Daniel P. Berrange wrote:
On Tue, Dec 04, 2007 at 05:40:44PM +0000, Richard W.M. Jones wrote:
> Daniel P. Berrange wrote:
>> For the QEMU / KVM driver, if the user doesn't specify an explicit name for
>> the TAP device associated with a virtual NIC, we auto-generate one with a
>> name vnetXXX. You can see this if you dump XML for a running QEMU guest.
>> Unfortunately if you dump XML, make a change and then feed it back in with
>> the define XML API, you have now persisted this auto-generated VIF name.
>>
>> Do this for several domains at varying times and you'll eventually get
>> 2 domains which have persisted the same auto-generated vnetXXX device
>> name. You can now not start both of these VMs at once.
>>
>> The fix for this is simple - simply strip any TAP device name starting with
>> the string 'vnet' when defining a new VM. It will thus get assigned a
new
>> automatically generate name which doesn't clash. The patch also strips out
>> hardcoded vnetXXX names when starting a VM to proactively deal with any
>> existing VMs whose config has been broken in this way.
> Hang about though, don't we sometimes want to explicitly set the name of
> some interfaces to vnetXXX?
No, if you want to manually set interface names, you have to use something
other than a 'vnet' prefix. 'vnet' is the prefix for auto-generated
names
in same way as 'vif' is the prefix for Xen auto-generated names.
Oh I didn't realise that. In that case, the patch is fine.
Rich.
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