Peter Krempa 6ef0b03483 virsh: Check whether found volume is member of the specified storage pool
When looking up storage volumes virsh uses multiple lookup steps. Some
of the steps don't require a pool name specified. This resulted into a
possibility that a volume would be part of a different pool than the
user specified:

Let's have a /var/lib/libvirt/images/test.qcow image in the 'default'
pool and a second pool 'emptypool':

Currently we'd return:
  $ virsh vol-info --pool emptypool /var/lib/libvirt/images/test.qcow
  Name:           test.qcow
  Type:           file
  Capacity:       100.00 MiB
  Allocation:     212.00 KiB

After the fix:
 $ tools/virsh vol-info --pool emptypool /var/lib/libvirt/images/test.qcow
 error: Requested volume '/var/lib/libvirt/images/test.qcow' is not in pool 'emptypool'

Resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1088667
2014-06-02 10:56:49 +02:00
2014-04-21 14:52:28 -06:00
2014-06-02 09:47:05 +08:00
2014-01-01 06:02:47 -07:00
2014-05-28 20:01:57 -06:00
2014-06-02 09:47:05 +08:00
2013-07-18 08:47:21 +02:00
2012-10-19 12:44:56 -04:00
2014-01-01 06:02:47 -07:00
2014-04-21 16:49:08 -06:00
2014-03-25 14:58:41 +01:00
2014-05-06 16:20:24 -06:00

         LibVirt : simple API for virtualization

  Libvirt is a C toolkit to interact with the virtualization capabilities
of recent versions of Linux (and other OSes). It is free software
available under the GNU Lesser General Public License. Virtualization of
the Linux Operating System means the ability to run multiple instances of
Operating Systems concurrently on a single hardware system where the basic
resources are driven by a Linux instance. The library aim at providing
long term stable C API initially for the Xen paravirtualization but
should be able to integrate other virtualization mechanisms if needed.

Daniel Veillard <veillard@redhat.com>
Description
Libvirt provides a portable, long term stable C API for managing the virtualization technologies provided by many operating systems. It includes support for QEMU, KVM, Xen, LXC, bhyve, Virtuozzo, VMware vCenter and ESX, VMware Desktop, Hyper-V, VirtualBox and the POWER Hypervisor.
Readme 922 MiB
Languages
C 94.8%
Python 2%
Meson 0.9%
Shell 0.8%
Dockerfile 0.6%
Other 0.8%