This *was* valuable when passing a full UUID in, so go back to that.
Verify first that the limit string is an actual UUID, and then compare
against it if applicable.
Celery 5.x introduced a new worker argument format that is not
backwards-compatible with the older Celery 4.x format. This created a
conundrum since we use one service unit for both Debian 10 (4.x) and
Debian 11 (5.x). Instead of worse hacks, create a wrapper script to
start the worker with the correct arguments instead.
I can see no possible reason to want to do limits against UUIDs, but
supporting that means match is not what one would expect since a random
UUID could match the limit. So only limit based on the name.
With many VMs this slows down linearly. Rework it a bit so there are
fewer calls to getInformationFromXML and so the processing could happen
in parallel at some point.
Also fixes up the Debian packaging such that this works how I would
want, with proper module installation while leaving everything else
untouched. Finally implements automatic installation and removal of the
BASH completion for the PVC command.
Trying to do this on the VMInstance side had problems because we can't
differentiate the 3 types of migration there. So, just update this in
the API side and hope everything goes well.
This introduces an edge bug: if a VM is using a macvtap SR-IOV device,
and then tries to migrate, and the migrate is aborted, the NIC lists
will be inconsistent.
When I revamp the VMInstance in the future, I should be able to correct
this, but for now we'll have to live with that edgecase.
Done to make the resulting config match the expectations when using "vm
network add", which is that networks are below disks, not above.
Not a functional change, just ensures the VM XML is consistent after
many changes.