This fixes issue of enabling dynamic roles based on the global setting
only. This also fixes application of the default role/permissions mapping
on upgrade from 4.8 and previous versions to 4.9+.
Previously, it would make additional check to ensure commands.properties
is not in the classpath however this creates confusion for admins who
may skip/skim through the rn/docs and assume that mere changing the
global settings was not enough.
Signed-off-by: Rohit Yadav <rohit.yadav@shapeblue.com>
This feature allows changing permission for existing role permissions, as those were static and could not be changed once created. It also provides the ability to change these permissions in the UI using a drop down menu for each permission rule, in which admin can select ‘Allow’ or ‘Deny’ permission.
Changes in the API:
This feature modifies behaviour of updateRolePermission API method:
New optional parameters ‘ruleid’ and ‘permission’ are introduced, they are mutual exclusive to ‘ruleorder’ parameter. This defines two use cases:
Update role permission: ‘ruleid’ and ‘permission’ parameters needed
Update rules order: ‘ruleorder’ parameter needed
Parameter ‘ruleorder’ is now optional
updateRolePermission providing ‘ruleorder’ parameter should be sent via POST
Default value of the account level global config vmsnapshot.expire.interval is -1 that conforms to legacy behaviour. A positive value will expire the VM snapshots for the respective account in that many hours.
CloudStack has several background polling tasks that are spread across
the codebase, the aim of this work is to provide a single manager to
handle submission, execution and handling of background tasks. With
the framework implemented, existing oobm background task has been
refactored to use this manager.
Signed-off-by: Rohit Yadav <rohit.yadav@shapeblue.com>
removed code which nullifies vm_instance_id
Also modified QueryManagerImpl to ignore volume which does not have uuid. This is to avoid duplicate volume listing.
(cherry picked from commit 3cced927c4)
Signed-off-by: Rohit Yadav <rohit.yadav@shapeblue.com>
In case of vmware host failure, all the VMs including stopped VMs migrate
to the new host. For the Stopped Vms powerhost gets updated. This was
triggering HandlePowerStateReport which finally calls updatePowerState
updating update_time for the VM. This cause the capacity being reserved
for stopped VMs.
(cherry picked from commit 9d268c8cd5)
Signed-off-by: Rohit Yadav <rohit.yadav@shapeblue.com>
store ref table so builtin template is never downloaded completely
In handleSysTemplateDownload method creating template only if there exists no entry
handleTemplateSync will take care of other scenario
(cherry picked from commit 929595c114)
Signed-off-by: Rohit Yadav <rohit.yadav@shapeblue.com>
Update the volume id in volume_store_ref table to newly created volume for migration
(cherry picked from commit 42b89278e9)
Signed-off-by: Rohit Yadav <rohit.yadav@shapeblue.com>
as that snapshot will never be going to use again and also it will fill up primary storage
(cherry picked from commit 336df84f17)
Signed-off-by: Rohit Yadav <rohit.yadav@shapeblue.com>
Without this information a NPE might be triggered when starting a VR, SSVM or CP
as this information is read from the 'nics' table and causes a NPE.
During deployment we should set the IPv6 Gateway and CIDR for the NIC object so that
it is persisted to the database.
Signed-off-by: Wido den Hollander <wido@widodh.nl>
(cherry picked from commit f661b631a1)
Signed-off-by: Rohit Yadav <rohit.yadav@shapeblue.com>
This commit contains following changes
(1) add CPU CORE information in op_host_capacity
(2) add capacity name in the CapacityResponse
(3) add allocatedCapacity for CPU/MEMORY/CPU CORE for zones
(4) sort CapacityResponse by zonename and CapacityType
CLOUDSTACK-9669:egress destination cidr VR python script changes
CLOUDSTACK-9669:egress destination API and orchestration changes
CLOUDSTACK-9669: Added the ipset package in systemvm template
CLOUDSTACK-9669:Added licence header for new files
CLOUDSTACK-9669: replacing 0.0.0.0/0 with the network cidr
ipset member add with 0.0.0.0/0 fails. So 0.0.0.0/0 replaced with the network cidr.
In source cidr 0.0.0.0/0 is nothing but network cidr.
updated the default egress all cidr with network cidr
The 'force' option provided with the stopVirtualMachine API command is
often assumed to be a hard shutdown sent to the hypervisor, when in fact
it is for CloudStacks' internal use. CloudStack should be able to send
the 'hard' power-off request to the hosts.
When forced parameter on the stopVM API is true, power off (hard shutdown)
a VM. This uses initial changes from #1635 to pass the forced parameter
to hypervisor plugin via the StopCommand, and fixes force stop (poweroff)
handling for KVM, VMware and XenServer.
Signed-off-by: Rohit Yadav <rohit.yadav@shapeblue.com>
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
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).
1. Removed XenServerGuestOsMemoryMap from CitrixHelper.java
This java file was holding a static in memory map named XenServerGuestOsMemoryMap. This was the source for xenserver dynamic memory values(max and min). These values were moved to guest_os_details table.
2. DAO layer was modified to access these values.
3. VirtualMachineTo object was modified to populate the dynamic memory values.
4. addGuestOs and UpdateGuestOS api has been modified to update memory values.