On 05/28/2014 02:04 AM, Jim Fehlig wrote:
Alvin Starr wrote:

Adding to Eric's comments...

I have been trying do some simulations of an openstack environment on
my workstation that is running xen and libvirt.
I managed to create nested HVM environments under lx but found a
number of shortfalls in libxl code.
Just to clarify terminology, libxl is the new interface for managing a
xen host.  xl (not lx) is one client of this interface.  The libvirt
libxl driver is another.
Some times I am a bit dyslexic and xl becomes lx.
I guess I could have phrased that better but the short and long was that I was forced to use lx because virsh/libvirt did not have enough control over the domains to do what I needed.


I have added a nestedhvm as a domain feature and was looking at
inspecting the domain configuration when I realized that the
persistant data is keept in config files in /var/lib/xen/userdata.....

Libvirt and lx have incompatible file names and are using different
config formats.
Libvirt keeps the data as XML and xl keeps them as xm config files.
Right.  They are different libxl clients, and one could argue this is a
way to determine that.

This means that libvirt domains cannot be manged with xl or xl domains
managed by libvirt.
Which is correct behavior, right?  I.e., one libxl client should not be
able to manipulate the domains of another?

I can be convinced I am wrong but my take on this would be that the domains are not owned by the tool used to create them but are owned by the underlying technology(ie. xen). From this perspective all tools should be able to manipulate to some level any xen domain. So either xl needs to be able to read and parse libvirt-xml userdata or libvirt needs to be able to read xl userdata.

By analogy I would use libc/linux as an example.
Nobody would try to argue that programs created in one programing language should be excluded from interacting with programs created in another programming language. Just think how life would be if perl programs could not invoke C programs or python programs.

Ok. Now that I have flogged that one to death...

Part of me thinks that sticking with the XL file format would be nice
from the point of view of being able to use xenlight tools once the
domain is configured.
At the very least it may make sense to keep an XL copy of the config
file in a format that xenlight can use.
Ideally, the libvirt libxl driver should support all the configuration
options supported by xl, allowing it to be used in place of xl.
I agree here completely.

WRT importing an xl domain to libvirt, I think Eric's suggestion to use
domxml-{to,from}-native is the way to go.  The libxl driver would need
to learn 'xen-xl' (slightly different than xen-xm) and 'xen-json'
formats so one could e.g. do

virsh domxml-from-native xen-xl /path/to/dom-cfg.xl > dom-cfg.xml
virsh define dom-cfg.xml

or

xl list --long dom > dom-json.cfg
virsh domxml-from-native xen-json dom-json.cfg > dom-cfg.xml
virsh define dom-cfg.xml

I suppose another option would be to support the equivalent of 'virsh
qemu-attach'.
The metadata is stored in files like

userdata-d.28.da587c68-da14-11e3-b2d6-37945c264b9d.libvirt-xml
or
userdata-d.2.62d064fb-3eb4-5b46-3298-47dcb1b6c13f.xl

where the suffix is the persistant data format.
It would be possible to use domxml-to/from-native to convert one to the other but my quick try just now kicked out a virsh internal error.

So domxml conversion needs to be fixed.

I guess the question would be.
Should there be a new xen-lx format  or is extending xen-xm enough?
If there is to be a new xen-lx format should it be built into the new libxl code or just added to the xen code?

Since the xend/xm interface is being replaced with libxl/xl will the xen driver go away?


To achieve my original goal of managing a nested HVM environment from
libvirt I need to get the CPUID flags working but I do believe that it
would be nice to have the various xen and libvirt tools being able to
talk to each other.
It should be possible to support specifying CPUID flags if that is
exposed through the libxl interface.  I think it is just a matter of
mapping libvirt's CPU model options to Xen's CPUID flags

http://libvirt.org/formatdomain.html#elementsCPU
It looks to be doable.


Regards,
Jim



--
Alvin Starr                   ||   voice: (905)513-7688
Netvel Inc.                   ||   Cell:  (416)806-0133
al...@netvel.net              ||

--
libvir-list mailing list
libvir-list@redhat.com
https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/libvir-list

Reply via email to