SUSE adjustments to qemu.conf This patch contains SUSE-specific adjustments to the upstream qemu.conf configuration file. In the future, it might make sense to separate these changes into individual patches (e.g. suse-qemu-conf-secdriver.patch, suse-qemu-conf-lockmgr.patch, etc.), but for now they are all lumped together in this single patch. Index: libvirt-2.0.0/src/qemu/qemu.conf =================================================================== --- libvirt-2.0.0.orig/src/qemu/qemu.conf +++ libvirt-2.0.0/src/qemu/qemu.conf @@ -212,11 +212,20 @@ # isolation, but it cannot appear in a list of drivers. # #security_driver = "selinux" +#security_driver = "apparmor" # If set to non-zero, then the default security labeling # will make guests confined. If set to zero, then guests -# will be unconfined by default. Defaults to 1. -#security_default_confined = 1 +# will be unconfined by default. Defaults to 0. +# +# SUSE Note: +# Currently, Apparmor is the default security framework in SUSE +# distros. If Apparmor is enabled on the host, libvirtd is +# generously confined but users must opt-in to confine qemu +# instances. Change this to a non-zero value to enable default +# Apparmor confinement of qemu instances. +# +security_default_confined = 0 # If set to non-zero, then attempts to create unconfined # guests will be blocked. Defaults to 0. @@ -428,11 +437,22 @@ #allow_disk_format_probing = 1 -# In order to prevent accidentally starting two domains that -# share one writable disk, libvirt offers two approaches for -# locking files. The first one is sanlock, the other one, -# virtlockd, is then our own implementation. Accepted values -# are "sanlock" and "lockd". +# SUSE note: +# Two lock managers are supported: lockd and sanlock. lockd, which +# is provided by the virtlockd service, uses advisory locks (flock(2)) +# to protect virtual machine disks. sanlock uses the notion of leases +# to protect virtual machine disks and is more appropriate in a SAN +# environment. +# +# For most deployments that require virtual machine disk protection, +# lockd is recommended since it is easy to configure and the virtlockd +# service can be restarted without terminating any running virtual +# machines. sanlock, which may be preferred in some SAN environments, +# has the disadvantage of not being able to be restarted without +# first terminating all virtual machines for which it holds leases. +# +# Specify lockd or sanlock to enable protection of virtual machine disk +# content. # #lock_manager = "lockd" @@ -523,8 +543,8 @@ # for x86_64 and i686, but it's AAVMF for aarch64. The libvirt default # follows this scheme. #nvram = [ -# "/usr/share/OVMF/OVMF_CODE.fd:/usr/share/OVMF/OVMF_VARS.fd", -# "/usr/share/AAVMF/AAVMF_CODE.fd:/usr/share/AAVMF/AAVMF_VARS.fd" +# "/usr/share/qemu/ovmf-x86_64-ms-code.bin:/usr/share/qemu/ovmf-x86_64-ms-vars.bin", +# "/usr/share/qemu/aavmf-aarch64-code.bin:/usr/share/qemu/aavmf-aarch64-vars.bin" #] # The backend to use for handling stdout/stderr output from