You might want to send these questions to the user mailing list instead,
which is libvirt-users. This mailing list is for libvirt development
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On Fri, Dec 13, 2013 at 1:21 PM, Joaquim Barrera <jbarrera(a)ac.upc.edu>wrote:
Hello everybody!
I would like to introduce myself, as this is my first contact with libvirt
mailing list (although I've been reading quite a lot of documentation).
My name is Joaquim Barrera, from Barcelona, Catalonia. I am a computer
engineer and recently I joined a research group here in the university. My
task is related to VM migration and management, and since then (a couple of
months) I've been trying to figure some things up.
Now I need to go one step forward, and I would like to set up a nice dev
environment to try some modifications we want to make to libvirt, such as
new API or migration-related-stuff.
Although I am familiar with linux environrment and programming, I am not
really quite familiar with this kind of, may I say, professional
development, and there are some issues I need to solve before start
writting code. Some of this issues you'll find not relevant or newbie
stuff, but I assure you I tried lots of times before coming here. :-)
Here is what I got following the instructions in
http://libvirt.org/compiling.html
$ ./autogen.sh --system
$ make
After make finishes I have compiled 1.2.0 libvirt in the source tree, and
if I execute 'sudo ./run tools/virsh version' I get a this answer:
*Compiled against library: libvirt 1.2.0*
*Using library: libvirt 1.2.0*
*Using API: QEMU 1.2.0*
*Running hypervisor: QEMU 1.5.0*
(note that now I need to run virsh with sudo, I don't know exactly why)
So far, so good. I guess that, with --system flag, 1.2.0 custom libvirt
uses config files from standard directories such as
/etc/libvirt/libvirtd.conf, and if I used a custom directory instead, I
would have to redefine my VMs, am I right?
Problems come when I want to use custom 1.2.0 daemon. If I execute "sudo
service libvirt-bin stop" followed by "./daemon/libvirtd -d", then custom
virsh gives me this error:
*error: failed to connect to the hypervisor*
*error: no valid connection*
*error: Failed to connect socket to '/var/run/libvirt/libvirt-sock': No
such file or directory*
And I need to kill custom daemon and restart 1.1.1 libvirtd to recover
from this. Any advice?
Finally (sorry about this large mail), there is one thing that does bother
me quite a lot.
Using custom virsh, command history seems to vanish, as I press Arrow-UP
and I get "^[[A" in the screen, instead of last command used. Tell me,
please, that this is just some silly config I need to adjust... :_(
The final comment is, am I following the right direction to be able to
develop something with libvirt? ^^
Ok, that's all for now, thank you A LOT for your time.
Joaquim.
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