devstack/lib/nova_plugins/functions-libvirt
Sean Dague e263c82e48 add shebang lines to all lib files
With gerrit 2.8, and the new change screen, this will trigger syntax
highlighting in gerrit. Thus making reviewing code a lot nicer.

Change-Id: Id238748417ffab53e02d59413dba66f61e724383
2014-12-10 11:28:05 -05:00

150 lines
5.2 KiB
Bash

#!/bin/bash
#
# lib/nova_plugins/functions-libvirt
# Common libvirt configuration functions
# Dependencies:
# ``functions`` file
# ``STACK_USER`` has to be defined
# Save trace setting
LV_XTRACE=$(set +o | grep xtrace)
set +o xtrace
# Defaults
# --------
# if we should turn on massive libvirt debugging
DEBUG_LIBVIRT=$(trueorfalse False $DEBUG_LIBVIRT)
# Installs required distro-specific libvirt packages.
function install_libvirt {
if is_ubuntu; then
install_package qemu-kvm
install_package libvirt-bin
install_package python-libvirt
install_package python-guestfs
elif is_fedora || is_suse; then
install_package kvm
install_package libvirt
install_package libvirt-python
install_package python-libguestfs
fi
# Restart firewalld after install of libvirt to avoid a problem
# with polkit, which libvirtd brings in. See
# https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1099031
# Note there is a difference between F20 rackspace cloud images
# and HP images used in the gate; rackspace has firewalld but hp
# cloud doesn't. RHEL6 doesn't have firewalld either. So we
# don't care if it fails.
if is_fedora && is_package_installed firewalld; then
sudo service firewalld restart || true
fi
}
# Configures the installed libvirt system so that is accessible by
# STACK_USER via qemu:///system with management capabilities.
function configure_libvirt {
if is_service_enabled neutron && is_neutron_ovs_base_plugin && ! sudo grep -q '^cgroup_device_acl' $QEMU_CONF; then
# Add /dev/net/tun to cgroup_device_acls, needed for type=ethernet interfaces
cat <<EOF | sudo tee -a $QEMU_CONF
cgroup_device_acl = [
"/dev/null", "/dev/full", "/dev/zero",
"/dev/random", "/dev/urandom",
"/dev/ptmx", "/dev/kvm", "/dev/kqemu",
"/dev/rtc", "/dev/hpet","/dev/net/tun",
]
EOF
fi
# Since the release of Debian Wheezy the libvirt init script is libvirtd
# and not libvirtd-bin anymore.
if is_ubuntu && [ ! -f /etc/init.d/libvirtd ]; then
LIBVIRT_DAEMON=libvirt-bin
else
LIBVIRT_DAEMON=libvirtd
fi
if is_fedora || is_suse; then
if is_fedora && [[ $DISTRO =~ (rhel6) || "$os_RELEASE" -le "17" ]]; then
cat <<EOF | sudo tee /etc/polkit-1/localauthority/50-local.d/50-libvirt-remote-access.pkla
[libvirt Management Access]
Identity=unix-group:$LIBVIRT_GROUP
Action=org.libvirt.unix.manage
ResultAny=yes
ResultInactive=yes
ResultActive=yes
EOF
elif is_suse && [[ $os_RELEASE = 12.2 || "$os_VENDOR" = "SUSE LINUX" ]]; then
# openSUSE < 12.3 or SLE
# Work around the fact that polkit-default-privs overrules pklas
# with 'unix-group:$group'.
cat <<EOF | sudo tee /etc/polkit-1/localauthority/50-local.d/50-libvirt-remote-access.pkla
[libvirt Management Access]
Identity=unix-user:$STACK_USER
Action=org.libvirt.unix.manage
ResultAny=yes
ResultInactive=yes
ResultActive=yes
EOF
else
# Starting with fedora 18 and opensuse-12.3 enable stack-user to
# virsh -c qemu:///system by creating a policy-kit rule for
# stack-user using the new Javascript syntax
rules_dir=/etc/polkit-1/rules.d
sudo mkdir -p $rules_dir
cat <<EOF | sudo tee $rules_dir/50-libvirt-$STACK_USER.rules
polkit.addRule(function(action, subject) {
if (action.id == 'org.libvirt.unix.manage' &&
subject.user == '$STACK_USER') {
return polkit.Result.YES;
}
});
EOF
unset rules_dir
fi
fi
# The user that nova runs as needs to be member of **libvirtd** group otherwise
# nova-compute will be unable to use libvirt.
if ! getent group $LIBVIRT_GROUP >/dev/null; then
sudo groupadd $LIBVIRT_GROUP
fi
add_user_to_group $STACK_USER $LIBVIRT_GROUP
# Enable server side traces for libvirtd
if [[ "$DEBUG_LIBVIRT" = "True" ]] ; then
if is_ubuntu; then
# Unexpectedly binary package builds in ubuntu get fully qualified
# source file paths, not relative paths. This screws with the matching
# of '1:libvirt' making everything turn on. So use libvirt.c for now.
# This will have to be re-visited when Ubuntu ships libvirt >= 1.2.3
local log_filters="1:libvirt.c 1:qemu 1:conf 1:security 3:object 3:event 3:json 3:file 1:util"
else
local log_filters="1:libvirt 1:qemu 1:conf 1:security 3:object 3:event 3:json 3:file 1:util"
fi
local log_outputs="1:file:/var/log/libvirt/libvirtd.log"
if ! grep -q "log_filters=\"$log_filters\"" /etc/libvirt/libvirtd.conf; then
echo "log_filters=\"$log_filters\"" | sudo tee -a /etc/libvirt/libvirtd.conf
fi
if ! grep -q "log_outputs=\"$log_outputs\"" /etc/libvirt/libvirtd.conf; then
echo "log_outputs=\"$log_outputs\"" | sudo tee -a /etc/libvirt/libvirtd.conf
fi
fi
# libvirt detects various settings on startup, as we potentially changed
# the system configuration (modules, filesystems), we need to restart
# libvirt to detect those changes.
restart_service $LIBVIRT_DAEMON
}
# Restore xtrace
$LV_XTRACE
# Local variables:
# mode: shell-script
# End: