Hi Eric, Thanks for the response. As mentioned I need to build the libvirt and install it in different VM.
I'm new to libvirt and new to C programming as well. Will you provide me any reference about all different way to build and install the libvirt. Thanks In Advance, Arun V On Fri, Oct 4, 2013 at 11:45 PM, Eric Blake <ebl...@redhat.com> wrote: > [no need to post to two separate lists; this is a development question, > so replies can drop libvirt-users] > > On 10/04/2013 12:08 PM, Arun Viswanath wrote: > > Hi All, > > > > For some testing purpose I've changed some content in > > src/test/test_driver.c and then used "make" command to compile and build > > the code. Then I copied the "libvirt.so.0.9.10.so" file to the target > > Huh? Why are you building 0.9.10 instead of the latest 1.1.3? > > > machine and restart the libvirtd daemon, but the changes I made in > > test_driver.c is nothing reflected. I'm not sure whether I'm missing > > something. Is it moving only the "libvirt.so.0.9.10.so" is enough or I > need > > to move some .a files ? , but I'm not seeing any ".a" in the kvm host > > related to libvirt to replace. Please provide me sufficient info to > proceed > > further. > > What configure options did you use when you built libvirt? Manually > copying single files onto a target machine is almost always wrong; much > better is to 'make install' (perhaps with an appropriate > DESTDIR=/staging setting), then place that entire installed tree into > place on the destination. If you are using a Fedora-based distro, 'make > rpm' will even turn your self-built binary into an rpm that you can > install using your package manager, for much easier control over getting > everything right. > > -- > Eric Blake eblake redhat com +1-919-301-3266 > Libvirt virtualization library http://libvirt.org > >
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