So that it is possible to query vcpu related information of
a persistent but not running domain, like it is for the QEMU
driver.
In fact, before this patch, we have:
# virsh list --all
Id Name State
----------------------------------------------------
5 debian_32 running
- fedora20_64 shut off
# virsh vcpuinfo fedora20_64
error: this function is not supported by the connection driver: virDomainGetVcpuPinInfo
After (same situation as above, i.e., fedora20_64 not running):
# virsh vcpuinfo fedora20_64
VCPU: 0
CPU: N/A
State: N/A
CPU time N/A
CPU Affinity: yyyyyyyy
VCPU: 1
CPU: N/A
State: N/A
CPU time N/A
CPU Affinity: yyyyyyyy
Signed-off-by: Dario Faggioli <dario.faggioli@citrix.com>
Cc: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
Cc: Ian Jackson <Ian.Jackson@eu.citrix.com>
This resolves:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1045002
If a domain has an <interface type='hostdev'> or an <interface
type='network'> where the network itself is a pool of hostdev devices,
then libvirt will internally keep that device on both the interface
list *and* the hostdev list for the domain. One of the places this
comes in handy is when a new device is being added and libvirt wants
to find a unique "alias" name for it - it just scans through the
hostdev array and makes sure it picks a name that doesn't match the
alias of any device in that array.
However, when libvirtd was restarted, if there was an <interface
type='network'> with the network being a hostdev pool, the device
would not be added to the reconstructed internal hostdev array, so its
alias would not be found during a scan of the hostdev array, thus
attempts to add a new hostdev (or <interface type='hostdev'> or
<interface type='network'>) would result in a message like this:
internal error: unable to execute QEMU command 'device_add':
Duplicate ID 'hostdev0' for device
This patch simply fixes the existing code in the domain XML parser
that fixes up the hostdev array in the case of <interface
type='hostdev'> to do the same thing in the case of <interface
type='network'> with a hostdev network.
This bug has existed since the very first addition of hostdev networks
to libvirt (0.10.0).
This eliminates the misleading error message that was being logged
when a vfio hostdev hotplug failed:
error: unable to set user and group to '107:107' on '/dev/vfio/22':
No such file or directory
as documented in:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1035490
Commit ee414b5d (pushed as a fix for Bug 1016511 and part of Bug
1025108) replaced the single call to
virSecurityManagerSetHostdevLabel() in qemuDomainAttachHostDevice()
with individual calls to that same function in each
device-type-specific attach function (for PCI, USB, and SCSI). It also
added a corresponding call to virSecurityManagerRestoreHostdevLabel()
in the error handling of the device-type-specific functions, but
forgot to remove the common call to that from
qemuDomainAttachHostDevice() - this resulted in a duplicate call to
virSecurityManagerRestoreHostdevLabel(), with the second occurrence
being after (e.g.) a PCI device has already been re-attached to the
host driver, thus destroying some of the device nodes / links that we
then attempted to re-label (e.f. /dev/vfio/22) and generating an error
log that obscured the original error.
This resolves:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1035490
virProcessSetMaxMemLock() (which is a wrapper over prlimit(3)) expects
the memory size in bytes, but libvirt's domain definition (which was
being used by qemuDomainAttachHostPciDevice()) stores all memory
tuning parameters in KiB. This was being accounted for when setting
MaxMemLock at domain startup time (so cold-plugged devices would
work), but not for hotplug.
This patch simplifies the few lines that call
virProcessSetMemMaxLock(), and multiply the amount * 1024 so that
we're locking the correct amount of memory.
What remains a mystery to me is why hot-plug of a managed='no' device
would succeed (at least on my system) while managed='yes' would
fail. I guess in one case the memory was coincidentally already
resident and in the other it wasn't.
there is a segfault in libxl logging in libxl_ctx_free when domain
create fail. because the log output handler vmessage is freed by
xtl_logger_destroy before libxl_ctx_free in virDomainObjListRemove.
move xtl_logger_destroy after libxl_ctx_free could fix this bug.
Signed-off-by: Bamvor Jian Zhang <bjzhang@suse.com>
by, in libxlDomainGetNumaParameters(), calling libxl_bitmap_init() as soon as
possible, which avoids getting to 'cleanup:', where libxl_bitmap_dispose()
happens, without having initialized the nodemap, and hence crashing after some
invalid free()-s:
# ./daemon/libvirtd -v
*** Error in `/home/xen/libvirt.git/daemon/.libs/lt-libvirtd': munmap_chunk(): invalid pointer: 0x00007fdd42592666 ***
======= Backtrace: =========
/lib64/libc.so.6(+0x7bbe7)[0x7fdd3f767be7]
/lib64/libxenlight.so.4.3(libxl_bitmap_dispose+0xd)[0x7fdd2c88c045]
/home/xen/libvirt.git/daemon/.libs/../../src/.libs/libvirt_driver_libxl.so(+0x12d26)[0x7fdd2caccd26]
/home/xen/libvirt.git/src/.libs/libvirt.so.0(virDomainGetNumaParameters+0x15c)[0x7fdd4247898c]
/home/xen/libvirt.git/daemon/.libs/lt-libvirtd(+0x1d9a2)[0x7fdd42ecc9a2]
/home/xen/libvirt.git/src/.libs/libvirt.so.0(virNetServerProgramDispatch+0x3da)[0x7fdd424e9eaa]
/home/xen/libvirt.git/src/.libs/libvirt.so.0(+0x1a6f38)[0x7fdd424e3f38]
/home/xen/libvirt.git/src/.libs/libvirt.so.0(+0xa81e5)[0x7fdd423e51e5]
/home/xen/libvirt.git/src/.libs/libvirt.so.0(+0xa783e)[0x7fdd423e483e]
/lib64/libpthread.so.0(+0x7c53)[0x7fdd3febbc53]
/lib64/libc.so.6(clone+0x6d)[0x7fdd3f7e1dbd]
Signed-off-by: Dario Faggili <dario.faggioli@citrix.com>
Cc: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
Cc: Ian Jackson <Ian.Jackson@eu.citrix.com>
The function doesn't check whether the request is made for active or
inactive domain. Thus when the domain is not running it still tries
accessing non-existing cgroups (priv->cgroup, which is NULL).
I re-made the function in order for it to work the same way it's qemu
counterpart does.
Reproducer:
1) Define an LXC domain
2) Do 'virsh memtune <domain> --hard-limit 133T'
Backtrace:
Thread 6 (Thread 0x7fffec8c0700 (LWP 26826)):
#0 0x00007ffff70edcc4 in virCgroupPathOfController (group=0x0, controller=3,
key=0x7ffff75734bd "memory.limit_in_bytes", path=0x7fffec8bf718) at util/vircgroup.c:1764
#1 0x00007ffff70e9206 in virCgroupSetValueStr (group=0x0, controller=3,
key=0x7ffff75734bd "memory.limit_in_bytes", value=0x7fffe409f360 "1073741824")
at util/vircgroup.c:669
#2 0x00007ffff70e98b4 in virCgroupSetValueU64 (group=0x0, controller=3,
key=0x7ffff75734bd "memory.limit_in_bytes", value=1073741824) at util/vircgroup.c:740
#3 0x00007ffff70ee518 in virCgroupSetMemory (group=0x0, kb=1048576) at util/vircgroup.c:1904
#4 0x00007ffff70ee675 in virCgroupSetMemoryHardLimit (group=0x0, kb=1048576)
at util/vircgroup.c:1944
#5 0x00005555557d54c8 in lxcDomainSetMemoryParameters (dom=0x7fffe40cc420,
params=0x7fffe409f100, nparams=1, flags=0) at lxc/lxc_driver.c:774
#6 0x00007ffff72c20f9 in virDomainSetMemoryParameters (domain=0x7fffe40cc420,
params=0x7fffe409f100, nparams=1, flags=0) at libvirt.c:4051
#7 0x000055555561365f in remoteDispatchDomainSetMemoryParameters (server=0x555555eb7e00,
client=0x555555ec4b10, msg=0x555555eb94e0, rerr=0x7fffec8bfb70, args=0x7fffe40b8510)
at remote_dispatch.h:7621
#8 0x00005555556133fd in remoteDispatchDomainSetMemoryParametersHelper (server=0x555555eb7e00,
client=0x555555ec4b10, msg=0x555555eb94e0, rerr=0x7fffec8bfb70, args=0x7fffe40b8510,
ret=0x7fffe40b84f0) at remote_dispatch.h:7591
#9 0x00007ffff73b293f in virNetServerProgramDispatchCall (prog=0x555555ec3ae0,
server=0x555555eb7e00, client=0x555555ec4b10, msg=0x555555eb94e0)
at rpc/virnetserverprogram.c:435
#10 0x00007ffff73b207f in virNetServerProgramDispatch (prog=0x555555ec3ae0,
server=0x555555eb7e00, client=0x555555ec4b10, msg=0x555555eb94e0)
at rpc/virnetserverprogram.c:305
#11 0x00007ffff73a4d2c in virNetServerProcessMsg (srv=0x555555eb7e00, client=0x555555ec4b10,
prog=0x555555ec3ae0, msg=0x555555eb94e0) at rpc/virnetserver.c:165
#12 0x00007ffff73a4e8d in virNetServerHandleJob (jobOpaque=0x555555ec3e30, opaque=0x555555eb7e00)
at rpc/virnetserver.c:186
#13 0x00007ffff7187f3f in virThreadPoolWorker (opaque=0x555555eb7ac0) at util/virthreadpool.c:144
#14 0x00007ffff718733a in virThreadHelper (data=0x555555eb7890) at util/virthreadpthread.c:161
#15 0x00007ffff468ed89 in start_thread (arg=0x7fffec8c0700) at pthread_create.c:308
#16 0x00007ffff3da26bd in clone () at ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/clone.S:113
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
The function doesn't check whether the request is made for active or
inactive domain. Thus when the domain is not running it still tries
accessing non-existing cgroups (priv->cgroup, which is NULL).
I re-made the function in order for it to work the same way it's qemu
counterpart does.
Reproducer:
1) Define an LXC domain
2) Do 'virsh memtune <domain>'
Backtrace:
Thread 6 (Thread 0x7fffec8c0700 (LWP 13387)):
#0 0x00007ffff70edcc4 in virCgroupPathOfController (group=0x0, controller=3,
key=0x7ffff75734bd "memory.limit_in_bytes", path=0x7fffec8bf750) at util/vircgroup.c:1764
#1 0x00007ffff70e958c in virCgroupGetValueStr (group=0x0, controller=3,
key=0x7ffff75734bd "memory.limit_in_bytes", value=0x7fffec8bf7c0) at util/vircgroup.c:705
#2 0x00007ffff70e9d29 in virCgroupGetValueU64 (group=0x0, controller=3,
key=0x7ffff75734bd "memory.limit_in_bytes", value=0x7fffec8bf810) at util/vircgroup.c:804
#3 0x00007ffff70ee706 in virCgroupGetMemoryHardLimit (group=0x0, kb=0x7fffec8bf8a8)
at util/vircgroup.c:1962
#4 0x00005555557d590f in lxcDomainGetMemoryParameters (dom=0x7fffd40024a0,
params=0x7fffd40027a0, nparams=0x7fffec8bfa24, flags=0) at lxc/lxc_driver.c:826
#5 0x00007ffff72c28d3 in virDomainGetMemoryParameters (domain=0x7fffd40024a0,
params=0x7fffd40027a0, nparams=0x7fffec8bfa24, flags=0) at libvirt.c:4137
#6 0x000055555563714d in remoteDispatchDomainGetMemoryParameters (server=0x555555eb7e00,
client=0x555555ebaef0, msg=0x555555ebb3e0, rerr=0x7fffec8bfb70, args=0x7fffd40024e0,
ret=0x7fffd4002420) at remote.c:1895
#7 0x00005555556052c4 in remoteDispatchDomainGetMemoryParametersHelper (server=0x555555eb7e00,
client=0x555555ebaef0, msg=0x555555ebb3e0, rerr=0x7fffec8bfb70, args=0x7fffd40024e0,
ret=0x7fffd4002420) at remote_dispatch.h:4050
#8 0x00007ffff73b293f in virNetServerProgramDispatchCall (prog=0x555555ec3ae0,
server=0x555555eb7e00, client=0x555555ebaef0, msg=0x555555ebb3e0)
at rpc/virnetserverprogram.c:435
#9 0x00007ffff73b207f in virNetServerProgramDispatch (prog=0x555555ec3ae0,
server=0x555555eb7e00, client=0x555555ebaef0, msg=0x555555ebb3e0)
at rpc/virnetserverprogram.c:305
#10 0x00007ffff73a4d2c in virNetServerProcessMsg (srv=0x555555eb7e00, client=0x555555ebaef0,
prog=0x555555ec3ae0, msg=0x555555ebb3e0) at rpc/virnetserver.c:165
#11 0x00007ffff73a4e8d in virNetServerHandleJob (jobOpaque=0x555555ebc7e0, opaque=0x555555eb7e00)
at rpc/virnetserver.c:186
#12 0x00007ffff7187f3f in virThreadPoolWorker (opaque=0x555555eb7ac0) at util/virthreadpool.c:144
#13 0x00007ffff718733a in virThreadHelper (data=0x555555eb7890) at util/virthreadpthread.c:161
#14 0x00007ffff468ed89 in start_thread (arg=0x7fffec8c0700) at pthread_create.c:308
#15 0x00007ffff3da26bd in clone () at ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/clone.S:113
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
While looking at event code, I noticed that the documentation was
trying to refer me to functions that don't exist. Also fix some
typos and poor formatting.
* src/libvirt.c (virConnectDomainEventDeregister)
(virConnectDomainEventRegisterAny)
(virConnectDomainEventDeregisterAny)
(virConnectNetworkEventRegisterAny)
(virConnectNetworkEventDeregisterAny): Link to correct function.
* include/libvirt.h.in (VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_CALLBACK)
(VIR_NETWORK_EVENT_CALLBACK): Likewise.
(virDomainEventID, virConnectDomainEventGenericCallback)
(virNetworkEventID, virConnectNetworkEventGenericCallback):
Improve docs.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Commit 6cd60b6 was flat out broken - it tried to print into the
wrong variable. My testing was obviously too cursory (did the
name get a slash added?); valgrind would have caught the error.
Thankfully it didn't hit any release.
Reported by Peter Krempa.
* src/storage/storage_backend_gluster.c
(virStorageBackendGlusterRefreshVol): Fix bogus code.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The VIR_WARNINGS_NO_CAST_ALIGN / VIR_WARNINGS_RESET should
not have any trailing ';' since they are pragmas. The use
of a ';' results in an empty statement which confuses CIL.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Move the code around so that the forward declaration isn't needed. Also
fix code style of the opening brace of the function by moving it to a
separate line.
Recent addition of the gluster pool type omitted fixing the virsh and
virConnectListAllStoragePool filters. A typecast of the converting
function in virsh showed that also the sheepdog pool was omitted in the
command parser.
This patch adds gluster pool filtering support and fixes virsh to
properly convert all supported storage pool types. The added typecast
should avoid doing such mistakes in the future.
Currently the virDBusAddWatch does
virEventAddHandle(fd, flags,
virDBusWatchCallback,
watch, NULL);
dbus_watch_set_data(watch, info, virDBusWatchFree);
Unfortunately this is racy - since the event loop is in a
different thread, the virDBusWatchCallback method may be
run before we get to calling dbus_watch_set_data. We must
reverse the order of these calls
See https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=885445
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Starting from commit 2e82c18c in Xen (will be included in Xen 4.4)
both libxl_get_max_cpus() and libxl_get_max_nodes() start returning
a proper libxl error code, in case of failure. This patch fixes
this in the libxl driver.
Note that, although it is now basically impossible for them to return
0, that would, theoretically, still be wrong. Also, checking that the
returned value is '<= 0' makes the code correct for both Xen 4.4 and
Xen 4.3 (and 4.2), and that is why we go for it (rather than
just '< 0').
Signed-off-by: Dario Faggioli <dario.faggioli@citrix.com>
Cc: Jim Fehlig <jfehlig@suse.com>
Cc: Ian Jackson <Ian.Jackson@eu.citrix.com>
Cc: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
On a system that is enforcing FIPS, most libraries honor the
current mode by default. Qemu, on the other hand, refused to
honor FIPS mode unless you add the '-enable-fips' command
line option; worse, this option is not discoverable via QMP,
and is only present on binaries built for Linux. So, if we
detect FIPS mode, then we unconditionally ask for FIPS; either
qemu is new enough to have the option and then correctly
cripple insecure VNC passwords, or it is so old that we are
correctly avoiding a FIPS violation by preventing qemu from
starting. Meanwhile, if we don't detect FIPS mode, then
omitting the argument is safe whether the qemu has the option
(but it would do nothing because FIPS is disabled) or whether
qemu lacks the option (including in the case where we are not
running on Linux).
The testsuite was a bit interesting: we don't want our test
to depend on whether it is being run in FIPS mode, so I had
to tweak things to set the capability bit outside of our
normal interaction with capability parsing.
This fixes https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1035474
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.h (QEMU_CAPS_ENABLE_FIPS): New bit.
* src/qemu/qemu_capabilities.c (virQEMUCapsInitQMP): Conditionally
set capability according to detection of FIPS mode.
* src/qemu/qemu_command.c (qemuBuildCommandLine): Use it.
* tests/qemucapabilitiestest.c (testQemuCaps): Conditionally set
capability to test expected output.
* tests/qemucapabilitiesdata/caps_1.2.2-1.caps: Update list.
* tests/qemucapabilitiesdata/caps_1.6.0-1.caps: Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Systemd specified that any /dev/pts/NNN device on which it
is expected to spawn a agetty login, should be listed in
the 'container_ttys' env variable. It should just contain
the relative paths, eg 'pts/0' not '/dev/pts/0' and should
be space separated.
http://cgit.freedesktop.org/systemd/systemd/commit/?id=1d97ff7dd71902a5604c2fed8964925d54e09de9
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Currently, 'vol-resize --allocate' allocates new space at the
vol->capacity offset. But the vol->capacity is not necessarily the same
as vol->allocation. For instance:.
[root@localhost ~]# virsh vol-list --pool tmp-pool --details
Name Path Type Capacity Allocation
-------------------------------------------------------------
tmp-vol /root/tmp-pool/tmp-vol file 1.00 GiB 1.00 GiB
[root@localhost ~]# virsh vol-resize tmp-vol --pool tmp-pool 2G
[root@localhost ~]# virsh vol-list --pool tmp-pool --details
Name Path Type Capacity Allocation
-------------------------------------------------------------
tmp-vol /root/tmp-pool/tmp-vol file 2.00 GiB 1.00 GiB
So, if we want to allocate more bytes, so the file is say 3G big, the
real allocated size is 2G actually:
[root@localhost ~]# virsh vol-resize tmp-vol --pool tmp-pool 3G --allocate
[root@localhost ~]# virsh vol-list --pool tmp-pool --details
Name Path Type Capacity Allocation
-------------------------------------------------------------
tmp-vol /root/tmp-pool/tmp-vol file 3.00 GiB 2.00 GiB
This commit uses the correct vol->allocation instead of incorrect
vol->capacity, so the output of the commands above looks like this:
[root@localhost ~]# virsh vol-resize tmp-vol --pool tmp-pool 3G --allocate
[root@localhost ~]# virsh vol-list --pool tmp-pool --details
Name Path Type Capacity Allocation
-------------------------------------------------------------
tmp-vol /root/tmp-pool/tmp-vol file 3.00 GiB 3.00 GiB
Moreover, if the '--alocate' flag was used, we must update the
vol->allocation member in storageVolResize API too, not just
vol->capacity.
Reported-by: Wang Sen <wangsen@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
vmx/vmx.c ignores the transient attribute on the disk xml format. This patch
adds a 1-1 relationship between it and [disk].mode = "independent-nonpersistent".
The other modes are ignored as before. It works in my testing.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1044023
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
The event namespace concept is mostly redundant information.
With the re-written dispatcher, the namespace is only used
for equality comparisons between event IDs. This can be solved
by just comparing virClassPtr instances instead.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Instead of having the object event code have to know about each
type of event and their dispatch functions, associate a dispatch
function with the object instance. The dispatch code can thus be
significantly simplified.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Inject a virNetworkEvent class between virObjectEvent
and virNetworkEventLifecycle to mirror virDomainEvent.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
While the public API & wire protocol included the 'detail'
arg for network lifecycle events, the internal event handling
code did not process it. This meant that if a future libvirtd
server starts sending non-0 'detail' args, the current libvirt
client will not process them.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
While running objecteventtest, it was found that valgrind pointed out the
following memory leak:
==13464== 5 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 7 of 134
==13464== at 0x4A0887C: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:270)
==13464== by 0x341F485E21: strdup (strdup.c:42)
==13464== by 0x4CAE28F: virStrdup (virstring.c:554)
==13464== by 0x4CF3CBE: virObjectEventCallbackListAddID (object_event.c:286)
==13464== by 0x4CF49CA: virObjectEventStateRegisterID (object_event.c:729)
==13464== by 0x4CF73FE: virDomainEventStateRegisterID (domain_event.c:1424)
==13464== by 0x4D7358F: testConnectDomainEventRegisterAny (test_driver.c:6032)
==13464== by 0x4D600C8: virConnectDomainEventRegisterAny (libvirt.c:19128)
==13464== by 0x402409: testDomainStartStopEvent (objecteventtest.c:232)
==13464== by 0x403451: virtTestRun (testutils.c:138)
==13464== by 0x402012: mymain (objecteventtest.c:395)
==13464== by 0x403AF2: virtTestMain (testutils.c:593)
==13464==
The support for <boot rebootTimeout="12345"/> was added before we were
checking for qemu command line options in QMP, so we haven't properly
adapted virQEMUCaps when using it and thus we report unsupported
option with new enough qemu.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1042690
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Recent changes to events (commit 8a29ffcf) resulted in new compile
failures on some targets (such as ARM OMAP5):
conf/domain_event.c: In function 'virDomainEventDispatchDefaultFunc':
conf/domain_event.c:1198:30: error: cast increases required alignment of
target type [-Werror=cast-align]
conf/domain_event.c:1314:34: error: cast increases required alignment of
target type [-Werror=cast-align]
cc1: all warnings being treated as errors
The error is due to alignment; the base class is merely aligned
to the worst of 'int' and 'void*', while the child class must
be aligned to a 'long long'. The solution is to include a
'long long' (and for good measure, a function pointer) in the
base class to ensure correct alignment regardless of what a
child class may add, but to wrap the inclusion in a union so
as to not incur any wasted space. On a typical x86_64 platform,
the base class remains 16 bytes; on i686, the base class remains
12 bytes; and on the impacted ARM platform, the base class grows
from 12 bytes to 16 bytes due to the increase of alignment from
4 to 8 bytes.
Reported by Michele Paolino and others.
* src/util/virobject.h (_virObject): Use a union to ensure that
subclasses never have stricter alignment than the parent.
* src/util/virobject.c (virObjectNew, virObjectUnref)
(virObjectRef): Adjust clients.
* src/libvirt.c (virConnectRef, virDomainRef, virNetworkRef)
(virInterfaceRef, virStoragePoolRef, virStorageVolRef)
(virNodeDeviceRef, virSecretRef, virStreamRef, virNWFilterRef)
(virDomainSnapshotRef): Likewise.
* src/qemu/qemu_monitor.c (qemuMonitorOpenInternal)
(qemuMonitorClose): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Map the new <panic> device in XML to the '-device pvpanic' command
line of qemu. Clients can then couple the <panic> device and the
<on_crash> directive to control behavior when the guest reports
a panic to qemu.
Signed-off-by: Hu Tao <hutao@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
virDomainBlkioDeviceWeightParseXML will be used to parse
the xml element read_bps, write_bps, read_iops, write_iops.
Signed-off-by: Gao feng <gaofeng@cn.fujitsu.com>
Hitting this should be pretty rare, but at least developers will know
that they are providing a weird event ID. Otherwise for namespace that
are added in the normal way, gcc will raise a warning about unhandled
case in the switch.
Define the public API for (de-)registering network events
and the callbacks for receiving lifecycle events. The lifecycle
event includes a 'detail' parameter to match the domain lifecycle
event data, but this is currently unused.
The network events related code goes into its own set of internal
files src/conf/network_event.[ch]
This variable shadows the stat(2) function, which only became visible in
this scope as of commit 9cac8639. Rename the variable so it doesn't
conflict.
Signed-off-by: Michael Chapman <mike@very.puzzling.org>
When doing 'virsh vol-dumpxml' on a gluster pool's volume, the
resulting URI incorrectly omitted a slash between hostname and
path: gluster://192.168.122.206rhsvol1/fedora-19.img
This is fallout from me rebasing earlier versions of my patch
that ended up as commit efee1af; I had originally played with
always requiring the gluster volume to have a leading slash,
but it was easier to use the gluster API if the gluster volume
name was guaranteed to have no slash. While I got the URI of
the pool correct, I forgot to fix the URI of a libvirt volume.
* src/storage/storage_backend_gluster.c
(virStorageBackendGlusterRefreshVol): Use correct starting point
since uri construction requires leading slash.
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1035955
There's a window when starting a qemu process between fork() and exec()
during which we are doing things that may fail but not tunnelling the
error to the daemon. This is basically all within qemuProcessHook().
So whenever we fail in something, e.g. placing a process onto numa node,
users are left with:
error: Child quit during startup handshake: Input/output error
while the original error is thrown into the domain log:
libvirt: error : internal error: NUMA memory tuning in 'preferred'
mode only supports single node
Hence, we should read the log file and search for the error message and
report it to users.
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Each unique event ID will thus be composed by 1 byte for the namespace
and 1 byte for a namespace-specific ID. The namespace for domain event
needs to be 0 for compatibility reasons.
SIGHUP is commonly used to instruct a daemon to reload its config. For
now we should handle it in virtlockd just like SIGUSR1, rather than
having it kill the process.
Signed-off-by: Michael Chapman <mike@very.puzzling.org>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
- Use SIGUSR1, not SIGHUP, on reload. At present, virtlockd only
responds to the former.
- Fix PID file for virtlockd.
- Do not start virtlockd in any runlevels by default. It needs to be
explicitly selected in libvirt's qemu.conf anyway, so there is no
need to have it running on all systems regardless.
- Fix chkconfig priorities to ensure virtlockd is started before
libvirtd is started, and stopped after libvirtd is stopped.
- Add "Should-Start: virtlockd" to the libvirtd initscript's LSB header,
for the same reason.
- Add "Default-Stop" to both libvirtd and virtlockd initscripts. LSB
does not guarantee that this defaults to the inverse of
"Default-Start".
Signed-off-by: Michael Chapman <mike@very.puzzling.org>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
- Pass VIRTLOCKD_ARGS through to virtlockd.
- Use SIGUSR1, not SIGHUP, in ExecReload. At present, virtlockd only
responds to the former.
- Have "systemctl enable virtlockd.service" enable virtlockd.socket,
rather than throw an error.
- Make virtlockd.socket wanted by sockets.target, rather than
multi-user.target. This is consistent with other socket units in
Fedora, and it ensures that the socket is available before libvirtd is
started.
Signed-off-by: Michael Chapman <mike@very.puzzling.org>
When changing memtune limits to unlimited with AFFECT_CONFIG, the
values in virDomainDef are set to PARAM_UNLIMITED, which causes the
whole <memtune> to be formatted. This can be changed in all drivers,
but it also makes sense to use the default (0) as another value for
"unlimited", since zero memory limit makes no sense.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
For dead domains that have no memtune limits, we return 0 instead of
"unlimited", this patch fixes it to return PARAM_UNLIMITED.
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
Since kernel 3.12 (commit 34ff8dc08956098563989d8599840b130be81252 in
linux-stable.git in particular) the value for 'unlimited' in cgroup
memory limits changed from LLONG_MAX to ULLONG_MAX. Due to rather
unfortunate choice of our VIR_DOMAIN_MEMORY_PARAM_UNLIMITED constant
(which we transfer as an unsigned long long in Kibibytes), we ended up
with the situation described below (applies to x86_64):
- 2^64-1 (ULLONG_MAX) -- "unlimited" in kernel = 3.12
- 2^63-1 (LLONG_MAX) -- "unlimited" in kernel < 3.12
- 2^63-1024 -- our PARAM_UNLIMITED scaled to Bytes
- 2^53-1 -- our PARAM_UNLIMITED unscaled (in Kibibytes)
This means that when any number within (2^63-1, 2^64-1] is read from
memory cgroup, we are transferring that number instead of "unlimited".
Unfortunately, changing VIR_DOMAIN_MEMORY_PARAM_UNLIMITED would break
ABI compatibility and thus we have to resort to a different solution.
With this patch every value greater than PARAM_UNLIMITED means
"unlimited". Even though this may seem misleading, we are already in
such unclear situation when running 3.12 kernel with memory limits set
to 2^63.
One example showing most of the problems at once (with kernel 3.12.2):
# virsh memtune asdf --hard-limit 9007199254740991 --swap-hard-limit -1
# echo 12345678901234567890 >\
/sys/fs/cgroup/memory/machine/asdf.libvirt-qemu/memory.soft_limit_in_bytes
# virsh memtune asdf
hard_limit : 18014398509481983
soft_limit : 12056327051986884
swap_hard_limit: 18014398509481983
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
We were unconditionally removing the device from the host list, when it
should only be done on error.
This fixes USB collision detection when hotplugging the same device to
two guests.
If we hit a collision, we free the USB device while it is still part
of our temporary USBDeviceList. When the list is unref'd, the device
is free'd again.
Make the initial device freeing dependent on whether it is present
in the temporary list or not.
Similar to what Jiri did for cgroup setup/teardown in 05e149f94, push
it all into the device handler functions so we can do the necessary prep
work before claiming the device.
This also fixes hotplugging USB devices by product/vendor (virt-manager's
default behavior):
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1016511
Currently, if virFileMakePath() fails, the @ret is left initialized from
virAsprintf() just a few lines above leading to a wrong return value of
zero whereas -1 should be returned.
Signed-off-by: Chen Hanxiao <chenhanxiao@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1035108
When attempting to enable more vCPUs in the guest than is currently
enabled in the guest but less than the maximum count for the VM we
currently reported an unhelpful message:
error: internal error: guest agent reports less cpu than requested
This patch changes it to:
error: invalid argument: requested vcpu count is greater than the count
of enabled vcpus in the domain: 3 > 2
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1035118
When outputting the XML for the RNG device, the code didn't format the
PCI address info. Additionally the schema wasn't expecting the info
although it was being parsed and used internally. Fix those mistakes and
add test for the PCI info section.
When changing the parsing and formatting functions in commit
43f2ccdc73 I forgot to update the qemu
disk alignment function for snapshots that automatically adds snapshot
configs for disks that were not mentioned in the XML. The function
allocated a new disk snapshot definition but did not correctly
initialize the snapshot disk source type variable. This resulted into
the disks considered as block devices and invalid XML was generated.
Reported by John Ferlan.
In 78839da I am trying to join the worker threads. However, I can't
sipmly reuse pool->nWorkers (same applies for pool->nPrioWorkers),
because of the following flow that is currently implemented:
1) the main thread executing virThreadPoolFree sets pool->quit = true,
wakes up all the workers and wait on pool->quit_cond.
2) A worker is woken up and see quit request. It immediately jumps of
the while() loop and decrements pool->nWorkers (or pool->nPrioWorkers in
case of priority worker). The last thread signalizes pool->quit_cond.
3) Main thread is woken up, with both pool->nWorkers and
pool->nPrioWorkers being zero.
So there's a need to copy the original value of worker thread counts
into local variables. However, these need to set *after* the check for
pool being NULL (dereferencing a NULL is no no). And for safety they can
be set right after the pool is locked.
Reported-by: John Ferlan <jferlan@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
When an error occurred in qemuAgentIO, it will be saved in mon->lastError,
but it will not be freed at the end. Present since commit c160ce33;
and compare to commit 9cc8a5af fixing the same problem in qemu_monitor.c.
==22219== 54 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 982 of 1,379
==22219== at 0x4C26B9B: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:263)
==22219== by 0x8520521: strdup (in /lib64/libc-2.11.3.so)
==22219== by 0x52E99CB: virStrdup (virstring.c:554)
==22219== by 0x52B44C4: virCopyError (virerror.c:195)
==22219== by 0x52B5123: virCopyLastError (virerror.c:312)
==22219== by 0x10905877: qemuAgentIO (qemu_agent.c:660)
==22219== by 0x52B6122: virEventPollDispatchHandles (vireventpoll.c:501)
==22219== by 0x52B7AEA: virEventPollRunOnce (vireventpoll.c:647)
==22219== by 0x52B5C1B: virEventRunDefaultImpl (virevent.c:274)
==22219== by 0x54181FD: virNetServerRun (virnetserver.c:1112)
==22219== by 0x11EF4D: main (libvirtd.c:1513)
Signed-off-by: Zhou Yimin <zhouyimin@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
This patch fixes memory leaks reported by valgrind on running
qemuxml2argvtest; introduced in commit 0df53f04.
Most of them are of the form:
==24777== 15 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 39 of 129
==24777== at 0x4A0887C: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:270)
==24777== by 0x341F485E21: strdup (strdup.c:42)
==24777== by 0x4CADE5F: virStrdup (virstring.c:554)
==24777== by 0x4362B6: qemuBuildDriveStr (qemu_command.c:3848)
==24777== by 0x43EF73: qemuBuildCommandLine (qemu_command.c:8500)
==24777== by 0x426670: testCompareXMLToArgvHelper (qemuxml2argvtest.c:350)
==24777== by 0x427C01: virtTestRun (testutils.c:138)
==24777== by 0x41DDB5: mymain (qemuxml2argvtest.c:658)
==24777== by 0x4282A2: virtTestMain (testutils.c:593)
==24777== by 0x341F421A04: (below main) (libc-start.c:225)
==24777==
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Kill the use of atoi() and introduce syntax check to forbid it and it's
friends (atol, atoll, atof, atoq).
Also fix a typo in variable name holding the cylinders count of a disk
pool (apparently unused).
examples/domsuspend/suspend.c will need a larger scale refactor as the
whole example file is broken thus it will be exempted from the syntax
check for now.
Even though currently we are freeing the pool of worker threads at the
daemon very end, nothing holds us back in joining the worker threads.
Moreover, we avoid leaks like this:
==26697== 1,680 bytes in 5 blocks are possibly lost in loss record 913 of 942
==26697== at 0x4C2BDE4: calloc (in /usr/lib64/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
==26697== by 0x4011131: allocate_dtv (in /lib64/ld-2.16.so)
==26697== by 0x401176D: _dl_allocate_tls (in /lib64/ld-2.16.so)
==26697== by 0x8499602: pthread_create@@GLIBC_2.2.5 (in /lib64/libpthread-2.16.so)
==26697== by 0x52F53E9: virThreadCreate (virthreadpthread.c:188)
==26697== by 0x52F5D4F: virThreadPoolNew (virthreadpool.c:221)
==26697== by 0x53F30DB: virNetServerNew (virnetserver.c:377)
==26697== by 0x11C6ED: main (libvirtd.c:1366)
Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
Ever since the subcpusets(vcpu,emulator) were introduced, the parent
cpuset cannot be modified to remove the nodes that are in use by the
subcpusets.
The fix is to break the memory node modification into three steps:
1. assign new nodes into the parent,
2. change the nodes in the child nodes,
3. remove the old nodes on the parent node.
Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1009880
Signed-off-by: Shivaprasad G Bhat <sbhat@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>