migration: create new section to store global state

This includes a new section that for now just stores the current qemu state.

Right now, there are only one way to control what is the state of the
target after migration.

- If you run the target qemu with -S, it would start stopped.
- If you run the target qemu without -S, it would run just after migration finishes.

The problem here is what happens if we start the target without -S and
there happens one error during migration that puts current state as
-EIO.  Migration would ends (notice that the error happend doing block
IO, network IO, i.e. nothing related with migration), and when
migration finish, we would just "continue" running on destination,
probably hanging the guest/corruption data, whatever.

Signed-off-by: Juan Quintela <quintela@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Dr. David Alan Gilbert <dgilbert@redhat.com>
This commit is contained in:
Juan Quintela 2014-10-08 10:58:10 +02:00
parent ca3fc39ea9
commit df4b102452
4 changed files with 103 additions and 7 deletions

View file

@ -1403,6 +1403,9 @@ migrate_fd_error(void) ""
migrate_fd_cancel(void) ""
migrate_pending(uint64_t size, uint64_t max) "pending size %" PRIu64 " max %" PRIu64
migrate_transferred(uint64_t tranferred, uint64_t time_spent, double bandwidth, uint64_t size) "transferred %" PRIu64 " time_spent %" PRIu64 " bandwidth %g max_size %" PRId64
migrate_state_too_big(void) ""
migrate_global_state_post_load(const char *state) "loaded state: %s"
migrate_global_state_pre_save(const char *state) "saved state: %s"
# migration/rdma.c
qemu_rdma_accept_incoming_migration(void) ""