When validating secure guests support on s390(x) we may read
/proc/cmdline and look for "prot_virt" argument. Reading the
kernel command line is done via virFileReadValueString() which
may fail. In such case caller won't see any error message. But we
can produce the same warning/error as if "prot_virt" argument
wasn't found.  Not only this lets users know about the problem,
it also terminates the "Checking for ...." line correctly.

Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mpriv...@redhat.com>
---
 tools/virt-host-validate-common.c | 6 ++----
 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)

diff --git a/tools/virt-host-validate-common.c 
b/tools/virt-host-validate-common.c
index c0cee43409..4482690b4b 100644
--- a/tools/virt-host-validate-common.c
+++ b/tools/virt-host-validate-common.c
@@ -470,14 +470,12 @@ int virHostValidateSecureGuests(const char *hvname,
                 return 0;
             }
 
-            if (virFileReadValueString(&cmdline, "/proc/cmdline") < 0)
-                return VIR_HOST_VALIDATE_FAILURE(level);
-
             /* we're prefix matching rather than equality matching here, 
because
              * kernel would treat even something like prot_virt='yFOO' as
              * enabled
              */
-            if (virKernelCmdlineMatchParam(cmdline, "prot_virt", kIBMValues,
+            if (virFileReadValueString(&cmdline, "/proc/cmdline") >= 0 &&
+                virKernelCmdlineMatchParam(cmdline, "prot_virt", kIBMValues,
                                            G_N_ELEMENTS(kIBMValues),
                                            
VIR_KERNEL_CMDLINE_FLAGS_SEARCH_FIRST |
                                            
VIR_KERNEL_CMDLINE_FLAGS_CMP_PREFIX)) {
-- 
2.31.1

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