Part I Introduction #
- 1 Virtualization Technology
Virtualization is a technology that provides a way for a machine (Host) to run another operating system (guest virtual machines) on top of the host operating system.
- 2 Introduction to Xen Virtualization
This chapter introduces and explains the components and technologies you need to understand to set up and manage a Xen-based virtualization environment.
- 3 Introduction to KVM Virtualization
- 4 Introduction to Linux Containers
Linux containers are a lightweight virtualization method to run multiple virtual units (“containers”) simultaneously on a single host. This is similar to the chroot environment. Containers are isolated with kernel Control Groups (cgroups) and kernel Namespaces.
- 5 Virtualization Tools
libvirt
is a library that provides a common API for managing popular virtualization solutions, among them KVM, LXC, and Xen. The library provides a normalized management API for these virtualization solutions, allowing a stable, cross-hypervisor interface for higher-level management tools. The library also provides APIs for management of virtual networks and storage on the VM Host Server. The configuration of each VM Guest is stored in an XML file.With
libvirt
you can also manage your VM Guests remotely. It supports TLS encryption, x509 certificates and authentication with SASL. This enables managing VM Host Servers centrally from a single workstation, alleviating the need to access each VM Host Server individually.Using the
libvirt
-based tools is the recommended way of managing VM Guests. Interoperability betweenlibvirt
andlibvirt
-based applications has been tested and is an essential part of SUSE's support stance.- 6 Installation of Virtualization Components
None of the virtualization tools is installed by default. They will be automatically installed when configuring the hypervisor with the YaST module yast2-vm.
› . In case this module is not available in YaST, install the package- 7 Supported Hosts, Guests, and Features
Supported architectures and virtualization limits for Xen and KVM are outlined in the Release Notes.