As of now, CloudStack can automatically import LDAP users based on the
configuration to a domain or an account. However, any new users in LDAP
aren't automatically reflected. The admin has to manually import them
again.
This feature enables admin to map LDAP group/OU to a CloudStack domain
and any changes are reflected in ACS as well.
given is running out of capacity. If host id is specified the deployment should happen
on the given host and it should fail if the host is out of capacity. We are retrying
deployment on the entire zone without the given host id if we fail once. The retry,
which will retry on other hosts, should only be attempted if host id isn't given.
Also, introduces global setting
allow.deploy.vm.if.deploy.on.given.host.fails with which old behaviour
can be restored
* 4.9:
Do not set gateway to 0.0.0.0 for windows clients
CLOUDSTACK-9904: Fix log4j to have @AGENTLOG@ replaced
ignore bogus default gateway when a shared network is secondary the default gateway gets overwritten by a bogus one dnsmasq does the right thing and replaces it with its own default which is not good for us so check for '0.0.0.0'
Activate NioTest following changes in CLOUDSTACK-9348 PR #1549
CLOUDSTACK-9828: GetDomRVersionCommand fails to get the correct version as output Fix tries to return the output as a single command, instead of appending output from two commands
CLOUDSTACK-3223 Exception observed while creating CPVM in VMware Setup with DVS
CLOUDSTACK-9787: Fix wrong return value in NetUtils.isNetworkAWithinNetworkB
Following parameters are moved to configdepot.
snapshot.max.hourly
snapshot.max.daily
snapshot.max.weekly
snapshot.max.monthly
enable.secure.session.cookie
json.content.type
with XenServer & Local SR (Db_exn.Uniqueness_constraint_violation)
removed the host uuid from SR label so that any host which has access to
the SR(all the hosts in the same pool) can reuse the same SR
A root volume can be replaced by a different root volume without the VM it belongs to being expunged.
From dev@:
For example: Let’s say we have a system VM running on NFS primary storage. We then put this primary storage into maintenance mode, which creates the system VM (with the same name) on a different primary storage (we do not create a new row in the cloud.vm_instance table for this VM). While this VM works, the original root disk of the system VM remains on the original primary storage and is not destroyed by the code in StorageManagerImpl.cleanupStorage(boolean) in 4.10 because 4.10 (as shown above) only asks for non-root volumes to consider for deletion. In the 4.9 version of the code, the original root disk is cleaned up in StorageManagerImpl.cleanupStorage(boolean). The problem with 4.10 relying on a root disk always being deleted when the VM it belongs to is deleted is that in a situation like this that the system VM doesn’t get deleted at this point – it gets a new root disk that’s hosted by a different primary storage (so now it’s original root disk is stranded).