Beginning with libvirt 0.8.0, specific events on a host system will trigger custom scripts.
These custom hook scripts are executed when any of the following actions occur:
The libvirt hook scripts are located in the directory
$SYSCONFDIR/libvirt/hooks/
.
/etc/libvirt/hooks/
. Other Linux distributions may do
this differently./usr/local/etc/libvirt/hooks/
.To use hook scripts, you will need to create this hooks
directory manually, place the desired hook scripts inside, then make
them executable.
At present, there are three hook scripts that can be called:
/etc/libvirt/hooks/daemon
/etc/libvirt/hooks/qemu
/etc/libvirt/hooks/lxc
The hook scripts are executed using standard Linux process creation functions. Therefore, they must begin with the declaration of the command interpreter to use.
For example:
#!/bin/bash
or:
#!/usr/bin/python
Other command interpreters are equally valid, as is any executable binary, so you are welcome to use your favourite languages.
The hook scripts are called with specific command line arguments, depending upon the script, and the operation being performed.
The guest hook scripts, qemu and lxc, are also given the full XML description for the domain on their stdin. This includes items such the UUID of the domain and its storage information, and is intended to provide all the libvirt information the script needs.
The command line arguments take this approach:
This translates to the following specifics for each hook script:
/etc/libvirt/hooks/daemon - start - start
/etc/libvirt/hooks/daemon - shutdown - shutdown
/etc/libvirt/hooks/daemon - reload begin SIGHUP
Please note that when the libvirt daemon is restarted, the daemon hook script is called once with the "shutdown" operation, and then once with the "start" operation. There is no specific operation to indicate a "restart" is occurring.
/etc/libvirt/hooks/qemu guest_name start begin -
/etc/libvirt/hooks/qemu guest_name stopped end -
/etc/libvirt/hooks/lxc guest_name start begin -
/etc/libvirt/hooks/lxc guest_name stopped end -
Migration of a QEMU guest involves running hook scripts on both the source and destination hosts:
DO NOT DO THIS!
A hook script must not call back into libvirt, as the libvirt daemon is already waiting for the script to exit.
A deadlock is likely to occur.
If a hook script returns with an exit code of 0, the libvirt daemon regards this as successful and performs no logging of it.
However, if a hook script returns with a non zero exit code, the libvirt daemon regards this as a failure, logs it with return code 256, and additionally logs anything on stderr the hook script returns.
For example, a hook script might use this code to indicate failure, and send a text string to stderr:
echo "Could not find required XYZZY" >&2 exit 1
The resulting entry in the libvirt log will appear as:
20:02:40.297: error : virHookCall:416 : Hook script execution failed: Hook script /etc/libvirt/hooks/qemu qemu failed with error code 256:Could not find required XYZZY