Describes virtualization technology in general, and introduces libvirt—the unified interface to virtualization—and detailed information on specific hypervisors.
- About This Manual
- I Introduction
- II Managing Virtual Machines with
libvirt
- 7 Starting and Stopping
libvirtd
- 8 Guest Installation
- 9 Basic VM Guest Management
- 10 Connecting and Authorizing
- 11 Managing Storage
- 12 Managing Networks
- 13 Configuring Virtual Machines with Virtual Machine Manager
- 13.1 Machine Setup
- 13.2 Storage
- 13.3 Controllers
- 13.4 Networking
- 13.5 Input Devices
- 13.6 Video
- 13.7 USB Redirectors
- 13.8 Miscellaneous
- 13.9 Adding a CD/DVD-ROM Device with Virtual Machine Manager
- 13.10 Adding a Floppy Device with Virtual Machine Manager
- 13.11 Ejecting and Changing Floppy or CD/DVD-ROM Media with Virtual Machine Manager
- 13.12 Assigning a Host PCI Device to a VM Guest
- 13.13 Assigning a Host USB Device to a VM Guest
- 14 Configuring Virtual Machines with
virsh
- 14.1 Editing the VM Configuration
- 14.2 Changing the Machine Type
- 14.3 Configuring Hypervisor Features
- 14.4 Configuring CPU Allocation
- 14.5 Changing Boot Options
- 14.6 Configuring Memory Allocation
- 14.7 Adding a PCI Device
- 14.8 Adding a USB Device
- 14.9 Adding SR-IOV Devices
- 14.10 Listing Attached Devices
- 14.11 Configuring Storage Devices
- 14.12 Configuring Controller Devices
- 14.13 Configuring Video Devices
- 14.14 Configuring Network Devices
- 14.15 Using Macvtap to Share VM Host Server Network Interfaces
- 14.16 Disabling a Memory Balloon Device
- 14.17 Configuring Multiple Monitors (Dual Head)
- 14.18 Crypto adapter pass-through to KVM guests on IBM Z
- 15 Managing Virtual Machines with Vagrant
- 7 Starting and Stopping
- III Hypervisor-Independent Features
- IV Managing Virtual Machines with Xen
- 21 Setting Up a Virtual Machine Host
- 22 Virtual Networking
- 23 Managing a Virtualization Environment
- 24 Block Devices in Xen
- 25 Virtualization: Configuration Options and Settings
- 26 Administrative Tasks
- 27 XenStore: Configuration Database Shared between Domains
- 28 Xen as a High-Availability Virtualization Host
- V Managing Virtual Machines with QEMU
- 29 QEMU Overview
- 30 Setting Up a KVM VM Host Server
- 31 Guest Installation
- 32 Running Virtual Machines with qemu-system-ARCH
- 33 Virtual Machine Administration Using QEMU Monitor
- 33.1 Accessing Monitor Console
- 33.2 Getting Information about the Guest System
- 33.3 Changing VNC Password
- 33.4 Managing Devices
- 33.5 Controlling Keyboard and Mouse
- 33.6 Changing Available Memory
- 33.7 Dumping Virtual Machine Memory
- 33.8 Managing Virtual Machine Snapshots
- 33.9 Suspending and Resuming Virtual Machine Execution
- 33.10 Live Migration
- 33.11 QMP - QEMU Machine Protocol
- VI Managing Virtual Machines with LXC
- Glossary
- A Virtual Machine Drivers
- B Appendix
- C XM, XL Toolstacks and Libvirt framework
- D Licenze GNU
- 2.1 Xen Virtualization Architecture
- 3.1 KVM Virtualization Architecture
- 12.1 Connection Details
- 12.2 Create virtual network
- 12.3 Create virtual network
- 12.4 Create virtual network
- 13.1 View of a VM Guest
- 13.2 Overview details
- 13.3 VM Guest Title and Description
- 13.4 Performance
- 13.5 Statistics Charts
- 13.6 Processor View
- 13.7 Memory View
- 13.8 Boot Options
- 13.9 Add a New Storage
- 13.10 Add a New Controller
- 13.11 Add a New Controller
- 13.12 Add a New Input Device
- 13.13 Add a New Video Device
- 13.14 Add a New USB Redirector
- 13.15 Adding a PCI Device
- 13.16 Adding a USB Device
- 26.1 Boot Loader Settings
- 30.1 Installing the KVM Hypervisor and Tools
- 30.2 Network Bridge
- 31.1 New 2 GB Partition in Guest YaST Partitioner
- 32.1 QEMU Window with SLES as VM Guest
- 32.2 QEMU VNC Session
- 32.3 Authentication Dialog in Remmina
- 6.1 Feature Support—Host (
Dom0
) - 6.2 Feature Support—Paravirtualized Guest
- 6.3 Feature Support—Fully Virtualized Guest
- 28.1 Xen Remote Storage
- C.1 Notation Conventions
- C.2 New Global Options
- C.3 Common Options
- C.4 Domain Management Removed Options
- C.5 USB Devices Management Removed Options
- C.6 CPU Management Removed options
- C.7 Other Options
- C.8
xl
create
Changed Options - C.9
xm
create
Removed Options - C.10
xl
create
Added Options - C.11
xl
console
Added Options - C.12
xm
info
Removed Options - C.13
xm
dump-core
Removed Options - C.14
xm
list
Removed Options - C.15
xl
list
Added Options - C.16
xl
mem-*
Changed Options - C.17
xm
migrate
Removed Options - C.18
xl
migrate
Added Options - C.19
xm
reboot
Removed Options - C.20
xl
reboot
Added Options - C.21
xl
save
Added Options - C.22
xl
restore
Added Options - C.23
xm
shutdown
Removed Options - C.24
xl
shutdown
Added Options - C.25
xl
trigger
Changed Options - C.26
xm
sched-credit
Removed Options - C.27
xl
sched-credit
Added Options - C.28
xm
sched-credit2
Removed Options - C.29
xl
sched-credit2
Added Options - C.30
xm
sched-sedf
Removed Options - C.31
xl
sched-sedf
Added Options - C.32
xm
cpupool-list
Removed Options - C.33
xm
cpupool-create
Removed Options - C.34
xl
pci-detach
Added Options - C.35
xm
block-list
Removed Options - C.36 Other Options
- C.37 Network Options
- C.38
xl
network-attach
Removed Options - C.39 New Options
- 8.1 Loading Kernel and Initrd from HTTP Server
- 8.2 Example of a
virt-install
command line - 9.1 Typical Output of
kvm_stat
- 12.1 NAT Based Network
- 12.2 Routed Network
- 12.3 Isolated Network
- 12.4 Using an Existing Bridge on VM Host Server
- 14.1 Example XML Configuration File
- 23.1 Guest Domain Configuration File for SLED 12:
/etc/xen/sled12.cfg
- 30.1 Exporting Host's File System with VirtFS
- 32.1 Restricted User-mode Networking
- 32.2 User-mode Networking with Custom IP Range
- 32.3 User-mode Networking with Network-boot and TFTP
- 32.4 User-mode Networking with Host Port Forwarding
- 32.5 Password Authentication
- 32.6 x509 Certificate Authentication
- 32.7 x509 Certificate and Password Authentication
- 32.8 SASL Authentication
- C.1 Converting Xen Domain Configuration to
libvirt
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