Re: Set hostname of guest during installation time

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On 5/5/20 8:11 AM, john doe wrote:
On 3/30/2020 4:10 PM, Michal Prívozník wrote:
On 30. 3. 2020 15:26, john doe wrote:
On 3/30/2020 1:20 PM, Andrea Bolognani wrote:
On Mon, 2020-03-30 at 12:04 +0200, Michal Prívozník wrote:
On 27. 3. 2020 20:49, john doe wrote:
If my understanding is correct, using 'try06' or 'debian' should do the
same thing?

Yes, that is the idea. However, these plugins were not introduced at the
same time. I think that especially Debian has delayed libvirt_guest
plugin. You can check if both plugins exist:

ls /usr/lib64/libnss_libvirt*

/usr/lib64/libnss_libvirt_guest.so.2
/usr/lib64/libnss_libvirt.so.2

Note that paths are different in Debian-based distros, so the correct
ones in this case are actually

   /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libnss_libvirt.so.2
   /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libnss_libvirt_guest.so.2


I have upgraded that Buster host to Bullseye, so I have now a 6... version.
I have also the above two modules.

I'm still not able to use 'libvirt_guest' though:

--- Guest output (try06):

root@try06:~# cat /etc/hostname
try06

--- Host output (host):

root@host:# grep hosts: /etc/ns*
hosts: libvirt_guest
root@host:# virsh net-dhcp-leases default
  Expiry Time           MAC address         Protocol   IP address
    Hostname   Client ID or DUID
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------   2020-03-30 16:03:41   52:54:00:d4:e6:f0   ipv4 192.168.122.137/24
   -          -


root@host:# getent hosts try06; echo $?
2


What am I missing?

Hold on. 'libvirt_guest' NSS plugin is supposed to translate libvirt
names to IP addresses. For instance:

   virsh start myDomain; ssh myDomain

The 'libvirt' NSS plugin is supposed to translate hostnames as sent by
guests to IP addresses. These two can be viewed as the following:

libvirt_guest: virsh domifaddr --source lease $dom
       libvirt: virsh net-dhcp-leases $net | grep $hostname

And this is where it gets interesting. In your previous e-mails,
net-dhcp-leases (aka 'libvirt' plugin) worked because the guest did send
hostname when doing DHCP. Now it doesn't (see '-' under 'Hostname' in
the output). Therefore, the 'libvirt' NSS plugin won't work.

And 'libvirt_guest' translates names of guests as seen by libvirt, i.e.
names you pass to virsh commands. These are unrelated to '/etc/hostname'
within guest. But hopefully, you haven't renamed your guest since then
and it is still named 'try06', that is virsh list --all produces 'try06'
in the list. If this is all true, can you share the output of:

   strace $(which getent) hosts try06



Thanks to the friendly feedback/support from Michal Privoznik and Andrea
Bolognani, I managed to get it working with the below command:

virt-install --name=try06 --pxe --os-variant=debian10 --network
network=default

What I think I mist while trying to implement the recommendation given
in here is that, if you change the network by doing 'virsh edit default'
the name of the interface in the guest might also change.

I don't understand why libvirt_guest won't work if a network bridge is used?

Because interface type='bridge' and type='network' are not the same. The libvirt_guest plugin needs a list of MAC addresses because it tries to find a match across libvirt domain name -> list of domain's MAC addresses -> list of leases. And whenever a domain is started, all its interfaces with type='network' will notify the corresponding network and the code that handles libvirt networks will dump the MAC address into a file for the NSS plugin to use. But, if plain type='bridge' is used then all that is done is that the TAP is plugged into the bridge (which ensures the connectivity), but does not notify the network which in turn means that the MAC dumping code is not run and hence the NSS plugin won't find a match.

Is there a reason why you are using interface type='bridge' with the default network?




Also, from (1):

"virsh net-dhcp-leases $network
where $network iterates through
all running network..."

If I understand correctly, the below should list all running network:

$ virsh net-dhcp-leases $network
error: command 'net-dhcp-leases' requires <network> option

This lists DHCP leases for given network. To list all running networks you can use 'virsh net-list'.



In my case, I substituted '$network' by 'default'.

It doesn't look like you did, otherwise you would either get leases or an error that there is no network named "default".

# virsh net-dhcp-leases
error: command 'net-dhcp-leases' requires <network> option
# virsh net-dhcp-leases ""
error: Failed to get option 'network': Option argument is empty

# virsh net-dhcp-leases default
Expiry Time MAC address Protocol IP address Hostname Client ID or DUID
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2020-05-05 09:01:11 52:54:00:a4:6f:91 ipv4 192.168.122.3/24 fedora 01:52:54:00:a4:6f:91


Michal





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