This resolves: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=873134 The reported problem is that an attempt to restore a saved domain that was configured with <currentMemory> and <memory> set to some (same for both) number that's not a multiple of 4096KiB results in an error like this: error: Failed to start domain libvirt_test_api error: XML error: current memory '4001792k' exceeds maximum '4000768k' (in this case, currentMemory was set to 4000000KiB). The reason for this failure is: 1) a saved image contains the "live xml" of the domain at the time of the save. 2) the live xml of a running domain gets its currentMemory (a.k.a. cur_balloon) directly from the qemu monitor rather than from the configuration of the domain. 3) the value reported by qemu is (sometimes) not exactly what was originally given to qemu when the domain was started, but is rounded up to [some indeterminate granularity] - in some versions of qemu that granularity is apparently 1MiB, and in others it is 4MiB. 4) When the XML is parsed to setup the state of the restored domain, the XML parser for <currentMemory> compares it to <memory> (which is the maximum allowed memory size for the domain) and if <currentMemory> is greater than the next 1024KiB boundary above <memory>, it spits out an error and fails. For example (from the BZ) if you start qemu on RHEL6 with both <currentMemory> and <memory> of 4000000 (this number is in KiB), libvirt's dominfo or dumpxml will report "4001792" back (rounded up to next 4MiB) for 10-20 seconds after the start, then revert to reporting "4000000". On Fedora 16 (which uses qemu-1.0), it will instead report "4000768" (rounded up to next 1MiB). On Fedora 17 (qemu-1.2), it seems to always report "4000000". ("4000000" is of course okay, and "4000768" is also okay since that's the next 1024KiB boundary above "4000000" and the parser was already allowing for that. But "4001792 is *not* okay and produces the error message.) This patch solves the problem by changing the allowed "fudge factor" when parsing from 1024KiB to 4096KiB to match the maximum up-rounding that could be done in qemu. (I had earlier thought to fix this by up-rounding <memory> in the dumpxml that's put into the saved image, but that wouldn't have fixed the case where the save image was produced by an "unfixed" libvirtd.) --- src/conf/domain_conf.c | 6 +++--- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/src/conf/domain_conf.c b/src/conf/domain_conf.c index 9f2029b..2dd4490 100644 --- a/src/conf/domain_conf.c +++ b/src/conf/domain_conf.c @@ -8644,10 +8644,10 @@ static virDomainDefPtr virDomainDefParseXML(virCapsPtr caps, if (def->mem.cur_balloon > def->mem.max_balloon) { /* Older libvirt could get into this situation due to - * rounding; if the discrepancy is less than 1MiB, we silently + * rounding; if the discrepancy is less than 4MiB, we silently * round down, otherwise we flag the issue. */ - if (VIR_DIV_UP(def->mem.cur_balloon, 1024) > - VIR_DIV_UP(def->mem.max_balloon, 1024)) { + if (VIR_DIV_UP(def->mem.cur_balloon, 4096) > + VIR_DIV_UP(def->mem.max_balloon, 4096)) { virReportError(VIR_ERR_XML_ERROR, _("current memory '%lluk' exceeds " "maximum '%lluk'"), -- 1.7.11.7 -- libvir-list mailing list libvir-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/libvir-list