Thanks Rich for your response.
Perhaps, this option could be passed via an environment variable and
guestfish could pass it down to qemu.
I will file a bug requesting this feature. This is an absolutely necessary
feature we would to like to have in order to make use of libguestfs in our
work. Generally, what is the turnaround time for such feature requests to
appear in a release?
Meanwhile, I am thinking of the following as a workaround
1. Make use of iscsi-initiator utils ( which gets installed as part of
libguestfs dependency ) to establish iscsi connection
2. This will create a device such as /dev/sdb
3. Mount the partition and execute our guestfs script as follows
guestfish -m /dev/sdb1:/ -f myscript.txt
Will this work without -a parameter ?
Any other alternative?
Thanks
Raghu
On 6 July 2014 16:02, Richard W.M. Jones <rjones(a)redhat.com> wrote:
On Fri, Jul 04, 2014 at 05:43:30PM +0530, Raghu wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I could not find any option to set iSCSI initiator iqn while using
> guestfish, although the underlying qemu command has this option.
> It appears that each time guestfish tries to connect to iSCSI LUN, a
> randomly generated initiator iqn is being used. This is preventing
> guestfish to connect to the iSCSI target in our environment as the target
> allows incoming connection based on the preconfigured initiator iqn.
>
> Is there way to set iSCSI initiator iqn with guestfish command?
At the API level, this is what is currently possible:
http://libguestfs.org/guestfs.3.html#iscsi
http://libguestfs.org/guestfs.3.html#guestfs_add_drive_opts
From my (limited) understanding of iSCSI, I believe it is the case
that the target and initiator iqn's are different things. We need to
pass the `-iscsi initiator-name=<initiator-iqn>' parameter.
This is not supported right now, but it's certainly something which we
should add. See also this section in the FAQ for how to supply
patches or file bugs requesting new features:
http://libguestfs.org/guestfs-faq.1.html#developers
Rich.
--
Richard Jones, Virtualization Group, Red Hat
http://people.redhat.com/~rjones
Read my programming and virtualization blog:
http://rwmj.wordpress.com
Fedora Windows cross-compiler. Compile Windows programs, test, and
build Windows installers. Over 100 libraries supported.
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/MinGW