
source or volume allocation, capacity, and physical values - create a
common API that will handle the details for both.
The common API will fill in "default" capacity values as well - although
those more than likely will be overridden by subsequent code. Having just
one place to make the determination of what the values should be will
make things be more consistent.
For the QEMU code - the data filled in will be for inactive domains
for the GetBlockInfo and DomainGetStatsOneBlock API's. For the storage
backend code - the data will be filled in during the volume updates.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Commit id '8dc27259' introduced virStorageSourceUpdateBlockPhysicalSize
in order to retrieve the physical size for a block backed source device
for an active domain since commit id '15fa84ac' changed to use the
qemuMonitorGetAllBlockStatsInfo and qemuMonitorBlockStatsUpdateCapacity
API's to (essentially) retrieve the "actual-size" from a 'query-block'
operation for the source device.
However, the code only was made functional for a BLOCK backing type
and it neglected to use qemuOpenFile, instead using just open. After
the open the block lseek would find the end of the block and set the
physical value, close the fd and return.
Since the code would return 0 immediately if the source device wasn't
a BLOCK backed device, the physical would be displayed incorrectly,
such as follows in domblkinfo for a file backed source device:
Capacity: 1073741824
Allocation: 0
Physical: 0
This patch will modify the algorithm to get the physical size for other
backing types and it will make use of the qemuDomainStorageOpenStat
helper in order to open/stat the source file depending on its type.
The qemuDomainGetStatsOneBlock will no longer inhibit printing errors,
but it will still ignore them leaving the physical value set to 0.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
We have couple of functions that operate over NULL terminated
lits of strings. However, our naming sucks:
virStringJoin
virStringFreeList
virStringFreeListCount
virStringArrayHasString
virStringGetFirstWithPrefix
We can do better:
virStringListJoin
virStringListFree
virStringListFreeCount
virStringListHasString
virStringListGetFirstWithPrefix
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Commit id 'a48c7141' altered how to determine if a volume was encrypted
by adding a peek at an offset into the file at a specific buffer location.
Unfortunately, all that was compared was the first "char" of the buffer
against the expect "int" value.
Restore the virReadBufInt32BE to get the complete field in order to
compare against the expected value from the qcow2EncryptionInfo or
qcow1EncryptionInfo "modeValue" field.
This restores the capability to create a volume with encryption, then
refresh the pool, and still find the encryption for the volume.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1367259
Crash occurs because 'secrets' is being dereferenced in call:
if (qemuDomainSecretSetup(conn, priv, secinfo, disk->info.alias,
VIR_SECRET_USAGE_TYPE_VOLUME, NULL,
&src->encryption->secrets[0]->seclookupdef,
true) < 0)
(gdb) p *src->encryption
$1 = {format = 2, nsecrets = 0, secrets = 0x0, encinfo = {cipher_size = 0,
cipher_name = 0x0, cipher_mode = 0x0, cipher_hash = 0x0, ivgen_name = 0x0,
ivgen_hash = 0x0}}
(gdb) bt
priv=priv@entry=0x7fffc03be160, disk=disk@entry=0x7fffb4002ae0)
at qemu/qemu_domain.c:1087
disk=0x7fffb4002ae0, vm=0x7fffc03a2580, driver=0x7fffc02ca390,
conn=0x7fffb00009a0) at qemu/qemu_hotplug.c:355
Upon entry to qemuDomainAttachVirtioDiskDevice, src->encryption points
at a valid 'secret' buffer w/ nsecrets == 1; however, the call to
qemuDomainDetermineDiskChain will call virStorageFileGetMetadata
and eventually virStorageFileGetMetadataInternal where the src->encryption
was overwritten when probing the volume.
Commit id 'a48c7141' added code to virStorageFileGetMetadataInternal
to determine if the disk/volume would use/need encryption and allocated
a meta->encryption. This overwrote an existing encryption buffer
already provided by the XML
This patch adds a check for meta->encryption already present before
just allocating and overwriting an existing buffer. It then checks the
existing encryption data to ensure the XML provided format for the
disk matches the expected format read from the disk and errors if there
is a mismatch.
The current LUKS support has a "luks" volume type which has
a "luks" encryption format.
This partially makes sense if you consider the QEMU shorthand
syntax only requires you to specify a format=luks, and it'll
automagically uses "raw" as the next level driver. QEMU will
however let you override the "raw" with any other driver it
supports (vmdk, qcow, rbd, iscsi, etc, etc)
IOW the intention though is that the "luks" encryption format
is applied to all disk formats (whether raw, qcow2, rbd, gluster
or whatever). As such it doesn't make much sense for libvirt
to say the volume type is "luks" - we should be saying that it
is a "raw" file, but with "luks" encryption applied.
IOW, when creating a storage volume we should use this XML
<volume>
<name>demo.raw</name>
<capacity>5368709120</capacity>
<target>
<format type='raw'/>
<encryption format='luks'>
<secret type='passphrase' uuid='0a81f5b2-8403-7b23-c8d6-21ccd2f80d6f'/>
</encryption>
</target>
</volume>
and when configuring a guest disk we should use
<disk type='file' device='disk'>
<driver name='qemu' type='raw'/>
<source file='/home/berrange/VirtualMachines/demo.raw'/>
<target dev='sda' bus='scsi'/>
<encryption format='luks'>
<secret type='passphrase' uuid='0a81f5b2-8403-7b23-c8d6-21ccd2f80d6f'/>
</encryption>
</disk>
This commit thus removes the "luks" storage volume type added
in
commit 318ebb36f1
Author: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Date: Tue Jun 21 12:59:54 2016 -0400
util: Add 'luks' to the FileTypeInfo
The storage file probing code is modified so that it can probe
the actual encryption formats explicitly, rather than merely
probing existance of encryption and letting the storage driver
guess the format.
The rest of the code is then adapted to deal with
VIR_STORAGE_FILE_RAW w/ VIR_STORAGE_ENCRYPTION_FORMAT_LUKS
instead of just VIR_STORAGE_FILE_LUKS.
The commit mentioned above was included in libvirt v2.0.0.
So when querying volume XML this will be a change in behaviour
vs the 2.0.0 release - it'll report 'raw' instead of 'luks'
for the volume format, but still report 'luks' for encryption
format. I think this change is OK because the storage driver
did not include any support for creating volumes, nor starting
guets with luks volumes in v2.0.0 - that only since then.
Clearly if we change this we must do it before v2.1.0 though.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Refactor the virStorageFileMatchesNNN methods so that
they don't take a struct FileFormatInfo parameter, but
instead get the actual raw dat items they needs. This
will facilitate reuse in other contexts.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Add a modular parser that will allow to parse 'json' backing definitions
that are supported by qemu. The initial implementation adds support for
the 'file' driver.
Due to the approach qemu took to implement the JSON backing strings it's
possible to specify them in two approaches.
The object approach:
json:{ "file" : { "driver":"file",
"filename":"/path/to/file"
}
}
And a partially flattened approach:
json:{"file.driver":"file"
"file.filename":"/path/to/file"
}
Both of the above are supported by qemu and by the code added in this
commit. The current implementation de-flattens the first level ('file.')
if possible and required. Other handling may be added later but
currently only one level was possible anyways.
As we already test that the extraction of the backing store string works
well additional tests for the backing store string parser can be made
simpler.
Export virStorageSourceNewFromBackingAbsolute and use it to parse the
backing store strings, format them using virDomainDiskSourceFormat and
match them against expected XMLs.
The version field historically has been a 4 byte data; however, an upcoming
new type will use a 2 byte version. So let's adjust for that now.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Move to virsecret.c and rename to virSecretLookupParseSecret. Also convert
to usage xmlNodePtr and virXMLPropString rather than virXPathString.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Move the enum into a new src/util/virsecret.h, rename it to be
virSecretLookupType. Add a src/util/virsecret.h in order to perform
a couple of simple operations on the secret XML and virSecretLookupTypeDef
for clearing and copying.
This includes quite a bit of collateral damage, but the goal is to remove
the "virStorage*" and replace with the virSecretLookupType so that it's
easier to to add new lookups that aren't necessarily storage pool related.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Move some parts of virStorageFileRemoveLastPathComponent
into a separate function so they can be reused.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1318993
Commit id 'dd519a294' caused a regression cloning a volume into a
logical pool by removing just the 'allocation' adjustment during
storageVolCreateXMLFrom. Combined with the change to not require the
new volume input XML to have a capacity listed (commit id 'e3f1d2a8')
left the possibility that a zero allocation value (e.g., not provided)
would create a thin/sparse logical volume. When a thin lv becomes fully
populated, then LVM sets the partition 'inactive' and the subsequent
fdatasync() fails.
Add a new 'has_allocation' flag to be set at XML parse time to indicate
that allocation was provided. This is done so that if it's not provided
the create-from code uses the capacity value since we document that if
omitted, the volume will be fully allocated at time of creation.
For a logical backend, that creation time is 'createVol', while for a
file backend, creation doesn't set the size, but the 'createRaw' called
during buildVolFrom will decide whether the file is sparse or not based
on the provided capacity and allocation value.
For volume clones that provide different allocation and capacity values
to allow for sparse files, there is no change.
For disks sources described by a libvirt volume we don't need to do a
complicated check since virStorageTranslateDiskSourcePool already
correctly determines the actual disk type.
Replace the checks using a new accessor that does not open-code the
whole logic.
Refreshes meta-information such as allocation, capacity, format, etc.
Ploop volumes differ from other volume types. Path to volume is the path
to directory with image file root.hds and DiskDescriptor.xml.
https://openvz.org/Ploop/format
Due to this fact, operations of opening the volume have to be done once
again. get the information.
To decide whether the given volume is ploops one, it is necessary to check
the presence of root.hds and DiskDescriptor.xml files in volumes' directory.
Only in this case the volume can be manipulated as the ploops one.
Such strategy helps us to resolve problems that might occure, when we
upload some other volume type from ploop source.
Signed-off-by: Olga Krishtal <okrishtal@virtuozzo.com>
Signed-off-by: Ján Tomko <jtomko@redhat.com>
The virStringListLength function does not ever modify the passed
string list. It merely counts the items in it. Make sure that we
reflect this bit in the function header.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
(crobinso: fix up spacing and squash in sheepdog bit suggested
by Andrea)
If no port number was provided for a storage pool libvirt defaults to
port 6789; however, librbd/librados already default to 6789 when no port
number is provided.
In the future Ceph will switch to a new port for the Ceph monitors since
port 6789 is already assigned to a different application by IANA.
Port 6789 is assigned to SMC-HTTPS and Ceph now has port 3300 assigned as
the 'Ceph monitor' port.
In this case it is the best solution to not hardcode any port number into
libvirt and let librados handle the connection.
Only if a user specifies a different port number we pass it down to librados,
otherwise we leave it blank.
Signed-off-by: Wido den Hollander <wido@widodh.nl>
merge
Qemu reports physical size 0 for block devices. As 15fa84acbb
changed the behavior of qemuDomainGetBlockInfo to just query the monitor
this created a regression since we didn't report the size correctly any
more.
This patch adds code to refresh the physical size of a block device by
opening it and seeking to the end and uses it both in
qemuDomainGetBlockInfo and also in qemuDomainGetStatsOneBlock that was
broken since it was introduced in this respect.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1250982
When a user would specify a backing chain index that is above the start
point libvirt would report a rather unhelpful error:
invalid argument: could not find backing store 1 in chain for 'sub/link2'
This patch adds an explicit check that the index is below start point in
the backing store and reports the following error if not:
invalid argument: requested backing store index 1 is above 'sub/../qcow2' in chain for 'sub/link2'
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1177062
Some storage protocols allow to have the @path field in struct
virStorageSource set to NULL. Add NULLSTR() wrappers to handle this
possibility until I finish the storage source error formatter.
If the storage device type is parsed as network our parser still allows
it to omit the <source> element. The empty drive check would not trigger
on such device as it expects that every network storage source is valid.
Use VIR_STORAGE_NET_PROTOCOL_NONE as a marker that the storage source is
empty.
The gluster volume name extraction code was copied from the XML parser
without changing the VIR_ERR_XML_ERROR error code. Use
VIR_ERR_CONFIG_UNSUPPORTED instead.
Similar to commit fdb80ed4f6 libvirtd
would crash if a gluster URI without path would be used in the backing
chain of a volume. The crash happens in the gluster specific part of the
parser that extracts the gluster volume name from the path.
Fix the crash by checking that the PATH is NULL.
This patch does not contain a test case as it's not possible to test it
with the current infrastructure as the test suite would attempt to
contact the gluster server in the URI. I'm working on the test suite
addition but that will be post-release material.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1196528
If a storage file would be backed with a NBD device without path
(nbd://localhost) libvirt would crash when parsing the backing path for
the disk as the URI structure's path element is NULL in such case but
the NBD parser would access it shamelessly.
Remove the resize flag and use the same code path for all callers.
This flag was added by commit 18f0316 to allow virStorageFileResize
use 'safezero' while preserving the behavior.
Explicitly return -2 when a fallback to a different method should
be done, to make the code path more obvious.
Fail immediately when ftruncate fails in the mmap method,
as we did before commit 18f0316.
Right now, grabbing blockinfo always calls stat on the disk, then
opens the image to determine the capacity, using a throw-away
virStorageSourcePtr. This has a couple of drawbacks:
1. We are calling stat and opening a file on every invocation of
the API. However, there are cases where the stats should NOT be
changing between successive calls (if a domain is running, no
one should be changing the physical size of a block device or raw
image behind our backs; capacity of read-only files should not
be changing; and we are the gateway to the block-resize command
to know when the capacity of read-write files should be changing).
True, we still have to use stat in some cases (a sparse raw file
changes allocation if it is read-write and the amount of holes is
changing, and a read-write qcow2 image stored in a file changes
physical size if it was not fully pre-allocated). But for
read-only images, even this should be something we can remember
from the previous time, rather than repeating every call.
2. We want to enhance the power of virDomainListGetStats, by
sharing code. But we already have a virStorageSourcePtr for
each disk, and it would be easier to reuse the common structure
than to have to worry about the one-off virDomainBlockInfoPtr.
While this patch does not optimize reuse of information in point
1, it does get us closer to being able to do so; by updating a
structure that survives between consecutive calls.
* src/util/virstoragefile.h (_virStorageSource): Add physical, to
mirror virDomainBlockInfo; rearrange fields to match public struct.
(virStorageSourceCopy): Copy the new field.
* src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemuDomainGetBlockInfo): Store into
storage source, then copy to block info.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Currently virStorageFileResize() function uses build conditionals to
choose either the posix_fallocate() or syscall(SYS_fallocate) with no
fallback in order to preallocate the space in the newly resized file.
Since the safezero code has a similar set of conditionals modify the
resize and safezero code in order to allow the resize logic to make use
of safezero to unify the look/feel of the code paths.
Add a new boolean (resize) to safezero() to make the optional decision
whether to try syscall(SYS_fallocate) if the posix_fallocate fails because
HAVE_POSIX_FALLOCATE is not defined (eg, return -1 and errno == 0).
Create a local safezero_sys_fallocate in order to handle the resize
code paths that support that. If not present, the set errno = ENOSYS
in order to allow the caller to handle the failure scenarios.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
To be able to express some use cases of the RBD backing with libvirt, we
need to be able to specify a config file for the RBD client to qemu as
that is one of the commonly used options.
Some storage systems have internal support for snapshots. Libvirt should
be able to select a correct snapshot when starting a VM.
This patch adds a XML element to select a storage source snapshot for
the RBD protocol which supports this feature.
As we now have a common function to parse backing store string for RBD
backing store we can reuse it in the backing store walker so that we
don't fail on files backed by RBD storage.
This patch also adds a few tests to verify that the parsing works as
expected.
To allow reuse this non-trivial parser code in the backing store parser
this part of the command line parser needs to be split out into a
separate funciton.
If there are no hosts for a storage source virStorageSourceCopy and
virStorageSourceNewFromBackingRelative would try to copy them anyways.
As the success of virStorageNetHostDefCopy is determined by returning
a pointer and malloc of 0 elements might return NULL according to the
implementation, the result of the copy function may vary.
Fix this by copying the hosts array only if there are hosts defined.
When creating a disk image snapshot the libvirt code would blindly copy
the parents label to the newly created image. This runs into problems
when you start a VM from an image hosted on NFS (or other storage system
that doesn't support selinux labels) and the snapshot destination is on
a storage system that does support selinux labels. Libvirt's code in
that case generates a different security label for the image hosted on
NFS. This label is valid only for NFS images and doesn't allow access in
case of a locally stored image.
To fix this issue libvirt needs to refrain from copying security
information in cases where the default domain seclabel is a better
choice.
This patch repurposes the now unused @force argument of
virStorageSourceInitChainElement to denote whether a copy of the
security labelling stuff should be attempted or not. This allows to
fine-control the copy operation for cases where we need to keep the
label of the old disk vs. the cases where we need to keep the label
unset to use the default domain imagelabel.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1151718
The code that parses the schema from the URI touches the "hosts[0]"
member of the storage file source structure in case the URI contains a
schema. The hosts array was not yet allocated at the point in the code
where the transport protocol was parsed and set. This lead to a crash of
libvirtd.
Fix the code by allocating the "hosts" array upfront and add a test case
to verify this scenario. (Unfortunately this requires shuffling the test
case numbers too).
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1156288
virStorageSourceInitChainElement initializes a new storage chain element
for use as a new disk source. If the new element doesn't contain the
driver name, copy it from the old source.
This fixes issue where a disk would forget the driver after a snapshot.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1140984
The backing store string location offset 0 determines that the file
isn't present. The string size shouldn't be then checked:
from qemu.git/docs/specs/qcow2.txt
== Header ==
The first cluster of a qcow2 image contains the file header:
Byte 0 - 3: magic
QCOW magic string ("QFI\xfb")
4 - 7: version
Version number (valid values are 2 and 3)
8 - 15: backing_file_offset
Offset into the image file at which the backing file name
is stored (NB: The string is not null terminated). 0 if the
image doesn't have a backing file.
16 - 19: backing_file_size
Length of the backing file name in bytes. Must not be
longer than 1023 bytes. Undefined if the image doesn't have
a backing file. ^^^^^^^^^
This patch intentionally leaves the backing file string size check in
place in case a malformatted file would be presented to libvirt. Also
according to the docs the string size is maximum 1023 bytes, thus this
patch adds a check to verify that.
I was also able to verify that the check was done the same way in the
legacy qcow fromat (in qemu's code).
To express empty drive we historically use storage source with empty
path. Unfortunately NBD disks may be declared without a path.
Add a helper to wrap this logic.
Valgrind caught a memory leak:
==2018== 9 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 143 of 927
==2018== at 0x4A0645D: malloc (in /usr/lib64/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
==2018== by 0x8C42369: strdup (strdup.c:42)
==2018== by 0x50EACC9: virStrdup (virstring.c:676)
==2018== by 0x50E79E5: virStorageSourceCopy (virstoragefile.c:1845)
==2018== by 0x20A3FAA7: qemuDomainBlockCommit (qemu_driver.c:15620)
==2018== by 0x51DC6B2: virDomainBlockCommit (libvirt.c:20092)
I traced it to the fact that blockcopy and blockcommit end up
reparsing a backing chain on pivot, but the chain parsing code
doesn't gracefully handle the case where the backing file is
already known.
I'm not exactly sure when this was introduced, but suspect that the
refactoring in commit 9944b71 and friends that moved towards probing
in-place rather than into a temporary structure are part of the cause.
* src/util/virstoragefile.c (virStorageFileGetMetadataInternal):
Don't leak any prior value.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The commit referenced above changed function arguments of
virStorageFileGetMetadataFromBuf() but didn't tweak the
ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL tied to them. This was caught by coverity as it
actually obeys them. We disabled them for GCC and thus it didn't show
up.
Additionally in commit 3ea661deea I passed
NULL to the backingFormat argument which was also marked as nonnull. Use
a dummy int's address when the argument isn't supplied so that the code
doesn't need to change much.
When discovering a disk backing chain the parent disk's metadata need to
be populated into the guest images so that each piece of the backing
chain contains a copy of those. This will allow us to refactor the
security driver so that it will not need to carry around the original
disk definition.
We are going to modify storage source chains in place. Add a helper that
will copy relevant information such as security labels to the new
element if that doesn't contain it.