Test disk-drive-network-rbd-auth-AES depends on existence of
gnutls_cipher_encrypt() function which was introduced in gnutls 2.10.0.
On systems without this function we should skip this test.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
This test requests a read-only virtual FAT drive on the IDE bus.
Read-only IDE drives are unsupported, but libvirt only displays
the error if it has the QEMU_CAPS_DRIVE_READONLY capability.
Read-write FAT drives are also unsupported.
Rather than only assigning a PCI address when no address is given at
all, also do it when the config says that the address type is 'pci',
but it gives no address (virDeviceInfoPCIAddressWanted()).
There are also several places after parsing but prior to address
assignment where code previously expected that any info with address
type='pci' would have a *valid* PCI address, which isn't always the
case - now we check not only for type='pci', but also for a valid
address (virDeviceInfoPCIAddressPresent()).
The test case added in this patch was directly copied from Cole's patch titled:
qemu: Wire up address type=pci auto_allocate
I've encountered this error while trying out this feature on some
systems:
$ VIR_TEST_FILE_ACCESS=1 ./virhashtest \
libvirt.git/tests/.libs/lt-virhashtest: \
symbol lookup error: libvirt.git/tests/.libs/virtestmock.so: \
undefined symbol: libvirt_event_poll_purge_timeout_semaphore
Problem is, linking just libvirt_utils to virmock.la is not
enough. We might need to link libvirt_probes.lo too.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
There is a lot to explain, but I try to make it as short as
possible. I'd start by pasting some parts of sys/stat.h:
extern int stat (const char *__restrict __file,
struct stat *__restrict __buf) __THROW __nonnull ((1, 2));
extern int __REDIRECT_NTH (stat, (const char *__restrict __file,
struct stat *__restrict __buf), stat64)
__nonnull ((1, 2));
__extern_inline int
__NTH (stat (const char *__path, struct stat *__statbuf))
{
return __xstat (_STAT_VER, __path, __statbuf);
}
Only one of these is effective at once, due to some usage of
the mess we are dealing with in here. So, basically, while
compiling or linking stat() in our code can be transformed into
some other func. Or a dragon.
Now, if you read stat(2) manpage, esp. "C library/kernel
differences" section, you'll learn that glibc uses some tricks
for older applications to work. I haven't gotten around actual
code that does this, but based on my observations, if 'stat'
symbol is found, glibc assumes it's dealing with ancient
application. Unfortunately, it can be just ours stat coming from
our mock. Therefore, calling stat() from a test will end up in
our mock. But since glibc is not exposing the symbol anymore, our
call of real_stat() will SIGSEGV immediately as the pointer to
function is NULL. Therefore, we should expose only those symbols
we know glibc has.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
It wasn't as great idea as I thought. Thing around stat() are
more complicated than that. Therefore we need to revert
86d1705a8a plus drop use of the macro as introduced in
later patches.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1182074
If they're available and we need to pass secrets to qemu, then use the
qemu domain secret object in order to pass the secrets for RBD volumes
instead of passing the base64 encoded secret on the command line.
The goal is to make AES secrets the default and have no user interaction
required in order to allow using the AES mechanism. If the mechanism
is not available, then fall back to the current plain mechanism using
a base64 encoded secret.
New APIs:
qemu_domain.c:
qemuDomainGetSecretAESAlias:
Generate/return the secret object alias for an AES Secret Info type.
This will be called from qemuDomainSecretAESSetup.
qemuDomainSecretAESSetup: (private)
This API handles the details of the generation of the AES secret
and saves the pieces that need to be passed to qemu in order for
the secret to be decrypted. The encrypted secret based upon the
domain master key, an initialization vector (16 byte random value),
and the stored secret. Finally, the requirement from qemu is the IV
and encrypted secret are to be base64 encoded.
qemu_command.c:
qemuBuildSecretInfoProps: (private)
Generate/return a JSON properties object for the AES secret to
be used by both the command building and eventually the hotplug
code in order to add the secret object. Code was designed so that
in the future perhaps hotplug could use it if it made sense.
qemuBuildObjectSecretCommandLine (private)
Generate and add to the command line the -object secret for the
secret. This will be required for the subsequent RBD reference
to the object.
qemuBuildDiskSecinfoCommandLine (private)
Handle adding the AES secret object.
Adjustments:
qemu_domain.c:
The qemuDomainSecretSetup was altered to call either the AES or Plain
Setup functions based upon whether AES secrets are possible (we have
the encryption API) or not, we have secrets, and of course if the
protocol source is RBD.
qemu_command.c:
Adjust the qemuBuildRBDSecinfoURI API's in order to generate the
specific command options for an AES secret, such as:
-object secret,id=$alias,keyid=$masterKey,data=$base64encodedencrypted,
format=base64
-drive file=rbd:pool/image:id=myname:auth_supported=cephx\;none:\
mon_host=mon1.example.org\:6321,password-secret=$alias,...
where the 'id=' value is the secret object alias generated by
concatenating the disk alias and "-aesKey0". The 'keyid= $masterKey'
is the master key shared with qemu, and the -drive syntax will
reference that alias as the 'password-secret'. For the -drive
syntax, the 'id=myname' is kept to define the username, while the
'key=$base64 encoded secret' is removed.
While according to the syntax described for qemu commit '60390a21'
or as seen in the email archive:
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2016-01/msg04083.html
it is possible to pass a plaintext password via a file, the qemu
commit 'ac1d8878' describes the more feature rich 'keyid=' option
based upon the shared masterKey.
Add tests for checking/comparing output.
NB: For hotplug, since the hotplug code doesn't add command line
arguments, passing the encoded secret directly to the monitor
will suffice.
Introduce virCryptoHaveCipher and virCryptoEncryptData to handle
performing encryption.
virCryptoHaveCipher:
Boolean function to determine whether the requested cipher algorithm
is available. It's expected this API will be called prior to
virCryptoEncryptdata. It will return true/false.
virCryptoEncryptData:
Based on the requested cipher type, call the specific encryption
API to encrypt the data.
Currently the only algorithm support is the AES 256 CBC encryption.
Adjust tests for the API's
Create a mock for virRandomBytes to generate a not so random value.
This should be usable by other tests that need a not so random number
to be generated by including the virrandommock at preload.
The "random number" generated is based upon the size of the expected
stream of bytes being returned where each byte in the result gets
the index of the array - hence a 4 byte array returns 0x00010203.
According to QEMU docs, the '-m' option for specifying RAM is by default
in MiB, and a suffix of "M" or "G" may be passed for values in MiB and
GiB respectively. This commit adds support and a test for the same.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=812295
Signed-off-by: Nishith Shah <nishithshah.2211@gmail.com>
Commit 55320c23 introduced a new test for VNC to test if
vnc_auto_unix_socket is set in qemu.conf, but forget to enable it in
qemuxml2argvtest.c.
This patch also moves the code in qemuxml2xmltest.c next to other VNC
tests and refactor the test so we also check the case for parsing active
XML.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
There's no reason for keeping the features in a linked list. Especially
when we know upfront the total number of features we are loading.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
While introducing virtestmock.la, I've forgotten to add '\' at
the end of one line leaving our Makefile.am mangled. Fortunately,
the only thing that comes after is '$(NULL)' so nothing is
terribly broken.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
All qemu versions we support have QEMU_CAPS_DEVICE, so checking
for it is redundant. Remove the usage.
The code diff isn't clear, but all that code is just inindented
with no other change.
Test cases that hit qemuDomainAssignAddresses but don't have
infrastructure for specifying qemuCaps values see lots of
churn, since now PCI addresses are in the XML output.
Upcoming patches are going to make the disk portion of these
test cases fail. In order to make it work, we would need to
extend the qemuargv2xml test infrastructure to handle qemuCaps.
This is worthwhile to do at some point but isn't critical.
Instead just drop the offending portion, which isn't even the
target of the test cases anyways
This wires up qemuDomainAssignAddresses into the new
virDomainDefAssignAddressesCallback, so it's always triggered
via virDomainDefPostParse. We are essentially doing this already
with open coded calls sprinkled about.
qemu argv parse output changes slightly since previously it wasn't
hitting qemuDomainAssignAddresses.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1331552
Instead of disabling auto-login of all scsi targets (even those
that do not "belong" to libvirt), use iscsiadm's "--op nonpersistent"
during discovery of iSCSI targets (e.g. "iscsiadm --mode discovery
--type sendtargets") in order to avoid the node database being altered
which led to the need for the "large hammer" approach taken by
commit id '3c12b654'.
This commit removes the virISCSITargetAutologin adjustment (eg. the setting
of node.startup to "manual"). The iscsiadm command has supported this mode
of operation as of commit id 'ad873767' to open-iscsi.
The only case where the hardware capabilities influence the result
is when no <gic/> element was provided.
The test programs now ensure both that the correct GIC version is
picked in that case, and that hardware capabilities are not taken
into account when the user has already picked a GIC version.
Now that we choose the GIC version based on hardware features when
no <gic/> element has been provided, we need a way to fake the GIC
capabilities of the host.
Update the qemuxml2argv and qemuxml2xml tests to allow this.
We support omitting listen attribute of graphics element so we should
also support omitting address attribute of listen element. This patch
also updates libvirt to always add a listen element into domain XML
except for VNC graphics if socket attribute is specified.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
If socket attribute is present we start VNC that listens only on that
unix socket. This makes the parser behave the same way as we actually
use the socket attribute.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
The only QEMU versions that don't have such capability are <0.12,
which we no longer support anyway.
Additionally, this solves the issue of some QEMU binaries being
reported as not having such capability just because they lacked
the {kvm-}pci-assign QMP object.
For a few cases where we handle secret information it's good to clear
the buffers containing sensitive data before freeing them.
Introduce VIR_DISPOSE, VIR_DISPOSE_N and VIR_DISPOSE_STRING that allow
simple clearing fo the buffers holding sensitive information on cleanup
paths.
When -cpu host is supported by a QEMU binary, a user can use
<cpu mode='host-passthrough'/> in domain XML even when libvirtd failed
to find a matching model for the host CPU. Let's make it obvious by
advertising <cpuselection/> guest capability whenever -cpu host is
supported.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
This script will check output generated by virtestmock against a
white list. All non matching records found are printed out. So
far, the white list is rather sparse at the moment.
This test should be ran only after all other tests finished, and
should cleanup the temporary file before their execution. Because
I'm unable to reflect these requirements in Makefile.am
correctly, I've introduced new target 'check-access' under which
this test is available.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
All the accesses to files outside our build or source directories
are now identified and appended into a file for later processing.
The location of the file that contains all the records can be
controlled via VIR_TEST_FILE_ACCESS env variable and defaults to
abs_builddir "/test_file_access.txt".
The script that will process the access file is to be added in
next commit.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The intent is that this library is going to be called every time
to check if we are not touching anything outside srcdir or
builddir.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
There is some magic going on when it comes to stat() or lstat().
Basically, stat() can either be a regular function, an inline
function that calls __xstat(_STAT_VER, ...) or a macro that does
the same as the inline func. Don't ask why is that, just read the
documentation in sys/stat.h and make sure you have a bucket next
to you. Anyway, currently there will not be both stat and __xstat
symbols at the same time, as one of them gets overwritten to the
other one during compilation. But this is not true anymore once
we start chaining our mocking libraries. Therefore we need a
wrapper that calls desired function from glibc.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Some of the test configuration files in tests/xlconfigdata
use the old qemu-dm as the emulator. Many of the configuration
features tested (spice, rbd, multi-usb) are not even usable with
the old qemu. Change these files to use the new qemu-xen (also
known as qemu upstream) emulator.
Note: This change fixes xlconfigtest failures when the old
qemu is actually installed on the system. During device post
parse, the libxl driver attempts to invoke the emulator to
determine if it is the old or new qemu so it can properly set
video RAM defaults. With the old qemu installed, the default
video RAM was set differently than the expected value.
Changing all the test data files to use qemu-xen ensures
predictable results wrt default video RAM size.
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
libvirt may automatically add a pci-root or pcie-root controller to a
domain, depending on the arch/machinetype, and it hopefully always
makes the right decision about which to add (since in all cases these
controllers are an implicit part of the virtual machine).
But it's always possible that someone will create a config that
explicitly supplies the wrong type of PCI controller for the selected
machinetype. In the past that would lead to an error later when
libvirt was trying to assign addresses to other devices, for example:
XML error: PCI bus is not compatible with the device at
0000:00:02.0. Device requires a PCI Express slot, which is not
provided by bus 0000:00
(that's the error message that appears if you replace the pcie-root
controller in a Q35 domain with a pci-root controller).
This patch adds a check at the same place that the implicit
controllers are added (to ensure that the same logic is used to check
which type of pci root is correct). If a pci controller with index='0'
is already present, we verify that it is of the model that we would
have otherwise added automatically; if not, an error is logged:
The PCI controller with index='0' must be " model='pcie-root' for
this machine type, " but model='pci-root' was found instead.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1004602
Our tests should use either VIRT_TEST_MAIN() or
VIRT_TEST_MAIN_PRELOAD() macros which create main() function and
call the passed callback subsequently. This is important because
the wrapper which calls the callback eventually does important
stuff like setting logging based on env variables and such.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Requires adding the plumbing for <device><video>
The value is <enum name='modelType'> to match the associated domain
XML of <video><model type='XXX'/>
Wire it up for qemu too
In other tests we use "expected" and "actual" to refer to the expected
outcome of the tested API and the result we got, respectively.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Adding new *.replies files for qemucapabilitiestest or updating the
files when libvirt adds an additional QMP command into the probing
process is quite painful. The goal of the new qemucapsprobe command is
to make this process as easy as
tests/qemucapsprobe /path/to/qemu/binary >caps.replies
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
json_reformat uses two spaces for when indenting nested objects, let's
do the same. The result of virJSONValueToString will be exactly the same
as json_reformat would produce.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
The new VIRT_TEST_PRELOAD macro does not force the caller to create a
special main function which would need to be called through
virtTestMain().
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Currently all qemu driver tests are statically linked to qemu driver
library, which makes it impossible to mock any API from the library.
This patch creates a shared qemu driver library which can be used
instead of the static one.
NB we can't use libvirt_driver_qemu.so directly since it is linked with
-module and it is supposed to be dlopened.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1286709
Now that we have all the pieces in place, we can add the 'iothread=#' to
the command line for the (two) controllers that support it (virtio-scsi-pci
and virtio-scsi-ccw). Add the tests as well...
Add the ability to add an 'iothread' to the controller which will be how
virtio-scsi-pci and virtio-scsi-ccw iothreads have been implemented in qemu.
Describe the new functionality and add tests to parse/validate that the
new attribute can be added.
An iothread for virtio-scsi is a property of the controller. Add a lookup
of the 'virtio-scsi-pci' and 'virtio-scsi-ccw' device properties and parse
the output. For both, support for the iothread was added in qemu 2.4
while support for virtio-scsi in general was added in qemu 1.4.
Modify the various mock capabilities replies (by hand) to reflect the
when virtio-scsi was supported and then specifically when the iothread
property was added. For versions prior to 1.4, use the no device error
return for virtio-scsi. For versions 1.4 to before 2.4, add some data
for virtio-scsi-pci even though it isn't complete we're not looking for
anything specific there anyway. For 2.4 to 2.6, add a more complete reply.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Our socket address format is in a rather non-standard format and that is
because sasl library requires the IP address and service to be delimited by a
semicolon. The string form is a completely internal matter, however once the
admin interfaces to retrieve client identity information are merged, we should
return the socket address string in a common format, e.g. format defined by
URI rfc-3986, i.e. the IP address and service are delimited by a colon and
in case of an IPv6 address, square brackets are added:
Examples:
127.0.0.1:1234
[::1]:1234
This patch changes our default format to the one described above, while adding
separate methods to request the non-standard SASL format using semicolon as a
delimiter.
Signed-off-by: Erik Skultety <eskultet@redhat.com>
This adds a ports= attribute to usb controller XML, like
<controller type='usb' model='nec-xhci' ports='8'/>
This maps to:
qemu -device nec-usb-xhci,p2=8,p3=8
Meaning, 8 ports that support both usb2 and usb3 devices. Gerd
suggested to just expose them as one knob.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1271408
Besides ID, libvirt should provide several parameters to help the user
distinguish two clients from each other. One of them is the connection
timestamp. This patch also adds a testcase for proper JSON formatting of the
new attribute too (proper formatting of older clients that did not support
this attribute yet is included in the existing tests) - in order to
testGenerateJSON to work, a mock of time_t time(time_t *timer) needed to be
created.
Signed-off-by: Erik Skultety <eskultet@redhat.com>
Admin API needs a way of addressing specific clients. Unlike servers, which we
are happy to address by names both because its name reflects its purpose (to
some extent) and we only have two of them (so far), naming clients doesn't make
any sense, since a) each client is an anonymous, i.e. not recognized after a
disconnect followed by a reconnect, b) we can't predict what kind of requests
it's going to send to daemon, and c) the are loads of them comming and going,
so the only viable option is to use an ID which is of a reasonably wide data
type.
Signed-off-by: Erik Skultety <eskultet@redhat.com>
Trying to define a domain name containing an embedded '/'
will immediately fail when trying to write the XML to disk for
our stateful drivers. This patch explicitly rejects names
containing a '/', and provides an xmlopt feature for drivers
to avoid this validation check, which is enabled in every
non-stateful driver that already has xmlopt handling wired up.
(Technically this could reject a previously accepted vmname like
'/foo', however at least for the qemu driver that falls over
later when starting qemu)
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=639923
We were lacking tests that are checking for the completeness of our
nodedev XMLs and also whether we output properly formatted ones. This
patch adds parsing for the capability elements inside the <capability
type='pci'> element. Also bunch of tests are added to show everything
works properly.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
There were few things done in the nodedev code but we were lacking tests
for it. And because of that we missed that the schema was not updated
either. Fix the schema and add various test files to show the schema
is correct.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Modeled after the qemuDomainDiskPrivatePtr logic, create a privateData
pointer in the _virDomainHostdevDef to allow storage of private data
for a hypervisor in order to at least temporarily store auth/secrets
data for usage during qemuBuildCommandLine.
NB: Since the qemu_parse_command (qemuParseCommandLine) code is not
expecting to restore the auth/secret data, there's no need to add
code to handle this new structure there.
Updated copyrights for modules touched. Some didn't have updates in a
couple years even though changes have been made.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
If qemu doesn't support DEVICE_TRAY_MOVED event the code that attempts
to change media would attempt to re-eject the tray even if it wouldn't
be notified when the tray opened. Add a capability bit and skip retrying
for old qemus.
The man page says: "(Re)-Connect to the hypervisor. When the shell is
first started, this is automatically run with the URI parameter
requested by the "-c" option on the command line." However, if you run:
virsh -c 'test://default' 'connect; uri'
the output will not be 'test://default'. That's because the 'connect'
command does not care about any virsh-only related settings and if it is
run without parameters, it connects with @uri == NULL. Not only that
doesn't comply to what the man page describes, but it also doesn't make
sense. It also means you aren't able to reconnect to whatever you are
connected currently.
So let's fix that in both virsh and virt-admin add a test case for it.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Similarly to what commit 7140807917 did with some internal paths,
clear vnc socket paths that were generated by us. Having such path in
the definition can cause trouble when restoring the domain. The path is
generated to the per-domain directory that contains the domain ID.
However, that ID will be different upon restoration, so qemu won't be
able to create that socket because the directory will not be prepared.
To be able to migrate to older libvirt, skip formatting the socket path
in migratable XML if it was autogenerated. And mark it as autogenerated
if it already exists and we're parsing live XML.
Best viewed with '-C'.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1326270
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Currently we only allow /dev/random and /dev/hwrng as host input
for <rng><backend model='random'/> device. This was added after
various upstream discussions in commit 4932ef45
However this restriction has generated quite a few complaints over
the years, so a new discussion was initiated:
http://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2016-April/msg00987.html
Several people suggested removing the restriction, and nobody really
spoke up to defend it. So this patch drops the path restriction
entirely
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1074464
This unifies the test scripts to all use the similar pattern added for
schematests in ace4aecd. This gives the following
- Enables running all tests from outside of tests/ dir
- Drops redundant abs_* definitions, which are set by test-lib.sh
- Drops unnecessary srcdir variable which was only used for sourcing
test-lib.sh
Behavior changes:
- srcdir can no longer be overwritten, but I don't know why anyone would
really need to...
- Script VERBOSE setting no longer prints commands executed by test-lib.sh.
if anyone cares I suggest handling this in test-lib.sh which already
has other verbose style handling
These old tests expect to run against a real xen connection via
xend running on the host. Our intentions for the test suite are
that it doesn't require interacting with any specific host resources,
so these don't really belong here.
Store the test list in libvirtd_test_scripts, and use it where
appropriate. This also fixes the fact that we didn't ship
virsh-uriprecedence when libvirtd build is disabled.
$ echo -n 'log_level=1' > ~/.config/libvirt/libvirtd.conf
$ libvirtd --timeout=10
2014-10-10 10:30:56.394+0000: 6626: info : libvirt version: 1.1.3.6, package: 1.fc20 (Fedora Project, 2014-09-08-17:50:42, buildvm-05.phx2.fedoraproject.org)
2014-10-10 10:30:56.394+0000: 6626: error : main:1261 : Can't load config file: configuration file syntax error: /home/rjones/.config/libvirt/libvirtd.conf:1: expecting a value: /home/rjones/.config/libvirt/libvirtd.conf
Rather than try to fix this in the depths of the parser, just catch
the case when a config file doesn't end in a newline, and manually
append a newline to the content before parsing
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1151409
According to the dnsmasq manpage, the netmask for IPv4 address ranges
will be auto-deteremined from the interface dnsmasq is listening on,
but it can't do this for IPv6 for some reason - it instead assumes a
network prefix of 64 for all IPv6 address ranges. If this is
incorrect, dnsmasq will refuse to give out an address to clients,
instead logging this message:
dnsmasq-dhcp[2380]: no address range available for DHCPv6 request via virbr0
The solution is for libvirt to add ",$prefix" to all IPv6 dhcp-range
arguments when building the dnsmasq.conf file.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1033739
Commit a8743c39 removed keepalive_required attribute from daemon, added a test
case for it, but forgot to enable the test itself in virnetdaemontest.
Signed-off-by: Erik Skultety <eskultet@redhat.com>
Commit a4746114 renamed virnetservertest to virnetdaemontest to reflect some
refactor changes to virNetServer code (which moved daemon-related parts to
virNetDaemon module). Moving test data from virnetserverdata to
virnetdaemondata was also part of the commit, but the commit failed to clean
half of the files that were copied (rather than moved).
Signed-off-by: Erik Skultety <eskultet@redhat.com>
This an ubuntu/debian packaging convention. At one point it may have
been an actually different binary, but at least as of ubuntu precise
(the oldest supported ubuntu distro, released april 2012) kvm-img is
just a symlink to qemu-img for back compat.
I think it's safe to drop support for it
Commit 3a773c43c8 introduced the testCompareNetXML2XMLResult
enumeration; however, in one instance the result variable was
assigned a value from the very similar testCompareDocXML2XMLResult
enumeration, leading to a build error.
networkxml2xmltest.c:33:42: error:
implicit conversion from enumeration type 'testCompareDomXML2XMLResult'
to different enumeration type 'testCompareNetXML2XMLResult'
[-Werror,-Wenum-conversion]
testCompareNetXML2XMLResult result = TEST_COMPARE_DOM_XML2XML_RESULT_SUCCESS;
~~~~~~ ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Use the proper value (TEST_COMPARE_NET_XML2XML_RESULT_SUCCESS) instead.
The struct contains a single boolean field, 'supported':
the meaning of this field is too generic to be limited to
devices only, and in fact it's already being used for
other things like loaders and OSs.
Instead of trying to come up with a more generic name just
get rid of the struct altogether.
Prior to this patch we didn't make any attempt to prevent two entries
in the array of interfaces/PCI devices from pointing to the same
device.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1002423
This is patterned after similar functionality for domain XML tests,
but tries harder to avoid reading non-existent networkxml2xmlout data
file when parse fails.
So in glibc-2.23 sys/sysmacros.h is no longer included from sys/types.h
and we don't build because of the usage of major/minor/makedev macros.
Autoconf already has AC_HEADER_MAJOR macro that check where exactly
these functions/macros are defined, so let's use that.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
While working on the tests for the secret initialization vector, I found
that the existing iSCSI tests were lacking in how they defined the IQN.
Many had IQN's of just 'iqn.1992-01.com.example' for one disk while using
'iqn.1992-01.com.example/1' for the second disk (same for hostdevs - guess
how they were copied/generated).
Typically (and documented this way), IQN's would include be of the form
'iqn.1992-01.com.example:storage/1' indicating an IQN using "storage" for
naming authority specific string and "/1" for the iSCSI LUN.
So modify the input XML's to use the more proper format - this of course
has a ripple effect on the output XML and the args.
Also note that the "%3A" is generated by the virURIFormat/xmlSaveUri
to represent the colon.
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
virTypedParamsValidate currently uses an index based check to find
duplicate parameters. This check does not work. Consider the following
simple example:
We have only 2 keys
A (multiples allowed)
B (multiples NOT allowed)
We are given the following list of parameters to check:
A
A
B
If you work through the validation loop you will see that our last iteration
through the loop has i=2 and j=1. In this case, i > j and keys[j].value.i will
indicate that multiples are not allowed. Both conditionals are satisfied so
an incorrect error will be given: "parameter '%s' occurs multiple times"
This patch replaces the index based check with code that remembers
the name of the last parameter seen and only triggers the error case if
the current parameter name equals the last one. This works because the
list is sorted and duplicate parameters will be grouped together.
In reality, we hit this bug while using selective block migration to migrate
a guest with 5 disks. 5 was apparently just the right number to push i > j
and hit this bug.
virsh migrate --live guestname --copy-storage-all
--migrate-disks vdb,vdc,vdd,vde,vdf
qemu+ssh://dsthost/system
Signed-off-by: Jason J. Herne <jjherne@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Farman <farman@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
This is backed by the qemu device pxb-pcie, which will be available in
qemu 2.6.0.
As with pci-expander-bus (which uses qemu's pxb device), the busNr
attribute and <node> subelement of <target> are used to set the bus_nr
and numa_node options.
During post-parse we validate that the domain's machinetype is
q35-based (since the device shows up for 440fx-based machinetypes, but
is unusable), as well as checking that <node> specifies a node that is
actually configured on the guest.
This controller provides a single PCIe port on a new root. It is
similar to pci-expander-bus, intended to provide a bus that can be
associated with a guest-identifiable NUMA node, but is for
machinetypes with PCIe rather than PCI (e.g. q35-based machinetypes).
Aside from PCIe vs. PCI, the other main difference is that a
pci-expander-bus has a companion pci-bridge that is automatically
attached along with it, but pcie-expander-bus has only a single port,
and that port will only connect to a pcie-root-port, or to a
pcie-switch-upstream-port. In order for the bus to be of any use in
the guest, it must have either a pcie-root-port or a
pcie-switch-upstream-port attached (and one or more
pcie-switch-downstream-ports attached to the
pcie-switch-upstream-port).
The pxb device is a PCIe expander bus that can be added to any
Q35-based machinetype. A single PCIe port (*not* hotpluggable) is
provided; if more than one device is desired, or if hotplug
support is needed, either a pcie-root-port, or some combination of
pcie-switch-upstream-port and pcie-swith-downstream-ports must be
added to it. It can have a NUMA node number associated with it, as
well as a bus number.
This is backed by the qemu device "pxb".
The pxb device always includes a pci-bridge that is at the bus number
of the pxb + 1.
busNr and <node> from the <target> subelement are used to set the
bus_nr and numa_node options for pxb.
During post-parse we validate that the domain's machinetype is
440fx-based (since the pxb device only works on 440fx-based machines),
and <node> also gets a sanity check to assure that the NUMA node
specified for the pxb (if any - it's optional) actually exists on the
guest.
This is a standard PCI root bus (not a bridge) that can be added to a
440fx-based domain. Although it uses a PCI slot, this is *not* how it
is connected into the PCI bus hierarchy, but is only used for
control. Each pci-expander-bus provides 32 slots (0-31) that can
accept hotplug of standard PCI devices.
The usefulness of pci-expander-bus relative to a pci-bridge is that
the NUMA node of the bus can be specified with the <node> subelement
of <target>. This gives guest-side visibility to the NUMA node of
attached devices (presuming that management apps only assign a device
to a bus that has a NUMA node number matching the node number of the
device on the host).
Each pci-expander-bus also has a "busNr" attribute. The expander-bus
itself will take the busNr specified, and all buses that are connected
to this bus (including the pci-bridge that is automatically added to
any expander bus of model "pxb" (see the next commit)) will use
busNr+1, busNr+2, etc, and the pci-root (or the expander-bus with next
lower busNr) will use bus numbers lower than busNr.
The pxb device is a PCI expander bus that can be added to any
440fx-based machinetype. The PCI bus that is created has 32 standard
PCI slots (hotpluggable). It can have a NUMA node number associated
with it, as well as a bus number.
When support for dmi-to-pci-bridge was added, it was assumed that,
just as with the pci-root bus, slot 0 was reserved. This is not the
case - it can be used to connect a device just like any other slot, so
remove the restriction and update the test cases that auto-assign an
address on a dmi-to-pci-bridge.
* Add a test for listen=XXX and <listen address=YYY/> collision error
* Add an explicit test for listen=XXX duplicated to <listen address=XXX/>
We implicitly test it elsewhere but I figure it's better to be explicit,
and this test case can be extended in the future for additional listen
back compat if/when we support <listen type='socket'/> syntax
In qemuHotplugCreateObjects, the ret variable was filled by
the value returned by qemuTestCapsCacheInsert.
If any of the functions after this assignment failed, we would still
return success.
Also adjust testCompareXMLToArgvHelper, where this change is just
cosmetic, because the value was overwritten right away.
Add codes to support creating domain with network defition of assigning
SRIOV VF from a pool.
Signed-off-by: Chunyan Liu <cyliu@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
The address assigning code might add new pci bridges.
We need them to have an alias when building the command line.
In real word usage, this is not a problem because all the code
paths already call qemuDomainAssignAddresses. However moving
this call lets us remove one extra call from qemuxml2argvtest.
It is only used for failed address allocation
Since we already have FLAG_EXPECT_FAILURE, use that instead.
Also unify the output to print the whole log buffer instead
of just the last error message.
After removing qemuBuildCommandLineCallbacks, testutilsqemu.h does not
need to include qemu_command.h.
Include just qemu_conf.h here and qemu_domain_address.h in files that
need it.
Essentially revert commit 3a6204c which added these to allow the test
suite to pass without depending on the host system state.
Since commit 4b527c1 we already mock virSCSIDeviceGetSgName, so these
callbacks are useless.
Commit 119cd06 started setting the primary bool for the first
user-specified video even if user omitted the 'primary' attribute.
However this was done before the addition of the implicit device.
This broke startup of transient qemu domains with no <video>:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1325757
Move this default to virDomainDefPostParseInternal,
after the addition of the implicit video device, to catch the implicit
video as well.
Commit dc98a5bc refactored the code a lot and forget about checking if
listen attribute is specified. This ensures that listen attribute and
first listen element are compared only if both exist.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
After the test and qemu_process refactor now we can benefit from default
listen address for spice and vnc in tests.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
Some places already check for "virt-" prefix as well as plain "virt".
virQEMUCapsHasPCIMultiBus did not, resulting in multiple PCI devices
having assigned the same unnumbered "pci" alias.
Add a test for the "virt-2.6" machine type which also omits the
<model type='virtio'/> in <interface>, to check if
qemuDomainDefaultNetModel works too.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1325085
If the -object secret capability exists, then get the path to the
masterKey file and provide that to qemu. Checking for the existence
of the file before passing to qemu could be done, but causes issues
in mock test environment.
Since the qemuDomainObjPrivate is not available when building the
command line, the qemuBuildHasMasterKey API will have to suffice
as the primary arbiter for whether the capability exists in order
to find/return the path to the master key for usage.
Created the qemuDomainGetMasterKeyAlias API which will be used by
later patches to define the 'keyid' (eg, masterKey) to be used by
other secrets to provide the id to qemu for the master key.
Add a capability bit for the qemu secret object.
Adjust the 2.6.0-1 caps/replies to add the secret object. For the
.replies it's take from the '{"execute":"qom-list-types"}' output.
Commit d77ffb6876 added not only reporting of the PCI header type, but
also parsing of that information. However, because there was no parsing
done for the other sub-PCI capabilities, if there was any other
capability then a valid header type name (like phys_function or
virt_functions) the parsing would fail. This prevented passing node
device XMLs that we generated into our own functions when dealing with,
e.g. with SRIOV cards.
Instead of reworking the whole parsing, just fix this one occurence and
remove a test for it for the time being. Future patches will deal with
the rest.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
* tools/nss/libvirt_nss.[ch]: add BSD-comptabile wrappers and
register via the nss_module_register() interface
* m4/virt-nss.m4: add checks if we're building NSS for FreeBSD
* tools/Makefile.am: handle target library name differences, as
Linux needs libnss_libvirt.so.2 and FreeBSD needs
nss_libvirt.so.1. Also, different syms files have to be used
as Linux needs to export all the methods while FreeBSD
only needs to have nss_module_register()
* tests/nsstest.c, tests/nssmock.c: s/__linux__/NSS/
* tests/nssmock.c: pass int instead of mode_t to va_arg() to please
gcc 4.8
* libvirt_nss_bsd.syms: FreeBSD syms file
In some cases it's impractical to use the regular APIs as the bitmap
size needs to be pre-declared. These new APIs allow to use bitmaps that
self expand.
The new code adds a property to the bitmap to track the allocation of
memory so that VIR_RESIZE_N can be used.
It was too similar to the non-scaled alternative.
before:
error: Numeric value 'abc' for <size> option is malformed or out of range
after:
error: Scaled numeric value 'abc' for <size> option is malformed or out of range
This patch adds new xml element, and so we can have the option of
also having perf events enabled immediately at startup.
Signed-off-by: Qiaowei Ren <qiaowei.ren@intel.com>
Message-id: 1459171833-26416-6-git-send-email-qiaowei.ren@intel.com
This patch adds support for "vpindex", "runtime", "synic",
"stimer", and "vendor_id" features available in qemu 2.5+.
- When Hyper-V "vpindex" is on, guest can use MSR HV_X64_MSR_VP_INDEX
to get virtual processor ID.
- Hyper-V "runtime" enlightement feature allows to use MSR
HV_X64_MSR_VP_RUNTIME to get the time the virtual processor consumes
running guest code, as well as the time the hypervisor spends running
code on behalf of that guest.
- Hyper-V "synic" stands for Synthetic Interrupt Controller, which is
lapic extension controlled via MSRs.
- Hyper-V "stimer" switches on Hyper-V SynIC timers MSR's support.
Guest can setup and use fired by host events (SynIC interrupt and
appropriate timer expiration message) as guest clock events
- Hyper-V "reset" allows guest to reset VM.
- Hyper-V "vendor_id" exposes hypervisor vendor id to guest.
Signed-off-by: Nikolay Shirokovskiy <nshirokovskiy@virtuozzo.com>
Signed-off-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
This test was commited 4 years ago, but was never enabled in
storagepoolxml2xmltest.c. This patch reactivates it, conditionnaly on RBD
storage support being enabled
This test failed for two reasons:
* The uuid was missing from the input file
* The output file had the <name> in a different place from the actual output
If the abs_builddir path already is in PATH and it's in the first
position, due to a bug in our code PATH would be cleared out.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Coverity pointed out that getenv("PATH") may return NULL. Well,
we check for that in virFindFileInPath() too. If this happens, we
will pass NULL into strstr(). Ouch.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The variable is dereferenced prior its check for NULL. The check
itself does not make much sense anyway - it's our test, we know
we are not passing NULL.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The test can return positive value even though it should have failed. It just
returns the value parser returned, which should be flipped back to -1 if
something went wrong or the result was unexpected, but it isn't.
After 9c17d665fd the tap device for ethernet network type is
automatically precreated before spawning qemu. Problem is, the
qemuxml2argvtest wasn't updated and thus is failing. Because of
all the APIs that new code is calling, I had to mock a lot. Also,
since the tap FDs are labeled separately from the rest of the
devices/files I had to enable NOP security driver for the test
too.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
When constructing SCSI hostdev command line for qemu, the
/sys/bus/scsi/devices/... dir is scanned. Unfortunately, even in
the tests. This is needed to determine the name of SCSI device to
passthrough to qemu, because in the domain XML we were given its
address instead. Anyway, we should not be touching live system
data in our test suite as it produced unpredictable results. The
test is regressing from 1e9a083742 on.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Ensure the code behaves properly even for situations that were not
being considered before, such as simply detaching devices from the
host without attaching them to a guest and attaching devices as
managed even though they had already been manually detached from
the host.
Update testutilsqemu to overwrite libDir and channelTargetDir and set
private paths using domain's privateData. This changes is required for
following patch.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
Move all code that checks host and domain. Do not check host if we use
VIR_QEMU_PROCESS_START_PRETEND flag.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
Problem is that in the test any status file matching
tests/nssdata/*.status is loaded as it contains IP addresses that
are parsed. However, there's no order specified in which the
files are loaded. Therefore on different systems the order may be
different. This is then producing an unexpected results.
Instead of defining an order in which the files are loaded, make
the code that checks for missing IP addresses (or redundant ones)
cope with unordered list of addresses. The reasoning behind is
that the code doing the parsing is used in real NSS module where
we don't care for ordering.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
hap is enabled by default in xm and xl config and usually only
specified when it is desirable to disable hap (hap = 0). Change
the xm,xl <-> xml converter to behave similarly. I.e. only
produce 'hap = 0' when <hap state='off'/> and vice versa.
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
This allows setting the address in host and/or network order and makes
the naming consistent. Now you don't need to call [hn]to[nh]l()
functions as that is taken care of by these functions. Also, now
the *NetOrder take the address in network order, the other functions in
host order so the naming and usage is consistent. Some places were
having the address in network order and calling ntohl() just so the
original function can call htonl() again. This makes it nicer to read.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
If a <graphics type='spice'> has no port nor tlsPort set, the generated
QEMU command line will contain -spice port=0.
This is later going to be ignored by spice-server, but it's better not
to add it at all in this situation.
As an empty -spice is not allowed, we still need to append port=0 if we
did not add any other argument.
Even if nss is disabled, the build system tries to build some
targets like libnss_libvirt_impl.la and nsstest. Hide those
under the "if WITH_NSS" block like the rest of NSS plugin bits.
If we expose this information, which is one byte in every PCI config
file, we let all mgmt apps know whether the device itself is an endpoint
or not so it's easier for them to decide whether such device can be
passed through into a VM (endpoint) or not (*-bridge).
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1317531
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
The only purpose of this test is to catch possible linking
problems with libnss_libvirt.so.2.
One of the problems I faced was that the NSS plugin was unloaded
immediately after it got loaded and the name resolution process
continued with next configured option. Without any error. It was
very hard to debug why until I created this simple test and found
out immediately that there were some symbols missing. The reason
why problem was not caught in nsstest is that in the test we want
to use all the fancy stuff and therefore link it with libvirt.la.
So even if there's a symbol missing in the NSS plugin it will be
found in the libvirt.la.
But even after I resolved the issue we still need this test
because files the NSS plugin is built from are still live (mostly
those under utils/ dir). So as they change new symbol might be
required which would render the NSS plugin unusable.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
The implementation is pretty straightforward. Moreover, because
of the nature of things, gethostbyname_r and gethostbyname2_r can
be implemented at the same time too.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
None of the existing domXML configs under tests/* specify a
default cache mode since default generally means "use the
hypervisor default" and is left unset by the various hypervisor
drivers. Add a config to tests/domainschemadata that specifies
cache='default'.
Currently we spawn couple of binaries in our test suite.
Moreover, we provide some spoofed versions of system binaries
hoping that those will be executed instead of the system ones.
For instance, for testing SSH socket we have written our own ssh
binary for producing predictable results. We certainly don't want
to execute the system ssh binary.
However, in order to prefer our binaries over system ones, we
need to set PATH environment variable. But this is done only at
the Makefile level. So if anybody runs a test by hand that
expects our spoofed binary, the test ends up executing real
system binaries. This is not good. In fact, it's terribly wrong.
The fix lies in a small trick - putting our build directory at
the beginning of the PATH environment variable in each test.
Hopefully, since every test has this VIRT_TEST_MAIN* wrapper, we
can fix this at a single place.
Moreover, while this removes setting PATH for our tests written
in bash, it's safe as we are not calling anything ours that would
require PATH change there.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
We include the file in plenty of places. This is mostly due to
historical reasons. The only place that needs something from the
header file is storage_backend_fs which opens _PATH_MOUNTED. But
it gets the file included indirectly via mntent.h. At no other
place in our code we need _PATH_.*. Drop the include and
configure check then.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Patch adds a generic DO_TEST_FULL macro, some PASS/FAIL macros to better
visually distinguish tests that should fail and tests that should pass. Also,
some cosmetic changes like renames and direct call to fprintf is replaced with
our VIR_TEST_DEBUG macro, as using testutils should be our preferred way of
reporting errors in tests.
Since servers know their name, there is no need to supply such
information twice. Also defeats inconsistencies.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
At first I did not want to do this, but after trying to implement some
newer feaures in the admin API I realized we need that to make our lives
easier. On the other hand they are not saved redundantly and the
virNetServer objects are still kept in a hash table.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
When debug-threads is enabled, individual threads are given a separate
name (on Linux)
Fixes:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1140121
Signed-off-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
QEMU (somewhere around 2.0) added a new sub-option to the -name flag
-name debug-threads=on.
Signed-off-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
If use of virtlogd is enabled, then use it for backing the
character device log files too. This avoids the possibility
of a guest denial of service by writing too much data to
the log file.
Honour the <log file='...'/> element in chardevs to output
data to a file. This requires QEMU >= 2.6
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
The 'actualCount' variable, formerly just 'count', is only used
internally by the macro, so it's better to move its declaration
inside the macro as well: this way, it doesn't have to be declared
by every single user.
The new name is less generic to make clashes less likely.
When checking the number of devices added to a device list, use the
nhostdevs variable instead of its value, so that the test can keep
working even if more hostdevs are added.
This attribute is used to extend secondary PCI bar and expose it to the
guest as 64bit memory. It works like this: attribute vram is there to
set size of secondary PCI bar and guest sees it as 32bit memory,
attribute vram64 can extend this secondary PCI bar. If both attributes
are used, guest sees two memory bars, both address the same memory, with
the difference that the 32bit bar can address only the first part of the
whole memory.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1260749
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
We always place primary video device at first place, to make it easier
to create a qemu command or format an xml, but we should also set the
primary boolean for primary video device to 'true'.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
When there isn't a ssh -X type session running and a user has not
been added to the libvirt group, attempts to run 'virsh -c qemu:///system'
commands from an otherwise unprivileged user will fail with rather
generic or opaque error message:
"error: authentication failed: no agent is available to authenticate"
This patch will adjust the error code and message to help reflect the
situation that the problem is the requested mechanism is UNAVAILABLE and
a slightly more descriptive error. The result on a failure then becomes:
"error: authentication unavailable: no polkit agent available to
authenticate action 'org.libvirt.unix.manage'"
A bit more history on this - at one time a failure generated the
following type message when running the 'pkcheck' as a subprocess:
"error: authentication failed: polkit\56retains_authorization_after_challenge=1
Authorization requires authentication but no agent is available."
but, a patch was generated to adjust the error message to help provide
more details about what failed. This was pushed as commit id '96a108c99'.
That patch prepended a "polkit: " to the output. It really didn't solve
the problem, but gave a hint.
After some time it was deemed using DBus API calls directly was a
better way to go (since pkcheck calls them anyway). So, commit id
'1b854c76' (more or less) copied the code from remoteDispatchAuthPolkit
and adjusted it. Then commit id 'c7542573' adjusted the remote.c
code to call the new API (virPolkitCheckAuth). Finally, commit id
'308c0c5a' altered the code to call DBus APIs directly. In doing
so, it reverted the failing error message to the generic message
that would have been received from DBus anyway.
Add Spice graphics gl attribute. qemu 2.6 should have -spice gl=on argument to
enable opengl rendering context (patches on the ML). This is necessary to
actually enable virgl rendering.
Add a qemuxml2argv test for virtio-gpu + spice with virgl.
Signed-off-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Per-domain directories were introduced in order to be able to
completely separate security labels for each domain (commit
f1f68ca334). However when the domain
name is long (let's say a ridiculous 110 characters), we cannot
connect to the monitor socket because on length of UNIX socket address
is limited. In order to get around this, let's shorten it in similar
fashion and in order to avoid conflicts, throw in an ID there as well.
Also save that into the status XML and load the old status XMLs
properly (to clean up after older domains). That way we can change it
in the future.
The shortening can be seen in qemuxml2argv tests, for example in the
hugepages-pages2 case.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Commit f1a89a8 allowed parsing configs from /etc/libvirt
without validating the emulator capabilities.
Check for the presence of a machine type in the qemu driver's
post parse function instead of crashing.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1267256
There's been a report on the upstream list [1] describing we
access /sys/devices/system/cpu/present directly on the host from
within our test suite. This may end up in unpredictable results
as no all linux systems are required to have that file. Mock
access to the file.
libvirt.git/tests $ ../run strace vircgrouptest
...
access("/sys/devices/system/cpu/present", F_OK) = 0
...
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Yet again, selinux has been adding const-correctness; this change
is ABI-compatible, but breaks API, which affects us when we try to
override things in our testsuite:
../../tests/securityselinuxhelper.c:307:24: error: conflicting types for 'selabel_open'
struct selabel_handle *selabel_open(unsigned int backend,
^~~~~~~~~~~~
In file included from ../../tests/securityselinuxhelper.c:32:0:
/usr/include/selinux/label.h:73:24: note: previous declaration of 'selabel_open' was here
The problem is a new 'const' prior to the second parameter.
Fix it the same way we did in commit 292d3f2d: check for the new
const at configure time.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The target= setting in xl disk configuration can be used to encode
meta info that is meaningful to a backend. Leverage this fact to
support qdisk network disk types such as rbd. E.g. <disk> config
such as
<disk type='network' device='disk'>
<driver name='qemu' type='raw'/>
<source protocol='rbd' name='pool/image'>
<host name='mon1.example.org' port='6321'/>
<host name='mon2.example.org' port='6322'/>
<host name='mon3.example.org' port='6322'/>
</source>
<target dev='hdb' bus='ide'/>
<address type='drive' controller='0' bus='0' target='0' unit='1'/>
</disk>
can be converted to the following xl config (and vice versa)
disk = [ "format=raw,vdev=hdb,access=rw,backendtype=qdisk,
target=rbd:pool/image:auth_supported=none:mon_host=mon1.example.org\\:6321\\;mon2.example.org\\:6322\\;mon3.example.org\\:6322"
]
Note that in xl disk config, a literal backslash in target= must
be escaped with a backslash. Conversion of <auth> config is not
handled in this patch, but can be done in a follow-up patch.
Also add a test for the conversions.
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
The most formal form of xl disk configuration uses key=value
syntax to define each configuration item, e.g.
format=raw, vdev=xvda, access=rw, backendtype=phy, target=disksrc
Change the xl disk formatter to produce this syntax, which allows
target= to contain meta info needed to setup a network-based
disksrc (e.g. rbd, nbd, iscsi). For details on xl disk config
format, see $xen-src/docs/misc/xl-disk-configuration.txt
Update the disk config in the tests to use the formal syntax.
But add tests to ensure disks specified with the positional
parameter syntax are correctly converted to <disk> XML.
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
This does nothing more than adding the new device and capability.
The device is present since QEMU 2.6.0.
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
PostParse handles it for us now.
This causes some test suite churn; qemu's custom PostParse could is
now invoked before the generic AddImplicitControllers, so PCI
controllers end up sequentially in the XML before the generically
added IDE controllers. So it's just some XML reordering
Seems like the natural fit, since we are already adding other XML bits
in the PostParse routine.
Previously AddImplicitControllers was only called at the end of XML
parsing, meaning code that builds a DomainDef by hand had to manually
call it. Now those PostParse callers get it for free.
There's some test churn here; xen xm and sexpr test suite bits weren't
calling this before, but now they are, so you'll see new IDE controllers.
I don't think this will cause problems in practice, since the code already
needs to handle these implicit controllers like in the case when a user
defines their own XML.
Since commit 51045df01b, the QEMU_CAPS_DEVICE capability is enabled
automatically and shouldn't be passed as an argument to DO_TEST();
however, commit 998a936c4c accidentally introduced few such uses.
This was only used for test 'xml blanking', which has now all
been removed, and isn't an ideal paradigm anyways since it
inhibits easy XML regeneration.
The memory XML blanking is only there to avoid the unit= churn that
was added by default a long time ago.
Drop the blanking, switch over to using the standard comparison
helpers, and regenerate the output with VIR_TEST_REGENERATE_OUTPUT.
If a qemuargv has iscsi or ceph secrets on the command line, we will
convert that to XML like:
<auth username='myname'>
<secret type='iscsi'/>
</auth>
This is not valid XML, as either a UUID or usage must be specified in
the secret block. It's not clear though how the argv2xml code can do
anything correct here, since XML like this requires a libvirt secret
object to have already been defined.
The current test suite handles this by blanking out any <secret> block
in the XML. This avoids domainschematest failures.
Instead of blanking, let's hardcode a usage= name. This lets us test
the other bits of generated <secret> XML, and is a step towards wiring
up VIR_TEST_REGENERATE_OUTPUT
Since the daemon can manage and add (at fresh start) multiple servers,
we also should be able to add them from a JSON state file in case of a
daemon restart, so post exec restart support for multiple servers is also
provided. Patch also updates virnetdaemontest accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Erik Skultety <eskultet@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
The method will now return 0 on success and -1 on error, rather than number of
items which it iterated over before it returned back to the caller. Since the
only place where we actually check the number of elements iterated is in
virhashtest, return value of 0 and -1 can be a pretty accurate hint that it
iterated over all the items. However, if we really want to know the number of
items iterated over (like virhashtest does), a counter has to be provided
through opaque data to each iterator call. This patch adjusts return value of
virHashForEach, refactors the body, so it returns as soon as one of the
iterators fail and adjusts virhashtest to reflect these changes.
Signed-off-by: Erik Skultety <eskultet@redhat.com>
Our existing virHashForEach method iterates through all items disregarding the
fact, that some of the iterators might have actually failed. Errors are usually
dispatched through an error element in opaque data which then causes the
original caller of virHashForEach to return -1. In that case, virHashForEach
could return as soon as one of the iterators fail. This patch changes the
iterator return type and adjusts all of its instances accordingly, so the
actual refactor of virHashForEach method can be dealt with later.
Signed-off-by: Erik Skultety <eskultet@redhat.com>
Test all kinds of scenarios, including guests asking for GIC but
failing to specify a version, guests specifying an invalid version
and guests trying to use GIC with non-virt or even non-ARM machines.
Unify the naming to prepare for new test cases that will be added
later on.
Convert a couple of output XML files for the qemuxml2xml test to
symlinks while at it, since they were identical to the corresponding
input XML files anyways.
Moreover, since we're only interested in testing GIC support here,
simplify XML files by getting rid of the unrelevant bits.
After the rework of mocking of our tests there's the
virportallocator test failing to link on mingw. Well, it's the
mocking library actually:
../gnulib/lib/.libs/libgnu.a(bind.o): In function `rpl_bind':
/home/jenkins/libvirt-mingw/build32/gnulib/lib/../../../gnulib/lib/bind.c:33: multiple definition of `rpl_bind'
.libs/virportallocatormock_la-virportallocatormock.o:/home/jenkins/libvirt-mingw/build32/tests/../../tests/virportallocatormock.c:79: first defined here
I've no idea why this matters to mingw and does not to others.
Nevertheless, if we make the test linux only the problem goes
away.
Apparently, our test for RTLD_NEXT is not sufficient because
mingw32 defines it. Lets put aside for a while fact that it has
the same value as RTLD_DEFAULT which by description has different
meaning, shall we?
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Mock libraries should not be linked against libvirt, but some of
them did - fix that.
On the other hand, not linking against gnulib can cause build
failures on mingw, so define a new $(MOCKLIBS_LIBS) variable and
use it everywhere.
The virportallocatortest.c file is compiled both as a test case
and as a mock library; in the latter case, it can't use
VIR_FORCE_CLOSE() because mock libraries are not linked against
libvirt.
Replace VIR_FORCE_CLOSE() with plain close() to solve the issue.
Apparently we are not the only ones with dumb free functions
because dbus_message_unref() does not accept NULL either. But if
I were to vote, this one is even more evil. Instead of returning
an error just like we do it immediately dereference any pointer
passed and thus crash you app. Well done DBus!
Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
[Switching to Thread 0x7f878ebda700 (LWP 31264)]
0x00007f87be4016e5 in ?? () from /usr/lib64/libdbus-1.so.3
(gdb) bt
#0 0x00007f87be4016e5 in ?? () from /usr/lib64/libdbus-1.so.3
#1 0x00007f87be3f004e in dbus_message_unref () from /usr/lib64/libdbus-1.so.3
#2 0x00007f87bf6ecf95 in virSystemdGetMachineNameByPID (pid=9849) at util/virsystemd.c:228
#3 0x00007f879761bd4d in qemuConnectCgroup (driver=0x7f87600a32a0, vm=0x7f87600c7550) at qemu/qemu_cgroup.c:909
#4 0x00007f87976386b7 in qemuProcessReconnect (opaque=0x7f87600db840) at qemu/qemu_process.c:3386
#5 0x00007f87bf6edfff in virThreadHelper (data=0x7f87600d5580) at util/virthread.c:206
#6 0x00007f87bb602334 in start_thread (arg=0x7f878ebda700) at pthread_create.c:333
#7 0x00007f87bb3481bd in clone () at ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/clone.S:109
(gdb) frame 2
#2 0x00007f87bf6ecf95 in virSystemdGetMachineNameByPID (pid=9849) at util/virsystemd.c:228
228 dbus_message_unref(reply);
(gdb) p reply
$1 = (DBusMessage *) 0x0
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Extract out the qemuParseCommandLine{String|Pid} into their own
separate module - taking with it all the various static functions.
Causes a ripple effect with a few other modules to include the
new qemu_parse_command.h.
Narrowed down the list of #include's in the split out module to
those that are necessary for build.
This reverts commit 6aa90452aa.
Turns out that not linking against libvirt and gnulib is okay for
regular Linux (and FreeBSD) builds, but makes mingw very unhappy.
.../virnetserverclientmock_la-virnetserverclientmock.o:
In function `virNetSocketGetSELinuxContext':
.../virnetserverclientmock.c:61: undefined reference to `rpl_strdup'
.../libvirportallocatormock_la-virportallocatortest.o:
In function `init_syms':
.../virportallocatortest.c:61: undefined reference to `virFileClose'
Mock libraries are used with LD_PRELOAD from test binaries that
are already linked against those libraries, so they will be able
to resolve the symbols anyway.
We use the PreFormat callback for this. Many test cases need to be extended
to pass in proper qemuCaps flags so AssignAddresses doesn't throw errors.
One test case (pcie-root-port-too-many) is dropped, since it was meant
only for checking an error condition in qemuxml2argv, and one we add in
AssignAddresses it errors here too.
Long term I think AssignAddresses should be handled in qemu's PostParse
callback, but that's not entirely straightforward. Handling it here
means we can get the test suite churn over with.
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)
When we unconditionally enable QEMU_CAPS_DEVICE, these tests need
some massaging, so do it ahead of time to not mix it in with the
big test refresh.
- minimal-s390 is not a real world working config, so drop it
- disk-usb was testing for an old code path that will be removed.
instead use it to test lack of USB disk support, and rename it
to disk-usb-nosupport. Switch xml2xml to use disk-usb-device for
input.
- cputune-numatune was needlessly using q35, switch it to an older
machine type
Most qemuxml2xml tests expect that the input XML is unchanged after
parsing. This is unlike 99% of new qemu configs in the wild, which after
initial parsing end up with stable PCI device addresses. The xml2xml bit
doesn't currently hit that code path though, so most XML testing indeed
does not change.
Future patches will add that PCI address bits, which means most test cases
will have different output. So let's do away with the hardcoded same vs
different test split, and always track a separate output file. Tests can
still have same input and output, it just necessitates 2 separate XML files.
Some of the tests that are not a part of qemuBuildCommandLine were not
executed in the test suite. We can now reuse qemuProcessStartValidate to
integrate these tests.
Most of the qemuargv2xml tests are parsing old style qemu command
lines (with -disk, -serial, etc), and it gets its input from
qemuxml2argv output.
But since we've raise the minimum supported qemu version to 0.12.0,
which supports -device, once that changes propagates through libvirt
the vast majority of qemuxml2argv output is _not_ going to be using
old style qemu options.
In preparation for this, switch qemuargv2xml to use its own copies
of input and output, so it's not tied to qemuxml2argv results.
This is just a straight copy of the current tests.
I've noticed couple of warning in dmesg while debugging
something:
[ 9683.973754] HTB: quantum of class 10001 is big. Consider r2q change.
[ 9683.976460] HTB: quantum of class 10002 is big. Consider r2q change.
I've read the HTB documentation and linux kernel code to find out
what's wrong. Basically we need to pass another argument
"quantum" to our tc cmd line because the default computed by HTB
does not always work in which case the warning message is printed
out.
You can read more details here:
http://luxik.cdi.cz/~devik/qos/htb/manual/userg.htm#sharing
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
So, systemd-machined has this philosophy that machine names are like
hostnames and hence should follow the same rules. But we always allowed
international characters in domain names. Thus we need to modify the
machine name we are passing to systemd.
In order to change some machine names that we will be passing to systemd,
we also need to call TerminateMachine at the end of a lifetime of a
domain. Even for domains that were started with older libvirt. That
can be achieved thanks to virSystemdGetMachineNameByPID(). And because
we can change machine names, we can get rid of the inconsistent and
pointless escaping of domain names when creating machine names.
So this patch modifies the naming in the following way. It creates the
name as <drivername>-<id>-<name> where invalid hostname characters are
stripped out of the name and if the resulting name is longer, it
truncates it to 64 characters. That way we can start domains we
couldn't start before. Well, at least on systemd.
To make it work all together, the machineName (which is needed only with
systemd) is saved in domain's private data. That way the generation is
moved to the driver and we don't need to pass various unnecessary
arguments to cgroup functions.
The only thing this complicates a bit is the scope generation when
validating a cgroup where we must check both old and new naming, so a
slight modification was needed there.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1282846
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
The virDomainSnapshotDefFormat calls into virDomainDefFormat,
so should be providing a non-NULL virCapsPtr instance. On the
qemu driver we change qemuDomainSnapshotWriteMetadata to also
include caps since it calls virDomainSnapshotDefFormat.
Signed-off-by: Joao Martins <joao.m.martins@oracle.com>
The virDomainObjFormat and virDomainSaveStatus methods
both call into virDomainDefFormat, so should be providing
a non-NULL virCapsPtr instance.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
And use the newly added caps->host.netprefix (if it exists) for
interface names that match the autogenerated target names.
Signed-off-by: Joao Martins <joao.m.martins@oracle.com>
Ever since commit ace4aecd, running 'make check' on RHEL 6 produces:
./test-lib.sh: line 21: realpath: command not found
for every shell script test, because 'realpath' was not part of
coreutils back then.
* tests/test-lib.sh (_scriptdir): Compute with only portable shell.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The name is confusing, and there are just two uses: one is a test case,
and the other will be removed as part of an upcoming refactoring of
the hostdev code.
The current code was a little bit odd. At first we've removed all
possible implicit input devices from domain definition to add them later
back if there was any graphics device defined while parsing XML
description. That's not all, while formating domain definition to XML
description we at first ignore any input devices with bus different to
USB and VIRTIO and few lines later we add implicit input devices to XML.
This seems to me as a lot of code for nothing. This patch may look
to be more complicated than original approach, but this is a preferred
way to modify/add driver specific stuff only in those drivers and not
deal with them in common parsing/formating functions.
The update is to add those implicit input devices into config XML to
follow the real HW configuration visible by guest OS.
There was also inconsistence between our behavior and QEMU's in the way,
that in QEMU there is no way how to disable those implicit input devices
for x86 architecture and they are available always, even without graphics
device. This applies also to XEN hypervisor. VZ driver already does its
part by putting correct implicit devices into live XML.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
Those tests are in qemuargv2xmltest and it makes sense to include them
also in qemuxml2xmltest and qemuxml2argvtest.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
This will enable regenerate functionality for those tests to make
developer lives easier while updating tests.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
Report
error: invalid argument: requested vcpu '100' is not present in the domain
instead of
error: invalid argument: requested vcpu is higher than allocated vcpus
A future patch will refactor the storage of the pinning information in a
way where the ordering will be lost. Order them numerically to avoid
changing the tests later.
Make bhyveload respect boot order as specified by os.boot section of the
domain XML or by "boot order" for specific devices. As bhyve does not
support a real boot order specification right now, it's just about
choosing a single device to boot from.
... and consolidate the cmdline/extra/root parsing to facilitate doing
so.
The logic is the same as xl's parse_cmdline from the current xen.git master
branch (e6f0e099d2c17de47fd86e817b1998db903cab61).
On the formatting side switch to producing cmdline= instead of extra=.
Update a few tests and add serveral more.
- test-cmdline is added to test the exclusive use of cmdline.
- test-fullvirt-direct-kernel-boot.cfg is updated due to the switch
on the formatting side and now tests the exclusive use of cmdline=.
- Tests are added for both paravirt and fullvirt where the .cfg uses
extra= and (paravirt only) root=. These are format (xl->xml) only
since the inverse will generate cmdline= hence is not a round trip
(which was already true if using root=, which used to generate
extra= on the way back).
- Tests are added for both paravirt and fullvirt where the .cfg
declares cmdline= as well as bogus extra= and (paravirt only) root=
entries which should be ignored. Again these are format only tests
since the inverse won't include the bogus lines.
The last two bullets here required splitting the DO_TEST macro into
two halves, as is done in the xmconfigtest.c case.
In order to introduce a use of VIR_WARN for logging I had to add
virerror.h and VIR_LOG_INIT.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ian.campbell@citrix.com>
Add a new storage pool source device attribute 'part_separator=[yes|no]'
in order to allow a 'disk' storage pool using a device mapper multipath
device to not add the "p" partition separator to the generated device
name when libvirt_parthelper is run.
This will allow libvirt to find device mapper multipath devices which were
configured in /etc/multipath.conf to use 'user_friendly_names' or custom
'alias' names for the LUN.
In the commit aea47e48c4 we have fixed a single pointer within
driver structure. Since all callers pass statically allocated
driver on stack other pointers within driver may contain random
values too. Before touching it lets overwrite it with zeroes and
thus fix all dangling pointers.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Autodeflate can be enabled/disabled for memballon device
of model 'virtio'.
xml:
<devices>
<memballoon model='virtio' autodeflate='on'/>
</devices>
qemu:
qemu -device virtio-balloon-pci,...,deflate-on-oom=on
Autodeflate cannot be enabled/disabled for running domain.
Use virDomainDefAddUSBController() to add an EHCI1+UHCI1+UHCI2+UHCI3
controller set to newly defined Q35 domains that don't have any USB
controllers defined.
The real Q35 machine puts the first USB controller set (EHCI+(UHCIx4))
on bus 0 slot 0x1D, and the 2nd USB controller set on bus 0 slot 0x1A,
so let's attempt to make the virtual machine match that for
controllers with auto-assigned addresses when possible.
Three test cases were added to assure that the proper addresses are
assigned - one with a single set of unaddressed USB controllers, one
with 3 (to grab both preferred slots plus one more), and one with the
order of the controller definitions reordered, to assure that the
auto-assignment isn't mixed up by order.
If the q35 specific disable s3/s4 setting isn't supported, fallback to
specifying the PIIX setting, which is the previous behavior. It doesn't
have any effect, but qemu will just warn about it rather than error:
qemu-system-x86_64: Warning: global PIIX4_PM.disable_s3=1 not used
qemu-system-x86_64: Warning: global PIIX4_PM.disable_s4=1 not used
Since it doesn't error, I don't think we should either, since there
may be configs in the wild that already have q35 + disable_s3/4 (via
virt-manager)
The condition was checking for UHCI (and OHCI for ppc64) availability so
that it can specify the proper device instead of legacy usb. However,
for ppc64, we don't need to check both OHCI and UHCI, but only OHCI as
that is the legacy default. The condition is so big that it was just a
matter of time when someone will make a mistake there, so let's use more
lines so that it is visible what the condition checks for.
This fixes usage of -device instead of -usb for ppc64 that supports
pci-usb-ohci and does not support piix3-usb-uhci.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1297020
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
For some reason we are not setting the driver with memset() to zeros.
But since commit 74abc3deac
driver->securityManager is being accessed and qemuagenttest started
crashing due to that.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Future changes will make some of these tests dependent on specific
QEMUCaps flags, so wire up the basic handling. Flags will be added
in future patches.
For the standard active/inactive XML testing, if we leave the file loading
up to the generic XML2XML infrastructure, we get the benefit of
VIR_TEST_REGENERATE_OUTPUT, at the price of a few more disk reads. Seems
worth it.
Since test files are formatted predictably nowadays, we can make
VIR_TEST_REGENERATE_OUTPUT handle most cases for us with a simple
replacement. test-wrap-argv.pl is still canon, but this bit makes
it easier to confirm test output changes during active development.
Both xm and xl config have long supported specifying vif rate
limiting, e.g.
vif = [ 'mac=00:16:3E:74:3d:76,bridge=br0,rate=10MB/s' ]
Add support for mapping rate to and from <bandwidth> in the xenconfig
parser and formatter. rate is mapped to the required 'average' attribute
of the <outbound> element, e.g.
<interface type='bridge'>
...
<bandwidth>
<outbound average='10240'/>
</bandwidth>
</interface>
Also add a unit test to check the conversion logic.
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
The xen sexpr config format has long supported specifying vif rate
limiting, e.g.
(device
(vif
(mac '00:16:3e:1b:b1:47')
(rate '10240KB/s')
...
)
)
Add support for mapping rate to and from <bandwidth> in the xenconfig
sexpr parser and formatter. rate is mapped to the required 'average'
attribute of the <outbound> element, e.g.
<interface type='bridge'>
...
<bandwidth>
<outbound average='10240'/>
</bandwidth>
</interface>
Also add unit tests to check the conversion logic.
This patch benefits both the old xen driver and the libxl driver.
Both drivers gain support for vif bandwidth when converting to/from
domXML and xen-sxpr. In addition, the old xen driver will now be
able to handle vif 'rate' setting when communicating with xend.
The structure actually contains migration statistics rather than just
the status as the name suggests. Renaming it as
qemuMonitorMigrationStats removes the confusion.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
Let's use the new virTestDifferenceFull function that will regenerate
the expected output and fail the test to let developer know that there
something was updated.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
This patch enable regeneration of expected output file for
virTestDifferenceFull. It also introduces new
virTestDifferenceFullNoRegenerate function for special cases, where we
don't want to regenerate output.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
When this flag is specified, some of the expected output files will be
regenerated with the actual output data. Use helper function like for
other flags.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
If user defines a virtio channel with UNIX socket backend and doesn't
care about the path for the socket (e.g. qemu-agent channel), we still
generate it into the persistent XML. Moreover when then user renames
the domain, due to its persistent socket path saved into the per-domain
directory, it will not start. So let's forget about old generated paths
and also stop putting them into the persistent definition.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1278068
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Just recently, qemu forbade specifying format for sourceless
disks (qemu commit 39c4ae941ed992a3bb5). It kind of makes sense.
If there's no file to open, why specify its format. Anyway, I
have a domain like this:
<disk type='file' device='cdrom'>
<driver name='qemu' type='raw'/>
<target dev='hda' bus='ide'/>
<readonly/>
<address type='drive' controller='0' bus='0' target='0' unit='0'/>
</disk>
and obviously I am unable to start it. Therefore, a fix on our
side is needed too.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
By default, QEMU truncates serial file on open. Sometimes, it could be weird -
for example, when we are trying to investigate some event, which occured several
restarts ago. This patch adds an ability to preserve previous content.
Signed-off-by: Dmitry Mishin <dim@virtuozzo.com>
This replaces the virPCIKnownStubs string array that was used
internally for stub driver validation.
Advantages:
* possible values are well-defined
* typos in driver names will be detected at compile time
* avoids having several copies of the same string around
* no error checking required when setting / getting value
The names used mirror those in the
virDomainHostdevSubsysPCIBackendType enumeration.
From: Ian Campbell <ian.campbell@citrix.com>
xend prior to 4.0 understands vcpus as maxvcpus and vcpu_avail
as a bit map of which cpus are online (default is all).
xend from 4.0 onwards understands maxvcpus as maxvcpus and
vcpus as the number which are online (from 0..N-1). The
upstream commit (68a94cf528e6 "xm: Add maxvcpus support")
claims that if maxvcpus is omitted then the old behaviour
(i.e. obeying vcpu_avail) is retained, but AFAICT it was not,
in this case vcpu==maxcpus==online cpus. This is good for us
because handling anything else would be fiddly.
This patch changes parsing of the virDomainDef maxvcpus and vcpus
entries to use the corresponding 'maxvcpus' and 'vcpus' settings
from xm and xl config. It also drops use of the old Xen 3.x
'vcpu_avail' setting.
The change also removes the maxvcpus limit of MAX_VIRT_VCPUS (since
maxvcpus is simply a count, not a bit mask), which is particularly
crucial on ARM where MAX_VIRT_CPUS == 1 (since all guests are
expected to support vcpu placement, and therefore only the boot
vcpu's info lives in the shared info page).
Existing tests adjusted accordingly, and new tests added for the
'maxvcpus' setting.
Remove use of xendConfigVersion in the s-expresion config formatter/parser
in src/xenconfig/. Adjust callers in the xen and libxl drivers accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
Change all xml2sexpr tests to use the latest XEND_CONFIG_VERSION
(XEND_CONFIG_VERSION_3_1_0 = 4). Fix tests that do not conform to
the latest version.
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
It has been quite some time since xend required specifying cdroms
and fds in '(image (hvm ...))'. Remove the code from the parsing
and formatting functions and fixup the associated tests.
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
Change all sexpr2xml tests to use the latest XEND_CONFIG_VERSION
(XEND_CONFIG_VERSION_3_1_0 = 4). Fix tests that do not conform to
the latest version.
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
Remove use of xendConfigVersion in the xm and xl config formatter/parsers
in src/xenconfig/. Adjust callers in the xen and libxl drivers accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
Change all tests to use the latest XEND_CONFIG_VERSION
(XEND_CONFIG_VERSION_3_1_0 = 4). Fix tests that do not conform to
the latest version.
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
Remove the fullvirt-net-ioemu test since explicitly specifying
'type=ioemu' has not been needed in xm/xend for a long time. It is
not used at all in xl/libxl.
Signed-off-by: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
Always return LLONG_MAX even on 32 bit systems. The limitation
originates from our use of "unsigned long" in several APIs. The internal
data type is unsigned long long. Make the test suite deterministic by
removing the architecture difference.
Flaw was introduced in 645881139b where
I've added a test that uses too large numbers.
This updates the test program to make it consistent with recent changes
to the mock libraries, and also opens up the possibility of mocking more
than just /sys in the future.
Instead of fakesysfsdir, which is very generic, use fakesysfspcidir and
fakesysfscgroupdir. This makes it explicit what part of the fake sysfs
filesystem they're referring to, and also leaves open the possibility of
handling files in two unrelated parts of the fake sysfs filesystem.
No functional changes.
We might need to mock files living outside SYSFS_PREFIX later on,
so it's better to treat the temporary directory we are passed via
the environment as the root of the fake filesystem and create
SYSFS_PREFIX inside it.
The environment variable name will be changed to reflect the new use
we're making of it in a later commit.
We might need to mock files living outside PCI_SYSFS_PREFIX later on,
so it's better to treat the temporary directory we are passed via
the environment as the root of the fake filesystem and create
PCI_SYSFS_PREFIX inside it.
The environment variable name will be changed to reflect the new use
we're making of it in a later commit.
This change ensures to call driver specific post-parse code to modify
domain definition after parsing hypervisor config the same way we do
after parsing XML.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
This change ensures to call driver specific post-parse code to modify
domain definition after parsing hypervisor config the same way we do
after parsing XML.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
This change ensures to call driver specific post-parse code to modify
domain definition after parsing hypervisor config the same way we do
after parsing XML.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
Since libvirt for dubious historical reasons stores memory size as
kibibytes, it's possible that the alignments done in the qemu code
overflow the the maximum representable size in bytes. The XML parser
code handles them in bytes in some stages. Prevent this by doing
overflow checks when alinging the size and add a test case.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1260576
To be used by the family of virtio input devices:
<input type='mouse' bus='virtio'/>
<input type='tablet' bus='virtio'/>
<input type='keyboard' bus='virtio'/>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1231114
Add capabilities for virtio-keyboard, virtio-mouse
and virtio-tablet devices:
name "virtio-keyboard-device", bus virtio-bus
name "virtio-keyboard-pci", bus PCI
name "virtio-mouse-device", bus virtio-bus
name "virtio-mouse-pci", bus PCI
name "virtio-tablet-device", bus virtio-bus
name "virtio-tablet-pci", bus PCI
Map both -device and -pci versions of the device to one capability.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1231114
If for some reason there is an existing log file, that is larger then
max length of log file, we need to rollover that file immediately.
Trying to figure out how much data we could write will resolve in
overflow of unsigned variable 'towrite' and this leads to segfault.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Hrdina <phrdina@redhat.com>
Check if virtio-gpu provides virgl option, and add qemu command line
formatter.
It is enabled with the existing accel3d attribute:
<model type='virtio' heads='1'>
<acceleration accel3d='yes'/>
</model>
Signed-off-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
qemu 2.5 provides virtio video device. It can be used with -device
virtio-vga for primary devices, or -device virtio-gpu for non-vga
devices. However, only the primary device (VGA) is supported with this
patch.
Reference:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1195176
Signed-off-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Machine name escaping follows the same rules as serice name escape,
except that '.' and '-' must not be escaped in machine names, due
to a bug in systemd-machined.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1282846
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
The rule for virrotatingfiletest was defined in DBUS-only block even
though the test does not use DBus at all. Also DBUS_CFLAGS and
DBUS_LIBS are removed from the rules. The original error was:
/usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu/5.2.0/../../../../lib64/Scrt1.o: In
function `_start':
(.text+0x20): undefined reference to `main'
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Otherwise we fail on 32bit with:
CC logging/virtlogd-log_daemon_dispatch.o
logging/log_daemon_dispatch.c: In function 'virLogManagerProtocolDispatchDomainReadLogFile':
logging/log_daemon_dispatch.c:120:9: error: format '%zu' expects argument of type 'size_t', but argument 7 has type 'uint64_t' [-Werror=format]
Add virRotatingFileReader and virRotatingFileWriter objects
which allow reading & writing from/to files with automation
rotation to N backup files when a size limit is reached. This
is useful for guest logging when a guaranteed finite size
limit is required. Use of external tools like logrotate is
inadequate since it leaves the possibility for guest to DOS
the host in between invokations of logrotate.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
According to the documentation, CreateMachine accepts only 7bit ASCII
characters in the machinename parameter, so let's make sure we can start
machines with unicode names with systemd. We already have a function
for that, we just forgot to use it.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1062943
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1282846
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
'model' attribute was added to a panic device but only one panic
device is allowed. This patch changes panic device presence
from 'optional' to 'zeroOrMore'.
Panic device type used depends on 'model' attribute.
If no model is specified then device type depends on hypervisor
and guest arch. 'pseries' model is used for pSeries guest and
'isa' model is used in other cases.
XML:
<devices>
<panic model='hyperv'/>
</devices>
QEMU command line:
qemu -cpu <cpu_model>,hv_crash