This runs all of the check* rules. Since this includes 'make check',
'make check-all' is not quite equivalent to the old 'make extra-tests'
which was removed in the previous commit.
libxml2 is very commonly available on Linux distros and has also been
ported (and is widely available) on Mac OS X and Windows. Therefore
simply require libxml2, and remove a lot of conditional code.
This large, but mainly mechanical commit, renames "attach method"
everywhere to "backend".
Backwards compatibility of the API (guestfs_{set,get}_attach_method)
and environment (LIBGUESTFS_ATTACH_METHOD) is maintained, but in new
code use guestfs_{set,get}_backend and LIBGUESTFS_BACKEND instead.
The default backend (launching qemu directly) is now called 'direct'
instead of 'appliance', although you can still use 'appliance' as a
synonym.
You can now add remote NBD drives using:
><fs> add-drive "" format:raw protocol:nbd server:localhost
(Note that you also need to add port:NNNN if the server is running on
a non-standard port).
The corresponding qemu-nbd service can be started by doing:
qemu-nbd disk.img -t
This commit also adds a test.
It causes plenty of problems with people have multiple parallel
versions of libguestfs installed, and there's no benefit because you
can easily run libguestfs and tools from the build directory.
As with Perl, you can now set INSTALLDIRS to control where Ruby places
its files (ie. in the site dir, which is the default, or in the vendor
dir).
The difference in file layout between 'make install' and
'make INSTALLDIRS=vendor install' is shown below (for Fedora 18).
--- /tmp/site 2013-03-14 12:14:35.740015694 +0000
+++ /tmp/vendor 2013-03-14 12:14:13.668093944 +0000
@@ -119,21 +119,20 @@
./usr/lib64/ocaml/guestfs/mlguestfs.cmxa
./usr/lib64/ocaml/stublibs/dllmlguestfs.so
./usr/lib64/ocaml/stublibs/dllmlguestfs.so.owner
-./usr/lib64/perl5/auto/Sys/Guestfs/Guestfs.bs
-./usr/lib64/perl5/auto/Sys/Guestfs/Guestfs.so
-./usr/lib64/perl5/auto/Sys/Guestfs/.packlist
./usr/lib64/perl5/perllocal.pod
-./usr/lib64/perl5/Sys/bindtests.pl
-./usr/lib64/perl5/Sys/Guestfs/Lib.pm
-./usr/lib64/perl5/Sys/Guestfs.pm
+./usr/lib64/perl5/vendor_perl/auto/Sys/Guestfs/Guestfs.bs
+./usr/lib64/perl5/vendor_perl/auto/Sys/Guestfs/Guestfs.so
+./usr/lib64/perl5/vendor_perl/auto/Sys/Guestfs/.packlist
+./usr/lib64/perl5/vendor_perl/Sys/bindtests.pl
+./usr/lib64/perl5/vendor_perl/Sys/Guestfs/Lib.pm
+./usr/lib64/perl5/vendor_perl/Sys/Guestfs.pm
./usr/lib64/php/modules/guestfs_php.so
./usr/lib64/pkgconfig/libguestfs-gobject-1.0.pc
./usr/lib64/pkgconfig/libguestfs.pc
./usr/lib64/python2.7/site-packages/guestfs.py
./usr/lib64/python2.7/site-packages/libguestfsmod.la
./usr/lib64/python2.7/site-packages/libguestfsmod.so
-./usr/local/lib64/ruby/site_ruby/_guestfs.so
-./usr/local/share/ruby/site_ruby/guestfs.rb
+./usr/lib64/ruby/vendor_ruby/_guestfs.so
./usr/sbin/libguestfs-make-fixed-appliance
./usr/share/doc/libguestfs/example-debian-netinst-cd.xml
./usr/share/doc/libguestfs/example-debian.xml
@@ -406,3 +405,4 @@
./usr/share/man/uk/man3/guestfs-perl.3
./usr/share/man/uk/man3/guestfs-python.3
./usr/share/man/uk/man3/guestfs-ruby.3
+./usr/share/ruby/vendor_ruby/guestfs.rb
For prompting me to fix this, thanks: Hilko Bengen.
'make extra-tests' was a monolithic set of tests that did all sorts of
things: valgrind, tests over local guests, tests with upstream qemu,
tests with upstream libvirt, tests with the appliance attach method.
This made it hard to perform individual tests, eg. just valgrind
testing. It was also hard to maintain because the tests were not
located in the same directories as the programs and sometimes
duplicated tests that were run elsewhere.
This commit splits up 'make extra-tests' into 5 separate targets:
make check-valgrind # run a subset of tests under valgrind
make check-valgrind-local-guests # test under valgrind with local guests
make check-with-appliance # test with attach-method == appliance
make check-with-upstream-qemu # test with an alternate/upstream qemu
make check-with-upstream-libvirt # test with an alternate/upstream libvirt
(You can also still run 'make extra-tests' which is now simply
a rule that runs the above 5 targets in order).
This replaces everything that was in the tests/extra directory,
so that has now gone.
This command was not tested at all. As a result we didn't notice that
it was broken for a long time (RHBZ#853159).
This adds a test that drives the command through a pty. It uses the
perl 'Expect' module, although this is not required.
This uses Pod::Simple so it properly parses the input POD and can
generate proper custom output as required specifically by libguestfs.
One immediate benefit is that links between and within manual pages
now work mostly correctly.
Earlier versions of qemu contained a bug in the qcow2 code which
causes qemu to segfault when shutting down and flushing its internal
cache, and this can result in data loss.
QEMU 1.0 was released at the end of 2011.
Remove all the cruft about detecting broken -machine type which
was only required for QEMU 0.15.
This also reverts commit 30ecbf3ec2.
Even on ARM you can pass -machine accel=kvm:tcg and qemu does the
right thing, so I'm not sure why we wanted to disable that.
Note that this support is optional: To enable it, install the
ocaml-gettext library from
http://forge.ocamlcore.org/projects/ocaml-gettext . If this library
is not installed, then configure detects this and inserts dummy
gettext functions that do nothing.
Netpbm and icoutils (wrestool) have always been dependencies. Since
they are not always present, make these into optional dependencies
(which they were, sort of, before).
Also document these dependencies in the README file.
This switches virt-sysprep to use guestmount instead of guestfish.
This makes the script a little bit easier to modify for sysadmins.
This commit also adds:
- dhcp-client-state
- dhcp-server-state
- logfiles
- random-seed
- smolt-uuid
- yum-uuid
SELinux relabelling, and a section on security in the manual page.
Update and verify the list of requirements, by checking it against
both configure.ac and the Fedora specfile.
Remove some obsolete sections that covered historical ground.