On Thu, May 12, 2022 at 13:30:57 +0200, Jiri Denemark wrote:
On Thu, May 12, 2022 at 12:41:57 +0200, Peter Krempa wrote:
> On Thu, May 12, 2022 at 12:40:54 +0200, Peter Krempa wrote:
> > On Thu, May 12, 2022 at 10:55:47 +0200, Jiri Denemark wrote:
> > > Every running QEMU process we are willing to reconnect (i.e., at least
> > > 3.1.0) supports migration events and we can assume the capability is
> > > already enabled since last time libvirt daemon connected to its monitor.
> > >
> > > Well, it's not guaranteed though. If libvirt 1.2.17 or older was used
to
> > > start QEMU 3.1.0 or newer, migration events would not be enabled. And if
> > > the user decides to upgrade libvirt from 1.2.17 to 8.4.0 while the QEMU
> > > process is still running, they would not be able to migrate the domain
> >
> > But doesn't the function below actually enable the events? Or is there
> > something else that needs to be done?
> >
> > Such that we simply could enable the events and be done with it?
> >
> > > because of disabled migration events. I think we do not really need to
> > > worry about this scenario as libvirt 1.2.17 is 7 years old while QEMU
> > > 3.1.0 was released only 3.5 years ago. Thus a chance someone would be
> > > running such configuration should be fairly small and a combination with
> > > upgrading 1.2.17 to 8.4.0 (or newer) with running domains should get it
> > > pretty much to zero. The issue would disappear ff the ancient libvirt is
> > > first upgraded to something older than 8.4.0 and then to the current
> > > libvirt.
> > >
> > > Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar(a)redhat.com>
> > > ---
> > >
> > > Notes:
> > > I was hoping we could do this without any downside, but it appeared
this
> > > was not possible. In case someone still thinks this would be an issue,
I
> > > can take an alternative solution and check whether migration events
are
> > > enabled when reconnecting to QEMU monitor.
>
> Aaah, never mind. You want to avoid setting it all the time. Well I
> think I would be okay with that, does our code handle the absence of
> events properly?
I guess the migration would just hang waiting for an event that never
comes. But I guess it should be fairly easy to check whether events are
enabled before starting a migration and report an error instead of
hanging.
Leaving the VM in a hanging migration would be bad, but if we can just
refuse it I'd be okay with that.