Thanks-- i get this eco-system setup isn't mainstream (yet). just wanted
to double check to see if there was some pre-existing way to use the
function aspect.
B
On Wed, Jan 2, 2019 at 9:29 AM Laine Stump <laine(a)redhat.com> wrote:
On 12/26/18 6:59 PM, b f31415 wrote:
> Thanks. Maybe I'm missing something but when I try virt-install
> --dry-run --print-xml it generates this snippet of XML:
>
> <interface type="bridge">
>
> <source bridge="ge_0_0_0_77"/>
>
> <mac address="52:54:00:01:00:4e"/>
>
> <model type="virtio"/>
>
> </interface>
>
>
> but what i need (and get from virsh dumpxml) has this extra PCI line.
>
> <interface type='bridge'>
>
> <mac address='52:54:00:01:00:4e'/>
>
> <source bridge='ge_0_0_0_77'/>
>
> <target dev='vnet78'/>
>
> <model type='virtio'/>
>
> <alias name='net78'/>
>
> <address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x01'
slot='0x0a'
function='0x6' />
>
> </interface>
>
>
> Did I miss something? Do you see PCI in the XML when you do the
> virt-install --dryrun approach?
virt-install never explicitly specifies a PCI address in the XML it
creates and sends to libvirt, and what you're seeing as the output from
--print-xml is the XML before it has been sent to libvirt.
Additionally, in response to a question in the original mail, there is
no way to tell virt-install (or libvirt itself) to use non-0 functions
for devices (except to manually specify the entire PCI address).
Since 99 44/100% of users (probably much higher, but that number has
such a nice ring to anyone who recalls the old Ivory Soap commercials
:-) never need more devices than are possible using only function 0,
there has been no effort made to automate assignment of non-0 functions.
So if you need this many devices, you should probably consider just
using virt-install once to generate proto-template XML, then "virsh
define" that template to get an XML that has an <address...> element for
every device that needs it, write a script that condenses all the device
PCI addresses into less slots by using non-0 functions (and saves that
as the "final" template), and finally modify your installation to do a
series of virsh commands using that template XML as a start.
I know it sounds awkward, but there is really nothing in libvirt or
virt-install to automate assignment of PCI devices to non-0 functions.
> On Wed, Dec 26, 2018 at 2:57 PM Peter Crowther
> <peter.crowther(a)melandra.com <mailto:peter.crowther@melandra.com>>
wrote:
>
> On Wed, 26 Dec 2018 at 16:26, b f31415 <bf31415(a)gmail.com
> <mailto:bf31415@gmail.com>> wrote:
>
> If not, is there a way with one of the virt command line tools
> to create the XML (with the PCI addresses specified) so that I
> can process that XML and re-write the PCI addressing values?
> Right now the only way I’ve been able to get that detailed XML
> file is to 1) virt-install and let the VM begin the boot process
> and then do a 2) virsh dumpxml and then 3) virsh
> destroy/undefine that VM, 4) modify the XML and then 5) virsh
> create ./modified.xml. Is there a cleaner way to do this?
>
>
> It won't do everything you want, but check out virt-install
> --print-step --dry-run. This should at least allow you to get at
> the XML for the intermediate steps and remove the brittleness of
> defining, destroying, undefining the VM.
>
> Cheers,
>
> - Peter
>
>
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