On 12/2/20 12:47 PM, Laine Stump wrote:
netcf (the backend of libvirt's virInterface*() APIs) hasn't
been modified in
over 2 years, and the last time there was a change significant enough for an
upstream release was in 2015 (!). It has never been possible to reliably
translate back and forth between native and netcf/libvirt XML config for
interfaces without losing some information, and impossible to keep up with new
functionality being added to host network configuration in NetworkManager
(especially since the modelling was slightly different - netcf is based on the
idea of each physical interface having one configuration, while NetworkManager
has potentially several different "Connections" for any given hardware
interface, and at most one of these connections can be active at a time for the
interface. Or something like that.)
The libvirt virInterface*() API (and netcf behind it) originally arose out of a
request from the oVirt project that we (libvirt) provide a way to provision the
networking config on a compute node (I *think* this is the case - I started
working on libvirt when they were in the middle of these discussions; netcf was
originally implemented mostly by David Lutterkort, and then handed off to me
when he moved on to other pastures). oVirt network provisioning usually meant
adding a bridge, assigning it an IP address, and attaching an ethernet (or two
via a bond) to that bridge. They wanted libvirt to provide this functionality
because (I guess?) they wanted to have a single connection to the node that
could perform all the setup they needed.
Although netcf could do that, in the end it didn't provide exactly what they
needed, so they "rolled their own" host network interface config and didn't
use
netcf. In the meantime, the idea of using a virtualization API to configure host
network interfaces never took off (Who'da thunk?).
netcf was designed so that a single C API + XML frontend could be compiled with
multiple different backends, for different network configuration paradigms. A
few other drivers were (partially) written (e.g. SuSE and Windows), but in the
real world, the only backends that have been used have been the one that uses
ifcfg files in Fedora/RHEL/CentOS, and the one that uses the
/etc/network/interfaces file on debian/ubuntu.
I could never get the SUSE network folks onboard, primarily due to resource
constraints. There was some early effort to make the interface APIs work with a
small shim library that looked and smelled like netcf, but there was never any
followup to make that a proper netcf backend. It was long ago and I had little
experience with downstream patch maintenance. Regretfully I accepted a
non-upstreamable patch in the downstream libvirt package that has caused much
pain and irritation over the many years since
https://build.opensuse.org/package/view_file/Virtualization/libvirt/libvi...
In both cases, the backend understands a subset of what is possible
in those
files, so some information from the config doesn't show up in the XML, and thus
won't be preserved if netcf is used to modify (i.e. redefine) the interface. In
addition, since a functionally identical configuration can be represented in
multiple ways in both those formats, sometimes a config file is deemed
unreadable by netcf, or it is read and interpreted correctly, but the modified
config is written back using the "other" method.
Since ovirt chose not to use it, the only users of its interface configuration
capabilities that I've ever noticed in the wild were the occasional user wanting
to use the "virsh iface-bridge" command to put a bridge behind their ethernet -
certainly none of the higher level virtualization management applications (that
I'm aware of) use any of the libvirt APIs that call to netcf (that means
"anything starting with "virInterface").
The small part of the virInterface APIs that have been used with some regularity
are just the functions that list current interfaces and get their current live
status (i.e. based on sending/receiving netlink messages, not on the contents of
the host network config files). Even on that front, the one commonly used
example that I know know of is virt-manager, which had used virInterface*() to
get a list of bridges/ethernets available for guest network connections, but
that functionality was removed from virt-manager-3.0, which was released in
September of this year.
In spite of this sporadic use, there are occasional netcf BZes that get filed
complaining about certain device options missing, or erroneous config resulting
in a confusing error message. These are usually filed by Red Hat virt QE, simply
because it's a part of their test plan (i.e. these reports generally don't
reflect a failure on a production system). Because the "fix" wouldn't
provide
any gain in the real world, these BZes just sit in the queue and server only to
make me (the netcf maintainer) feel like even more of a procrastinator that I
actually am.
I received a recent report (sorry the details are not public) about 'virsh
iface-list' taking longer on libvirt 6.0.0 (5m26.713s) vs 5.1.0 (3m49.949s) with
a large number (>200) of interfaces. I provided the customer with a small test
app that uses libnetcontrol directly, which took only 2m28.172s to list the
interfaces. I haven't had time to investigate, but it's obvious libvirt is
adding considerable time.
(A sidebar: netcf was originally made into a separate library, rather
than just
a few files within libvirt itself, because there was at least shrugging verbal
agreement that it would be used in places other than libvirt (and thus there
would be a community benefit in eliminated duplicate code in the multiple
projects); this also never materialized, so in the end, it is a separate library
that is only consumed by libvirt, but because it's a separate library the
"barrier to entry" for anyone to make any changes to it is very high, and so it
(effectively) never sees any contributions from the outside.)
Likely another reason the SUSE network folks lost interest. They couldn't
rationalize the effort for a single consumer.
Because of all the above, I've thought for quite awhile that we
should deprecate
netcf itself, along with all of libvirt's virInterface APIs *except* the one
that lists interfaces (virConnectListAllInterfaces) and the one that outputs an
XML dump of the current status of interfaces (virInterfaceGetXMLDesc). Since
netcf is only used by libvirt anyway, the part of functionality that performs
those two tasks could be moved into one or two C files within libvirt, removing
the dependency on netcf and making updates easier and more accessible to 3rd
parties. As a followup to this, we might provide another backend that would use
NetworkManager APIs to retrieve all this information rather than netlink
messages (which is what netcf currently does).
Alternately, Cole suggested in a separate email that since libvirt's node device
driver already reports various status information about devices on the host, we
could just beef up the output of virNodeDeviceGetXMLDesc() for net_* devices to
include more of the info that's visible in "ip link" and "ip
addr".
Or, we could just decide that it's okay for a management application (the main
consumer of libvirt) to need to use other APIs to get that information
(especially since that's what they already do anyway!)
So, that's my piece to speak. I'm looking for opinions and ideas on a few
different fronts:
1) Does this generally sound like a good direction? Or is there something I'm
ignoring that renders my points moot?
If you haven't already guessed, I would be in favor of deprecating the
virInterface APIs :-).
2) If we are going to do it, how should we proceed?
AFAIK, APIs have never been deprecated in libvirt, so it will be interesting to
see how we proceed.
We obviously can't simply *remove* the virInterface API from
libvirt (since that
would destroy backward compatibility guarantees), but could immediately begin
logging some sort of "this API is deprecated" message when any of the functions
are called, and then in a later release change the APIs to return an error
(while simultaneously removing netcf from the build and dependency lists).
Without much thought, this proposal sounds fine.
At the same time, we would need to decide if the "interface
status" functionality
needs to be maintained within appropriate virInterface*() APIs, reproduced in
virNodeDeviceGetXMLDesc(), or just dropped altogether.
On the netcf side, there are several small patches that have been sitting in git
for a few years without being in any official release; it would probably be nice
to make one final release before closing up shop. The mailing list could then be
closed down, and some final message put in a README in the git repo (on
pagure.io) before putting it into some archival state.
After those things are done, the various distros could be notified of the
newfound irrelevance of netcf, and given the opportunity to remove the package
from their releases.
I look forward to the day! :-)
Regards,
Jim