Lars Kellogg-Stedman
writes:
> I ran into an odd problem today. I wanted to share it here in the
> hopes of maybe saving someone else some lost time.
>
> When you run libvirtd as an unprivileged user (e.g., if you target
> qemu:///session from a non-root account), then libvirt will open a
> unix
On Thu, Mar 10, 2016 at 12:37:31PM +, Daniel P. Berrange wrote:
> On Wed, Mar 09, 2016 at 01:01:40PM -0500, Lars Kellogg-Stedman wrote:
> > I ran into an odd problem today. I wanted to share it here in the
> > hopes of maybe saving someone else some lost time.
> >
> > When you run libvirtd as
On Wed, Mar 09, 2016 at 01:01:40PM -0500, Lars Kellogg-Stedman wrote:
> I ran into an odd problem today. I wanted to share it here in the
> hopes of maybe saving someone else some lost time.
>
> When you run libvirtd as an unprivileged user (e.g., if you target
> qemu:///session from a non-root a
On Wed, Mar 09, 2016 at 01:01:40PM -0500, Lars Kellogg-Stedman wrote:
> I ran into an odd problem today. I wanted to share it here in the
> hopes of maybe saving someone else some lost time.
>
> When you run libvirtd as an unprivileged user (e.g., if you target
> qemu:///session from a non-root a
I ran into an odd problem today. I wanted to share it here in the
hopes of maybe saving someone else some lost time.
When you run libvirtd as an unprivileged user (e.g., if you target
qemu:///session from a non-root account), then libvirt will open a
unix domain socket in one of two places:
- If