This file is mainly a central place to:
- include localenv if it exists, and
- define the RHEL 5 backwards compatibility macros, instead of
spreading them over every other file.
(cherry picked from commit 49bdaabc7d)
(cherry picked from commit 7bc67024f0)
At least libpython2.7-dev and libpython3.3-dev on current
Debian/unstable ship with pkg-config files. As with the pkg-config
check for Lua, we check for versioned and an unversioned .pc files.
(cherry picked from commit e5f0dfb6e3)
This commit rearranges the internal header files.
"src/guestfs-internal.h" is just for the library, as before.
"src/guestfs-internal-frontend.h" is for use by all library, bindings,
tools C code, but NOT the daemon.
"src/guestfs-internal-all.h" is for use by all C code including the
daemon.
This is just code motion, but it has some important consequences:
(1) We can use the CLEANUP_* macros in bindings and tools code.
(2) We can get rid of TMP_TEMPLATE_ON_STACK.
(3) We will (in future) be able to stop bindings and tools code from
using the safe_* allocation functions (which are NOT safe to use
outside the library alone).
(cherry picked from commit ec3b75e5ff)
Certain functions are intended to be internal only, but we currently
export them anyway. This change moves them into a separate section of
guestfs.h protected by a GUESTFS_PRIVATE variable. This change also
enables private structs, but doesn't implement any.
This change only affects the C api. Language bindings aren't affected,
but probably should be in the future.
(cherry picked from commit 27b995c841)
Rename guestfs_safe_malloc et al to guestfs___safe_malloc etc.
To use the private functions, code now has to define
-DGUESTFS_PRIVATE_FUNCTIONS=1. This will make it easier for us in
future to work out which programs are using these functions and to
minimize both the number of programs and the functions they are
calling.
Note that the Perl, Python, OCaml, Ruby and Java bindings use
guestfs_safe_* calls. None of the other bindings do. This is a bug
(in the bindings using those functions): these functions will call the
out of memory callback on failure. This function defaults to abort(),
and since this happens from a language binding, there is no way to
change this default.
(cherry picked from commit 62e775c350)
guestfs_parse_environment_list.
Add a new function for creating a handle:
guestfs_h *guestfs_create_flags (unsigned flags [, ...]);
This variant lets you supply flags and extra arguments, although extra
arguments are not used at the moment.
Of particular interest is the ability to separate the creation of the
handle from the parsing of environment variables like
LIBGUESTFS_DEBUG. guestfs_create does both together, which prevents
us from propagating errors from parsing environment variables back to
the caller (guestfs_create has always printed any errors on stderr and
then just ignored them).
If you are interested in these errors, you can now write:
g = guestfs_create_flags (GUESTFS_CREATE_NO_ENVIRONMENT);
if (!g)
exit (EXIT_FAILURE);
r = guestfs_parse_environment (g);
if (!r)
exit (EXIT_FAILURE);
Also you can *omit* the call to guestfs_parse_environment, which
creates a handle unaffected by the environment (which was not possible
before).
This commit also includes new (backwards compatible) changes to the
OCaml, Perl, Python, Ruby and Java constructors that let you use the
flags.
This adds standard LICENSE and BUGS sections to all of the man pages
that are processed by podwrapper.
Modify all the calls to $(PODWRAPPER) to add the right --license
parameter according to the content. Note that this relaxes the
license on some code example pages, making them effectively BSD-style
licensed.
section.
Ensure each man page contains consistent COPYRIGHT and AUTHOR
sections.
Remove the LICENSE section. We will add that back in podwrapper in a
later commit.
Since our minimum supported version is now 1.16 and mount was fixed in
1.13.16, it is now safe to replace mount-options + empty options with
mount wherever it occurs.
Previously with Python it was impossible to set a boolean or integer
optarg to -1 because that was used as a special sentinel value to
indicate that the optarg was not set.
Instead, use None as the sentinel value, since that cannot be a
boolean or integer type.
In libguestfs 1.20, you will be able to use 'add_drive'
instead of 'add_drive_opts' (except in the C bindings).
However until libguestfs 1.20 is the minimum stable version
people will still be using old versions where you have to use
'add_drive_opts'. This makes the examples confusing.
Therefore continue to use 'add_drive_opts' in the examples
for now.
By using the once_had_no_optargs flag, this change is backwards
compatible for callers (except Haskell, PHP and GObject as discussed
in earlier commit).
The new API splits orderly close into a two-step process:
if (guestfs_shutdown (g) == -1) {
/* handle the error, eg. qemu error */
}
guestfs_close (g);
Note that the explicit shutdown step is only necessary in the case
where you have made changes to the disk image and want to handle write
errors. Read the documentation for further information.
This change also:
- deprecates guestfs_kill_subprocess
- turns guestfs_kill_subprocess into the same as guestfs_shutdown
- changes guestfish and other tools to call shutdown + close
where necessary (not for read-only tools)
- updates documentation
- updates examples
This option, when added via
TESTS_ENVIRONMENT = [...] $(top_builddir)/run --test
allows us to run the tests and only print the full output (including
debugging etc) when the test fails.
Old KVM can't add /dev/null readonly. Treat /dev/null as a special
case.
We also fix a few tests where /dev/null was being used with
format=qcow2. This was always incorrect behaviour, but qemu appears
to tolerate it.
RHEL 5-era autoconf did not define these, so define them manually
when they are missing.
Define builddir as '.' The scripts require this. It won't work
in the srcdir != builddir case, but we don't care about that for
RHEL 5.
This commit also moves the builddir / abs_srcdir variable setting
above the include of subdir-rules.mk, in case that include uses
these variables.
Useful script:
for f in $(find -name Makefile.am | xargs fgrep '$(abs_srcdir)' -l) ; do
if ! grep -q '^abs_srcdir' $f; then
echo missing in $f
fi
done
'del g' is a trap for the unwary. If the handle has any other
references, it does nothing (in fact, it can be actively dangerous if
the user was expecting the appliance to go away). In non-CPython it
can be delayed arbitrarily long.
Using 'g.close()' on the other hand is always safe.
I noticed some uses of ${srcdir} in shell scripts.
That is almost always better written as $srcdir.
The patch below converts most such variable references.
Here are the few remaining candidates:
$ git grep -i -E '\$\{[a-zA-Z_0-9]+\}'|grep -v Makefile.in.in
configure.ac: JAR_INSTALL_DIR=\${prefix}/share/java
configure.ac: JNI_INSTALL_DIR=\${libdir}
debian/rules: for TEST in ${DEBIAN_SKIP_TEST}; do \
debian/rules:# mv $${mod} $$(dirname $${mod})/libguestfsmod.so; \
java/Makefile.am:libguestfs_jar_DATA = libguestfs-${VERSION}.jar
java/Makefile.am:libguestfs-${VERSION}.jar: $(libguestfs_jar_class_files)
perl/lib/Sys/Guestfs/Lib.pm: "-f", '${Package} ${Version} ${Architecture} ${Status}\n',
perl/typemap: croak (\"${Package}::$func_name(): called on a closed handle\");
perl/typemap: croak (\"${Package}::$func_name(): $var is not a blessed HV reference\");
tests/data/Makefile.am: echo "$${i}abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz"; \
We could change all of those, too, except the ones in configure.ac
and Makefile.am, since they refer to Make variables. Even those
should be changed, but to use the preferred Makefile notation:
$(prefix), $(libdir), $(VERSION).
>From a86770ecd45666232a94d76c8725c8f9b1c76e3a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Jim Meyering <meyering@redhat.com>
Date: Mon, 23 Jan 2012 11:15:12 +0100
Subject: [PATCH libguestfs] maint: use $var notation rather than ${var} when
possible
The only case to avoid in a shell script is when the byte after the
"}" is word-constituent, and concatenating it would thus change the
name of the variable.
These changes were induced by running this command:
git grep -l -i -E '\$\{(srcdir|md)' \
|xargs perl -pi -e 's/\$\{(srcdir|md)\}($|\w)/\$$1$2/gi'
The "g" was needed because there was one line with two instances.
The "i" is to handle ${SRCDIR}. The ($|\w) ensures that concatenating
whatever follows the "}" won't change semantics.
* gobject/run-bindtests: Use "$srcdir", not "${srcdir}".
* haskell/run-bindtests: Likewise.
* java/run-bindtests: Likewise.
* ocaml/run-bindtests: Likewise.
* perl/run-bindtests: Likewise.
* python/run-bindtests: Likewise.
* ruby/run-bindtests: Likewise.
* tests/guests/guest-aux/make-debian-img.sh: Likewise, but $SRCDIR.
* tests/guests/guest-aux/make-ubuntu-img.sh: Likewise.
* tests/guests/guest-aux/make-windows-img.sh: Likewise.
* tests/md/test-mdadm.sh: Likewise, but $md.
These fixes allow libguestfs bindings to work with Python 3 (tested
with Python 3.2)
You can select which Python you compile against by doing:
PYTHON=python ./configure && make && make check
or:
PYTHON=python3 ./configure && make && make check
If the user set PYTHON when configuring, this variable is not passed
through to the tests, so it is possible the tests will fail because
they are testing the wrong version of python. By passing $PYTHON
through to the tests we ensure that we test against the same version
of python that we configured with.
This avoids conflicts with the globally installed libguestfs
appliance, or lets us build in multiple local directories at the same
time without conflicts.