with libhvee, we are able to do the basics of podman machine management
on hyperv. The basic functions like init, rm, stop, and start are all
functional. Start and stop will periodically throw a benign error
processing the hyperv message being returned from the action. The error
is described in the todo's below.
notable items:
* no podman commands will work (like ps, images, etc)
* the machine must be initialized with --image-path and fed a custom image.
* disk size is set to 100GB statically.
* the vm joins the default hyperv network which is TCP/IP network based.
* podman machine ssh does not work
* podman machine set does not work
* you can grab the ip address from hyperv and fake a machine connection
with `podman system connection`.
* when booting, use the hyperv console to know the boot is complete.
TODOs:
* podman machine ssh
* podman machine set
* podman machine rm needs force bool
* disk size in NewMachine is set to 100GB
* podman start needs to wait until fully booted
* establish a boot complete signal from guest
* implement gvproxy like user networking
* fix benign failures in stop/start -> Error: error 2147749890 (FormatMessage failed with: The system cannot find message text for message number 0x%1 in the message file for %2.)
[NO NEW TESTS NEEDED]
Signed-off-by: Brent Baude <bbaude@redhat.com>
before we can support hyperv as a virtualization option for podman
machine, several areas in machine will require cleanup. this is the
first pass of these changes to keep the review burden low. changes
include:
* convert artifact, format (image format) and compression to enums
with string methods
* rename Provider interface to VirtProvider
* change Provider implementation in QEMU to QEMUVirt
* change Provider implementation in WSL to WSLVirt
as mentioned earlier, there will be several more of these refactoring
PRs because assumptions were made about associations of platforms and
virt providers as well as compression and image formats.
Signed-off-by: Brent Baude <bbaude@redhat.com>
podman system reset did not clean up machines fully, leaving some config
files, and breaking machines. Now it removes all machines files fully.
Signed-off-by: Ashley Cui <acui@redhat.com>