On 5/14/22 3:23 PM, Darragh Bailey wrote:
On Fri, 13 May 2022 at 00:17, Darragh Bailey <daragh.bailey(a)gmail.com
<mailto:daragh.bailey@gmail.com>> wrote:
Hi,
On Thu 12 May 2022, 21:34 Laine Stump, <laine(a)redhat.com
<mailto:laine@redhat.com>> wrote:
The virDomainDefineXMLFlags API (and also the older/deprecated
virDomainDefineXML API) doesn't require that the domain first be
undefined (with one notable exception - see below[*]). If you
define a
domain that already exists with the same name and uuid, then the
effect
is to "redefine" (or "update" if you prefer) the existing
domain
of that
name. If the domain is currently active, then the changes will take
effect the next time the domain is shut down ("Destroy"ed in
libvirt API
parlance) and re-started.
Unfortunately trying to call this via ruby-libvirt doesn't appear to
behave as expected. It appears that if I add an nvram element without a
loader element to the os block, the following code block will execute
without issue but also without changing the domain XML:
# Apply XML changes directly
if descr_changed
begin
env[:ui].info("Updating domain definition due to configuration change")
new_descr = String.new
xml_descr.write new_descr
# env[:machine].provider.driver.connection.client provides access
to the ruby-libvirt connection object
libvirt_domain =
env[:machine].provider.driver.connection.client.define_domain_xml(new_descr,
1)
domain =
env[:machine].provider.driver.connection.servers.get(env[:machine].id.to_s)
rescue Fog::Errors::Error => e
raise Errors::UpdateServerError, error_message: e.message
end
end
I've by-passing the fog-libvirt to call the ruby-libvirt connection
object directly to try and avoid any unexpected interference when
testing the API call out e.g.
https://libvirt.org/ruby/api/Libvirt/Connect.html#method-i-define_domain_xml
<
https://libvirt.org/ruby/api/Libvirt/Connect.html#method-i-define_domain_...
So not only is there no exception thrown if the XML change is ignored,
I've noticed there doesn't appear to be an easy way to check using the
API either, in that
https://libvirt.org/ruby/api/Libvirt/Domain.html#method-i-updated-3F
<
https://libvirt.org/ruby/api/Libvirt/Domain.html#method-i-updated-3F>
doesn't indicate that the domain has been updated whether I call it on
the libvirt_domain object returned, or an instance from before the
define_domain_xml call is made.
It appears that the only way is to perform a call to get the xml
definition of the libvirt_domain object returned in the above block and
see if that matches the xml that was sent, if not, error.
Is this the expected usage of the API? Or should the call to
define_domain_xml raise an exception if it cannot update the domain XML?
as opposed to a schema validation error which does appear to be detected
when I did something stupid.
Caveat - I'm completely unfamiliar with ruby and the libvirt-ruby API
bindings.
If there is a problem that causes the domain config to not be updated,
libvirt will return an error. So I would suspect one of the two things
is happening:
1) there may be a problem in the libvirt-ruby bindings that causes the
error reported by the call (in whatever C code is behind the ruby
bindings) to libvirt to be properly propagated to ruby. I would hope
this isn't the case, but "bugs happen", so it should be considered as a
possibility.
2) As I said in my earlier mail, any changes that are made will take
effect the next time the domain is destroyed and restarted. This also
means that the changes won't be reflected in the "live/status" XML of
the domain until that time. If you want to see the new configuration
after you've made changes, you should add the VIR_DOMAIN_XML_INACTIVE
flag when requesting the domain XML. Possibly you haven't included this
flag, and that's why you think that your change hasn't taken effect?