* EL8 uses rng-tools, not haveged, to gather entropy
* packaging: use rng-tools/rngd consistently across all distros
Signed-off-by: Rohit Yadav <rohit.yadav@shapeblue.com>
Co-authored-by: Rohit Yadav <rohit.yadav@shapeblue.com>
createtmplt.sh will use file, and setup-sysvm-tmplt will use which. this is log:
/usr/share/cloudstack-common/scripts/storage/secondary/setup-sysvm-tmplt: line 74: which: command not found
/usr/share/cloudstack-common/scripts/storage/secondary/createtmplt.sh: line 56: file: command not found
/usr/share/cloudstack-common/scripts/storage/secondary/createtmplt.sh: line 75: file: command not found
/usr/share/cloudstack-common/scripts/storage/secondary/createtmplt.sh: line 42: file: command not found
/usr/share/cloudstack-common/scripts/storage/secondary/setup-sysvm-tmplt: line 74: which: command not found
/usr/share/cloudstack-common/scripts/storage/secondary/createtmplt.sh: line 56: file: command not found
/usr/share/cloudstack-common/scripts/storage/secondary/createtmplt.sh: line 75: file: command not found
/usr/share/cloudstack-common/scripts/storage/secondary/createtmplt.sh: line 42: file: command not found
when no which and file, systemvm template can not be import correctly(not decompressed, stay bzip2), then libvirtd will report error:
Could not open backing file: Image is not in qcow2 format
Then systemvm can not be started.
This PR has 3 improvements for the Linstor primary storage driver:
- Create a separate jar of it and move all Linstor related classes into the correct project (similar to the storpool plugin)
- Add aux properties for Cloudstack volumes in Linstor to make it easier to identify them in Linstor
- Add support for IOPs settings with the Linstor storage plugin
This PR introduces a feature designed to allow CloudStack to manage a generic volume encryption setting. The encryption is handled transparently to the guest OS, and is intended to handle VM guest data encryption at rest and possibly over the wire, though the actual encryption implementation is up to the primary storage driver.
In some cases cloud customers may still prefer to maintain their own guest-level volume encryption, if they don't trust the cloud provider. However, for private cloud cases this greatly simplifies the guest OS experience in terms of running volume encryption for guests without the user having to manage keys, deal with key servers and guest booting being dependent on network connectivity to them (i.e. Tang), etc, especially in cases where users are attaching/detaching data disks and moving them between VMs occasionally.
The feature can be thought of as having two parts - the API/control plane (which includes scheduling aspects), and the storage driver implementation.
This initial PR adds the encryption setting to disk offerings and service offerings (for root volume), and implements encryption support for KVM SharedMountPoint, NFS, Local, and ScaleIO storage pools.
NOTE: While not required, operations can be significantly sped up by ensuring that hosts have the `rng-tools` package and service installed and running on the management server and hypervisors. For EL hosts the service is `rngd` and for Debian it is `rng-tools`. In particular, the use of SecureRandom for generating volume passphrases can be slow if there isn't a good source of entropy. This could affect testing and build environments, and otherwise would only affect users who actually use the encryption feature. If you find tests or volume creates blocking on encryption, check this first.
### Management Server
##### API
* createDiskOffering now has an 'encrypt' Boolean
* createServiceOffering now has an 'encryptroot' Boolean. The 'root' suffix is added here in case there is ever any other need to encrypt something related to the guest configuration, like the RAM of a VM. This has been refactored to deal with the new separation of service offering from disk offering internally.
* listDiskOfferings shows encryption support on each offering, and has an encrypt boolean to choose to list only offerings that do or do not support encryption
* listServiceOfferings shows encryption support on each offering, and has an encrypt boolean to choose to list only offerings that do or do not support encryption
* listHosts now shows encryption support of each hypervisor host via `encryptionsupported`
* Volumes themselves don't show encryption on/off, rather the offering should be referenced. This follows the same pattern as other disk offering based settings such as the IOPS of the volume.
##### Volume functions
A decent effort has been made to ensure that the most common volume functions have either been cleanly supported or blocked. However, for the first release it is advised to mark this feature as *experimental*, as the code base is complex and there are certainly edge cases to be found.
Many of these features could eventually be supported over time, such as creating templates from encrypted volumes, but the effort and size of the change is already overwhelming.
Supported functions:
* Data Volume create
* VM root volume create
* VM root volume reinstall
* Offline volume snapshot/restore
* Migration of VM with storage (e.g. local storage VM migration)
* Resize volume
* Detach/attach volume
Blocked functions:
* Online volume snapshot
* VM snapshot w/memory
* Scheduled snapshots (would fail when VM is running)
* Disk offering migration to offerings that don't have matching encryption
* Creating template from encrypted volume
* Creating volume from encrypted volume
* Volume extraction (would we decrypt it first, or expose the key? Probably the former).
##### Primary Storage Support
For storage developers, adding encryption support involves:
1. Updating the `StoragePoolType` for your primary storage to advertise encryption support. This is used during allocation of storage to match storage types that support encryption to storage that supports it.
2. Implementing encryption feature when your `PrimaryDataStoreDriver` is called to perform volume lifecycle functions on volumes that are requesting encryption. You are free to do what your storage supports - this could be as simple as calling a storage API with the right flag when creating a volume. Or (as is the case with the KVM storage types), as complex as managing volume details directly at the hypervisor host. The data objects passed to the storage driver will contain volume passphrases, if encryption is requested.
##### Scheduling
For the KVM implementations specified above, we are dependent on the KVM hosts having support for volume encryption tools. As such, the hosts `StartupRoutingCommand` has been modified to advertise whether the host supports encryption. This is done via a probe during agent startup to look for functioning `cryptsetup` and support in `qemu-img`. This is also visible via the listHosts API and the host details in the UI. This was patterned after other features that require hypervisor support such as UEFI.
The `EndPointSelector` interface and `DefaultEndpointSelector` have had new methods added, which allow the caller to ask for endpoints that support encryption. This can be used by storage drivers to find the proper hosts to send storage commands that involve encryption. Not all volume activities will require a host to support encryption (for example a snapshot backup is a simple file copy), and this is the reason why the interface has been modified to allow for the storage driver to decide, rather than just passing the data objects to the EndpointSelector and letting the implementation decide.
VM scheduling has also been modified. When a VM start is requested, if any volume that requires encryption is attached, it will filter out hosts that don't support encryption.
##### DB Changes
A volume whose disk offering enables encryption will get a passphrase generated for it before its first use. This is stored in the new 'passphrase' table, and is encrypted using the CloudStack installation's standard configured DB encryption. A field has been added to the volumes table, referencing this passphrase, and a foreign key added to ensure passphrases that are referenced can't be removed from the database. The volumes table now also contains an encryption format field, which is set by the implementer of the encryption and used as it sees fit.
#### KVM Agent
For the KVM storage pool types supported, the encryption has been implemented at Qemu itself, using the built-in LUKS storage support. This means that the storage remains encrypted all the way to the VM process, and decrypted before the block device is visible to the guest. This may not be necessary in order to implement encryption for /your/ storage pool type, maybe you have a kernel driver that decrypts before the block device on the system, or something like that. However, it seemed like the simplest, common place to terminate the encryption, and provides the lowest surface area for decrypted guest data.
For qcow2 based storage, `qemu-img` is used to set up a qcow2 file with LUKS encryption. For block based (currently just ScaleIO storage), the `cryptsetup` utility is used to format the block device as LUKS for data disks, but `qemu-img` and its LUKS support is used for template copy.
Any volume that requires encryption will contain a passphrase ID as a byte array when handed down to the KVM agent. Care has been taken to ensure this doesn't get logged, and it is cleared after use in attempt to avoid exposing it before garbage collection occurs. On the agent side, this passphrase is used in two ways:
1. In cases where the volume experiences some libvirt interaction it is loaded into libvirt as an ephemeral, private secret and then referenced by secret UUID in any libvirt XML. This applies to things like VM startup, migration preparation, etc.
2. In cases where `qemu-img` needs to use this passphrase for volume operations, it is written to a `KeyFile` on the cloudstack agent's configured tmpfs and passed along. The `KeyFile` is a `Closeable` and when it is closed, it is deleted. This allows us to try-with-resources any volume operations and get the KeyFile removed regardless.
In order to support the advanced syntax required to handle encryption and passphrases with `qemu-img`, the `QemuImg` utility has been modified to support the new `--object` and `--image-opts` flags. These are modeled as `QemuObject` and `QemuImageOptions`. These `qemu-img` flags have been designed to supersede some of the existing, older flags being used today (such as choosing file formats and paths), and an effort could be made to switch over to these wholesale. However, for now we have instead opted to keep existing functions and do some wrapping to ensure backward compatibility, so callers of `QemuImg` can choose to use either way.
It should be noted that there are also a few different Enums that represent the encryption format for various purposes. While these are analogous in principle, they represent different things and should not be confused. For example, the supported encryption format strings for the `cryptsetup` utility has `LuksType.LUKS` while `QemuImg` has a `QemuImg.PhysicalDiskFormat.LUKS`.
Some additional effort could potentially be made to support advanced encryption configurations, such as choosing between LUKS1 and LUKS2 or changing cipher details. These may require changes all the way up through the control plane. However, in practice Libvirt and Qemu currently only support LUKS1 today. Additionally, the cipher details aren't required in order to use an encrypted volume, as they're stored in the LUKS header on the volume there is no need to store these elsewhere. As such, we need only set the one encryption format upon volume creation, which is persisted in the volumes table and then available later as needed. In the future when LUKS2 is standard and fully supported, we could move to it as the default and old volumes will still reference LUKS1 and have the headers on-disk to ensure they remain usable. We could also possibly support an automatic upgrade of the headers down the road, or a volume migration mechanism.
Every version of cryptsetup and qemu-img tested on variants of EL7 and Ubuntu that support encryption use the XTS-AES 256 cipher, which is the leading industry standard and widely used cipher today (e.g. BitLocker and FileVault).
Signed-off-by: Marcus Sorensen <mls@apple.com>
Co-authored-by: Marcus Sorensen <mls@apple.com>
* Support for live patching systemVMs and deprecating systemVM.iso. Includes:
- fix systemVM template version
- Include agent.zip, cloud-scripts.tgz to the commons package
- Support for live-patching systemVMs - CPVM, SSVM, Routers
- Fix Unit test
- Remove systemvm.iso dependency
* The following commit:
- refactors logic added to support SystemVM deployment on KVM
- Adds support to copy specific files (required for patching) to the hosts on Xenserver
- Modifies vmops method - createFileInDomr to take cleanup param
- Adds configuratble sleep param to CitrixResourceBase::connect() used to verify if telnet to specifc port is possible (if sleep is 0, then default to _sleep = 10000ms)
- Adds Command/Answer for patch systemVMs on XenServer/Xcp
* - Support to patch SystemVMs - VMWare
- Remove attaching systemvm.iso to systemVMs
- Modify / Refactor VMware start command to copy patch related files to the systemvms
- cleanup
* Commit comprises of:
- remove docker from systemvm template - use containerd as container runtime
- update create-k8s-binaries script to use ctr for all docker operations
- Update userdata sent to the k8s nodes
- update cksnode script, run during patching of the cks/k8s nodes
* Add ssh to k8s nodes details in the Access tab on the UI
* test
* Refactor ca/cert patching logic
* Commit comprises of the following changes:
- Use restart network/VPC API to patch routers
- use livePatch API support patching of only cpvm/ssvm
- add timeout to the keystore setup/import script
* remove all references of systemvm.iso
* Fix keystore-cert-import invocation + refactor cert timeout in CP/SS VMs
* fix script timeout
* Refactor cert patching for systemVMs + update keystore-cert-import script + patch-sysvms script + remove patchSysvmCommand from networkelementcommand
* remove commented code + change core user to cloud for cks nodes
* Update ownership of ssh directory
* NEED TO DISCUSS - add on the fly template conversion as an ExecStartPre action (systemd)
* Add UI changes + move changes from patch file to runcmd
* test: validate performance for template modification during seeding
* create vms folder in cloudstack-commons directory - debian rules
* remove logic for on the fly template convert + update k8s test
* fix syntax issue - causing issue with shared network tests
* Code cleanup
* refactor patching logic - certs
* move logic of fixing rootdiskcontroller from upgrade to kubernetes service
* add livepatch option to restart network & vpc
* smooth upgrade of cks clusters
* Support for live patching systemVMs and deprecating systemVM.iso. Includes:
- fix systemVM template version
- Include agent.zip, cloud-scripts.tgz to the commons package
- Support for live-patching systemVMs - CPVM, SSVM, Routers
- Fix Unit test
- Remove systemvm.iso dependency
* The following commit:
- refactors logic added to support SystemVM deployment on KVM
- Adds support to copy specific files (required for patching) to the hosts on Xenserver
- Modifies vmops method - createFileInDomr to take cleanup param
- Adds configuratble sleep param to CitrixResourceBase::connect() used to verify if telnet to specifc port is possible (if sleep is 0, then default to _sleep = 10000ms)
- Adds Command/Answer for patch systemVMs on XenServer/Xcp
* - Support to patch SystemVMs - VMWare
- Remove attaching systemvm.iso to systemVMs
- Modify / Refactor VMware start command to copy patch related files to the systemvms
- cleanup
* Commit comprises of:
- remove docker from systemvm template - use containerd as container runtime
- update create-k8s-binaries script to use ctr for all docker operations
- Update userdata sent to the k8s nodes
- update cksnode script, run during patching of the cks/k8s nodes
* Add ssh to k8s nodes details in the Access tab on the UI
* test
* Refactor ca/cert patching logic
* Commit comprises of the following changes:
- Use restart network/VPC API to patch routers
- use livePatch API support patching of only cpvm/ssvm
- add timeout to the keystore setup/import script
* remove all references of systemvm.iso
* Fix keystore-cert-import invocation + refactor cert timeout in CP/SS VMs
* fix script timeout
* Refactor cert patching for systemVMs + update keystore-cert-import script + patch-sysvms script + remove patchSysvmCommand from networkelementcommand
* remove commented code + change core user to cloud for cks nodes
* Update ownership of ssh directory
* NEED TO DISCUSS - add on the fly template conversion as an ExecStartPre action (systemd)
* Add UI changes + move changes from patch file to runcmd
* test: validate performance for template modification during seeding
* create vms folder in cloudstack-commons directory - debian rules
* remove logic for on the fly template convert + update k8s test
* fix syntax issue - causing issue with shared network tests
* Code cleanup
* add cgroup config for containerd
* add systemd config for kubelet
* add additional info during image registry config
* address comments
* add temp links of download.cloudstack.org
* address part of the comments
* address comments
* update containerd config - as version has upgraded to 1.5 from 1.4.12 in 4.17.0
* address comments - simplify
* fix vue3 related icon changes
* allow network commands when router template version is lower but is patched
* add internal LB to the list of routers to be patched on network restart with live patch
* add unit tests for API param validations and new helper utilities - file scp & checksum validations
* perform patching only for non-user i.e., system VMs
* add test to validate params
* remove unused import
* add column to domain_router to display software version and support networkrestart with livePatch from router view
* Requires upgrade column to consider package (cloud-scripts) checksum to identify if true/false
* use router software version instead of checksum
* show N/A if no software version reported i.e., in upgraded envs
* fix deb failure
* update pom to official links of systemVM template
* StorPool storage plugin
Adds volume storage plugin for StorPool SDS
* Added support for alternative endpoint
Added option to switch to alternative endpoint for SP primary storage
* renamed all classes from Storpool to StorPool
* Address review
* removed unnecessary else
* Removed check about the storage provider
We don't need this check, we'll get if the snapshot is on StorPool be
its name from path
* Check that current plugin supports all functionality before upgrade CS
* Smoke tests for StorPool plug-in
* Fixed conflicts
* Fixed conflicts and added missed Apache license header
* Removed whitespaces in smoke tests
* Added StorPool plugin jar for Debian
the StorPool jar will be included into cloudstack-agent package for
Debian/Ubuntu
* Create profiles to download systemvm-templates
* Rename profiles
* Add support to pass necessary flags to the packaging jobs
* Escape flags
Co-authored-by: GutoVeronezi <daniel@scclouds.com.br>
Co-authored-by: Pearl Dsilva <pearl1594@gmail.com>
* packaging: display First Install and Onboarding Message
* Update #5851: Update as per Rohit's comments
* Update #5851: display package name in help message
* Update #5851: display links of installed cloudstack version on UI
* Update #5851: fix vue warnings
Support for centos7 and centos8
Prior PR #2915 causes the cloudstack-usage daemon to not be able to find the mysql-ha jar file.
This happens because the /etc/default/cloudstack-usage file points to the old location for the mysql-ha jar file, and thus is unable to load it. This prior PR installs this jar into a more common area with other jar files, and thus is not really a desired location for the cloudstack-usage daemon to get it from, as it will cause cloudstack-usage to load other plugins that it doesn't need.
Fixes: #3974
Updates the DB properties (with strict / full property string search) having master and slave(s), with source and replica(s) respectively on upgrade (for inclusiveness).
Signed-off-by: Suresh Kumar Anaparti <suresh.anaparti@shapeblue.com>
This changes deb and rpm packaging to build the UI using npm and bundle
it in the `cloudstack-management` package and a new `cloudstack-ui`
package. The `cloudstack-ui` package will install the UI under
`/usr/share/cloudstack-ui/`. For both packages the config.json will not
be overridden on upgrade and hosted at /etc/cloudstack/management
for the cloudstack-mangement package, and at /etc/cloudstack/ui for the
cloudstack-ui package. The cloudstack-ui package is for advanced users
who only want the UI want to setup reverse proxy (separate hosting of UI).
Signed-off-by: Rohit Yadav <rohit.yadav@shapeblue.com>
* DB : Add support for MySQL 8
- Splits commands to create user and grant access on database, the old
statement is no longer supported by MySQL 8.x
- `NO_AUTO_CREATE_USER` is no longer supported by MySQL 8.x so remove
that from db.properties conn parameters
For mysql-server 8.x setup the following changes were added/tested to
make it work with CloudStack in /etc/mysql/mysql.conf.d/mysqld.cnf and
then restart the mysql-server process:
server_id = 1
sql-mode="STRICT_TRANS_TABLES,NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION,ERROR_FOR_DIVISION_BY_ZERO,NO_ZERO_DATE,NO_ZERO_IN_DATE,NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION"
innodb_rollback_on_timeout=1
innodb_lock_wait_timeout=600
max_connections=1000
log-bin=mysql-bin
binlog-format = 'ROW'
default-authentication-plugin=mysql_native_password
Notice the last line above, this is to reset the old password based
authentication used by MySQL 5.x.
Developers can set empty password as follows:
> sudo mysql -u root
ALTER USER 'root'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY '';
In libvirt repository, there are two related commits
2019-08-23 13:13 Daniel P. Berrangé ● rpm: don't enable socket activation in upgrade if --listen present
2019-08-22 14:52 Daniel P. Berrangé ● remote: forbid the --listen arg when systemd socket activation
In libvirt.spec.in
/bin/systemctl mask libvirtd.socket >/dev/null 2>&1 || :
/bin/systemctl mask libvirtd-ro.socket >/dev/null 2>&1 || :
/bin/systemctl mask libvirtd-admin.socket >/dev/null 2>&1 || :
/bin/systemctl mask libvirtd-tls.socket >/dev/null 2>&1 || :
/bin/systemctl mask libvirtd-tcp.socket >/dev/null 2>&1 || :
Co-authored-by: Wei Zhou <w.zhou@global.leaseweb.com>
Co-authored-by: Abhishek Kumar <abhishek.mrt22@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Rohit Yadav <rohit.yadav@shapeblue.com>