"Daniel P. Berrange" <berra...@redhat.com> writes: > On Tue, Dec 04, 2012 at 01:13:46PM -0600, Anthony Liguori wrote: >> "Daniel P. Berrange" <berra...@redhat.com> writes: >> >> > On Tue, Dec 04, 2012 at 03:42:32PM +0100, Ján Tomko wrote: >> >> On 12/04/12 12:46, Luiz Capitulino wrote: >> >> > On Mon, 03 Dec 2012 16:55:35 +0100 >> >> > Ján Tomko <jto...@redhat.com> wrote: >> >> > >> >> >> Hello, >> >> >> >> >> >> is there a way to check if QEMU was compiled with --enable-seccomp via >> >> >> QMP? >> >> > >> >> > Not that I'm aware of. Could you describe your use-case? >> >> >> >> It's for libvirt. The detection is broken since the switch from parsing >> >> -help output to QMP and I wanted to fix it. >> >> >> >> Assuming it's supported if we do capabilities detection via QMP (since >> >> libvirt 1.0.0 and QEMU 1.2) would work except for this case: >> >> If seccomp sandbox was requested in /etc/libvirt/qemu.conf, but it was >> >> compiled out from qemu, libvirt would try to run QEMU with -sandbox on >> >> instead of printing an error earlier. >> > >> > In the absence of any way to detect it via QMP, libvirt should fallback >> > to hardcoding it based on the version number. This presumes that QEMU was >> > built with it enabled in configure, but we've no other option for current >> > released 1.2/1.3 versions. >> >> echo quit | qemu -machine none -S -monitor stdio -vnc none -sandbox on >> >> A non-zero execute means QEMU doesn't support the option. This will >> work for any new command line option introduction and can be considered >> a "supported" way of probing for whether options are supported. > > One of the significant benefits to libvirt of the QMP based feature > detection, was that we no longer have to invoke QEMU multiple times > to query different data. I don't want to regress in this regard, > because invoking QEMU many times has a noticable performance impact > for some applications eg virt-sandbox were even 100ms delays are > relevant. So while what you describe does work, I don't think it > is a satisfactory approach for libvirt.
Okay, so in terms of what exists today, I don't have a better option. But we could add: { 'enum': 'ConfigEntryType', 'data': [ 'number', 'string', 'bool', 'size' ] } { 'type': 'ConfigEntry', 'data': { 'name': 'str', 'type': 'ConfigEntryType' } } { 'type': 'ConfigSection', 'data': { 'name': 'str', 'fields': [ 'ConfigEntry' ] } } { 'command': 'query-config-schema', 'returns': [ 'ConfigSection' ] } This technically introspects config sections but obviously could be used to detect the availability of -sandbox. If it's useful, I can take a quick swing at implementing (or someone else certainly could). Regards, Anthony Liguori > > Regards, > Daniel > -- > |: http://berrange.com -o- http://www.flickr.com/photos/dberrange/ :| > |: http://libvirt.org -o- http://virt-manager.org :| > |: http://autobuild.org -o- http://search.cpan.org/~danberr/ :| > |: http://entangle-photo.org -o- http://live.gnome.org/gtk-vnc :|