lhecking at users.sourceforge.net
2014-Sep-18 09:45 UTC
[CentOS-virt] libvirt/kvm changes /dev/ttyS0
A new kvm guest on a CentOS6.5 x84_64 host is set up to make use of the serial port (virt-install ... --serial dev,path=/dev/ttyS0) <serial type='dev'> <source path='/dev/ttyS0'/> <target port='0'/> </serial> <console type='dev'> <source path='/dev/ttyS0'/> <target type='serial' port='0'/> </console> When I launch the vm, setroubleshootd goes into overdrive and creates massive logs, and /var/log/messages starts growing significantly also. The reason is that as soon as the vm starts, ownership and context of /dev/ttyS0 on the host are being reset. Why is that, and how can I prevent it from happening? Should be: crw-rw----. root dialout system_u:object_r:tty_device_t:s0 /dev/ttyS0 Changes to: crw-rw----. qemu qemu unconfined_u:object_r:svirt_image_t:s0:c9,c796 /dev/ttyS0
lhecking at users.sourceforge.net
2014-Sep-19 14:15 UTC
[CentOS-virt] libvirt/kvm changes /dev/ttyS0
> When I launch the vm, setroubleshootd goes into overdrive and creates massive > logs, and /var/log/messages starts growing significantly also. The reason is > that as soon as the vm starts, ownership and context of /dev/ttyS0 on the host > are being reset. Why is that, and how can I prevent it from happening? > > Should be: > > crw-rw----. root dialout system_u:object_r:tty_device_t:s0 /dev/ttyS0 > > Changes to: > > crw-rw----. qemu qemu unconfined_u:object_r:svirt_image_t:s0:c9,c796 /dev/ttyS0One way of doing this: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=596553#c4 (no. 1). This avoids resetting of group ownership to root instead of dialout. In addition, I had to add qemu to the disk group to access the /dev/dm* device that serves as vm disk. Also found qemu_use_comm and set it to on, for what it's worth ...