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https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1073305 When creating a volume in a pool, the creation allows the 'capacity' value to be larger than the available space in the pool. As long as the 'allocation' value will fit in the space, the volume will be created. However, resizing the volume checks were made with the new absolute capacity value against existing capacity + the available space without regard for whether the new absolute capacity was actually allocating space or not. For example, a pool with 75G of available space creates a volume of 10G using a capacity of 100G and allocation of 10G will succeed; however, if the allocation used a capacity of 10G instead and then tried to resize the allocation to 100G the code would fail to allow the backend to try the resize. Furthermore, when updating the pool "available" and "allocation" values, the resize code would just "blindly" adjust them regardless of whether space was "allocated" or just "capacity" was being adjusted. This left a scenario whereby a resize to 100G would fail; however, a resize to 50G followed by one to 100G would both succeed. Again, neither was adjusting the allocation value, just the "capacity" value. This patch adds more logic to the resize code to understand whether the new capacity value is actually "allocating" space as well and whether it shrinking or expanding. Since unsigned arithmatic is involved, the possibility that we adjust the pool size values incorrectly is probable. This patch also ensures that updates to the pool values only occur if we actually performed the allocation. NB: The storageVolDelete, storageVolCreateXML, and storageVolCreateXMLFrom each only updates the pool allocation/availability values by the target volume allocation value.
libvirt library code README =========================== The directory provides the bulk of the libvirt codebase. Everything except for the libvirtd daemon and client tools. The build uses a large number of libtool convenience libraries - one for each child directory, and then links them together for the final libvirt.so, although some bits get linked directly to libvirtd daemon instead. The files directly in this directory are supporting the public API entry points & data structures. There are two core shared modules to be aware of: * util/ - a collection of shared APIs that can be used by any code. This directory is always in the include path for all things built * conf/ - APIs for parsing / manipulating all the official XML files used by the public API. This directory is only in the include path for driver implementation modules * vmx/ - VMware VMX config handling (used by esx/ and vmware/) Then there are the hypervisor implementations: * bhyve - bhyve - The BSD Hypervisor * esx/ - VMware ESX and GSX support using vSphere API over SOAP * hyperv/ - Microsoft Hyper-V support using WinRM * lxc/ - Linux Native Containers * openvz/ - OpenVZ containers using cli tools * phyp/ - IBM Power Hypervisor using CLI tools over SSH * qemu/ - QEMU / KVM using qemu CLI/monitor * remote/ - Generic libvirt native RPC client * test/ - A "mock" driver for testing * uml/ - User Mode Linux * vbox/ - Virtual Box using native API * vmware/ - VMware Workstation and Player using the vmrun tool * xen/ - Xen using hypercalls, XenD SEXPR & XenStore * xenapi/ - Xen using libxenserver Finally some secondary drivers that are shared for several HVs. Currently these are used by LXC, OpenVZ, QEMU, UML and Xen drivers. The ESX, Hyper-V, Power Hypervisor, Remote, Test & VirtualBox drivers all implement the secondary drivers directly * cpu/ - CPU feature management * interface/ - Host network interface management * network/ - Virtual NAT networking * nwfilter/ - Network traffic filtering rules * node_device/ - Host device enumeration * secret/ - Secret management * security/ - Mandatory access control drivers * storage/ - Storage management drivers Since both the hypervisor and secondary drivers can be built as dlopen()able modules, it is *FORBIDDEN* to have build dependencies between these directories. Drivers are only allowed to depend on the public API, and the internal APIs in the util/ and conf/ directories