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@stormi I'm running the update on all 8.2.1 hosts. No problems so far.
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No problem here either on my home lab
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The update was published earlier today: https://xcp-ng.org/blog/2023/02/20/february-2023-security-update/
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I noticed the there are updates to the Windows Templates. Clicking the or "EYE" in XOA, and the Description for "guest-templates-json-data-windows" seemed a tad smidgeon "buggy". Is that due to git revision description and there were no actual changes to Windows Templates?
Changelog Patch guest-templates-json-data-windows Date January 6, 2023 at 6:00 AM Author Gael Duperrey <gduperrey@vates.fr> - 1.9.6-1.2 Description - Add templates for rhel 9, CentOS Stream 8 and 9, Almalinux 9, Rockylinux 9, Oracle linux 9
guest-templates-json Creates the default guest templates 1.9.6 1.2.xcpng8.2 29.21 KiB guest-templates-json-data-linux Contains the default Linux guest templates 1.9.6 1.2.xcpng8.2 18.68 KiB guest-templates-json-data-other Contains the default other guest templates 1.9.6 1.2.xcpng8.2 11.86 KiB guest-templates-json-data-windows Contains the default Windows guest templates 1.9.6 1.2.xcpng8.2 14.38 KiB
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@rjt
These rpms come from the same source rpm and, therefore, from the same SPEC file. So when we build it for changes, the Windows one is built too, even if there is no change on the Windows side.
On this revision, we only add new templates for RHEL 9, AlmaLinux 9, Rocky Linux 9, CentOS Stream 8 and 9, and Oracle Linux 9.
There weren't any changes to the Windows templates. -
New Security Update Candidates (Xen)
Xen is being updated to mitigate some vulnerabilities:
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XSA-427: "Guests running in shadow mode and being subject to migration or snapshotting may be able to cause Denial of Service and other problems, including escalation of privilege". This vulnerability concerns old platforms (Nehalem/Bulldozer families and older) which do not have Hardware Assisted Paging facilitie (EPT/NPT), or modern platforms where this extension is disabled by the firmware or the system software. This also concerns PV guests, which are not officially supported anymore in XCP-ng.
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XSA-428: "Entities controlling HVM guests can run the host out of resources or stall execution of a physical CPU for effectively unbounded periods of time, resulting in a Denial of Servis (DoS) affecting the entire host. Crashes, information leaks, or elevation of privilege cannot be ruled out".
On the platforms managed by XCP-ng software, with regard of this vulnerability, we would rather talk of "reduction in defence in depth", as the only entity controlling HVM guests is a trusted software (QEMU) running in a trusted domain (dom0). -
XSA-429: The patch completes the original Spectre/Meltdown mitigation work(XSA-254). A malicious PV guest might be able to infer the contents of arbitrary host memory, including memory assigned to other guests. Only AMD and Hygon CPUs which offer SMEP/SMAP facilities are affected. Although PV guests are not officially supported in XCP-ng, we also included a fix for this vulnerability.
Components are also updated to add bugfixes and enhancements:
- Xen
- Update to Xen 4.13.5
- Initial Sapphire Rapids support
- Fix memory corruption issues in the Ocaml bindings.
- On xenstored live update, validate the config file before launching into the new xenstored
Test on XCP-ng 8.2
From an up to date host:
yum clean metadata --enablerepo=xcp-ng-testing yum update "xen-*" --enablerepo=xcp-ng-testing reboot
Versions:
- xen-*: 4.13.5-9.30.3.xcpng8.2
What to test
Normal use and anything else you want to test. The closer to your actual use of XCP-ng, the better.
Test window before official release of the updates
~2 days.
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@gduperrey Installed on 8.2 systems and running ok on home lab and other secondary machines. No issues before or after update. No Sapphire Rapids CPUs. Ran same update on 8.3 by mistake on a test machine but it's running ok too.
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what is the kernel version of the latest XCP-ng?
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Looks like some of the testers who used to test the update candidates moved their test hosts to the 8.3 alpha release. Thanks @Andrew for staying true to the job
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@maxcuttins Is the question related to the testing of update candidates?
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Latest updates seem to be working fine in my test lab as well.
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Update published. Thanks for the tests!
https://xcp-ng.org/blog/2023/03/23/march-2023-security-update/
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@stormi not really I would say.
I'm stick to version 8.0 and I'm planning to upgrade.
So I'm trying to understand which kernel I'll find in the next release.PS: Upgrade is a pain because I need to remember that CEPH NBD share storage are not preserved during upgrade and so, those config file will be erased, I'll need to restore in order to have back my VDIs.
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@maxcuttins Ok. Then let's discuss this in another thread and leave the current one for testing update candidates.
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@gduperrey XO (current source) rolling pool update did its job.
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Hello here! I hope you are ready, because we'll have a train of update candidates for you to test shortly
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New update candidates for you to test!
As you may know, we group non-urgent updates together for a collective release, in order not to cause unnecessary maintenance for our users.
The moment to release such a batch has come, so here they are, ready for user tests before the final release.
xcp-ng-release*
:- Updated web page on hosts to remove dependencies to Fontawesome Pro and Jquery.
- The XOA quick deploy script now uses HTTPS by default.
- Updated repository definitions in
/etc/yum.repos.d/xcpng.repo
, to add more testing repositories (disabled by default. More about this below). Warning: If you have any local changes to this file, it won't be overwritten. In this case, look for/etc/yum.repos.d/xcpng.repo.rpmnew
after applying the update, and move it overxcpng.repo
.
xen-*
: sync with Citrix Hypervisor hotfix XS82ECU1030:- Hardware support fixes, among which "Cope booting for x2APIC mode on AMD systems without XT mode."
- Improve loading of AMD microcode on all logical processors.
- (The hotfix from Citrix Hypervisor also includes fixes for the latest Xen Security Advisories, which we already published in a previous update)
- AMD microcode (
linux-firmware
) and Intel microcode (microcode_ctl
). AMD and Intel did not detail what they fix, but everyone is supposed to update. This is the frustrating situation with binary blobs in firmware. - XAPI and related components:
- Instead of a 403 error on HTTP requests to the host's web page, redirect to HTTPS instead.
- Fix spurious "not enough memory" error message in
/var/log/xcp-rrdd-plugins.log
. - Sync with Citrix Hypervisor hotfix XS82ECU1027: various fixes.
qemu
: sync with Citrix Hypervisor hotfix XS82ECU1031. Fixes for specific issues.sm
(Storage Manager): sync with Citrix hypervisor hotfix XS82ECU1022. Various fixes.
Test on XCP-ng 8.2
yum clean metadata --enablerepo=xcp-ng-testing yum update --enablerepo=xcp-ng-testing forkexecd gpumon linux-firmware message-switch microcode_ctl qemu rrdd-plugins sm sm-rawhba varstored-guard xapi-core xapi-tests xapi-xe xcp-networkd xcp-ng-release xcp-ng-release-config xcp-ng-release-presets xcp-rrdd xen-dom0-libs xen-dom0-tools xen-hypervisor xen-libs xen-tools xenopsd xenopsd-cli xenopsd-xc reboot
The usual update rules apply: pool coordinator first, etc.
What to test
Normal use and anything else you want to test. The closer to your actual use of XCP-ng, the better.
About the new testing repositories
Until recently, we would just have one testing repository:
xcp-ng-testing
. We decided to split it.It had a lot of different uses:
- Making updates available to testers for them to provide feedback, before pushing them to everyone. This use will remain and will now be the only role of this repository.
- Storing updates to components we don't intend to push as official updates. For example newer zstd or GlusterFS releases. These now live in a new repository:
xcp-ng-lab
. - Providing temporary builds just to test a patch, before embedding it in a real update if tests are successful. There are several places where we can make them available to you when needed, depending on the situation: per-person developer repositories, scratch builds in koji, or . We'll tell you where to pull from each time we need you to test.
We also added two new repositories for our internal needs. You usually won't need to pull from them, even for tests:
xcp-ng-incoming
andxcp-ng-ci
.xcp-ng-incoming
is where we build updates first. When a consistent set of changes is ready, it moves toxcp-ng-ci
and undergoes automated testing. Once the tests pass,
updates move toxcp-ng-testing
for you to test.Shortly before publishing to everyone, updates will be moved the new
xcp-ng-candidates
. Why are there bothxcp-ng-testing
andxcp-ng-candidates
? Because not all updates move on at the same pace. Some can wait for weeks before we publish them in what we call internally "an update train", because we group non-urgent updates together. Some need to be published as soon as possible, notably security fixes. So while there may already be updates inxcp-ng-testing
, sometimes we need to build, test and publish updates directly without any interferences from what's currently inxcp-ng-testing
. What it means for you as testers is that sometimes we'll ask you to pull update candidates fromxcp-ng-testing
, sometimes fromxcp-ng-candidates
. In any case we'll always specify it in our testing instructions.Test window before official release of the updates
~1 week.
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We had some feedback on 8.3, but I'm also counting on you for XCP-ng 8.2
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@stormi I updated active 8.2.1 servers and it's running normally (24 hours), HP G8 and current 11th Gen i7. I updated other machines (older AMD and Intel) and they are ok too, but just used for testing. Normal update/reboot worked fine.
Active servers run: Windows, Linux (many versions), FreeBSD, hot migrations, CR, Delta S3 backup, NFS SR/ISO, VxLAN, etc...
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@stormi So far so good in my test lab and one minor production server.