Red Hat Enterprise Linux-7-Virtualization Deployment and Administration Guide-en-US PDF
Red Hat Enterprise Linux-7-Virtualization Deployment and Administration Guide-en-US PDF
Laura No vich
Red Hat Engineering Co ntent Services
lno [email protected] m
Tahlia Richardso n
Red Hat Engineering Co ntent Services
[email protected] m
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Table of Contents
P
. .art
. . .I.. Deployment
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6. . . . . . . . .
C
. .hapter
. . . . . . 1.
. . System
. . . . . . . .requirements
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7. . . . . . . . .
1.1. Calculating swap space 8
1.2. KVM requirements 8
1.3. Storage support 8
1.4. Verifying virtualization extensions 8
C
. .hapter
. . . . . . 2.
. . KVM
. . . . .guest
. . . . . virtual
. . . . . . .machine
. . . . . . . .compatibility
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
..........
2.1. Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 support limits 10
2.2. Supported CPU Models 10
C
. .hapter
. . . . . . 3.
. . Virtualization
. . . . . . . . . . . . .restrictions
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14
..........
3.1. KVM restrictions 14
3.2. Application restrictions 16
3.3. Other restrictions 17
C
. .hapter
. . . . . . 4. . .Installing
. . . . . . . . the
. . . .virtualization
. . . . . . . . . . . . packages
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
..........
4 .1. Configuring a Virtualization Host installation 18
4 .2. Installing virtualization packages on an existing Red Hat Enterprise Linux system 22
C
. .hapter
. . . . . . 5.
. . Guest
. . . . . . virtual
. . . . . . .machine
. . . . . . . .installation
. . . . . . . . . . overview
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .24
..........
5.1. Guest virtual machine prerequisites and considerations 24
5.2. Creating guests with virt-install 24
5.3. Creating guests with virt-manager 26
5.4. Installing guest virtual machines with PXE 32
C
. .hapter
. . . . . . 6.
. . Installing
. . . . . . . . . a. .Red
. . . .Hat
. . . Enterprise
. . . . . . . . . . Linux
. . . . . .7. guest
. . . . . . virtual
. . . . . . machine
. . . . . . . . on
. . . a. .Red
. . . .Hat
...............
Enterprise Linux 7 host 39
6.1. Creating a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 guest with local installation media 39
6.2. Creating a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 guest with a network installation tree 48
6.3. Creating a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 guest with PXE 51
C
. .hapter
. . . . . . 7.
. . Virtualizing
. . . . . . . . . . . Red
. . . . Hat
. . . .Enterprise
. . . . . . . . . .Linux
. . . . . on
. . .Other
. . . . . .Platforms
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
..........
7.1. On VMware ESX 55
7.2. On Hyper-V 55
C
. .hapter
. . . . . . 8.
. . Installing
. . . . . . . . . a. .fully-virtualized
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Windows
. . . . . . . . .guest
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
..........
8.1. Using virt-install to create a guest 57
8.2. T ips for more efficiency with Windows guest virtual machines 58
C
. .hapter
. . . . . . 9.
. . KVM
. . . . .Para-virtualized
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .(virtio)
. . . . . . Drivers
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
..........
9.1. Installing the KVM Windows virtio drivers 59
9.2. Installing the drivers on an installed Windows guest virtual machine 61
9.3. Installing drivers during the Windows installation 69
9.4. Using KVM virtio drivers for existing devices 76
9.5. Using KVM virtio drivers for new devices 77
C
. .hapter
. . . . . . 10.
. . . .Network
. . . . . . . configuration
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82
..........
10.1. Network Address T ranslation (NAT ) with libvirt 82
10.2. Disabling vhost-net 83
10.3. Enabling vhost-net zero-copy 84
10.4. Bridged networking with virt-manager 84
10.5. Bridged networking with libvirt 86
C
. .hapter
. . . . . . 11.
. . . .Overcommitting
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . with
. . . . .KVM
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 88
..........
11.1. Introduction 88
1
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Virtualization D eployment and Administration Guide
11.1. Introduction 88
11.2. Overcommitting Memory 88
11.3. Overcommitting virtualized CPUs 89
C
. .hapter
. . . . . . 12.
. . . .KVM
. . . .guest
. . . . . .timing
. . . . . .management
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91
..........
12.1. Required parameters for Red Hat Enterprise Linux guests 92
12.2. Using the Real-T ime Clock with Windows Server 2003 and Windows XP guests 93
12.3. Using the Real-T ime Clock with Windows Server 2008, Windows Server 2008 R2, and
Windows 7 guests 94
12.4. Steal time accounting 94
C
. .hapter
. . . . . . 13.
. . . Network
. . . . . . . . booting
. . . . . . . .with
. . . .libvirt
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95
..........
13.1. Preparing the boot server 95
13.2. Booting a guest using PXE 96
C
. .hapter
. . . . . . 14
. . .. .QEMU
. . . . . .Guest
. . . . . .Agent
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98
..........
14.1. Set Up Communication between Guest Agent and Host 98
14.2. Using the QEMU guest virtual machine agent protocol CLI 99
14.3. Running the QEMU guest agent on a Windows guest 101
P
. .art
. . .II.. .Administration
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .105
...........
C
. .hapter
. . . . . . 15.
. . . .Securing
. . . . . . . . the
. . . .host
. . . . physical
. . . . . . . .machine
. . . . . . . .and
. . . .improving
. . . . . . . . . performance
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .106
...........
15.1. Security Deployment Plan 106
15.2. Client access control 107
C
. .hapter. . . . . . 16.
. . . .Storage
. . . . . . . pools
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .109
...........
16.1. Disk-based storage pools 111
16.2. Partition-based storage pools 114
16.3. Directory-based storage pools 121
16.4. LVM-based storage pools 128
16.5. iSCSI-based storage pools 137
16.6. NFS-based storage pools 148
C
. .hapter
. . . . . . 17.
. . . . Storage
. . . . . . . .Volumes
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .152
...........
17.1. Introduction 152
17.2. Creating volumes 153
17.3. Cloning volumes 154
17.4. Adding storage devices to guests 155
17.5. Deleting and removing volumes 160
C
. .hapter . . . . . . 18.
. . . .Using
. . . . . qemu-img
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .161
...........
18.1. Checking the disk image 161
18.2. Committing changes to an image 161
18.3. Converting an existing image to another format 161
18.4. Creating and formatting new images or devices 162
18.5. Displaying image information 162
18.6. Re-basing a backing file of an image 162
18.7. Re-sizing the disk image 163
18.8. Listing, creating, applying, and deleting a snapshot 163
18.9. Supported qemu-img formats 164
C
. .hapter
. . . . . . 19.
. . . .KVM
. . . .live
. . . .migration
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .165
...........
19.1. Live migration requirements 165
19.2. Live migration and Red Hat Enterprise Linux version compatibility 167
19.3. Shared storage example: NFS for a simple migration 167
19.4. Live KVM migration with virsh 168
19.5. Migrating with virt-manager 173
C
. .hapter
. . . . . . 20.
. . . .Guest
. . . . . .virtual
. . . . . .machine
. . . . . . . .device
. . . . . . configuration
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .180
...........
20.1. PCI devices 180
2
Table of Contents
C
. .hapter
. . . . . . 21.
. . . .SR-IOV
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .205
...........
21.1. Advantages of SR-IOV 205
21.2. Using SR-IOV 206
21.3. T roubleshooting SR-IOV 211
C
. .hapter . . . . . . 22.
. . . .Virtual
. . . . . .Networking
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .212
...........
22.1. Virtual network switches 212
22.2. Network Address T ranslation 213
22.3. Networking protocols 214
22.4. T he default configuration 216
22.5. Examples of common scenarios 217
22.6. Managing a virtual network 220
22.7. Creating a virtual network 221
22.8. Attaching a virtual network to a guest 225
22.9. Directly attaching to physical interface 229
22.10. Dynamically changing a host physical machine or a network bridge that is attached to a
virtual NIC 231
22.11. Applying network filtering 232
22.12. Creating T unnels 260
22.13. Setting vLAN tags 261
22.14. Applying QoS to your virtual network 262
C
. .hapter
. . . . . . 23.
. . . Remote
. . . . . . . .management
. . . . . . . . . . . .of
. . guests
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 263
...........
23.1. Remote management with SSH 263
23.2. Remote management over T LS and SSL 265
23.3. T ransport modes 268
23.4. Configuring a VNC Server 271
C
. .hapter
. . . . . . 24
. . .. .KSM
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 273
...........
24.1. T he KSM service 273
24.2. T he KSM tuning service 274
24.3. KSM variables and monitoring 275
24.4. Deactivating KSM 276
C
. .hapter . . . . . . 25.
. . . .Managing
. . . . . . . . .guests
. . . . . . with
. . . . .the
. . . Virtual
. . . . . . .Machine
. . . . . . . .Manager
. . . . . . . .(virt-manager)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .277
...........
25.1. Starting virt-manager 277
25.2. T he Virtual Machine Manager main window 278
25.3. T he virtual hardware details window 279
25.4. Virtual Machine graphical console 285
25.5. Adding a remote connection 287
25.6. Displaying guest details 288
25.7. Performance monitoring 295
25.8. Displaying CPU usage for guests 297
25.9. Displaying CPU usage for hosts 299
25.10. Displaying Disk I/O 301
25.11. Displaying Network I/O 304
C
. .hapter. . . . . . 26.
. . . .Managing
. . . . . . . . .guest
. . . . . virtual
. . . . . . .machines
. . . . . . . . .with
. . . .virsh
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 308
...........
26.1. Generic Commands 308
26.2. Attaching and updating a device with virsh 310
26.3. Attaching interface devices 311
26.4. Changing the media of a CDROM 311
26.5. Domain Commands 312
26.6. Editing a guest virtual machine's configuration file 324
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Virtualization D eployment and Administration Guide
C
. .hapter . . . . . . 27.
. . . .Guest
. . . . . .virtual
. . . . . .machine
. . . . . . . .disk
. . . .access
. . . . . . .with
. . . .offline
. . . . . . tools
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 369
...........
27.1. Introduction 369
27.2. T erminology 370
27.3. Installation 371
27.4. T he guestfish shell 371
27.5. Other commands 376
27.6. virt-rescue: T he rescue shell 377
27.7. virt-df: Monitoring disk usage 378
27.8. virt-resize: resizing guest virtual machines offline 379
27.9. virt-inspector: inspecting guest virtual machines 381
27.10. virt-win-reg: Reading and editing the Windows Registry 383
27.11. Using the API from Programming Languages 384
27.12. Using virt-sysprep 388
C
. .hapter
. . . . . . 28.
. . . .Graphic
. . . . . . . User
. . . . .Interface
. . . . . . . . tools
. . . . . for
. . . guest
. . . . . . virtual
. . . . . . machine
. . . . . . . . management
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 391
...........
28.1. Using virt-viewer command line 391
28.2. remote-viewer 393
28.3. GNOME Boxes 393
C
. .hapter . . . . . . 29.
. . . .Manipulating
. . . . . . . . . . . .the
. . . domain
. . . . . . . XML
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 399
...........
29.1. General information and metadata 399
29.2. Operating system booting 400
29.3. SMBIOS system information 404
29.4. CPU allocation 404
29.5. CPU tuning 405
29.6. Memory backing 407
29.7. Memory tuning 407
29.8. Memory allocation 408
29.9. NUMA node tuning 409
29.10. Block I/O tuning 410
29.11. Resource partitioning 411
29.12. CPU model and topology 411
29.13. Events configuration 418
29.14. Power Management 420
29.15. Hypervisor features 420
29.16. T ime keeping 421
29.17. T imer element attributes 425
29.18. Devices 426
4
Table of Contents
P
. .art
. . .III.
. . Appendices
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4. 90
..........
. .roubleshooting
T . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4. 91
..........
A.1. Debugging and troubleshooting tools 491
A.2. Creating virsh dump files 492
A.3. kvm_stat 493
A.4. T roubleshooting with serial consoles 498
A.5. Virtualization log files 499
A.6. Loop device errors 499
A.7. Live Migration Errors 499
A.8. Enabling Intel VT -x and AMD-V virtualization hardware extensions in BIOS 499
A.9. Generating a new unique MAC address 500
A.10. KVM networking performance 501
A.11. Workaround for creating external snapshots with libvirt 503
A.12. Missing characters on guest console with Japanese keyboard 503
A.13. Known Windows XP guest issues 503
A.14. Disable SMART disk monitoring for guest virtual machines 504
A.15. libguestfs troubleshooting 504
A.16. Common libvirt errors and troubleshooting 504
.Additional
. . . . . . . . . resources
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 532
...........
B.1. Online resources 532
B.2. Installed documentation 532
.NetKVM
. . . . . . .Driver
. . . . . .Parameters
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 533
...........
C.1. Configurable parameters for NetKVM 533
. .he
T . . Virtual
. . . . . . .Host
. . . . Metrics
. . . . . . . .Daemon
. . . . . . . (vhostmd)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 537
...........
. . . . . . . . .History
Revision . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 538
...........
5
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Virtualization D eployment and Administration Guide
Part I. Deployment
6
Chapter 1. System requirements
For information on installing the virtualization packages, see Chapter 4, Installing the virtualization
packages.
2 GB of RAM.
One processor core or hyper-thread for the maximum number of virtualized CPUs in a guest virtual
machine and one for the host.
6 GB disk space for the host, plus the required disk space for each virtual machine.
Most guest operating systems will require at least 6GB of disk space, but the additional storage space
required for each guest depends on its image format.
For guest virtual machines using raw images, the guest's total required space (total for raw
form at) is equal to or greater than the sum of the space required by the guest's raw image files
(im ages), the 6GB space required by the host operating system (host), and the swap space that
guest will require (swap).
Equation 1.1. Calculating required space for guest virtual machines using raw images
For qcow images, you must also calculate the expected maximum storage requirements of the guest
(total for qcow form at), as qcow and qcow2 images grow as required. T o allow for this
expansion, first multiply the expected maximum storage requirements of the guest (expected
m axim um guest storage) by 1.01, and add to this the space required by the host (host), and the
necessary swap space (swap).
Equation 1.2. Calculating required space for guest virtual machines using qcow images
total for qcow format = (expected maximum guest storage * 1.01) + host + swap
Guest virtual machine requirements are further outlined in Chapter 11, Overcommitting with KVM.
7
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Virtualization D eployment and Administration Guide
T he Red Hat Knowledge Base contains an article on safely and efficiently determining the size of the swap
partition, available here: https://access.redhat.com/site/solutions/15244.
an Intel processor with the Intel VT -x and Intel 64 extensions for x86-based systems, or
Refer to Section 1.4, “Verifying virtualization extensions” to determine if your processor has the
virtualization extensions.
LVM partitions,
iSCSI,
1. Run the following command to verify the CPU virtualization extensions are available:
T he following output contains a vm x entry indicating an Intel processor with the Intel VT -x
extension:
8
Chapter 1. System requirements
flags : fpu tsc msr pae mce cx8 apic mtrr mca cmov pat pse36 clflush
dts acpi mmx fxsr sse sse2 ss ht tm syscall lm constant_tsc pni monitor
ds_cpl
vmx est tm2 cx16 xtpr lahf_lm
T he following output contains an svm entry indicating an AMD processor with the AMD-V
extensions:
flags : fpu tsc msr pae mce cx8 apic mtrr mca cmov pat pse36 clflush
mmx fxsr sse sse2 ht syscall nx mmxext fxsr_opt lm 3dnowext 3dnow pni cx16
lahf_lm cmp_legacy svm cr8legacy ts fid vid ttp tm stc
If any output is received, the processor has the hardware virtualization extensions. However in
some circumstances manufacturers disable the virtualization extensions in BIOS.
T he "flags:" output content may appear multiple times, once for each hyperthread, core or CPU
on the system.
T he virtualization extensions may be disabled in the BIOS. If the extensions do not appear or full
virtualization does not work refer to Procedure A.1, “Enabling virtualization extensions in BIOS”.
As an additional check, verify that the kvm modules are loaded in the kernel:
If the output includes kvm _intel or kvm _am d then the kvm hardware virtualization modules are
loaded and your system meets requirements.
Note
If the libvirt package is installed, the virsh command can output a full list of virtualization system
capabilities. Run virsh capabilities as root to receive the complete list.
9
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Virtualization D eployment and Administration Guide
T he following URLs explain the processor and memory amount limitations for Red Hat Enterprise Linux:
T he following URL is a complete reference showing supported operating systems and host and guest
combinations:
https://access.redhat.com/site/supported-hypervisors
Note
A full list of supported CPU models can also be found using the virsh cpu-m odels command as
shown in Section 2.2.1, “Listing the guest CPU models”. Additional information is also included in
Section 29.12, “CPU model and topology”. T he host model can be configured to be using a specified
feature set as needed. For information, refer to Section 29.12.1, “Changing the feature set for a
specified CPU”.
# gedit /user/share/libvirt/cpu_map.xml
You can subsititute gedit with another editor if you would like. T he file that opens resembles Figure 2.1,
“cpu_map.xml file partial contents” but is much longer.
10
Chapter 2. KVM guest virtual machine compatibility
<!-- This is only a partial file, only containing the CPU models. The XML file has
more information (including supported features per model) which you can see when you
open the file yourself -->
<cpus>
<arch name='x86'>
...
<model name='pentium2'>
<model name='pentium'/>
</model>
<model name='pentium3'>
<model name='pentium2'/>
</model>
<model name='pentiumpro'>
</model>
<model name='coreduo'>
<model name='pentiumpro'/>
<vendor name='Intel'/>
</model>
<model name='n270'>
<model name='coreduo'/>
</model>
<model name='core2duo'>
<model name='n270'/>
</model>
<model name='kvm32'>
<model name='qemu32'/>
</model>
<model name='cpu64-rhel5'>
<model name='kvm32'/>
</model>
<model name='cpu64-rhel6'>
<model name='cpu64-rhel5'/>
</model>
<model name='kvm64'>
<model name='cpu64-rhel5'/>
</model>
<model name='qemu64'>
<model name='kvm64'/>
</model>
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Virtualization D eployment and Administration Guide
<model name='Penryn'>
<model name='Conroe'/>
</model>
<model name='Nehalem'>
<model name='Penryn'/>
</model>
<model name='Westmere'>
<model name='Nehalem'/>
<feature name='aes'/>
</model>
<model name='SandyBridge'>
<model name='Westmere'/>
</model>
<model name='Haswell'>
<model name='SandyBridge'/>
</model>
<model name='phenom'>
<model name='cpu64-rhel5'/>
<vendor name='AMD'/>
</model>
<model name='Opteron_G1'>
<model name='cpu64-rhel5'/>
<vendor name='AMD'/>
</model>
<model name='Opteron_G2'>
<model name='Opteron_G1'/>
</model>
<model name='Opteron_G3'>
<model name='Opteron_G2'/>
</model>
<model name='Opteron_G4'>
<model name='Opteron_G2'/>
</model>
<model name='Opteron_G5'>
<model name='Opteron_G4'/>
</model>
</arch>
</cpus>
12
Chapter 2. KVM guest virtual machine compatibility
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Virtualization D eployment and Administration Guide
Guest virtual machines support up to a maximum of 160 virtual CPUs in Red Hat Enterprise
Linux 7.
Nested virtualization
Nested virtualization is disabled by default in Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7. Starting a guest virtual
machine within a guest virtual machine is not supported by Red Hat.
C onstant T SC bit
Systems without a Constant T ime Stamp Counter require additional configuration. Refer to
Chapter 12, KVM guest timing management for details on determining whether you have a
Constant T ime Stamp Counter and configuration steps for fixing any related issues.
M emory overcommit
KVM supports memory overcommit and can store the memory of guest virtual machines in swap.
A virtual machine will run slower if it is swapped frequently. Red Hat Knowledge Base has an
article on safely and efficiently determining the size of the swap partition, available here:
https://access.redhat.com/site/solutions/15244. When KSM is used for memory overcommitting,
make sure that the swap size follows the recommendations described in this article.
Important
When device assignment is in use, all virtual machine memory must be statically pre-
allocated to enable DMA with the assigned device. Memory overcommit is therefore not
supported with device assignment.
C PU overcommit
It is not recommended to have more than 10 virtual CPUs per physical processor core.
Customers are encouraged to use a capacity planning tool in order to determine the CPU
overcommit ratio. Estimating an ideal ratio is difficult as it is highly dependent on each workload.
For instance, a guest virtual machine may consume 100% CPU on one use case, and multiple
guests may be completely idle on another.
Red Hat does not support running more vCPUs to a single guest than the amount of overall
physical cores that exist on the system. While Hyperthreads can be considered as cores, their
performance can also vary from one scenario to the next, and they should not be expected to
perform as well as regular cores.
Refer to Section 11.3, “Overcommitting virtualized CPUs” for tips and recommendations on
overcommitting CPUs.
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Chapter 3. Virtualization restrictions
SCSI emulation is not supported with KVM in Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
KVM is limited to a maximum of four virtualized (emulated) IDE devices per guest virtual machine.
P ara-virtualized devices
Para-virtualized devices are also known as Virtio devices. T hey are purely virtual devices
designed to work optimally in a virtual machine.
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 supports 32 PCI device slots per virtual machine, and 8 PCI functions
per device slot. T his gives a theoretical maximum of 256 PCI functions per guest when multi-
function capabilities are enabled, and PCI bridges are used. Refer to Section 20.1.5, “Creating PCI
bridges” for more information on PCI bridges and Chapter 20, Guest virtual machine device
configuration for more information on devices.
M igration restrictions
Device assignment refers to physical devices that have been exposed to a virtual machine, for the
exclusive use of that virtual machine. Because device assignment uses hardware on the specific
host where the virtual machine runs, migration and save/restore are not supported when device
assignment is in use. If the guest operating system supports hot-plugging, assigned devices can
be removed prior to the migration or save/restore operation to enable this feature.
Live migration is only possible between hosts with the same CPU type (that is, Intel to Intel or
AMD to AMD only).
For live migration, both hosts must have the same value set for the No eXecution (NX) bit, either
on or off.
For migration to work, cache=none must be specified for all block devices opened in write mode.
Warning
S torage restrictions
T here are risks associated with giving guest virtual machines write access to entire disks or
block devices (such as /dev/sdb). If a guest virtual machine has access to an entire block
device, it can share any volume label or partition table with the host machine. If bugs exist in the
host system's partition recognition code, this can create a security risk. Avoid this risk by
configuring the host machine to ignore devices assigned to a guest virtual machine.
Warning
S R-IOV restrictions
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Virtualization D eployment and Administration Guide
SR-IOV is only thoroughly tested with the following devices (other SR-IOV devices may work but
have not been tested at the time of release):
Because core dumping is currently implemented on top of migration, it is not supported when
device assignment is in use.
PCI device assignment (attaching PCI devices to virtual machines) requires host systems to have
AMD IOMMU or Intel VT -d support to enable device assignment of PCI-e devices.
For parallel/legacy PCI, only single devices behind a PCI bridge are supported.
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 has limited PCI configuration space access by guest device drivers.
T his limitation could cause drivers that are dependent on PCI configuration space to fail
configuration.
Platform support for interrupt remapping is required to fully isolate a guest with assigned devices
from the host. Without such support, the host may be vulnerable to interrupt injection attacks from
a malicious guest. In an environment where guests are trusted, the admin may opt-in to still allow
PCI device assignment using the allow_unsafe_interrupts option to the
vfio_iommu_type1 module. T his may either be done persistently by adding a .conf file (e.g.
local.conf) to /etc/m odprobe.d containing the following:
Applications with high I/O throughput requirements should use KVM's para-virtualized drivers (virtio
drivers) for fully-virtualized guests. Without the virtio drivers certain applications may be unpredictable
under heavy I/O loads.
kdump server
netdump server
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Chapter 3. Virtualization restrictions
You should carefully evaluate applications and tools that heavily utilize I/O or those that require real-time
performance. Consider the virtio drivers or PCI device assignment for increased I/O performance. Refer to
Chapter 9, KVM Para-virtualized (virtio) Drivers for more information on the virtio drivers for fully virtualized
guests. Refer to Chapter 20, Guest virtual machine device configuration for more information on PCI device
assignment.
Applications suffer a small performance loss from running in virtualized environments. T he performance
benefits of virtualization through consolidating to newer and faster hardware should be evaluated against
the potential application performance issues associated with using virtualization.
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Virtualization D eployment and Administration Guide
T he KVM hypervisor uses the default Red Hat Enterprise Linux kernel with the kvm kernel module.
Note
Start an interactive Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 installation from the Red Hat Enterprise Linux
Installation CD-ROM, DVD or PXE.
Complete the other steps up to the software selection step. T he Installation Sum m ary screen
prompts the user to complete any steps still requiring attention.
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Chapter 4. Installing the virtualization packages
Software Selection defaults to Minimal Install. Open the Software Selection screen to
select the virtualization packages instead.
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 has two available options for installing a virtualization host: a minimal
virtualization host with only the basic packages installed (Step 3.a), or a virtualization host with
packages installed to allow management of guests through a graphical user interface (Step 3.b).
a.
Select the Virtualization Host radio button under Base Environm ent, and the
Virtualization Platform checkbox under Add-Ons for Selected Environm ent.
T his installs a basic virtualization environment which can be run with virsh, or remotely over
the network.
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Virtualization D eployment and Administration Guide
b.
Select the Server with GUI radio button under Base Environm ent, and the checkboxes
for Virtualization Client, Virtualization Hypervisor, and Virtualization
T ools under Add-Ons for Selected Environm ent. T his installs a virtualization
environment along with graphical tools for installing and managing guest virtual machines.
20
Chapter 4. Installing the virtualization packages
Figure 4 .3. Server with GUI selected in the software selection screen
4. Finalize installation
On the Installation Summary screen, complete the steps as necessary and click Begin
Installtion.
Important
You require a valid RHN virtualization entitlement to receive updates for the virtualization packages.
Kickstart files allow for large, automated installations without a user manually installing each individual host
system. T his section describes how to create and use a Kickstart file to install Red Hat Enterprise Linux
with the Virtualization packages.
In the %packages section of your Kickstart file, append the following package groups:
@virtualization
@virtualization-client
@virtualization-platform
@virtualization-tools
For more information about Kickstart files, refer to the Red Hat Enterprise Linux Installation Guide, available
from https://access.redhat.com/site/documentation/Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux/.
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Virtualization D eployment and Administration Guide
T o install the packages, your machines must be registered. T here are two methods of registering an
unregistered installation of Red Hat Enterprise Linux:
1. T o register via RHN Classic, run the rhn_register command and follow the prompts.
2. T o register via Red Hat Subscription Manager, run the subscription-m anager register
command and follow the prompts.
If you do not have a valid Red Hat subscription, visit the Red Hat online store to obtain one.
T o use virtualization on Red Hat Enterprise Linux you require at least the qem u-kvm and qem u-im g
packages. T hese packages provide the user-level KVM emulator and disk image manager on the host Red
Hat Enterprise Linux system.
T o install the qem u-kvm and qem u-im g packages, run the following command:
virt-install
libvirt
T he libvirt package provides the server and host side libraries for interacting with hypervisors
and host systems. T he libvirt package provides the libvirtd daemon that handles the library
calls, manages virtual machines and controls the hypervisor.
libvirt-python
T he libvirt-python package contains a module that permits applications written in the Python
programming language to use the interface supplied by the libvirt API.
virt-manager
virt-m anager, also known as Virtual Machine Manager, provides a graphical tool for
administering virtual machines. It uses libvirt-client library as the management API.
libvirt-client
T he libvirt-client package provides the client-side APIs and libraries for accessing libvirt servers.
T he libvirt-client package includes the virsh command line tool to manage and control virtual
machines and hypervisors from the command line or a special virtualization shell.
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Chapter 4. Installing the virtualization packages
Install all of these recommended virtualization packages with the following command:
T he virtualization packages can also be installed from package groups. T he following table describes the
virtualization package groups and what they provide.
Note
Note that the qem u-im g package is installed as a dependency of the Virtualization package
group if it is not already installed on the system. It can also be installed manually with the yum
install qem u-im g command as described previously.
T o install a package group, run the yum groupinstall groupname command. For instance, to install
the Virtualization T ools package group, run the yum groupinstall "Virtualization T ools"
command.
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Virtualization D eployment and Administration Guide
Detailed installation instructions are available in the following chapters for specific versions of Red Hat
Enterprise Linux and Microsoft Windows.
P erformance
Guest virtual machines should be deployed and configured based on their intended tasks. Some
guest systems (for instance, guests running a database server) may require special performance
considerations. Guests may require more assigned CPUs or memory based on their role and
projected system load.
Some guest virtual machines may have a particularly high I/O requirement or may require further
considerations or projections based on the type of I/O (for instance, typical disk block size
access, or the amount of clients).
S torage
Some guest virtual machines may require higher priority access to storage or faster disk types, or
may require exclusive access to areas of storage. T he amount of storage used by guests should
also be regularly monitored and taken into account when deploying and maintaining storage.
Depending upon your environment, some guest virtual machines could require faster network
links than other guests. Bandwidth or latency are often factors when deploying and maintaining
guests, especially as requirements or load changes.
Request requirements
SCSI requests can only be issued to guest virtual machines on virtio drives if the virtio drives are
backed by whole disks, and the disk device parameter is set to lun, as shown in the following
example:
<devices>
<emulator>/usr/libexec/qemu-kvm</emulator>
<disk type='block' device='lun'>
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Chapter 5. Guest virtual machine installation overview
You can use the virt-install command to create guest virtual machines from the command line.
virt-install is used either interactively or as part of a script to automate the creation of virtual
machines. Using virt-install with Kickstart files allows for unattended installation of virtual machines.
T he virt-install tool provides a number of options that can be passed on the command line. T o see a
complete list of options run the following command:
# virt-install --help
Note that you need root privileges in order for virt-install commands to complete successfully. T he
virt-install man page also documents each command option and important variables.
qem u-im g is a related command which may be used before virt-install to configure storage options.
An important option is the --graphics option which allows graphical installation of a virtual machine.
Example 5.1. Using virt-install to install a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 guest virtual machine
virt-install \
--name=guest1-rhel6-64 \
--disk path=/var/lib/libvirt/images/guest1-rhel6-
64.dsk,size=8,sparse=false,cache=none \
--graphics spice \
--vcpus=2 --ram=2048 \
--location=http://example1.com/installation_tree/RHEL6.4-Server-x86_64/os \
--network bridge=br0 \
--os-type=linux \
--os-variant=rhel6
In Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7, the virtio-scsi controller is available for use in guests. If both the host and
guest support virtio-scsi, you can use it as follows:
Example 5.2. Using virt-install to install a guest virtual machine with the virtio-scsi
controller
T he items in bold are required on top of a standard installation in order to use the virtio-scsi controller.
virt-install \
--name=guest1-rhel6-64 \
--controller type=scsi,model=virtio-scsi \
--disk path=/var/lib/libvirt/images/guest1-rhel6-
64.dsk,size=8,sparse=false,cache=none,bus=scsi \
--graphics spice \
--vcpus=2 --ram=2048 \
--location=http://example1.com/installation_tree/RHEL6.4-Server-x86_64/os \
--network bridge=br0 \
--os-type=linux \
--os-variant=rhel6
Ensure that you select the correct os-type for your operating system when running this command.
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Virtualization D eployment and Administration Guide
Note
1. Open virt-manager
Start virt-m anager. Launch the Virtual Machine Manager application from the Applications
menu and System T ools submenu. Alternatively, run the virt-m anager command as root.
Select the hypervisor and click the Connect button to connect to the remote hypervisor.
T he virt-manager window allows you to create a new virtual machine. Click the Create a new
virtual m achine button (Figure 5.1, “Virtual Machine Manager window”) to open the New VM
wizard.
T he New VM wizard breaks down the virtual machine creation process into five steps:
a. Naming the guest virtual machine and choosing the installation type
26
Chapter 5. Guest virtual machine installation overview
Ensure that virt-m anager can access the installation media (whether locally or over the network)
before you continue.
T he guest virtual machine creation process starts with the selection of a name and installation type.
Virtual machine names can have underscores (_), periods (.), and hyphens (-).
T his method uses a CD-ROM, DVD, or image of an installation disk (for example, .iso).
T his method involves the use of a mirrored Red Hat Enterprise Linux or Fedora installation
tree to install a guest. T he installation tree must be accessible through either HT T P, FT P,
or NFS.
T his method uses a Preboot eXecution Environment (PXE) server to install the guest virtual
machine. Setting up a PXE server is covered in the Deployment Guide. T o install via
network boot, the guest must have a routable IP address or shared network device. For
information on the required networking configuration for PXE installation, refer to
Section 5.4, “Installing guest virtual machines with PXE”.
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Virtualization D eployment and Administration Guide
T his method allows you to create a new guest virtual machine and import a disk image
(containing a pre-installed, bootable operating system) to it.
5. Configure installation
Next, configure the OS type and Version of the installation. Ensure that you select the appropriate
OS type for your virtual machine. Depending on the method of installation, provide the install URL or
existing storage path.
28
Chapter 5. Guest virtual machine installation overview
T he next step involves configuring the number of CPUs and amount of memory to allocate to the
virtual machine. T he wizard shows the number of CPUs and amount of memory you can allocate;
configure these settings and click Forward.
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Virtualization D eployment and Administration Guide
7. Configure storage
30
Chapter 5. Guest virtual machine installation overview
If you chose to import an existing disk image during the first step, virt-m anager will skip this step.
Assign sufficient space for your virtual machine and any applications it requires, then click Forward
to continue.
8. Final configuration
Working with guests that are not Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7
Any guest virtual machine that is of type Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 or Red Hat Enterprise
Linux 4 will not be able to be installed using graphical mode. As such, you must select
"Cirrus" instead of "QXL" as a video card.
Verify the settings of the virtual machine and click Finish when you are satisfied; doing so will
create the virtual machine with default networking settings, virtualization type, and architecture.
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Virtualization D eployment and Administration Guide
If you prefer to further configure the virtual machine's hardware first, check the Customize
configuration before install box first before clicking Finish. Doing so will open another wizard
that will allow you to add, remove, and configure the virtual machine's hardware settings.
After configuring the virtual machine's hardware, click Apply. virt-m anager will then create the
virtual machine with your specified hardware settings.
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Chapter 5. Guest virtual machine installation overview
By default, if no network is found, the guest virtual machine attempts to boot from alternative bootable
devices. If there is no other bootable device found, the guest virtual machine pauses. You can use the
qemu-kvm boot parameter reboot-timeout to allow the guest to retry booting if no bootable device is
found, like so:
Note that the command above cannot be executed in a text-only environment. A fully-virtualized (--hvm)
guest can only be installed in a text-only environment if the --location and --extra-args
"console=console_type" are provided instead of the --graphics spice parameter.
1.
Select PXE
Select PXE as the installation method and follow the rest of the steps to configure the OS type,
memory, CPU and storage settings.
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Virtualization D eployment and Administration Guide
34
Chapter 5. Guest virtual machine installation overview
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Virtualization D eployment and Administration Guide
36
Chapter 5. Guest virtual machine installation overview
2.
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Virtualization D eployment and Administration Guide
A DHCP request is sent and if a valid PXE server is found the guest virtual machine's installation
processes will start.
38
Chapter 6. Installing a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 guest virtual machine on a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 host
T hese procedures assume that the KVM hypervisor and all other required packages are installed and the
host is configured for virtualization.
Note
For more information on installing the virtualization packages, refer to Chapter 4, Installing the
virtualization packages.
Procedure 6.1. Creating a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 guest virtual machine with virt-manager
1. Optional: Preparation
Prepare the storage environment for the virtual machine. For more information on preparing storage,
refer to Chapter 16, Storage pools.
Important
Various storage types may be used for storing guest virtual machines. However, for a virtual
machine to be able to use migration features the virtual machine must be created on
networked storage.
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 requires at least 1GB of storage space. However, Red Hat recommends
at least 5GB of storage space for a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 installation and for the procedures in
this guide.
Open virt-manager by executing the virt-m anager command as root or opening Applications
→ System T ools → Virtual Machine Manager.
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Virtualization D eployment and Administration Guide
Click on the Create a new virtual m achine button to start the new virtualized guest wizard.
Virtual machine names can contain letters, numbers and the following characters: '_', '.' and '-'.
Virtual machine names must be unique for migration and cannot consist only of numbers.
Choose the Local install m edia (ISO im age or CDROM) radio button.
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Chapter 6. Installing a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 guest virtual machine on a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 host
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Virtualization D eployment and Administration Guide
A. If you wish to install from a CD-ROM or DVD, select the Use CDROM or DVD radio button, and
select the appropriate disk drive from the drop-down list of drives available.
B. If you wish to install from an ISO image, select Use ISO im age, and then click the Browse...
button to open the Locate m edia volum e window.
Select the installation image you wish to use, and click Choose Volum e.
If no images are displayed in the Locate m edia volum e window, click on the Browse Local
button to browse the host machine for the installation image or DVD drive containing the
installation disk. Select the installation image or DVD drive containing the installation disk and
click Open; the volume is selected for use and you are returned to the Create a new
virtual m achine wizard.
Important
For ISO image files and guest storage images, the recommended location to use is
/var/lib/libvirt/im ages/. Any other location may require additional configuration
by SELinux. Refer to the Red Hat Enterprise Linux Virtualization Security Guide or Red Hat
Enterprise Linux SELinux User's and Administrator's Guide for more details on configuring
SELinux.
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Chapter 6. Installing a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 guest virtual machine on a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 host
Select the operating system type and version which match the installation media you have selected.
5.
Choose appropriate values for the virtual CPUs and RAM allocation. T hese values affect the host's
and guest's performance. Memory and virtual CPUs can be overcommitted. For more information on
overcommitting, refer to Chapter 11, Overcommitting with KVM.
Virtual machines require sufficient physical memory (RAM) to run efficiently and effectively. Red Hat
supports a minimum of 512MB of RAM for a virtual machine. Red Hat recommends at least 1024MB
of RAM for each logical core.
Assign sufficient virtual CPUs for the virtual machine. If the virtual machine runs a multi-threaded
application, assign the number of virtual CPUs the guest virtual machine will require to run efficiently.
You cannot assign more virtual CPUs than there are physical processors (or hyper-threads)
available on the host system. T he number of virtual CPUs available is noted in the Up to X
available field.
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Virtualization D eployment and Administration Guide
6. Storage
Enable and assign storage for the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 guest virtual machine. Assign at least
5GB for a desktop installation or at least 1GB for a minimal installation.
Note
Live and offline migrations require virtual machines to be installed on shared network storage.
For information on setting up shared storage for virtual machines, refer to Section 19.3,
“Shared storage example: NFS for a simple migration”.
Select the Create a disk im age on the com puter's hard drive radio button to
create a file-based image in the default storage pool, the /var/lib/libvirt/im ages/
directory. Enter the size of the disk image to be created. If the Allocate entire disk
now check box is selected, a disk image of the size specified will be created immediately. If
not, the disk image will grow as it becomes filled.
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Chapter 6. Installing a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 guest virtual machine on a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 host
Note
Although the storage pool is a virtual container it is limited by two factors: maximum
size allowed to it by qemu-kvm and the size of the disk on the host physical machine.
Storage pools may not exceed the size of the disk on the host physical machine. T he
maximum sizes are as follows:
virtio-blk = 2^63 bytes or 8 Exabytes(using raw files or disk)
Ext4 = ~ 16 T B (using 4 KB block size)
XFS = ~8 Exabytes
qcow2 and host file systems keep their own metadata and scalability should be
evaluated/tuned when trying very large image sizes. Using raw disks means fewer
layers that could affect scalability or max size.
Click Forward to create a disk image on the local hard drive. Alternatively, select Select
m anaged or other existing storage, then select Browse to configure managed
storage.
If you selected Select m anaged or other existing storage in the previous step to
use a storage pool and clicked Browse, the Locate or create storage volum e
window will appear.
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Virtualization D eployment and Administration Guide
ii. Optional: Click on the New Volum e button to create a new storage volume. T he Add a
Storage Volum e screen will appear. Enter the name of the new storage volume.
Choose a format option from the Form at dropdown menu. Format options include raw,
cow, qcow, qcow2, vmdk, and vpc. Adjust other fields as desired. Note that the qcow
version used here is version 3. T o change the qcow version refer to Section 29.20.2,
“Setting target elements”
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Chapter 6. Installing a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 guest virtual machine on a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 host
Verify there were no errors made during the wizard and everything appears as expected.
Select the Custom ize configuration before install check box to change the guest's
storage or network devices, to use the para-virtualized (virtio) drivers or to add additional devices.
Click on the Advanced options down arrow to inspect and modify advanced options. For a
standard Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 installation, none of these options require modification.
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Virtualization D eployment and Administration Guide
Click Finish to continue into the Red Hat Enterprise Linux installation sequence. For more
information on installing Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 refer to the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7
Installation Guide.
A Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 guest virtual machine is now created from an ISO installation disc image.
Procedure 6.2. Creating a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 guest with virt-manager
1. Optional: Preparation
Prepare the storage environment for the guest virtual machine. For more information on preparing
storage, refer to Chapter 16, Storage pools.
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Chapter 6. Installing a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 guest virtual machine on a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 host
Important
Various storage types may be used for storing guest virtual machines. However, for a virtual
machine to be able to use migration features the virtual machine must be created on
networked storage.
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 requires at least 1GB of storage space. However, Red Hat recommends
at least 5GB of storage space for a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 installation and for the procedures in
this guide.
Open virt-manager by executing the virt-m anager command as root or opening Applications
→ System T ools → Virtual Machine Manager.
Click on the Create a new virtual m achine button to start the new virtual machine wizard.
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Virtualization D eployment and Administration Guide
Virtual machine names can contain letters, numbers and the following characters: '_', '.' and '-'.
Virtual machine names must be unique for migration and cannot consist only of numbers.
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Chapter 6. Installing a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 guest virtual machine on a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 host
4. Provide the installation URL, and the Kickstart URL and Kernel options if required.
5. T he remaining steps are the same as the ISO installation procedure. Continue from Step 5 of the
ISO installation procedure.
Procedure 6.3. Creating a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 guest with virt-manager
1. Optional: Preparation
Prepare the storage environment for the virtual machine. For more information on preparing storage,
refer to Chapter 16, Storage pools.
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Virtualization D eployment and Administration Guide
Important
Various storage types may be used for storing guest virtual machines. However, for a virtual
machine to be able to use migration features the virtual machine must be created on
networked storage.
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 requires at least 1GB of storage space. However, Red Hat recommends
at least 5GB of storage space for a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 installation and for the procedures in
this guide.
Open virt-manager by executing the virt-m anager command as root or opening Applications
→ System T ools → Virtual Machine Manager.
Click on the Create new virtualized guest button to start the new virtualized guest wizard.
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Chapter 6. Installing a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 guest virtual machine on a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 host
Virtual machine names can contain letters, numbers and the following characters: '_', '.' and '-'.
Virtual machine names must be unique for migration and cannot consist only of numbers.
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Virtualization D eployment and Administration Guide
4. T he remaining steps are the same as the ISO installation procedure. Continue from Step 5 of the
ISO installation procedure. From this point, the only difference in this PXE procedure is on the final
New VM screen, which shows the Install: PXE Install field.
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Chapter 7. Virtualizing Red Hat Enterprise Linux on Other Platforms
vm w_balloon - a para-virtualized memory ballooning driver used when running Red Hat Enterprise
Linux on VMware hosts. For further information about this driver, refer to
http://kb.VMware.com/selfservice/microsites/search.do?
cmd=displayKC&docT ype=kc&externalId=1002586.
vm m ouse_drv - a para-virtualized mouse driver used when running Red Hat Enterprise Linux on
VMware hosts. For further information about this driver, refer to
http://kb.VMware.com/selfservice/microsites/search.do?
cmd=displayKC&docT ype=kc&externalId=5739104.
vm ware_drv - a para-virtualized video driver used when running Red Hat Enterprise Linux on VMware
hosts. For further information about this driver, refer to
http://kb.VMware.com/selfservice/microsites/search.do?
cmd=displayKC&docT ype=kc&externalId=1033557.
vm xnet3 - a para-virtualized network adapter used when running Red Hat Enterprise Linux on
VMware hosts. For further information about this driver, refer to
http://kb.VMware.com/selfservice/microsites/search.do?
language=en_US&cmd=displayKC&externalId=1001805.
vm w_pvscsi - a para-virtualized SCSI adapter used when running Red Hat Enterprise Linux on
VMware hosts. For further information about this driver, refer to
http://kb.VMware.com/selfservice/microsites/search.do?
language=en_US&cmd=displayKC&externalId=1010398.
7.2. On Hyper-V
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 ships with Microsoft's Linux Integration Services, a set of drivers that enable
synthetic device support in supported virtualized operating systems. Further details about the drivers
provided are available from http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dn531030.aspx.
T he following enhancements have been made to allow for easier deployment and management of Red Hat
Enterprise Linux guest virtual machines on Hyper-V hypervisor:
Upgraded VMBUS protocols - VMBUS protocols have been upgraded to Windows 8 level. As part of
this work, now VMBUS interrupts can be processed on all available virtual CPUs in the guest.
Furthermore, the signaling protocol between the Red Hat Enterprise Linux guest virtual machine and
the Windows host physical machine has been optimized.
Synthetic frame buffer driver - Provides enhanced graphics performance and superior resolution for
Red Hat Enterprise Linux desktop users.
Live Virtual Machine Backup support - Provisions uninterrupted backup support for live Red Hat
Enterprise Linux guest virtual machines.
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Dynamic expansion of fixed size Linux VHDXs - Allows expansion of live mounted fixed sized Red Hat
Enterprise Linux VHDXs.
Boot using UEFI - Allows virtual machines to boot using Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI) on
Hyper-V 2012 R2 host.
For more information, refer to the following article:" Enabling Linux Support on Windows Server 2012 R2
Hyper-V".
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Chapter 8. Installing a fully-virtualized Windows guest
T o install a Windows operating system on the guest, use the virt-viewer tool. T his tool allows you to
display the graphical console of a virtual machine (via the VNC protocol). In doing so, virt-viewer
allows you to install a fully-virtualized guest's operating system with that operating system's installer (for
example, the Windows 8 installer).
1. Creating the guest virtual machine, using either virt-install or virt-m anager.
2. Installing the Windows operating system on the guest virtual machine, using virt-viewer.
Refer to Chapter 5, Guest virtual machine installation overview for details about creating a guest virtual
machine with virt-install or virt-m anager.
Note that this chapter does not describe how to install a Windows operating system on a fully-virtualized
guest. Rather, it only covers how to create the guest and launch the installer within the guest. For
information on how to install a Windows operating system, refer to the relevant Microsoft installation
documentation.
Important
Before creating the guest, consider first if the guest needs to use KVM Windows para-virtualized
(virtio) drivers. If it does, keep in mind that you can do so during or after installing the Windows
operating system on the guest. For more information about virtio drivers, refer to Chapter 9, KVM
Para-virtualized (virtio) Drivers.
For instructions on how to install KVM virtio drivers, refer to Section 9.1, “Installing the KVM
Windows virtio drivers”.
It is possible to create a fully-virtualized guest with only a single command. T o do so, run the following
program (replace the values accordingly):
# virt-install \
--name=guest-name \
--os-type=windows \
--network network=default \
--disk path=path-to-disk,size=disk-size \
--cdrom=path-to-install-disk \
--graphics spice --ram=1024
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T he path-to-install-disk must be a path to an ISO image, or a URL from which to access a minimal boot ISO
image.
Important
All image files are stored in /var/lib/libvirt/im ages/ by default. Other directory locations
for file-based images are possible, but may require SELinux configuration. If you run SELinux in
enforcing mode, refer to the Red Hat Enterprise Linux SELinux User's and Administrator's Guide for
more information on SELinux.
Once the fully-virtualized guest is created, virt-viewer will launch the guest and run the operating
system's installer. Refer to the relevant Microsoft installation documentation for instructions on how to
install the operating system.
8.2. Tips for more efficiency with Windows guest virtual machines
T he following flags should be set with libvirt to make sure the Windows guest virual machine works
efficiently:
hv_relaxed
hv_spinlocks=0x1fff
hv_vapic
hv_time
<domain type='kvm'>
...
<clock offset='utc'>
<timer name='hypervclock' present='yes'/>
</clock>
...
</domain>
T his action should not be done while the guest virtual machine is running. Shutdown the guest virtual
machine, change the XML file and then re-start the guest virtual machine.
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Virtio drivers are KVM's para-virtualized device drivers, available for Windows guest virtual machines
running on KVM hosts. T hese drivers are included in the virtio package. T he virtio package supports block
(storage) devices and network interface controllers.
T he KVM virtio drivers are automatically loaded and installed on the following:
Some versions of Linux based on the 2.6.27 kernel or newer kernel versions.
Versions of Red Hat Enterprise Linux in the list above detect and install the drivers; additional installation
steps are not required.
In Red Hat Enterprise Linux 3 (3.9 and above), manual installation is required.
Note
PCI devices are limited by the virtualized system architecture. Refer to Chapter 20, Guest virtual
machine device configuration for additional limitations when using assigned devices.
Using KVM virtio drivers, the following Microsoft Windows versions are expected to run similarly to bare-
metal-based systems.
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T his section covers the installation process for the KVM Windows virtio drivers. T he KVM virtio drivers can
be loaded during the Windows installation or installed after the guest's installation.
You can install the virtio drivers on a guest virtual machine using one of the following methods:
using a virtualized CD-ROM device of the driver installation disk .iso file
using a USB drive, by mounting the same (provided) .ISO file that you would use for the CD-ROM
using a virtualized floppy device to install the drivers during boot time (required and recommended only
for XP/2003)
T his guide describes installation from the para-virtualized installer disk as a virtualized CD-ROM device.
1.
T he virtio-win package contains the virtio block and network drivers for all supported Windows guest
virtual machines.
Note
Download and install the virtio-win package on the host with the yum command.
T he list of virtio-win packages that are supported on Windows operating systems, and the current
certified package version, can be found at the following URL: windowsservercatalog.com.
Note that the Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization Hypervisor and Red Hat Enterprise Linux are created
on the same code base so the drivers for the same version (for example, Red Hat Enterprise
Virtualization Hypervisor 3.3 and Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.5) are supported for both environments.
2.
When booting a Windows guest that uses virtio-win devices, the relevant virtio-win device drivers
must already be installed on this guest. T he virtio-win drivers are not provided as inbox drivers in
Microsoft's Windows installation kit, so installation of a Windows guest on a virtio-win storage device
(viostor/virtio-scsi) requires that you provide the appropriate driver during the installation, either
directly from the virtio-win.iso or from the supplied Virtual Floppy image virtio-
win<version>.vfd.
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Follow this procedure to add a CD-ROM image with virt-m anager and then install the drivers.
Procedure 9.1. Installing from the driver CD-ROM image with virt-manager
Open virt-m anager, then open the guest virtual machine from the list by double-clicking the
guest name.
Click the lightbulb icon on the toolbar at the top of the window to view virtual hardware details.
T hen click the Add Hardware button at the bottom of the new view that appears.
Ensure that the Select m anaged or other existing storage radio button is selected, and
browse to the virtio driver's .iso image file. T he default location for the latest version of the drivers
is /usr/share/virtio-win/virtio-win.iso.
Change the Device type to IDE cdrom and click the Forward button to proceed.
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4. Reboot
Reboot or start the virtual machine to begin using the driver disc. Virtualized IDE devices require a
restart to for the virtual machine to recognize the new device.
Once the CD-ROM with the drivers is attached and the virtual machine has started, proceed with
Procedure 9.2, “Windows installation on a Windows 7 virtual machine”.
T his procedure installs the drivers on a Windows 7 virtual machine as an example. Adapt the Windows
installation instructions to your guest's version of Windows.
On the desktop of the Windows virtual machine, click the Windows icon at the bottom corner of the
screen to open the Start menu.
Right-click on Com puter and select Manage from the pop-up menu.
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Select the Device Manager from the left-most pane. T his can be found under Com puter
Managem ent > System T ools.
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Figure 9.6. Viewing available system devices in the Computer Management window
T here are up to four drivers available: the balloon driver, the serial driver, the network driver,
and the block driver.
Balloon, the balloon driver, affects the PCI standard RAM Controller in the
System devices group.
vioserial, the serial driver, affects the PCI Sim ple Com m unication Controller
in the System devices group.
NetKVM, the network driver, affects the Network adapters group. T his driver is only
available if a virtio NIC is configured. Configurable parameters for this driver are
documented in Appendix C, NetKVM Driver Parameters.
viostor, the block driver, affects the Disk drives group. T his driver is only available if
a virtio disk is configured.
Right-click on the device whose driver you wish to update, and select Update Driver...
from the pop-up menu.
T his example installs the balloon driver, so right-click on PCI standard RAM
Controller.
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From the drop-down menu, select Update Driver Software... to access the driver
update wizard.
T he first page of the driver update wizard asks how you want to search for driver software. Click on
the second option, Browse m y com puter for driver software.
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Click on Browse...
A separate driver is provided for each combination of operating systems and architectures.
T he drivers are arranged hierarchically according to their driver type, the operating system,
and the architecture on which they will be installed: driver_type/os/arch/. For example, the
Balloon driver for a Windows 7 operating system with an x86 (32-bit) architecture, resides in
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7. Reboot
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Chapter 9. KVM Para-virtualized (virtio) D rivers
T his method allows a Windows guest virtual machine to use the virtio drivers for the default storage
device.
Note
Important
Create the virtual machine, as normal, without starting the virtual machine. Follow one of the
procedures below.
Select one of the following guest-creation methods, and follow the instructions.
T his method attaches the virtio driver floppy disk to a Windows guest before the installation.
If the virtual machine is created from an XML definition file with virsh, use the virsh
define command not the virsh create command.
i. Create, but do not start, the virtual machine. Refer to the Red Hat Enterprise Linux
Virtualization Administration Guide for details on creating virtual machines with the
virsh command.
ii. Add the driver disk as a virtualized floppy disk with the virsh command. T his example
can be copied and used if there are no other virtualized floppy devices attached to the
guest virtual machine. Note that vm_name should be replaced with the name of the
virtual machine.
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b. Creating the guest virtual machine with virt-manager and changing the disk type
i. At the final step of the virt-manager guest creation wizard, check the Custom ize
configuration before install checkbox.
Click the Add Hardware button in the bottom left of the new panel.
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You have now created a removable device accessible by your virtual machine.
T o change the hard disk type from IDE Disk to Virtio Disk, we must first remove the
existing hard disk, Disk 1. Select the disk and click on the Rem ove button.
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Add a new virtual storage device by clicking Add Hardware. T hen, change the
Device type from IDE disk to Virtio Disk. Click Finish to confirm the operation.
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When you are satisfied with the configuration details, click the Begin Installation
button.
Append the following parameter exactly as listed below to add the driver disk to the
installation with the virt-install command:
--disk path=/usr/share/virtio-win/virtio-win.vfd,device=floppy
Important
If the device you wish to add is a disk (that is, not a floppy or a cdrom ), you will
also need to add the bus=virtio option to the end of the --disk parameter, like so:
--disk path=/usr/share/virtio-win/virtio-
win.vfd,device=disk,bus=virtio
According to the version of Windows you are installing, append one of the following options to
the virt-install command:
--os-variant winxp
--os-variant win2k3
--os-variant win7
3.
During the installation, additional steps are required to install drivers, depending on the type of
Windows guest.
a.
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Before the installation blue screen repeatedly press F6 for third party drivers.
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b.
Follow the same procedure for Windows Server 2003, but when the installer prompts you for
the driver, click on Load Driver, point the installer to Drive A: and pick the driver that
suits your guest operating system and architecture.
1. Ensure that you have installed the appropriate driver (viostor), as described in Section 9.1,
“Installing the KVM Windows virtio drivers”, before continuing with this procedure.
2. Run the virsh edit <guestnam e> command as root to edit the XML configuration file for your
device. For example, virsh edit guest1. T he configuration files are located in
/etc/libvirt/qem u.
3. Below is a file-based block device using the virtualized IDE driver. T his is a typical entry for a virtual
machine not using the virtio drivers.
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4. Change the entry to use the virtio device by modifying the bus= entry to virtio. Note that if the
disk was previously IDE it will have a target similar to hda, hdb, or hdc and so on. When changing to
bus=virtio the target needs to be changed to vda, vdb, or vdc accordingly.
5. Remove the address tag inside the disk tags. T his must be done for this procedure to work. Libvirt
will regenerate the address tag appropriately the next time the virtual machine is started.
Alternatively, virt-m anager, virsh attach-disk or virsh attach-interface can add a new
device using the virtio drivers.
Refer to the libvirt website for more details on using Virtio: http://www.linux-kvm.org/page/Virtio
Important
Ensure the drivers have been installed on the Windows guest before proceeding to install new
devices. If the drivers are unavailable the device will not be recognized and will not work.
1. Open the guest virtual machine by double clicking on the name of the guest in virt-m anager.
2. Open the Show virtual hardware details tab by clicking the lightbulb button.
3. In the Show virtual hardware details tab, click on the Add Hardware button.
4. In the Adding Virtual Hardware tab select Storage or Network for the type of device. T he storage
and network device wizards are covered in procedures Procedure 9.6, “Adding a storage device
using the virtio storage driver” and Procedure 9.7, “Adding a network device using the virtio network
driver”.
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Procedure 9.6. Adding a storage device using the virtio storage driver
1. Open the guest virtual machine by double clicking on the name of the guest in virt-m anager.
2. Open the Show virtual hardware details tab by clicking the lightbulb button.
3. In the Show virtual hardware details tab, click on the Add Hardware button.
Set the Device type to Virtio Disk to use the virtio drivers. Choose the desired Host
device.
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Procedure 9.7. Adding a network device using the virtio network driver
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Once all new devices are added, reboot the virtual machine. Windows virtual machines may not recognize
the devices until the guest is rebooted.
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 supports the following networking setups for virtualization:
bridged networks
You must enable NAT , network bridging or directly assign a PCI device to allow external hosts access to
network services on guest virtual machines.
Host configuration
Every standard libvirt installation provides NAT -based connectivity to virtual machines as the default
virtual network. Verify that it is available with the virsh net-list --all command.
If it is missing the following could be used in the XML configuration file (such as
/etc/libvirtd/qemu/myguest.xml) for the guest:
# ll /etc/libvirt/qemu/
total 12
drwx------. 3 root root 4096 Nov 7 23:02 networks
-rw-------. 1 root root 2205 Nov 20 01:20 r6.4.xml
-rw-------. 1 root root 2208 Nov 8 03:19 r6.xml
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Chapter 10. Network configuration
Once the libvirt default network is running, you will see an isolated bridge device. T his device does not
have any physical interfaces added. T he new device uses NAT and IP forwarding to connect to the
physical network. Do not add new interfaces.
# brctl show
bridge name bridge id STP enabled interfaces
virbr0 8000.000000000000 yes
libvirt adds iptables rules which allow traffic to and from guest virtual machines attached to the
virbr0 device in the INPUT , FORWARD, OUT PUT and POST ROUT ING chains. libvirt then attempts to
enable the ip_forward parameter. Some other applications may disable ip_forward, so the best
option is to add the following to /etc/sysctl.conf.
net.ipv4.ip_forward = 1
Once the host configuration is complete, a guest virtual machine can be connected to the virtual network
based on its name. T o connect a guest to the 'default' virtual network, the following could be used in the
XML configuration file (such as /etc/libvirtd/qem u/m yguest.xm l) for the guest:
<interface type='network'>
<source network='default'/>
</interface>
Note
Defining a MAC address is optional. If you do not define one, a MAC address is automatically
generated and used as the MAC address of the bridge device used by the network. Manually
setting the MAC address may be useful to maintain consistency or easy reference throughout your
environment, or to avoid the very small chance of a conflict.
<interface type='network'>
<source network='default'/>
<mac address='00:16:3e:1a:b3:4a'/>
</interface>
Specifically, when UDP traffic is sent from a host machine to a guest virtual machine on that host,
performance degradation can occur if the guest virtual machine processes incoming data at a rate slower
than the host machine sends it. In this situation, enabling vhost-net causes the UDP socket's receive
buffer to overflow more quickly, which results in greater packet loss. It is therefore better to disable
vhost-net in this situation to slow the traffic, and improve overall performance.
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T o disable vhost-net, edit the <interface> sub-element in the guest virtual machine's XML
configuration file and define the network as follows:
<interface type="network">
...
<model type="virtio"/>
<driver name="qemu"/>
...
</interface>
Setting the driver name to qem u forces packet processing into QEMU user space, effectively disabling
vhost-net for that interface.
If you want to disable this again, you can run the following:
modprobe -r vhost_net
T he first command removes the old file, the second one makes a new file (like above) and disables zero-
copy. You can use this to enable as well but the change will not be permanent.
T o confirm that this has taken effect, check the output of cat
/sys/m odule/vhost_net/param eters/experim ental_zcopytx. It should show:
$ cat /sys/module/vhost_net/parameters/experimental_zcopytx
0
1. From the virt-manager main menu, click Edit > Connection Details to open the Connection Details
window.
3. Click the + at the bottom of the window to configure a new network interface.
4. In the Interface type drop-down menu, select Bridge, and then click Forward to continue.
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Chapter 10. Network configuration
5. a. In the Name field, pick a name for the bridge, such as br0.
b. Select a Start mode from the drop-down menu. Choose from one of the following:
onboot - activates the bridge on the next guest virtual machine reboot
hotplug - activates the bridge even if the guest virtual machine is running
c. Check the Activate now check box to activate the bridge immediately.
d. If you want to configure either the IP or Bridge settings, click the appropriate Configure
button. A separate window will open to allow you to specify the settings. Make any necessary
changes and click OK when done.
e. Choose the interfaces you want to bridge. If the interface is currently in use by another guest
virtual machine you will get a warning message.
6. Click Finish and the wizard closes taking you back to the Connections menu. T o stop the
interface, click the Stop key and to delete click the Delete key.
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T o create a bridge (br0) based on the eth0 interface, execute the following command on the host:
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Important
If you do not want to disable NetworkManager entirely, add "NM_CONTROLLED=no" to the ifcfg-
* network script being used for the bridge.
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11.1. Introduction
T he KVM hypervisor supports overcommitting CPUs and overcommitting memory. Overcommitting is
allocating more virtualized CPUs or memory than there are physical resources on the system. With CPU
overcommit, under-utilized virtualized servers or desktops can run on fewer servers which saves a
number of system resources, with the net effect of less power, cooling, and investment in server hardware.
As most processes do not access 100% of their allocated memory all the time, KVM can use this behavior
to its advantage and allocate more memory for guest virtual machines than the host physical machine
actually has available, in a process called overcommiting of resources.
Overcommitting is not an ideal solution for all memory issues as the recommended method to deal
with memory shortage is to allocate less memory per guest so that the sum of all guests memory
(+4G for the host O/S) is lower than the host physical machine's physical memory. If the guest
virtual machines need more memory, then increase the guest virtual machines' swap space
allocation. If however, should you decide to overcommit, do so with caution.
Guest virtual machines running on a KVM hypervisor do not have dedicated blocks of physical RAM
assigned to them. Instead, each guest virtual machine functions as a Linux process where the host
physical machine's Linux kernel allocates memory only when requested. In addition the host physical
machine's memory manager can move the guest virtual machine's memory between its own physical
memory and swap space. T his is why overcommitting requires allotting sufficient swap space on the host
physical machine to accommodate all guest virtual machines as well as enough memory for the host
physical machine's processes. As a basic rule, the host physical machine's operating system requires a
maximum of 4GB of memory along with a minimum of 4GB of swap space. Refer to Example 11.1, “Memory
overcommit example” for more information.
Red Hat Knowledgebase has an article on safely and efficiently determining the size of the swap partition.
Note
T he example below is provided as a guide for configuring swap only. T he settings listed may not be
appropriate for your environment.
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T his example demonstrates how to calculate swap space for overcommitting. Although it may appear to
be simple in nature, the ramifications of overcommitting should not be ignored. Refer to Important before
proceeding.
ExampleServer1 has 32GB of physical RAM. T he system is being configured to run 50 guest virtual
machines, each requiring 1GB of virtualized memory. As mentioned above, the host physical machine's
system itself needs a maximum of 4GB (apart from the guest virtual machines) as well as an additional
4GB as a swap space minimum.
Calculate the amount of memory needed for the sum of all the guest virtual machines - In this
example: (50 guest virtual machines * 1GB of memory per guest virtual machine) = 50GB
Add the guest virtual machine's memory amount to the amount needed for the host physical
machine's OS and for the host physical machine's minimum swap space - In this example: 50GB
guest virtual machine memory + 4GB host physical machine's OS + 4GB minimal swap = 58GB
Subtract this amount from the amount of physical RAM there is on the system - In this example 58GB
- 32GB = 26GB
T he answer is the amount of swap space that needs to be allocated. In this example 26GB
Note
Overcommitting does not work with all guest virtual machines, but has been found to work in a
desktop virtualization setup with minimal intensive usage or running several identical guest virtual
machines with KSM. It should be noted that configuring swap and memory overcommit is not a
simple plug-in and configure formula, as each environment and setup is different. Proceed with
caution before changing these settings and make sure you completely understand your
environment and setup before making any changes.
For more information on KSM and overcommitting, refer to Chapter 24, KSM.
Virtualized CPUs are overcommitted best when each guest virtual machine only has a single VCPU. T he
Linux scheduler is very efficient with this type of load. KVM should safely support guest virtual machines
with loads under 100% at a ratio of five VCPUs. Overcommitting single VCPU guest virtual machines is not
an issue.
You cannot overcommit symmetric multiprocessing guest virtual machines on more than the physical
number of processing cores. For example a guest virtual machine with four VCPUs should not be run on a
host physical machine with a dual core processor. Overcommitting symmetric multiprocessing guest virtual
machines in over the physical number of processing cores will cause significant performance degradation.
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Assigning guest virtual machines VCPUs up to the number of physical cores is appropriate and works as
expected. For example, running guest virtual machines with four VCPUs on a quad core host. Guest virtual
machines with less than 100% loads should function effectively in this setup.
Important
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Chapter 12. KVM guest timing management
Guest virtual machines without accurate time keeping may experience issues with network applications
and processes, as session validity, migration, and other network activities rely on timestamps to remain
correct.
KVM avoids these issues by providing guest virtual machines with a para-virtualized clock (kvm-clock).
However, it is still vital to test timing before attempting activities that may be affected by time keeping
inaccuracies.
Note
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.5 and newer, Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.0 and newer, and Red Hat
Enterprise Linux 7 use kvm-clock as their default clock source. Running without kvm-clock
requires special configuration, and is not recommended.
Important
T he Network T ime Protocol (NT P) daemon should be running on the host and the guest virtual
machines. Make sure to install ntp and enable the ntpd service:
Enable the ntpd service and add it to the default startup sequence:
T he ntpd service will correct the effects of clock skew as long as the clock runs no more than
0.05% faster or slower than the reference time source. T he ntp startup script adjusts the clock
offset from the reference time by adjusting the system clock at startup time, if required.
Modern Intel and AMD CPUs provide a constant T ime Stamp Counter (T SC). T he count frequency of the
constant T SC does not vary when the CPU core itself changes frequency, for example, to comply with a
power saving policy. A CPU with a constant T SC frequency is necessary in order to use the T SC as a
clock source for KVM guests.
Your CPU has a constant T ime Stamp Counter if the constant_tsc flag is present. T o determine if your
CPU has the constant_tsc flag run the following command:
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If any output is given your CPU has the constant_tsc bit. If no output is given follow the instructions
below.
Systems without a constant T SC frequency cannot use the T SC as a clock source for virtual machines,
and require additional configuration. Power management features interfere with accurate time keeping and
must be disabled for guest virtual machines to accurately keep time with KVM.
Important
If the CPU lacks the constant_tsc bit, disable all power management features (BZ #513138). Each
system has several timers it uses to keep time. T he T SC is not stable on the host, which is sometimes
caused by cpufreq changes, deep C state, or migration to a host with a faster T SC. Deep C sleep states
can stop the T SC. T o prevent the kernel using deep C states append processor.m ax_cstate=1 to the
kernel boot. T o make this change persistent, edit values of the GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT key in
the /etc/default/grub file. For example. if you want to enable emergency mode for each boot, edit
the entry as follows:
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="emergency"
Note that you can specify multiple parameters for the GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT key, similarly to
adding the parameters in the GRUB 2 boot menu.
Disable cpufreq (only necessary on hosts without the constant_tsc) by editing the
/etc/sysconfig/cpuspeed configuration file and change the . Valid limits can be found in the
/sys/devices/system /cpu/cpu* /cpufreq/scaling_available_frequencies files.
T he table below lists versions of Red Hat Enterprise Linux and the parameters required on the specified
systems.
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5.5 x86 with the para-virtualized clock Additional parameters are not required
5.5 x86 without the para-virtualized clock clocksource=acpi_pm lpj=n
5.4 AMD64/Intel 64 notsc
5.4 x86 clocksource=acpi_pm
5.3 AMD64/Intel 64 notsc
5.3 x86 clocksource=acpi_pm
4.8 AMD64/Intel 64 notsc
4.8 x86 clock=pmtmr
3.9 AMD64/Intel 64 Additional parameters are not required
Note
T he lpj parameter requires a numeric value equal to the loops per jiffy value of the specific CPU
on which the guest virtual machine runs. If you do not know this value, do not set the lpj
parameter.
Warning
T he divider kernel parameter was previously recommended for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4 and 5
guest virtual machines that did not have high responsiveness requirements, or exist on systems
with high guest density. It is no longer recommended for use with guests running Red Hat
Enterprise Linux 4, or Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 versions prior to version 5.8.
divider can improve throughput on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 versions equal to or later than 5.8
by lowering the frequency of timer interrupts. For example, if HZ=1000, and divider is set to 10
(that is, divider=10), the number of timer interrupts per period changes from the default value
(1000) to 100 (the default value, 1000, divided by the divider value, 10).
BZ #698842 details a bug in the way that the divider parameter interacts with interrupt and tick
recording. T his bug is fixed as of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.8. However, the divider parameter
can still cause kernel panic in guests using Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4, or Red Hat Enterprise Linux
5 versions prior to version 5.8.
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 and newer does not have a fixed-frequency clock interrupt; it operates
in tickless mode and uses the timer dynamically as required. T he divider parameter is therefore
not useful for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 and Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7, and guests on these
systems are not affected by this bug.
12.2. Using the Real-Time Clock with Windows Server 2003 and
Windows XP guests
Windows uses both the Real-T ime Clock (RT C) and the T ime Stamp Counter (T SC). For Windows guest
virtual machines the Real-T ime Clock can be used instead of the T SC for all time sources which resolves
guest timing issues.
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T o enable the Real-T ime Clock for the PMT IMER clock source (the PMT IMER usually uses the T SC), add
the following option to the Windows boot settings. Windows boot settings are stored in the boot.ini file. Add
the following option to the end of the Windows boot line in the boot.ini file:
/usepmtimer
For more information on Windows boot settings and the usepmtimer option, refer to Available switch
options for the Windows XP and the Windows Server 2003 Boot.ini files.
T he boot.ini file is no longer used as of Windows Server 2008 and newer. Windows Server 2008,
Windows Server 2008 R2, and Windows 7 do not use the T SC as a time source if the hypervisor-
present bit is set. T he Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 KVM hypervisor enables this CPUID bit by default, so
it is no longer necessary to use the Boot Configuration Data Editor (bcdedit.exe) to modify the
Windows boot parameters.
2. Open the Accessories menu of the start menu. Right click on the Command Prompt application,
select Run as Adm inistrator.
4. Set the boot manager to use the platform clock. T his should instruct Windows to use the PM timer
for the primary clock source. T he system UUID ({default} in the example below) should be
changed if the system UUID is different than the default boot device.
T his fix should improve time keeping for Windows Server 2008 and Windows 7 guests.
Steal time is reported in the CPU time fields in /proc/stat as st. It is automatically reported by utilities
such as top and vm stat, and cannot be switched off.
Large amounts of steal time indicate CPU contention, which can reduce guest performance. T o relieve
CPU contention, increase the guest's CPU priority or CPU quota, or run fewer guests on the host.
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Chapter 13. Network booting with libvirt
T his section does not cover the creation of boot images or PXE servers. It is used to explain how to
configure libvirt, in a private or bridged network, to boot a guest virtual machine with PXE booting enabled.
Warning
T hese procedures are provided only as an example. Ensure that you have sufficient backups
before proceeding.
A PXE Server (DHCP and T FT P) - T his can be a libvirt internal server, manually-configured dhcpd and
tftpd, dnsmasq, a server configured by Cobbler, or some other server.
3. Edit the <ip> element in the configuration file for the default network to include the appropriate
address, network mask, DHCP address range, and boot file, where BOOT_FILENAME represents
the file name you are using to boot the guest virtual machine.
4. Run:
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5. Boot the guest using PXE (refer to Section 13.2, “Booting a guest using PXE”).
1. Ensure bridging is enabled such that the PXE boot server is available on the network.
2. Boot a guest virtual machine with PXE booting enabled. You can use the virt-install command
to create a new virtual machine with PXE booting enabled, as shown in the following example
command:
Alternatively, ensure that the guest network is configured to use your bridged network, and that the
XML guest configuration file has a <boot dev='network'/> element inside the <os> element, as
shown in the following example:
<os>
<type arch='x86_64' machine='rhel6.2.0'>hvm</type>
<boot dev='network'/>
<boot dev='hd'/>
</os>
<interface type='bridge'>
<mac address='52:54:00:5a:ad:cb'/>
<source bridge='breth0'/>
<target dev='vnet0'/>
<alias name='net0'/>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x00' slot='0x03' function='0x0'/>
</interface>
1. Configure PXE booting on libvirt as shown in Section 13.1.1, “Setting up a PXE boot server on a
private libvirt network”.
2. Boot a guest virtual machine using libvirt with PXE booting enabled. You can use the virt-
install command to create/install a new virtual machine using PXE:
Alternatively, ensure that the guest network is configured to use your bridged network, and that the XML
guest configuration file has a <boot dev='network'/> element inside the <os> element, as shown in
the following example:
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Chapter 13. Network booting with libvirt
<os>
<type arch='x86_64' machine='rhel6.2.0'>hvm</type>
<boot dev='network'/>
<boot dev='hd'/>
</os>
Also ensure that the guest virtual machine is connected to the private network:
<interface type='network'>
<mac address='52:54:00:66:79:14'/>
<source network='default'/>
<target dev='vnet0'/>
<alias name='net0'/>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x00' slot='0x03' function='0x0'/>
</interface>
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T his section covers the options and commands available to the guest agent in detail. It also covers how to
run the Guest Agent in the foreground, or as a daemon in the background.
Note that CPU hot plugging and hot unplugging are supported with the help of the QEMU guest agent on
Linux and Windows guests; CPUs can be enabled or disabled while the guest is running, thus
implementing the hotplug feature and mimicking the unplug feature. Refer to Section 26.13.6, “Configuring
virtual CPU count” for the command to use to implement this.
Note
For instructions on how to setup the QEMU guest agent on Window's guests refer to the
instructions found here. or Section 14.3, “Running the QEMU guest agent on a Windows guest”
In this step you will open the guest virtual machine domain XML with the QEMU guest-agent
configuration. You will need the domain name to open the file. Use the command # virsh list on
the host physical machine to list the domains that it can recognize.In this example, the domain's
name is rhel7 as shown.
Add the following elements to the XML file remembering to write and save it when done.
<channel type='unix'>
</channel>
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Figure 14 .1. Editing the domain XML to configure the QEMU guest agent
Download and install the guest agent via the guest virtual machine's terminal window if you have not
done so already. Once installed, start the service as follows:
You can now communicate with the guest by sending valid libvirt commands over the established character
device driver.
14.2. Using the QEMU guest virtual machine agent protocol CLI
T he QEMU guest virtual machine agent protocol (QEMU GA) package, qemu-guest-agent, is fully
supported in Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7. T here are some issues regarding its isa-serial/virtio-serial
transport, and the following caveats have been noted:
T here is no way for qemu-guest-agent to detect whether or not a client has connected to the channel.
T here is no way for a client to detect whether or not qemu-guest-agent has disconnected or
reconnected to the backend.
If the virtio-serial device resets and qemu-guest-agent has not connected to the channel as a result,
(generally caused by a reboot or hotplug), data from the client will be dropped.
If qemu-guest-agent has connected to the channel following a virtio-serial device reset, data from the
client will be queued (and eventually throttled if available buffers are exhausted), regardless of whether
or not qemu-guest-agent is still running/connected.
14.2.1. guest-sync
T he guest-sync request/response exchange is simple. T he client provides a unique numerical token, the
agent sends it back in a response:
A successful exchange guarantees that the channel is now in sync and no unexpected data/responses
will be sent. Note that for the reasons mentioned above there's no guarantee this request will be
answered, so a client should implement a timeout and re-issue this periodically until a response is
received for the most recent request.
T his alone does not handle synchronization issues in all cases. For example, if qemu-guest-agent's
parser previously received a partial request from a previous client connection, subsequent attempts to
issue the guest-sync request can be misconstrued as being part of the previous partial request.
Eventually qemu-guest-agent will hit it's recursion or token size limit and flush its parser state, at which
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point it will begin processing the backlog of requests, but there's no guarantee this will occur before the
channel is throttled due to exhausting all available buffers. T hus, there is a potential for a deadlock
situation occurring for certain instances.
T o avoid this, qemu-guest-agent/QEMU's JSON parser has special handling for the 0xFF byte, which is an
invalid UT F-8 character. Client requests should precede the guest-sync request with to ensure that qemu-
guest-agent flushes it's parser state as soon as possible. As long as all clients abide by this, the deadlock
state should be reliably avoidable.
14.2.2. guest-sync-delimited
If qemu-guest-agent attempts to communicate with a client, and the client receives a partial response from
a previous qemu-guest-agent instance, the client might misconstrue responses to guest-sync as being
part of this previous request. For client implementations that treat newlines as a delimiter for qemu-guest-
agent responses, use guest-sync-delim ited.
Even in some cases where there are JSON stream-based implementations that do not rely on newline
delimiters, it may be considered invasive to implement a client's response/JSON handling, as it is the same
deadlock scenario described previously. Using the guest-sync-delim ited on the client, tells QEMU
GA to place the same 0xFF character in front of the response, thereby preventing confusion.
> 7b 27 65 78 65 63 75 74 65 27 3a 27 67 75 65 73 74 2d 73 79 6e 63 2d 64 65
6c 69 6d 69 74 65 64 27 2c 27 61 72 67 75 6d 65 6e 74 73 27 3a 7b 27 69 64
27 3a 31 32 33 34 35 36 7d 7d 0a
< ff 7b 22 72 65 74 75 72 6e 22 3a 20 31 32 33 34 35 36 7d 0a
As stated above, the request should also be preceded with a 0xFF to flush qemu-guest-agent's parser
state.
File system applications / databases flush working buffers to the virtual disk and stop accepting client
connections
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Chapter 14. QEMU Guest Agent
Snapshot is confirmed
T he command you need to use snapshot-create-as is explained in furter detail in Section 26.17.2,
“Creating a snapshot for the current domain”.
An application specific hook script might need various SELinux permissions in order to run correctly.
As is done when the script needs to connect to a socket in order to talk to a database. In general,
local SELinux policies should be developed and installed for such purposes. Accessing file system
nodes should work out of the box, after issuing the restorecon -FvvR command listed in
T able 14.1, “QEMU guest agent package contents” in the table row labeled /etc/qem u-
ga/fsfreeze-hook.d/.
T he main hook script, /etc/qem u-ga/fsfreeze-hook logs its own messages, as well as the
application-specific scripts' standard output and error messages, in the following log file:
/var/log/qem u-ga/fsfreeze-hook.log. For more information, refer to the qemu-guest-agent wiki
page on wiki.qemu.org or libvirt.org.
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T he instructions below are for Windows guests running on a Red Hat Enterprise Linux host phyical
machine only.
Windows guest virtual machines will use QEMU GA for windows, qemu-guest-agent-win. T his agent
is required for VSS (Volume Shadow Copy Service) support for Windows guest virtual machines
running on Red Hat Enterprise Linux. More information can be found here.
Make sure the following packages are installed on the Red Hat Enterprise Linux host physical
machine
In order to copy the drivers in the Windows guest, make an * .iso file for the qxl driver using the
following command:
Install the virtio-serial and spice+qxl drivers in guest by mounting the * .iso to the Windows guest
in order to update the driver. Remember to start the guest,then attach the driver .iso file to the guest
as shown:
T o install the drivers using the Windows Control Panel and navigate to the following menus:
T o install qxl-win driver - Select Hardware and Sound > device manager > display
adapter, and update the driver with the spice+qxl
Install virtio-win driver - Select Hardware and Sound > device manager > virtio-serial
driver.
T he domain XML file for the Windows guest is located on the Red Hat Enterprise Linux host physical
machine. T o gain access to this file, you need the Windows guest domain name. Use the command
# virsh list on the host physical machine to list the domains that it can recognize.In this
example, the domain's name is win7x86 as shown.
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Chapter 14. QEMU Guest Agent
Add the following elements to the XML file remembering to write and save it when done.
<domain type='kvm'>
<name>win7x86</name>
<uuid>ad61420e-b3c6-b50e-16ab-73009cbf9b6d</uuid>
<memory unit='KiB'>1048576</memory>
<currentMemory unit='KiB'>1048576</currentMemory>
<vcpu placement='static'>1</vcpu>
<os>
<type arch='i686' machine='rhel6.4.0'>hvm</type>
<loader>/usr/share/seabios/bios.bin</loader>
<boot dev='hd'/>
</os>
---
<pm>
<suspend-to-mem enabled='yes'/>
<suspend-to-disk enabled='yes'/>
</pm>
---
Figure 14 .2. Editing the Windows guest domain XML to configure the QEMU guest agent
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Run the following command on the Red Hat Enterprise Linux host physical machine terminal
window to locate the file to install. Note that the file shown below may not be exactly the same
as the one your system finds, but it should be latest official version.
# ls -l /usr/share/virtio-win/guest-agent/
total 1544
From the Windows guest (win7x86, for example) install the qemu-ga-x64.msi or the qemu-ga-
x86.msi by double clicking on the file. Once installed, it will be shown as a qemu-ga service in
the Windows guest within the System Manager. T his same manager can be used to monitor
the status of the service.
Only the following commands are currently supported with qemu-ga for Windows guests. T hese
commands function in the same way as the Red Hat Enterprise Linux commands do and the
directions are universal. More information is in the README.T XT file that is downloaded when the
package is installed. It is best to read it entirely. Refer to qemu-devel list for even more information.
guest-info
guest-ping
guest-sync-delim ited
guest-sync
guest-shutdown
guest-suspend-disk
guest-suspend-ram
guest-fsfreeze-status
guest-fsfreeze-freeze
guest-fsfreeze-thaw
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P art II. Administration
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Run SELinux in enforcing mode. Set SELinux to run in enforcing mode with the setenforce command.
# setenforce 1
Remove or disable any unnecessary services such as AutoFS, NFS, FT P, HT T P, NIS, telnetd,
sendm ail and so on.
Only add the minimum number of user accounts needed for platform management on the server and
remove unnecessary user accounts.
Avoid running any unessential applications on your host. Running applications on the host may impact
virtual machine performance and can affect server stability. Any application which may crash the server
will also cause all virtual machines on the server to go down.
Use a central location for virtual machine installations and images. Virtual machine images should be
stored under /var/lib/libvirt/im ages/. If you are using a different directory for your virtual
machine images make sure you add the directory to your SELinux policy and relabel it before starting
the installation. Use of shareable, network storage in a central location is highly recommended.
Note
Additional performance tips can be found in the Red Hat Enterprise Linux Virtualization Tuning and
Optimization Guide.
Additional security tips can be found in the Red Hat Enterprise Linux Virtualization Security Guide.
Operating specifications
Specifies the host physical servers as well as what support is required for these services
Here are a few security issues to consider while developing a deployment plan:
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Chapter 15. Securing the host physical machine and improving performance
Run only necessary services on host physical machines. T he fewer processes and services running
on the host physical machine, the higher the level of security and performance.
Enable SELinux on the hypervisor. Refer to the Red Hat Enterprise Linux Virtualization Security Guide
for more information on using SELinux and virtualization.
Use a firewall to restrict traffic to the host physical machine. You can setup a firewall with default-reject
rules that will help secure the host physical machine from attacks. It is also important to limit network-
facing services.
Do not allow normal users to access the host operating system. If the host operating system is
privileged, granting access to unprivileged accounts may compromise the level of security.
In a default configuration, the libvirtd daemon has three levels of access control. All connections start off in
an unauthenticated state, where the only API operations allowed are those required to complete
authentication. After successful authentication, a connection either has full, unrestricted access to all libvirt
API calls, or is locked down to only "read only" operations, according to what socket the client connection
originated on. T he access control framework allows authenticated connections to have fine grained
permission rules to be defined by the administrator. Every API call in libvirt has a set of permissions that
will be validated against the object being used. Further permissions will also be checked if certain flags are
set in the API call. In addition to checks on the object passed in to an API call, some methods will filter their
results.
T he access driver is configured in the libvirtd.conf configuration file, using the access_drivers
parameter. T his parameter accepts an array of access control driver names. If more than one access
driver is requested, then all must succeed in order for access to be granted. T o enable 'polkit' as the
driver run the command:
T o set the driver back to the default (no access control), run the following command:
# augtool -s rm /files/etc/libvirt/libvirtd.conf/access_drivers
It should be noted that changes made to libvirtd.conf require that the libvirtd daemon be restarted.
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libvirt applies access control to all the main object types in its API. Each object type, in turn, has a set of
permissions defined. T o determine what permissions are checked for specific API call, consult the API
reference manual documentation for the API in question. For the complete list of objects and permissions,
refer to libvirt.org.
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Chapter 16. Storage pools
For example, the storage administrator responsible for an NFS server creates a shared disk to store all of
the guest virtual machines' data. T he system administrator would define a storage pool on the
virtualization host using the details of the shared disk. In this example the admin may want
nfs.exam ple.com :/path/to/share to be mounted on /vm _data). When the storage pool is started,
libvirt mounts the share on the specified directory, just as if the system administrator logged in and
executed m ount nfs.exam ple.com :/path/to/share /vm data. If the storage pool is configured to
autostart, libvirt ensures that the NFS shared disk is mounted on the directory specified when libvirt is
started.
Once the storage pool is started, the files in the NFS shared disk are reported as storage volumes, and
the storage volumes' paths may be queried using the libvirt APIs. T he storage volumes' paths can then be
copied into the section of a guest virtual machine's XML definition describing the source storage for the
guest virtual machine's block devices.In the case of NFS, an application using the libvirt APIs can create
and delete storage volumes in the storage pool (files in the NFS share) up to the limit of the size of the
pool (the storage capacity of the share). Not all storage pool types support creating and deleting volumes.
Stopping the storage pool (pool-destroy) undoes the start operation, in this case, unmounting the NFS
share. T he data on the share is not modified by the destroy operation, despite what the name of the
command suggests. See m an virsh for more details.
A second example is an iSCSI storage pool. A storage administrator provisions an iSCSI target to present
a set of LUNs to the host running the VMs. When libvirt is configured to manage that iSCSI target as a
storage pool, libvirt will ensure that the host logs into the iSCSI target and libvirt can then report the
available LUNs as storage volumes. T he storage volumes' paths can be queried and used in VM's XML
definitions as in the NFS example. In this case, the LUNs are defined on the iSCSI server, and libvirt cannot
create and delete volumes.
Storage pools and volumes are not required for the proper operation of guest virtual machines. Storage
pools and volumes provide a way for libvirt to ensure that a particular piece of storage will be available for
a guest virtual machine, but some administrators will prefer to manage their own storage without using
storage pools or volumes and the guest virtual machines will operate properly without any storage pools
or volumes defined. On systems that do not use storage pools, system administrators must ensure the
availability of the guest virtual machine's storage using whatever tools they prefer, for example, adding the
NFS share to the host physical machine's fstab so that the share is mounted at boot time.
If at this point the value of storage pools and volumes over traditional system administration tools is
unclear, note that one of the features of libvirt is its remote protocol, so it's possible to manage all aspects
of a guest virtual machine's life cycle as well as the configuration of the resources required by the guest
virtual machine. T hese operations can be performed on a remote host entirely within the libvirt API. In other
words, a management application using libvirt can enable a user to perform all the required tasks for
configuring the host physical machine for a guest virtual machine such as: allocating resources, running
the guest virtual machine, shutting it down and deallocating the resources, without requiring shell access
or any other control channel.
A Although the storage pool is a virtual container it is limited by two factors: maximum size allowed to it by
qemu-kvm and the size of the disk on the host physical machine. Storage pools may not exceed the size
of the disk on the host physical machine. T he maximum sizes are as follows:
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XFS = ~8 Exabytes
qcow2 and host file systems keep their own metadata and scalability should be evaluated/tuned when
trying very large image sizes. Using raw disks means fewer layers that could affect scalability or max
size.
libvirt uses a directory-based storage pool, the /var/lib/libvirt/im ages/ directory, as the default
storage pool. T he default storage pool can be changed to another storage pool.
Local storage pools - Local storage pools are directly attached to the host physical machine server.
Local storage pools include: local directories, directly attached disks, physical partitions, and LVM
volume groups. T hese storage volumes store guest virtual machine images or are attached to guest
virtual machines as additional storage. As local storage pools are directly attached to the host physical
machine server, they are useful for development, testing and small deployments that do not require
migration or large numbers of guest virtual machines. Local storage pools are not suitable for many
production environments as local storage pools do not support live migration.
Networked (shared) storage pools - Networked storage pools include storage devices shared over
a network using standard protocols. Networked storage is required when migrating virtual machines
between host physical machines with virt-manager, but is optional when migrating with virsh. Networked
storage pools are managed by libvirt. Supported protocols for networked storage pools include:
iSCSI
NFS
GFS2
SCSI RDMA protocols (SCSI RCP), the block export protocol used in InfiniBand and 10GbE iWARP
adapters.
Note
Multi-path storage pools should not be created or used as they are not fully supported.
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Chapter 16. Storage pools
Suppose a storage administrator responsible for an NFS server creates a share to store guest virtual
machines' data. T he system administrator defines a pool on the host physical machine with the details
of the share (nfs.example.com:/path/to/share should be mounted on /vm _data). When the pool is
started, libvirt mounts the share on the specified directory, just as if the system administrator logged in
and executed m ount nfs.exam ple.com :/path/to/share /vm data. If the pool is configured to
autostart, libvirt ensures that the NFS share is mounted on the directory specified when libvirt is started.
Once the pool starts, the files that the NFS share, are reported as volumes, and the storage volumes'
paths are then queried using the libvirt APIs. T he volumes' paths can then be copied into the section of
a guest virtual machine's XML definition file describing the source storage for the guest virtual
machine's block devices. With NFS, applications using the libvirt APIs can create and delete volumes in
the pool (files within the NFS share) up to the limit of the size of the pool (the maximum storage capacity
of the share). Not all pool types support creating and deleting volumes. Stopping the pool negates the
start operation, in this case, unmounts the NFS share. T he data on the share is not modified by the
destroy operation, despite the name. See man virsh for more details.
Note
Storage pools and volumes are not required for the proper operation of guest virtual machines.
Pools and volumes provide a way for libvirt to ensure that a particular piece of storage will be
available for a guest virtual machine, but some administrators will prefer to manage their own
storage and guest virtual machines will operate properly without any pools or volumes defined. On
systems that do not use pools, system administrators must ensure the availability of the guest
virtual machines' storage using whatever tools they prefer, for example, adding the NFS share to
the host physical machine's fstab so that the share is mounted at boot time.
Warning
Guests should not be given write access to whole disks or block devices (for example, /dev/sdb).
Use partitions (for example, /dev/sdb1) or LVM volumes.
If you pass an entire block device to the guest, the guest will likely partition it or create its own LVM
groups on it. T his can cause the host physical machine physical machine to detect these partitions
or LVM groups and cause errors.
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Warning
Dedicating a disk to a storage pool will reformat and erase all data presently stored on the disk
device! It is strongly recommended to back up the data on the storage device before commencing
with the following procedure:
T he disk must be relabeled with a GUID Partition Table (GPT ) disk label. GPT disk labels allow for
creating a large numbers of partitions, up to 128 partitions, on each device. GPT partition tables can
store partition data for far more partitions than the MS-DOS partition table.
# parted /dev/sdb
GNU Parted 2.1
Using /dev/sdb
Welcome to GNU Parted! Type 'help' to view a list of commands.
(parted) mklabel
New disk label type? gpt
(parted) quit
Information: You may need to update /etc/fstab.
#
Create a temporary XML text file containing the storage pool information required for the new device.
T he file must be in the format shown below, and contain the following fields:
< name>guest_images_disk</name>
T he name parameter determines the name of the storage pool. T his example uses the
name guest_images_disk in the example below.
<device path='/dev/sdb'/>
T he device parameter with the path attribute specifies the device path of the storage
device. T his example uses the device /dev/sdb.
T he file system target parameter with the path sub-parameter determines the location on
the host physical machine file system to attach volumes created with this storage pool.
For example, sdb1, sdb2, sdb3. Using /dev/, as in the example below, means volumes
created from this storage pool can be accessed as /dev/sdb1, /dev/sdb2, /dev/sdb3.
T he format parameter specifies the partition table type. T his example uses the gpt in the
example below, to match the GPT disk label type created in the previous step.
Create the XML file for the storage pool device with a text editor.
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<pool type='disk'>
<name>guest_images_disk</name>
<source>
<device path='/dev/sdb'/>
<format type='gpt'/>
</source>
<target>
<path>/dev</path>
</target>
</pool>
Add the storage pool definition using the virsh pool-define command with the XML
configuration file created in the previous step.
Start the storage pool with the virsh pool-start command. Verify the pool is started with the
virsh pool-list --all command.
5. T urn on autostart
T urn on autostart for the storage pool. Autostart configures the libvirtd service to start the
storage pool when the service starts.
Verify the storage pool was created correctly, the sizes reported correctly, and the state reports as
running.
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Remove the temporary storage pool XML configuration file if it is not needed anymore.
# rm ~/guest_images_disk.xml
1. T o avoid any issues with other guest virtual machines using the same pool, it is best to stop the
storage pool and release any resources in use by it.
For the following examples, a host physical machine has a 500GB hard drive (/dev/sdc) partitioned into
one 500GB, ext4 formatted partition (/dev/sdc1). We set up a storage pool for it using the procedure
below.
a. In the virt-m anager graphical interface, select the host physical machine from the main
window.
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Press the + button (the add pool button). T he Add a New Storage Pool wizard appears.
Choose a Nam e for the storage pool. T his example uses the name guest_images_fs. Change
the T ype to fs: Pre-Form atted Block Device.
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Change the T arget Path, Form at, and Source Path fields.
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T arget Path
Enter the location to mount the source device for the storage pool in the T arget
Path field. If the location does not already exist, virt-m anager will create the
directory.
F ormat
Select a format from the Form at list. T he device is formatted with the selected
format.
T his example uses the ext4 file system, the default Red Hat Enterprise Linux file
system.
S ource Path
Verify the details and press the Finish button to create the storage pool.
T he new storage pool appears in the storage list on the left after a few seconds. Verify the size is
reported as expected, 458.20 GB Free in this example. Verify the State field reports the new
storage pool as Active.
Select the storage pool. In the Autostart field, click the On Boot checkbox. T his will make sure
the storage device starts whenever the libvirtd service starts.
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1. T o avoid any issues with other guest virtual machines using the same pool, it is best to stop the
storage pool and release any resources in use by it. T o do this, select the storage pool you want to
stop and click the red X icon at the bottom of the Storage window.
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2. Delete the storage pool by clicking the T rash can icon. T his icon is only enabled if you stop the
storage pool first.
Warning
Do not use this procedure to assign an entire disk as a storage pool (for example, /dev/sdb).
Guests should not be given write access to whole disks or block devices. Only use this method to
assign partitions (for example, /dev/sdb1) to storage pools.
Procedure 16.2. Creating pre-formatted block device storage pools using virsh
Use the virsh pool-define-as command to create a new storage pool definition. T here are three
options that must be provided to define a pre-formatted disk as a storage pool:
P artition name
T he name parameter determines the name of the storage pool. T his example uses the
name guest_images_fs in the example below.
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d evice
T he device parameter with the path attribute specifies the device path of the storage
device. T his example uses the partition /dev/sdc1.
mountpoint
T he mountpoint on the local file system where the formatted device will be mounted. If the
mount point directory does not exist, the virsh command can create the directory.
Use the virsh pool-build command to create a mount point for a pre-formatted file system
storage pool.
Use the virsh pool-start command to mount the file system onto the mount point and make the
pool available for use.
5. T urn on autostart
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By default, a storage pool is defined with virsh is not set to automatically start each time
libvirtd starts. T urn on automatic start with the virsh pool-autostart command. T he
storage pool is now automatically started each time libvirtd starts.
Verify the storage pool was created correctly, the sizes reported are as expected, and the state is
reported as running. Verify there is a "lost+found" directory in the mount point on the file system,
indicating the device is mounted.
2. Optionally, if you want to remove the directory where the storage pool resides use the following
command:
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Directory-based storage pools can be created with virt-m anager or the virsh command line tools.
Create the directory on the host physical machine for the storage pool. T his example uses a
directory named /guest virtual machine_images.
# mkdir /guest_images
Change the user and group ownership of the directory. T he directory must be owned by the
root user.
Verify the permissions were modified. T he output shows a correctly configured empty
directory.
# ls -la /guest_images
total 8
drwx------. 2 root root 4096 May 28 13:57 .
dr-xr-xr-x. 26 root root 4096 May 28 13:57 ..
Configure the correct SELinux context for the new directory. Note that the name of the pool and the
directory do not have to match. However, when you shutdown the guest virtual machine, libvirt has to
set the context back to a default value. T he context of the directory determines what this default
value is. It is worth explicitly labeling the directory virt_image_t, so that when the guest virtual
machine is shutdown, the images get labeled 'virt_image_t' and are thus isolated from other
processes running on the host physical machine.
a. In the virt-m anager graphical interface, select the host physical machine from the main
window.
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Press the + button (the add pool button). T he Add a New Storage Pool wizard appears.
Choose a Nam e for the storage pool. T his example uses the name guest_images. Change
the T ype to dir: Filesystem Directory.
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Verify the details and press the Finish button to create the storage pool.
T he new storage pool appears in the storage list on the left after a few seconds. Verify the size is
reported as expected, 36.41 GB Free in this example. Verify the State field reports the new storage
pool as Active.
Select the storage pool. In the Autostart field, confirm that the On Boot checkbox is checked.
T his will make sure the storage pool starts whenever the libvirtd service starts.
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1. T o avoid any issues with other guest virtual machines using the same pool, it is best to stop the
storage pool and release any resources in use by it. T o do this, select the storage pool you want to
stop and click the red X icon at the bottom of the Storage window.
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2. Delete the storage pool by clicking the T rash can icon. T his icon is only enabled if you stop the
storage pool first.
Use the virsh pool-define-as command to define a new storage pool. T here are two options
required for creating directory-based storage pools:
T his example uses the name guest_images. All further virsh commands used in this example
use this name.
T he path to a file system directory for storing guest image files. If this directory does not exist,
virsh will create it.
Verify the storage pool object is created correctly and the state reports it as inactive.
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-----------------------------------------
default active yes
guest_images inactive no
Use the virsh pool-build command to build the directory-based storage pool for the directory
guest_images (for example), as shown:
Use the virsh command pool-start to enable a directory storage pool, thereby allowing allowing
volumes of the pool to be used as guest disk images.
5. T urn on autostart
T urn on autostart for the storage pool. Autostart configures the libvirtd service to start the
storage pool when the service starts.
Verify the storage pool was created correctly, the size is reported correctly, and the state is reported
as running. If you want the pool to be accessible even if the guest virtual machine is not running,
make sure that Persistent is reported as yes. If you want the pool to start automatically when the
service starts, make sure that Autostart is reported as yes.
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# ls -la /guest_images
total 8
drwx------. 2 root root 4096 May 30 02:44 .
dr-xr-xr-x. 26 root root 4096 May 30 02:44 ..
#
1. T o avoid any issues with other guest virtual machines using the same pool, it is best to stop the
storage pool and release any resources in use by it.
2. Optionally, if you want to remove the directory where the storage pool resides use the following
command:
Note
T hin provisioning is currently not possible with LVM based storage pools.
Note
Please refer to the Red Hat Enterprise Linux Storage Administration Guide for more details on LVM.
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Warning
LVM-based storage pools require a full disk partition. If activating a new partition/device with these
procedures, the partition will be formatted and all data will be erased. If using the host's existing
Volume Group (VG) nothing will be erased. It is recommended to back up the storage device before
commencing the following procedure.
T hese steps describe how to create a new partition and LVM volume group on a new hard disk
drive.
Warning
T his procedure will remove all data from the selected storage device.
Use the fdisk command to create a new disk partition from the command line. T he following
example creates a new partition that uses the entire disk on the storage device /dev/sdb.
# fdisk /dev/sdb
Command (m for help):
Command action
e extended
p primary partition (1-4)
c. Choose an available partition number. In this example the first partition is chosen by entering
1.
e. Select the size of the partition. In this example the entire disk is allocated by pressing Enter.
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g. Choose the partition you created in the previous steps. In this example, the partition number is
1.
Create a new LVM volume group with the vgcreate command. T his example creates a
volume group named guest_images_lvm.
T he new LVM volume group, guest_images_lvm, can now be used for an LVM-based storage pool.
a. In the virt-m anager graphical interface, select the host from the main window.
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Press the + button (the add pool button). T he Add a New Storage Pool wizard appears.
Choose a Nam e for the storage pool. We use guest_images_lvm for this example. T hen
change the T ype to logical: LVM Volum e Group, and
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Now fill in the T arget Path and Source Path fields, then tick the Build Pool check
box.
Use the T arget Path field to either select an existing LVM volume group or as the name
for a new volume group. T he default format is /dev/storage_pool_name.
T he Source Path field is optional if an existing LVM volume group is used in the
T arget Path.
For new LVM volume groups, input the location of a storage device in the Source Path
field. T his example uses a blank partition /dev/sdc.
T he Build Pool checkbox instructs virt-m anager to create a new LVM volume
group. If you are using an existing volume group you should not select the Build Pool
checkbox.
T his example is using a blank partition to create a new volume group so the Build Pool
checkbox must be selected.
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Verify the details and press the Finish button format the LVM volume group and create the
storage pool.
Press the Yes button to proceed to erase all data on the storage device and create the
storage pool.
T he new storage pool will appear in the list on the left after a few seconds. Verify the details are
what you expect, 465.76 GB Free in our example. Also verify the State field reports the new
storage pool as Active.
It is generally a good idea to have the Autostart check box enabled, to ensure the storage pool
starts automatically with libvirtd.
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1. T o avoid any issues with other guest virtual machines using the same pool, it is best to stop the
storage pool and release any resources in use by it. T o do this, select the storage pool you want to
stop and click the red X icon at the bottom of the Storage window.
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2. Delete the storage pool by clicking the T rash can icon. T his icon is only enabled if you stop the
storage pool first.
2. Build the pool according to the specified name. If you are using an already existing volume group,
skip this step.
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# vgs
VG #PV #LV #SN Attr VSize VFree
libvirt_lvm 1 0 0 wz--n- 465.76g 465.76g
7. T he following commands demonstrate the creation of three volumes (volume1, volume2 and
volume3) within this pool.
8. List the available volumes in this pool with the virsh command.
9. T he following two commands (lvscan and lvs) display further information about the newly created
volumes.
# lvscan
ACTIVE '/dev/libvirt_lvm/volume1' [8.00 GiB] inherit
ACTIVE '/dev/libvirt_lvm/volume2' [8.00 GiB] inherit
ACTIVE '/dev/libvirt_lvm/volume3' [8.00 GiB] inherit
# lvs
LV VG Attr LSize Pool Origin Data% Move Log Copy%
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Convert
volume1 libvirt_lvm -wi-a- 8.00g
volume2 libvirt_lvm -wi-a- 8.00g
volume3 libvirt_lvm -wi-a- 8.00g
1. T o avoid any issues with other guests using the same pool, it is best to stop the storage pool and
release any resources in use by it.
2. Optionally, if you want to remove the directory where the storage pool resides use the following
command:
iSCSI (Internet Small Computer System Interface) is a network protocol for sharing storage devices. iSCSI
connects initiators (storage clients) to targets (storage servers) using SCSI instructions over the IP layer.
2. Launch targetcli
3.
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a. Create a block storage object, by changing into the backstores/block directory and
running the following command:
create [block-name][filepath]
, or for example
b. Create a fileio object, by changing into the fileio directory and running the following
command:
, or for example
c. Create a ramdisk object by changing into the ram disk directory, and running the following
command:
, or for example
create ramdisk1 1M
d. Remember the names of the disks you created in this step, you will need them later.
6.
Define the T PG
Each iscsi target needs to have a target portal group or T PG defined. In this example,the default
tpg1 will be used, but you can add additional tpgs as well. As this is the most common configuration,
the example will configure tpg1. T o do this, make sure you are still in then /iscsi directory and
change to the /tpg1 directory.
/iscsi>iqn.iqn.2010-05.com.example.server1:iscsirhel7guest/tpg1
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In order to export the block storage over iSCSI, three things need to be configured: portals, luns, and
acls. T he first thing that needs to be configured is the portal which includes the IP address and T CP
port that the target will listen on and that the initiators will connect to. iSCSI uses port 3260, which is
the port that will be configured by default. T o connect to this port, run the command
portals /create
from the /tpg directory. T his command will have all available IP addresses listen to this port. T o
specify that only one specific IP address will listen on the port, run portals /create
[ipaddress], and the specified IP address will be configured to listen to port 3260.
8. Configure the LUNs and assign the storage objects to the fabric
T his step uses the storage devices you created in Step 3. Make sure you change into the luns
directory for the T PG you created in Step 6, or iscsi>iqn.iqn.2010-
05.com .exam ple.server1:iscsirhel7guest, for example.
create /backstores/ramdisk/ramdisk1
create /backstores/block/block1
create /backstores/fileio/file1
/iscsi/iqn.20...csirhel7guest/tpg1 ls
o- tgp1
............................................................................
[enabled, auth]
o-
acls.............................................................................
.....[0 ACL]
o-
luns.............................................................................
....[3 LUNs]
| o-
lun0.....................................................................
[ramdisk/ramdisk1]
| o- lun1..............................................................
[block/block1 (dev/vdb1)]
| o- lun2...............................................................
[fileio/file1 (foo.img)]
o-
portals..........................................................................
..[1 Portal]
o- IP-
ADDRESS:3260....................................................................
....[OK]
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T his step allows for the creation of authentication when the initiator connects, and it also allows for
restriction of specified luns to specified initiators. Both targets and initiators have unique names.
iSCSI initiators use an IQN.
create iqn.2010-05.com.example.foo:888
LVM volumes are useful for iSCSI backing images. LVM snapshots and re-sizing can be beneficial
for guest virtual machines. T his example creates an LVM image named virtimage1 on a new volume
group named virtstore on a RAID5 array for hosting guest virtual machines with iSCSI.
Creating software RAID5 arrays is covered by the Red Hat Enterprise Linux Deployment
Guide.
Create a logical volume group named virtstore with the vgcreate command.
Create a logical volume group named virtimage1 on the virtstore volume group with a size of
20GB using the lvcreate command.
File-based storage is sufficient for testing but is not recommended for production environments or
any significant I/O activity. T his optional procedure creates a file based imaged named
virtimage2.img for an iSCSI target.
Create a new directory to store the image. T he directory must have the correct SELinux
contexts.
# mkdir -p /etc/target/targetd.yamlvirtualization
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b. Select a host physical machine from the main virt-m anager window. Click Edit m enu and
select Connection Details.
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Press the + button (the add pool button). T he Add a New Storage Pool wizard appears.
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Choose a name for the storage pool, change the T ype to iscsi, and press Forward to continue.
You will need the information you used in Section 16.5, “iSCSI-based storage pools” and Step 6 to
complete the fields in this menu.
a. Enter the iSCSI source and target. T he Form at option is not available as formatting is
handled by the guest virtual machines. It is not advised to edit the T arget Path. T he default
target path value, /dev/disk/by-path/, adds the drive path to that directory. T he target
path should be the same on all host physical machines for migration.
b. Enter the hostname or IP address of the iSCSI target. T his example uses
host1.exam ple.com .
c. In the Source Pathfield, enter the iSCSI target IQN. If you look at Step 6 in Section 16.5,
“iSCSI-based storage pools”, this is the information you added in the
/etc/target/targets.conf file. T his example uses iqn.2010-
05.com .exam ple.server1:iscsirhel7guest.
d. Check the IQN checkbox to enter the IQN for the initiator. T his example uses iqn.2010-
05.com .exam ple.host1:iscsirhel7.
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1. T o avoid any issues with other guest virtual machines using the same pool, it is best to stop the
storage pool and release any resources in use by it. T o do this, select the storage pool you want to
stop and click the red X icon at the bottom of the Storage window.
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2. Delete the storage pool by clicking the T rash can icon. T his icon is only enabled if you stop the
storage pool first.
Storage pool definitions can be created with the virsh command line tool. Creating storage pools
with virsh is useful for systems administrators using scripts to create multiple storage pools.
T he virsh pool-define-as command has several parameters which are accepted in the
following format:
t ype
n ame
must be unique and sets the name for the storage pool
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these parameters are not required for iSCSI-based pools, use a - character to leave the
field blank.
t arget
defines the location for mounting the iSCSI device on the host physical machine
T he example below creates the same iSCSI-based storage pool as the previous step.
Verify the storage pool object is created correctly and the state reports as inactive.
T his step is optional but it allows you to establish a direct connection to the iSCSI storage pool. By
default this is enabled, but if the connection is to the host physical machine (and not direct to the
network) you can change it back by editing the domain XML for the guest virtual machine to reflect
this example:
...
<disk type='volume' device='disk'>
<driver name='qemu'/>
<source pool='iscsi' volume='unit:0:0:1' mode='direct'/>
<!--you can change mode to mode='host' for a connection to the host
physical machine-->
<target dev='vda' bus='virtio'/>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x00' slot='0x06'
function='0x0'/>
</disk>
...
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Use the virsh command pool-start for this. pool-start enables a directory storage pool,
allowing it to be used for volumes and guest virtual machines.
5. T urn on autostart
T urn on autostart for the storage pool. Autostart configures the libvirtd service to start the
storage pool when the service starts.
Verify the storage pool was created correctly, the sizes reported correctly, and the state reports as
running.
1. T o avoid any issues with other guest virtual machines using the same pool, it is best to stop the
storage pool and release any resources in use by it.
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b. Select a host physical machine from the main virt-m anager window. Click Edit m enu and
select Connection Details.
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Press the + button (the add pool button). T he Add a New Storage Pool wizard appears.
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Choose a name for the storage pool and press Forward to continue.
Enter the target path for the device, the hostname and the NFS share path. Set the Form at option
to NFS or auto (to detect the type). T he target path must be identical on all host physical machines
for migration.
Enter the hostname or IP address of the NFS server. T his example uses server1.exam ple.com .
1. T o avoid any issues with other guests using the same pool, it is best to stop the storage pool and
release any resources in use by it. T o do this, select the storage pool you want to stop and click the
red X icon at the bottom of the Storage window.
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2. Delete the storage pool by clicking the T rash can icon. T his icon is only enabled if you stop the
storage pool first.
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17.1. Introduction
Storage pools are divided into storage volumes. Storage volumes are an abstraction of physical partitions,
LVM logical volumes, file-based disk images and other storage types handled by libvirt. Storage volumes
are presented to guest virtual machines as local storage devices regardless of the underlying hardware.
Note the sections below do not contain all of the possible commands and arguments that virsh allows, for
more information refer to Section 26.12, “Storage Volume Commands”.
A volume may be referred to by name, along with an identifier for the storage pool it belongs in.
On the virsh command line, this takes the form --pool storage_pool volume_name.
virsh #
A volume may also be referred to by its full path on the file system. When using this approach, a
pool identifier does not need to be included.
For example, a volume named secondimage.img, visible to the host physical machine system as
/images/secondimage.img. T he image can be referred to as /images/secondimage.img.
When a volume is first created in the virtualization system, a unique identifier is generated and
assigned to it. T he unique identifier is termed the volume key. T he format of this volume key
varies upon the storage used.
When used with block based storage such as LVM, the volume key may follow this format:
c3pKz4-qPVc-Xf7M-7WNM-WJc8-qSiz-mtvpGn
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When used with file based storage, the volume key may instead be a copy of the full path to the
volume storage.
/images/secondimage.img
virsh provides commands for converting between a volume name, volume path, or volume key:
vol-name
Returns the volume name when provided with a volume path or volume key.
vol-path
Returns the volume path when provided with a volume key, or a storage pool identifier and volume
name.
T he vol-key command
Returns the volume key when provided with a volume path, or a storage pool identifier and volume
name.
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File based Storage. Refer to Section 17.4.1, “Adding file based storage to a guest”.
Block devices - including CD-ROM, DVD and floppy devices. Refer to Section 17.4.2, “Adding hard
drives and other block devices to a guest”.
SCSI controllers and devices. If your host physical machine can accommodate it, up to 100 SCSI
controllers can be added to any guest virtual machine. Refer to Section 17.4.3, “Managing storage
controllers in a guest virtual machine”.
1. Create a storage file or use an existing file (such as an IMG file). Note that both of the following
commands create a 4GB file which can be used as additional storage for a guest:
Pre-allocated files are recommended for file-based storage images. Create a pre-allocated file
using the following dd command as shown:
Alternatively, create a sparse file instead of a pre-allocated file. Sparse files are created much
faster and can be used for testing, but are not recommended for production environments due to
data integrity and performance issues.
2. Create the additional storage by writing a <disk> element in a new file. In this example, this file will be
known as NewStorage.xm l.
A <disk> element describes the source of the disk, and a device name for the virtual block device.
T he device name should be unique across all devices in the guest, and identifies the bus on which
the guest will find the virtual block device. T he following example defines a virtio block device whose
source is a file-based storage container named FileNam e.im g:
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</disk>
Device names can also start with "hd" or "sd", identifying respectively an IDE and a SCSI disk. T he
configuration file can also contain an <address> sub-element that specifies the position on the bus
for the new device. In the case of virtio block devices, this should be a PCI address. Omitting the
<address> sub-element lets libvirt locate and assign the next available PCI slot.
Note
T his change will only apply after the guest has been destroyed and restarted. In addition,
persistent devices can only be added to a persistent domain, that is a domain whose
configuration has been saved with virsh define command.
If the guest is running, and you want the new device to be added temporarily until the guest is
destroyed, omit the --config option:
Note
T he virsh command allows for an attach-disk command that can set a limited number of
parameters with a simpler syntax and without the need to create an XML file. T he attach-
disk command is used in a similar manner to the attach-device command mentioned
previously, as shown:
Note that the virsh attach-disk command also accepts the --config option.
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Note
T he following steps are Linux guest specific. Other operating systems handle new storage
devices in different ways. For other systems, refer to that operating system's documentation.
6.
T he guest now has a hard disk device called /dev/vdb. If required, partition this disk drive and
format the partitions. If you do not see the device that you added, then it indicates that there is an
issue with the disk hotplug in your guest's operating system.
# fdisk /dev/vdb
Command (m for help):
c. T he following appears:
Command action
e extended
p primary partition (1-4)
d. Choose an available partition number. In this example, the first partition is chosen by entering
1.
f. Select the size of the partition. In this example the entire disk is allocated by pressing Enter.
h. Select the partition you created in the previous steps. In this example, the partition number is
1 as there was only one partition created and fdisk automatically selected partition 1.
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# mke2fs -j /dev/vdb1
7. Create a mount directory, and mount the disk on the guest. In this example, the directory is located in
myfiles.
# mkdir /myfiles
# mount /dev/vdb1 /myfiles
T he guest now has an additional virtualized file-based storage device. Note however, that this
storage will not mount persistently across reboot unless defined in the guest's /etc/fstab file:
1. T his procedure describes how to add a hard drive on the host physical machine to a guest. It
applies to all physical block devices, including CD-ROM, DVD and floppy devices.
Physically attach the hard disk device to the host physical machine. Configure the host physical
machine if the drive is not accessible by default.
a. Create the additional storage by writing a disk element in a new file. In this example, this file
will be known as NewStorage.xm l. T he following example is a configuration file section
which contains an additional device-based storage container for the host physical machine
partition /dev/sr0:
b. Follow the instruction in the previous section to attach the device to the guest virtual machine.
Alternatively, you can use the virsh attach-disk command, as shown:
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T he virsh attach-disk command also accepts the --config, --type, and --mode
options, as shown:
Additionally, --type also accepts --type disk in cases where the device is a hard
drive.
3. T he guest virtual machine now has a new hard disk device called /dev/vdc on Linux (or something
similar, depending on what the guest virtual machine OS chooses) or D: drive (for example) on
Windows. You can now initialize the disk from the guest virtual machine, following the standard
procedures for the guest virtual machine's operating system. Refer to Procedure 17.1, “Adding file-
based storage” and Step 6 for an example.
Warning
T he host physical machine should not use filesystem labels to identify file systems in the
fstab file, the initrd file or on the kernel command line. Doing so presents a security risk
if less privileged users, such as guest virtual machines, have write access to whole partitions
or LVM volumes, because a guest virtual machine could potentially write a filesystem label
belonging to the host physical machine, to its own block device storage. Upon reboot of the
host physical machine, the host physical machine could then mistakenly use the guest virtual
machine's disk as a system disk, which would compromise the host physical machine system.
It is preferable to use the UUID of a device to identify it in the fstab file, the initrd file or
on the kernel command line. While using UUIDs is still not completely secure on certain file
systems, a similar compromise with UUID is significantly less feasible.
Important
Guest virtual machines should not be given write access to whole disks or block devices (for
example, /dev/sdb). Guest virtual machines with access to whole block devices may be able
to modify volume labels, which can be used to compromise the host physical machine system.
Use partitions (for example, /dev/sdb1) or LVM volumes to prevent this issue.
1. Display the configuration of the guest virtual machine (Guest1) and look for a pre-existing SCSI
controller:
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If a device controller is present, the command will output one or more lines similar to the following:
2. If the previous step did not show a device controller, create the description for one in a new file and
add it to the virtual machine, using the following steps:
a. Create the device controller by writing a <controller> element in a new file and save this
file with an XML extension. virtio-scsi-controller.xm l, for example.
In this example the --config option behaves the same as it does for disks. Refer to
Procedure 17.2, “Adding physical block devices to guests” for more information.
3. Add a new SCSI disk or CD-ROM. T he new disk can be added using the methods in sections
Section 17.4.1, “Adding file based storage to a guest” and Section 17.4.2, “Adding hard drives and
other block devices to a guest”. In order to create a SCSI disk, specify a target device name that
starts with sd. Each SCSI controller can serve 7 disks and the sum total memory of the disks cannot
exceed that of the host physical machine.
Depending on the version of the driver in the guest virtual machine, the new disk may not be
detected immediately by a running guest virtual machine. Follow the steps in the Red Hat Enterprise
Linux Storage Administration Guide.
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Note
Only the qcow2, qcow2 version3, and vdi formats support consistency checks.
# qemu-img convert [-c] [-p] [-f fmt] [-t cache] [-O output_fmt] [-o options] [-S
sparse_size] filename output_filename
T he -p parameter shows the progress of the command (optional and not for every command) and -S flag
allows for the creation of a sparse file, which is included within the disk image. Sparse files in all purposes
function like a standard file, except that the physical blocks that only contain zeros (i.e., nothing). When the
Operating System sees this file, it treats it as it exists and takes up actual disk space, even though in
reality it doesn't take any. T his is particularly helpful when creating a disk for a guest virtual machine as
this gives the appearance that the disk has taken much more disk space than it has. For example, if you
set -S to 50Gb on a disk image that is 10Gb, then your 10Gb of disk space will appear to be 60Gb in size
even though only 10Gb is actually being used.
Convert the disk image filename to disk image output_filename using format output_format. T he
disk image can be optionally compressed with the -c option, or encrypted with the -o option by setting -o
encryption. Note that the options available with the -o parameter differ with the selected format.
Only the qcow2 and qcow2 format supports encryption or compression. qcow2 encryption uses the AES
format with secure 128-bit keys. qcow2 compression is read-only, so if a compressed sector is converted
from qcow2 format, it is written to the new format as uncompressed data.
Image conversion is also useful to get a smaller image when using a format which can grow, such as qcow
or cow. T he empty sectors are detected and suppressed from the destination image.
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If a base image is specified with -o backing_file=filename, the image will only record differences
between itself and the base image. T he backing file will not be modified unless you use the com m it
command. No size needs to be specified in this case.
T his command is often used to discover the size reserved on disk which can be different from the
displayed size. If snapshots are stored in the disk image, they are displayed also. T his command will show
for example, how much space is being taken by a qcow2 image on a block device. T his is done by running
the qem u-im g. You can check that the image in use is the one that matches the output of the qem u-im g
info command with the qem u-im g check command.
# qemu-img rebase [-f fmt] [-t cache] [-p] [-u] -b backing_file [-F backing_fmt]
filename
T he backing file is changed to backing_file and (if the format of filename supports the feature), the backing
file format is changed to backing_format.
Note
Only the qcow2 format supports changing the backing file (rebase).
T here are two different modes in which rebase can operate: safe and unsafe.
safe mode is used by default and performs a real rebase operation. T he new backing file may differ from
the old one and the qem u-im g rebase command will take care of keeping the guest virtual machine-
visible content of filename unchanged. In order to achieve this, any clusters that differ between
backing_file and old backing file of filename are merged into filename before making any changes to the
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backing file.
Note that safe mode is an expensive operation, comparable to converting an image. T he old backing file
is required for it to complete successfully.
unsafe mode is used if the -u option is passed to qem u-im g rebase. In this mode, only the backing file
name and format of filename is changed, without any checks taking place on the file contents. Make sure
the new backing file is specified correctly or the guest-visible content of the image will be corrupted.
T his mode is useful for renaming or moving the backing file. It can be used without an accessible old
backing file. For instance, it can be used to fix an image whose backing file has already been moved or
renamed.
Use the following to set the size of the disk image filename to size bytes:
You can also re-size relative to the current size of the disk image. T o give a size relative to the current
size, prefix the number of bytes with + to grow, or - to reduce the size of the disk image by that number of
bytes. Adding a unit suffix allows you to set the image size in kilobytes (K), megabytes (M), gigabytes (G)
or terabytes (T ).
Warning
Before using this command to shrink a disk image, you must use file system and partitioning tools
inside the VM itself to reduce allocated file systems and partition sizes accordingly. Failure to do so
will result in data loss.
After using this command to grow a disk image, you must use file system and partitioning tools
inside the VM to actually begin using the new space on the device.
T he apply option, -a, reverts the disk image (filename) to the state of a previously saved snapshot.
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raw - Raw disk image format (default). T his can be the fastest file-based format. If your file system
supports holes (for example in ext2 or ext3 on Linux or NT FS on Windows), then only the written
sectors will reserve space. Use qem u-im g info to obtain the real size used by the image or ls -ls
on Unix/Linux. Although Raw images give optimal performance, only very basic features are available
with a Raw image (no snapshots etc.).
qcow2 - QEMU image format, the most versatile format with the best feature set. Use it to have optional
AES encryption, zlib-based compression, support of multiple VM snapshots, and smaller images, which
are useful on file systems that do not support holes (non-NT FS file systems on Windows). Note that
this expansive feature set comes at the cost of performance.
Although only the formats above can be used to run on a guest virtual machine or host physical
machine machine, qemu-img also recognizes and supports the following formats in order to convert
from them into either raw , or qcow2 format. T he format of an image is usually detected automatically.
In addition to converting these formats into raw or qcow2 , they can be converted back from raw or
qcow2 to the original format. Note that the qcow2 version supplied with Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 is
1.1. T he format that is supplied with previous versions of Red Hat Enterprise Linux will be 0.10. You
can revert image files to previous versions of qcow2. T o know which version you are using, run qem u-
im g info qcow2 [imagefilename.img] command. T o change the qcow version refer to
Section 29.20.2, “Setting target elements”.
cloop - Linux Compressed Loop image, useful only to reuse directly compressed CD-ROM images
present for example in the Knoppix CD-ROMs.
cow - User Mode Linux Copy On Write image format. T he cow format is included only for compatibility
with previous versions. It does not work with Windows.
qcow - Old QEMU image format. Only included for compatibility with older versions.
vpc - Windows Virtual PC disk image format. Also referred to as vhd, or Microsoft virtual hard disk
image format.
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Migration describes the process of moving a guest virtual machine from one host physical machine to
another. T his is possible because guest virtual machines are running in a virtualized environment instead
of directly on the hardware. Migration is useful for:
Load balancing - guest virtual machines can be moved to host physical machines with lower usage
when their host physical machine becomes overloaded, or another host physical machine is under-
utilized.
Hardware independence - when we need to upgrade, add, or remove hardware devices on the host
physical machine, we can safely relocate guest virtual machines to other host physical machines. T his
means that guest virtual machines do not experience any downtime for hardware improvements.
Energy saving - guest virtual machines can be redistributed to other host physical machines and can
thus be powered off to save energy and cut costs in low usage periods.
Geographic migration - guest virtual machines can be moved to another location for lower latency or in
serious circumstances.
Migration works by sending the state of the guest virtual machine's memory and any virtualized devices to
a destination host physical machine. It is recommended to use shared, networked storage to store the
guest virtual machine's images to be migrated. It is also recommended to use libvirt-managed storage
pools for shared storage when migrating virtual machines.
In a live migration, the guest virtual machine continues to run on the source host physical machine while its
memory pages are transferred, in order, to the destination host physical machine. During migration, KVM
monitors the source for any changes in pages it has already transferred, and begins to transfer these
changes when all of the initial pages have been transferred. KVM also estimates transfer speed during
migration, so when the remaining amount of data to transfer will take a certain configurable period of time
(10ms by default), KVM suspends the original guest virtual machine, transfers the remaining data, and
resumes the same guest virtual machine on the destination host physical machine.
A migration that is not performed live, suspends the guest virtual machine, then moves an image of the
guest virtual machine's memory to the destination host physical machine. T he guest virtual machine is
then resumed on the destination host physical machine and the memory the guest virtual machine used on
the source host physical machine is freed. T he time it takes to complete such a migration depends on
network bandwidth and latency. If the network is experiencing heavy use or low bandwidth, the migration
will take much longer.
If the original guest virtual machine modifies pages faster than KVM can transfer them to the destination
host physical machine, offline migration must be used, as live migration would never complete.
Migration requirements
A guest virtual machine installed on shared storage using one of the following protocols:
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iSCSI
FCoE
NFS
GFS2
SCSI RDMA protocols (SCSI RCP): the block export protocol used in Infiniband and 10GbE iWARP
adapters
T he migration platforms and versions should be checked against table T able 19.1, “Live Migration
Compatibility”
Both systems must have the appropriate T CP/IP ports open. In cases where a firewall is used refer to
the Red Hat Enterprise Linux Virtualization Security Guide for detailed port information.
A separate system exporting the shared storage medium. Storage should not reside on either of the
two host physical machines being used for migration.
Shared storage must mount at the same location on source and destination systems. T he mounted
directory names must be identical. Although it is possible to keep the images using different paths, it is
not recommended. Note that, if you are intending to use virt-manager to perform the migration, the path
names must be identical. If however you intend to use virsh to perform the migration, different network
configurations and mount directories can be used with the help of --xml option or pre-hooks when
doing migrations (refer to Live Migration Limitations). For more information on prehooks, refer to
libvirt.org, and for more information on the XML option, refer to Chapter 29, Manipulating the domain
XML.
When migration is attempted on an existing guest virtual machine in a public bridge+tap network, the
source and destination host physical machines must be located in the same network. Otherwise, the
guest virtual machine network will not operate after migration.
Guest virtual machine migration has the following limitations when used on Red Hat Enterprise
Linux with virtualization technology based on KVM:
Point to point migration – must be done manually to designate destination hypervisor from
originating hypervisor
No validation or roll-back is available
Determination of target may only be done manually
Storage migration cannot be performed live on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7, but you can migrate
storage while the guest virtual machine is powered down. Live storage migration is available on
Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization . Call your service representive for deatails.
Make sure that the libvirtd service is enabled (# system ctl enable libvirtd) and running (#
system ctl start libvirtd). It is also important to note that the ability to migrate effectively is
dependent on the parameter settings in the /etc/libvirt/libvirtd.conf configuration file.
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# vim /etc/libvirt/libvirtd.conf
Issues with the migration protocol — If backward migration ends with "unknown section error",
repeating the migration process can repair the issue as it may be a transient error. If not, please report
the problem.
Configure shared storage and install a guest virtual machine on the shared storage.
Alternatively, use the NFS example in Section 19.3, “Shared storage example: NFS for a simple migration”
T his example uses NFS to share guest virtual machine images with other KVM host physical
machines. Although not practical for large installations, it is presented to demonstrate migration
techniques only. Do not use this example for migrating or running more than a few guest virtual
machines. In addition, it is required that the synch parameter is enabled. T his is required for proper
export of the NFS storage.
iSCSI storage is a better choice for large deployments. Refer to Section 16.5, “iSCSI-based storage
pools” for configuration details.
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Also note, that the instructions provided herin are not meant to replace the detailed instructions found in
Red Hat Linux Storage Administration Guide. Refer to this guide for information on configuring NFS,
opening IP tables, and configuring the firewall.
Make sure that NFS file locking is not used as it is not supported in KVM.
Migration requires storage to reside on a system that is separate to the migration target systems.
On this separate system, export the storage by adding the default image directory to the
/etc/exports file:
/var/lib/libvirt/images *.example.com(rw,no_root_squash,sync)
2. Start NFS
b. Make sure that the ports for NFS in iptables (2049, for example) are opened and add NFS
to the /etc/hosts.allow file.
Warning
Whichever directory is chosen for the guest virtual machine must be exactly the same as that
on the host physical machine. T his applies to all types of shared storage. T he directory must
be the same or the migration with virt-manager will fail.
Note that the --live option may be eliminated when live migration is not desired. Additional options are listed
in Section 19.4.2, “Additional options for the virsh migrate command”.
T he GuestName parameter represents the name of the guest virtual machine which you want to migrate.
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T he DestinationURL parameter is the connection URL of the destination host physical machine. T he
destination system must run the same version of Red Hat Enterprise Linux, be using the same hypervisor
and have libvirt running.
Note
T he DestinationURL parameter for normal migration and peer2peer migration has different
semantics:
normal migration: the DestinationURL is the URL of the target host physical machine as seen
from the source guest virtual machine.
peer2peer migration: DestinationURL is the URL of the target host physical machine as seen
from the source host physical machine.
Once the command is entered, you will be prompted for the root password of the destination system.
Important
An entry for the destination host physical machine, in the /etc/hosts file on the source server is
required for migration to succeed. Enter the IP address and hostname for the destination host
physical machine in this file as shown in the following example, substituting your destination host
physical machine's IP address and hostname:
10.0.0.20 host2.example.com
T his example migrates from host1.exam ple.com to host2.exam ple.com . Change the host physical
machine names for your environment. T his example migrates a virtual machine named guest1-rhel6-
64 .
T his example assumes you have fully configured shared storage and meet all the prerequisites (listed
here: Migration requirements).
1.
2.
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Execute the following command to live migrate the guest virtual machine to the destination,
host2.exam ple.com . Append /system to the end of the destination URL to tell libvirt that you
need full access.
Once the command is entered you will be prompted for the root password of the destination system.
3.
Wait
T he migration may take some time depending on load and the size of the guest virtual machine.
virsh only reports errors. T he guest virtual machine continues to run on the source host physical
machine until fully migrated.
4.
Verify the guest virtual machine has arrived at the destination host
Note
libvirt supports a variety of networking methods including T LS/SSL, UNIX sockets, SSH, and
unencrypted T CP. Refer to Chapter 23, Remote management of guests for more information on
using other methods.
Note
Non-running guest virtual machines cannot be migrated with the virsh m igrate command. T o
migrate a non-running guest virtual machine, the following script should be used:
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#################################################################
#
# Processing controls
#
#################################################################
3. Change the max_clients and max_workers parameters settings. It is recommended that the
number be the same in both parameters. T he max_clients will use 2 clients per migration (one per
side) and max_workers will use 1 worker on the source and 0 workers on the destination during the
perform phase and 1 worker on the destination during the finish phase.
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Important
T he max_clients and max_workers parameters settings are effected by all guest virtual
machine connections to the libvirtd service. T his means that any user that is using the same
guest virtual machine and is performing a migration at the same time will also beholden to the
limits set in the the max_clients and max_workers parameters settings. T his is why the
maximum value needs to be considered carefully before performing a concurrent live
migration.
Note
T here may be cases where a migration connection drops because there are too many ssh
sessions that have been started, but not yet authenticated. By default, sshd allows only 10
sessions to be in a "pre-authenticated state" at any time. T his setting is controlled by the
MaxStartups parameter in the sshd configuration file (located here:
/etc/ssh/sshd_config), which may require some adjustment. Adjusting this parameter
should be done with caution as the limitation is put in place to prevent DoS attacks (and over-
use of resources in general). Setting this value too high will negate its purpose. T o change
this parameter, edit the file /etc/ssh/sshd_config, remove the # from the beginning of
the MaxStartups line, and change the 10 (default value) to a higher number. Remember to
save the file and restart the sshd service. For more information, refer to the sshd_config
MAN page.
--offline - migrates domain definition without starting the domain on destination and without
stopping it on source host. Offline migration may be used with inactive domains and it must be used
with the --persistent option.
--suspend - leaves the domain paused on the destination host physical machine
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--com pressed - activates compression of memory pages that have to be transferred repeatedly
during live migration.
--abort-on-error - cancels the migration if a soft error (for example I/O error) happens during the
migration.
--desturi uri - connection URI of the destination host as seen from the client (normal migration) or
source (p2p migration).
--m igrateuri uri - the migration URI, which can usually be omitted.
--listen-address address - sets the listen address that the hypervisor on the destination side
should bind to for incoming migration.
--tim eout seconds - forces a guest virtual machine to suspend when the live migration counter
exceeds N seconds. It can only be used with a live migration. Once the timeout is initiated, the migration
continues on the suspended guest virtual machine.
--dnam e newname - is used for renaming the domain during migration, which also usually can be
omitted
--xm l filename - the filename indicated can be used to supply an alternative XML file for use on the
destination to supply a larger set of changes to any host-specific portions of the domain XML, such as
accounting for naming differences between source and destination in accessing underlying storage.
T his option is usually omitted.
virsh m igrate-setm axdowntim e domain downtime - will set a maximum tolerable downtime for
a domain which is being live-migrated to another host. T he specified downtime is in milliseconds. T he
domain specified must be the same domain that is being migrated.
virsh m igrate-com pcache domain --size - will set and or get the size of the cache in bytes
which is used for compressing repeatedly transferred memory pages during a live migration. When the
--size is not used the command displays the current size of the compression cache. When --size
is used, and specified in bytes, the hypervisor is asked to change compression to match the indicated
size, following which the current size is displayed. T he --size argument is supposed to be used while
the domain is being live migrated as a reaction to the migration progress and increasing number of
compression cache misses obtained from the dom jobingfo.
virsh m igrate-setspeed domain bandwidth - sets the migration bandwidth in Mib/sec for the
specified domain which is being migrated to another host.
virsh m igrate-getspeed domain - gets the maximum migration bandwidth that is available in
Mib/sec for the specified domain.
Refer to Live Migration Limitations or the virsh man page for more information.
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T his section covers migrating a KVM guest virtual machine with virt-m anager from one host physical
machine to another.
1. Open virt-manager
Open virt-m anager. Choose Applications → System T ools → Virtual Machine Manager
from the main menu bar to launch virt-m anager.
Connect to the target host physical machine by clicking on the File menu, then click Add
Connection.
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3. Add connection
Usernam e: Enter the username for the remote host physical machine.
Hostnam e: Enter the hostname for the remote host physical machine.
Click the Connect button. An SSH connection is used in this example, so the specified user's
password must be entered in the next step.
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Open the list of guests inside the source host physical machine (click the small triangle on the left of
the host name) and right click on the guest that is to be migrated (guest1-rhel6-64 in this
example) and click Migrate.
In the New Host field, use the drop-down list to select the host physical machine you wish to
migrate the guest virtual machine to and click Migrate.
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Figure 19.6. Choosing the destination host physical machine and starting the migration
process
virt-manager now displays the newly migrated guest virtual machine running in the destination
host. T he guest virtual machine that was running in the source host physical machine is now listed
inthe Shutoff state.
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Figure 19.8. Migrated guest virtual machine running in the destination host physical
machine
5. Optional - View the storage details for the host physical machine
In the Edit menu, click Connection Details, the Connection Details window appears.
Click the Storage tab. T he iSCSI target details for the destination host physical machine is shown.
Note that the migrated guest virtual machine is listed as using the storage
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<pool type='iscsi'>
<name>iscsirhel6guest</name>
<source>
<host name='virtlab22.example.com.'/>
<device path='iqn.2001-05.com.iscsivendor:0-8a0906-fbab74a06-
a700000017a4cc89-rhevh'/>
</source>
<target>
<path>/dev/disk/by-path</path>
</target>
</pool>
...
Figure 19.10. XML configuration for the destination host physical machine
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Emulated devices are purely virtual devices that mimic real hardware, allowing unmodified guest
operating systems to work with them using their standard in-box drivers. Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7
supports up to 216 virtio devices.
Virtio devices are purely virtual devices designed to work optimally in a virtual machine. Virtio devices
are similar to emulated devices, however, non-Linux virtual machines do not include the drivers they
require by default. Virtualization management software like the Virtual Machine Manager (virt-
manager) and the Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization Hypervisor install these drivers automatically for
supported non-Linux guest operating systems. Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 supports up to 700 scsi
disks.
Assigned devices are physical devices that are exposed to the virtual machine. T his method is also
known as 'passthrough'. Device assignment allows virtual machines exclusive access to PCI devices
for a range of tasks, and allows PCI devices to appear and behave as if they were physically attached
to the guest operating system. Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 supports up to 32 assigned devices per
virtual machine.
Device assignment is supported on PCIe devices, including select graphics devices. Nvidia K-series
Quadro, GRID, and T esla graphics card GPU functions are now supported with device assignment in
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7. Parallel PCI devices may be supported as assigned devices, but they have
severe limitations due to security and system configuration conflicts.
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 supports PCI hotplug of devices exposed as single function slots to the virtual
machine. Single function host devices and individual functions of multi-function host devices may be
configured to enable this. Configurations exposing devices as multi-function PCI slots to the virtual
machine are recommended only for non-hotplug applications.
Note
Platform support for interrupt remapping is required to fully isolate a guest with assigned devices
from the host. Without such support, the host may be vulnerable to interrupt injection attacks from a
malicious guest. In an environment where guests are trusted, the admin may opt-in to still allow PCI
device assignment using the allow_unsafe_interrupts option to the vfio_iommu_type1
module. T his may either be done persistently by adding a .conf file (e.g. local.conf) to
/etc/m odprobe.d containing the following:
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T he Intel VT -d specifications provide hardware support for directly assigning a physical device to a
virtual machine. T hese specifications are required to use PCI device assignment with Red Hat
Enterprise Linux.
T he Intel VT -d specifications must be enabled in the BIOS. Some system manufacturers disable
these specifications by default. T he terms used to refer to these specifications can differ between
manufacturers; consult your system manufacturer's documentation for the appropriate terms.
Activate Intel VT -d in the kernel by adding the intel_iommu=on parameter to the end of the
GRUB_CMDLINX_LINUX line, within the quotes, in the /etc/sysconfig/grub file.
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="rd.lvm.lv=vg_VolGroup00/LogVol01
vconsole.font=latarcyrheb-sun16 rd.lvm.lv=vg_VolGroup_1/root
vconsole.keymap=us $([ -x /usr/sbin/rhcrashkernel-param ] && /usr/sbin/
rhcrashkernel-param || :) rhgb quiet intel_iommu=on"
grub2-mkconfig -o /boot/grub2/grub.cfg
4. Ready to use
Reboot the system to enable the changes. Your system is now capable of PCI device assignment.
T he AMD IOMMU specifications are required to use PCI device assignment in Red Hat Enterprise
Linux. T hese specifications must be enabled in the BIOS. Some system manufacturers disable these
specifications by default.
Append amd_iommu=on to the end of the GRUB_CMDLINX_LINUX line, within the quotes, in
/etc/sysconfig/grub so that AMD IOMMU specifications are enabled at boot.
grub2-mkconfig -o /boot/grub2/grub.cfg
4. Ready to use
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Reboot the system to enable the changes. Your system is now capable of PCI device assignment.
T his example uses a PCIe network controller with the PCI identifier code, pci_0000_01_00_0, and a fully
virtualized guest machine named guest1-rhel7-64.
Procedure 20.3. Assigning a PCI device to a guest virtual machine with virsh
First, identify the PCI device designated for device assignment to the virtual machine. Use the
lspci command to list the available PCI devices. You can refine the output of lspci with grep.
T his example uses the Ethernet controller highlighted in the following output:
T his Ethernet controller is shown with the short identifier 00:19.0. We need to find out the full
identifier used by virsh in order to assign this PCI device to a virtual machine.
T o do so, use the virsh nodedev-list command to list all devices of a particular type (pci) that
are attached to the host machine. T hen look at the output for the string that maps to the short
identifier of the device you wish to use.
T his example highlights the string that maps to the Ethernet controller with the short identifier
00:19.0. Note that the : and . characters are replaced with underscores in the full identifier.
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pci_0000_00_1d_1
pci_0000_00_1d_2
pci_0000_00_1d_7
pci_0000_00_1e_0
pci_0000_00_1f_0
pci_0000_00_1f_2
pci_0000_00_1f_3
pci_0000_01_00_0
pci_0000_01_00_1
pci_0000_02_00_0
pci_0000_02_00_1
pci_0000_06_00_0
pci_0000_07_02_0
pci_0000_07_03_0
Record the PCI device number that maps to the device you want to use; this is required in other
steps.
Information on the domain, bus, and function are available from output of the virsh nodedev-
dum pxm l command:
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Note
An IOMMU group is determined based on the visibility and isolation of devices from the
perspective of the IOMMU. Each IOMMU group may contain one or more devices. When
multiple devices are present, all endpoints within the IOMMU group must be claimed for any
device within the group to be assigned to a guest. T his can be accomplished either by also
assigning the extra endpoints to the guest or by detaching them from the host driver using
virsh nodedev-detach. Devices contained within a single group may not be split
between multiple guests or split between host and guest. Non-endpoint devices such as
PCIe root ports, switch ports, and bridges should not be detached from the host drivers and
will not interfere with assignment of endpoints.
Devices within an IOMMU group can be determined using the iommuGroup section of the
virsh nodedev-dum pxm l output. Each member of the group is provided via a separate
"address" field. T his information may also be found in sysfs using the following:
$ ls /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000:01:00.0/iommu_group/devices/
0000:01:00.0 0000:01:00.1
T o assign only 0000.01.00.0 to the guest, the unused endpoint should be detached from the
host before starting the guest:
Refer to the output from the virsh nodedev-dum pxm l pci_0000_00_19_0 command for the
values required for the configuration file.
T he example device has the following values: bus = 0, slot = 25 and function = 0. T he decimal
configuration uses those three values:
bus='0'
slot='25'
function='0'
Run virsh edit, specifying the virtual machine name, and add a device entry in the <source>
section to assign the PCI device to the guest virtual machine.
Alternately, run virsh attach-device, specifying the virtual machine name and the guest's XML
file:
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T he PCI device should now be successfully assigned to the virtual machine, and accessible to the guest
operating system.
Procedure 20.4 . Assigning a PCI device to a guest virtual machine using virt-manager
Open the guest virtual machine and click the Add Hardware button to add a new device to the
virtual machine.
Select PCI Host Device from the Hardware list on the left.
Select an unused PCI device. Note that selecting PCI devices presently in use by another guest
causes errors. In this example, a spare 82576 network device is used. Click Finish to complete
setup.
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T he setup is complete and the guest virtual machine now has direct access to the PCI device.
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Note
If device assignment fails, there may be other endpoints in the same IOMMU group that are still
attached to the host. T here is no way to retrieve group information using virt-manager, but virsh
commands can be used to analyze the bounds of the IOMMU group and if necessary sequester
devices.
Refer to the Note in Section 20.1.1, “Assigning a PCI device with virsh” for more information on
IOMMU groups and how to detach endpoint devices using virsh.
Identify the PCI device designated for device assignment to the guest virtual machine.
T he virsh nodedev-list command lists all devices attached to the system, and identifies each
PCI device with a string. T o limit output to only PCI devices, run the following command:
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pci_0000_00_1d_7
pci_0000_00_1e_0
pci_0000_00_1f_0
pci_0000_00_1f_2
pci_0000_00_1f_3
pci_0000_01_00_0
pci_0000_01_00_1
pci_0000_02_00_0
pci_0000_02_00_1
pci_0000_06_00_0
pci_0000_07_02_0
pci_0000_07_03_0
Record the PCI device number; the number is needed in other steps.
Information on the domain, bus and function are available from output of the virsh nodedev-
dum pxm l command:
Note
If there are multiple endpoints in the IOMMU group and not all of them are assigned to the
guest, you will need to manually detach the other endpoint(s) from the host by running the
following command before you start the guest:
Refer to the Note in Section 20.1.1, “Assigning a PCI device with virsh” for more information
on IOMMU groups.
Use the PCI identifier output from the virsh nodedev command as the value for the --host-
device parameter.
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virt-install \
--name=guest1-rhel7-64 \
--disk path=/var/lib/libvirt/images/guest1-rhel7-64.img,size=8 \
--nonsparse --graphics spice \
--vcpus=2 --ram=2048 \
--location=http://example1.com/installation_tree/RHEL7.0-Server-x86_64/os \
--nonetworks \
--os-type=linux \
--os-variant=rhel7
--host-device=pci_0000_01_00_0
Complete the guest installation. T he PCI device should be attached to the guest.
Use the following command to detach the PCI device from the guest by removing it in the guest's
XML file:
If the device is in managed mode, skip this step. T he device will be returned to the host automatically.
If the device is not using managed mode, use the following command to re-attach the PCI device to
the host machine:
In virt-manager, double-click on the virtual machine that contains the device. Select the Show
virtual hardware details button to display a list of virtual hardware.
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Select the PCI device to be detached from the list of virtual devices in the left panel.
Click the Rem ove button to confirm. T he device is now available for host use.
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limitations in standard single-port PCI ethernet card driver design - only SR-IOV (Single Root I/O
Virtualization) virtual function (VF) devices can be assigned in this manner; to assign a standard single-
port PCI or PCIe Ethernet card to a guest, use the traditional <hostdev> device definition.
T o use VFIO device assignment rather than traditional/legacy KVM device assignment (VFIO is a new
method of device assignment that is compatible with UEFI Secure Boot), a <type='hostdev'> interface
can have an optional driver sub-element with a name attribute set to "vfio". T o use legacy KVM device
assignment you can set name to "kvm" (or simply omit the <driver> element, since <driver='kvm '>
is currently the default).
Note that this "intelligent passthrough" of network devices is very similar to the functionality of a standard
<hostdev> device, the difference being that this method allows specifying a MAC address and
<virtualport> for the passed-through device. If these capabilities are not required, if you have a
standard single-port PCI, PCIe, or USB network card that does not support SR-IOV (and hence would
anyway lose the configured MAC address during reset after being assigned to the guest domain), or if you
are using a version of libvirt older than 0.9.11, you should use standard <hostdev> to assign the device
to the guest instead of <interface type='hostdev'/>.
<devices>
<interface type='hostdev'>
<driver name='vfio'/>
<source>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x00' slot='0x07' function='0x0'/>
</source>
<mac address='52:54:00:6d:90:02'>
<virtualport type='802.1Qbh'>
<parameters profileid='finance'/>
</virtualport>
</interface>
</devices>
T hese VFs can be assigned to guest virtual machines in the traditional manner using the element
<hostdev>, but as SR-IOV VF network devices do not have permanent unique MAC addresses, it causes
issues where the guest virtual machine's network settings would have to be re-configured each time the
host physical machine is rebooted. T o remedy this, you would need to set the MAC address prior to
assigning the VF to the host physical machine and you would need to set this each and every time the
guest virtual machine boots. In order to assign this MAC address as well as other options, refert to the
procedure described in Procedure 20.8, “Configuring MAC addresses, vLAN, and virtual ports for
assigning PCI devices on SR-IOV”.
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Procedure 20.8. Configuring MAC addresses, vLAN, and virtual ports for assigning PCI devices
on SR-IOV
It is important to note that the <hostdev> element cannot be used for function-specific items like MAC
address assignment, vLAN tag ID assignment, or virtual port assignment because the <m ac>, <vlan>,
and <virtualport> elements are not valid children for <hostdev>. As they are valid for
<interface>, support for a new interface type was added (<interface type='hostdev'>). T his
new interface device type behaves as a hybrid of an <interface> and <hostdev>. T hus, before
assigning the PCI device to the guest virtual machine, libvirt initializes the network-specific
hardware/switch that is indicated (such as setting the MAC address, setting a vLAN tag, and/or
associating with an 802.1Qbh switch) in the guest virtual machine's XML configuration file. For information
on setting the vLAN tag, refer to Section 22.13, “Setting vLAN tags”.
Using virsh shutdown command (refer to Section 26.9.2, “Shutting down Red Hat
Enterprise Linux 6 guests on a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 host”), shutdown the guest virtual
machine named guestVM.
2. Gather information
In order to use <interface type='hostdev'>, you must have an SR-IOV-capable network card,
host physical machine hardware that supports either the Intel VT -d or AMD IOMMU extensions, and
you must know the PCI address of the VF that you wish to assign.
Run the # virsh save-im age-edit command to open the XML file for editing (refer to
Section 26.8.10, “Edit Domain XML configuration files” for more information). As you would want to
restore the guest virtual machine to its former running state, the --running would be used in this
case. T he name of the configuration file in this example is guestVM.xml, as the name of the guest
virtual machine is guestVM.
Update the configuration file (guestVM.xml) to have a <devices> entry similar to the following:
<devices>
...
<interface type='hostdev' managed='yes'>
<source>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0' bus='0x00' slot='0x07' function='0x0'/>
<!--these values can be decimal as well-->
</source>
<mac address='52:54:00:6d:90:02'/>
<!--sets the mac address-->
<virtualport type='802.1Qbh'>
<!--sets the virtual port for the 802.1Qbh switch-->
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<parameters profileid='finance'/>
</virtualport>
<vlan>
<!--sets the vlan tag-->
<tag id='42'/>
</vlan>
</interface>
...
</devices>
Note that if you do not provide a MAC address, one will be automatically generated, just as with any
other type of interface device. Also, the <virtualport> element is only used if you are connecting
to an 802.11Qgh hardware switch (802.11Qbg (a.k.a. "VEPA") switches are currently not supported.
Run the virsh start command to restart the guest virtual machine you shutdown in the first step
(example uses guestVM as the guest virtual machine's domain name). Refer to Section 26.8.1,
“Starting a defined domain” for more information.
When the guest virtual machine starts, it sees the network device provided to it by the physical host
machine's adapter, with the configured MAC address. T his MAC address will remain unchanged
across guest virtual machine and host physical machine reboots.
20.1.8. Setting PCI device assignment from a pool of SR-IOV virtual functions
Hard coding the PCI addresses of a particular Virtual Functions (VFs) into a guest's configuration has two
serious limitations:
T he specified VF must be available any time the guest virtual machine is started, implying that the
administrator must permanently assign each VF to a single guest virtual machine (or modify the
configuration file for every guest virtual machine to specify a currently unused VF's PCI address each
time every guest virtual machine is started).
If the guest vitual machine is moved to another host physical machine, that host physical machine must
have exactly the same hardware in the same location on the PCI bus (or, again, the guest vitual
machine configuration must be modified prior to start).
It is possible to avoid both of these problems by creating a libvirt network with a device pool containing all
the VFs of an SR-IOV device. Once that is done you would configure the guest virtual machine to reference
this network. Each time the guest is started, a single VF will be allocated from the pool and assigned to the
guest virtual machine. When the guest virtual machine is stopped, the VF will be returned to the pool for
use by another guest virtual machine.
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Using virsh shutdown command (refer to Section 26.9.2, “Shutting down Red Hat
Enterprise Linux 6 guests on a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 host”), shutdown the guest virtual
machine named guestVM.
Using your editor of chocice create an XML file (named passthrough.xml, for example) in the /tm p
directory. Make sure to replace pf dev='eth3' with the netdev name of your own SR-IOV device's
PF
T he following is an example network definition that will make available a pool of all VFs for the SR-
IOV adapter with its physical function (PF) at "eth3' on the host physical machine:
<network>
<name>passthrough</name>
<!--This is the name of the file you created-->
<forward mode='hostdev' managed='yes'>
<pf dev='myNetDevName'/>
<!--Use the netdev name of your SR-IOV devices PF here-->
</forward>
</network>
Run the following command, replacing /tmp/passthrough.xml, with the name and location of your XML
file you created in the previous step:
Run the following replacing passthrough.xml, with the name of your XML file you created in the
previous step:
Run the virsh start command to restart the guest virtual machine you shutdown in the first step
(example uses guestVM as the guest virtual machine's domain name). Refer to Section 26.8.1,
“Starting a defined domain” for more information.
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Although only a single device is shown, libvirt will automatically derive the list of all VFs associated
with that PF the first time a guest virtual machine is started with an interface definition in its domain
XML like the following:
<interface type='network'>
<source network='passthrough'>
</interface>
7. Verification
You can verify this by running virsh net-dum pxm l passthrough command after starting the
first guest that uses the network; you will get output similar to the following:
<network connections='1'>
<name>passthrough</name>
<uuid>a6b49429-d353-d7ad-3185-4451cc786437</uuid>
<forward mode='hostdev' managed='yes'>
<pf dev='eth3'/>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x02' slot='0x10'
function='0x1'/>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x02' slot='0x10'
function='0x3'/>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x02' slot='0x10'
function='0x5'/>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x02' slot='0x10'
function='0x7'/>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x02' slot='0x11'
function='0x1'/>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x02' slot='0x11'
function='0x3'/>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x02' slot='0x11'
function='0x5'/>
</forward>
</network>
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Using USB passthrough - this requires the device to be physically connected to the host physical
machine that is hosting the guest virtual machine. SPICE is not needed in this case. USB devices on
the host can be passed to the guest via the command line or virt-manager. Refer to Section 25.3.2,
“Attaching USB devices to a guest virtual machine” for virt manager directions. Note that the virt-
manager directions are not suitable for hot plugging or hot unplugging devices. If you want to hot
plug/or hot unplug a USB device, refer to Procedure 26.1, “Hotplugging USB devices for use by the
guest virtual machine”.
Using USB re-direction - USB re-direction is best used in cases where there is a host physical machine
that is running in a data center. T he user connects to his/her guest virtual machine from a local
machine or thin client. On this local machine there is a SPICE client. T he user can attach any USB
device to the thin client and the SPICE client will redirect the device to the host physical machine on the
data center so it can be used by the guest virtual machine that is running on the thin client. For
instructions via the virt-manager refer to Section 25.3.3, “USB redirection”.
<class>:<vendor>:<product>:<version>:<allow>
Use the value -1 to designate it to accept any value for a particular field. You may use multiple rules on
the same command line using | as a separator. Note that if a device matches none of the passed in rules,
redirecting it will not be allowed!
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Example 20.1. An example of limiting redirection with a windows guest virtual machine
2. Add the following code excerpt to the guest virtual machine's' domain xml file:
3. Start the guest virtual machine and confirm the setting changes by running the following:
-device usb-redir,chardev=charredir0,id=redir0,/
filter=0x08:0x1234:0xBEEF:0x0200:1|-1:-1:-1:-1:0,bus=usb.0,port=3
4. Plug a USB device into a host physical machine, and use virt-manager to connect to the guest
virtual machine.
5. Click USB device selection in the menu, which will produce the following message: "Some USB
devices are blocked by host policy". Click OK to confirm and continue.
6. T o make sure that the filter captures properly check the USB device vendor and product, then
make the following changes in the host physical machine's domain XML to allow for USB
redirection.
<redirfilter>
<usbdev class='0x08' vendor='0x0951' product='0x1625' version='2.0'
allow='yes'/>
<usbdev allow='no'/>
</redirfilter>
7. Restart the guest virtual machine, then use virt-viewer to connect to the guest virtual machine.
T he USB device will now redirect traffic to the guest virtual machine.
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...
<devices>
<controller type='ide' index='0'/>
<controller type='virtio-serial' index='0' ports='16' vectors='4'/>
<controller type='virtio-serial' index='1'>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x00' slot='0x0a' function='0x0'/>
</controller>
...
</devices>
...
Each controller has a mandatory attribute <controller type>, which must be one of:
ide
fdc
scsi
sata
usb
ccid
virtio-serial
pci
T he <controller> element has a mandatory attribute <controller index> which is the decimal
integer describing in which order the bus controller is encountered (for use in controller attributes of
<address> elements). When <controller type ='virtio-serial'> there are two additional
optional attributes (named ports and vectors), which control how many devices can be connected
through the controller.
When <controller type ='scsi'>, there is an optional attribute m odel model, which can have the
following values:
auto
buslogic
ibmvscsi
lsilogic
lsisas1068
lsisas1078
virtio-scsi
vmpvscsi
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When <controller type ='usb'>, there is an optional attribute m odel model, which can have the
following values:
piix3-uhci
piix4-uhci
ehci
ich9-ehci1
ich9-uhci1
ich9-uhci2
ich9-uhci3
vt82c686b-uhci
pci-ohci
nec-xhci
Note that if the USB bus needs to be explicitly disabled for the guest virtual machine, <m odel='none'>
may be used. .
For controllers that are themselves devices on a PCI or USB bus, an optional sub-element <address>
can specify the exact relationship of the controller to its master bus, with semantics as shown in
Section 20.4, “Setting addresses for devices”.
An optional sub-element <driver> can specify the driver specific options. Currently it only supports
attribute queues, which specifies the number of queues for the controller. For best performance, it's
recommended to specify a value matching the number of vCPUs.
USB companion controllers have an optional sub-element <m aster> to specify the exact relationship of
the companion to its master controller. A companion controller is on the same bus as its master, so the
companion index value should be equal.
...
<devices>
<controller type='usb' index='0' model='ich9-ehci1'>
<address type='pci' domain='0' bus='0' slot='4' function='7'/>
</controller>
<controller type='usb' index='0' model='ich9-uhci1'>
<master startport='0'/>
<address type='pci' domain='0' bus='0' slot='4' function='0'
multifunction='on'/>
</controller>
...
</devices>
...
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PCI controllers have an optional m odel attribute with the following possible values:
pci-root
pcie-root
pci-bridge
dmi-to-pci-bridge
T he root controllers (pci-root and pcie-root) have an optional pcihole64 element specifying how
big (in kilobytes, or in the unit specified by pcihole64 's unit attribute) the 64-bit PCI hole should be.
Some guest virtual machines (such as Windows XP or Windows Server 2003) may cause a crash, unless
unit is disabled (set to 0 unit='0').
For machine types which provide an implicit PCI bus, the pci-root controller with index='0' is auto-added
and required to use PCI devices. pci-root has no address. PCI bridges are auto-added if there are too
many devices to fit on the one bus provided by m odel='pci-root', or a PCI bus number greater than
zero was specified. PCI bridges can also be specified manually, but their addresses should only refer to
PCI buses provided by already specified PCI controllers. Leaving gaps in the PCI controller indexes might
lead to an invalid configuration. T he following XML example can be added to the <devices> section:
...
<devices>
<controller type='pci' index='0' model='pci-root'/>
<controller type='pci' index='1' model='pci-bridge'>
<address type='pci' domain='0' bus='0' slot='5' function='0'
multifunction='off'/>
</controller>
</devices>
...
For machine types which provide an implicit PCI Express (PCIe) bus (for example, the machine types
based on the Q35 chipset), the pcie-root controller with index='0' is auto-added to the domain's
configuration. pcie-root has also no address, but provides 31 slots (numbered 1-31) and can only be used
to attach PCIe devices. In order to connect standard PCI devices on a system which has a pcie-root
controller, a pci controller with m odel='dm i-to-pci-bridge' is automatically added. A dmi-to-pci-
bridge controller plugs into a PCIe slot (as provided by pcie-root), and itself provides 31 standard PCI slots
(which are not hot-pluggable). In order to have hot-pluggable PCI slots in the guest system, a pci-bridge
controller will also be automatically created and connected to one of the slots of the auto-created dmi-to-
pci-bridge controller; all guest devices with PCI addresses that are auto-determined by libvirt will be placed
on this pci-bridge device.
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...
<devices>
<controller type='pci' index='0' model='pcie-root'/>
<controller type='pci' index='1' model='dmi-to-pci-bridge'>
<address type='pci' domain='0' bus='0' slot='0xe' function='0'/>
</controller>
<controller type='pci' index='2' model='pci-bridge'>
<address type='pci' domain='0' bus='1' slot='1' function='0'/>
</controller>
</devices>
...
Every address has a mandatory attribute type that describes which bus the device is on. T he choice of
which address to use for a given device is constrained in part by the device and the architecture of the
guest virtual machine. For example, a <disk> device uses type='drive', while a <console> device
would use type='pci' on i686 or x86_64 guest virtual machine architectures. Each address type has
further optional attributes that control where on the bus the device will be placed as described in the table:
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iobase
irq
On the host physical machine, the hardware rng interface creates a chardev at /dev/hwrng, which can
be opened and then read to fetch entropy from the host physical machine. Coupled with the rngd daemon,
the entropy from the host physical machine can be routed to the guest virtual machine's /dev/random ,
which is the primary source of randomness.
Using a random number generator is particularly useful when a device such as a keyboard, mouse and
other inputs are not enough to generate sufficient entropy on the guest virtual machine.T he virtual random
number generator device allows the host physical machine to pass through entropy to guest virtual
machine operating systems. T his device is available on both Windows and KVM guest virtual machines.
T his procedure can be done either via the command line or via virt-manager. For virt-manager instructions
refer to Procedure 20.10, “Implementing virtio-rng via Virtualzation Manager” and for command line
instructions, refer to Procedure 20.11, “Implementing virtio-rng via command line tools”.
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2. Select the guest virtual machine and from the Edit menu, select Virtual Machine Details, to open
the Details window for the specified guest virtual machine.
4. In the Add New Virtual Hardware window, select RNG to open the Random Number Generator
window.
Enter the desired parameters and click Finish when done. T he parameters are explained in virtio-
rng elements.
2. Using virsh edit domain-name command, open the XML file for the desired guest virtual
machine.
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...
<devices>
<rng model='virtio'>
<rate period="2000" bytes="1234"/>
<backend model='random'>/dev/random</backend>
<!-- OR -->
<backend model='egd' type='udp'>
<source mode='bind' service='1234'>
<source mode='connect' host physical machine='1.2.3.4' service='1234'>
</backend>
</rng>
</devices>
...
virtio-rng elements
m odel - T he required m odel attribute specifies what type of RNG device is provided.
'virtio'
<backend> - T he <backend> element specifies the source of entropy to be used for the
domain. T he source model is configured using the m odel attribute. Supported source models
include 'random ' — /dev/random (default setting) or similar device as source and 'egd'
which sets a EGD protocol backend.
backend type='random ' - T his <backend> type expects a non-blocking character device
as input. Examples of such devices are /dev/random and /dev/urandom . T he file name is
specified as contents of the <backend> element. When no file name is specified the hypervisor
default is used.
<backend type='egd'> - T his backend connects to a source using the EGD protocol. T he
source is specified as a character device. Refer to character device host physical machine
interface for more information.
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SR-IOV enables a Single Root Function (for example, a single Ethernet port), to appear as multiple,
separate, physical devices. A physical device with SR-IOV capabilities can be configured to appear in the
PCI configuration space as multiple functions. Each device has its own configuration space complete with
Base Address Registers (BARs).
Physical Functions (PFs) are full PCIe devices that include the SR-IOV capabilities. Physical Functions
are discovered, managed, and configured as normal PCI devices. Physical Functions configure and
manage the SR-IOV functionality by assigning Virtual Functions.
Virtual Functions (VFs) are simple PCIe functions that only process I/O. Each Virtual Function is derived
from a Physical Function. T he number of Virtual Functions a device may have is limited by the device
hardware. A single Ethernet port, the Physical Device, may map to many Virtual Functions that can be
shared to virtual machines.
T he hypervisor can map one or more Virtual Functions to a virtual machine. T he Virtual Function's
configuration space is then mapped to the configuration space presented to the guest.
Each Virtual Function can only be mapped to a single guest at a time, as Virtual Functions require real
hardware resources. A virtual machine can have multiple Virtual Functions. A Virtual Function appears as a
network card in the same way as a normal network card would appear to an operating system.
T he SR-IOV drivers are implemented in the kernel. T he core implementation is contained in the PCI
subsystem, but there must also be driver support for both the Physical Function (PF) and Virtual Function
(VF) devices. An SR-IOV capable device can allocate VFs from a PF. T he VFs appear as PCI devices
which are backed on the physical PCI device by resources such as queues and register sets.
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Virtual Functions have near-native performance and provide better performance than para-virtualized
drivers and emulated access. Virtual Functions provide data protection between virtual machines on the
same physical server as the data is managed and controlled by the hardware.
T hese features allow for increased virtual machine density on hosts within a data center.
SR-IOV is better able to utilize the bandwidth of devices with multiple guests.
SR-IOV Virtual Functions (VFs) can be assigned to virtual machines by adding a device entry in
<hostdev> with the virsh edit or virsh attach-device command. However, this can be
problematic because unlike a regular network device, an SR-IOV VF network device does not have a
permanent unique MAC address, and is assigned a new MAC address each time the host is rebooted.
Because of this, even if the guest is assigned the same VF after a reboot, when the host is rebooted the
guest determines its network adapter to have a new MAC address. As a result, the guest believes there is
new hardware connected each time, and will usually require re-configuration of the guest's network
settings.
libvirt-0.9.10 and newer contains the <interface type='hostdev'> interface device. Using this interface
device, libvirt will first perform any network-specific hardware/switch initialization indicated (such as
setting the MAC address, VLAN tag, or 802.1Qbh virtualport parameters), then perform the PCI device
assignment to the guest.
host hardware that supports either the Intel VT -d or the AMD IOMMU extensions, and
Important
Assignment of an SR-IOV device to a virtual machine requires that the host hardware supports the
Intel VT -d or the AMD IOMMU specification.
T o attach an SR-IOV network device on an Intel or an AMD system, follow this procedure:
1. Enable Intel VT -d or the AMD IOMMU specifications in the BIOS and kernel
On an Intel system, enable Intel VT -d in the BIOS if it is not enabled already. Refer to
Procedure 20.1, “Preparing an Intel system for PCI device assignment” for procedural help on
enabling Intel VT -d in the BIOS and kernel.
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On an AMD system, enable the AMD IOMMU specifications in the BIOS if they are not enabled
already. Refer to Procedure 20.2, “Preparing an AMD system for PCI device assignment” for
procedural help on enabling IOMMU in the BIOS.
2. Verify support
Verify if the PCI device with SR-IOV capabilities is detected. T his example lists an Intel 82576
network interface card which supports SR-IOV. Use the lspci command to verify whether the
device was detected.
# lspci
03:00.0 Ethernet controller: Intel Corporation 82576 Gigabit Network Connection
(rev 01)
03:00.1 Ethernet controller: Intel Corporation 82576 Gigabit Network Connection
(rev 01)
Note that the output has been modified to remove all other devices.
If the device is supported the driver kernel module should be loaded automatically by the kernel.
Optional parameters can be passed to the module using the m odprobe command. T he Intel 82576
network interface card uses the igb driver kernel module.
T he max_vfs parameter of the igb module allocates the maximum number of Virtual Functions. T he
max_vfs parameter causes the driver to spawn, up to the value of the parameter in, Virtual
Functions. For this particular card the valid range is 0 to 7.
# modprobe -r igb
Restart the module with the max_vfs set to 7 or any number of Virtual Functions up to the maximum
supported by your device.
Add the line options igb m ax_vfs=7 to any file in /etc/m odprobe.d to make the Virtual
Functions persistent. For example:
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Using the lspci command, list the newly added Virtual Functions attached to the Intel 82576
network device. (Alternatively, use grep to search for Virtual Function, to search for devices
that support Virtual Functions.)
T he identifier for the PCI device is found with the -n parameter of the lspci command. T he
Physical Functions correspond to 0b:00.0 and 0b:00.1. All Virtual Functions have Virtual
Function in the description.
T he libvirt service must recognize the device before adding a device to a virtual machine.
libvirt uses a similar notation to the lspci output. All punctuation characters, ; and ., in lspci
output are changed to underscores (_).
Use the virsh nodedev-list command and the grep command to filter the Intel 82576 network
device from the list of available host devices. 0b is the filter for the Intel 82576 network devices in
this example. T his may vary for your system and may result in additional devices.
T he serial numbers for the Virtual Functions and Physical Functions should be in the list.
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T his example adds the Virtual Function pci_0000_0b_10_0 to the virtual machine in Step 9. Note
the bus, slot and function parameters of the Virtual Function: these are required for adding the
device.
Copy these parameters into a temporary XML file, such as /tm p/new-interface.xm l for
example.
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Note
When the virtual machine starts, it should see a network device of the type provided by the
physical adapter, with the configured MAC address. T his MAC address will remain
unchanged across host and guest reboots.
T he following <interface> example shows the syntax for the optional <mac address>,
<virtualport>, and <vlan> elements. In practice, use either the <vlan> or <virtualport>
element, not both simultaneously as shown in the example:
...
<devices>
...
<interface type='hostdev' managed='yes'>
<source>
<address type='pci' domain='0' bus='11' slot='16' function='0'/>
</source>
<mac address='52:54:00:6d:90:02'>
<vlan>
<tag id='42'/>
</vlan>
<virtualport type='802.1Qbh'>
<parameters profileid='finance'/>
</virtualport>
</interface>
...
</devices>
9.
Add the Virtual Function to the virtual machine using the following command with the temporary file
created in the previous step. T his attaches the new device immediately and saves it for subsequent
guest restarts.
Specifying the --live option with virsh attach-device attaches the new device to the running
guest. Using the --config option ensures the new device is available after future guest restarts.
Note
T he --live option is only accepted when the guest is running. virsh will return an error if
the --live option is used on a non-running guest.
T he virtual machine detects a new network interface card. T his new card is the Virtual Function of the SR-
IOV device.
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T his error is often caused by a device that is already assigned to another guest or to the host
itself.
Attempts to migrate and dump the virtual machine cause an error similar to the following:
Because device assignment uses hardware on the specific host where the virtual machine was
started, guest migration and save are not supported when device assignment is in use. Currently,
the same limitation also applies to core-dumping a guest; this may change in the future. It is
important to note that QEMU does not currently support migrate, save, and dump operations on
guest virtual machines with PCI devices attached. Currently it only can support these actions with
USB devices. Work is currently being done to improve this in the future.
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Linux host physical machine servers represent a virtual network switch as a network interface. When the
libvirtd daemon (libvirtd) is first installed and started, the default network interface representing the
virtual network switch is virbr0.
Figure 22.2. Linux host physical machine with an interface to a virtual network switch
T his virbr0 interface can be viewed with the ifconfig and ip commands like any other interface:
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$ ifconfig virbr0
virbr0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 1B:C4:94:CF:FD:17
inet addr:192.168.122.1 Bcast:192.168.122.255 Mask:255.255.255.0
UP BROADCAST RUNNING MULTICAST MTU:1500 Metric:1
RX packets:0 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:0
TX packets:11 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 carrier:0
collisions:0 txqueuelen:0
RX bytes:0 (0.0 b) TX bytes:3097 (3.0 KiB)
Figure 22.3. Virtual network switch using NAT with two guests
Warning
Virtual network switches use NAT configured by iptables rules. Editing these rules while the switch
is running is not recommended, as incorrect rules may result in the switch being unable to
communicate.
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If the switch is not running, you can set th public IP range for foward mode NAT in order to create a port
masquerading range by running:
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Note
A virtual network can be restricted to a specific physical interface. T his may be useful on a physical
system that has several interfaces (for example, eth0, eth1 and eth2). T his is only useful in
routed and NAT modes, and can be defined in the dev=<interface> option, or in virt-
m anager when creating a new virtual network.
Consider a network where one or more nodes are placed in a controlled sub-network for security reasons.
T he deployment of a special sub-network such as this is a common practice, and the sub-network is
known as a DMZ . Refer to the following diagram for more details on this layout:
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Host physical machines in a DMZ typically provide services to WAN (external) host physical machines as
well as LAN (internal) host physical machines. As this requires them to be accessible from multiple
locations, and considering that these locations are controlled and operated in different ways based on
their security and trust level, routed mode is the best configuration for this environment.
Consider a virtual server hosting company that has several host physical machines, each with two
physical network connections. One interface is used for management and accounting, the other is for the
virtual machines to connect through. Each guest has its own public IP address, but the host physical
machines use private IP address as management of the guests can only be performed by internal
administrators. Refer to the following diagram to understand this scenario:
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When the host physical machine has a public IP address and the virtual machines have static public IP
addresses, bridged networking cannot be used, as the provider only accepts packets from the MAC
address of the public host physical machine. T he following diagram demonstrates this:
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Isolated mode allows virtual machines to communicate with each other only. T hey are unable to interact
with the physical network.
2. T his will open the Connection Details menu. Click the Virtual Networks tab.
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3. All available virtual networks are listed on the left-hand box of the menu. You can edit the
configuration of a virtual network by selecting it from this box and editing as you see fit.
1. Open the Virtual Networks tab from within the Connection Details menu. Click the Add
Network button, identified by a plus sign (+) icon. For more information, refer to Section 22.6,
“Managing a virtual network”.
T his will open the Create a new virtual network window. Click Forward to continue.
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2. Enter an appropriate name for your virtual network and click Forward.
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3. Enter an IPv4 address space for your virtual network and click Forward.
4. Define the DHCP range for your virtual network by specifying a Start and End range of IP
addresses. Click Forward to continue.
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5. Select how the virtual network should connect to the physical network.
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If you select Forwarding to physical network, choose whether the Destination should
be Any physical device or a specific physical device. Also select whether the Mode should be
NAT or Routed.
6. You are now ready to create the network. Check the configuration of your network and click Finish.
7. T he new virtual network is now available in the Virtual Networks tab of the Connection
Details window.
1. In the Virtual Machine Manager window, highlight the guest that will have the network
assigned.
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2. From the Virtual Machine Manager Edit menu, select Virtual Machine Details.
3. Click the Add Hardware button on the Virtual Machine Details window.
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4. In the Add new virtual hardware window, select Network from the left pane, and select your
network name (network1 in this example) from the Host device menu and click Finish.
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Figure 22.23. Select your network from the Add new virtual hardware window
5. T he new network is now displayed as a virtual network interface that will be presented to the guest
upon launch.
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vepa
All VMs' packets are sent to the external bridge. Packets whose destination is a VM on the same
host physical machine as where the packet originates from are sent back to the host physical
machine by the VEPA capable bridge (today's bridges are typically not VEPA capable).
b ridge
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Packets whose destination is on the same host physical machine as where they originate from
are directly delivered to the target macvtap device. Both origin and destination devices need to be
in bridge mode for direct delivery. If either one of them is in vepa mode, a VEPA capable bridge is
required.
p rivate
All packets are sent to the external bridge and will only be delivered to a target VM on the same
host physical machine if they are sent through an external router or gateway and that device
sends them back to the host physical machine. T his procedure is followed if either the source or
destination device is in private mode.
p assthrough
T his feature attaches a virtual function of a SRIOV capable NIC directly to a VM without losing the
migration capability. All packets are sent to the VF/IF of the configured network device. Depending
on the capabilities of the device additional prerequisites or limitations may apply; for example, on
Linux this requires kernel 2.6.38 or newer.
Each of the four modes is configured by changing the domain xml file. Once this file is opened, change the
mode setting as shown:
<devices>
...
<interface type='direct'>
<source dev='eth0' mode='vepa'/>
</interface>
</devices>
T he network access of direct attached guest virtual machines can be managed by the hardware switch to
which the physical interface of the host physical machine is connected to.
T he interface can have additional parameters as shown below, if the switch is conforming to the IEEE
802.1Qbg standard. T he parameters of the virtualport element are documented in more detail in the IEEE
802.1Qbg standard. T he values are network specific and should be provided by the network administrator.
In 802.1Qbg terms, the Virtual Station Interface (VSI) represents the virtual interface of a virtual machine.
Note that IEEE 802.1Qbg requires a non-zero value for the VLAN ID. Also if the switch is conforming to the
IEEE 802.1Qbh standard, the values are network specific and should be provided by the network
administrator.
managerid
T he VSI Manager ID identifies the database containing the VSI type and instance definitions. T his
is an integer value and the value 0 is reserved.
t ypeid
T he VSI T ype ID identifies a VSI type characterizing the network access. VSI types are typically
managed by network administrator. T his is an integer value.
t ypeidversion
T he VSI T ype Version allows multiple versions of a VSI T ype. T his is an integer value.
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instanceid
T he VSI Instance ID Identifier is generated when a VSI instance (i.e. a virtual interface of a virtual
machine) is created. T his is a globally unique identifier.
p rofileid
T he profile ID contains the name of the port profile that is to be applied onto this interface. T his
name is resolved by the port profile database into the network parameters from the port profile,
and those network parameters will be applied to this interface.
Each of the four types is configured by changing the domain xml file. Once this file is opened, change the
mode setting as shown:
<devices>
...
<interface type='direct'>
<source dev='eth0.2' mode='vepa'/>
<virtualport type="802.1Qbg">
<parameters managerid="11" typeid="1193047" typeidversion="2"
instanceid="09b11c53-8b5c-4eeb-8f00-d84eaa0aaa4f"/>
</virtualport>
</interface>
</devices>
<devices>
...
<interface type='direct'>
<source dev='eth0' mode='private'/>
<virtualport type='802.1Qbh'>
<parameters profileid='finance'/>
</virtualport>
</interface>
</devices>
...
<interface type='bridge'>
<mac address='52:54:00:4a:c9:5e'/>
<source bridge='virbr0'/>
<model type='virtio'/>
</interface>
# cat br1.xml
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<interface type='bridge'>
<mac address='52:54:00:4a:c9:5e'/>
<source bridge='virbr1'/>
<model type='virtio'/>
</interface>
3. Start the guest virtual machine, confirm the guest virtual machine's network functionality, and check
that the guest virtual machine's vnetX is connected to the bridge you indicated.
# brctl show
bridge name bridge id STP enabled interfaces
virbr0 8000.5254007da9f2 yes virbr0-nic
vnet0
virbr1 8000.525400682996 yes virbr1-nic
4. Update the guest virtual machine's network with the new interface parameters with the following
command:
5. On the guest virtual machine, run service network restart. T he guest virtual machine gets a
new IP address for virbr1. Check the guest virtual machine's vnet0 is connected to the new
bridge(virbr1)
# brctl show
bridge name bridge id STP enabled interfaces
virbr0 8000.5254007da9f2 yes virbr0-nic
virbr1 8000.525400682996 yes virbr1-nic vnet0
22.11.1. Introduction
T he goal of the network filtering, is to enable administrators of a virtualized system to configure and
enforce network traffic filtering rules on virtual machines and manage the parameters of network traffic that
virtual machines are allowed to send or receive. T he network traffic filtering rules are applied on the host
physical machine when a virtual machine is started. Since the filtering rules cannot be circumvented from
within the virtual machine, it makes them mandatory from the point of view of a virtual machine user.
From the point of view of the guest virtual machine, the network filtering system allows each virtual
machine's network traffic filtering rules to be configured individually on a per interface basis. T hese rules
are applied on the host physical machine when the virtual machine is started and can be modified while the
virtual machine is running. T he latter can be achieved by modifying the XML description of a network filter.
Multiple virtual machines can make use of the same generic network filter. When such a filter is modified,
the network traffic filtering rules of all running virtual machines that reference this filter are updated. T he
machines that are not running will update on start.
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As previously mentioned, applying network traffic filtering rules can be done on individual network
interfaces that are configured for certain types of network configurations. Supported network types include:
network
bridge
T he interface XML is used to reference a top-level filter. In the following example, the interface
description references the filter clean-traffic.
<devices>
<interface type='bridge'>
<mac address='00:16:3e:5d:c7:9e'/>
<filterref filter='clean-traffic'/>
</interface>
</devices>
Network filters are written in XML and may either contain: references to other filters, rules for traffic
filtering, or hold a combination of both. T he above referenced filter clean-traffic is a filter that only
contains references to other filters and no actual filtering rules. Since references to other filters can be
used, a tree of filters can be built. T he clean-traffic filter can be viewed using the command: # virsh
nwfilter-dum pxm l clean-traffic.
As previously mentioned, a single network filter can be referenced by multiple virtual machines. Since
interfaces will typically have individual parameters associated with their respective traffic filtering rules,
the rules described in a filter's XML can be generalized using variables. In this case, the variable name
is used in the filter XML and the name and value are provided at the place where the filter is referenced.
In the following example, the interface description has been extended with the parameter IP and a dotted
IP address as a value.
<devices>
<interface type='bridge'>
<mac address='00:16:3e:5d:c7:9e'/>
<filterref filter='clean-traffic'>
<parameter name='IP' value='10.0.0.1'/>
</filterref>
</interface>
</devices>
In this particular example, the clean-traffic network traffic filter will be represented with the IP address
parameter 10.0.0.1 and as per the rule dictates that all traffic from this interface will always be using
10.0.0.1 as the source IP address, which is one of the purpose of this particular filter.
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Packets start their filter evaluation in the root chain and can then continue their evaluation in other chains,
return from those chains back into the root chain or be dropped or accepted by a filtering rule in one of the
traversed chains.
Libvirt's network filtering system automatically creates individual root chains for every virtual machine's
network interface on which the user chooses to activate traffic filtering. T he user may write filtering rules
that are either directly instantiated in the root chain or may create protocol-specific filtering chains for
efficient evaluation of protocol-specific rules.
root
mac
vlan
ipv4
ipv6
Multiple chains evaluating the mac, stp, vlan, arp, rarp, ipv4, or ipv6 protocol can be created using the
protocol name only as a prefix in the chain's name.
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T his example allows chains with names arp-xyz or arp-test to be specified and have their ARP protocol
packets evaluated in those chains.
T he following filter XML shows an example of filtering ARP traffic in the arp chain.
T he consequence of putting ARP-specific rules in the arp chain, rather than for example in the root
chain, is that packets protocols other than ARP do not need to be evaluated by ARP protocol-specific
rules. T his improves the efficiency of the traffic filtering. However, one must then pay attention to only
putting filtering rules for the given protocol into the chain since other rules will not be evaluated. For
example, an IPv4 rule will not be evaluated in the ARP chain since IPv4 protocol packets will not
traverse the ARP chain.
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Note
A chain with a lower priority value is accessed before one with a higher value.
T he chains listed in T able 22.1, “Filtering chain default priorities values” can be also be assigned
custom priorities by writing a value in the range [-1000 to 1000] into the priority (XML) attribute in
the filter node. Section 22.11.2, “Filtering chains”filter shows the default priority of -500 for arp
chains, for example.
MAC is designated for the MAC address of the network interface. A filtering rule that references this
variable will automatically be replaced with the MAC address of the interface. T his works without the user
having to explicitly provide the MAC parameter. Even though it is possible to specify the MAC parameter
similar to the IP parameter above, it is discouraged since libvirt knows what MAC address an interface will
be using.
T he parameter IP represents the IP address that the operating system inside the virtual machine is
expected to use on the given interface. T he IP parameter is special in so far as the libvirt daemon will try to
determine the IP address (and thus the IP parameter's value) that is being used on an interface if the
parameter is not explicitly provided but referenced. For current limitations on IP address detection, consult
the section on limitations Section 22.11.12, “Limitations” on how to use this feature and what to expect
when using it. T he XML file shown in Section 22.11.2, “Filtering chains” contains the filter no-arp-
spoofing, which is an example of using a network filter XML to reference the MAC and IP variables.
Note that referenced variables are always prefixed with the character $. T he format of the value of a
variable must be of the type expected by the filter attribute identified in the XML. In the above example, the
IP parameter must hold a legal IP address in standard format. Failure to provide the correct structure will
result in the filter variable not being replaced with a value and will prevent a virtual machine from starting or
will prevent an interface from attaching when hotplugging is being used. Some of the types that are
expected for each XML attribute are shown in the example Example 22.4, “Sample variable types”.
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As variables can contain lists of elements, (the variable IP can contain multiple IP addresses that are
valid on a particular interface, for example), the notation for providing multiple elements for the IP
variable is:
<devices>
<interface type='bridge'>
<mac address='00:16:3e:5d:c7:9e'/>
<filterref filter='clean-traffic'>
<parameter name='IP' value='10.0.0.1'/>
<parameter name='IP' value='10.0.0.2'/>
<parameter name='IP' value='10.0.0.3'/>
</filterref>
</interface>
</devices>
T his XML file creates filters to enable multiple IP addresses per interface. Each of the IP addresses will
result in a separate filtering rule. T herefore using the XML above and the the following rule, three
individual filtering rules (one for each IP address) will be created:
As it is possible to access individual elements of a variable holding a list of elements, a filtering rule like
the following accesses the 2nd element of the variable DSTPORTS.
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As it is possible to create filtering rules that represent all of the permissible rules from different lists
using the notation $VARIABLE[@ <iterator id="x">]. T he following rule allows a virtual machine
to receive traffic on a set of ports, which are specified in DSTPORTS, from the set of source IP address
specified in SRCIPADDRESSES. T he rule generates all combinations of elements of the variable
DSTPORTS with those of SRCIPADDRESSES by using two independent iterators to access their
elements.
Assigning values to the variables using $SRCIPADDRESSES[@ 1] and $DST PORT S[@ 2] would then
result in all variants of addresses and ports being created as shown:
10.0.0.1, 80
10.0.0.1, 8080
11.1.2.3, 80
11.1.2.3, 8080
Accessing the same variables using a single iterator, for example by using the notation
$SRCIPADDRESSES[@ 1] and $DST PORT S[@ 1], would result in parallel access to both lists and
result in the following combination:
10.0.0.1, 80
11.1.2.3, 8080
Note
$VARIABLE is short-hand for $VARIABLE[@ 0]. T he former notation always assumes the role of
iterator with iterator id="0" added as shown in the opening paragraph at the top of this
section.
22.11.5.1. Introduction
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T he value any instructs libvirt to use any packet to determine the address in use by a virtual machine,
which is the default setting if the variable TRL_IP_LEARNING is not set. T his method will only detect a
single IP address per interface. Once a guest virtual machine's IP address has been detected, its IP
network traffic will be locked to that address, if for example, IP address spoofing is prevented by one of its
filters. In that case, the user of the VM will not be able to change the IP address on the interface inside the
guest virtual machine, which would be considered IP address spoofing. When a guest virtual machine is
migrated to another host physical machine or resumed after a suspend operation, the first packet sent by
the guest virtual machine will again determine the IP address that the guest virtual machine can use on a
particular interface.
T he value of dhcp instructs libvirt to only honor DHCP server-assigned addresses with valid leases. T his
method supports the detection and usage of multiple IP address per interface. When a guest virtual
machine resumes after a suspend operation, any valid IP address leases are applied to its filters.
Otherwise the guest virtual machine is expected to use DHCP to obtain a new IP addresses. When a
guest virtual machine migrates to another physical host physical machine, the guest virtual machine is
required to re-run the DHCP protocol.
If CT RL_IP_LEARNING is set to none, libvirt does not do IP address learning and referencing IP without
assigning it an explicit value is an error.
When DHCP snooping is enabled and the DHCP lease expires, the guest virtual machine will no longer be
able to use the IP address until it acquires a new, valid lease from a DHCP server. If the guest virtual
machine is migrated, it must get a new valid DHCP lease to use an IP address (e.g., by bringing the VM
interface down and up again).
Note
Automatic DHCP detection listens to the DHCP traffic the guest virtual machine exchanges with the
DHCP server of the infrastructure. T o avoid denial-of-service attacks on libvirt, the evaluation of
those packets is rate-limited, meaning that a guest virtual machine sending an excessive number of
DHCP packets per second on an interface will not have all of those packets evaluated and thus
filters may not get adapted. Normal DHCP client behavior is assumed to send a low number of
DHCP packets per second. Further, it is important to setup appropriate filters on all guest virtual
machines in the infrastructure to avoid them being able to send DHCP packets. T herefore guest
virtual machines must either be prevented from sending UDP and T CP traffic from port 67 to port 68
or the DHCPSERVER variable should be used on all guest virtual machines to restrict DHCP server
messages to only be allowed to originate from trusted DHCP servers. At the same time anti-
spoofing prevention must be enabled on all guest virtual machines in the subnet.
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T he following XML provides an example for the activation of IP address learning using the DHCP
snooping method:
<interface type='bridge'>
<source bridge='virbr0'/>
<filterref filter='clean-traffic'>
<parameter name='CTRL_IP_LEARNING' value='dhcp'/>
</filterref>
</interface>
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T he following shows the XML of the clean-traffic network filter referencing several other filters.
<filter name='clean-traffic'>
<uuid>6ef53069-ba34-94a0-d33d-17751b9b8cb1</uuid>
<filterref filter='no-mac-spoofing'/>
<filterref filter='no-ip-spoofing'/>
<filterref filter='allow-incoming-ipv4'/>
<filterref filter='no-arp-spoofing'/>
<filterref filter='no-other-l2-traffic'/>
<filterref filter='qemu-announce-self'/>
</filter>
T o reference another filter, the XML node <filterref> needs to be provided inside a filter node. T his
node must have the attribute filter whose value contains the name of the filter to be referenced.
New network filters can be defined at any time and may contain references to network filters that are not
known to libvirt, yet. However, once a virtual machine is started or a network interface referencing a filter is
to be hotplugged, all network filters in the filter tree must be available. Otherwise the virtual machine will not
start or the network interface cannot be attached.
T he traffic filtering rule starts with the rule node. T his node may contain up to three of the following
attributes:
drop (matching the rule silently discards the packet with no further analysis)
reject (matching the rule generates an ICMP reject message with no further analysis)
accept (matching the rule accepts the packet with no further analysis)
return (matching the rule passes this filter, but returns control to the calling filter for further
analysis)
continue (matching the rule goes on to the next rule for further analysis)
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priority is optional. T he priority of the rule controls the order in which the rule will be instantiated relative
to other rules. Rules with lower values will be instantiated before rules with higher values. Valid values
are in the range of -1000 to 1000. If this attribute is not provided, priority 500 will be assigned by
default. Note that filtering rules in the root chain are sorted with filters connected to the root chain
following their priorities. T his allows to interleave filtering rules with access to filter chains. Refer to
Section 22.11.3, “Filtering chain priorities” for more information.
statematch is optional. Possible values are '0' or 'false' to turn the underlying connection state
matching off. T he default setting is 'true' or 1
For more information see Section 22.11.11, “Advanced Filter Configuration T opics”.
T he above example Example 22.7, “An Example of a clean traffic filter” indicates that the traffic of type ip
will be associated with the chain ipv4 and the rule will have priority=500. If for example another filter is
referenced whose traffic of type ip is also associated with the chain ipv4 then that filter's rules will be
ordered relative to the priority=500 of the shown rule.
A rule may contain a single rule for filtering of traffic. T he above example shows that traffic of type ip is to
be filtered.
IP_MASK: IP address mask in either dotted decimal format (255.255.248.0) or CIDR mask (0-32)
ST RING: A string
IPSET FLAGS: T he source and destination flags of the ipset described by up to 6 'src' or 'dst' elements
selecting features from either the source or destination part of the packet header; example: src,src,dst.
T he number of 'selectors' to provide here depends on the type of ipset that is referenced
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Every attribute except for those of type IP_MASK or IPV6_MASK can be negated using the match attribute
with value no. Multiple negated attributes may be grouped together. T he following XML fragment shows
such an example using abstract attributes.
[...]
<rule action='drop' direction='in'>
<protocol match='no' attribute1='value1' attribute2='value2'/>
<protocol attribute3='value3'/>
</rule>
[...]
Rules behave evaluate the rule as well as look at it logically within the boundaries of the given protocol
attributes. T hus, if a single attribute's value does not match the one given in the rule, the whole rule will be
skipped during the evaluation process. T herefore, in the above example incoming traffic will only be
dropped if: the protocol property attribute1 does not match both value1 and the protocol property
attribute2 does not match value2 and the protocol property attribute3 matches value3.
[...]
<mac match='no' srcmacaddr='$MAC'/>
[...]
Rules of this type should go either into the root or vlan chain.
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Rules of this type should go either into the root or stp chain.
22.11.10.4 . ARP/RARP
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Rules of this type should either go into the root or arp/rarp chain.
22.11.10.5. IPv4
Protocol ID: ip
Rules of this type should either go into the root or ipv4 chain.
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22.11.10.6. IPv6
Rules of this type should either go into the root or ipv6 chain.
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22.11.10.7. T CP/UDP/SCT P
T he chain parameter is ignored for this type of traffic and should either be omitted or set to root. .
22.11.10.8. ICMP
Note: T he chain parameter is ignored for this type of traffic and should either be omitted or set to root.
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T he chain parameter is ignored for this type of traffic and should either be omitted or set to root.
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T he chain parameter is ignored for this type of traffic and should either be omitted or set to root.
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22.11.10.11. ICMPv6
T he chain parameter is ignored for this type of traffic and should either be omitted or set to root.
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T he chain parameter is ignored for this type of traffic and should either be omitted or set to root.
T able 22.14 . IGMP, ESP, AH, UDPLIT E, 'ALL' over IPv protocol types
T he network filtering subsystem (on Linux) makes use of the connection tracking support of IP tables. T his
helps in enforcing the direction of the network traffic (state match) as well as counting and limiting the
number of simultaneous connections towards a guest virtual machine. As an example, if a guest virtual
machine has T CP port 8080 open as a server, clients may connect to the guest virtual machine on port
8080. Connection tracking and enforcement of the direction and then prevents the guest virtual machine
from initiating a connection from (T CP client) port 8080 to the host physical machine back to a remote host
physical machine. More importantly, tracking helps to prevent remote attackers from establishing a
connection back to a guest virtual machine. For example, if the user inside the guest virtual machine
established a connection to port 80 on an attacker site, then the attacker will not be able to initiate a
connection from T CP port 80 back towards the guest virtual machine. By default the connection state
match that enables connection tracking and then enforcement of the direction of traffic is turned on.
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Example 22.9. XML example for turning off connections to the T CP port
T he following shows an example XML fragment where this feature has been turned off for incoming
connections to T CP port 12345.
[...]
<rule direction='in' action='accept' statematch='false'>
<cp dstportstart='12345'/>
</rule>
[...]
T his now allows incoming traffic to T CP port 12345, but would also enable the initiation from (client)
T CP port 12345 within the VM, which may or may not be desirable.
T o limit the number of connections a guest virtual machine may establish, a rule must be provided that
sets a limit of connections for a given type of traffic. If for example a VM is supposed to be allowed to only
ping one other IP address at a time and is supposed to have only one active incoming ssh connection at a
time.
[...]
<rule action='drop' direction='in' priority='400'>
<tcp connlimit-above='1'/>
</rule>
<rule action='accept' direction='in' priority='500'>
<tcp dstportstart='22'/>
</rule>
<rule action='drop' direction='out' priority='400'>
<icmp connlimit-above='1'/>
</rule>
<rule action='accept' direction='out' priority='500'>
<icmp/>
</rule>
<rule action='accept' direction='out' priority='500'>
<udp dstportstart='53'/>
</rule>
<rule action='drop' direction='inout' priority='1000'>
<all/>
</rule>
[...]
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Note
Limitation rules must be listed in the XML prior to the rules for accepting traffic. According to the XML
file in Example 22.10, “XML sample file that sets limits to connections”, an additional rule for allowing
DNS traffic sent to port 22 go out the guest virtual machine, has been added to avoid ssh sessions
not getting established for reasons related to DNS lookup failures by the ssh daemon. Leaving this
rule out may result in the ssh client hanging unexpectedly as it tries to connect. Additional caution
should be used in regards to handling timeouts related to tracking of traffic. An ICMP ping that the
user may have terminated inside the guest virtual machine may have a long timeout in the host
physical machine's connection tracking system and will therefore not allow another ICMP ping to go
through.
T he best solution is to tune the timeout in the host physical machine's sysfs with the following
command:# echo 3 > /proc/sys/net/netfilter/nf_conntrack_icm p_tim eout. T his
command sets the ICMP connection tracking timeout to 3 seconds. T he effect of this is that once
one ping is terminated, another one can start after 3 seconds.
If for any reason the guest virtual machine has not properly closed its T CP connection, the
connection to be held open for a longer period of time, especially if the T CP timeout value was set
for a large amount of time on the host physical machine. In addition, any idle connection may result
in a time out in the connection tracking system which can be re-activated once packets are
exchanged.
However, if the limit is set too low, newly initiated connections may force an idle connection into T CP
backoff. T herefore, the limit of connections should be set rather high so that fluctuations in new
T CP connections don't cause odd traffic behavior in relation to idle connections.
virsh has been extended with life-cycle support for network filters. All commands related to the network
filtering subsystem start with the prefix nwfilter. T he following commands are available:
nwfilter-define : defines a new network filter or updates an existing one (must supply a name)
nwfilter-undefine : deletes a specified network filter (must supply a name). Do not delete a
network filter currently in use.
T he following is a list of example network filters that are automatically installed with libvirt:
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T hese filters are only building blocks and require a combination with other filters to provide useful network
traffic filtering. T he most used one in the above list is the clean-traffic filter. T his filter itself can for example
be combined with the no-ip-multicast filter to prevent virtual machines from sending IP multicast traffic on
top of the prevention of packet spoofing.
Since libvirt only provides a couple of example networking filters, you may consider writing your own. When
planning on doing so there are a couple of things you may need to know regarding the network filtering
subsystem and how it works internally. Certainly you also have to know and understand the protocols very
well that you want to be filtering on so that no further traffic than what you want can pass and that in fact
the traffic you want to allow does pass.
T he network filtering subsystem is currently only available on Linux host physical machines and only
works for QEMU and KVM type of virtual machines. On Linux, it builds upon the support for ebtables,
iptables and ip6tables and makes use of their features. Considering the list found in Section 22.11.10,
“Supported protocols” the following protocols can be implemented using ebtables:
mac
vlan (802.1Q)
arp, rarp
ipv4
ipv6
Any protocol that runs over IPv4 is supported using iptables, those over IPv6 are implemented using
ip6tables.
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Using a Linux host physical machine, all traffic filtering rules created by libvirt's network filtering subsystem
first passes through the filtering support implemented by ebtables and only afterwards through iptables or
ip6tables filters. If a filter tree has rules with the protocols including: mac, stp, vlan arp, rarp, ipv4, or ipv6;
the ebtable rules and values listed will automatically be used first.
Multiple chains for the same protocol can be created. T he name of the chain must have a prefix of one of
the previously enumerated protocols. T o create an additional chain for handling of ARP traffic, a chain with
name arp-test, can for example be specified.
As an example, it is possible to filter on UDP traffic by source and destination ports using the ip protocol
filter and specifying attributes for the protocol, source and destination IP addresses and ports of UDP
packets that are to be accepted. T his allows early filtering of UDP traffic with ebtables. However, once an
IP or IPv6 packet, such as a UDP packet, has passed the ebtables layer and there is at least one rule in a
filter tree that instantiates iptables or ip6tables rules, a rule to let the UDP packet pass will also be
necessary to be provided for those filtering layers. T his can be achieved with a rule containing an
appropriate udp or udp-ipv6 traffic filtering node.
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allows the VM to send ping traffic from an interface but not let the VM be pinged on the interface
T he requirement to prevent spoofing is fulfilled by the existing clean-traffic network filter, thus the
way to do this is to reference it from a custom filter.
T o enable traffic for T CP ports 22 and 80, two rules are added to enable this type of traffic. T o allow the
guest virtual machine to send ping traffic a rule is added for ICMP traffic. For simplicity reasons, general
ICMP traffic will be allowed to be initiated from the guest virtual machine, and will not be specified to
ICMP echo request and response messages. All other traffic will be prevented to reach or be initiated by
the guest virtual machine. T o do this a rule will be added that drops all other traffic. Assuming the guest
virtual machine is called test and the interface to associate our filter with is called eth0, a filter is
created named test-eth0.
<filter name='test-eth0'>
<!- - This rule references the clean traffic filter to prevent MAC, IP and ARP
spoofing. By not providing an IP address parameter, libvirt will detect the IP
address the guest virtual machine is using. - ->
<filterref filter='clean-traffic'/>
<!- - This rule enables TCP ports 22 (ssh) and 80 (http) to be reachable - ->
<rule action='accept' direction='in'>
<tcp dstportstart='22'/>
</rule>
<!- - This rule enables general ICMP traffic to be initiated by the guest
virtual machine including ping traffic - ->
<rule action='accept' direction='out'>
<icmp/>
</rule>>
<!- - This rule enables outgoing DNS lookups using UDP - ->
<rule action='accept' direction='out'>
<udp dstportstart='53'/>
</rule>
</filter>
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Although one of the rules in the above XML contains the IP address of the guest virtual machine as either
a source or a destination address, the filtering of the traffic works correctly. T he reason is that whereas
the rule's evaluation occurs internally on a per-interface basis, the rules are additionally evaluated based
on which (tap) interface has sent or will receive the packet, rather than what their source or destination IP
address may be.
An XML fragment for a possible network interface description inside the domain XML of the test guest
virtual machine could then look like this:
[...]
<interface type='bridge'>
<source bridge='mybridge'/>
<filterref filter='test-eth0'/>
</interface>
[...]
T o more strictly control the ICMP traffic and enforce that only ICMP echo requests can be sent from the
guest virtual machine and only ICMP echo responses be received by the guest virtual machine, the
above ICMP rule can be replaced with the following two rules:
T his example demonstrates how to build a similar filter as in the example above, but extends the list of
requirements with an ftp server located inside the guest virtual machine. T he requirements for this filter
are:
prevents a guest virtual machine's interface from MAC, IP, and ARP spoofing
allows the guest virtual machine to send ping traffic from an interface but does not allow the guest
virtual machine to be pinged on the interface
allows the guest virtual machine to do DNS lookups (UDP towards port 53)
enables the ftp server (in active mode) so it can run inside the guest virtual machine
T he additional requirement of allowing an FT P server to be run inside the guest virtual machine maps
into the requirement of allowing port 21 to be reachable for FT P control traffic as well as enabling the
guest virtual machine to establish an outgoing T CP connection originating from the guest virtual
machine's T CP port 20 back to the FT P client (FT P active mode). T here are several ways of how this
filter can be written and two possible solutions are included in this example.
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T he first solution makes use of the state attribute of the T CP protocol that provides a hook into the
connection tracking framework of the Linux host physical machine. For the guest virtual machine-initiated
FT P data connection (FT P active mode) the RELAT ED state is used to enable detection that the guest
virtual machine-initiated FT P data connection is a consequence of ( or 'has a relationship with' ) an
existing FT P control connection, thereby allowing it to pass packets through the firewall. T he RELAT ED
state, however, is only valid for the very first packet of the outgoing T CP connection for the FT P data
path. Afterwards, the state is EST ABLISHED, which then applies equally to the incoming and outgoing
direction. All this is related to the FT P data traffic originating from T CP port 20 of the guest virtual
machine. T his then leads to the following solution:
<filter name='test-eth0'>
<!- - This filter (eth0) references the clean traffic filter to prevent MAC,
IP, and ARP spoofing. By not providing an IP address parameter, libvirt will
detect the IP address the guest virtual machine is using. - ->
<filterref filter='clean-traffic'/>
<!- - This rule enables TCP port 20 for guest virtual machine-initiated FTP data
connection related to an existing FTP control connection - ->
<rule action='accept' direction='out'>
<tcp srcportstart='20' state='RELATED,ESTABLISHED'/>
</rule>
<!- - This rule accepts all packets from a client on the FTP data connection - -
>
<rule action='accept' direction='in'>
<tcp dstportstart='20' state='ESTABLISHED'/>
</rule>
<!- - This rule enables general ICMP traffic to be initiated by the guest
virtual machine, including ping traffic - ->
<rule action='accept' direction='out'>
<icmp/>
</rule>
<!- - This rule enables outgoing DNS lookups using UDP - ->
<rule action='accept' direction='out'>
<udp dstportstart='53'/>
</rule>
</filter>
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Before trying out a filter using the RELAT ED state, you have to make sure that the appropriate
connection tracking module has been loaded into the host physical machine's kernel. Depending on the
version of the kernel, you must run either one of the following two commands before the FT P connection
with the guest virtual machine is established:
If protocols other than FT P are used in conjunction with the RELAT ED state, their corresponding module
must be loaded. Modules are available for the protocols: ftp, tftp, irc, sip, sctp, and amanda.
T he second solution makes use of the state flags of connections more than the previous solution did.
T his solution takes advantage of the fact that the NEW state of a connection is valid when the very first
packet of a traffic flow is detected. Subsequently, if the very first packet of a flow is accepted, the flow
becomes a connection and thus enters into the EST ABLISHED state. T herefore a general rule can be
written for allowing packets of EST ABLISHED connections to reach the guest virtual machine or be sent
by the guest virtual machine. T his is done writing specific rules for the very first packets identified by the
NEW state and dictates the ports that the data is acceptable. All packets meant for ports that are not
explicitly accepted are dropped, thus not reaching an EST ABLISHED state. Any subsequent packets
sent from that port are dropped as well.
<filter name='test-eth0'>
<!- - This filter references the clean traffic filter to prevent MAC, IP and
ARP spoofing. By not providing and IP address parameter, libvirt will detect the
IP address the VM is using. - ->
<filterref filter='clean-traffic'/>
<!- - This rule allows the packets of all previously accepted connections to
reach the guest virtual machine - ->
<rule action='accept' direction='in'>
<all state='ESTABLISHED'/>
</rule>
<!- - This rule allows the packets of all previously accepted and related
connections be sent from the guest virtual machine - ->
<rule action='accept' direction='out'>
<all state='ESTABLISHED,RELATED'/>
</rule>
<!- - This rule enables traffic towards port 21 (FTP) and port 22 (SSH)- ->
<rule action='accept' direction='in'>
<tcp dstportstart='21' dstportend='22' state='NEW'/>
</rule>
<!- - This rule enables general ICMP traffic to be initiated by the guest
virtual machine, including ping traffic - ->
<rule action='accept' direction='out'>
<icmp state='NEW'/>
</rule>
<!- - This rule enables outgoing DNS lookups using UDP - ->
<rule action='accept' direction='out'>
<udp dstportstart='53' state='NEW'/>
</rule>
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</filter>
22.11.12. Limitations
T he following is a list of the currently known limitations of the network filtering subsystem.
VM migration is only supported if the whole filter tree that is referenced by a guest virtual machine's top
level filter is also available on the target host physical machine. T he network filter clean-traffic for
example should be available on all libvirt installations and thus enable migration of guest virtual
machines that reference this filter. T o assure version compatibility is not a problem make sure you are
using the most current version of libvirt by updating the package regularly.
Migration must occur between libvirt insallations of version 0.8.1 or later in order not to lose the
network traffic filters associated with an interface.
VLAN (802.1Q) packets, if sent by a guest virtual machine, cannot be filtered with rules for protocol IDs
arp, rarp, ipv4 and ipv6. T hey can only be filtered with protocol IDs, MAC and VLAN. T herefore, the
example filter clean-traffic Example 22.1, “An example of network filtering” will not work as expected.
T o create a multicast tunnel place the following XML details into the <devices> element:
...
<devices>
<interface type='mcast'>
<mac address='52:54:00:6d:90:01'>
<source address='230.0.0.1' port='5558'/>
</interface>
</devices>
...
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T o create a T CP tunnel place the following XML details into the <devices> element:
...
<devices>
<interface type='server'>
<mac address='52:54:00:22:c9:42'>
<source address='192.168.0.1' port='5558'/>
</interface>
...
<interface type='client'>
<mac address='52:54:00:8b:c9:51'>
<source address='192.168.0.1' port='5558'/>
</interface>
</devices>
...
<network>
<name>ovs-net</name>
<forward mode='bridge'/>
<bridge name='ovsbr0'/>
<virtualport type='openvswitch'>
<parameters interfaceid='09b11c53-8b5c-4eeb-8f00-d84eaa0aaa4f'/>
</virtualport>
<vlan trunk='yes'>
<tag id='42' nativeMode='untagged'/>
<tag id='47'/>
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</vlan>
<portgroup name='dontpanic'>
<vlan>
<tag id='42'/>
</vlan>
</portgroup>
</network>
Figure 22.27. vSetting VLAN tag (on supported network types only)
If (and only if) the network type supports vlan tagging transparent to the guest, an optional <vlan>
element can specify one or more vlan tags to apply to the traffic of all guests using this network.
(openvswitch and type='hostdev' SR-IOV networks do support transparent vlan tagging of guest traffic;
everything else, including standard linux bridges and libvirt's own virtual networks, do not support it.
802.1Qbh (vn-link) and 802.1Qbg (VEPA) switches provide their own way (outside of libvirt) to tag guest
traffic onto specific vlans.) As expected, the tag attribute specifies which vlan tag to use. If a network has
more than one <vlan> element defined, it is assumed that the user wants to do VLAN trunking using all
the specified tags. In the case that vlan trunking with a single tag is desired, the optional attribute
trunk='yes' can be added to the vlan element.
For network connections using openvswitch it is possible to configure the 'native-tagged' and 'native-
untagged' vlan modes. T his uses the optional nativeMode attribute on the <tag> element: nativeMode
may be set to 'tagged' or 'untagged'. T he id attribute of the element sets the native vlan.
<vlan> elements can also be specified in a <portgroup> element, as well as directly in a domain's
<interface> element. In the case that a vlan tag is specified in multiple locations, the setting in
<interface> takes precedence, followed by the setting in the <portgroup> selected by the interface
config. T he <vlan> in <network> will be selected only if none is given in <portgroup> or
<interface>.
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Chapter 23. Remote management of guests
Be aware of the issues with using SSH for remotely managing your virtual machines, including:
you require root log in access to the remote machine for managing virtual machines,
there is no standard or trivial way to revoke a user's key on all hosts or guests, and
ssh does not scale well with larger numbers of remote machines.
Note
Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization enables remote management of large numbers of virtual
machines. Refer to the Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization documentation for further details.
openssh
openssh-askpass
openssh-clients
openssh-server
Configuring password less or password managed SSH access for virt-m anager
T he following instructions assume you are starting from scratch and do not already have SSH keys set
up. If you have SSH keys set up and copied to the other systems you can skip this procedure.
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Important
SSH keys are user dependent and may only be used by their owners. A key's owner is the one who
generated it. Keys may not be shared.
virt-m anager must be run by the user who owns the keys to connect to the remote host. T hat
means, if the remote systems are managed by a non-root user virt-m anager must be run in
unprivileged mode. If the remote systems are managed by the local root user then the SSH keys
must be owned and created by root.
You cannot manage the local host as an unprivileged user with virt-m anager.
Change user, if required. T his example uses the local root user for remotely managing the other
hosts and the local host.
$ su -
Generate a public key pair on the machine virt-m anager is used. T his example uses the default
key location, in the ~/.ssh/ directory.
# ssh-keygen -t rsa
Remote login without a password, or with a pass-phrase, requires an SSH key to be distributed to
the systems being managed. Use the ssh-copy-id command to copy the key to root user at the
system address provided (in the example, [email protected]).
Now try logging into the machine, with the ssh root@ host2.exam ple.com command and check
in the .ssh/authorized_keys file to make sure unexpected keys have not been added.
T he instructions below describe how to add a passphrase to an existing ssh-agent. It will fail to run
if the ssh-agent is not running. T o avoid errors or conflicts make sure that your SSH parameters are
set correctly. Refer to the Red Hat Enterprise Linux Deployment Guide for more information.
Add the pass-phrase for the SSH key to the ssh-agent, if required. On the local host, use the
following command to add the pass-phrase (if there was one) to enable password-less login.
# ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub
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T he libvirt daemon provides an interface for managing virtual machines. You must have the
libvirtd daemon installed and running on every remote host that needs managing.
$ ssh root@somehost
# systemctl enable libvirtd.service
# systemctl start libvirtd
After libvirtd and SSH are configured you should be able to remotely access and manage your virtual
machines. You should also be able to access your guests with VNC at this point.
Remote hosts can be managed with the virt-manager GUI tool. SSH keys must belong to the user
executing virt-manager for password-less login to work.
1. Start virt-manager.
3. Use the drop down menu to select hypervisor type, and click the Connect to remote host check
box to open the Connection Method (in this case Remote tunnel over SSH), and enter the desired
User name and Hostname, then click Connect.
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3. Once the key generates, the next step is to create a signature file so the key can be self-signed. T o
do this, create a file with signature details and name it ca.info. T his file should contain the
following:
# vim ca.info
Once the file generates, the ca.info file may be deleted using the rm command. T he file that results
from the generation process is named cacert.pem . T his file is the public key (certificate). T he
loaded file cakey.pem is the private key. T his file should not be kept in a shared space. Keep this
key private.
5. Install the cacert.pem Certificate Authority Certificate file on all clients and servers in the
/etc/pki/CA/cacert.pem directory to let them know that the certificate issued by your CA can
be trusted. T o view the contents of this file, run:
T his is all that is required to set up your CA. Keep the CA's private key safe as you will need it in
order to issue certificates for your clients and servers.
T his procedure demonstrates how to issue a certificate with the X.509 CommonName (CN)field set to the
hostname of the server. T he CN must match the hostname which clients will be using to connect to the
server. In this example, clients will be connecting to the server using the URI:
qem u://m ycom m onnam e/system , so the CN field should be identical, ie mycommoname.
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2. Generate a signature for the CA's private key by first creating a template file called server.info .
Make sure that the CN is set to be the same as the server's hostname:
Make sure to keep the location of the private key secret. T o view the contents of the file, perform the
following command:
When opening this file the CN= parameter should be the same as the CN that you set earlier. For
example, m ycom m onnam e.
serverkey.pem - the server's private key. Place this file in the following location:
/etc/pki/libvirt/private/serverkey.pem
servercert.pem - the server's certificate. Install it in the following location on the server:
/etc/pki/libvirt/servercert.pem
1. For every client (ie. any program linked with libvirt, such as virt-manager), you need to issue a
certificate with the X.509 Distinguished Name (DN) set to a suitable name. T his needs to be decided
on a corporate level.
T his process is quite similar to Procedure 23.2, “Issuing a server certificate”, with the following
exceptions noted.
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3. Generate a signature for the CA's private key by first creating a template file called client.info .
T he file should contain the following (fields should be customized to reflect your region/location):
country = USA
state = North Carolina
locality = Raleigh
organization = Red Hat
cn = client1
tls_www_client
encryption_key
signing_key
# cp clientkey.pem /etc/pki/libvirt/private/clientkey.pem
# cp clientcert.pem /etc/pki/libvirt/clientcert.pem
T ransport Layer Security T LS 1.0 (SSL 3.1) authenticated and encrypted T CP/IP socket, usually listening
on a public port number. T o use this you will need to generate client and server certificates. T he standard
port is 16514.
UNIX sockets
UNIX domain sockets are only accessible on the local machine. Sockets are not encrypted, and use UNIX
permissions or SELinux for authentication. T he standard socket names are
/var/run/libvirt/libvirt-sock and /var/run/libvirt/libvirt-sock-ro (for read-only
connections).
SSH
T ransported over a Secure Shell protocol (SSH) connection. Requires Netcat (the nc package) installed.
T he libvirt daemon (libvirtd) must be running on the remote machine. Port 22 must be open for SSH
access. You should use some sort of SSH key management (for example, the ssh-agent utility) or you
will be prompted for a password.
ext
T he ext parameter is used for any external program which can make a connection to the remote machine
by means outside the scope of libvirt. T his parameter is unsupported.
T CP
Unencrypted T CP/IP socket. Not recommended for production use, this is normally disabled, but an
administrator can enable it for testing or use over a trusted network. T he default port is 16509.
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Remote URIs
A Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) is used by virsh and libvirt to connect to a remote host. URIs can
also be used with the --connect parameter for the virsh command to execute single commands or
migrations on remote hosts. Remote URIs are formed by taking ordinary local URIs and adding a hostname
and/or transport name. As a special case, using a URI scheme of 'remote', will tell the remote libvirtd server
to probe for the optimal hypervisor driver. T his is equivalent to passing a NULL URI for a local connection
libvirt URIs take the general form (content in square brackets, "[]", represents optional functions):
driver[+transport]://[username@][hostname][:port]/path[?extraparameters]
Note that if the hypervisor(driver) is QEMU, the path is mandatory. If it is XEN, it is optional.
qemu://hostname/
xen://hostname/
xen+ssh://hostname/
T he transport method or the hostname must be provided to target an external location. For more
information refer to http://libvirt.org/guide/html/Application_Development_Guide-Architecture-
Remote_URIs.html.
Connect to a remote KVM host named host2, using SSH transport and the SSH username
virtuser.T he connect command for each is connect [<nam e>] [--readonly], where <nam e>
is a valid URI as explained here. For more information about the virsh connect command refer to
Section 26.1.5, “connect”
qemu+ssh://virtuser@host2/
Connect to a remote KVM hypervisor on the host named host2 using T LS.
qemu://host2/
T esting examples
Connect to the local KVM hypervisor with a non-standard UNIX socket. T he full path to the UNIX socket
is supplied explicitly in this case.
qemu+unix:///system?socket=/opt/libvirt/run/libvirt/libvirt-sock
Connect to the libvirt daemon with an non-encrypted T CP/IP connection to the server with the IP
address 10.1.1.10 on port 5000. T his uses the test driver with default settings.
test+tcp://10.1.1.10:5000/default
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Extra parameters can be appended to remote URIs. T he table below T able 23.1, “Extra URI parameters”
covers the recognized parameters. All other parameters are ignored. Note that parameter values must be
URI-escaped (that is, a question mark (?) is appended before the parameter and special characters are
converted into the URI format).
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netcat -U socket
T he port, username
and hostname
parameters can be
specified as part of the
remote URI. T he
command, netcat and
socket come from other
extra parameters.
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If needed, Create and then Edit the ~/.vnc/xstartup file to start a GNOME session whenever
vncserver is started. T he first time you run the vncserver script it will ask you for a password you want
to use for your VNC session. For more information on vnc server files refer to the Red Hat Enterprise Linux
Installation Guide.
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KSM is a new Linux feature which uses this concept in reverse. KSM enables the kernel to examine two or
more already running programs and compare their memory. If any memory regions or pages are identical,
KSM reduces multiple identical memory pages to a single page. T his page is then marked copy on write. If
the contents of the page is modified by a guest virtual machine, a new page is created for that guest virtual
machine.
T his is useful for virtualization with KVM. When a guest virtual machine is started, it only inherits the
memory from the parent qem u-kvm process. Once the guest virtual machine is running the contents of the
guest virtual machine operating system image can be shared when guests are running the same operating
system or applications. KSM only identifies and merges identical pages which does not interfere with the
guest virtual machine or impact the security of the host physical machine or the guests. KSM allows KVM
to request that these identical guest virtual machine memory regions be shared.
KSM provides enhanced memory speed and utilization. With KSM, common process data is stored in
cache or in main memory. T his reduces cache misses for the KVM guests which can improve performance
for some applications and operating systems. Secondly, sharing memory reduces the overall memory
usage of guests which allows for higher densities and greater utilization of resources.
Note
In Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7, KSM is NUMA aware. T his allows it to take NUMA locality into
account while coalescing pages, thus preventing performance drops related to pages being moved
to a remote node. Red Hat recommends avoiding cross-node memory merging when KSM is in use.
If KSM is in use, change the /sys/kernel/m m /ksm /m erge_across_nodes tunable to 0 to
avoid merging pages across NUMA nodes. T his can be done with the command virsh node-
m em ory-tune --shm -m erge-across-nodes 0. Kernel memory accounting statistics can
eventually contradict each other after large amounts of cross-node merging. As such, numad can
become confused after the KSM daemon merges large amounts of memory. If your system has a
large amount of free memory, you may achieve higher performance by turning off and disabling the
KSM daemon. Refer to the Red Hat Enterprise Linux Performance Tuning Guide for more
information on NUMA.
Red Hat Enterprise Linux uses two separate methods for controlling KSM:
T he ksm tuned service controls and tunes the ksm , dynamically managing same-page merging. T he
ksm tuned service starts ksm and stops the ksm service if memory sharing is not necessary. T he
ksm tuned service must be told with the retune parameter to run when new guests are created or
destroyed.
Both of these services are controlled with the standard service management tools.
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7. When using Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 as a KVM host physical machine, however, it is likely turned on
by the ksm /ksm tuned services.
When the ksm service is not started, KSM shares only 2000 pages. T his default is low and provides
limited memory saving benefits.
When the ksm service is started, KSM will share up to half of the host physical machine system's main
memory. Start the ksm service to enable KSM to share more memory.
T he ksm service can be added to the default startup sequence. Make the ksm service persistent with the
systemctl command.
T he ksm tuned service can be tuned with the retune parameter. T he retune parameter instructs
ksm tuned to run tuning functions manually.
Before changing the parameters in the file, there are a few terms that need to be clarified:
npages - How many pages ksm will scan before ksm d goes to sleep. It will be set at
/sys/kernel/m m /ksm /pages_to_scan.
thres` - Activation threshold, in kbytes. A KSM cycle is triggered when the `thres` value added to the
sum of all `qemu-kvm` processes RSZ exceeds total system memory. T his parameter is the equivalent
in kbytes of the percentage defined in parameter `KSM_T HRES_COEF`.
T he /etc/ksm tuned.conf file is the configuration file for the ksm tuned service. T he file output below is
the default ksm tuned.conf file.
# KSM_NPAGES_BOOST is added to the `npages` value, when `free memory` is less than
`thres`.
# KSM_NPAGES_BOOST=300
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# KSM_NPAGES_DECAY=-50
# KSM_THRES_CONST - If this is a low memory system, and the `thres` value is less
than `KSM_THRES_CONST`, then reset `thres` value to `KSM_THRES_CONST` value.
# KSM_THRES_CONST=2048
T he variables in the list below are also configurable variables in the /etc/ksm tuned.conf file as noted
below.
full_scans
merge_across_nodes
p ages_shared
p ages_sharing
p ages_to_scan
p ages_unshared
p ages_volatile
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r un
sleep_millisecs
Sleep milliseconds.
T hese variables can be manually tuned using the virsh node-m em ory-tune command. For example,
specifies the number of pages to scan before the shared memory service goes to sleep.
KSM tuning activity is stored in the /var/log/ksm tuned log file if the DEBUG=1 line is added to the
/etc/ksm tuned.conf file. T he log file location can be changed with the LOGFILE parameter. Changing
the log file location is not advised and may require special configuration of SELinux settings.
KSM can be deactivated by stopping the ksm tuned and the ksm service. Stopping the services
deactivates KSM but does not persist after restarting.
Persistently deactivate KSM with the system ctl command. T o turn off the services, run the following
commands:
Important
Ensure the swap size is sufficient for the committed RAM even with KSM. KSM reduces the RAM
usage of identical or similar guests. Overcommitting guests with KSM without sufficient swap space
may be possible but is not recommended because guest virtual machine memory use can result in
pages becoming unshared.
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virt-m anager provides a graphical view of hypervisors and guests on your host system and on remote
host systems. virt-m anager can perform virtualization management tasks, including:
assigning memory,
saving and restoring, pausing and resuming, and shutting down and starting guests,
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Alternatively, virt-m anager can be started remotely using ssh as demonstrated in the following
command:
Using ssh to manage virtual machines and hosts is discussed further in Section 23.1, “Remote
management with SSH”.
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1. Make sure the guest virtual machine is powered off before implementing these changes.
a. T o indicate that this guest virtual machine should start each time the host physical machine
boots, select the Autostart check box.
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b. T o indicate the order in which guest virtual machine should boot, click the Enable boot
menu check box. After this is checked, you can then check the devices you want to boot from
and using the arrow keys change the order that the guest virtual machine will use when
booting.
c. If you want to boot directly from the kernel, expand the Direct kernel boot menu. Fill in the
Kernel path, Intrid path, and the Kernel arguments that you want to use.
5. T o set these changes, click Apply and then start the guest virtual machine.
In order to attach the USB device to the guest virtual machine, you first must attach it to the host
physical machine and confirm that the device is working. If the guest is running, you need to shut it
down before proceeding.
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3. In the Add New Virtual Hardware popup, select USB Host Device, select the device you want to
attach from the list and Click Finish.
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4. T o use the USB device in the guest virtual machine, start the guest virtual machine.
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3. In the Add New Virtual Hardware popup, select USB Redirection. Make sure to select Spice
channel the T ype drop-down menu and click Finish.
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4. A pop-up menu opens with a list of devices to choose from. Select a device by clicking the check box
and click OK.
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T his window displays a guest's graphical console. Guests can use several different protocols to export
their graphical frame buffers: virt-m anager supports VNC and SPICE. If your virtual machine is set to
require authentication, the Virtual Machine graphical console prompts you for a password before the
display appears.
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Note
VNC is considered insecure by many security experts, however, several changes have been made
to enable the secure usage of VNC for virtualization on Red Hat enterprise Linux. T he guest
machines only listen to the local host's loopback address (127.0.0.1). T his ensures only those
with shell privileges on the host can access virt-manager and the virtual machine through VNC.
Although virt-manager is configured to listen to other public network interfaces and alternative
methods can be configured, it is not recommended.
Remote administration can be performed by tunneling over SSH which encrypts the traffic. Although
VNC can be configured to access remotely without tunneling over SSH, for security reasons, it is
not recommended. T o remotely administer the guest follow the instructions in: Chapter 23, Remote
management of guests. T LS can provide enterprise level security for managing guest and host
systems.
Your local desktop can intercept key combinations (for example, Ctrl+Alt+F1) to prevent them from being
sent to the guest machine. You can use the Send key menu option to send these sequences. From the
guest machine window, click the Send key menu and select the key sequence to send. In addition, from
this menu you can also capture the screen output.
1. T o create a new connection open the File menu and select the Add Connection... menu item.
2. T he Add Connection wizard appears. Select the hypervisor. For Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7
systems select QEMU/KVM. Select Local for the local system or one of the remote connection options
and click Connect. T his example uses Remote tunnel over SSH which works on default
installations. For more information on configuring remote connections refer to Chapter 23, Remote
management of guests
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3. Enter the root password for the selected host when prompted.
A remote host is now connected and appears in the main virt-m anager window.
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1. In the Virtual Machine Manager main window, highlight the virtual machine that you want to view.
2. From the Virtual Machine Manager Edit menu, select Virtual Machine Details.
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When the Virtual Machine details window opens, there may be a console displayed. Should this
happen, click View and then select Details. T he Overview window opens first by default. T o go
back to this window, select Overview from the navigation pane on the left hand side.
3. Select Perform ance from the navigation pane on the left hand side.
T he Perform ance view shows a summary of guest performance, including CPU and Memory
usage.
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4. Select Processor from the navigation pane on the left hand side. T he Processor view allows you
to view or change the current processor allocation.
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5. Select Mem ory from the navigation pane on the left hand side. T he Mem ory view allows you to view
or change the current memory allocation.
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6. Each virtual disk attached to the virtual machine is displayed in the navigation pane. Click on a virtual
disk to modify or remove it.
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7. Each virtual network interface attached to the virtual machine is displayed in the navigation pane.
Click on a virtual network interface to modify or remove it.
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2. From the Stats tab specify the time in seconds or stats polling options.
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1. From the View menu, select Graph, then the Guest CPU Usage check box.
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2. T he Virtual Machine Manager shows a graph of CPU usage for all virtual machines on your system.
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1. From the View menu, select Graph, then the Host CPU Usage check box.
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2. T he Virtual Machine Manager shows a graph of host CPU usage on your system.
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1. Make sure that the Disk I/O statistics collection is enabled. T o do this, from the Edit menu, select
Preferences and click the Stats tab.
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3. T o enable the Disk I/O display, from the View menu, select Graph, then the Disk I/O check box.
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4. T he Virtual Machine Manager shows a graph of Disk I/O for all virtual machines on your system.
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1. Make sure that the Network I/O statistics collection is enabled. T o do this, from the Edit menu,
select Preferences and click the Statstab.
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3. T o display the Network I/O statistics, from the View menu, select Graph, then the Network I/O
check box.
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4. T he Virtual Machine Manager shows a graph of Network I/O for all virtual machines on your system.
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26.1.1. help
$ virsh help [com m and|group] T he help command can be used with or without options. When
used without options, all commands are listed, one perline. When used with an option, it is grouped into
categories, displaying the keyword for each group.
T o display the commands that are only for a specific option, you need to give the keyword for that group
as an option. For example:
Using the same command with a command option, gives the help information on that one specific
command. For example:
SYNOPSIS
vol-path <vol> [--pool <string>]
OPTIONS
[--vol] <string> volume name or key
--pool <string> pool name or uuid
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$virsh exit
$virsh quit
26.1.3. version
T he version command displays the current libvirt version and displays information about where the build is
from. For example:
$ virsh version
Compiled against library: libvirt 1.1.1
Using library: libvirt 1.1.1
Using API: QEMU 1.1.1
Running hypervisor: QEMU 1.5.3
26.1.5. connect
Connects to a hypervisor session. When the shell is first started this command runs automatically when
the URI parameter is requested by the -c command. T he URI specifies how to connect to the hypervisor.
T he most commonly used URIs are:
qem u:///system - connects locally as root to the daemon supervising QEMU and KVM domains.
xen:///session - connects locally as a user to the user's set of QEMU and KVM domains
Where {name} is the machine name (hostname) or URL (the output of the virsh uri command) of the
hypervisor. T o initiate a read-only connection, append the above command with --readonly. For more
information on URIs refer to Remote URIs If you are unsure of the URI, the uri command will display it:
$ virsh uri
qemu:///session
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$ sysinfo - displays the XML representation of the hypervisor's system information, if available
Procedure 26.1. Hotplugging USB devices for use by the guest virtual machine
T he following procedure demonstrates how to attach USB devices to the guest virtual machine. T his can
be done while the guest virtual machine is running as a hotplug procedure or it can be done while the
guest is shutoff. T he device you want to emulate needs to be attached to the host physical machine.
1. Locate the USB device you want to attach with the following command:
# lsusb -v
2. Create an XML file and give it a logical name (usb_device.xm l, for example). Make sure you copy
the vendor and procuct IDs exactly as was displayed in your search.
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In this example [rhel7] is the name of your guest virtual machine and [usb_device.xml] is the file you
created in the previous step. If you want to have the change take effect in the next reboot, use the -
-config If you want this change to be persistent, use the --persistent argument. If you want
the change to take effect on the current domain, use the --current argument. See the Virsh MAN
page for additional arguments.
4. If you want to detach the device (hot unplug), perform the following command:
In this example [rhel7] is the name of your guest virtual machine and [usb_device.xml] is the file you
attached in the previous step
--persistent - behaves like --config for an offline domain, and like --live for a running domain.
--m ac - use this to specify the MAC address of the network interface
--script - use this to specify a path to a script file handling a bridge instead of the default one.
--inbound - controls the inbound bandwidth of the interface. Acceptable values are average, peak,
and burst.
--outbound - controls the outbound bandwidth of the interface. Acceptable values are average,
peak, and burst.
T he type can be either network to indicate a physical network device, or bridge to indicate a bridge to a
device. source is the source of the device. T o remove the attached device, use the virsh detach-
device.
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In the example above, the rhel7 guest virtual machine will automatically start when the host physical
machine boots
In the example above, the autostart function is disabled and the guest virtual machine will no longer start
automatically when the host physical machine boots.
26.5.2. Connecting the serial console for the guest virtual machine
T he $ virsh console <dom ain> [--devnam e <string>] [--force] [--safe] command
connects the virtual serial console for the guest virtual machine. T he optional --devname <string>
parameter refers to the device alias of an alternate console, serial, or parallel device configured for the
guest virtual machine. If this parameter is omitted, the primary console will be opened. T he --force
argument will force the console connection or when used with disconnect, will disconnect connections.
Using the --safe argument will only allow the guest to connect if safe console handling is supported.
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T he define <FILE> command defines a domain from an XML file. T he domain definition in this case is
registered but not started. If the domain is already running, the changes will take effect on the next boot.
T he arguments --live or --config select whether this command works on live or persistent definitions
of the domain. If both --live and --config are specified, the --config option takes precedence on
getting the current description and both live configuration and persistent configuration are updated while
setting the description. --current argument will modify or get the current state configuration. It is
exclusive and implied if none of these were specified. T he --edit argument specifies that an editor with
the contents of current description or title should be opened and the contents saved back afterwards. --
title selects operation on the title field instead of a description. In addition, if neither --edit nor --new-
desc are specified, then the description is displayed and cannot be modified.
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T his command can either configure a specified interface as up or down. T he dom if-setlink
[dom ain][interface-device][state]{--config} modifies the status of the specified interface
for the specified domain. Note that if you only want the persistent configuration of the domain to be
modified, you need to use the --configargument. It should also be noted that for compatibility reasons, -
-persistent is an alias of --config. T he "interface device" can be the interface's target name or the
MAC address.
T he only required parameter is the domain name and interface device of the guest virtual machine, the --
config, --live, and --current functions the same as in Section 26.21, “Setting schedule parameters”.
If no limit is specified, it will query current network interface setting. Otherwise, alter the limits with the
following flags:
<interface-device> T his is mandatory and it will set or query the domain’s network interface’s
bandwidth parameters. interface-device can be the interface’s target name (<target
dev=’name’/>), or the MAC address.
If no --inbound or --outbound is specified, this command will query and show the bandwidth
settings. Otherwise, it will set the inbound or outbound bandwidth. average,peak,burst is the same as in
attach-interface command. Refer to Section 26.3, “Attaching interface devices”
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Both the --live and --config arguments may be used but --current is exclusive. If no flag is
specified, the behavior will be different depending on the guest's state.
If --inactive is specified, the result will show the devices that are to be used at the next boot and will
not show those that are currently running in use by the running domain. If --details is specified, the
disk type and device value will be included in the table. T he information displayed in this table can be used
with the dom blkinfo and snapshot-create.
If --inactive is specified, the result will show the devices that are to be used at the next boot and will
not show those that are currently running in use by the running domain.
Commands that require a MAC address of a virtual interface (such as detach-interface or dom if-
setlink) will accept the output displayed by this command.
blockcom m it copies data from one part of the chain down into a backing file, allowing you to pivot the
rest of the chain in order to bypass the committed portions. For example, suppose this is the current state:
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Using blockcom m it moves the contents of snap2 into snap1, allowing you to delete snap2 from the
chain, making backups much quicker.
# virsh blockcommit $dom $disk -base snap1 -top snap2 -wait -verbose
Warning
blockcom m it will corrupt any file that depends on the -base argument (other than files that
depended on the -top argument, as those files now point to the base). T o prevent this, do not
commit changes into files shared by more than one guest. T he -verbose option will allow the
progress to be printed on the screen.
Flattens an image by populating it with data from its backing image chain. T his makes the image file
self-contained so that it no longer depends on backing images and looks like this:
After: base.img is no longer used by the guest and Active contains all of the data.
Flattens part of the backing image chain. T his can be used to flatten snapshots into the top-level image
and looks like this:
After: base.img ← active. Note that active now contains all data from sn1 and sn2 and neither sn1
nor sn2 are used by the guest.
Moves the disk image to a new file system on the host. T his is allows image files to be moved while the
guest is running and looks like this:
After: /fs2/active.vm .qcow2 is now the new file system and /fs1/base.vm .im g is no longer
used.
Useful in live migration with post-copy storage migration. T he disk image is copied from the source
host to the destination host after live migration completes.
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2. If the chain looks like this: base ← snap1 ← snap2 ← active run the following:
T his command makes 'snap1' the backing file of active, by pulling data from snap2 into active
resulting in: base ← snap1 ← active.
3. Once the blockpull is complete, the libvirt tracking of the snapshot that created the extra image
in the chain is no longer useful. Delete the tracking on the outdated snapshot with this command:
T o flatten a single image and populate it with data from its backing image chain:# virsh blockpull
exam ple-dom ain vda - wait
T o flatten part of the backing image chain:# virsh blockpull exam ple-dom ain vda - base
/path/to/base.im g - wait
T o move the disk image to a new file system on the host:# virsh snapshot-create exam ple-
dom ain - xm lfile /path/to/new.xm l - disk-only followed by # virsh blockpull
exam ple-dom ain vda - wait
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blockresize can be used to re-size a block device of a domain while the domain is running, using the
absolute path of the block device which also corresponds to a unique target name (<target
dev="nam e"/>) or source file (<source file="nam e"/>). T his can be applied to one of the disk
devices attached to domain (you can use the command dom blklist to print a table showing the brief
information of all block devices associated with a given domain).
Note
Live image re-sizing will always re-size the image, but may not immediately be picked up by guests.
With recent guest kernels, the size of virtio-blk devices is automatically updated (older kernels
require a guest reboot). With SCSI devices, it is required to manually trigger a re-scan in the guest
with the command, echo > /sys/class/scsi_device/0:0:0:0/device/rescan. In addition,
with IDE it is required to reboot the guest before it picks up the new size.
Run the following command: blockresize [dom ain] [path size] where:
Domain is the unique target name or source file of the domain whose size you want to change
Path size is a scaled integer which defaults to KiB (blocks of 1024 bytes) if there is no suffix. You
must use a suffix of "B" to for bytes.
Note
Live block copy is a feature that is not supported with the version of KVM that is supplied with
Red Hat Enterprise Linux. Live block copy is available with the version of KVM that is supplied with
Red Hat Virtualization. T his version of KVM must be running on your physical host machine in order
for the feature to be supported. Contact your representative at Red Hat for more details.
Live block copy allows you to copy an in use guest disk image to a destination image and switches the
guest disk image to the destination guest image while the guest is running. Whilst live migration moves the
memory and registry state of the host, the guest is kept in shared storage. Live block copy allows you to
move the entire guest contents to another host on the fly while the guest is running. Live block copy may
also be used for live migration without requiring permanent share storage. In this method the disk image is
copied to the destination host after migration, but while the guest is running.
when maintenance is required, guests can be transferred to another location, with no loss of
performance
image format conversions can be done without having to shut down the guest
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T his example shows what happens when live block copy is performed. T he example has a backing file
(base) that is shared between a source and destination. It also has two overlays (sn1 and sn2) that are
only present on the source and must be copied.
sn1 - the first snapshot that was taken of the base disk image
2. When a copy of the image is created as a new image on top of sn2 the result is this:
3. At this point the read permissions are all in the correct order and are set automatically. T o make
sure write permissions are set properly, a mirror mechanism redirects all writes to both sn2 and
active, so that sn2 and active read the same at any time (and this mirror mechanism is the
essential difference between live block copy and image streaming).
4. A background task that loops over all disk clusters is executed. For each cluster, there are the
following possible cases and actions:
Use bdrv_is_allocated() to follow the backing file chain. If the cluster is read from base
(which is shared) there is nothing to do.
If bdrv_is_allocated() variant is not feasible, rebase the image and compare the read
data with write data in base in order to decide if a copy is needed.
5. When the copy has completed, the backing file of active is switched to base (similar to rebase)
T o reduce the length of a backing chain after a series of snapshots, the following commands are helpful:
blockcom m it and blockpull. See Section 26.5.15, “Using blockcommit to shorten a backing chain” for
more information.
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T he virsh dom fstrim doman --m inium --m ountpoint command will issue a fstrim on all
mounted files ystems within a running specified domain. It will discard the blocks not in use by the file
system. if the argument --m inim um is used, an amount in bytes must be specified. T his amount will be
sent to the guest kernel as its length of contiguous free range. Values smaller than this amount may be
ignored. Increasing this value will create competition with file systems with badly fragmented free space.
Note that not all blocks in this case are discarded. T he default minimum is zero which means that every
free block is discarded. If a user only wants to trim one mount point, the --m ountpoint argument should
be used and a mount point should be specified.
virsh dom hostnam e domain displays the hostname of the specified domain provided the
hypervisor can publish it.
virsh dom info domain displays basic information about a specified domain.
virsh dom uid domain|ID converts a given domain name or ID into a UUID.
virsh dom id domain|ID converts a given domain name or UUID into an ID.
virsh dom jobabort domain aborts the currently running job on the specified domain.
virsh dom jobinfo domain displays information about jobs running on the specified domain,
including migration statistics
virsh dom nam e domain ID|UUID converts a given domain ID or UUID into a domain name.
virsh dom state domain displays the state of the given domain. Using the --reason argument will
also display the reason for the displayed state.
virsh dom control domain displays the state of an interface to VMM that were used to control a
domain. For states that are not OK or Error, it will also print the number of seconds that have elapsed
since the control interface entered the displayed state.
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In order to get information about the domain, run the following command:
Suppose you have a QEMU guest with the following args file:
$ cat demo.args
LC_ALL=C
PATH=/bin
HOME=/home/test
USER=test
LOGNAME=test /usr/bin/qemu -S -M pc -m 214 -smp 1 -nographic -monitor pty -no-acpi
-boot c -hda /dev/HostVG/QEMUGuest1 -net none -serial none -parallel none -usb
T o convert this to a domain XML file so that the guest can be managed by libvirt, run:
T his command turns the args file above, into this domain XML file:
<domain type='qemu'>
<uuid>00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000</uuid>
<memory>219136</memory>
<currentMemory>219136</currentMemory>
<vcpu>1</vcpu>
<os>
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--bypass-cache the file saved will not contain the file system cache. Note that selecting this option
may slow down dump operation.
--live will save the file as the domain continues to run and will not pause or stop the domain.
--crash puts the domain in a crashed status rather than leaving it in a paused state while the dump
file is saved.
--reset once the dump file is successfully saved, the domain will reset.
--m em ory-only the only information that will be saved in the dump file will be the domain's memory
and CPU common register file.
Note that the entire process can be monitored using the dom jobinfo command and can be canceled
using the dom jobabort command.
T his command outputs the guest virtual machine's XML configuration file to standard out (stdout). You
can save the data by piping the output to a file. An example of piping the output to a file called guest.xml:
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T his file guest.xm l can recreate the guest virtual machine (refer to Section 26.6, “Editing a guest virtual
machine's configuration file”. You can edit this XML configuration file to configure additional devices or to
deploy additional guest virtual machines.
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Note that the <shareable/> flag is set. T his indicates the device is expected to be shared between
domains (assuming the hypervisor and OS support this), which means that caching should be deactivated
for that device.
T his opens a text editor. T he default text editor is the $EDIT OR shell parameter (set to vi by default).
1. Run the virsh edit [guestname] command to edit the XML configuration file for the guest virtual
machine.
T his enables the guest virtual machine to use the multifunction PCI devices.
For a PCI device with two functions, amend the XML configuration file to include a second device with
the same slot number as the first device and a different function number, such as
function='0x1'.
For Example:
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$ lspci
00:05.0 SCSI storage controller: Red Hat, Inc Virtio block device
00:05.1 SCSI storage controller: Red Hat, Inc Virtio block device
Under normal conditions, the managed save will decide between using the running or paused state as
determined by the state the domain is in when the save is done. However, this can be overridden by using
the --running argument to indicate that it must be left in a running state or by using --paused
argument which indicates it is to be left in a paused state.
T o remove the managed save state, use the virsh m anagedsave-rem ove command which will force
the domain to do a full boot the next time it is started.
Note that the entire managed save process can be monitored using the dom jobinfo command and can
also be canceled using the dom jobabort command.
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Each keycode can either be a numeric value or a symbolic name from the corresponding codeset. If
multiple keycodes are specified, thay are all sent simultaneously to the guest virtual machine and as such
may be received in random order. If you need distinct keycodes, you must send the send-key command
multiple times.
If a --holdtim e is given, each keystroke will be held for the specified amount in milliseconds. T he --
codeset allows you to specify a code set, the default being Linux, but the following options are permitted:
linux - choosing this option causes the symbolic names to match the corresponding Linux key
constant macro names and the numeric values are those offered by the Linux generic input event
subsystems.
xt- this will send a value that is defined by the XT keyboard controller. No symbolic names are
provided.
atset1 - the numeric values are those that are defined by the AT keyboard controller, set1 (XT
compatible set). Extended keycodes from the atset1 may differ from extended keycodes in the XT
codeset. No symbolic names are provided.
atset2 - T he numeric values are those defined by the AT keyboard controller, set 2. No symbolic
names are provided.
atset3 - T he numeric values are those defined by the AT keyboard controller, set 3 (PS/2
compatible). No symbolic names are provided.
os_x - T he numeric values are those defined by the OS-X keyboard input subsystem. T he symbolic
names match the corresponding OS-X key constant macro names.
xt_kbd - T he numeric values are those defined by the Linux KBD device. T hese are a variant on the
original XT codeset, but often with different encoding for extended keycodes. No symbolic names are
provided.
win32 - T he numeric values are those defined by the Win32 keyboard input subsystem. T he symbolic
names match the corresponding Win32 key constant macro names.
usb - T he numeric values are those defined by the USB HID specification for keyboard input. No
symbolic names are provided.
rfb - T he numeric values are those defined by the RFB extension for sending raw keycodes. T hese
are a variant on the XT codeset, but extended keycodes have the low bit of the second bite set,
instead of the high bit of the first byte. No symbolic names are provided.
nop , stkflt
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hup, cont
int, chld
quit, stop
ill, tstp
trap, ttin
abrt, ttou
bus, urg
fpe, xcpu
kill, xfsz
usr1, vtalrm
segv, prof
usr2, winch
pipe, poll
alrm , pwr
term , sys
More options are on the Virsh MAN page. Note that these sumbols may also be prefixed with sigor
sig_ and it is not case sensitive.
26.6.7. Displaying the IP address and port number for the VNC display
T he virsh vncdisplay will print the IP address and port number of the VNC display for the specified
domain. If the information is unavailable the exit code 1 will be displayed.
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$ virsh nodeinfo
CPU model: x86_64
CPU(s): 4
CPU frequency: 1199 MHz
CPU socket(s): 1
Core(s) per socket: 2
Thread(s) per core: 2
NUMA cell(s): 1
Memory size: 3715908 KiB
--m ode - T he mode can be set to either strict, interleave, or preferred. Running domains
cannot have their mode changed while live unless the domain was started within strict mode.
--nodeset contains a list of NUMA nodes that are used by the host physical machine for running the
domain. T he list contains nodes, each separated by a comma, with a dash - used for node ranges and
a caret ^ used for excluding a node.
Only one of the three following flags can be used per instance
--config will effect the next boot of a persistent guest virtual machine
--live will set the scheduler information of a running guest virtual machine.
--current will effect the current state of the guest virtual machine.
$ virsh nodecpumap
CPUs present: 4
CPUs online: 1
CPU map: y
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T he nodecpustats command displays statistical information about the specified CPU, if the CPU is
given. If not, it will display the CPU status of the node. If a percent is specified, it will display the percentage
of each type of CPU statistics that were recorded over an one (1) second interval.
$ virsh nodecpustats
user: 1056442260000000
system: 401675280000000
idle: 7549613380000000
iowait: 94593570000000
shm -pages-to-scan - sets the number of pages to scan before the shared memory service goes to
sleep.
shm -sleep-m ilisecs - sets the number of miliseconds that the shared memory service will sleep
before the next scan
shm -m erge-across-nodes - specifies if pages from different NUMA nodes can be merged. Values
allowed are 0 and 1. When set to 0, the only pages that can be merged are those that are physically
residing in the memory area of the same NUMA node. When set to 1, pages from all of the NUMA
nodes can be merged. T he default setting is 1.
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T he virsh nodedev-create file command allows you to create a device on a host node and then
assign it to a guest virtual machine. libvirt normally detects which host nodes are available for use
automatically, but this command allows for the registration of host hardware that libvirt did not detect. T he
file should contain the XML for the top level <device> description of the node device.
Note that different drivers expect the device to be bound to different dummy devices. Using the --driver
argument allows you to specify the desired backend driver.
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--paused - If this is supported by the driver it will boot the domain and then put it into a paused state
--autodestroy - the guest virtual machine is automatically destroyed when the virsh session closes
or the connection to libvirt closes, or it otherwise exits
--bypass-cache - used if the domain is in the managedsave state. If this is used, it will restore the
guest virtual machine, avoiding the system cache. Note this will slow down the restore process.
--force-boot - discards any managedsave options and causes a fresh boot to occur
--pass-fds - is a list of additional arguments separated by commas, which are passed onto the
guest virtual machine.
When a guest virtual machine is in a suspended state, it consumes system RAM but not processor
resources. Disk and network I/O does not occur while the guest virtual machine is suspended. T his
operation is immediate and the guest virtual machine can be restarted with the resum e (Section 26.8.6,
“Resuming a guest virtual machine”) option.
--target - can be either m em (suspend to RAM (S3))disk (suspend to disk (S4 )), or
hybrid (hybrid suspend)
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# dompmwakeup rhel7
T his command requires the name of the domain, rhel7 for example as shown.
--m anaged-save - this argument guarantees that any managed save image is also cleaned up.
Without using this argument, attempts to undefine a domain with a managed save will fail.
--snapshots-m etadata - this argument guarantees that any snapshots (as shown with snaphot-
list) are also cleaned up when undefining an inactive domain. Note that any attempts to undefine an
inactive domain with snapshot metadata will fail. If this argument is used and the domain is active, it is
ignored.
--storage - using this argument requires a comma separated list of volume target names or source
paths of storage volumes to be removed along with the undefined domain. T his action will undefine the
storage volume before it is removed. Note that this can only be done with inactive domains. Note too
that this will only work with storage volumes that are managed by libvirt.
--rem ove-all-storage - in addition to undefining the domain, all associated storage volumes are
deleted.
--wipe-storage - in addition to deleting the storage volume, the contents are wiped.
T his operation is immediate and the guest virtual machine parameters are preserved for suspend and
resum e operations.
T his stops the guest virtual machine you specify and saves the data to a file, which may take some time
given the amount of memory in use by your guest virtual machine. You can restore the state of the guest
virtual machine with the restore (Section 26.8.11, “Restore a guest virtual machine”) option. Save is
similar to pause, instead of just pausing a guest virtual machine the present state of the guest virtual
machine is saved.
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--bypass-cache - causes the restore to avoid the file system cache but note that using this flag may
slow down the restore operation.
--xm l - this argument must be used with an XML file name. Although this argument is usually omitted,
it can be used to supply an alternative XML file for use on a restored guest virtual machine with
changes only in the host-specific portions of the domain XML. For example, it can be used to account
for the file naming differences in underlying storage due to disk snapshots taken after the guest was
saved.
--running - overrides the state recorded in the save image to start the domain as running.
--paused- overrides the state recorded in the save image to start the domain as paused.
If you want to restore the guest virtual machine directly from the XML file, the virsh restore command
will do just that. You can monitor the process with the dom jobinfo and cancel it with the dom jobabort.
26.8.8. Updating the domain XML file that will be used for restoring the guest
T he virsh save-im age-define file xml --running|--paused command will update the domain
XML file that will be used when the specified file is later used during the virsh restore command. T he
xml argument must be an XML file name containing the alternative XML with changes only in the host
physical machine specific portions of the domain XML. For example, it can be used to account for the file
naming differences resulting from creating disk snapshots of underlying storage after the guest was
saved. T he save image records if the domain should be restored to a running or paused state. Using the
arguments --running or --paused dictates the state that is to be used.
Note that the save image records whether the domain should be restored to a --running or --paused
state. Without using these arguments the state is determined by the file itself. By selecting --running or
--paused you can overwrite the state that virsh restore should use.
T his restarts the saved guest virtual machine, which may take some time. T he guest virtual machine's
name and UUID are preserved but are allocated for a new id.
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--bypass-cache - causes the restore to avoid the file system cache but note that using this flag may
slow down the restore operation.
--xm l - this argument must be used with an XML file name. Although this argument is usually omitted,
it can be used to supply an alternative XML file for use on a restored guest virtual machine with
changes only in the host-specific portions of the domain XML. For example, it can be used to account
for the file naming differences in underlying storage due to disk snapshots taken after the guest was
saved.
--running - overrides the state recorded in the save image to start the domain as running.
--paused- overrides the state recorded in the save image to start the domain as paused.
You can control the behavior of the rebooting guest virtual machine by modifying the on_shutdown
parameter in the guest virtual machine's configuration file.
26.9.2. Shutting down Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 guests on a Red Hat
Enterprise Linux 7 host
Installing Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 guest virtual machines with the Minim al installation option
does not install the acpid package. Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 no longer requires this package, as it has
been taken over by system d. However, Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 guest virtual machines running on a
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 host still require it.
Without the acpid package, the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 guest virtual machine does not shut down when
the virsh shutdown command is executed. T he virsh shutdown command is designed to gracefully
shut down guest virtual machines.
Using virsh shutdown is easier and safer for system administration. Without graceful shut down with
the virsh shutdown command a system administrator must log into a guest virtual machine manually or
send the Ctrl-Alt-Del key combination to each guest virtual machine.
Note
Other virtualized operating systems may be affected by this issue. T he virsh shutdown
command requires that the guest virtual machine operating system is configured to handle ACPI
shut down requests. Many operating systems require additional configuration on the guest virtual
machine operating system to accept ACPI shut down requests.
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Log into the guest virtual machine and install the acpid package on the guest virtual machine:
Set the acpid service to start during the guest virtual machine boot sequence and start the service:
Edit the domain XML file to include the following element. Replace the virtio serial port with
org.qem u.guest_agent.0 and use your guest's name instead of $guestname
<channel type='unix'>
<source mode='bind' path='/var/lib/libvirt/qemu/{$guestname}.agent'/>
<target type='virtio' name='org.qemu.guest_agent.0'/>
</channel>
Install the QEMU guest agent (QEMU-GA) and start the service as directed in Chapter 14, QEMU
Guest Agent. If you are running a Windows guest there are instructions in this chapter for that as
well.
# virsh list --all - this command lists all of the known domains
Id Name State
----------------------------------
rhel7 running
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c. Wait a few seconds for the guest virtual machine to shut down.
d. Start the domain named rhel7, with the XML file you edited.
f. List all the domains again, rhel6 should still be on the list, and it should indicate it is shut off.
g. Start the domain named rhel7, with the XML file you edited.
i. List the domains. rhel7 should still be on the list, and it should indicate it is shut off
T he guest virtual machine will shut down using the virsh shutdown command for the consecutive
shutdowns, without using the workaround described above.
In addition to the method described above, a guest can be automatically shutdown, by stopping the libvirt-
guest service. Refer to Section 26.9.3, “Manipulating the libvirt-guests configuration settings” for more
information on this method.
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Procedure 26.5. Changing the libvirt-guests service parameters to allow for the graceful
shutdown of guests
T he procedure described here allows for the graceful shutdown of guest virtual machines when the host
physical machine is stuck, powered off, or needs to be restarted.
$ vi /etc/sysconfig/libvirt-guests
# - ignore libvirt-guests init script won't start any guest on boot, however,
# libvirtd
#ON_BOOT=start
# parallel startup.
#START_DELAY=0
# Number of seconds we're willing to wait for a guest to shut down. If parallel
# shutdown is enabled, this timeout applies as a timeout for shutting down all
# guests on a single URI defined in the variable URIS. If this is 0, then there
# is no time out (use with caution, as guests might not respond to a shutdown
# request). The default value is 300 seconds (5 minutes).
#SHUTDOWN_TIMEOUT=300
# If non-zero, try to bypass the file system cache when saving and
# restoring guests, even though this may give slower operation for
# some file systems.
#BYPASS_CACHE=0
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URIS - checks the specified connections for a running guest. T he Default setting functions
in the same manner as virsh does when no explicit URI is set In addition, one can explicitly
set the URI from /etc/libvirt/libvirt.conf. It should be noted that when using the
libvirt configuration file default setting, no probing will be used.
ON_BOOT - specifies the action to be done to / on the guests when the host boots. T he
start option starts all guests that were running prior to shutdown regardless on their
autostart settings. T he ignore option will not start the formally running guest on boot,
however, any guest marked as autostart will still be automatically started by libvirtd.
T he START_DELAY - sets a delay interval in between starting up the guests. T his time period
is set in seconds. Use the 0 time setting to make sure there is no delay and that all guests
are started simultaneously.
ON_SHUTDOWN - specifies the action taken when a host shuts down. Options that can be set
include: suspend which suspends all running guests using virsh m anagedsave and
shutdown which shuts down all running guests. It is best to be careful with using the
shutdown option as there is no way to distinguish between a guest which is stuck or
ignores shutdown requests and a guest that just needs a longer time to shutdown. When
setting the ON_SHUTDOWN=shutdown, you must also set SHUTDOWN_TIMEOUT to a value
suitable for the guests.
PARALLEL_SHUTDOWN Dictates that the number of guests on shutdown at any time will not
exceed number set in this variable and the guests will be suspended concurrently. If set to 0,
then guests are not shutdown concurrently.
Number of seconds to wait for a guest to shut down. If SHUTDOWN_TIMEOUT is enabled, this
timeout applies as a timeout for shutting down all guests on a single URI defined in the
variable URIS. If SHUTDOWN_TIMEOUT is set to 0, then there is no time out (use with caution,
as guests might not respond to a shutdown request). T he default value is 300 seconds (5
minutes).
BYPASS_CACHE can have 2 values, 0 to disable and 1 to enable. If enabled it will by-pass the
file system cache when guests are restored. Note that setting this may effect performance
and may cause slower operation for some file systems.
If you have not started the service, start the libvirt-guests service. Do not restart the service as this
will cause all running domains to shutdown.
You can control the behavior of the rebooting guest virtual machine by modifying the on_reboot element
in the guest virtual machine's configuration file.
By default, the hypervisor will try to pick a suitable shutdown method. T o specify an alternative method, the
--m ode argument can specify a comma separated list which includes initctl, acpi, agent, signal.
T he order in which drivers will try each mode is undefined, and not related to the order specified in virsh.
For strict control over ordering, use a single mode at a time and repeat the command.
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T his command does an immediate ungraceful shutdown and stops the specified guest virtual machine.
Using virsh destroy can corrupt guest virtual machine file systems. Use the destroy option only
when the guest virtual machine is unresponsive. If you want to initiate a graceful shutdown, use the virsh
destroy --graceful command.
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T he find-storage-pool-sources-as type host port initiator displays the XML describing all
storage pools of a given type that could be found. If host, port, or initiator are provided, they control where
the query is performed.
T he pool-info pool-or-uuid command will list the basic information about the specified storage pool
object. T his command requires the name or UUID of the storage pool. T o retrieve this information, use the
pool-list
In addition to those arguments there are several sets of filtering flags that can be used to filter the content
of the list. --persistent restricts the list to persistent pools, --transient restricts the list to transient
pools, --autostart restricts the list to autostarting pools and finally --no-autostart restricts the list
to the storage pools that have autostarting disabled.
For all storage pool commands which require a type, the pool types must be separated by comma. T he
valid pool types include: dir, fs, netfs, logical, disk, iscsi, scsi, m path, rbd, and sheepdog.
T he --details option instructs virsh to additionally display pool persistence and capacity related
information where available.
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Note
When this command is used with older servers, it is forced to use a series of API calls with an
inherent race, where a pool might not be listed or might appear more than once if it changed its
state between calls while the list was being collected. Newer servers however, do not have this
problem.
If --no-overwrite is specified, it probes to determine if a file system already exists on the target device,
returning an error if it exists, or using m kfs to format the target device if it does not. If --overwrite is
specified, then the m kfs command is executed and any existing data on the target device is overwritten.
T he pool-create file creates and starts a storage pool its associated XML file.
T he pool-define file creates, but does not start, a storage pool object from the XML file.
If --print-xm l is specified, then it prints the XML of the storage pool object without creating the pool.
Otherwise, the pool requires a type in order to be built. For all storage pool commands which require a
type, the pool types must be separated by comma. T he valid pool types include: dir, fs, netfs,
logical, disk, iscsi, scsi, m path, rbd, and sheepdog.
If --print-xm l is specified, then it prints the XML of the pool object without defining the pool. Otherwise,
the pool has to have a specified type. For all storage pool commands which require a type, the pool types
must be separated by comma. T he valid pool types include: dir, fs, netfs, logical, disk, iscsi,
scsi, m path, rbd, and sheepdog.
T he pool-start pool-or-uuid starts the specified storage pool, which was previously defined but
inactive.
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T he pool-delete pool-or-uuid destroys the resources used by the specified storage pool. It is
important to note that this operation is non-recoverable and non-reversible. However, the pool structure
will still exist after this command, ready to accept the creation of new storage volumes.
T his method is the only method that should be used to edit an XML configuration file as it does error
checking before applying.
T he file argument contains is the XML file and path containing the volume definition. T he --inputpool
pool-or-uuid argument specifies the name or uuid of the storage pool the source volume is in. T he vol-
name-or-key-or-path argument specifies the name or key or path of the source volume. For some
examples, refer to Section 17.2, “Creating volumes”.
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name is the name of the new volume. capacity is the size of the volume to be created, as a scaled integer,
defaulting to bytes if there is no suffix. --allocation <size> is the initial size to be allocated in the
volume, also as a scaled integer defaulting to bytes. --form at <string> is used in file based storage
pools to specify the volume file format which is a string of acceptable formats separated by a comma.
Acceptable formats include raw, bochs, qcow, qcow2, vm dk, . --backing-vol vol-name-or-key-or-
path is the source backing volume to be used if taking a snapshot of an existing volume. --backing-
vol-form at string is the format of the snapshot backing volume which is a string of formats separated
by a comma. Accepted values include: raw, bochs, qcow, qcow2, , vm dk, and host_device. T hese are,
however, only meant for file based storage pools. By default the qcow version that is used is version 3. If
you want to change the version, refer to Section 29.20.2, “Setting target elements”.
T he vol-create pool-or-uuid file creates a storage volume from an XML file. T his command also
requires the pool-or-uuid, which is the name or UUID of the storage pool to create the volume in. T he file
argument contains the path with the volume definition's XML file. An easy way to create the XML file is to
use the vol-dum pxm l command to obtain the definition of a pre-existing volume.
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Note
T he availability of algorithms may be limited by the version of the "scrub" binary installed on the
host.
nnsa - 4-pass NNSA Policy Letter NAP-14.1-C (XVI-8) for sanitizing removable and non-removable
hard disks: random x2, 0x00, verify.
dod - 4-pass DoD 5220.22-M section 8-306 procedure for sanitizing removeable and non-removeable
rigid disks: random, 0x00, 0xff, verify.
bsi - 9-pass method recommended by the German Center of Security in Information T echnologies
(http://www.bsi.bund.de): 0xff, 0xfe, 0xfd, 0xfb, 0xf7, 0xef, 0xdf, 0xbf, 0x7f.
schneier - 7-pass method described by Bruce Schneier in "Applied Cryptography" (1996): 0x00,
0xff, random x5.
T his command requires a --pool pool-or-uuid, which is the name or UUID of the storage pool the
volume is in. vol-name-or-key-or-path is the name or key or path of the volume to place the resulting XML
file.
T he vol-list--pool pool-or-uuid --details lists all of volumes in the specified storage pool.
T his command requires --pool pool-or-uuid which is the name or UUID of the storage pool. T he --
details option instructs virsh to additionally display volume type and capacity related information where
available.
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T he vol-path --pool pool-or-uuid vol-name-or-key command returns the path for a given
volume. T he command requires --pool pool-or-uuid, which is the name or UUID of the storage pool
the volume is in. It also requires vol-name-or-key which is the name or key of the volume for which the path
has been requested.
T he vol-nam e vol-key-or-path command returns the name for a given volume, where vol-key-or-path
is the key or path of the volume to return the name for.
T he vol-key --pool pool-or-uuid vol-name-or-path command returns the volume key for a given
volume where --pool pool-or-uuid is the name or UUID of the storage pool the volume is in and vol-
name-or-path is the name or path of the volume to return the volume key for.
T he command requires a --pool pool-or-uuid which is the name or UUID of the storage pool that the
volume is in. It also requires vol-name-or-key-or-path which is the name or key or path of the volume to
wipe. Using the argument --offset dictates the position in the storage volume at which to start reading
the data. --length length dictates an upper limit for the amount of data to be downloaded.
T he new capacity might be sparse unless --allocate is specified. Normally, capacity is the new size,
but if --delta is present, then it is added to the existing size. Attempts to shrink the volume will fail
unless --shrink is present.
Note that capacity cannot be negative unless --shrink is provided and a negative sign is not necessary.
capacity is a scaled integer which defaults to bytes if there is no suffix. Note too that this command is only
safe for storage volumes not in use by an active guest. Refer to Section 26.5.17, “Using blockresize to
change the size of a domain path” for live re-sizing.
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# virsh list
--inactive option lists the inactive guest virtual machines (that is, guest virtual machines that have
been defined but are not currently active)
T here are seven states that can be visible using this command:
Running - T he running state refers to guest virtual machines which are currently active on a CPU.
Idle - T he idle state indicates that the domain is idle, and may not be running or able to run. T his
can be caused because the domain is waiting on IO (a traditional wait state) or has gone to sleep
because there was nothing else for it to do.
Paused - T he paused state lists domains that are paused. T his occurs if an administrator uses
the paused button in virt-m anager or virsh suspend. When a guest virtual machine is
paused it consumes memory and other resources but it is ineligible for scheduling and CPU
resources from the hypervisor.
Shutdown - T he shutdown state is for guest virtual machines in the process of shutting down. T he
guest virtual machine is sent a shutdown signal and should be in the process of stopping its
operations gracefully. T his may not work with all guest virtual machine operating systems; some
operating systems do not respond to these signals.
Shut off - T he shut off state indicates that the domain is not running. T his can be caused when
a domain completly shuts down or has not been started.
Crashed - T he crashed state indicates that the domain has crashed and can only occur if the
guest virtual machine has been configured not to restart on crash.
Dying - Domains in the dying state are in is in process of dying, which is a state where the domain
has not completely shut-down or crashed.
--m anaged-save Although this flag alone does not filter the domains, it will list the domains that have
managed save state enabled. In order to actually list the domains seperately you will need to use the -
-inactive flag as well.
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--nam e is specified domain names are printed in a list. If --uuid is specified the donain's UUID is
printed instead. Using the flag --table specifies that a table style output should be used. All three
commands are mutually exclusive
--title T his command must be used with --table output. --titlewill cause an extra column to be
created in the table with the short domain description (title).
--with-m anaged-save lists the domains that have been configured with managed save. T o list the
commands without it, use the command --without-m anaged-save
--state-running filters out for the domains that are running, --state-paused for paused
domains, --state-shutoff for domains that are turned off, and --state-other lists all states as a
fallback.
--autostart this argument will cause the auto-starting domains to be listed. T o list domains with this
feature disabled, use the argument --no-autostart.
--with-snapshot will list the domains whose snapshot images can be listed. T o filter for the
domains without a snapshot, use the argument --without-snapshot
VCPU: 1
CPU: 2
State: running
CPU time: 10889.1s
CPU Affinity: yyyy
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----------------------------------
0: 0-3
1: 0-3
[--cpulist] >string< lists the host physical machine's CPU number(s) to set, or omit option to
query
26.13.4. Displaying information about the virtual CPU counts of a given domian
virsh vcpucount requires a domain name or a domain ID
T he vcpu parameter denotes the number of virtualized CPUs allocated to the guest virtual machine.T he
vcpu parameter must be provided.
T he cpulist parameter is a list of physical CPU identifier numbers separated by commas. T he cpulist
parameter determines which physical CPUs the VCPUs can run on.
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Additional parameters such as --config effect the next boot, whereas --live effects the running
domain and --currenteffects the current domain
For example:
will increase the number of vCPUs to guestVM1 by two and this action will be performed while the
guestVM1 is running.
T he count value may be limited by host, hypervisor, or a limit coming from the original description of the
guest domain. For Xen, you can only adjust the virtual CPUs of a running domain if the domain is
paravirtualized.
If the --config flag is specified, the change is made to the stored XML configuration for the guest virtual
machine domain, and will only take effect when the guest domain is next started.
If --live is specified, the guest virtual machine domain must be active, and the change takes place
immediately. T his option will allow hotplugging of a vCPU. Both the --config and --live flags may be
specified together if supported by the hypervisor.
If --current is specified, the flag affects the current guest virtual machine state. When no flags are
given, the --live flag is assumed which will fail if the guest virtual machine domain is not active. In this
situation it is up to the hypervisor whether the --config flag is also assumed, and therefore whether the
XML configuration is adjusted to make the change persistent.
T he --m axim um flag controls the maximum number of virtual cpus that can be hot-plugged the next time
the domain is booted. As such, it must only be used with the --config flag, and not with the --live flag.
It is important to note that the count value cannot exceed the number of CPUs that were assigned to the
guest virtual machine when it was created.
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You must specify the count in kilobytes. T he new count value cannot exceed the amount you specified
when you created the guest virtual machine. Values lower than 64 MB are unlikely to work with most guest
virtual machine operating systems. A higher maximum memory value does not affect active guest virtual
machines. If the new value is lower than the available memory, it will shrink possibly causing the guest
virtual machine to crash.
Note that all values will be rounded up to the nearest kibibyte by libvirt, and may be further rounded to
the granularity supported by the hypervisor. Some hypervisors also enforce a minimum, such as
4000KiB (or 4000 x 210 or 4,096,000 bytes). T he units for this value are determined by the optional
attribute memory unit, which defaults to the kibibytes (KiB) as a unit of measure where the value given
is multiplied by 210 or blocks of 1024 bytes.
T he size that can be given for the maximum memory is a scaled integer that by default is expressed in
kibibytes, unless a supported suffix is provided. T he following arguments can be used with this command:
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--live - controls the memory of the running domain, providing the hypervisor supports this action as
not all hypervisors allow live changes of the maximum memory limit.
# virsh net-list
# virsh net-list
Name State Autostart
-----------------------------------------
default active yes
vnet1 active yes
vnet2 active yes
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virsh net-create XMLfile — generates and starts a new network using an existing XML file.
virsh net-define XMLfile — generates a new network device from an existing XML file without
starting it.
Warning
T he commands in this section are only supported if the machine has the NetworkManager service
disabled, and is using the network service instead.
Often, these host interfaces can then be used by name within domain <interface> elements (such as a
system-created bridge interface), but there is no requirement that host interfaces be tied to any particular
guest configuration XML at all. Many of the commands for host interfaces are similar to the ones used for
domains, and the way to name an interface is either by its name or its MAC address. However, using a
MAC address for an iface argument only works when that address is unique (if an interface and a bridge
share the same MAC address, which is often the case, then using that MAC address results in an error
due to ambiguity, and you must resort to a name instead).
26.16.1. Defining and starting a host physical machine interface via an XML file
T he virsh iface-define file command define a host interface from an XML file. T his command will
only define the interface and will not start it.
T o start an interface which has already been defined, run iface-start interface, where interface is
the interface name.
26.16.2. Editing the XML configuration file for the host interface
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T he command iface-edit interface edits the XML configuration file for a host interface. T his is the
only recommended way to edit the XML configuration file. (Refer to Chapter 29, Manipulating the domain
XML for more information about these files.)
T he iface-m ac interface command will convert a host's interface name to MAC address where in this
case interface, is the interface name.
T o undefine the interface, use the iface-undefine interface command along with the interface
name.
Note that these settings can be altered with --no-stp, --no-start, and an integer number of seconds for
delay. All IP address configuration of interface will be moved to the new bridge device. Refer to
Section 26.16.8, “T earing down a bridge device” for information on tearing down the bridge.
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Use the iface-com m it command to declare all changes made since the last iface-begin as working,
and then delete the rollback point. If no interface snapshot has already been started via iface-begin,
then this command will fail.
Use the iface-rollback to revert all host interface settings back to the state that recorded the last
time the iface-begin command was executed. If iface-begin command had not been previously
executed, then iface-rollback will fail. Note that rebooting the host physical machine also serves as
an implicit rollback point.
live snapshots
In all cases where --live is listed take note that live snapshots are not supported with Red Hat
Enterprise Linux 7 but you can create a snapshot while the guest virtual machine is powered down.
Live snapshot creation is available on Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization . Call your service
representative for details.
T he domain name, id, or uid may be used as the domain requirement. T he XML requirement is a string that
must in the very least contain the <name>, <description> and <disks> elements.
--disk-only - causes the rest of the fields to be ignored, and automatically filled in by libvirt.
If the XML file string is completely omitted, then libvirt will choose a value for all fields. T he new
snapshot will become current, as listed by snapshot-current. In addition the snapshot will only include
the disk state rather than the usual system checkpoint with guest virtual machine state. Disk
snapshots are faster than full system checkpoints, but reverting to a disk snapshot may require fsck
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or journal replays, since it is like the disk state at the point when the power cord is abruptly pulled. Note
that mixing --halt and --disk-only loses any data that was not flushed to disk at the time.
--halt - causes the domain to be left in an inactive state after the snapshot is created. Mixing --
halt and --disk-only loses any data that was not flushed to disk at the time
--redefine specifies that if all XML elements produced by snapshot-dum pxm l are valid; it can be
used to migrate snapshot hierarchy from one machine to another, to recreate hierarchy for the case of
a transient domain that goes away and is later recreated with the same name and UUID, or to make
slight alterations in the snapshot metadata (such as host-specific aspects of the domain XML
embedded in the snapshot). When this flag is supplied, the xm lfile argument is mandatory, and the
domain’s current snapshot will not be altered unless the --current flag is also given.
--no-m etadata creates the snapshot, but any metadata is immediately discarded (that is, libvirt does
not treat the snapshot as current, and cannot revert to the snapshot unless --redefine is later used
to teach libvirt about the metadata again).
--reuse-external, if used and snapshot XML requests an external snapshot with a destination of
an existing file, then the destination must exist, and is reused; otherwise, a snapshot is refused to
avoid losing contents of the existing files.
--quiesce libvirt will try to to freeze and unfreeze the domain’s mounted file system(s), using the
guest agent. However, if the domain doesn't have a guest agent, snapshot creation will fail. Currently,
this requires --disk-only to be passed as well.
--atom ic causes libvirt to guarantee that the snapshot either succeeds, or fails with no changes.
Note that not all hypervisors support this. If this flag is not specified, then some hypervisors may fail
after partially performing the action, and dum pxm l must be used to see whether any partial changes
occurred.
--live Refer to live snapshots. T his option causes libvirt to take the snapshot while the guest is
running. T his increases the size of the memory image of the external checkpoint. T his is currently
supported only for external checkpoints. Existence of snapshot metadata will prevent attempts to
undefine a persistent domain. However, for transient domains, snapshot metadata is silently lost when
the domain quits running (whether by command such as destroy or by internal guest action).
--print-xm lcreates appropriate XML for snapshot-create as output, rather than actually creating
a snapshot.
--halt keeps the domain in an inactive state after the snapshot is created.
--disk-only creates a snapshot that does not include the guest virtual machine state.
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--m em spec can be used to control whether a checkpoint is internal or external. T he flag is mandatory,
followed by a m em spec of the form [file=]nam e[,snapshot=type], where type can be none,
internal, or external. T o include a literal comma in file=name, escape it with a second comma.
--diskspec option can be used to control how --disk-only and external checkpoints create
external files. T his option can occur multiple times, according to the number of <disk> elements in the
domain XML. Each <diskspec> is in the form disk[,snapshot=type][,driver=type]
[,file=nam e]. T o include a literal comma in disk or in file=nam e, escape it with a second comma.
A literal --diskspec must precede each diskspec unless all three of <domain>, <name>, and
<description> are also present. For example, a diskspec of
vda,snapshot=external,file=/path/to,,new results in the following XML:
--reuse-external is specified, and the domain XML or diskspec option requests an external
snapshot with a destination of an existing file, then the destination must exist, and is reused; otherwise,
a snapshot is refused to avoid losing contents of the existing files.
--quiesce is specified, libvirt will try to use guest agent to freeze and unfreeze domain’s mounted file
systems. However, if domain has no guest agent, snapshot creation will fail. Currently, this requires --
disk-only to be passed as well.
--no-m etadata creates snapshot data but any metadata is immediately discarded (that is,libirt does
not treat the snapshot as current, and cannot revert to the snapshot unless snapshot-create is later
used to teach libvirt about the metadata again). T his flag is incompatible with --print-xm l
--atom icwill cause libvirt to guarantee that the snapshot either succeeds, or fails with no changes. It
should be noted that not all hypervisors support this. If this flag is not specified, then some hypervisors
may fail after partially performing the action, and dum pxm l must be used to see whether any partial
changes occurred.
--live Refer to live snapshots. T his option causes libvirt to take the snapshot while the guest virtual
machine is running. T his increases the size of the memory image of the external checkpoint. T his is
currently supported only for external checkpoints.
If snapshotnam e is not used, snapshot XML for the domain’s current snapshot (if there is one) will be
displayed as output. If --nam e is specified, just the current snapshot name instead of the full XML will be
sent as output. If --security-info is supplied security sensitive information will be included in the XML.
Using snapshotnam e, generates a request to make the existing named snapshot become the current
snapshot, without reverting it to the domain.
26.17.4. snapshot-edit-domain
T his command is used to edit the snapshot that is currently in use. T o use, run:
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If both snapshotnam e and --current are specified, it forces the edited snapshot to become the current
snapshot. If snapshotnam e is omitted, then --current must be supplied, in order to edit the current
snapshot.
T his is equivalent to the following command sequence below, but it also includes some error checking:
If --renam e is specified, then the resulting edited file gets saved in a different file name. If --clone is
specified, then changing the snapshot name will create a clone of the snapshot metadata. If neither is
specified, then the edits will not change the snapshot name. Note that changing a snapshot name must be
done with care, since the contents of some snapshots, such as internal snapshots within a single qcow2
file, are accessible only from the original snapshot filename.
26.17.5. snapshot-info-domain
snapshot-info-dom ain displays information about the snapshots. T o use, run:
Outputs basic information about a specified snapshot , or the current snapshot with --current.
26.17.6. snapshot-list-domain
List all of the available snapshots for the given domain, defaulting to show columns for the snapshot name,
creation time, and domain state. T o use, run:
--parent adds a column to the output table giving the name of the parent of each snapshot. T his
option may not be used with --roots or --tree.
--roots filters the list to show only the snapshots that have no parents. T his option may not be used
with --parent or --tree.
--tree displays output in a tree format, listing just snapshot names. T hese three options are mutually
exclusive. T his option may not be used with --roots or --parent.
--from filters the list to snapshots which are children of the given snapshot; or if --current is
provided, will cause the list to start at the current snapshot. When used in isolation or with --parent,
the list is limited to direct children unless --descendants is also present. When used with --tree,
the use of --descendants is implied. T his option is not compatible with --roots. Note that the
starting point of --from or --current is not included in the list unless the --tree option is also
present.
--leaves is specified, the list will be filtered to just snapshots that have no children. Likewise, if --
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no-leaves is specified, the list will be filtered to just snapshots with children. (Note that omitting both
options does no filtering, while providing both options will either produce the same list or error out
depending on whether the server recognizes the flags) Filtering options are not compatible with --
tree..
--m etadata is specified, the list will be filtered to just snapshots that involve libvirt metadata, and
thus would prevent the undefining of a persistent domain, or be lost on destroy of a transient domain.
Likewise, if --no-m etadata is specified, the list will be filtered to just snapshots that exist without the
need for libvirt metadata.
--inactive is specified, the list will be filtered to snapshots that were taken when the domain was
shut off. If --active is specified, the list will be filtered to snapshots that were taken when the domain
was running, and where the snapshot includes the memory state to revert to that running state. If --
disk-only is specified, the list will be filtered to snapshots that were taken when the domain was
running, but where the snapshot includes only disk state.
--internal is specified, the list will be filtered to snapshots that use internal storage of existing disk
images. If --external is specified, the list will be filtered to snapshots that use external files for disk
images or memory state.
T he --security-info option will also include security sensitive information. Use snapshot-current
to easily access the XML of the current snapshot.
Warning
Be aware that this is a destructive action; any changes in the domain since the last snapshot was
taken will be lost. Also note that the state of the domain after snapshot-revert is complete will
be the state of the domain at the time the original snapshot was taken.
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Normally, reverting to a snapshot leaves the domain in the state it was at the time the snapshot was
created, except that a disk snapshot with no guest virtual machine state leaves the domain in an inactive
state. Passing either the --running or --paused flag will perform additional state changes (such as
booting an inactive domain, or pausing a running domain). Since transient domains cannot be inactive, it is
required to use one of these flags when reverting to a disk snapshot of a transient domain.
T here are two cases where a snapshot revert involves extra risk, which requires the use of --force
to proceed. One is the case of a snapshot that lacks full domain information for reverting configuration;
since libvirt cannot prove that the current configuration matches what was in use at the time of the
snapshot, supplying --force assures libvirt that the snapshot is compatible with the current
configuration (and if it is not, the domain will likely fail to run). T he other is the case of reverting from a
running domain to an active state where a new hypervisor has to be created rather than reusing the
existing hypervisor, because it implies drawbacks such as breaking any existing VNC or Spice
connections; this condition happens with an active snapshot that uses a provably incompatible
configuration, as well as with an inactive snapshot that is combined with the --start or --pause flag.
T his command Deletes the snapshot for the domain named snapshot, or the current snapshot with --
current. If this snapshot has child snapshots, changes from this snapshot will be merged into the
children. If the option --children is used, then it will delete this snapshot and any children of this
snapshot. If --children-only is used, then it will delete any children of this snapshot, but leave this
snapshot intact. T hese two flags are mutually exclusive.
T he --m etadata is used it will delete the snapshot's metadata maintained by libvirt, while leaving the
snapshot contents intact for access by external tools; otherwise deleting a snapshot also removes its data
contents from that point in time.
26.18.1. Introduction
Every hypervisor has its own policy for what a guest virtual machine will see for its CPUs by default.
Whereas some hypervisors decide which CPU host physical machine features will be available for the
guest virtual machine, QEMU/KVM presents the guest virtual machine with a generic model named
qem u32 or qem u64 . T hese hypervisors perform more advanced filtering, classifying all physical CPUs
into a handful of groups and have one baseline CPU model for each group that is presented to the guest
virtual machine. Such behavior enables the safe migration of guest virtual machines between host physical
machines, provided they all have physical CPUs that classify into the same group. libvirt does not typically
enforce policy itself, rather it provides the mechanism on which the higher layers define their own desired
policy. Understanding how to obtain CPU model information and define a suitable guest virtual machine
CPU model is critical to ensure guest virtual machine migration is successful between host physical
machines. Note that a hypervisor can only emulate features that it is aware of and features that were
created after the hypervisor was released may not be emulated.
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T he virsh capabilities command displays an XML document describing the capabilities of the
hypervisor connection and host physical machine. T he XML schema displayed has been extended to
provide information about the host physical machine CPU model. One of the big challenges in describing a
CPU model is that every architecture has a different approach to exposing their capabilities. On x86, the
capabilities of a modern CPU are exposed via the CPUID instruction. Essentially this comes down to a set
of 32-bit integers with each bit given a specific meaning. Fortunately AMD and Intel agree on common
semantics for these bits. Other hypervisors expose the notion of CPUID masks directly in their guest
virtual machine configuration format. However, QEMU/KVM supports far more than just the x86
architecture, so CPUID is clearly not suitable as the canonical configuration format. QEMU ended up using
a scheme which combines a CPU model name string, with a set of named flags. On x86, the CPU model
maps to a baseline CPUID mask, and the flags can be used to then toggle bits in the mask on or off. libvirt
decided to follow this lead and uses a combination of a model name and flags.
It is not practical to have a database listing all known CPU models, so libvirt has a small list of baseline
CPU model names. It chooses the one that shares the greatest number of CPUID bits with the actual host
physical machine CPU and then lists the remaining bits as named features. Notice that libvirt does not
display which features the baseline CPU contains. T his might seem like a flaw at first, but as will be
explained in this section, it is not actually necessary to know this information.
Here is an example of what libvirt reports as the capabilities on a basic workstation, when the virsh
capabilitiesis executed:
<capabilities>
<host>
<cpu>
<arch>i686</arch>
<model>pentium3</model>
<topology sockets='1' cores='2' threads='1'/>
<feature name='lahf_lm'/>
<feature name='lm'/>
<feature name='xtpr'/>
<feature name='cx16'/>
<feature name='ssse3'/>
<feature name='tm2'/>
<feature name='est'/>
<feature name='vmx'/>
<feature name='ds_cpl'/>
<feature name='monitor'/>
<feature name='pni'/>
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<feature name='pbe'/>
<feature name='tm'/>
<feature name='ht'/>
<feature name='ss'/>
<feature name='sse2'/>
<feature name='acpi'/>
<feature name='ds'/>
<feature name='clflush'/>
<feature name='apic'/>
</cpu>
</host>
</capabilities>
Now compare that to any random server, with the same virsh capabilities command:
<capabilities>
<host>
<cpu>
<arch>x86_64</arch>
<model>phenom</model>
<topology sockets='2' cores='4' threads='1'/>
<feature name='osvw'/>
<feature name='3dnowprefetch'/>
<feature name='misalignsse'/>
<feature name='sse4a'/>
<feature name='abm'/>
<feature name='cr8legacy'/>
<feature name='extapic'/>
<feature name='cmp_legacy'/>
<feature name='lahf_lm'/>
<feature name='rdtscp'/>
<feature name='pdpe1gb'/>
<feature name='popcnt'/>
<feature name='cx16'/>
<feature name='ht'/>
<feature name='vme'/>
</cpu>
...snip...
T o see if this CPU description is compatible with the previous workstation CPU description, use the virsh
cpu-com pare command.
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As seen in this output, libvirt is correctly reporting that the CPUs are not strictly compatible. T his is
because there are several features in the server CPU that are missing in the client CPU. T o be able to
migrate between the client and the server, it will be necessary to open the XML file and comment out some
features. T o determine which features need to be removed, run the virsh cpu-baseline command, on
the both-cpus.xm l which contains the CPU information for both machines. Running # virsh cpu-
baseline both-cpus.xm l, results in:
<cpu match='exact'>
<model>pentium3</model>
<feature policy='require' name='lahf_lm'/>
<feature policy='require' name='lm'/>
<feature policy='require' name='cx16'/>
<feature policy='require' name='monitor'/>
<feature policy='require' name='pni'/>
<feature policy='require' name='ht'/>
<feature policy='require' name='sse2'/>
<feature policy='require' name='clflush'/>
<feature policy='require' name='apic'/>
</cpu>
T his composite file shows which elements are in common. Everything that is not in common should be
commented out.
match='minimum' - the host physical machine CPU must have at least the CPU features described in
the guest virtual machine XML. If the host physical machine has additional features beyond the guest
virtual machine configuration, these will also be exposed to the guest virtual machine.
match='exact' - the host physical machine CPU must have at least the CPU features described in the
guest virtual machine XML. If the host physical machine has additional features beyond the guest
virtual machine configuration, these will be masked out from the guest virtual machine.
match='strict' - the host physical machine CPU must have exactly the same CPU features described in
the guest virtual machine XML.
T he next enhancement is that the <feature> elements can each have an extra 'policy' attribute with
possible values of:
policy='force' - expose the feature to the guest virtual machine even if the host physical machine does
not have it. T his is usually only useful in the case of software emulation.
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policy='require' - expose the feature to the guest virtual machine and fail if the host physical machine
does not have it. T his is the sensible default.
policy='optional' - expose the feature to the guest virtual machine if it happens to support it.
policy='disable' - if the host physical machine has this feature, then hide it from the guest virtual
machine.
policy='forbid' - if the host physical machine has this feature, then fail and refuse to start the guest
virtual machine.
T he 'forbid' policy is for a niche scenario where an incorrectly functioning application will try to use a
feature even if it is not in the CPUID mask, and you wish to prevent accidentally running the guest virtual
machine on a host physical machine with that feature. T he 'optional' policy has special behavior with
respect to migration. When the guest virtual machine is initially started the flag is optional, but when the
guest virtual machine is live migrated, this policy turns into 'require', since you cannot have features
disappearing across migration.
m em ory - T he memory controller allows for setting limits on RAM and swap usage and querying
cumulative usage of all processes in the group
cpuset - T he CPU set controller binds processes within a group to a set of CPUs and controls
migration between CPUs.
cpuacct - T he CPU accounting controller provides information about CPU usage for a group of
processes.
cpu -T he CPU scheduler controller controls the prioritization of processes in the group. T his is similar
to granting nice level privileges.
devices - T he devices controller grants access control lists on character and block devices.
freezer - T he freezer controller pauses and resumes execution of processes in the group. T his is
similar to SIGST OP for the whole group.
net_cls - T he network class controller manages network utilization by associating processes with a
tc network class.
In creating a group hierarchy cgroup will leave mount point and directory setup entirely to the
administrators’ discretion and is more complex than just adding some mount points to /etc/fstab. It is
necessary to setup the directory hierarchy and decide how processes get placed within it. T his can be
done with the following virsh commands:
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dom iftune- described in Section 26.5.9, “Setting network interface bandwidth parameters”
--set - the string placed here is the controller or action that is to be called. Additional parameters or
values if required should be added as well.
--current - when used with --set, will use the specified set string as the current scheduler
information. When used without will display the current scheduler information.
--config - - when used with --set, will use the specified set string on the next reboot. When used
without will display the scheduler information that is saved in the configuration file.
--live - when used with --set, will use the specified set string on a guest virtual machine that is
currently running. When used without will display the configuration setting currently used by the running
virtual machine
T he scheduler can be set with any of the following parameters: cpu_shares, vcpu_period and
vcpu_quota.
T his example shows the shell guest virtual machine's schedule information
In this example, the cpu_shares is changed to 2046. T his effects the current state and not the
configuration file.
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T he only required parameter is the domain name of the guest virtual machine. T o list the domain name, run
the dom blklist command. T he --config, --live, and --current arguments function the same as
in Section 26.21, “Setting schedule parameters”. If no limit is specified, it will query current I/O limits setting.
Otherwise, alter the limits with the following flags:
For more information refer to the blkdeviotune section of the virsh MAN page. For an example domain XML
refer to Figure 29.27, “Devices - Hard drives, floppy disks, CD-ROMs”.
More information on this command can be found in the Virtualization Tuning and Optimization Guide
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T his command accepts the --disable option which disables the autostart command.
# net-define file
# net-destroy network
except that it does some error checking. T he editor used can be supplied by the $VISUAL or $EDIT OR
environment variables, and defaults to "vi". T o edit the network, run:
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Note: When talking to older servers, this command is forced to use a series of API calls with an inherent
race, where a pool might not be listed or might appear more than once if it changed state between calls
while the list was being collected. Newer servers do not have this problem.
# net-undefine network
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T his command updates the given section of an existing network definition, taking effect immediately,
without needing to destroy and re-start the network. T his command is one of "add-first", "add-last", "add"
(a synonym for add-last), "delete", or "modify". section is one of ""bridge", "domain", "ip", "ip-dhcp-host",
"ip-dhcp-range", "forward", "forward-interface", "forward-pf", "portgroup", "dns-host", "dns-txt", or "dns-
srv", each section being named by a concatenation of the xml element hierarchy leading to the element
being changed. For example, "ip-dhcp-host" will change a <host> element that is contained inside a
<dhcp> element inside an <ip> element of the network. xml is either the text of a complete xml element of
the type being changed (e.g. "<host mac="00:11:22:33:44:55’ ip=’1.2.3.4’/>", or the name of a file that
contains a complete xml element. Disambiguation is done by looking at the first character of the provided
text - if the first character is "<", it is xml text, if the first character is not ">", it is the name of a file that
contains the xml text to be used. T he **parent-index option is used to specify which of several parent
elements the requested element is in (0-based). For example, a dhcp <host> element could be in any one
of multiple <ip> elements in the network; if a parent-index isn’t provided, the "most appropriate" <ip>
element will be selected (usually the only one that already has a <dhcp> element), but if --parent-index
is given, that particular instance of <ip> will get the modification. If --live is specified, affect a running
network. If --config is specified, affect the next startup of a persistent network. If --current is specified,
affect the current network state. Both --live and --config flags may be given, but --current is exclusive.
Not specifying any flag is the same as specifying --current.
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27.1. Introduction
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 comes with tools to access, edit and create guest virtual machine disks or
other disk images. T here are several uses for these tools, including:
Preparing new disk images containing files, directories, file systems, partitions, logical volumes and
other options.
Rescuing and repairing guest virtual machines that fail to boot or those that need boot configuration
changes.
Auditing compliance of guest virtual machines, for example to organizational security standards.
Warning
You must never use these tools to write to a guest virtual machine or disk image which is attached
to a running virtual machine, not even to open such a disk image in write mode. Doing so will result
in disk corruption of the guest virtual machine. T he tools try to prevent you from doing this, however
do not catch all cases. If there is any suspicion that a guest virtual machine might be running, it is
strongly recommended that the tools not be used, or at least always use the tools in read-only
mode.
T he primary source for documentation for libguestfs and the tools are the Unix man pages. T he API
is documented in guestfs(3). guestfish is documented in guestfish(1). T he virt tools are
documented in their own man pages (eg. virt-df(1)). For troubleshooting information, refer to
Section A.15, “libguestfs troubleshooting”
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libguestfs in Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 cannot access the disks of remote libvirt guests, and commands
using remote URLs like this do not work as expected.
However beginning with Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7, libguestfs can access remote disk sources over NBD.
You can export a disk image from a remote machine using the qem u-nbd command, and access it using a
nbd:// URL,. You may need to open a port on your firewall (port 10809) as shown here:
- guestfish
- guestmount
- virt-alignment-scan
- virt-cat
- virt-copy-in
- virt-copy-out
- virt-df
- virt-edit
- virt-filesystems
- virt-inspector
- virt-ls
- virt-rescue
- virt-sysprep
- virt-tar-in
- virt-tar-out
- virt-win-reg
27.2. Terminology
T his section explains the terms used throughout this chapter.
libguestfs (GUEST FileSystem LIBrary) - the underlying C library that provides the basic
functionality for opening disk images, reading and writing files and so on. You can write C programs
directly to this API, but it is quite low level.
guestfish (GUEST Filesystem Interactive SHell) is an interactive shell that you can use from the
command line or from shell scripts. It exposes all of the functionality of the libguestfs API.
Various virt tools are built on top of libguestfs, and these provide a way to perform specific single tasks
from the command line. T ools include virt-df, virt-rescue, virt-resize and virt-edit.
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hivex and augeas are libraries for editing the Windows Registry and Linux configuration files
respectively. Although these are separate from libguestfs, much of the value of libguestfs comes from
the combination of these tools.
guestmount is an interface between libguestfs and FUSE. It is primarily used to mount file systems
from disk images on your host physical machine. T his functionality is not necessary, but can be useful.
27.3. Installation
T o install libguestfs, guestfish, the libguestfs tools, guestmount and support for Windows guest virtual
machines, subscribe to the RHEL V2WIN channel, go to the Red Hat Website and run the following
command:
T o install every libguestfs-related package including the language bindings, run the following command:
T o begin viewing or editing a virtual machine disk image, run the following command, substituting the path
to your desired disk image:
--ro means that the disk image is opened read-only. T his mode is always safe but does not allow write
access. Only omit this option when you are certain that the guest virtual machine is not running, or the
disk image is not attached to a live guest virtual machine. It is not possible to use libguestfs to edit a
live guest virtual machine, and attempting to will result in irreversible disk corruption.
/path/to/disk/image is the path to the disk. T his can be a file, a host physical machine logical volume
(such as /dev/VG/LV), a host physical machine device (/dev/cdrom) or a SAN LUN (/dev/sdf3).
Note
libguestfs and guestfish do not require root privileges. You only need to run them as root if the disk
image being accessed needs root to read and/or write.
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><fs>
At the prompt, type run to initiate the library and attach the disk image. T his can take up to 30 seconds the
first time it is done. Subsequent starts will complete much faster.
Note
libguestfs will use hardware virtualization acceleration such as KVM (if available) to speed up this
process.
Once the run command has been entered, other commands can be used, as the following section
demonstrates.
T he list-filesystem s command will list file systems found by libguestfs. T his output shows a Red Hat
Enterprise Linux 4 disk image:
><fs> run
><fs> list-filesystems
/dev/vda1: ext3
/dev/VolGroup00/LogVol00: ext3
/dev/VolGroup00/LogVol01: swap
><fs> run
><fs> list-filesystems
/dev/vda1: ntfs
/dev/vda2: ntfs
Other useful commands are list-devices, list-partitions, lvs, pvs, vfs-type and file. You
can get more information and help on any command by typing help command, as shown in the following
output:
SYNOPSIS
vfs-type device
DESCRIPTION
This command gets the filesystem type corresponding to the filesystem on
"device".
For most filesystems, the result is the name of the Linux VFS module
which would be used to mount this filesystem if you mounted it without
specifying the filesystem type. For example a string such as "ext3" or
"ntfs".
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T o view the actual contents of a file system, it must first be mounted. T his example uses one of the
Windows partitions shown in the previous output (/dev/vda2), which in this case is known to correspond
to the C:\ drive:
You can use guestfish commands such as ls, ll, cat, m ore, download and tar-out to view and
download files and directories.
Note
T here is no concept of a current working directory in this shell. Unlike ordinary shells, you cannot
for example use the cd command to change directories. All paths must be fully qualified starting at
the top with a forward slash (/) character. Use the Tab key to complete paths.
Instead of listing and mounting file systems by hand, it is possible to let guestfish itself inspect the image
and mount the file systems as they would be in the guest virtual machine. T o do this, add the -i option on
the command line:
><fs> ll /
total 210
drwxr-xr-x. 24 root root 4096 Oct 28 09:09 .
drwxr-xr-x 21 root root 4096 Nov 17 15:10 ..
drwxr-xr-x. 2 root root 4096 Oct 27 22:37 bin
drwxr-xr-x. 4 root root 1024 Oct 27 21:52 boot
drwxr-xr-x. 4 root root 4096 Oct 27 21:21 dev
drwxr-xr-x. 86 root root 12288 Oct 28 09:09 etc
[etc]
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Because guestfish needs to start up the libguestfs back end in order to perform the inspection and
mounting, the run command is not necessary when using the -i option. T he -i option works for many
common Linux and Windows guest virtual machines.
A guest virtual machine can be accessed from the command line when you specify its name as known to
libvirt (in other words, as it appears in virsh list --all). Use the -d option to access a guest virtual
machine by its name, with or without the -i option:
# guestfish -a ssh://[email protected]/disk.img
T he format used for the URI should be like any of these examples where the file is named disk.img, use ///
when the file is local:
guestfish -a disk.im g
guestfish -a file:///path/to/disk.im g
$ guestfish -d RHEL3 -i
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/dev/vda2 mounted on /
/dev/vda1 mounted on /boot
Commands to edit files include edit, vi and em acs. Many commands also exist for creating files and
directories, such as write, m kdir, upload and tar-in.
#!/bin/bash -
set -e
guestname="$1"
#!/bin/bash -
set -e
guestname="$1"
Augeas can also be used to modify configuration files. You can modify the above script to change the
keyboard layout:
#!/bin/bash -
set -e
guestname="$1"
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1. T he --ro option has been removed in the second example, giving the ability to write to the guest
virtual machine.
2. T he aug-get command has been changed to aug-set to modify the value instead of fetching it.
T he new value will be "gb" (including the quotes).
3. T he aug-save command is used here so Augeas will write the changes out to disk.
Note
guestfish can do much more than we can cover in this introductory document. For example, creating disk
images from scratch:
guestfish -N fs
virt-cat is similar to the guestfish download command. It downloads and displays a single file to
the guest virtual machine. For example:
virt-edit is similar to the guestfish edit command. It can be used to interactively edit a single file
within a guest virtual machine. For example, you may need to edit the grub.conf file in a Linux-based
guest virtual machine that will not boot:
virt-edit has another mode where it can be used to make simple non-interactive changes to a
single file. For this, the -e option is used. T his command, for example, changes the root password in a
Linux guest virtual machine to having no password:
virt-ls is similar to the guestfish ls, ll and find commands. It is used to list a directory or
directories (recursively). For example, the following command would recursively list files and directories
under /home in a Linux guest virtual machine:
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27.6.1. Introduction
T his section describes virt-rescue, which can be considered analogous to a rescue CD for virtual
machines. It boots a guest virtual machine into a rescue shell so that maintenance can be performed to
correct errors and the guest virtual machine can be repaired.
T here is some overlap between virt-rescue and guestfish. It is important to distinguish their differing uses.
virt-rescue is for making interactive, ad-hoc changes using ordinary Linux file system tools. It is particularly
suited to rescuing a guest virtual machine that has failed . virt-rescue cannot be scripted.
In contrast, guestfish is particularly useful for making scripted, structured changes through a formal set of
commands (the libguestfs API), although it can also be used interactively.
$ virt-rescue -d GuestName
$ virt-rescue -a /path/to/disk/image
(where the path can be any file, any logical volume, LUN, or so on) containing a guest virtual machine disk.
You will first see output scroll past, as virt-rescue boots the rescue VM. In the end you will see:
bash: cannot set terminal process group (-1): Inappropriate ioctl for device
bash: no job control in this shell
><rescue>
T he shell prompt here is an ordinary bash shell, and a reduced set of ordinary Red Hat Enterprise Linux
commands is available. For example, you can enter:
T he previous command will list disk partitions. T o mount a file system, it is suggested that you mount it
under /sysroot, which is an empty directory in the rescue machine for the user to mount anything you
like. Note that the files under / are files from the rescue VM itself:
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When you are finished rescuing the guest virtual machine, exit the shell by entering exit or Ctrl+d.
virt-rescue has many command line options. T he options most often used are:
--ro: Operate in read-only mode on the guest virtual machine. No changes will be saved. You can use
this to experiment with the guest virtual machine. As soon as you exit from the shell, all of your
changes are discarded.
--network: Enable network access from the rescue shell. Use this if you need to, for example,
download RPM or other files into the guest virtual machine.
27.7.1. Introduction
T his section describes virt-df, which displays file system usage from a disk image or a guest virtual
machine. It is similar to the Linux df command, but for virtual machines.
# virt-df -a /dev/vg_guests/RHEL7
Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use%
RHEL6:/dev/sda1 101086 10233 85634 11%
RHEL6:/dev/VolGroup00/LogVol00 7127864 2272744 4493036 32%
(Where /dev/vg_guests/RHEL7 is a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 guest virtual machine disk image. T he
path in this case is the host physical machine logical volume where this disk image is located.)
You can also use virt-df on its own to list information about all of your guest virtual machines (ie. those
known to libvirt). T he virt-df command recognizes some of the same options as the standard df such
as -h (human-readable) and -i (show inodes instead of blocks).
# virt-df -h -d domname
Filesystem Size Used Available Use%
F14x64:/dev/sda1 484.2M 66.3M 392.9M 14%
F14x64:/dev/vg_f14x64/lv_root 7.4G 3.0G 4.4G 41%
RHEL6brewx64:/dev/sda1 484.2M 52.6M 406.6M 11%
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RHEL6brewx64:/dev/vg_rhel6brewx64/lv_root
13.3G 3.4G 9.2G 26%
Win7x32:/dev/sda1 100.0M 24.1M 75.9M 25%
Win7x32:/dev/sda2 19.9G 7.4G 12.5G 38%
Note
You can use virt-df safely on live guest virtual machines, since it only needs read-only access.
However, you should not expect the numbers to be precisely the same as those from a df
command running inside the guest virtual machine. T his is because what is on disk will be slightly
out of synch with the state of the live guest virtual machine. Nevertheless it should be a good
enough approximation for analysis and monitoring purposes.
virt-df is designed to allow you to integrate the statistics into monitoring tools, databases and so on. T his
allows system administrators to generate reports on trends in disk usage, and alerts if a guest virtual
machine is about to run out of disk space. T o do this you should use the --csv option to generate
machine-readable Comma-Separated-Values (CSV) output. CSV output is readable by most databases,
spreadsheet software and a variety of other tools and programming languages. T he raw CSV looks like
the following:
For resources and ideas on how to process this output to produce trends and alerts, refer to the following
URL: http://virt-tools.org/learning/advanced-virt-df/.
27.8.1. Introduction
T his section describes virt-resize, a tool for expanding or shrinking guest virtual machines. It only
works for guest virtual machines which are offline (shut down). It works by copying the guest virtual
machine image and leaving the original disk image untouched. T his is ideal because you can use the
original image as a backup, however there is a trade-off as you need twice the amount of disk space.
1. Locate the disk image to be resized. You can use the command virsh dum pxm l GuestNam e for
a libvirt guest virtual machine.
2. Decide on how you wish to expand the guest virtual machine. Run virt-df -h and virt-
filesystem s on the guest virtual machine disk, as shown in the following output:
# virt-df -h -a /dev/vg_guests/RHEL6
Filesystem Size Used Available Use%
RHEL6:/dev/sda1 98.7M 10.0M 83.6M 11%
RHEL6:/dev/VolGroup00/LogVol00 6.8G 2.2G 4.3G 32%
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Increase the size of the first (boot) partition, from approximately 100MB to 500MB.
2. Rename the original disk as the backup. How you do this depends on the host physical machine
storage environment for the original disk. If it is stored as a file, use the m v command. For logical
volumes (as demonstrated in this example), use lvrenam e:
3. Create the new disk. T he requirements in this example are to expand the total disk size up to 16GB.
Since logical volumes are used here, the following command is used:
# virt-resize \
/dev/vg_guests/RHEL6.backup /dev/vg_guests/RHEL6 \
--resize /dev/sda1=500M \
--expand /dev/sda2 \
--LV-expand /dev/VolGroup00/LogVol00
T he first two arguments are the input disk and output disk. --resize /dev/sda1=500M resizes
the first partition up to 500MB. --expand /dev/sda2 expands the second partition to fill all
remaining space. --LV-expand /dev/VolGroup00/LogVol00 expands the guest virtual
machine logical volume to fill the extra space in the second partition.
Summary of changes:
/dev/sda1: partition will be resized from 101.9M to 500.0M
/dev/sda1: content will be expanded using the 'resize2fs' method
/dev/sda2: partition will be resized from 7.9G to 15.5G
/dev/sda2: content will be expanded using the 'pvresize' method
/dev/VolGroup00/LogVol00: LV will be expanded to maximum size
/dev/VolGroup00/LogVol00: content will be expanded using the 'resize2fs'
method
Copying /dev/sda1 ...
[#####################################################]
Copying /dev/sda2 ...
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[#####################################################]
Expanding /dev/sda1 using the 'resize2fs' method
Expanding /dev/sda2 using the 'pvresize' method
Expanding /dev/VolGroup00/LogVol00 using the 'resize2fs' method
5. T ry to boot the virtual machine. If it works (and after testing it thoroughly) you can delete the backup
disk. If it fails, shut down the virtual machine, delete the new disk, and rename the backup disk back
to its original name.
# virt-df -h -a /dev/vg_pin/RHEL6
Filesystem Size Used Available Use%
RHEL6:/dev/sda1 484.4M 10.8M 448.6M 3%
RHEL6:/dev/VolGroup00/LogVol00 14.3G 2.2G 11.4G 16%
Resizing guest virtual machines is not an exact science. If virt-resize fails, there are a number of tips
that you can review and attempt in the virt-resize(1) man page. For some older Red Hat Enterprise Linux
guest virtual machines, you may need to pay particular attention to the tip regarding GRUB.
27.9.1. Introduction
virt-inspector is a tool for inspecting a disk image to find out what operating system it contains.
27.9.2. Installation
T o install virt-inspector and the documentation, enter the following command:
T o process Windows guest virtual machines you must also install libguestfs-winsupport. Refer to
Section 27.10.2, “Installation” for details. T he documentation, including example XML output and a Relax-
NG schema for the output, will be installed in /usr/share/doc/libguestfs-devel-* / where "*" is
replaced by the version number of libguestfs.
Or as shown here:
T he result will be an XML report (report.xm l). T he main components of the XML file are a top-level
<operatingsytems> element containing usually a single <operatingsystem> element, similar to the
following:
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<operatingsystems>
<operatingsystem>
</operatingsystem>
</operatingsystems>
Processing these reports is best done using W3C standard XPath queries. Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7
comes with a command line program (xpath) which can be used for simple instances; however, for long-
term and advanced usage, you should consider using an XPath library along with your favorite
programming language.
As an example, you can list out all file system devices using the following XPath query:
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27.10.2. Installation
T o use virt-win-reg you must run the following:
# virt-win-reg WindowsGuest \
'HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall' \
| less
Note
Hex-quoting is used for strings because the format does not properly define a portable encoding
method for strings. T his is the only way to ensure fidelity when transporting .REG files from one
machine to another.
You can make hex-quoted strings printable by piping the output of virt-win-reg through this
simple Perl script:
T o merge changes into the Windows Registry of an offline guest virtual machine, you must first prepare a
.REG file. T here is a great deal of documentation about doing this available here. When you have
prepared a .REG file, enter the following:
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T he binding for each language is essentially the same, but with minor syntactic changes. A C statement:
guestfs_launch (g);
$g->launch ()
g#launch ()
In the C and C++ bindings, you must manually check for errors. In the other bindings, errors are converted
into exceptions; the additional error checks shown in the examples below are not necessary for other
languages, but conversely you may wish to add code to catch exceptions. Refer to the following list for
some points of interest regarding the architecture of the libguestfs API:
T he libguestfs API is synchronous. Each call blocks until it has completed. If you want to make calls
asynchronously, you have to create a thread.
T he libguestfs API is not thread safe: each handle should be used only from a single thread, or if you
want to share a handle between threads you should implement your own mutex to ensure that two
threads cannot execute commands on one handle at the same time.
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You should not open multiple handles on the same disk image. It is permissible if all the handles are
read-only, but still not recommended.
You should not add a disk image for writing if anything else could be using that disk image (eg. a live
VM). Doing this will cause disk corruption.
Opening a read-only handle on a disk image which is currently in use (eg. by a live VM) is possible;
however, the results may be unpredictable or inconsistent particularly if the disk image is being heavily
written to at the time you are reading it.
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <guestfs.h>
int
main (int argc, char *argv[])
{
guestfs_h *g;
g = guestfs_create ();
if (g == NULL) {
perror ("failed to create libguestfs handle");
exit (EXIT_FAILURE);
}
/* ... */
guestfs_close (g);
exit (EXIT_SUCCESS);
}
Save this program to a file (test.c). Compile this program and run it with the following two commands:
At this stage it should print no output. T he rest of this section demonstrates an example showing how to
extend this program to create a new disk image, partition it, format it with an ext4 file system, and create
some files in the file system. T he disk image will be called disk.im g and be created in the current
directory.
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#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <guestfs.h>
int
main (int argc, char *argv[])
{
guestfs_h *g;
size_t i;
g = guestfs_create ();
if (g == NULL) {
perror ("failed to create libguestfs handle");
exit (EXIT_FAILURE);
}
/* Set the trace flag so that we can see each libguestfs call. */
guestfs_set_trace (g, 1);
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/* This uploads the local file /etc/resolv.conf into the disk image. */
if (guestfs_upload (g, "/etc/resolv.conf", "/foo/resolv.conf") == -1)
exit (EXIT_FAILURE);
/* Because 'autosync' was set (above) we can just close the handle
* and the disk contents will be synchronized. You can also do
* this manually by calling guestfs_umount_all and guestfs_sync.
*/
guestfs_close (g);
exit (EXIT_SUCCESS);
}
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Compile and run this program with the following two commands:
If the program runs to completion successfully then you should be left with a disk image called disk.im g,
which you can examine with guestfish:
By default (for C and C++ bindings only), libguestfs prints errors to stderr. You can change this behavior
by setting an error handler. T he guestfs(3) man page discusses this in detail.
virt-sysprep modifies the guest or disk image in place. T o use virt-sysprep the guest virtual machine must
be offline so you must shut it down before running the commands. If you want to preserve the existing
contents of the guest virtual machine, you must snapshot, copy or clone the disk first. Refer to
libguestfs.org for more information.
You do not need to run virt-sysprep as root. In fact it is recommended that you don't. T he only time where
you might want to run it as root is when you need root in order to access the disk image, but even in this
case it would be better to change the permissions on the disk image to be writable as the non-root user
running virt-sysprep.
T he commands that you can use in virt-sysprep are as shown in the table:
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--mount-options Sets the mount options for each --mount-options "/:noatime" will
mountpoint in the guest virtual mount the root directory with the
machine. Use a semicolon- notim e operation.
separated list of
mountpoint:options pairs. You
may need to place quotes
around this list to protect it from
the shell.
-q or --quiet Prevents the printing of log $ virt-sysprep -q
messages
-v or --verbose Enables verbose messages for $ virt-sysprep -v
debugging purposes.
-V or --version Displays the virt-sysprep version $ virt-sysprep -V
number and exits.
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-v, or --verbose - Displays information about the connection to the guest virtual machine.
-w, or --wait - Causes the domain to start up before attempting to connect to the console.
-r, or --reconnect - Automatically reconnects to the domain if it shuts down and restarts.
-z PCT, or --zoom =PCT - Adjusts the zoom level of the display window in the specified percentage.
Accepted range 10-200%.
-a, or --attach - Uses libvirt to directly attach to a local display, instead of making a T CP/UNIX
socket connection. T his avoids the need to authenticate with the remote display, if authentication with
libvirt is already allowed. T his option does not work with remote displays.
-h hotkeys, or --hotkeys hotkeys - Overrides the default hotkey settings with the new specified
hotkey. Refer to Example 28.5, “Setting hot keys”.
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# virt-viewer guest-name
Look up the guest configuration and then make a direct non-tunneled connection to the console:
toggle-fullscreen
release-cursor
smartcard-insert
smartcard-remove
Key name combination hotkeys are case insensitive. Each hotkey setting should have a unique key
combination.
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28.2. remote-viewer
T he remote-viewer is a simple remote desktop display client that supports SPICE and VNC.
-v, or --verbose - Displays information about the connection to the guest virtual machine.
-z PCT, or --zoom =PCT - Adjusts the zoom level of the display window in the specified percentage.
Accepted range 10-200%.
-f, or --full-screen=auto-conf - Starts with the windows maximized to its full screen size. If the
optional argument 'auto-conf' is given, the remote display will be reconfigured to match at best the client
physical monitor configuration on initialization, by enabling or disabling extra monitors as necessary.
T his is currently implemented by the Spice backend only.
-t title, or --title title - Sets the window title to the string given.
--spice-controller - Uses the SPICE controller to initialize the connection with the SPICE server.
T his option is used by the SPICE browser plug-ins to allow web page to start a client.
For more information see the MAN page for the remote-viewer.
T he main screen shows the available guest virtual machines. T he right-hand side of the screen has two
buttons:
the search button, to search for guest virtual machines by name, and
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Clicking on the selection button allows you to select one or more guest virtual machines in order to perform
operations individually or as a group. T he available operations are shown at the bottom of the screen on
the operations bar:
Favorite: Adds a heart to selected guest virtual machines and moves them to the top of the list of
guests. T his becomes increasingly helpful as the number of guests grows.
Create new guest virtual machines using the New button on the left-hand side of the main screen.
1. Click New
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2. Select source
Available media: Any immediately available installation media will be shown here. Clicking on any
of these will take you directly to the Review screen.
Enter a URL: T ype in a URL to specify a local URI or path to an ISO file. T his can also be used
to access a remote machine. T he address should follow the pattern of
protocol://IPaddress?port;, for example:
spice://192.168.122.1?port=5906;
Select a file: Open a file directory to search for installation media manually.
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T hese details can be left as is, in which case proceed to the final step, or:
Clicking on Custom ize allows you to adjust the configuration of the guest virtual machine, such as
the memory and disk size.
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5. Create
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Chapter 29. Manipulating the domain XML
Important
Use only supported management interfaces (such as virsh) and commands (such as virsh edit)
to edit the components of the domain XML file. Do not open and edit the domain XML file directly with
a text editor such as vim or gedit.
Element Description
<nam e> Assigns a name for the virtual machine. T his name
should consist only of alpha-numeric characters
and is required to be unique within the scope of a
single host physical machine. It is often used to
form the filename for storing the persistent
configuration files.
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Element Description
<uuid> Assigns a globally unique identifier for the virtual
machine. T he format must be RFC 4122 compliant,
for example, 3e3fce4 5-4 f53-4 fa7-bb32-
11f34 168b82b. If omitted when defining or
creating a new machine, a random UUID is
generated. It is also possible to provide the UUID
via a sysinfo specification.
<title> Creates space for a short description of the
domain. T he title should not contain any new lines.
<description> Different from the title, this data is not used by
libvirt. It can contain any information the user
chooses to display.
<m etadata> Can be used by applications to store custom
metadata in the form of XML nodes/trees.
Applications must use custom namespaces on
XML nodes/trees, with only one top-level element
per namespace (if the application needs structure,
they should have sub-elements to their
namespace element).
...
<os>
<type>hvm</type>
<loader>/usr/lib/kvm/boot/hvmloader</loader>
<boot dev='hd'/>
<boot dev='cdrom'/>
<bootmenu enable='yes'/>
<smbios mode='sysinfo'/>
<bios useserial='yes' rebootTimeout='0'/>
</os>
...
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Element Description
<type> Specifies the type of operating system to be
booted on the guest virtual machine. hvm indicates
that the operating system is designed to run on
bare metal and requires full virtualization. linux
refers to an operating system that supports the
KVM hypervisor guest ABI. T here are also two
optional attributes: arch specifies the CPU
architecture to virtualization, and m achine refers
to the machine type. Refer to Driver Capabilities for
more information.
<loader> Refers to a piece of firmware that is used to assist
the domain creation process. It is only needed for
using KVM fully virtualized domains.
<boot> Specifies the next boot device to consider with one
of the following values:fd, hd, cdrom or network.
T he boot element can be repeated multiple times
to set up a priority list of boot devices to try in turn.
Multiple devices of the same type are sorted
according to their targets while preserving the
order of buses. After defining the domain, its XML
configuration returned by libvirt (through
virDom ainGetXMLDesc) lists devices in the
sorted order. Once sorted, the first device is
marked as bootable. For more information, see
BIOS bootloader.
<bootm enu> Determines whether or not to enable an interactive
boot menu prompt on guest virtual machine
startup. T he enable attribute can be either yes
or no. If not specified, the hypervisor default is
used.
<sm bios> determines how SMBIOS information is made
visible in the guest virtual machine. T he m ode
attribute must be specified, as either em ulate
(allows the hypervisor generate all values), host
(copies all of Block 0 and Block 1, except for the
UUID, from the host physical machine's SMBIOS
values; the virConnectGetSysinfo call can be
used to see what values are copied), or sysinfo
(uses the values in the sysinfo element). If not
specified, the hypervisor's default setting is used.
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Element Description
<bios> T his element has attribute useserial with
possible values yes or no. T he attribute enables
or disables the Serial Graphics Adapter which
allows users to see BIOS messages on a serial
port. T herefore, one needs to have serial port
defined. T he rebootT im eout attribute controls
whether and after how long the guest virtual
machine should start booting again in case the
boot fails (according to the BIOS). T he value is set
in milliseconds with a maximum of 65535; setting -
1 disables the reboot.
...
<bootloader>/usr/bin/pygrub</bootloader>
<bootloader_args>--append single</bootloader_args>
...
Element Description
<bootloader> Provides a fully qualified path to the bootloader
executable in the host physical machine OS. T his
bootloader will choose which kernel to boot. T he
required output of the bootloader is dependent on
the hypervisor in use.
<bootloader_args> Allows command line arguments to be passed to
the bootloader (optional command).
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Chapter 29. Manipulating the domain XML
...
<os>
<type>hvm</type>
<loader>/usr/lib/kvm/boot/hvmloader</loader>
<kernel>/root/f8-i386-vmlinuz</kernel>
<initrd>/root/f8-i386-initrd</initrd>
<cmdline>console=ttyS0 ks=http://example.com/f8-i386/os/</cmdline>
<dtb>/root/ppc.dtb</dtb>
</os>
...
Element Description
<type> Same as described in the BIOS boot section.
<loader> Same as described in the BIOS boot section.
<kernel> Specifies the fully-qualified path to the kernel
image in the host physical machine operating
system.
<initrd> Specifies the fully-qualified path to the (optional)
ramdisk image in the host physical machine
operating system.
<cm dline> Specifies arguments to be passed to the kernel (or
installer) at boot time. T his is often used to specify
an alternate primary console (such as a serial
port), or the installation media source or kickstart
file.
...
<os>
<type>hvm</type>
<loader>/usr/lib/kvm/boot/hvmloader</loader>
<kernel>/root/f8-i386-vmlinuz</kernel>
<initrd>/root/f8-i386-initrd</initrd>
<cmdline>console=ttyS0 ks=http://example.com/f8-i386/os/</cmdline>
<dtb>/root/ppc.dtb</dtb>
</os>
...
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...
<os>
<smbios mode='sysinfo'/>
...
</os>
<sysinfo type='smbios'>
<bios>
<entry name='vendor'>LENOVO</entry>
</bios>
<system>
<entry name='manufacturer'>Fedora</entry>
<entry name='vendor'>Virt-Manager</entry>
</system>
</sysinfo>
...
T he <sysinfo> element has a mandatory attribute type that determines the layout of sub-elements, and
may be defined as follows:
<sm bios> - Sub-elements call out specific SMBIOS values, which will affect the guest virtual machine if
used in conjunction with the sm bios sub-element of the <os> element. Each sub-element of
<sysinfo> names a SMBIOS block, and within those elements can be a list of entry elements that
describe a field within the block. T he following blocks and entries are recognized:
<bios> - T his is block 0 of SMBIOS, with entry names drawn from vendor, version, date, and
release.
<system > - T his is block 1 of SMBIOS, with entry names drawn from m anufacturer, product,
version, serial, uuid, sku, and fam ily. If a uuid entry is provided alongside a top-level uuid
element, the two values must match.
<domain>
...
<vcpu placement='static' cpuset="1-4,^3,6" current="1">2</vcpu>
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...
</domain>
T he <cpu> element defines the maximum number of virtual CPUs allocated for the guest virtual machine
operating system, which must be between 1 and the maximum number supported by the hypervisor. T his
element can contain an optional cpuset attribute, which is a comma-separated list of physical CPU
numbers that the domain process and virtual CPUs can be pinned to by default.
Note that the pinning policy of the domain process and virtual CPUs can be specified separately by using
the cputune attribute. If the em ulatorpin attribute is specified in <cputune>, cpuset specified by
<vcpu> will be ignored.
Similarly, virtual CPUs that have set a value for vcpupin cause cpuset settings to be ignored. For virtual
CPUs where vcpupin is not specified, it will be pinned to the physical CPUs specified by cpuset. Each
element in the cpuset list is either a single CPU number, a range of CPU numbers, or a caret (^) followed
by a CPU number to be excluded from a previous range. T he attribute current can be used to specify
whether fewer than the maximum number of virtual CPUs should be enabled.
T he optional attribute placem ent can be used to indicate the CPU placement mode for domain process.
Its value can be either static or auto, which defaults to placem ent, or num atune, or static if
cpuset is specified. auto indicates the domain process will be pinned to the advisory nodeset from
querying numad, and the value of attribute cpuset will be ignored if it is specified. If both cpuset and
placem ent are not specified, or if placement is static, but no cpuset is specified, the domain process
will be pinned to all the available physical CPUs.
<domain>
...
<cputune>
<vcpupin vcpu="0" cpuset="1-4,^2"/>
<vcpupin vcpu="1" cpuset="0,1"/>
<vcpupin vcpu="2" cpuset="2,3"/>
<vcpupin vcpu="3" cpuset="0,4"/>
<emulatorpin cpuset="1-3"/>
<shares>2048</shares>
<period>1000000</period>
<quota>-1</quota>
<emulator_period>1000000</emulator_period>
<emulator_quota>-1</emulator_quota>
</cputune>
...
</domain>
Although all are optional, the components of this section of the domain XML are as follows:
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Element Description
<cputune> Provides details regarding the CPU tunable
parameters for the domain. T his is optional.
<vcpupin> Specifies which of host physical machine's
physical CPUs the domain vCPU will be pinned to.
If this is omitted, and the cpuset attribute of the
<vcpu> element is not specified, the vCPU is
pinned to all the physical CPUs by default. It
contains two required attributes: the <vcpu>
attribute specifies id, and the cpuset attribute is
same as the cpuset attribute in the <vcpu>
element.
<em ulatorpin> Specifies which of the host physical machine CPUs
the "emulator" (a subset of a domains not
including <vcpu>) will be pinned to. If this is
omitted, and the cpuset attribute in the <vcpu>
element is not specified, the "emulator" is pinned
to all the physical CPUs by default. It contains one
required cpuset attribute specifying which
physical CPUs to pin to. em ulatorpin is not
allowed if the placem ent attribute in the <vcpu>
element is set as auto.
<shares> Specifies the proportional weighted share for the
domain. If this is omitted, it defaults to the
operating system provided defaults. If there is no
unit for the value, it is calculated relative to the
setting of the other guest virtual machine. For
example, a guest virtual machine configured with a
<shares> value of 2048 will get twice as much
CPU time as a guest virtual machine configured
with a <shares> value of 1024.
<period> Specifies the enforcement interval in
microseconds. By using <period>, each of the
domain's vCPUs will not be allowed to consume
more than its allotted quota worth of run time. T his
value should be within the following range: 1000-
1000000. A <period> with a value of 0 means
no value.
<quota> Specifies the maximum allowed bandwidth in
microseconds. A domain with <quota> as any
negative value indicates that the domain has
infinite bandwidth, which means that it is not
bandwidth controlled. T he value should be within
the following range: 1000 -
184 4 674 4 073709551 or less than 0. A quota
with value of 0 means no value. You can use this
feature to ensure that all vCPUs run at the same
speed.
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Element Description
<em ulator_period> Specifies the enforcement interval in
microseconds. Within an <em ulator_period>,
emulator threads (those excluding vCPUs) of the
domain will not be allowed to consume more than
the <em ulator_quota> worth of run time. T he
<em ulator_period> value should be in the
following range: 1000 - 1000000. An
<em ulator_period> with value of 0 means no
value.
<em ulator_quota> Specifies the maximum allowed bandwidth in
microseconds for the domain's emulator threads
(those excluding vCPUs). A domain with an
<em ulator_quota> as a negative value
indicates that the domain has infinite bandwidth for
emulator threads (those excluding vCPUs), which
means that it is not bandwidth controlled. T he
value should be in the following range: 1000 -
184 4 674 4 073709551, or less than 0. An
<em ulator_quota> with value 0 means no
value.
<domain>
...
<memoryBacking>
<hugepages/>
</memoryBacking>
...
</domain>
T he optional <m em oryBacking> element may have an <hugepages> element set within it. T his tells
the hypervisor that the guest virtual machine should have its memory allocated using hugepages instead
of using the default native page size.
<domain>
...
<memtune>
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<hard_limit unit='G'>1</hard_limit>
<soft_limit unit='M'>128</soft_limit>
<swap_hard_limit unit='G'>2</swap_hard_limit>
<min_guarantee unit='bytes'>67108864</min_guarantee>
</memtune>
...
</domain>
Although <m em tune> is optional, the components of this section of the domain XML are as follows:
Element Description
<m em tune> Provides details regarding the memory tunable
parameters for the domain. If this is omitted, it
defaults to the operating system provided defaults.
As parameters are applied to the process as a
whole, when setting limits, determine values by
adding the guest virtual machine RAM to the guest
virtual machine video RAM, allowing for some
memory overhead. For each tunable, it is possible
to designate which unit the number is in on input,
using the same values as for <m em ory>. For
backwards compatibility, output is always in
kibibytes (KiB).
<hard_lim it> T he maximum memory the guest virtual machine
can use. T his value is expressed in kibibytes
(blocks of 1024 bytes).
<soft_lim it> T he memory limit to enforce during memory
contention. T his value is expressed in kibibytes
(blocks of 1024 bytes).
<swap_hard_lim it> T he maximum memory plus swap the guest virtual
machine can use. T his value is expressed in
kibibytes (blocks of 1024 bytes). T his must be
more than <hard_lim it> value.
<m in_guarantee> T he guaranteed minimum memory allocation for
the guest virtual machine. T his value is expressed
in kibibytes (blocks of 1024 bytes).
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T he currentMemory attribute determines the actual memory allocation for a guest virtual machine. T his
value can be less than the maximum allocation, to allow for the guest virtual machine memory to balloon as
needed. If omitted, this defaults to the same value as the memory element. T he unit attribute behaves the
same as for memory.
<domain>
<domain>
...
<numatune>
<memory mode="strict" nodeset="1-4,^3"/>
</numatune>
...
</domain>
Although all are optional, the components of this section of the domain XML are as follows:
Element Description
<num atune> Provides details of how to tune the performance of
a NUMA host physical machine by controlling
NUMA policy for domain processes.
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Element Description
<m em ory> Specifies how to allocate memory for the domain
processes on a NUMA host physical machine. It
contains several optional attributes. T he m ode
attriibute can be set to interleave, strict, or
preferred. If no value is given it defaults to
strict. T he nodeset attribute specifies the
NUMA nodes, using the same syntax as the
cpuset attribute of the <vcpu> element. Attribute
placem ent can be used to indicate the memory
placement mode for the domain process. Its value
can be either static or auto. If the <nodeset>
attribute is specified it defaults to the
<placem ent> of <vcpu>, or static. auto
indicates the domain process will only allocate
memory from the advisory nodeset returned from
querying numad and the value of the nodeset
attribute will be ignored if it is specified. If the
<placem ent> attribute in vcpu is set to auto,
and the <num atune> attribute is not specified, a
default <num atune> with <placem ent> auto
and strict mode will be added implicitly.
<domain>
...
<blkiotune>
<weight>800</weight>
<device>
<path>/dev/sda</path>
<weight>1000</weight>
</device>
<device>
<path>/dev/sdb</path>
<weight>500</weight>
</device>
</blkiotune>
...
</domain>
Although all are optional, the components of this section of the domain XML are as follows:
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Element Description
<blkiotune> T his optional element provides the ability to tune
blkio cgroup tunable parameters for the domain.
If this is omitted, it defaults to the operating system
provided defaults.
<weight> T his optional weight element is the overall I/O
weight of the guest virtual machine. T he value
should be within the range 100 - 1000.
<device> T he domain may have multiple <device>
elements that further tune the weights for each
host physical machine block device in use by the
domain. Note that multiple guest virtual machine
disks can share a single host physical machine
block device. In addition, as they are backed by
files within the same host physical machine file
system, this tuning parameter is at the global
domain level, rather than being associated with
each guest virtual machine disk device (contrast
this to the <iotune> element which can be
applied to a single <disk>). Each device element
has two mandatory sub-elements, <path>
describing the absolute path of the device, and
<weight> giving the relative weight of that device,
which has an acceptable range of 100 - 1000.
<resource>
<partition>/virtualmachines/production</partition>
</resource>
Resource partitions are currently supported by the KVM and LXC drivers, which map partition paths to
cgroups directories in all mounted controllers.
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topology is specified using the following elements from the domain XML:
<cpu match='exact'>
<model fallback='allow'>core2duo</model>
<vendor>Intel</vendor>
<topology sockets='1' cores='2' threads='1'/>
<feature policy='disable' name='lahf_lm'/>
</cpu>
<cpu mode='host-model'>
<model fallback='forbid'/>
<topology sockets='1' cores='2' threads='1'/>
</cpu>
<cpu mode='host-passthrough'/>
In cases where no restrictions are to be put on the CPU model or its features, a simpler <cpu> element
such as the following may be used:
<cpu>
<topology sockets='1' cores='2' threads='1'/>
</cpu>
Element Description
<cpu> T his is the main container for describing guest
virtual machine CPU requirements.
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Element Description
<m atch> Specifies how the virtual CPU is provided to the
guest virtual machine must match these
requirements. T he m atch attribute can be omitted
if topology is the only element within <cpu>.
Possible values for the m atch attribute are:
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Element Description
<m ode> T his optional attribute may be used to make it
easier to configure a guest virtual machine CPU to
be as close to the host physical machine CPU as
possible. Possible values for the m ode attribute
are:
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Chapter 29. Manipulating the domain XML
Element Description
<m odel> Specifies the CPU model requested by the guest
virtual machine. T he list of available CPU models
and their definition can be found in the
cpu_m ap.xm l file installed in libvirt's data
directory. If a hypervisor is unable to use the exact
CPU model, libvirt automatically falls back to a
closest model supported by the hypervisor while
maintaining the list of CPU features. An optional
fallback attribute can be used to forbid this
behavior, in which case an attempt to start a
domain requesting an unsupported CPU model will
fail. Supported values for fallback attribute are:
allow (the default), and forbid. T he optional
vendor_id attribute can be used to set the
vendor ID seen by the guest virtual machine. It
must be exactly 12 characters long. If not set, the
vendor iID of the host physical machine is used.
T ypical possible values are AuthenticAMD and
GenuineIntel.
<vendor> Specifies the CPU vendor requested by the guest
virtual machine. If this element is missing, the
guest virtual machine runs on a CPU matching
given features regardless of its vendor. T he list of
supported vendors can be found in
cpu_m ap.xm l.
<topology> Specifies the requested topology of the virtual CPU
provided to the guest virtual machine. T hree non-
zero values must be given for sockets, cores, and
threads: the total number of CPU sockets, number
of cores per socket, and number of threads per
core, respectively.
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Element Description
<feature> Can contain zero or more elements used to fine-
tune features provided by the selected CPU model.
T he list of known feature names can be found in
the cpu_m ap.xm l file. T he meaning of each
feature element depends on its policy attribute,
which has to be set to one of the following values:
2. Open the guest virtual machine's configuration file by running the virsh edit [dom ain]
command.
3. Change the parameters within the <feature> or <m odel> to include the attribute value 'allow'
to force the feature to be allowed, or 'forbid' to deny support for the feature.
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</cpu>
4. When you have completed the changes, save the configuration file and start the guest virtual
machine.
<cpu>
<numa>
<cell cpus='0-3' memory='512000'/>
<cell cpus='4-7' memory='512000'/>
</numa>
</cpu>
...
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Each cell element specifies a NUMA cell or a NUMA node. cpus specifies the CPU or range of CPUs that
are part of the node. m em ory specifies the node memory in kibibytes (blocks of 1024 bytes). Each cell or
node is assigned a cellid or nodeid in increasing order starting from 0.
<on_poweroff>destroy</on_poweroff>
<on_reboot>restart</on_reboot>
<on_crash>restart</on_crash>
<on_lockfailure>poweroff</on_lockfailure>
T he following collections of elements allow the actions to be specified when a guest virtual machine
operating system triggers a life cycle operation. A common use case is to force a reboot to be treated as a
poweroff when doing the initial operating system installation. T his allows the VM to be re-configured for the
first post-install bootup.
State Description
<on_poweroff> Specifies the action that is to be executed when
the guest virtual machine requests a poweroff.
Four arguments are possible:
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Chapter 29. Manipulating the domain XML
State Description
<on_reboot> Specifies the action to be executed when the guest
virtual machine requests a reboot. Four arguments
are possible:
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State Description
<on_lockfailure> Specifies the action to take when a lock manager
loses resource locks. T he following actions are
recognized by libvirt, although not all of them need
to be supported by individual lock managers. When
no action is specified, each lock manager will take
its default action. T he following arguments are
possible:
...
<pm>
<suspend-to-disk enabled='no'/>
<suspend-to-mem enabled='yes'/>
</pm>
...
T he <pm > element can be enabled using the argument yes or disabled using the argument no. BIOS
support can be implemented for S3 using the suspend-to-disk argument and S4 using the suspend-
to-m em argument for ACPI sleep states. If nothing is specified, the hypervisor will be left with its default
value.
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...
<features>
<pae/>
<acpi/>
<apic/>
<hap/>
<privnet/>
<hyperv>
<relaxed state='on'/>
</hyperv>
</features>
...
All features are listed within the <features> element, if a <state> is not specified it is disabled. T he
available features can be found by calling the capabilities XML, but a common set for fully virtualized
domains are:
State Description
<pae> Physical address extension mode allows 32-bit
guest virtual machines to address more than 4 GB
of memory.
<acpi> Useful for power management, for example, with
KVM guest virtual machines it is required for
graceful shutdown to work.
<apic> Allows the use of programmable IRQ management.
T his element has an optional attribute eoi with
values on and off, which sets the availability of
EOI (End of Interrupt) for the guest virtual machine.
<hap> Enables the use of hardware assisted paging if it
is available in the hardware.
<hyperv> Enables various features to improve the behavior
of guest virtual machines running Microsoft
Windows. Using the optional attribute relaxed
with values on or off enables or disables the
relax constraints on timers.
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Accurate timekeeping on guest virtual machines is a key challenge for virtualization platforms. Different
hypervisors attempt to handle the problem of timekeeping in a variety of ways. libvirt provides hypervisor-
independent configuration settings for time management, using the <clock> and <timer> elements in the
domain XML. T he domain XML can be edited using the virsh edit command. See Section 26.6, “Editing
a guest virtual machine's configuration file” for details.
...
<clock offset='localtime'>
<timer name='rtc' tickpolicy='catchup' track='guest'>
<catchup threshold='123' slew='120' limit='10000'/>
</timer>
<timer name='pit' tickpolicy='delay'/>
</clock>
...
State Description
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Chapter 29. Manipulating the domain XML
State Description
<clock> T he <clock> element is used to determine how
the guest virtual machine clock is synchronized
with the host physical machine clock. T he offset
attribute takes four possible values, allowing for
fine grained control over how the guest virtual
machine clock is synchronized to the host physical
machine. Note that hypervisors are not required to
support all policies across all time sources
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A <clock> element can have zero or more <tim er> elements as children. T he <tim er>
element specifies a time source used for guest virtual machine clock synchronization.
In each <tim er> element only the nam e is required, and all other attributes are optional:
nam e - Selects which tim er is being modified. T he following values are acceptable:
kvm clock, pit, or rtc.
track - Specifies the timer track. T he following values are acceptable: boot, guest, or wall.
track is only valid for nam e="rtc".
tickpolicy - Determines what happens when the deadline for injecting a tick to the guest
virtual machine is missed. T he following values can be assigned:
delay - Continues to deliver ticks at the normal rate. T he guest virtual machine time will be
delayed due to the late tick.
catchup - Delivers ticks at a higher rate in order to catch up with the missed tick. T he guest
virtual machine time is not displayed once catch up is complete. In addition, there can be
three optional attributes, each a positive integer: threshold, slew, and limit.
m erge - Merges the missed tick(s) into one tick and injects them. T he guest virtual machine
time may be delayed, depending on how the merge is done.
discard - T hrows away the missed tick(s) and continues with future injection at its default
interval setting. T he guest virtual machine time may be delayed, unless there is an explicit
statement for handling lost ticks.
Note
T he value utc is set as the clock offset in a virtual machine by default. However, if the guest virtual
machine clock is run with the localtime value, the clock offset needs to be changed to a different
value in order to have the guest virtual machine clock synchronized with the host physical machine
clock.
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Value Description
pit Programmable Interval T imer - a timer with periodic
interrupts. When using this attribute, the
tickpolicy delay becomes the default setting.
rtc Real T ime Clock - a continuously running timer
with periodic interrupts. T his attribute supports the
tickpolicy catchup sub-element.
kvmclock KVM clock - the recommended clock source for
KVM guest virtual machines. KVM pvclock, or kvm-
clock allows guest virtual machines to read the
host physical machine’s wall clock time.
hypervclock Hyper-V clock for Windows guest virtual machines
only. T his is the recommended clock source for all
Windows guests.
T he track attribute specifies what is tracked by the timer, and is only valid for a nam e value of rtc.
Value Description
boot Corresponds to old host physical machine option,
this is an unsupported tracking option.
guest RT C always tracks the guest virtual machine time.
wall RT C always tracks the host time.
T he tickpolicy attribute and the values dictate the policy that is used to pass ticks on to the guest
virtual machine.
Value Description
delay Continue to deliver at normal rate (ticks are
delayed).
catchup Deliver at a higher rate to catch up.
merge T icks merged into one single tick.
discard All missed ticks are discarded.
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T he present attribute is used to override the default set of timers visible to the guest virtual machine.
T he present attribute can take the following values:
Value Description
yes Force this timer to be visible to the guest virtual
machine.
no Force this timer to not be visible to the guest virtual
machine.
29.18. Devices
T his set of XML elements are all used to describe devices provided to the guest virtual machine domain.
All of the devices below are indicated as children of the main <devices> element.
...
<devices>
<emulator>/usr/lib/kvm/bin/kvm-dm</emulator>
</devices>
...
T he contents of the <em ulator> element specify the fully qualified path to the device model emulator
binary. T he capabilities XML specifies the recommended default emulator to use for each particular domain
type or architecture combination.
...
<devices>
<disk type='file' snapshot='external'>
<driver name="tap" type="aio" cache="default"/>
<source file='/var/lib/xen/images/fv0' startupPolicy='optional'>
<seclabel relabel='no'/>
</source>
<target dev='hda' bus='ide'/>
<iotune>
<total_bytes_sec>10000000</total_bytes_sec>
<read_iops_sec>400000</read_iops_sec>
<write_iops_sec>100000</write_iops_sec>
</iotune>
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Chapter 29. Manipulating the domain XML
<boot order='2'/>
<encryption type='...'>
...
</encryption>
<shareable/>
<serial>
...
</serial>
</disk>
<disk type='network'>
<driver name="qemu" type="raw" io="threads" ioeventfd="on" event_idx="off"/>
<source protocol="sheepdog" name="image_name">
<host name="hostname" port="7000"/>
</source>
<target dev="hdb" bus="ide"/>
<boot order='1'/>
<transient/>
<address type='drive' controller='0' bus='1' unit='0'/>
</disk>
<disk type='network'>
<driver name="qemu" type="raw"/>
<source protocol="rbd" name="image_name2">
<host name="hostname" port="7000"/>
</source>
<target dev="hdd" bus="ide"/>
<auth username='myuser'>
<secret type='ceph' usage='mypassid'/>
</auth>
</disk>
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<auth username='myuser'>
<secret type='chap' usage='libvirtiscsi'/>
</auth>
<target dev='vda' bus='virtio'/>
</disk>
<disk type='file' device='disk'>
<driver name='qemu' type='raw' cache='none'/>
<source file='/tmp/test.img' startupPolicy='optional'/>
<target dev='sdb' bus='scsi'/>
<readonly/>
</disk>
<disk type='file' device='disk'>
<driver name='qemu' type='raw' discard='unmap'/>
<source file='/var/lib/libvirt/images/discard1.img'/>
<target dev='vdb' bus='virtio'/>
<alias name='virtio-disk1'/>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x00' slot='0x09' function='0x0'/>
</disk>
</devices>
...
T he <disk> element is the main container for describing disks. T he attribute type can be used with the
<disk> element. T he following types are allowed:
file
block
dir
network
If <disk type='file'>, then the file attribute specifies the fully-qualified path to the file holding the
disk. If <disk type='block'>, then the dev attribute specifies the path to the host physical machine
device to serve as the disk. With both file and block, one or more optional sub-elements seclabel,
described below, can be used to override the domain security labeling policy for just that source file. If the
disk type is dir, then the dir attribute specifies the fully-qualified path to the directory to use as the disk.
If the disk type is network, then the protocol attribute specifies the protocol to access to the requested
image; possible values are nbd, rbd, sheepdog or gluster.
If the protocol attribute is rbd, sheepdog or gluster, an additional attribute nam e is mandatory to
specify which volume and or image will be used. When the disk type is network, the source may have
zero or more host sub-elements used to specify the host physical machines to connect, including:
type='dir' and type='network'. For a file disk type which represents a CD-ROM or floppy (the
device attribute), it is possible to define the policy for what to do with the disk if the source file is not
accessible. T his is done by setting the startupPolicy attribute with one of the following values:
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Chapter 29. Manipulating the domain XML
m andatory causes a failure if missing for any reason. T his is the default setting.
requisite causes a failure if missing on boot up, drops if missing on migrate, restore, or revert.
T his element is present if the hypervisor has started a BlockCopy operation, where the <m irror>
location in the attribute file will eventually have the same contents as the source, and with the file format in
attribute format (which might differ from the format of the source). If an attribute ready is present, then it is
known the disk is ready to pivot; otherwise, the disk is probably still copying. For now, this element only
valid in output; it is ignored on input.
T he <target> element controls the bus or device under which the disk is exposed to the guest virtual
machine operating system. T he dev attribute indicates the logical device name. T he actual device name
specified is not guaranteed to map to the device name in the guest virtual machine operating system. T he
optional bus attribute specifies the type of disk device to emulate; possible values are driver specific, with
typical values being ide, scsi, virtio, kvm , usb or sata. If omitted, the bus type is inferred from the
style of the device name. For example, a device named 'sda' will typically be exported using a SCSI bus.
T he optional attribute tray indicates the tray status of the removable disks (for example, CD-ROM or
Floppy disk), where the value can be either open or closed. T he default setting is closed. For more
information, see T arget Elements.
T he optional <iotune> element provides the ability to provide additional per-device I/O tuning, with values
that can vary for each device (contrast this to the blkiotune element, which applies globally to the
domain). T his element has the following optional sub-elements (note that any sub-element not specified or
at all or specified with a value of 0 implies no limit):
<total_bytes_sec> - T he total throughput limit in bytes per second. T his element cannot be used
with <read_bytes_sec> or <write_bytes_sec>.
<total_iops_sec> - T he total I/O operations per second. T his element cannot be used with
<read_iops_sec> or <write_iops_sec>.
T he optional <driver> element allows specifying further details related to the hypervisor driver that is
used to provide the disk. T he following options may be used:
If the hypervisor supports multiple back-end drivers, the nam e attribute selects the primary back-end
driver name, while the optional type attribute provides the sub-type. For a list of possible types, refer to
Driver Elements.
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T he optional cache attribute controls the cache mechanism. Possible values are: default, none,
writethrough, writeback, directsync (similar to writethrough, but it bypasses the host
physical machine page cache) and unsafe (host physical machine may cache all disk I/O, and sync
requests from guest virtual machines are ignored).
T he optional error_policy attribute controls how the hypervisor behaves on a disk read or write
error. Possible values are stop, report, ignore, and enospace. T he default setting of
error_policy is report. T here is also an optional rerror_policy that controls behavior for
read errors only. If no rerror_policy is given, error_policy is used for both read and write
errors. If rerror_policy is given, it overrides the error_policy for read errors. Also note that
enospace is not a valid policy for read errors, so if error_policy is set to enospace and no
rerror_policy is given, the read error default setting, report will be used.
T he optional io attribute controls specific policies on I/O; kvm guest virtual machines support
threads and native. T he optional ioeventfd attribute allows users to set domain I/O
asynchronous handling for disk devices. T he default is determined by the hypervisor. Accepted values
are on and off. Enabling this allows the guest virtual machine to be executed while a separate thread
handles I/O. T ypically, guest virtual machines experiencing high system CPU utilization during I/O will
benefit from this. On the other hand, an overloaded host physical machine can increase guest virtual
machine I/O latency. However, it is recommended that you not change the default setting, and allow the
hypervisor to dictate the setting.
T he optional event_idx attribute controls some aspects of device event processing and can be set
to either on or off. If set to on, it will reduce the number of interrupts and exits for the guest virtual
machine. T he default is determined by the hypervisor and the default setting is on. When this behavior
is not desired, setting off forces the feature off. However, it is highly recommended that you not
change the default setting, and allow the hypervisor to dictate the setting.
T he optional copy_on_read attribute controls whether to copy the read backing file into the image file.
T he accepted values can be either on or <off>. copy-on-read avoids accessing the same backing
file sectors repeatedly, and is useful when the backing file is over a slow network. By default copy-
on-read is off.
T he discard='unm ap' can be set to enable discard support. T he same line can be replaced with
discard='ignore' to disable. discard='ignore' is the default setting.
<order> - Determines the order in which devices will be tried during boot sequence.
<per-device> Boot elements cannot be used together with general boot elements in the BIOS
bootloader section.
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<readonly> - Indicates the device cannot be modified by the guest virtual machine virtual machine.
T his setting is the default for disks with attribute <device='cdrom '>.
<shareable> Indicates the device is expected to be shared between domains (as long as hypervisor
and operating system support this). If shareable is used, cache='no' should be used for that
device.
<transient> - Indicates that changes to the device contents should be reverted automatically when
the guest virtual machine exits. With some hypervisors, marking a disk transient prevents the
domain from participating in migration or snapshots.
<serial>- Specifies the serial number of guest virtual machine's hard drive. For example,
<serial>WD-WMAP9A966149</serial>.
<wwn> - Specifies the WWN (World Wide Name) of a virtual hard disk or CD-ROM drive. It must be
composed of 16 hexadecimal digits.
<vendor> - Specifies the vendor of a virtual hard disk or CD-ROM device. It must not be longer than 8
printable characters.
<product> - Specifies the product of a virtual hard disk or CD-ROM device. It must not be longer than
16 printable characters
<host> - Supports 4 attributes: viz, nam e, port, transport and socket, which specify the
hostname, the port number, transport type, and path to socket, respectively. T he meaning of this
element and the number of the elements depend on the protocol attribute as shown here:
nbd - Specifies a server running nbd-server and may only be used for only one host physical
machine.
rbd - Monitors servers of RBD type and may be used for one or more host physical machines.
sheepdog - Specifies one of the sheepdog servers (default is localhost:7000) and can be
usedwith one or none of the host physical machines.
gluster - Specifies a server running a glusterd daemon and may be used for only only one host
physical machine. T he valid values for transport attribute are tcp, rdm a or unix. If nothing is
specified, tcp is assumed. If transport is unix, the socket attribute specifies path to unix socket.
<address> - T ies the disk to a given slot of a controller. T he actual <controller> device can often
be inferred but it can also be explicitly specified. T he type attribute is mandatory, and is typically pci
or drive. For a pci controller, additional attributes for bus, slot, and function must be present, as
well as optional dom ain and m ultifunction. m ultifunction defaults to off. For a drive
controller, additional attributes controller, bus, target, and unit are available, each with a default
setting of 0.
auth - Provides the authentication credentials needed to access the source. It includes a mandatory
attribute usernam e, which identifies the username to use during authentication, as well as a sub-
element secret with mandatory attribute type. More information can be found here at Device
Elements.
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geom etry - Provides the ability to override geometry settings. T his mostly useful for S390 DASD-
disks or older DOS-disks.
trans - Specifies the BIOS-T ranslation-Modus and can have the following values: none, lba or auto.
blockio - Allows the block device to be overridden with any of the block device properties listed
below:
blockio options
logical_block_size - Reports to the guest virtual machine operating system and describes the
smallest units for disk I/O.
physical_block_size - Reports to the guest virtual machine operating system and describes
the disk's hardware sector size, which can be relevant for the alignment of disk data.
29.18.2. Filesystems
T he filesystems directory on the host physical machine can be accessed directly from the guest virtual
machine.
...
<devices>
<filesystem type='template'>
<source name='my-vm-template'/>
<target dir='/'/>
</filesystem>
<filesystem type='mount' accessmode='passthrough'>
<driver type='path' wrpolicy='immediate'/>
<source dir='/export/to/guest'/>
<target dir='/import/from/host'/>
<readonly/>
</filesystem>
...
</devices>
...
type='m ount' - Specifies the host physical machine directory to mount in the guest virtual machine.
T his is the default type if one is not specified. T his mode also has an optional sub-element driver,
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Chapter 29. Manipulating the domain XML
type='tem plate' - Specifies the OpenVZ filesystem template and is only used by OpenVZ driver.
type='file' - Specifies that a host physical machine file will be treated as an image and mounted in
the guest virtual machine. T his filesystem format will be autodetected and is only used by LXC driver.
type='block' - Specifies the host physical machine block device to mount in the guest virtual
machine. T he filesystem format will be autodetected and is only used by the LXC driver.
type='ram ' - Specifies that an in-memory filesystem, using memory from the host physical machine
operating system will be used. T he source element has a single attribute usage, which gives the
memory usage limit in kibibytes and is only used by LXC driver.
type='bind' - Specifies a directory inside the guest virtual machine which will be bound to another
directory inside the guest virtual machine. T his element is only used by LXC driver.
accessm ode - Specifies the security mode for accessing the source. Currently this only works with
type='m ount' for the KVM driver. T he possible values are:
passthrough - Specifies that the source is accessed with the user's permission settings that are
set from inside the guest virtual machine. T his is the default accessm ode if one is not specified.
m apped - Specifies that the source is accessed with the permission settings of the hypervisor.
squash - Similar to 'passthrough', the exception is that failure of privileged operations like
chown are ignored. T his makes a passthrough-like mode usable for people who run the hypervisor
as non-root.
source - Specifies that the resource on the host physical machine that is being accessed in the guest
virtual machine. T he nam e attribute must be used with <type='tem plate'>, and the dir attribute
must be used with <type='m ount'>. T he usage attribute is used with <type='ram '> to set the
memory limit in KB.
target - Dictates where the source drivers can be accessed in the guest virtual machine. For most
drivers, this is an automatic mount point, but for KVM this is merely an arbitrary string tag that is
exported to the guest virtual machine as a hint for where to mount.
readonly - Enables exporting the filesytem as a read-only mount for a guest virtual machine. By
default read-write access is given.
space_hard_lim it - Specifies the maximum space available to this guest virtual machine's
filesystem.
space_soft_lim it - Specifies the maximum space available to this guest virtual machine's
filesystem. T he container is permitted to exceed its soft limits for a grace period of time. Afterwards the
hard limit is enforced.
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Many devices have an optional <address> sub-element to describe where the device placed on the
virtual bus is presented to the guest virtual machine. If an address (or any optional attribute within an
address) is omitted on input, libvirt will generate an appropriate address; but an explicit address is
required if more control over layout is required. See below for device examples including an address
element.
Every address has a mandatory attribute type that describes which bus the device is on. T he choice of
which address to use for a given device is constrained in part by the device and the architecture of the
guest virtual machine. For example, a disk device uses type='disk', while a console device would use
type='pci' on i686 or x86_64 guest virtual machines, or type='spapr-vio' on PowerPC64 pseries
guest virtual machines. Each address <type> has additional optional attributes that control where on the
bus the device will be placed. T he additional attributes are as follows:
Also available is the m ultifunction attribute, which controls turning on the multifunction bit for a
particular slot or function in the PCI control register. T his multifunction attribute defaults to 'off',
but should be set to 'on' for function 0 of a slot that will have multiple functions used.
type='ccid' - A CCID address, used for smart-cards, has the following additional attributes:
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Chapter 29. Manipulating the domain XML
type='spapr-vio - On PowerPC pseries guest virtual machines, devices can be assigned to the
SPAPR-VIO bus. It has a flat 64-bit address space; by convention, devices are generally assigned at a
non-zero multiple of 0x1000, but other addresses are valid and permitted by libvirt. T he additional
attribute: reg (the hex value address of the starting register) can be assigned to this attribute.
29.18.4. Controllers
Depending on the guest virtual machine architecture, it is possible to assign many virtual devices to a
single bus. Under normal circumstances libvirt can automatically infer which controller to use for the bus.
However, it may be necessary to provide an explicit <controller> element in the guest virtual machine
XML:
...
<devices>
<controller type='ide' index='0'/>
<controller type='virtio-serial' index='0' ports='16' vectors='4'/>
<controller type='virtio-serial' index='1'>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x00' slot='0x0a' function='0x0'/>
<controller type='scsi' index='0' model='virtio-scsi' num_queues='8'/>
</controller>
...
</devices>
...
Each controller has a mandatory attribute type, which must be one of "ide", "fdc", "scsi",
"sata", "usb", "ccid", or "virtio-serial", and a mandatory attribute index which is the
decimal integer describing in which order the bus controller is encountered (for use in controller attributes
of address elements). T he "virtio-serial" controller has two additional optional attributes, ports
and vectors, which control how many devices can be connected through the controller.
A "usb" controller has an optional attribute m odel, which is one of "piix3-uhci", "piix4 -uhci",
"ehci", "ich9-ehci1", "ich9-uhci1", "ich9-uhci2", "ich9-uhci3", "vt82c686b-
uhci", "pci-ohci" or "nec-xhci". Additionally, if the USB bus needs to be explicitly disabled for
the guest virtual machine, m odel='none' may be used. T he PowerPC64 "spapr-vio" addresses do not
have an associated controller.
For controllers that are themselves devices on a PCI or USB bus, an optional sub-element address can
specify the exact relationship of the controller to its master bus, with semantics given above.
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USB companion controllers have an optional sub-element m aster to specify the exact relationship of the
companion to its master controller. A companion controller is on the same bus as its master, so the
companion index value should be equal.
...
<devices>
<controller type='usb' index='0' model='ich9-ehci1'>
<address type='pci' domain='0' bus='0' slot='4' function='7'/>
</controller>
<controller type='usb' index='0' model='ich9-uhci1'>
<master startport='0'/>
<address type='pci' domain='0' bus='0' slot='4' function='0'
multifunction='on'/>
</controller>
...
</devices>
...
...
<devices>
...
<lease>
<lockspace>somearea</lockspace>
<key>somekey</key>
<target path='/some/lease/path' offset='1024'/>
</lease>
...
</devices>
...
lockspace - An arbitrary string that identifies lockspace within which the key is held. Lock managers
may impose extra restrictions on the format, or length of the lockspace name.
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key - An arbitrary string that uniquely identies the lease to be acquired. Lock managers may impose
extra restrictions on the format, or length of the key.
target - T he fully qualified path of the file associated with the lockspace. T he offset specifies where
the lease is stored within the file. If the lock manager does not require a offset, set this value to 0.
T he host physical machine's USB and PCI devices can be passed through to the guest virtual machine
using the hostdev element, by modifying the host physical machine using a management tool, configure
the following section of the domain XML file:
...
<devices>
<hostdev mode='subsystem' type='usb'>
<source startupPolicy='optional'>
<vendor id='0x1234'/>
<product id='0xbeef'/>
</source>
<boot order='2'/>
</hostdev>
</devices>
...
...
<devices>
<hostdev mode='subsystem' type='pci' managed='yes'>
<source>
<address bus='0x06' slot='0x02' function='0x0'/>
</source>
<boot order='1'/>
<rom bar='on' file='/etc/fake/boot.bin'/>
</hostdev>
</devices>
...
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...
<devices>
<hostdev mode='subsystem' type='scsi'>
<source>
<adapter name='scsi_host0'/>
<address type='scsi' bus='0' target='0' unit='0'/>
</source>
<readonly/>
<address type='drive' controller='0' bus='0' target='0' unit='0'/>
</hostdev>
</devices>
..
Parameter Description
hostdev T his is the main container for describing host
physical machine devices. For USB device
passthrough m ode is always subsystem and
type is usb for a USB device and pci for a PCI
device. When m anaged is yes for a PCI device, it
is detached from the host physical machine before
being passed on to the guest virtual machine, and
reattached to the host physical machine after the
guest virtual machine exits. If m anaged is omitted
or no for PCI and for USB devices, the user is
responsible to use the argument
virNodeDeviceDettach (or virsh nodedev-
dettach) before starting the guest virtual
machine or hot-plugging the device, and
virNodeDeviceReAttach (or virsh
nodedev-reattach) after hot-unplug or
stopping the guest virtual machine.
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Parameter Description
source Describes the device as seen from the host
physical machine. T he USB device can be
addressed by vendor or product ID using the
vendor and product elements or by the device's
address on the host physical machines using the
address element. PCI devices on the other hand
can only be described by their address. Note that
the source element of USB devices may contain a
startupPolicy attribute which can be used to
define a rule for what to do if the specified host
physical machine USB device is not found. T he
attribute accepts the following values:
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Parameter Description
address Also has a bus and device attribute to specify
the USB bus and device number the device
appears at on the host physical machine. T he
values of these attributes can be given in decimal,
hexadecimal (starting with 0x) or octal (starting
with 0) form. For PCI devices, the element carries 3
attributes allowing to designate the device as can
be found with lspci or with virsh nodedev-
list.
T he host physical machine's block / character devices can be passed through to the guest virtual machine
by using management tools to modify the domain XML hostdev element. Note that this is only possible
with container based virtualization.
...
<hostdev mode='capabilities' type='storage'>
<source>
<block>/dev/sdf1</block>
</source>
</hostdev>
...
Figure 29.4 3. Devices - Host physical machine device assignment block character devices
...
<hostdev mode='capabilities' type='misc'>
<source>
<char>/dev/input/event3</char>
</source>
</hostdev>
...
Figure 29.4 4 . Devices - Host physical machine device assignment block character devices
alternative 1
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...
<hostdev mode='capabilities' type='net'>
<source>
<interface>eth0</interface>
</source>
</hostdev>
...
Figure 29.4 5. Devices - Host physical machine device assignment block character devices
alternative 2
Parameter Description
hostdev T his is the main container for describing host
physical machine devices. For block/character
devices, passthrough m ode is always
capabilities, and type is block for a block
device and char for a character device.
source T his describes the device as seen from the host
physical machine. For block devices, the path to
the block device in the host physical machine
operating system is provided in the nested block
element, while for character devices, the char
element is used.
...
<devices>
<redirdev bus='usb' type='tcp'>
<source mode='connect' host='localhost' service='4000'/>
<boot order='1'/>
</redirdev>
<redirfilter>
<usbdev class='0x08' vendor='0x1234' product='0xbeef' version='2.00'
allow='yes'/>
<usbdev allow='no'/>
</redirfilter>
</devices>
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...
Parameter Description
redirdev T his is the main container for describing redirected
devices. bus must be usb for a USB device. An
additional attribute type is required, matching one
of the supported serial device types, to describe
the host physical machine side of the tunnel:
type='tcp' or type='spicevm c' (which uses
the usbredir channel of a SPICE graphics device)
are typical. T he redirdev element has an
optional sub-element, address, which can tie the
device to a particular controller. Further sub-
elements, such as source, may be required
according to the given type, although a target
sub-element is not required (since the consumer
of the character device is the hypervisor itself,
rather than a device visible in the guest virtual
machine).
boot Specifies that the device is bootable. T he order
attribute determines the order in which devices will
be tried during boot sequence. T he per-device
boot elements cannot be used together with
general boot elements in BIOS bootloader section.
redirfilter T his is used for creating the filter rule to filter out
certain devices from redirection. It uses sub-
element usbdev to define each filter rule. T he
class attribute is the USB Class code.
Configure USB device redirection through a character device with management tools to modify the
following section of the domain XML:
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...
<devices>
<smartcard mode='host'/>
<smartcard mode='host-certificates'>
<certificate>cert1</certificate>
<certificate>cert2</certificate>
<certificate>cert3</certificate>
<database>/etc/pki/nssdb/</database>
</smartcard>
<smartcard mode='passthrough' type='tcp'>
<source mode='bind' host='127.0.0.1' service='2001'/>
<protocol type='raw'/>
<address type='ccid' controller='0' slot='0'/>
</smartcard>
<smartcard mode='passthrough' type='spicevmc'/>
</devices>
...
T he sm artcard element has a mandatory attribute m ode. In each mode, the guest virtual machine sees
a device on its USB bus that behaves like a physical USB CCID (Chip/Smart Card Interface Device) card.
Parameter Description
m ode='host' In this mode, the hypervisor relays all requests
from the guest virtual machine into direct access to
the host physical machine's smartcard via NSS. No
other attributes or sub-elements are required. See
below about the use of an optional address sub-
element.
m ode='host-certificates' T his mode allows you to provide three NSS
certificate names residing in a database on the
host physical machine, rather than requiring a
smartcard to be plugged into the host physical
machine. T hese certificates can be generated via
the command certutil -d /etc/pki/nssdb
-x -t CT ,CT ,CT -S -s CN=cert1 -n
cert1, and the resulting three certificate names
must be supplied as the content of each of three
certificate sub-elements. An additional sub-
element database can specify the absolute path
to an alternate directory (matching the -d flag of
the certutil command when creating the
certificates); if not present, it defaults to
/etc/pki/nssdb.
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Parameter Description
m ode='passthrough' Using this mode allows you to tunnel all requests
through a secondary character device to a third-
party provider (which may in turn be
communicating to a smartcard or using three
certificate files, rather than having the hypervisor
directly communicate with the host physical
machine. In this mode of operation, an additional
attribute type is required, matching one of the
supported serial device types, to describe the host
physical machine side of the tunnel; type='tcp'
or type='spicevm c' (which uses the smartcard
channel of a SPICE graphics device) are typical.
Further sub-elements, such as source, may be
required according to the given type, although a
target sub-element is not required (since the
consumer of the character device is the hypervisor
itself, rather than a device visible in the guest
virtual machine).
Each mode supports an optional sub-element address, which fine-tunes the correlation between the
smartcard and a ccid bus controller (Refer to Section 29.18.3, “Device addresses”).
...
<devices>
<interface type='bridge'>
<source bridge='kvmbr0'/>
<mac address='00:16:3e:5d:c7:9e'/>
<script path='vif-bridge'/>
<boot order='1'/>
<rom bar='off'/>
</interface>
</devices>
...
T here are several possibilities for specifying a network interface visible to the guest virtual machine. Each
sub-section below provides more details about common set-up options. Additionally, each <interface>
element has an optional <address> sub-element that can tie the interface to a particular PCI slot, with
attribute type='pci' (Refer to Section 29.18.3, “Device addresses”).
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T his is the recommended configuration for general guest virtual machine connectivity on host physical
machines with dynamic or wireless networking configurations (or multi-host physical machine
environments where the host physical machine hardware details, which are described separately in a
<network> definition). In addition, it provides a connection with details that are described by the named
network definition. Depending on the virtual network's forward m ode configuration, the network may be
totally isolated (no <forward> element given), using NAT to connect to an explicit network device or to
the default route (forward m ode='nat'), routed with no NAT (forward m ode='route'), or
connected directly to one of the host physical machine's network interfaces (via macvtap) or bridge
devices (forward m ode='bridge|private|vepa|passthrough')
For networks with a forward mode of bridge, private, vepa, and passthrough, it is assumed that the
host physical machine has any necessary DNS and DHCP services already set up outside the scope of
libvirt. In the case of isolated, nat, and routed networks, DHCP and DNS are provided on the virtual network
by libvirt, and the IP range can be determined by examining the virtual network config with virsh net-
dum pxm l [networknam e]. T he 'default' virtual network, which is set up out of the box, uses NAT to
connect to the default route and has an IP range of 192.168.122.0/255.255.255.0. Each guest virtual
machine will have an associated tun device created with a name of vnetN, which can also be overridden
with the <target> element (refer to Section 29.18.9.11, “Overriding the target element”).
When the source of an interface is a network, a portgroup can be specified along with the name of the
network; one network may have multiple portgroups defined, with each portgroup containing slightly
different configuration information for different classes of network connections. Also, similar to <direct>
network connections (described below), a connection of type network may specify a <virtualport>
element, with configuration data to be forwarded to a vepa (802.1Qbg) or 802.1Qbh compliant switch, or to
an Open vSwitch virtual switch.
Since the type of switch may vary depending on the configuration in the <network> on the host physical
machine, it is acceptable to omit the virtualport type attribute, and specify attributes from multiple different
virtualport types (and also to leave out certain attributes); at domain startup time, a complete
<virtualport> element will be constructed by merging together the type and attributes defined in the
network and the portgroup referenced by the interface. T he newly-constructed virtualport is a combination
of both. T he attributes from lower virtualport cannot make changes on the attributess defined in higher
virtualport. Interfaces take the highest priority, while portgroup is lowest priority.
For example, in order to work properly with both an 802.1Qbh switch and an Open vSwitch switch, you may
choose to specify no type, but both an profileid (in case the switch is 802.1Qbh) and an
interfaceid (in case the switch is Open vSwitch) You may also omit the other attributes, such as
m anagerid, typeid, or profileid, to be filled in from the network's virtualport. If you want to limit
a guest virtual machine to connect only to certain types of switches, you can specify the virtualport type,
but still omit some or all of the parameters. In this case, if the host physical machine's network has a
different type of virtualport, connection of the interface will fail. Define the virtual network parameters using
management tools that modify the following part of the domain XML:
...
<devices>
<interface type='network'>
<source network='default'/>
</interface>
...
<interface type='network'>
<source network='default' portgroup='engineering'/>
<target dev='vnet7'/>
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<mac address="00:11:22:33:44:55"/>
<virtualport>
<parameters instanceid='09b11c53-8b5c-4eeb-8f00-d84eaa0aaa4f'/>
</virtualport>
</interface>
</devices>
...
T his is the recommended configuration setting for guest virtual machine connectivity on host physical
machines with static wired networking configurations.
Bridge to LAN provides a bridge from the guest virtual machine directly onto the LAN. T his assumes there
is a bridge device on the host physical machine which has one or more of the host physical machines
physical NICs enslaved. T he guest virtual machine will have an associated tun device created with a
name of <vnetN>, which can also be overridden with the <target> element (refer to Section 29.18.9.11,
“Overriding the target element”). T he <tun> device will be enslaved to the bridge. T he IP range or network
configuration is the same as what is used on the LAN. T his provides the guest virtual machine full
incoming and outgoing network access, just like a physical machine.
On Linux systems, the bridge device is normally a standard Linux host physical machine bridge. On host
physical machines that support Open vSwitch, it is also possible to connect to an Open vSwitch bridge
device by adding a virtualport type='openvswitch'/ to the interface definition. T he Open vSwitch
type virtualport accepts two parameters in its param eters element: an interfaceid which is a
standard UUID used to uniquely identify this particular interface to Open vSwitch (if you do no specify one,
a random interfaceid will be generated when first defining the interface), and an optional profileid
which is sent to Open vSwitch as the interfaces <port-profile>. T o set the bridge to LAN settings,
use a management tool that will configure the following part of the domain XML:
...
<devices>
...
<interface type='bridge'>
<source bridge='br0'/>
</interface>
<interface type='bridge'>
<source bridge='br1'/>
<target dev='vnet7'/>
<mac address="00:11:22:33:44:55"/>
</interface>
<interface type='bridge'>
<source bridge='ovsbr'/>
<virtualport type='openvswitch'>
<parameters profileid='menial' interfaceid='09b11c53-8b5c-4eeb-8f00-
d84eaa0aaa4f'/>
</virtualport>
</interface>
...
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</devices>
In cases where you want to set the port masquerading range, set the port as follows:
<forward mode='nat'>
<address start='1.2.3.4' end='1.2.3.10'/>
</forward> ...
T hese values should be set using the iptables commands as shown in Section 22.2, “Network Address
T ranslation”
Setting the userspace SLIRP stack parameters provides a virtual LAN with NAT to the outside world. T he
virtual network has DHCP and DNS services and will give the guest virtual machine an IP addresses
starting from 10.0.2.15. T he default router is 10.0.2.2 and the DNS server is 10.0.2.3. T his networking is
the only option for unprivileged users who need their guest virtual machines to have outgoing access.
T he userspace SLIRP stack parameters are defined in the following part of the domain XML:
...
<devices>
<interface type='user'/>
...
<interface type='user'>
<mac address="00:11:22:33:44:55"/>
</interface>
</devices>
...
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T his provides a means for the administrator to execute an arbitrary script to connect the guest virtual
machine's network to the LAN. T he guest virtual machine will have a tun device created with a name of
vnetN, which can also be overridden with the target element. After creating the tun device a shell script
will be run and complete the required host physical machine network integration. By default, this script is
called /etc/kvm -ifup but can be overridden (refer to Section 29.18.9.11, “Overriding the target
element”).
T he generic ethernet connection parameters are defined in the following part of the domain XML:
...
<devices>
<interface type='ethernet'/>
...
<interface type='ethernet'>
<target dev='vnet7'/>
<script path='/etc/kvm-ifup-mynet'/>
</interface>
</devices>
...
T hisdirectly attaches the guest virtual machine's NIC to the physical interface of the host physical machine,
if the physical interface is specified.
T his requires the Linux macvtap driver to be available. One of the modes vepa ( 'Virtual Ethernet Port
Aggregator'), bridge or private can be chosen for the operation mode of the macvtap device. vepa is
the default mode.
Manipulating direct attachment to physical interfaces involves setting the following parameters in this
section of the domain XML:
...
<devices>
...
<interface type='direct'>
<source dev='eth0' mode='vepa'/>
</interface>
</devices>
...
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T he individual modes cause the delivery of packets to behave as shown in T able 29.21, “Direct attachment
to physical interface elements”:
Element Description
vepa All of the guest virtual machines' packets are sent
to the external bridge. Packets whose destination
is a guest virtual machine on the same host
physical machine as where the packet originates
from are sent back to the host physical machine by
the VEPA capable bridge (today's bridges are
typically not VEPA capable).
bridge Packets whose destination is on the same host
physical machine as where they originate from are
directly delivered to the target macvtap device.
Both origin and destination devices need to be in
bridge mode for direct delivery. If either one of
them is in vepa mode, a VEPA capable bridge is
required.
private All packets are sent to the external bridge and will
only be delivered to a target virtual machine on the
same host physical machine if they are sent
through an external router or gateway and that
device sends them back to the host physical
machine. T his procedure is followed if either the
source or destination device is in private mode.
passthrough T his feature attaches a virtual function of a SR-IOV
capable NIC directly to a guest virtual machine
without losing the migration capability. All packets
are sent to the VF/IF of the configured network
device. Depending on the capabilities of the device,
additional prerequisites or limitations may apply;
for example, this requires kernel 2.6.38 or newer.
T he network access of directly attached virtual machines can be managed by the hardware switch to
which the physical interface of the host physical machine is connected to.
T he interface can have additional parameters as shown below, if the switch conforms to the IEEE
802.1Qbg standard. T he parameters of the virtualport element are documented in more detail in the IEEE
802.1Qbg standard. T he values are network specific and should be provided by the network administrator.
In 802.1Qbg terms, the Virtual Station Interface (VSI) represents the virtual interface of a virtual machine.
Note that IEEE 802.1Qbg requires a non-zero value for the VLAN ID.
Additional elements that can be manipulated are described in T able 29.22, “Direct attachment to physical
interface additional elements”:
Element Description
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Element Description
m anagerid T he VSI Manager ID identifies the database
containing the VSI type and instance definitions.
T his is an integer value and the value 0 is
reserved.
typeid T he VSI T ype ID identifies a VSI type
characterizing the network access. VSI types are
typically managed by network administrator. T his is
an integer value.
typeidversion T he VSI T ype Version allows multiple versions of a
VSI T ype. T his is an integer value.
instanceid T he VSI Instance ID Identifier is generated when a
VSI instance (i.e. a virtual interface of a virtual
machine) is created. T his is a globally unique
identifier.
profileid T he profile ID contains the name of the port profile
that is to be applied onto this interface. T his name
is resolved by the port profile database into the
network parameters from the port profile, and
those network parameters will be applied to this
interface.
...
<devices>
...
<interface type='direct'>
<source dev='eth0.2' mode='vepa'/>
<virtualport type="802.1Qbg">
<parameters managerid="11" typeid="1193047" typeidversion="2"
instanceid="09b11c53-8b5c-4eeb-8f00-d84eaa0aaa4f"/>
</virtualport>
</interface>
</devices>
...
T he interface can have additional parameters as shown below if the switch conforms to the IEEE
802.1Qbh standard. T he values are network specific and should be provided by the network administrator.
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...
<devices>
...
<interface type='direct'>
<source dev='eth0' mode='private'/>
<virtualport type='802.1Qbh'>
<parameters profileid='finance'/>
</virtualport>
</interface>
</devices>
...
Figure 29.56. Devices - network interfaces - direct attachment to physical interfaces more
additional parameters
T he profileid attribute contains the name of the port profile to be applied to this interface. T his name
is resolved by the port profile database into the network parameters from the port profile, and those
network parameters will be applied to this interface.
A PCI network device (specified by the source element) is directly assigned to the guest virtual machine
using generic device passthrough, after first optionally setting the device's MAC address to the configured
value, and associating the device with an 802.1Qbh capable switch using an optionally specified
virtualport element (see the examples of virtualport given above for type='direct' network
devices). Note that due to limitations in standard single-port PCI ethernet card driver design, only SR-IOV
(Single Root I/O Virtualization) virtual function (VF) devices can be assigned in this manner. T o assign a
standard single-port PCI or PCIe ethernet card to a guest virtual machine, use the traditional hostdev
device definition.
Note that this "intelligent passthrough" of network devices is very similar to the functionality of a standard
hostdev device, the difference being that this method allows specifying a MAC address and
virtualport for the passed-through device. If these capabilities are not required, if you have a standard
single-port PCI, PCIe, or USB network card that does not support SR-IOV (and hence would anyway lose
the configured MAC address during reset after being assigned to the guest virtual machine domain), or if
you are using libvirt version older than 0.9.11, use standard hostdev definition to assign the device to the
guest virtual machine instead of interface type='hostdev'.
...
<devices>
<interface type='hostdev'>
<driver name='vfio'/>
<source>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x00' slot='0x07' function='0x0'/>
</source>
<mac address='52:54:00:6d:90:02'>
<virtualport type='802.1Qbh'>
<parameters profileid='finance'/>
</virtualport>
</interface>
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</devices>
...
A multicast group can be used to represent a virtual network. Any guest virtual machine with network
devices within the same multicast group will communicate with each other, even if they reside across
multiple physical host physical machines. T his mode may be used as an unprivileged user. T here is no
default DNS or DHCP support and no outgoing network access. T o provide outgoing network access, one
of the guest virtual machines should have a second NIC which is connected to one of the first 4 network
types in order to provide appropriate routing. T he multicast protocol is compatible with protocols used by
user m ode Linux guest virtual machines as well. Note that the source address used must be from the
multicast address block. A multicast tunnel is created by manipulating the interface type using a
management tool and setting it to m cast, and providing a m ac address and source address, for
example:
...
<devices>
<interface type='mcast'>
<mac address='52:54:00:6d:90:01'>
<source address='230.0.0.1' port='5558'/>
</interface>
</devices>
...
29.18.9.9. T CP tunnel
Creating a T CP client/server architecture is another way to provide a virtual network where one guest
virtual machine provides the server end of the network and all other guest virtual machines are configured
as clients. All network traffic between the guest virtual machines is routed through the guest virtual
machine that is configured as the server. T his model is also available for use to unprivileged users. T here
is no default DNS or DHCP support and no outgoing network access. T o provide outgoing network access,
one of the guest virtual machines should have a second NIC which is connected to one of the first 4
network types thereby providing the appropriate routing. A T CP tunnel is created by manipulating the
interface type using a management tool and setting it to m cast, and providing a m ac address and
source address, for example:
...
<devices>
<interface type='server'>
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<mac address='52:54:00:22:c9:42'>
<source address='192.168.0.1' port='5558'/>
</interface>
...
<interface type='client'>
<mac address='52:54:00:8b:c9:51'>
<source address='192.168.0.1' port='5558'/>
</interface>
</devices>
...
Some NICs may have tunable driver-specific options. T hese options are set as attributes of the driver
sub-element of the interface definition. T hese options are set by using management tools to configure the
following sections of the domain XML:
<devices>
<interface type='network'>
<source network='default'/>
<target dev='vnet1'/>
<model type='virtio'/>
<driver name='vhost' txmode='iothread' ioeventfd='on' event_idx='off'/>
</interface>
</devices>
...
Parameter Description
nam e T he optional nam e attribute forces which type of
back-end driver to use. T he value can be either
kvm (a user-space back-end) or vhost (a kernel
back-end, which requires the vhost module to be
provided by the kernel); an attempt to require the
vhost driver without kernel support will be rejected.
T he default setting is vhost if the vhost driver is
present, but will silently fall back to kvm if not.
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Parameter Description
txm ode Specifies how to handle transmission of packets
when the transmit buffer is full. T he value can be
either iothread or tim er. If set to iothread,
packet tx is all done in an iothread in the bottom
half of the driver (this option translates into adding
"tx=bh" to the kvm commandline -device virtio-
net-pci option). If set to tim er, tx work is done in
KVM, and if there is more tx data than can be sent
at the present time, a timer is set before KVM
moves on to do other things; when the timer fires,
another attempt is made to send more data. It is
not recommended to change this value.
ioeventfd Sets domain I/O asynchronous handling for the
interface device. T he default is left to the discretion
of the hypervisor. Accepted values are on and
off . Enabling this option allows KVM to execute
a guest virtual machine while a separate thread
handles I/O. T ypically, guest virtual machines
experiencing high system CPU utilization during
I/O will benefit from this. On the other hand,
overloading the physical host machine may also
increase guest virtual machine I/O latency. It is not
recommended to change this value.
event_idx T he event_idx attribute controls some aspects
of device event processing. T he value can be
either on or off. on is the default, which reduces
the number of interrupts and exits for the guest
virtual machine. In situations where this behavior is
sub-optimal, this attribute provides a way to force
the feature off. It is not recommended to change
this value.
T o override the target element, use a management tool to make the following changes to the domain XML:
...
<devices>
<interface type='network'>
<source network='default'/>
<target dev='vnet1'/>
</interface>
</devices>
...
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If no target is specified, certain hypervisors will automatically generate a name for the created tun device.
T his name can be manually specified, however the name must not start with either vnet or vif, which are
prefixes reserved by libvirt and certain hypervisors. Manually-specified targets using these prefixes will be
ignored.
T o specify the boot order, use a management tool to make the following changes to the domain XML:
...
<devices>
<interface type='network'>
<source network='default'/>
<target dev='vnet1'/>
<boot order='1'/>
</interface>
</devices>
...
In hypervisors which support it, you can set a specific NIC to be used for the network boot. T he order of
attributes determine the order in which devices will be tried during boot sequence. Note that the per-device
boot elements cannot be used together with general boot elements in BIOS bootloader section.
T o specify the ROM BIOS configuration settings, use a management tool to make the following changes to
the domain XML:
...
<devices>
<interface type='network'>
<source network='default'/>
<target dev='vnet1'/>
<rom bar='on' file='/etc/fake/boot.bin'/>
</interface>
</devices>
...
For hypervisors which support it, you can change how a PCI Network device's ROM is presented to the
guest virtual machine. T he bar attribute can be set to on or off, and determines whether or not the
device's ROM will be visible in the guest virtual machine's memory map. (In PCI documentation, the rom
bar setting controls the presence of the Base Address Register for the ROM). If no rom baris specified,
the KVM default will be used (older versions of KVM used off for the default, while newer KVM
hypervisors default to on). T he optional file attribute is used to point to a binary file to be presented to
the guest virtual machine as the device's ROM BIOS. T his can be useful to provide an alternative boot
ROM for a network device.
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Incoming and outgoing traffic can be shaped independently to set Quality of Service (QoS). T he
bandwidth element can have at most one inbound and one outbound child elements. Leaving any of
these child elements out results in no QoS being applied on that traffic direction. T herefore, to shape only
a domain's incoming traffic, use inbound only, and vice versa.
Each of these elements has one mandatory attribute average (or floor as described below). average
specifies the average bit rate on the interface being shaped. T hen there are two optional attributes: peak,
which specifies the maximum rate at which the interface can send data, and burst, which specifies the
amount of bytes that can be burst at peak speed. Accepted values for attributes are integer numbers.
T he units for average and peak attributes are kilobytes per second, whereas burst is only set in
kilobytes. In addtion, inbound traffic can optionally have a floor attribute. T his guarantees minimal
throughput for shaped interfaces. Using the floor requires that all traffic goes through one point where
QoS decisions can take place. As such, it may only be used in cases where the interface
type='network'/ with a forward type of route, nat, or no forward at all). It should be noted that
within a virtual network, all connected interfaces are required to have at least the inbound QoS set
(average at least) but the floor attribute does not require specifying average. However, peak and
burst attributes still require average. At the present time, ingress qdiscs may not have any classes, and
therefore floor may only be applied only on inbound and not outbound traffic.
T o specify the QoS configuration settings, use a management tool to make the following changes to the
domain XML:
...
<devices>
<interface type='network'>
<source network='default'/>
<target dev='vnet0'/>
<bandwidth>
<inbound average='1000' peak='5000' floor='200' burst='1024'/>
<outbound average='128' peak='256' burst='256'/>
</bandwidth>
</interface>
<devices>
...
T o specify the VLAN tag configuration settings, use a management tool to make the following changes to
the domain XML:
...
<devices>
<interface type='bridge'>
<vlan>
<tag id='42'/>
</vlan>
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<source bridge='ovsbr0'/>
<virtualport type='openvswitch'>
<parameters interfaceid='09b11c53-8b5c-4eeb-8f00-d84eaa0aaa4f'/>
</virtualport>
</interface>
<devices>
...
Figure 29.65. Setting VLAN tag (on supported network types only)
If the network connection used by the guest virtual machine supports VLAN tagging transparent to the
guest virtual machine, an optional vlan element can specify one or more VLAN tags to apply to the guest
virtual machine's network traffic. Only OpenvSwitch and type='hostdev' SR-IOV interfaces support
transparent VLAN tagging of guest virtual machine traffic; other interfaces, including standard Linux
bridges and libvirt's own virtual networks, do not support it. 802.1Qbh (vn-link) and 802.1Qbg (VEPA)
switches provide their own methods (outside of libvirt) to tag guest virtual machine traffic onto specific
VLANs. T o allow for specification of multiple tags (in the case of VLAN trunking), the tag subelement
specifies which VLAN tag to use (for example, tag id='4 2'/). If an interface has more than one vlan
element defined, it is assumed that the user wants to do VLAN trunking using all the specified tags. In the
case that VLAN trunking with a single tag is desired, the optional attribute trunk='yes' can be added to
the top-level vlan element.
T his element sets the virtual network link state. Possible values for attribute state are up and down. If
down is specified as the value, the interface behaves as the network cable is disconnected. Default
behavior if this element is unspecified is up.
T o specify the virtual link state configuration settings, use a management tool to make the following
changes to the domain XML:
...
<devices>
<interface type='network'>
<source network='default'/>
<target dev='vnet0'/>
<link state='down'/>
</interface>
<devices>
...
T o specify the input device configuration settings, use a management tool to make the following changes
to the domain XML:
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...
<devices>
<input type='mouse' bus='usb'/>
</devices>
...
T he <input> element has one mandatory attribute: type, which can be set to m ouse or tablet.
tablet provides absolute cursor movement, while m ouse uses relative movement. T he optional bus
attribute can be used to refine the exact device type and can be set to kvm (para-virtualized), ps2, and
usb.
T he input element has an optional sub-element <address>, which can tie the device to a particular PCI
slot, as documented above.
T o specify the hub device configuration settings, use a management tool to make the following changes to
the domain XML:
...
<devices>
<hub type='usb'/>
</devices>
...
T he hub element has one mandatory attribute, type, which can only be set to usb. T he hub element has
an optional sub-element, address, with type='usb', which can tie the device to a particular controller.
T o specify the graphical framebuffer device configuration settings, use a management tool to make the
following changes to the domain XML:
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...
<devices>
<graphics type='sdl' display=':0.0'/>
<graphics type='vnc' port='5904'>
<listen type='address' address='1.2.3.4'/>
</graphics>
<graphics type='rdp' autoport='yes' multiUser='yes' />
<graphics type='desktop' fullscreen='yes'/>
<graphics type='spice'>
<listen type='network' network='rednet'/>
</graphics>
</devices>
...
T he graphics element has a mandatory type attribute which takes the value sdl, vnc, rdp or
desktop as explained below:
Parameter Description
sdl T his displays a window on the host physical
machine desktop. It accepts 3 optional arguments:
a display attribute for the display to use, an
xauth attribute for the authentication identifier,
and an optional fullscreen attribute accepting
values yes or no.
vnc Starts a VNC server. T he port attribute specifies
the T CP port number (with -1 as legacy syntax
indicating that it should be auto-allocated). T he
autoport attribute is the preferred syntax for
indicating auto-allocation of the T CP port to use.
T he listen attribute is an IP address for the
server to listen on. T he passwd attribute provides
a VNC password in clear text. T he keym ap
attribute specifies the keymap to use. It is possible
to set a limit on the validity of the password be
giving an tim estam p passwdValidT o='2010-
04 -09T 15:51:00' assumed to be in UT C. T he
connected attribute allows control of connected
client during password changes. VNC accepts the
keep value only; note that it may not be supported
by all hypervisors. Rather than using listen/port,
KVM supports a socket attribute for listening on a
UNIX domain socket path.
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Parameter Description
spice Starts a SPICE server. T he port attribute
specifies the T CP port number (with -1 as legacy
syntax indicating that it should be auto-allocated),
while tlsPort gives an alternative secure port
number. T he autoport attribute is the new
preferred syntax for indicating auto-allocation of
both port numbers. T he listen attribute is an IP
address for the server to listen on. T he passwd
attribute provides a SPICE password in clear text.
T he keym ap attribute specifies the keymap to use.
It is possible to set a limit on the validity of the
password be giving an tim estam p
passwdValidT o='2010-04 -09T 15:51:00'
assumed to be in UT C. T he connected attribute
allows control of a connected client during
password changes. SPICE accepts keep to keep
a client connected, disconnect to disconnect the
client and fail to fail changing password. Note,
this is not supported by all hypervisors. T he
defaultMode attribute sets the default channel
security policy; valid values are secure,
insecure and the default any (which is secure
if possible, but falls back to insecure rather than
erroring out if no secure path is available).
When SPICE has both a normal and T LS secured T CP port configured, it may be desirable to restrict what
channels can be run on each port. T his is achieved by adding one or more channel elements inside the
main graphics element. Valid channel names include m ain, display, inputs, cursor, playback,
record, sm artcard, and usbredir.
T o specify the SPICE configuration settings, use a mangement tool to make the following changes to the
domain XML:
SPICE supports variable compression settings for audio, images and streaming. T hese settings are
configured using the com pression attribute in all following elements: im age to set image compression
(accepts auto_glz, auto_lz, quic, glz, lz, off), jpeg for JPEG compression for images over WAN
(accepts auto, never, always), zlib for configuring WAN image compression (accepts auto, never,
always) and playback for enabling audio stream compression (accepts on or off).
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T he stream ing element sets streaming mode. T he m ode attribute can be set to filter, all or off.
In addition, copy and paste functionality (through the SPICE agent) is set by the clipboard element. It is
enabled by default, and can be disabled by setting the copypaste property to no.
T he m ouse element sets mouse mode. T he m ode attribute can be set to server or client. If no mode
is specified, the KVM default will be used (client mode).
Parameter Description
rdp Starts a RDP server. T he port attribute specifies
the T CP port number (with -1 as legacy syntax
indicating that it should be auto-allocated). T he
autoport attribute is the preferred syntax for
indicating auto-allocation of the T CP port to use.
T he replaceUser attribute is a boolean deciding
whether multiple simultaneous connections to the
virtual machine are permitted. T he m ultiUser
decides whether the existing connection must be
dropped and a new connection must be
established by the VRDP server, when a new client
connects in single connection mode.
desktop T his value is reserved for VirtualBox domains for
the moment. It displays a window on the host
physical machine desktop, similarly to "sdl", but
uses the VirtualBox viewer. Just like "sdl", it
accepts the optional attributes display and
fullscreen.
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Parameter Description
listen Rather than putting the address information used
to set up the listening socket for graphics types
vnc and spice in the graphics, the listen
attribute, a separate sub-element of graphics,
can be specified (see the examples above).
listen accepts the following attributes:
...
<devices>
<video>
<model type='vga' vram='8192' heads='1'>
<acceleration accel3d='yes' accel2d='yes'/>
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</model>
</video>
</devices>
...
T he graphics element has a mandatory type attribute which takes the value "sdl", "vnc", "rdp" or
"desktop" as explained below:
Parameter Description
video T he video element is the container for describing
video devices. For backwards compatibility, if no
video is set but there is a graphics element in
the domain XML, then libvirt will add a default
video according to the guest virtual machine type.
If "ram" or "vram" are not supplied, a default value
is used.
m odel T his has a mandatory type attribute which takes
the value vga, cirrus, vm vga, kvm , vbox, or qxl
depending on the hypervisor features available.
You can also provide the amount of video memory
in kibibytes (blocks of 1024 bytes) using vram and
the number of figure with heads.
acceleration If acceleration is supported it should be enabled
using the accel3d and accel2d attributes in the
acceleration element.
address T he optional address sub-element can be used to
tie the video device to a particular PCI slot.
T o specify the consoles, channel and other device configuration settings, use a management tool to make
the following changes to the domain XML:
...
<devices>
<serial type='pty'>
<source path='/dev/pts/3'/>
<target port='0'/>
</serial>
<console type='pty'>
<source path='/dev/pts/4'/>
<target port='0'/>
</console>
<channel type='unix'>
<source mode='bind' path='/tmp/guestfwd'/>
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In each of these directives, the top-level element name (serial, console, channel) describes how the
device is presented to the guest virtual machine. T he guest virtual machine interface is configured by the
target element. T he interface presented to the host physical machine is given in the type attribute of
the top-level element. T he host physical machine interface is configured by the source element. T he
source element may contain an optional seclabel to override the way that labeling is done on the
socket path. If this element is not present, the security label is inherited from the per-domain setting. Each
character device element has an optional sub-element address which can tie the device to a particular
controller or PCI slot.
Note
T o set the serial port, use a management tool to make the following change to the domain XML:
...
<devices>
<serial type='pty'>
<source path='/dev/pts/3'/>
<target port='0'/>
</serial>
</devices>
...
<target> can have a port attribute, which specifies the port number. Ports are numbered starting from
0. T here are usually 0, 1 or 2 serial ports. T here is also an optional type attribute, which has two choices
for its value, isa-serial or usb-serial. If type is missing, isa-serial will be used by default. For
usb-serial, an optional sub-element <address> with type='usb' can tie the device to a particular
controller, documented above.
T he <console> element is used to represent interactive consoles. Depending on the type of guest virtual
machine in use, the consoles might be para-virtualized devices, or they might be a clone of a serial device,
according to the following rules:
If no targetT ype attribute is set, then the default device type is according to the hypervisor's rules.
T he default type will be added when re-querying the XML fed into libvirt. For fully virtualized guest
virtual machines, the default device type will usually be a serial port.
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If the targetT ype attribute is serial, and if no <serial> element exists, the console element will
be copied to the <serial> element. If a <serial> element does already exist, the console element
will be ignored.
Only the first <console> element may use a targetT ype of serial. Secondary consoles must all
be para-virtualized.
On s390, the console element may use a targetT ype of sclp or sclplm (line mode). SCLP is the
native console type for s390. T here is no controller associated to SCLP consoles.
In the example below, a virtio console device is exposed in the guest virtual machine as /dev/hvc[0-7]
(for more information, see the Fedora project's virtio-serial page):
...
<devices>
<console type='pty'>
<source path='/dev/pts/4'/>
<target port='0'/>
</console>
...
<devices>
<!-- KVM s390 sclp console -->
<console type='pty'>
<source path='/dev/pts/1'/>
<target type='sclp' port='0'/>
</console>
</devices>
...
If the console is presented as a serial port, the <target> element has the same attributes as for a serial
port. T here is usually only one console.
29.18.16. Channel
T his represents a private communication channel between the host physical machine and the guest virtual
machine. It is manipulated by making changes to a guest virtual machine using a management tool to edit
following section of the domain XML:
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...
<devices>
<channel type='unix'>
<source mode='bind' path='/tmp/guestfwd'/>
<target type='guestfwd' address='10.0.2.1' port='4600'/>
</channel>
T his can be implemented in a variety of ways. T he specific type of <channel> is given in the type
attribute of the <target> element. Different channel types have different target attributes as follows:
guestfwd - Dictates that T CP traffic sent by the guest virtual machine to a given IP address and port
is forwarded to the channel device on the host physical machine. T he target element must have
address and port attributes.
virtio - para-virtualized virtio channel. <channel> is exposed in the guest virtual machine under
/dev/vport* , and if the optional element nam e is specified, /dev/virtio-ports/$nam e (for more
information, see the Fedora project's virtio-serial page). T he optional element address can tie the
channel to a particular type='virtio-serial' controller, documented above. With KVM, if name is
"org.kvm.guest_agent.0", then libvirt can interact with a guest agent installed in the guest virtual
machine, for actions such as guest virtual machine shutdown or file system quiescing.
spicevm c - Para-virtualized SPICE channel. T he domain must also have a SPICE server as a
graphics device, at which point the host physical machine piggy-backs messages across the main
channel. T he target element must be present, with attribute type='virtio'; an optional attribute
nam e controls how the guest virtual machine will have access to the channel, and defaults to
nam e='com .redhat.spice.0'. T he optional <address> element can tie the channel to a
particular type='virtio-serial' controller.
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<devices>
<serial type="tcp">
<source
mode="bind"
host="127.0.0.1"
service="2445"/>
<protocol
type="raw"/>
<target
port="1"/>
</serial>
</devices>
<devices>
<serial type="tcp">
<source
mode="connect"
host="0.0.0.0"
service="2445"/>
<protocol
type="telnet"/>
<target
port="1"/>
</serial>
<serial
type="tcp">
<source
mode="bind"
host="127.0.0.1"
service="2445"/>
<protocol
type="telnet"/>
<target
port="1"/>
</serial>
</devices>
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...
<devices>
<sound model='sb16'/>
</devices>
...
T he sound element has one mandatory attribute, m odel, which specifies what real sound device is
emulated. Valid values are specific to the underlying hypervisor, though typical choices are 'sb16',
'ac97', and 'ich6'. In addition, a sound element with 'ich6' model set can have optional codec sub-
elements to attach various audio codecs to the audio device. If not specified, a default codec will be
attached to allow playback and recording. Valid values are 'duplex' (advertises a line-in and a line-out)
and 'm icro' (advertises a speaker and a microphone).
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...
<devices>
<sound model='ich6'>
<codec type='micro'/>
<sound/>
</devices>
...
Each sound element has an optional sub-element <address> which can tie the device to a particular PCI
slot, documented above.
...
<devices>
<watchdog model='i6300esb'/>
</devices>
...
...
<devices>
<watchdog model='i6300esb' action='poweroff'/>
</devices>
...
m odel - T he required m odel attribute specifies what real watchdog device is emulated. Valid values
are specific to the underlying hypervisor.
action - T he optional action attribute describes what action to take when the watchdog expires.
Valid values are specific to the underlying hypervisor. T he action attribute can have the following
values:
shutdown — gracefully shuts down the guest virtual machine (not recommended)
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Note that the 'shutdown' action requires that the guest virtual machine is responsive to ACPI signals. In the
sort of situations where the watchdog has expired, guest virtual machines are usually unable to respond
to ACPI signals. T herefore using 'shutdown' is not recommended. In addition, the directory to save dump
files can be configured by auto_dump_path in file /etc/libvirt/kvm.conf.
T o configure the panic mechanism, place the following snippet into the domain XML devices element, by
running virsh edit to open and edit the XML:
<devices>
<panic>
<address type='isa' iobase='0x505'/>
</panic>
</devices>
T he element <address> specifies the address of panic. T he default ioport is 0x505. In most cases
specifying an address is not needed.
In the following example, KVM has automatically added the memballoon device:
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...
<devices>
<memballoon model='virtio'/>
</devices>
...
T he following example shows the device has been added manually with static PCI slot 2 requested:
...
<devices>
<memballoon model='virtio'>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x00' slot='0x02' function='0x0'/>
</memballoon>
</devices>
...
T he required m odel attribute specifies what type of balloon device is provided. Valid values are specific to
the virtualization platform; in the KVM hypervisor, 'virtio' is the default setting.
...
<devices>
<tpm model='tpm-tis'>
<backend type='passthrough'>
<backend path='/dev/tpm0'/>
</backend>
</tpm>
</devices>
...
T he m odel attribute specifies what device model KVM provides to the guest virtual machine. If no model
name is provided, tpm -tis will automatically be chosen. T he <backend> element specifies the type of
T PM device. T he following types are supported: 'passthrough' — uses the host physical machine's
T PM device and 'passthrough'. T his backend type requires exclusive access to a T PM device on the
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host physical machine. An example for such a device is /dev/tpm 0. T he filename is specified as path
attribute of the source element. If no file name is specified, /dev/tpm 0 is automatically used.
T he top level element for a storage pool document is <pool>. It has a single attribute type, which can
take the following values: dir, fs, netfs, disk, iscsi, logical, scsi, m path, rbd,
sheepdog, or gluster.
<pool type="iscsi">
<name>virtimages</name>
<uuid>3e3fce45-4f53-4fa7-bb32-11f34168b82b</uuid>
<allocation>10000000</allocation>
<capacity>50000000</capacity>
<available>40000000</available>
...
</pool>
T he elements that are used in this example are explained in the T able 29.28, “virt-sysprep commands”.
Element Description
<nam e> Provides a name for the storage pool which must
be unique to the host physical machine. T his is
mandatory when defining a storage pool.
<uuid> Provides an identifier for the storage pool which
must be globally unique. Although supplying the
UUID is optional, if the UUID is not provided at the
time the storage pool is created, a UUID will be
automatically generated.
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Element Description
<allocation> Provides the total storage allocation for the
storage pool. T his may be larger than the sum of
the total allocation across all storage volumes due
to the metadata overhead. T his value is expressed
in bytes. T his element is read-only and the value
should not be changed.
<capacity> Provides the total storage capacity for the pool.
Due to underlying device constraints it may not be
possible to use the full capacity for storage
volumes. T his value is in bytes. T his element is
read-only and the value should not be changed.
<available> Provides the free space available for allocating
new storage volumes in the storage pool. Due to
underlying device constraints it may not be
possible to allocate the entire free space to a
single storage volume. T his value is in bytes. T his
element is read-only and the value should not be
changed.
...
<source>
<host name="iscsi.example.com"/>
<device path="demo-target"/>
<auth type='chap' username='myname'>
<secret type='iscsi' usage='mycluster_myname'/>
</auth>
<vendor name="Acme"/>
<product name="model"/>
</source>
...
...
<source>
<adapter type='fc_host' parent='scsi_host5' wwnn='20000000c9831b4b'
wwpn='10000000c9831b4b'/>
</source>
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...
T he child elements that are accepted by <source> are explained in T able 29.29, “Source child elements
commands”.
Element Description
<device> Provides the source for storage pools backed by
host physical machine devices (based on <pool
type=> (as shown in Section 29.19, “Storage
pools” )). May be repeated multiple times
depending on backend driver. Contains a single
attribute path which is the fully qualified path to
the block device node.
<dir> Provides the source for storage pools backed by
directories (<pool type='dir'>), or optionally
to select a subdirectory within a storage pool that
is based on a filesystem (<pool
type='gluster'>). T his element may only occur
once per (<pool>). T his element accepts a single
attribute (<path>) which is the full path to the
backing directory.
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Element Description
<adapter> Provides the source for storage pools backed by
SCSI adapters (<pool type='scsi'>). T his
element may only occur once per (<pool>).
Attribute name is the SCSI adapter name (ex.
"scsi_host1". Although "host1" is still supported
for backwards compatibility, it is not recommended.
Attribute type specifies the adapter type. Valid
values are 'fc_host'| 'scsi_host'. If omitted
and the nam e attribute is specified, then it defaults
to type='scsi_host'. T o keep backwards
compatibility, the attribute type is optional for the
type='scsi_host' adapter, but mandatory for
the type='fc_host' adapter. Attributes wwnn
(Word Wide Node Name) and wwpn (Word Wide
Port Name) are used by the type='fc_host'
adapter to uniquely identify the device in the Fibre
Channel storage fabric (the device can be either a
HBA or vHBA). Both wwnn and wwpn should be
specified (Refer to Section 26.7.10, “Dump a
Device” for instructions on how to get wwnn/wwpn
of a (v)HBA). T he optional attribute parent
specifies the parent device for the
type='fc_host' adapter.
<host> Provides the source for storage pools backed by
storage from a remote server
(type='netfs'|'iscsi'|'rbd'|'sheepdog'
|'gluster'). T his element should be used in
combination with a <directory> or <device>
element. Contains an attribute nam e which is the
hostname or IP address of the server. May
optionally contain a port attribute for the protocol
specific port number.
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Element Description
<auth> If present, the <auth> element provides the
authentication credentials needed to access the
source by the setting of the type attribute (pool
type='iscsi'|'rbd'). T he type must be either
type='chap' or type='ceph'. Use "ceph" for
Ceph RBD (Rados Block Device) network sources
and use "iscsi" for CHAP (Challenge-Handshake
Authentication Protocol) iSCSI targets. Additionally
a mandatory attribute username identifies the
username to use during authentication as well as
a sub-element secret with a mandatory attribute
type, to tie back to a libvirt secret object that holds
the actual password or other credentials. T he
domain XML intentionally does not expose the
password, only the reference to the object that
manages the password. T he secret element
requires either a uuid attribute with the UUID of the
secret object or a usage attribute matching the key
that was specified in the secret object. Refer to
ceph for more information.
<nam e> Provides the source for storage pools backed by a
storage device from a named element <type>
which can take the values:
(type='logical'|'rbd'|'sheepdog','glus
ter').
<form at> Provides information about the format of the
storage pool <type> which can take the following
values:
type='logical'|'disk'|'fs'|'netfs'). It
should be noted that this value is backend specific.
T his is typically used to indicate a filesystem type,
or a network filesystem type, or a partition table
type, or an LVM metadata type. As all drivers are
required to have a default value for this, the
element is optional.
<vendor> Provides optional information about the vendor of
the storage device. T his contains a single attribute
<nam e> whose value is backend specific.
<product> Provides optional information about the product
name of the storage device. T his contains a single
attribute <nam e> whose value is back-end
specific.
ceph
In all cases where type='ceph' is listed take note that ceph is not supported with Red Hat
Enterprise Linux 7 but you can create storage pools with type='chap'. type='ceph' is
available on Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization . Call your service representative for details.
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A single <target> element is contained within the top level <pool> element for the following types:
(type='dir'|'fs'|'netfs'|'logical'|'disk'|'iscsi'|'scsi'|'m path'). T his tag is used to
describe the mapping of the storage pool into the host filesystem. It can contain the following child
elements:
<pool>
...
<target>
<path>/dev/disk/by-path</path>
<permissions>
<owner>107</owner>
<group>107</group>
<mode>0744</mode>
<label>virt_image_t</label>
</permissions>
<timestamps>
<atime>1341933637.273190990</atime>
<mtime>1341930622.047245868</mtime>
<ctime>1341930622.047245868</ctime>
</timestamps>
<encryption type='...'>
...
</encryption>
</target>
</pool>
T he table (T able 29.30, “T arget child elements”) explains the child elements that are valid for the parent
<target> element:
Element Description
<path> Provides the location at which the storage pool will
be mapped into the local filesystem namespace.
For a filesystem/directory based storage pool it will
be the name of the directory in which storage
volumes will be created. For device based storage
pools it will be the name of the directory in which
the device's nodes exist. For the latter, /dev/may
seem like the logical choice, however, the device's
nodes there are not guaranteed to be stable
across reboots, since they are allocated on
demand. It is preferable to use a stable location
such as one of the /dev/disk/by-
{path,id,uuid,label} locations.
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Element Description
<perm issions> T his is currently only useful for directory or
filesystem based storage pools, which are mapped
as a directory into the local filesystem namespace.
It provides information about the permissions to
use for the final directory when the storage pool is
built. T he <m ode> element contains the octal
permission set. T he <owner> element contains
the numeric user ID. T he <group> element
contains the numeric group ID. T he <label>
element contains the MAC (for example, SELinux)
label string.
<tim estam ps> Provides timing information about the storage
volume. Up to four sub-elements are present,
where
tim estam ps='atim e'|'btim e|'ctim e'|'m t
im e' holds the access, birth, change, and
modification time of the storage volume, where
known. T he used time format is
<seconds>.<nanoseconds> since the
beginning of the epoch (1 Jan 1970). If
nanosecond resolution is 0 or otherwise
unsupported by the host operating system or
filesystem, then the nanoseconds part is omitted.
T his is a read-only attribute and is ignored when
creating a storage volume.
<encryption> If present, specifies how the storage volume is
encrypted. Refer to Storage Encryption page for
more information.
For storage pools supporting extent information, within each <device> element there will be zero or more
<freeExtent> elements. Each of these elements contains two attributes, <start> and <end> which
provide the boundaries of the extent on the device, measured in bytes.
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...
<volume type='file'>
<name>sparse.img</name>
<key>/var/lib/xen/images/sparse.img</key>
<allocation>0</allocation>
<capacity unit="T">1</capacity>
...
</volume>
T he table (T able 29.31, “Volume child elements”) explains the child elements that are valid for the parent
<volum e> element:
Element Description
<nam e> Provides a name for the storage volume which is
unique to the storage pool. T his is mandatory
when defining a storage volume.
<key> Provides an identifier for the storage volume which
identifies a single storage volume. In some cases
it's possible to have two distinct keys identifying a
single storage volume. T his field cannot be set
when creating a storage volume as it is always
generated.
<allocation> Provides the total storage allocation for the
storage volume. T his may be smaller than the
logical capacity if the storage volume is sparsely
allocated. It may also be larger than the logical
capacity if the storage volume has substantial
metadata overhead. T his value is in bytes. If
omitted when creating a storage volume, the
storage volume will be fully allocated at time of
creation. If set to a value smaller than the capacity,
the storage pool has the option of deciding to
sparsely allocate a storage volume or not. Different
types of storage pools may treat sparse storage
volumes differently. For example, a logical pool will
not automatically expand a storage volume's
allocation when it gets full; the user is responsible
for configuring it or configuring dm eventd to do
so automatically. By default this is specified in
bytes. Refer to A note about unit
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Element Description
<capacity> Provides the logical capacity for the storage
volume. T his value is in bytes by default, but a
<unit> attribute can be specified with the same
semantics as for <allocation> described in A
note about unit. T his is compulsory when
creating a storage volume.
<source> Provides information about the underlying storage
allocation of the storage volume. T his may not be
available for some storage pool types.
<target> Provides information about the representation of
the storage volume on the local host physical
machine.
When necessary, an optional attribute unit can be specified to adjust the passed value. T his
attribute can be used with the elements <allocation> and <capacity>. Accepted values for
the attribute unit include:
<target>
<path>/var/lib/virt/images/sparse.img</path>
<format type='qcow2'/>
<permissions>
<owner>107</owner>
<group>107</group>
<mode>0744</mode>
<label>virt_image_t</label>
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</permissions>
<compat>1.1</compat>
<features>
<lazy_refcounts/>
</features>
</target>
T he specific child elements for <target> are explained in T able 29.32, “T arget child elements”:
Element Description
<path> Provides the location at which the storage volume
can be accessed on the local filesystem, as an
absolute path. T his is a read-only attribute, and
should not be specified when creating a volume.
<form at> Provides information about the pool specific
volume format. For disk based storage pools, it will
provide the partition type. For filesystem or
directory based storage pools, it will provide the
file format type, (such as cow, qcow, vmdk, raw). If
omitted when creating a storage volume, the
storage pool's default format will be used. T he
actual format is specified via the type attribute.
Refer to the sections on the specific storage pools
in Chapter 16, Storage pools for the list of valid
values.
<perm issions> Provides information about the default permissions
to use when creating storage volumes. T his is
currently only useful for directory or filesystem
based storage pools, where the storage volumes
allocated are simple files. For storage pools where
the storage volumes are device nodes, the hotplug
scripts determine permissions. It contains four
child elements. T he <m ode> element contains the
octal permission set. T he <owner> element
contains the numeric user ID. T he <group>
element contains the numeric group ID. T he
<label> element contains the MAC (for example,
SELinux) label string.
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Element Description
<com pat> Specify compatibility level. So far, this is only used
for <type='qcow2'> volumes. Valid values are
<com pat>0.10</com pat> for qcow2 (version 2)
and <com pat>1.1</com pat> for qcow2 (version
3) so far for specifying the QEMU version the
images should be compatible with. If the
<feature> element is present,
<com pat>1.1</com pat> is used. If omitted,
qemu-img default is used.
<features> Format-specific features. Presently is only used
with <form at type='qcow2'/> (version 3).
Valid sub-elements include <lazy_refcounts/>.
T his reduces the amount of metadata writes and
flushes, and therefore improves initial write
performance. T his improvement is seen especially
for writethrough cache modes, at the cost of
having to repair the image after a crash, and
allows delayed reference counter updates. It is
recommended to use this feature with qcow2
(version 3), as it is faster when this is
implemented.
<backingStore>
<path>/var/lib/virt/images/master.img</path>
<format type='raw'/>
<permissions>
<owner>107</owner>
<group>107</group>
<mode>0744</mode>
<label>virt_image_t</label>
</permissions>
</backingStore>
Element Description
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Element Description
<path> Provides the location at which the backing store
can be accessed on the local filesystem, as an
absolute path. If omitted, there is no backing store
for this storage volume.
<form at> Provides information about the pool specific
backing store format. For disk based storage pools
it will provide the partition type. For filesystem or
directory based storage pools it will provide the file
format type (such as cow, qcow, vmdk, raw). T he
actual format is specified via the <type> attribute.
Consult the pool-specific docs for the list of valid
values. Most file formats require a backing store of
the same format, however, the qcow2 format allows
a different backing store format.
<perm issions> Provides information about the permissions of the
backing file. It contains four child elements. T he
<owner> element contains the numeric user ID.
T he <group> element contains the numeric group
ID. T he <label> element contains the MAC (for
example, SELinux) label string.
If more than one security driver is used by libvirt, multiple seclabel tags can be used, one for each driver
and the security driver referenced by each tag can be defined using the attribute m odel. Valid input XML
configurations for the top-level security label are:
<seclabel type='none'/>
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If no 'type' attribute is provided in the input XML, then the security driver default setting will be used,
which may be either 'none' or 'dynam ic'. If a <baselabel> is set but no 'type' is set, then the type
is presumed to be 'dynam ic'. When viewing the XML for a running guest virtual machine with automatic
resource relabeling active, an additional XML element, im agelabel, will be included. T his is an output-
only element, so will be ignored in user supplied XML documents.
type - Either static, dynam ic or none to determine whether libvirt automatically generates a unique
security label or not.
m odel - A valid security model name, matching the currently activated security model.
relabel - Either yes or no. T his must always be yes if dynamic label assignment is used. With static
label assignment it will default to no.
<label> - If static labelling is used, this must specify the full security label to assign to the virtual
domain. T he format of the content depends on the security driver in use:
DAC: owner and group separated by colon. T hey can be defined both as user/group names or
UID/GID. T he driver will first try to parse these values as names, but a leading plus sign can used
to force the driver to parse them as UID or GID.
<baselabel> - If dynamic labelling is used, this can optionally be used to specify the base security
label. T he format of the content depends on the security driver in use.
<im agelabel> - T his is an output only element, which shows the security label used on resources
associated with the virtual domain. T he format of the content depends on the security driver in use.
When relabeling is in effect, it is also possible to fine-tune the labeling done for specific source file
names, by either disabling the labeling (useful if the file exists on NFS or other file system that lacks
security labeling) or requesting an alternate label (useful when a management application creates a
special label to allow sharing of some, but not all, resources between domains). When a seclabel
element is attached to a specific path rather than the top-level domain assignment, only the attribute
relabel or the sub-element label are supported.
<domain type='kvm'>
<name>demo2</name>
<uuid>4dea24b3-1d52-d8f3-2516-782e98a23fa0</uuid>
<memory>131072</memory>
<vcpu>1</vcpu>
<os>
<type arch="i686">hvm</type>
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</os>
<clock sync="localtime"/>
<devices>
<emulator>/usr/bin/kvm-kvm</emulator>
<disk type='file' device='disk'>
<source file='/var/lib/libvirt/images/demo2.img'/>
<target dev='hda'/>
</disk>
<interface type='network'>
<source network='default'/>
<mac address='24:42:53:21:52:45'/>
</interface>
<graphics type='vnc' port='-1' keymap='de'/>
</devices>
</domain>
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Troubleshooting
T his chapter covers common problems and solutions for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 virtualization issues.
Read this chapter to develop an understanding of some of the common problems associated with
virtualization technologies. T roubleshooting takes practice and experience which are difficult to learn from
a book. It is recommended that you experiment and test virtualization on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 to
develop your troubleshooting skills.
If you cannot find the answer in this document there may be an answer online from the virtualization
community. Refer to Section B.1, “Online resources” for a list of Linux virtualization websites.
trace-cm d
vm stat
iostat
lsof
system tap
crash
sysrq
sysrq t
sysrq w
T hese networking tools can assist with troubleshooting virtualization networking problems:
ifconfig
tcpdum p
T he tcpdum p command 'sniffs' network packets. tcpdum p is useful for finding network abnormalities
and problems with network authentication. T here is a graphical version of tcpdum p named
wireshark.
brctl
brctl is a networking tool that inspects and configures the Ethernet bridge configuration in the Linux
kernel. You must have root access before performing these example commands:
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# brctl show
bridge-name bridge-id STP enabled interfaces
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
virtbr0 8000.feffffff yes eth0
Listed below are some other useful commands for troubleshooting virtualization.
strace is a command which traces system calls and events received and used by another process.
vncviewer: connect to a VNC server running on your server or a virtual machine. Install vncviwer
using the yum install vnc command.
vncserver: start a remote desktop on your server. Gives you the ability to run graphical user
interfaces such as virt-manager via a remote session. Install vncserver using the yum install
vnc-server command.
In addtion to all the commands listed above, looking at the following log files can be quite helpful.
/var/log/m essages (From Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7, libvirtd log is recorded here by default)
/var/log/audit/audit.log
While the domain (guest virtual machine domain name) and corefilepath (location of the newly created core
dump file) are mandatory, the following arguments are optional:
--live creates a dump file on a running machine and doesn't pause it.
--crash stops the guest virtual machine and generates the dump file. T he guest virtual machine will
be listed as Shut off, with the reason as Crashed. Note that in virt-manager the status will be listed
as Shut off also.
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--reset will reset the guest virtual machine following a successful dump. Note, these three switches
are mutually exclusive.
--m em ory-only the dump file will be saved as an elf file, and will only include domain’s memory and
cpu common register value. T his option is very useful if the domain uses host devices directly.
T he entire dump process may be monitored using virsh dom jobinfo command and can be canceled
by running virsh dom jobabort.
A.3. kvm_stat
T he kvm _stat command is a python script which retrieves runtime statistics from the kvm kernel module.
T he kvm _stat command can be used to diagnose guest behavior visible to kvm . In particular,
performance related issues with guests. Currently, the reported statistics are for the entire system; the
behavior of all running guests is reported. T o run this script you need to install the qemu-kvm-tools
package. Refer to Section 4.2, “Installing virtualization packages on an existing Red Hat Enterprise Linux
system”.
T he kvm _stat command requires that the kvm kernel module is loaded and debugfs is mounted. If either
of these features are not enabled, the command will output the required steps to enable debugfs or the
kvm module. For example:
# kvm_stat
Please mount debugfs ('mount -t debugfs debugfs /sys/kernel/debug')
and ensure the kvm modules are loaded
kvm_stat output
T he kvm _stat command outputs statistics for all guests and the host. T he output is updated until the
command is terminated (using Ctrl+c or the q key). Note that the output you see on your screen may
differ.
# kvm_stat -l
#kvm_stat -1
kvm_ack_irq 21 18
kvm_age_page 0 0
kvm_apic 0 0
kvm_apic_accept_irq 0 0
kvm_apic_ipi 0 0
kvm_async_pf_completed 0 0
kvm_async_pf_doublefault 0 0
kvm_async_pf_not_present 0 0
kvm_async_pf_ready 0 0
kvm_cpuid 78387 66543
kvm_cr 0 0
kvm_emulate_insn 160 160
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Explanation of variables:
e fer_reload
e xits
fpu_reload
T he number of times a VMENT RY reloaded the FPU state. T he fpu_reload is incremented when
a guest is using the Floating Point Unit (FPU).
h alt_exits
Number of guest exits due to halt calls. T his type of exit is usually seen when a guest is idle.
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h alt_wakeup
h ost_state_reload
Count of full reloads of the host state (currently tallies MSR setup and guest MSR reads).
h ypercalls
insn_emulation
insn_emulation_fail
io_exits
irq_exits
irq_injections
irq_window
largepages
mmio_exits
mmu_cache_miss
mmu_flooded
Detection count of excessive write operations to an MMU page. T his counts detected write
operations not of individual write operations.
mmu_pde_zapped
mmu_pte_updated
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Troubleshooting
mmu_pte_write
mmu_recycled
mmu_shadow_zapped
mmu_unsync
n mi_injections
n mi_window
p f_fixed
p f_guest
r emote_tlb_flush
Number of remote (sibling CPU) T ranslation Lookaside Buffer (T LB) flush requests.
r equest_irq
signal_exits
t lb_flush
kvm_emulate_insn
Number of guest virtual machine instructions emulated by the host physical machine.
kvm_emulate_insn
Number of VM-entries.
kvm_emulate_insn
Number of VM-exits.
kvm_userspace_exit
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Itemized list of guest virtual machine exit counts (listed on a per-guest virtual machine basis as
defined by its hardware implementation). T he remaining entries are tracepoints in KVM code,
therefore subject to change and particular software configurations. Consult the individual MAN
pages for their meaning. T he items listed here will differ depending on your configuration.
Note
T he output information from the kvm _stat command is exported by the KVM hypervisor as pseudo
files located in the /sys/kernel/debug/kvm / directory.
T his section covers how to enable serial console output for fully virtualized guests.
Fully virtualized guest serial console output can be viewed with the virsh console command.
Be aware fully virtualized guest serial consoles have some limitations. Present limitations include:
You must configure the virtualized operating system to output information to the virtual serial port.
T o output kernel information from a fully virtualized Linux guest into the domain, modify the
etc/default/grub file. Append the following to the kernel line: console=tty0
console=ttyS0,115200.
# grub2-mkconfig -o /boot/grub2/grub.cfg
On the host, access the serial console with the following command:
# virsh console
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Troubleshooting
You can also use virt-m anager to display the virtual text console. In the guest console window, select
Serial 1 in T ext Consoles from the View menu.
If you encounter any errors with the Virtual Machine Manager, you can review the generated data in the
virt-m anager.log file that resides in the $HOME/.virt-m anager directory.
T his example uses 64 but you can specify another number to set the maximum loop value. You may also
have to implement loop device backed guests on your system. T o use a loop device backed guests for a
full virtualized system, use the phy: device or file: file commands.
T he current live-migration implementation has a default migration time configured to 30ms. T his value
determines the guest pause time at the end of the migration in order to transfer the leftovers. Higher
values increase the odds that live migration will converge
T he Intel VT -x extensions can be disabled in the BIOS. Certain laptop vendors have disabled the Intel VT -
x extensions by default in their CPUs.
Refer to the following section for instructions on enabling disabled virtualization extensions.
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Verify the virtualization extensions are enabled in BIOS. T he BIOS settings for Intel VT or AMD-V are
usually in the Chipset or Processor menus. T he menu names may vary from this guide, the virtualization
extension settings may be found in Security Settings or other non standard menu names.
1. Reboot the computer and open the system's BIOS menu. T his can usually be done by pressing the
delete key, the F1 key or Alt and F4 keys depending on the system.
Note
Many of the steps below may vary depending on your motherboard, processor type, chipset
and OEM. Refer to your system's accompanying documentation for the correct information on
configuring your system.
a. Open the Processor submenu T he processor settings menu may be hidden in the
Chipset, Advanced CPU Configuration or Northbridge.
c. Enable Intel VT -d or AMD IOMMU, if the options are available. Intel VT -d and AMD IOMMU are
used for PCI device assignment.
4. When the machine has booted, run cat /proc/cpuinfo |grep -E "vm x|svm ". Specifying --
color is optional, but useful if you want the search term highlighted. If the command outputs, the
virtualization extensions are now enabled. If there is no output your system may not have the
virtualization extensions or the correct BIOS setting enabled.
$ ./macgen.py
00:16:3e:20:b0:11
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Troubleshooting
#!/usr/bin/python
# macgen.py script to generate a MAC address for guest virtual machines
#
import random
#
def randomMAC():
mac = [ 0x00, 0x16, 0x3e,
random.randint(0x00, 0x7f),
random.randint(0x00, 0xff),
random.randint(0x00, 0xff) ]
return ':'.join(map(lambda x: "%02x" % x, mac))
#
print randomMAC()
Another method to generate a new MAC for your guest virtual machine
You can also use the built-in modules of python-virtinst to generate a new MAC address and UUID
for use in a guest virtual machine configuration file:
#!/usr/bin/env python
# -*- mode: python; -*-
print ""
print "New UUID:"
import virtinst.util ; print virtinst.util.uuidToString(virtinst.util.randomUUID())
print "New MAC:"
import virtinst.util ; print virtinst.util.randomMAC()
print ""
T he rtl8139 virtualized NIC works fine in most environments,but this device can suffer from performance
degradation problems on some networks, such as a 10 Gigabit Ethernet.
Note
Note that the virtualized Intel PRO/1000 (e1000) driver is also supported as an emulated driver
choice. T o use the e1000 driver, replace virtio in the procedure below with e1000. For the best
performance it is recommended to use the virtio driver.
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2. Edit the guest's configuration file with the virsh command (where GUEST is the guest's name):
T he virsh edit command uses the $EDIT OR shell variable to determine which editor to use.
3. Find the network interface section of the configuration. T his section resembles the snippet below:
<interface type='network'>
[output truncated]
<model type='rtl8139' />
</interface>
4. Change the type attribute of the model element from 'rtl8139' to 'virtio'. T his will change the
driver from the rtl8139 driver to the e1000 driver.
<interface type='network'>
[output truncated]
<model type='virtio' />
</interface>
Alternatively, new guests can be created with a different network driver. T his may be required if you are
having difficulty installing guests over a network connection. T his method requires you to have at least one
guest already created (possibly installed from CD or DVD) to use as a template.
1. Create an XML template from an existing guest (in this example, named Guest1):
2. Copy and edit the XML file and update the unique fields: virtual machine name, UUID, disk image,
MAC address, and any other unique parameters. Note that you can delete the UUID and MAC
address lines and virsh will generate a UUID and MAC address.
# cp /tmp/guest-template.xml /tmp/new-guest.xml
# vi /tmp/new-guest.xml
<interface type='network'>
[output truncated]
<model type='virtio' />
</interface>
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Troubleshooting
External snapshots, on the other hand work with any type of original disk image, can be taken with no
guest downtime, and are able to receive active improvements from QEMU. In libvirt, they are created when
using the --disk-only or --m em spec option to snapshot-create-as (or when specifying an explicit
XML file to snapshot-create that does the same). At the moment external snapshots are a one-way
operation as libvirt can create them but can't do anything further with them. A workaround is described
here.
With Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 and Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 guests, there is usually no error
message produced when pressing the associated key. However, Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4 and Red Hat
Enterprise Linux 5 guests may display an error similar to the following:
Alternatively, to fix this issue using the virsh edit command on the target guest:
Add the following attribute to the <graphics> tag: keymap='ja'. For example:
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newer Windows OS version guests as well as all known Linux guests do not experience this problem. T o
prevent this issue from happening, wait to delete a device that you just added.
$ libguestfs-test-tool
T his tool prints a large amount of text to test the operation of libguestfs. If the test is successful, the
following text will appear near the end of the output:
Locate the error on the table below and follow the corresponding link under Solution for detailed
troubleshooting information.
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Unable to add bridge br0 T his error message or the Section A.16.11, “Unable to add
port vnet0: No such similar Failed to add tap bridge br0 port vnet0: No such
device interface to bridge device”
'br0': No such device
reveal that the bridge device
specified in the guest's (or
domain's) <interface>
definition does not exist.
Warning: could not open T he guest virtual machine does Section A.16.12, “Guest is unable
/dev/net/tun: no virtual not start after configuring a to start with error: warning:
network em ulation qem u- type='ethernet' (or 'generic could not open
kvm : -netdev ethernet') interface in the host /dev/net/tun”
tap,script=/etc/m y-qem u- system. T his error or similar
appears either in
ifup,id=hostnet0: Device
libvirtd.log,
'tap' could not be
/var/log/libvirt/qem u/na
initialized
me_of_guest.log, or in both.
Unable to resolve QEMU guest migration fails and Section A.16.13, “Migration fails
address name_of_host this error message appears with with Error: unable to
service '4 9155': Nam e or an unfamiliar hostname. resolve address”
service not known
Unable to allow access A guest virtual machine cannot Section A.16.14, “Migration fails
for disk path be migrated because libvirt with Unable to allow
/var/lib/libvirt/im ages/ cannot access the disk image(s). access for disk path: No
qem u.im g: No such file such file or directory”
or directory
No guest virtual machines are T he libvirt daemon is Section A.16.15, “No guest virtual
present when libvirtd is started successfully started, but no machines are present when
guest virtual machines appear to libvirtd is started”
be present when running virsh
list --all.
Unable to connect to While libvirtd should listen on Section A.16.16, “Unable to
server at 'host:16509': T CP ports for connections, the connect to server at
Connection refused ... connection to the hypervisor 'host:16509': Connection refused
error: failed to connect fails. ... error: failed to connect to the
hypervisor”
to the hypervisor
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Troubleshooting
T he libvirt daemon does not start automatically. Starting the libvirt daemon manually fails as
well:
# /etc/init.d/libvirtd start
* Caching service dependencies ...
[ ok ]
* Starting libvirtd ...
/usr/sbin/libvirtd: error: Unable to initialize network sockets. Check
/var/log/messages or run without --daemon for more info.
* start-stop-daemon: failed to start `/usr/sbin/libvirtd'
[ !! ]
* ERROR: libvirtd failed to start
Moreover, there is not 'm ore info' about this error in /var/log/m essages.
Investigation
log_outputs="3:syslog:libvirtd"
Note
T his line is commented out by default to prevent libvirt from producing excessive log
messages. After diagnosing the problem, it is recommended to comment this line again in
the /etc/libvirt/libvirtd.conf file.
If libvirtd still does not start successfully, an error similar to the following will be shown in the
/var/log/m essages file:
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T he libvirtd man page shows that the missing cacert.pem file is used as T LS authority when
libvirt is run in Listen for T CP/IP connections mode. T his means the --listen
parameter is being passed.
S olution
Configure the libvirt daemon's settings with one of the following methods:
Install a CA certificate.
Note
Investigation
T he error message is misleading about the actual cause. T his error can be caused by a variety
of factors, such as an incorrectly specified URI, or a connection that is not configured.
S olution
Incorrectly specified URI
Use three forward slashes to connect to the local host. For example, specifying
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Troubleshooting
When a host name is specified, the QEMU transport defaults to T LS. T his results in
certificates.
When running a virsh command, the following error (or similar) appears:
Investigation
Without any hostname specified, the connection to QEMU uses UNIX sockets by default. If there
is no error running this command as root, the UNIX socket options in
/etc/libvirt/libvirtd.conf are likely misconfigured.
S olution
T o connect as a non-root user using UNIX sockets, configure the following options in
/etc/libvirt/libvirtd.conf:
unix_sock_group = <group>
unix_sock_ro_perms = <perms>
unix_sock_rw_perms = <perms>
Note
T he daemon is not running on the server or is configured not to listen, using configuration option
listen_tcp or listen_tls.
E nd of file while reading data: nc: using stream socket: Input/output error
If you specified ssh transport, the daemon is likely not running on the server. Solve this error by
verifying that the daemon is running on the server.
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A.16.3. The guest virtual machine cannot be started: internal error guest CPU
is not compatible with host CPU
S ymptom
Running on an Intel Core i7 processor (which virt-manager refers to as Nehalem , or the older
Core 2 Duo, referred to as Penryn), a KVM guest (or domain) is created using virt-manager.
After installation, the guest's processor is changed to match the host's CPU. T he guest is then
unable to start and reports this error:
Additionally, clicking Copy host CPU configuration in virt-manager shows Pentium III
instead of Nehalem or Penryn.
Investigation
T he /usr/share/libvirt/cpu_m ap.xm l file lists the flags that define each CPU model. T he
Nehalem and Penryn definitions contain this:
<feature name='nx'/>
As a result, the NX (or No eXecute) flag needs to be presented to identify the CPU as Nehalem
or Penryn. However, in /proc/cpuinfo, this flag is missing.
S olution
Nearly all new BIOSes allow enabling or disabling of the No eXecute bit. However, if disabled,
some CPUs do not report this flag and thus libvirt detects a different CPU. Enabling this
functionality instructs libvirt to report the correct CPU. Refer to your hardware documentation for
further instructions on this subject.
A.16.4. Guest starting fails with error: monitor socket did not show up
S ymptom
T he guest virtual machine (or domain) starting fails with this error (or similar):
Investigation
1. libvirt is working;
3. libvirt quits when trying to connect QEMU or the QEMU agent monitor socket.
# cat /var/log/libvirt/qemu/name_of_guest.log
LC_ALL=C PATH=/sbin:/usr/sbin:/bin:/usr/bin QEMU_AUDIO_DRV=none
/usr/bin/qemu-kvm -S -M pc -enable-kvm -m 768 -smp
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Troubleshooting
S olution
If a host physical machine is shut down while the guest is still running a libvirt version prior to
0.9.5, the libvirt-guest's init script attempts to perform a managed save of the guest. If the
managed save was incomplete (for example, due to loss of power before the managed save
image was flushed to disk), the save image is corrupted and will not be loaded by QEMU. T he
older version of libvirt does not recognize the corruption, making the problem perpetual. In this
case, the guest log will show an attempt to use -incom ing as one of its arguments, meaning
that libvirt is trying to start QEMU by migrating in the saved state file.
T his error message appears when attempting to connect to a guest virtual machine's console:
Investigation
T his error message shows that there is no serial console configured for the guest virtual
machine.
S olution
1. Add the following XML to the guest virtual machine's XML using virsh edit:
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<serial type='pty'>
<target port='0'/>
</serial>
<console type='pty'>
<target type='serial' port='0'/>
</console>
T o do this, either log in to the guest virtual machine to edit the /boot/grub/grub.conf
file directly, or use the virt-edit command line tool. Add the following to the guest kernel
command line:
console=ttyS0,115200
A.16.6. Guest virtual machine booting stalls with error: No boot device
S ymptom
After building a guest virtual machine from an existing disk image, the guest booting stalls with the
error message No boot device. However, the guest virtual machine can start successfully
using the QEMU command directly.
Investigation
T he disk's bus type is not specified in the command for importing the existing disk image:
# virt-install \
--connect qemu:///system \
--ram 2048 -n rhel_64 \
--os-type=linux --os-variant=rhel5 \
--disk path=/root/RHEL-Server-5.8-64-virtio.qcow2,device=disk,format=qcow2
\
--vcpus=2 --graphics spice --noautoconsole --import
However, the command line used to boot up the guest virtual machine using QEMU directly
shows that it uses virtio for its bus type:
Note the bus= in the guest's XML generated by libvirt for the imported guest:
<domain type='qemu'>
<name>rhel_64</name>
<uuid>6cd34d52-59e3-5a42-29e4-1d173759f3e7</uuid>
<memory>2097152</memory>
<currentMemory>2097152</currentMemory>
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Troubleshooting
<vcpu>2</vcpu>
<os>
<type arch='x86_64' machine='rhel5.4.0'>hvm</type>
<boot dev='hd'/>
</os>
<features>
<acpi/>
<apic/>
<pae/>
</features>
<clock offset='utc'>
<timer name='pit' tickpolicy='delay'/>
</clock>
<on_poweroff>destroy</on_poweroff>
<on_reboot>restart</on_reboot>
<on_crash>restart</on_crash>
<devices>
<emulator>/usr/libexec/qemu-kvm</emulator>
<disk type='file' device='disk'>
<driver name='qemu' type='qcow2' cache='none'/>
<source file='/root/RHEL-Server-5.8-64-virtio.qcow2'/>
<emphasis role="bold"><target dev='hda' bus='ide'/></emphasis>
<address type='drive' controller='0' bus='0' unit='0'/>
</disk>
<controller type='ide' index='0'/>
<interface type='bridge'>
<mac address='54:52:00:08:3e:8c'/>
<source bridge='br0'/>
</interface>
<serial type='pty'>
<target port='0'/>
</serial>
<console type='pty'>
<target port='0'/>
</console>
<input type='mouse' bus='ps2'/>
<graphics type='vnc' port='-1' autoport='yes' keymap='en-us'/>
<video>
<model type='cirrus' vram='9216' heads='1'/>
</video>
</devices>
</domain>
T he bus type for the disk is set as ide, which is the default value set by libvirt. T his is the
incorrect bus type, and has caused the unsuccessful boot for the imported guest.
S olution
1. Undefine the imported guest virtual machine, then re-import it with bus=virtio and the
following:
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--disk path=/root/RHEL-Server-5.8-64-
virtio.qcow2,device=disk,bus=virtio,format=qcow2 \
--vcpus=2 --graphics spice --noautoconsole --import
2. Edit the imported guest's XML using virsh edit and correct the disk bus type.
Normally, the configuration for a virtual network named default is installed as part of the libvirt
package, and is configured to autostart when libvirtd is started.
If the default network (or any other locally-created network) is unable to start, any virtual machine
configured to use that network for its connectivity will also fail to start, resulting in this error
message:
Investigation
One of the most common reasons for a libvirt virtual network's failure to start is that the
dnsmasq instance required to serve DHCP and DNS requests from clients on that network has
failed to start.
T o determine if this is the cause, run virsh net-start default from a root shell to start the
default virtual network.
If this action does not successfully start the virtual network, open
/var/log/libvirt/libvirtd.log to view the complete error log message.
If a message similar to the following appears, the problem is likely a systemwide dnsmasq
instance that is already listening on libvirt's bridge, and is preventing libvirt's own dnsmasq
instance from doing so. T he most important parts to note in the error message are dnsm asq and
exit status 2:
S olution
If the machine is not using dnsmasq to serve DHCP for the physical network, disable dnsmasq
completely.
If it is necessary to run dnsmasq to serve DHCP for the physical network, edit the
/etc/dnsm asq.conf file. Add or remove the comment mark the first line, as well as one of the
two lines following that line. Do not add or remove the comment from all three lines:
bind-interfaces
interface=name_of_physical_interface
listen-address=chosen_IP_address
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Troubleshooting
After making this change and saving the file, restart the system wide dnsmasq service.
Next, start the default network with the virsh net-start default command.
A guest virtual machine starts successfully, but is then either unable to acquire an IP address
from DHCP or boot using the PXE protocol, or both. T here are two common causes of this error:
having a long forward delay time set for the bridge, and when the iptables package and kernel do
not support checksum mangling rules.
T his is the most common cause of this error. If the guest network interface is
connecting to a bridge device that has ST P (Spanning T ree Protocol) enabled,
as well as a long forward delay set, the bridge will not forward network packets
from the guest virtual machine onto the bridge until at least that number of
forward delay seconds have elapsed since the guest connected to the bridge.
T his delay allows the bridge time to watch traffic from the interface and
determine the MAC addresses behind it, and prevent forwarding loops in the
network topology.
If the forward delay is longer than the timeout of the guest's PXE or DHCP client,
then the client's operation will fail, and the guest will either fail to boot (in the
case of PXE) or fail to acquire an IP address (in the case of DHCP).
S olution
If this is the case, change the forward delay on the bridge to 0, disable ST P on
the bridge, or both.
Note
T his solution applies only if the bridge is not used to connect multiple
networks, but just to connect multiple endpoints to a single network (the
most common use case for bridges used by libvirt).
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Note
delay='0' and stp='on' are the default settings for virtual networks,
so this step is only necessary if the configuration has been modified from
the default.
If the guest interface is connected to a host bridge that was configured outside
of libvirt, change the delay setting.
STP=on
DELAY=0
/usr/sbin/ifdown name_of_bridge
/usr/sbin/ifup name_of_bridge
Note
T his message is only a problem if all four of the following conditions are true:
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Troubleshooting
Important
Unless all of the other three conditions in this list are also true, the
above warning message can be disregarded, and is not an indicator
of any other problems.
When these conditions occur, UDP packets sent from the host to the guest
have uncomputed checksums. T his makes the host's UDP packets seem invalid
to the guest's network stack.
S olution
T o solve this problem, invalidate any of the four points above. T he best solution
is to update the host iptables and kernel to iptables-1.4.10 or newer where
possible. Otherwise, the most specific fix is to disable the vhost-net driver for
this particular guest. T o do this, edit the guest configuration with this command:
<interface type='network'>
<model type='virtio'/>
<driver name='qemu'/>
...
</interface>
Save the changes, shut down the guest, and then restart it.
If this problem is still not resolved, the issue may be due to a conflict between
firewalld and the default libvirt network.
T o fix this, stop firewalld with the service firewalld stop command,
then restart libvirt with the service libvirtd restart command.
A.16.9. Guest can reach outside network, but cannot reach host when using
macvtap interface
S ymptom
A guest virtual machine can communicate with other guests, but cannot connect to the host
machine after being configured to use a macvtap (also known as type='direct') network
interface.
Investigation
Even when not connecting to a Virtual Ethernet Port Aggregator (VEPA) or VN-Link capable
switch, macvtap interfaces can be useful. Setting the mode of such an interface to bridge allows
the guest to be directly connected to the physical network in a very simple manner without the
setup issues (or NetworkManager incompatibility) that can accompany the use of a traditional
host bridge device.
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However, when a guest virtual machine is configured to use a type='direct' network interface
such as macvtap, despite having the ability to communicate with other guests and other external
hosts on the network, the guest cannot communicate with its own host.
T his situation is actually not an error — it is the defined behavior of macvtap. Due to the way in
which the host's physical Ethernet is attached to the macvtap bridge, traffic into that bridge from
the guests that is forwarded to the physical interface cannot be bounced back up to the host's IP
stack. Additionally, traffic from the host's IP stack that is sent to the physical interface cannot be
bounced back up to the macvtap bridge for forwarding to the guests.
S olution
Use libvirt to create an isolated network, and create a second interface for each guest virtual
machine that is connected to this network. T he host and guests can then directly communicate
over this isolated network, while also maintaining compatibility with NetworkManager.
1. Add and save the following XML in the /tm p/isolated.xm l file. If the 192.168.254.0/24
network is already in use elsewhere on your network, you can choose a different network.
<network>
<name>isolated</name>
<ip address='192.168.254.1' netmask='255.255.255.0'>
<dhcp>
<range start='192.168.254.2' end='192.168.254.254' />
</dhcp>
</ip>
</network>
2. Create the network with this command: virsh net-define /tm p/isolated.xm l
3. Set the network to autostart with the virsh net-autostart isolated command.
5. Using virsh edit name_of_guest, edit the configuration of each guest that uses
macvtap for its network connection and add a new <interface> in the <devices> section
similar to the following (note the <model type='virtio'/> line is optional to include):
<interface type='network'>
<source network='isolated'/>
<model type='virtio'/>
</interface>
T he guests are now able to reach the host at the address 192.168.254.1, and the host will be
able to reach the guests at the IP address they acquired from DHCP (alternatively, you can
manually configure the IP addresses for the guests). Since this new network is isolated to only
the host and guests, all other communication from the guests will use the macvtap interface.
A.16.10. Could not add rule to fixup DHCP response checksums on network
'default'
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Troubleshooting
S ymptom
Could not add rule to fixup DHCP response checksums on network 'default'
Investigation
S olution
Unless the problem you are experiencing is that the guest virtual machines are unable to acquire
IP addresses through DHCP, this message can be ignored.
If this is the case, refer to Section A.16.8, “PXE boot (or DHCP) on guest failed” for further details
on this situation.
For example, if the bridge name is br0, the error message will appear as:
In libvirt versions 0.9.6 and earlier, the same error appears as:
Investigation
Both error messages reveal that the bridge device specified in the guest's (or domain's)
<interface> definition does not exist.
T o verify the bridge device listed in the error message does not exist, use the shell command
ifconfig br0.
A message similar to this confirms the host has no bridge by that name:
However, if the resulting message is similar to the following, the issue exists elsewhere:
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S olution
E dit the existing bridge or create a new bridge with virsh
Use virsh to either edit the settings of an existing bridge or network, or to add the
bridge device to the host system configuration.
For libvirt version 0.9.8 and later, a bridge device can be created with the
virsh iface-bridge command. T his will create a bridge device br0 with
eth0, the physical network interface which is set as part of a bridge, attached:
Optional: If desired, remove this bridge and restore the original eth0
configuration with this command:
For older versions of libvirt, it is possible to manually create a bridge device on the host.
Refer to Section 10.5, “Bridged networking with libvirt” for instructions.
A.16.12. Guest is unable to start with error: warning: could not open
/dev/net/tun
S ymptom
T he guest virtual machine does not start after configuring a type='ethernet' (also known as
'generic ethernet') interface in the host system. An error appears either in libvirtd.log,
/var/log/libvirt/qem u/name_of_guest.log, or in both, similar to the below message:
Investigation
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Troubleshooting
T he reason for this failure is that for this type of interface, a script called by QEMU needs to
manipulate the tap device. However, with type='ethernet' configured, in an attempt to lock
down QEMU, libvirt and SELinux have put in place several checks to prevent this. (Normally,
libvirt performs all of the tap device creation and manipulation, and passes an open file
descriptor for the tap device to QEMU.)
S olution
Reconfigure the host system to be compatible with the generic ethernet interface.
Procedure A.6. Reconfiguring the host system to use the generic ethernet interface
clear_emulator_capabilities = 0
user = "root"
group = "root"
cgroup_device_acl = [
"/dev/null", "/dev/full", "/dev/zero",
"/dev/random", "/dev/urandom",
"/dev/ptmx", "/dev/kvm", "/dev/kqemu",
"/dev/rtc", "/dev/hpet", "/dev/net/tun",
4. Restart libvirtd.
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Important
Since each of these steps significantly decreases the host's security protections against
QEMU guest domains, this configuration should only be used if there is no alternative to
using <interface type='ethernet'>.
Note
For more information on SELinux, refer to the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Security-Enhanced Linux
User Guide.
For example, if the destination hostname is "newyork", the error message will appear as:
However, this error looks strange as we did not use "newyork" hostname anywhere.
Investigation
During migration, libvirtd running on the destination host creates a URI from an address and port
where it expects to receive migration data and sends it back to libvirtd running on the source
host.
In this case, the destination host (192.168.122.12) has its name set to 'newyork'. For some
reason, libvirtd running on that host is unable to resolve the name to an IP address that could be
sent back and still be useful. For this reason, it returned the 'newyork' hostname hoping the
source libvirtd would be more successful with resolving the name. T his can happen if DNS is not
properly configured or /etc/hosts has the hostname associated with local loopback address
(127.0.0.1).
Note that the address used for migration data cannot be automatically determined from the
address used for connecting to destination libvirtd (for example, from
qem u+tcp://192.168.122.12/system ). T his is because to communicate with the
destination libvirtd, the source libvirtd may need to use network infrastructure different from
that which virsh (possibly running on a separate machine) requires.
S olution
T he best solution is to configure DNS correctly so that all hosts involved in migration are able to
resolve all host names.
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Troubleshooting
If DNS cannot be configured to do this, a list of every host used for migration can be added
manually to the /etc/hosts file on each of the hosts. However, it is difficult to keep such lists
consistent in a dynamic environment.
If the host names cannot be made resolvable by any means, virsh m igrate supports
specifying the migration host:
Destination libvirtd will take the tcp://192.168.122.12 URI and append an automatically
generated port number. If this is not desirable (because of firewall configuration, for example), the
port number can be specified in this command:
Another option is to use tunneled migration. T unneled migration does not create a separate
connection for migration data, but instead tunnels the data through the connection used for
communication with destination libvirtd (for example,
qem u+tcp://192.168.122.12/system ):
A.16.14. Migration fails with Unable to allow access for disk path: No
such file or directory
S ymptom
A guest virtual machine (or domain) cannot be migrated because libvirt cannot access the disk
image(s):
For example, if the destination hostname is "newyork", the error message will appear as:
Investigation
By default, migration only transfers the in-memory state of a running guest (such as memory or
CPU state). Although disk images are not transferred during migration, they need to remain
accessible at the same path by both hosts.
S olution
Set up and mount shared storage at the same location on both hosts. T he simplest way to do this
is to use NFS:
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1. Set up an NFS server on a host serving as shared storage. T he NFS server can be one of
the hosts involved in the migration, as long as all hosts involved are accessing the shared
storage through NFS.
# mkdir -p /exports/images
# cat >>/etc/exports <<EOF
/exports/images 192.168.122.0/24(rw,no_root_squash)
EOF
2. Mount the exported directory at a common location on all hosts running libvirt. For
example, if the IP address of the NFS server is 192.168.122.1, mount the directory with the
following commands:
Note
It is not possible to export a local directory from one host using NFS and mount it at the
same path on another host — the directory used for storing disk images must be mounted
from shared storage on both hosts. If this is not configured correctly, the guest virtual
machine may lose access to its disk images during migration, because the source host's
libvirt daemon may change the owner, permissions, and SELinux labels on the disk
images after it successfully migrates the guest to its destination.
If libvirt detects that the disk images are mounted from a shared storage location, it will
not make these changes.
T he libvirt daemon is successfully started, but no guest virtual machines appear to be present.
Investigation
T here are various possible causes of this problem. Performing these tests will help to determine
the cause of this situation:
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Troubleshooting
If you are using an AMD machine, verify the kvm _am d kernel modules are inserted in the
kernel instead, using the similar command lsm od | grep kvm _am d in the root shell.
If the modules are not present, insert them using the m odprobe <modulename>
command.
Note
Verify that virtualization extensions are supported and enabled on the host:
# virsh uri
vbox:///system
For example, this message shows the URI is connected to the VirtualBox hypervisor,
not QEMU, and reveals a configuration error for a URI that is otherwise set to connect to
a QEMU hypervisor. If the URI was correctly connecting to QEMU, the same message
would appear instead as:
# virsh uri
qemu:///system
T his situation occurs when there are other hypervisors present, which libvirt may speak
to by default.
S olution
After performing these tests, use the following command to view a list of guest virtual machines:
While libvirtd should listen on T CP ports for connections, the connections fail:
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# virsh -c qemu+tcp://host/system
error: unable to connect to server at 'host:16509': Connection refused
error: failed to connect to the hypervisor
However, the T CP ports for libvirt are still not open after changing configuration:
Investigation
T he libvirt daemon was started without the --listen option. Verify this by running this
command:
S olution
T o do this, modify the /etc/sysconfig/libvirtd file and uncomment the following line:
#LIBVIRTD_ARGS="--listen"
# /etc/init.d/libvirtd restart
Although it is not recommended, it is sometimes necessary to edit a guest virtual machine's (or a
domain's) XML file manually. T o access the guest's XML for editing, use the following command:
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Troubleshooting
T his command opens the file in a text editor with the current definition of the guest virtual machine. After
finishing the edits and saving the changes, the XML is reloaded and parsed by libvirt. If the XML is
correct, the following message is displayed:
Important
When using the edit command in virsh to edit an XML document, save all changes before exiting
the editor.
After saving the XML file, use the xm llint command to validate that the XML is well-formed, or the virt-
xm l-validate command to check for usage problems:
# virt-xml-validate config.xml
If no errors are returned, the XML description is well-formed and matches the libvirt schema. While the
schema does not catch all constraints, fixing any reported errors will further troubleshooting.
T hese documents contain definitions of states and configurations for the guests. T hese
documents are automatically generated and should not be edited manually. Errors in these
documents contain the file name of the broken document. T he file name is valid only on the host
machine defined by the URI, which may refer to the machine the command was run on.
Errors in files created by libvirt are rare. However, one possible source of these errors is a
downgrade of libvirt — while newer versions of libvirt can always read XML generated by older
versions, older versions of libvirt may be confused by XML elements added in a newer version.
Syntax errors are caught by the XML parser. T he error message contains information for identifying the
problem.
T his example error message from the XML parser consists of three lines — the first line denotes the error
message, and the two following lines contain the context and location of the XML code containing the error.
T he third line contains an indicator showing approximately where the error lies on the line above it:
T his is the file name of the document that contains the error. File names in parentheses
are symbolic names to describe XML documents parsed from memory, and do not
directly correspond to files on disk. File names that are not contained in parentheses are
local files that reside on the target of the connection.
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T his is the line number in the XML file that contains the error.
T his is the error message from the libxml2 parser, which describes the specific XML
error.
Investigation
T his error message shows that the parser expects a new element name after the < symbol on
line 6 of a guest's XML file.
Ensure line number display is enabled in your text editor. Open the XML file, and locate the text on
line 6:
<domain type='kvm'>
<name>name_of_guest</name>
<memory>524288</memory>
<vcpu>2</vcpu><
T his snippet of a guest's XML file contains an extra < in the document:
S olution
Investigation
T his snippet of a guest's XML file contains an unterminated element attribute value:
<domain type='kvm>
<name>name_of_guest</name>
In this case, 'kvm ' is missing a second quotation mark. Strings of attribute values, such as
quotation marks and apostrophes, must be opened and closed, similar to XML start and end tags.
S olution
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Troubleshooting
Investigation
T he error message above contains three clues to identify the offending tag:
T he message following the last colon, clock line 16 and dom ain, reveals that <clock>
contains a mismatched tag on line 16 of the document. T he last hint is the pointer in the context
part of the message, which identifies the second offending tag.
Unpaired tags must be closed with />. T he following snippet does not follow this rule and has
produced the error message shown above:
<domain type='kvm'>
...
<clock offset='utc'>
T his error is caused by mismatched XML tags in the file. Every XML tag must have a matching
start and end tag.
T his snippet contains an mismatch error for <features> because there is no end tag
(</nam e>):
<domain type='kvm'>
...
<features>
<acpi/>
<pae/>
...
</domain>
T his snippet contains an end tag (</nam e>) without a corresponding start tag:
<domain type='kvm'>
</name>
...
</domain>
S olution
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Investigation
XML errors are easily caused by a simple typographical error. T his error message highlights the
XML error — in this case, an extra white space within the word type — with a pointer.
<domain ty pe='kvm'>
T hese XML examples will not parse correctly because of typographical errors such as a missing
special character, or an additional character:
<dom#ain type='kvm'>
S olution
T o identify the problematic tag, read the error message for the context of the file, and locate the
error with the pointer. Correct the XML and save the changes.
A well-formatted XML document can contain errors that are correct in syntax but libvirt cannot parse.
Many of these errors exist, with two of the most common cases outlined below.
Parts of the change you have made do not show up and have no effect after editing or defining
the domain. T he define or edit command works, but when dumping the XML once again, the
change disappears.
Investigation
T his error likely results from a broken construct or syntax that libvirt does not parse. T he libvirt
tool will generally only look for constructs it knows but ignore everything else, resulting in some of
the XML changes vanishing after libvirt parses the input.
S olution
Validate the XML input before passing it to the edit or define commands. T he libvirt
developers maintain a set of XML schemas bundled with libvirt which define the majority of the
constructs allowed in XML documents used by libvirt.
# virt-xml-validate libvirt.xml
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Troubleshooting
If this command passes, libvirt will likely understand all constructs from your XML, except if the
schemas cannot detect options which are valid only for a given hypervisor. Any XML generated by
libvirt as a result of a virsh dum p command, for example, should validate without error.
T he definition of the source image for the CD-ROM virtual drive is not present, despite being
added:
S olution
A type='block' disk device expects that the source is a physical device. T o use the disk with
an image file, use type='file' instead.
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Additional resources
T o learn more about virtualization and Red Hat Enterprise Linux, refer to the following resources.
http://virt-manager.et.redhat.com/ is the project website for the Virtual Machine Manager (virt-
manager), the graphical application for managing virtual machines.
http://www.redhat.com/products/cloud-computing/virtualization/
https://access.redhat.com/site/documentation/
http://virt.kernelnewbies.org
http://et.redhat.com
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NetKVM D river Parameters
Important
Modifying the driver's parameters causes Windows to re-load that driver. T his interrupts existing
network activity.
Click on the Start button. In the right-hand pane, right-click on Com puter, and click Manage. If
prompted, click Continue on the User Account Control window. T his opens the Com puter
Managem ent window.
In the left-hand pane of the Com puter Managem ent window, click Device Manager.
In the central pane of the Com puter Managem ent window, click on the + symbol beside Network
adapters.
Under the list of Red Hat VirtIO Ethernet Adapter devices, double-click on NetKVM. T his
opens the Properties window for that device.
Click on the parameter you wish to modify to display the options for that parameter.
Logging parameters
L ogging.Enable
A Boolean value that determines whether logging is enabled. T he default value is 1 (enabled).
L ogging.Level
An integer that defines the logging level. As the integer increases, so does the verbosity of the
log. T he default value is 0 (errors only). 1-2 adds configuration messages. 3-4 adds packet flow
information. 5-6 adds interrupt and DPC level trace information.
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Important
High logging levels will slow down your guest virtual machine.
L ogging.Statistics(sec)
An integer that defines whether log statistics are printed, and the time in seconds between each
periodical statistics printout. T he default value is 0 (no logging statistics).
Initial parameters
Assign MAC
A string that defines the locally-administered MAC address for the para-virtualized NIC. T his is
not set by default.
Init.ConnectionRate(Mb)
An integer that represents the connection rate in megabytes. T he default value for Windows 2008
and later is 10000.
Init.Do802.1PQ
A Boolean value that enables Priority/VLAN tag population and removal support. T he default value
is 1 (enabled).
Init.UseMergedBuffers
Init.UsePublishEvents
A Boolean value that enables published event use. T he default value is 1 (enabled).
Init.MT USize
An integer that defines the maximum transmission unit (MT U). T he default value is 1500. Any
value from 500 to 65500 is acceptable.
Init.IndirectT x
Controls whether indirect ring descriptors are in use. T he default value is Disable, which
disables use of indirect ring descriptors. Other valid values are Enable, which enables indirect
ring descriptor usage; and Enable* , which enables conditional use of indirect ring descriptors.
Init.MaxT xBuffers
An integer that represents the amount of T X ring descriptors that will be allocated. T he default
value is 1024 . Valid values are: 16, 32, 64, 128, 256, 512, or 1024.
Init.MaxRxBuffers
An integer that represents the amount of RX ring descriptors that will be allocated. T he default
value is 256. Valid values are: 16, 32, 64, 128, 256, 512, or 1024.
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NetKVM D river Parameters
O ffload.T x.Checksum
In Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7, the valid values for this parameter are All (the default), which
enables IP, T CP and UDP checksum offloading for both IPv4 and IPv6; T CP/UDP(v4 ,v6), which
enables T CP and UDP checksum offloading for both IPv4 and IPv6; T CP/UDP(v4 ), which
enables T CP and UDP checksum offloading for IPv4 only; and T CP(v4 ), which enables only T CP
checksum offloading for IPv4 only.
O ffload.T x.LSO
A Boolean value that enables T X T CP Large Segment Offload (LSO). T he default value is 1
(enabled).
O ffload.Rx.Checksum
In Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7, the valid values for this parameter are All (the default), which
enables IP, T CP and UDP checksum offloading for both IPv4 and IPv6; T CP/UDP(v4 ,v6), which
enables T CP and UDP checksum offloading for both IPv4 and IPv6; T CP/UDP(v4 ), which
enables T CP and UDP checksum offloading for IPv4 only; and T CP(v4 ), which enables only T CP
checksum offloading for IPv4 only.
Important
T est and debug parameters should only be used for testing or debugging; they should not be used
in production.
T estOnly.DelayConnect(ms)
T he period for which to delay connection upon startup, in milliseconds. T he default value is 0.
T estOnly.DPCChecking
Sets the DPC checking mode. 0 (the default) disables DPC checking. 1 enables DPC checking;
each hang test verifies DPC activity and acts as if the DPC was spawned. 2 clears the device
interrupt status and is otherwise identical to 1.
T estOnly.Scatter-Gather
T estOnly.InterruptRecovery
A Boolean value that determines whether interrupt recovery is enabled. T he default value is 1
(enabled).
T estOnly.PacketFilter
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Virtualization D eployment and Administration Guide
A Boolean value that determines whether packet filtering is enabled. T he default value is 1
(enabled).
T estOnly.BatchReceive
A Boolean value that determines whether packets are received in batches, or singularly. T he
default value is 1, which enables batched packet receipt.
T estOnly.Promiscuous
A Boolean value that determines whether promiscuous mode is enabled. T he default value is 0
(disabled).
T estOnly.AnalyzeIPPackets
A Boolean value that determines whether the checksum fields of outgoing IP packets are tested
and verified for debugging purposes. T he default value is 0 (no checking).
T estOnly.RXT hrottle
An integer that determines the number of receive packets handled in a single DPC. T he default
value is 1000.
T estOnly.UseSwT xChecksum
A Boolean value that determines whether hardware checksum is enabled. T he default value is 0
(disabled).
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The Virtual Host Metrics D aemon (vhostmd)
In the host, a daemon (vhostmd) runs which writes metrics periodically into a disk image. T his disk image
is exported read-only to guest virtual machines. Guest virtual machines can read the disk image to see
metrics. Simple synchronization stops guest virtual machines from seeing out of date or corrupt metrics.
T he system administrator chooses which metrics are available for use on a per guest virtual machine
basis. In addition, the system administrator may block one or more guest virtual machines from having any
access to metric configurations.
Customers who want to use vhostmd and vm-dump-metrics therefore need subscriptions for "Red Hat
Enterprise Linux for SAP Business Applications" to be able to subscribe their Red Hat Enterprise systems
running SAP to the "RHEL for SAP" channel on RHN/Customer Portal to install the packages. T he following
Knowledge Base article on the Red Hat customer portal describes the the setup of vhostmd on RHEL:
https://access.redhat.com/knowledge/solutions/41566
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Revision History
Revision 1-14 5 Wed Jun 11 2014 T ahlia Richardson
Fixed broken links.
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edited iSCSI and included link to source domain XML section - 1059006
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