Digimer
2020-Oct-01 01:42 UTC
Determining when a guest booted / how long it's been running
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Michal Prívozník
2020-Oct-01 05:21 UTC
Determining when a guest booted / how long it's been running
On 10/1/20 3:42 AM, Digimer wrote:> Hi all, > > ? Is there a way to tell when a tool made a change to guest (ie: used > virt-manager to make a change)? Following, is there a way to check to > see if there are changes queued to take effect when the guest next reboots? >You can listen for events. For changes to inactive XML you will get VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_DEFINED+VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_DEFINED_UPDATED lifecycle event (+reason) and for changes to live XML (like hotplug and hotunplug) you'll get DEVICE_ADDED or DEVICE_REMOVED. But there is no API/virsh command that you could call to get the timestamp of last modification. You have to listen for events. And the second question - you can dump live and inactive XML and see if there is any difference (modulo runtime configuration from live XML). The live XML should be strictly bigger than inactive XML, meaning live XML should be inactive XML + runtime info. But again, no API there, because changes to inactive XML can be done any time - libvirt keeps live and inactive XMLs separately.> ? If either of the above are not possible, is there a way to see when a > guest last booted or how long a guest has been running?Again, if listening to evens - libvirt emits one when a guest is started. But I don't think we store a timestamp of start anywhere nor expose it through an API. Maybe there is some indirect way? Michal
wferi@niif.hu
2020-Oct-01 06:29 UTC
Re: Determining when a guest booted / how long it's been running
daggs <daggs@gmx.com> writes:> I'd assume that saying vm running you mean that the os is up and > running too. I have similar need, I was able to get something as such > to work using virsh console when the guest was a linux with serial > console support enabled. I wasn't able to get this to work in a > script as I was never able to terminate the console seesion as virsh > console wasn't able to send the termination combination properly.I wouldn't have assumed this meaning, but running off the tangent anyway: I think installing a guest agent could help solving this problem. However, if you want something extremely lightweight, the following (a custom one-line guest agent if you wish) worked for me: 1. Add a channel with a descriptive name to the guest config: <channel type="unix"> <target type="virtio" name="startup_signal"/> </channel> 2. After starting the domain, query the assigned socket path: virsh dumpxml $domain | xmllint --nonet --xpath \ "string(/domain/devices/channel[@type='unix' and target/@name='startup_signal']/source/@path)" -) 3. Then wait for the signal (and optionally acknowledge it): socat UNIX-CONNECT:"$socket_path" \ SYSTEM:'read msg id && [ $msg = ready ] && echo ack $id' This will wait until you send the signal from the chosen point of the guest bootup procedure via something like: port=/dev/virtio-ports/startup_signal msg=foobar reply="$(echo "ready $msg" | socat STDIO "$port")" [ "($reply)" = "(ack $msg)" ] # for checking proper acknowledgment I folded this into a oneshot systemd service on Linux, but the implementation should be similarly simple under any OS. -- Feri
Digimer
2020-Oct-01 16:24 UTC
Re: Determining when a guest booted / how long it's been running
On 2020-10-01 1:21 a.m., Michal Prívozník wrote:> On 10/1/20 3:42 AM, Digimer wrote: >> Hi all, >> >> Is there a way to tell when a tool made a change to guest (ie: used >> virt-manager to make a change)? Following, is there a way to check to >> see if there are changes queued to take effect when the guest next >> reboots? >> > > You can listen for events. For changes to inactive XML you will get > VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_DEFINED+VIR_DOMAIN_EVENT_DEFINED_UPDATED lifecycle > event (+reason) and for changes to live XML (like hotplug and hotunplug) > you'll get DEVICE_ADDED or DEVICE_REMOVED. > > But there is no API/virsh command that you could call to get the > timestamp of last modification. You have to listen for events. > > And the second question - you can dump live and inactive XML and see if > there is any difference (modulo runtime configuration from live XML). > The live XML should be strictly bigger than inactive XML, meaning live > XML should be inactive XML + runtime info. But again, no API there, > because changes to inactive XML can be done any time - libvirt keeps > live and inactive XMLs separately. > >> If either of the above are not possible, is there a way to see when >> a guest last booted or how long a guest has been running? > > Again, if listening to evens - libvirt emits one when a guest is > started. But I don't think we store a timestamp of start anywhere nor > expose it through an API. Maybe there is some indirect way? > > MichalThanks, Michal. Now I know not to keep looking. I do infer the boot time (explained in my reply to daggs and feri. In brief, when we notice a server is running, that had last been seen off, we use the pid to get the runtime in seconds and subtract that from the current time to get a boot time. -- Digimer Papers and Projects: https://alteeve.com/w/ "I am, somehow, less interested in the weight and convolutions of Einstein’s brain than in the near certainty that people of equal talent have lived and died in cotton fields and sweatshops." - Stephen Jay Gould
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