On Sun, Jan 23, 2011 at 05:38:33PM +0300, Nikita A Menkovich wrote:
Hello,
I'm running Debian Sid with libvirt/qemu/kvm packages from experimental:
$ qemu --version
QEMU emulator version 0.13.0 (Debian 0.13.0+dfsg-2), Copyright (c)
2003-2008 Fabrice Bellard
$ kvm --version
QEMU emulator version 0.13.0 (qemu-kvm-0.13.0 Debian 0.13.0+dfsg-2),
Copyright (c) 2003-2008 Fabrice Bellard
$ libvirtd --version
libvirtd (libvirt) 0.8.6
/etc/libvirt/qemu.conf
cgroup_controllers = [ "cpu", "devices" ]
cgroup_device_acl = [
"/dev/null", "/dev/full", "/dev/zero",
"/dev/random", "/dev/urandom",
"/dev/ptmx", "/dev/kvm", "/dev/kqemu",
"/dev/rtc", "/dev/hpet", "/dev/net/tun",
]
/etc/cgconfig.conf
mount {
cpu = /dev/cgroup/cpu;
cpuacct = /dev/cgroup/cpuacct;
devices = /dev/cgroup/devices;
# memory = /dev/cgroup/memory;
blkio = /dev/cgroup/blkio;
}
When I'm running virsh, and want to change cpu shares I receive an error
virsh # schedinfo --set cpu.shares=2048 test
Scheduler : posix
error: internal error cannot find cgroup for domain test
Really I didn't have any group test in
$ ls /dev/cgroup/cpu/sysdefault/libvirt/qemu/
cgroup.clone_children cgroup.event_control cgroup.procs cpu.shares
notify_on_release tasks
It happens if I run libvirt as usual user, how can I grant access to
create cgroup to ordinary user?
When run libvirt will create cgroups under whichever group it was
in when it was started. Out of the box this will only work for
libvirt run as root, because the 'sysdefault' cgroup is readonly
for non-root users. You need to configure things such that your
user login is given a dedicated cgroup + ownership on that cgroup
to let it do 'mkdir' while non-root.
Daniel