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We need to bump the gtk dep to at least 3.10 for GtkRevealer usage,
and I want to bump the pygobject higher to drop some bug workarounds.
But since the oldest thing I have that meets those requirements is
RHEL/Centos 7.3 which is at 3.14 for both, set those as the minimum
versions since that's what I'll be testing against. They are still
1.5 years old and only a bit over a year newer than the previous
versions, so it's not a huge change.
This UI exposed the old NUMA allocation policy detailed in the last commit.
It's very much sub-optimal, and should be removed.
Manual cpuset configuration is also quite uncommon and not really something
worth exposing in the UI. It can easily be done from the command line
with virt-xml.
If people complain, I'd consider adding a checkbox for vcpu placement=auto,
or an option to do that by default for new VMs.
Simplest is to have a separate UI area for the arch warning, since
the standard startup warning may still apply too.
Reported-by: João Pirralha <joaopirralha@gmail.com>
Originally this made sense, as it was the only way to specify a non-default
storage format when creating new storage.
Nowadays the storage browser is a full featured storage manager... and
this field is a bit confusing WRT whether it's used for creating new
storage, or informing libvirt about an existing image's format.
Drop it from the addhardware wizard, and simplify what we show in the
details wizard as well.
This is a little low level and rarely used IMO to have it in the UI.
If people want to edit this we should point them at virt-xml which
seems like the appropriate user friendlyness for this feature.
This made more sense when raw was the disk image default, but nowadays
we use qcow2 which doesn't even support non-sparse, so the UI is always
disabled.
If the user changed their preference to raw, it still doesn't make much
sense to show the option, since they are likely using raw for performance
in which case they are going to want to preallocate anyways.
So just default to sparse=False. If users want to override it, they can
do it via custom created storage.
Drop horizontal scrolling, since with gtk3 hidden scrollbars it might
mean users don't realize there's info that is scrolled off.
Adjust the default sizing to match that pattern
Trying to fall back to the create wizard can give weird results, since
it's really hard to ensure the customized changes are preserved if
the user changes things in the 'new' wizard.
It's largely the same, but now
- The code is better organized
- The UI is much more streamlined, only showing relevant fields when
required.
- We warn about the hostname/URI cases that we know libvirt will error on
- Drop some of the attempts at being smart, and just mimic what libvirt
will do.
This is only needed when people have very specific downtime constraints
on public facing services. I don't think that covers many virt-manager
users. So suggest they just use the command line for this.
We've had multiple requests over the years for something similar. People
might have to connect to multiple IP addresses, or really large hostnames,
that become difficult to distinguish in the UI.
Add a field in the host details page that allows setting a custom name,
and store it in gsettings.
We were already sharing a chunk of this in a haphazard way. Now officially
break it all out, similar to netlist.py. This mostly unifies the views
of host->storage and storagebrowser.py
And not the other way around. It's less confusing this way IMO, particularly
if virtio is selected by default and the user is confused, wondering
where the cdrom option is.
Take the opportunity to actually share the bus combo logic between details
and addhardware
People should rarely need to edit the mac address, so remove it from
the create wizard. However we only allow editing the mac address in
the 'customize' dialog: regular network details disables editing, since
that should be a rare and potentially dangerous operation.