d tbsky
2017-Oct-18 10:59 UTC
[libvirt-users] "virsh define" modify xml configuration file
hi: I upgrade my system from rhel 7.3 to 7.4. so libvirt upgrade to 3.2. I found command "virsh define vm.xml" sometimes modify "vm.xml". I thought the command will read vm.xml, not write to it. is this kind of behavior by design? for example vm.xml with the line <cpu mode='custom' match='exact'> will be replaced with <cpu mode='custom' match='exact' check='partial'> Regards, tbskyd
Laine Stump
2017-Oct-19 01:48 UTC
Re: [libvirt-users] "virsh define" modify xml configuration file
On 10/18/2017 06:59 AM, d tbsky wrote:> hi: > I upgrade my system from rhel 7.3 to 7.4. so libvirt upgrade to 3.2. > > I found command "virsh define vm.xml" sometimes modify "vm.xml".That command would only modify the file "vm.xml" if it was located in /etc/libvirt/qemu (or /etc/libvirt/lxc, or whatever was appropriate for the domain type) *and* the domain's <name> happened to be "vm". If that's what's happening, this email should be your warning to never directly modify or access the files in /etc/libvirt; they are files used internally by libvirt, and modifying them can lead to "unexpected" results.> I > thought the command will read vm.xml, not write to it. is this kind of > behavior by design? > > for example vm.xml with the line > > <cpu mode='custom' match='exact'> > > will be replaced with > > <cpu mode='custom' match='exact' check='partial'> > > > Regards, > tbskyd > > _______________________________________________ > libvirt-users mailing list > libvirt-users@redhat.com > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/libvirt-users >
d tbsky
2017-Oct-19 03:51 UTC
Re: [libvirt-users] "virsh define" modify xml configuration file
2017-10-19 9:48 GMT+08:00 Laine Stump <laine@laine.org>:> On 10/18/2017 06:59 AM, d tbsky wrote: >> hi: >> I upgrade my system from rhel 7.3 to 7.4. so libvirt upgrade to 3.2. >> >> I found command "virsh define vm.xml" sometimes modify "vm.xml". > > That command would only modify the file "vm.xml" if it was located in > /etc/libvirt/qemu (or /etc/libvirt/lxc, or whatever was appropriate for > the domain type) *and* the domain's <name> happened to be "vm". If > that's what's happening, this email should be your warning to never > directly modify or access the files in /etc/libvirt; they are files used > internally by libvirt, and modifying them can lead to "unexpected" results.got it. thanks a lot for the hint! Regards, tbskyd