On Thu, Jan 20, 2022 at 04:34:01PM +0100, Peter Krempa wrote:
Since we are at a transition period where some users may be running
monolithic libvirtd and others already the modular topology we need a
section that allows users to figure out which is in use.
This will be particularly important in the document about enabling
logging, as the active log file depends on which daemon is in use.
Signed-off-by: Peter Krempa <pkrempa(a)redhat.com>
---
docs/daemons.rst | 52 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1 file changed, 52 insertions(+)
diff --git a/docs/daemons.rst b/docs/daemons.rst
index 1f9bc34260..c3970eb89c 100644
--- a/docs/daemons.rst
+++ b/docs/daemons.rst
@@ -435,6 +435,58 @@ host first.
$ systemctl enable virtproxyd-tls.socket
$ systemctl start virtproxyd-tls.socket
+Checking whether modular/monolithic mode is in use
+==================================================
+
+New distributions are likely to use the modular mode although the upgrade
+process preserves whichever mode was in use before the upgrade.
+
+To determine whether modular or monolithic mode is in use on a host running
+``systemd`` as the init system you can take the following steps:
+
+#. Check whether the modular daemon infrastructure is in use
+
+ First check whether the modular daemon you are interested (see
+ `Modular driver daemons`_ for a summary of which daemons are provided by
+ libvirt) in is running:
+
+ #. Check ``.socket`` for socket activated services
+
+ ::
+
+ # systemctl is-active virtqemud.socket
+ active
+
+ #. Check ``.service`` for always-running daemons
For ^these 2 checks, simple bulleted list would do even better. Also, for some
reason ^this hunk resulted in:
1. Check ``.socket``...
1. Check ``.service``...
+
+ ::
+
+ # systemctl is-active virtqemud.service
+ active
+
+ If either of the above is ``active`` your system is using the modular daemons.
+
+#. Check whether the monolithic daemon is in use
+
+ #. Check ``libvirtd.socket``
+
+ ::
+
+ # systemctl is-active libvirtd.socket
+ active
+
+ #. Check ``libvirtd.service`` for always-running daemon
...same ^here as above :)
with bulleted lists:
Reviewed-by: Erik Skultety <eskultet(a)redhat.com>