9 Basic VM Guest Management #
Most management tasks, such as starting or stopping a VM Guest, can either
be done using the graphical application Virtual Machine Manager or on the command line using
virsh
. Connecting to the graphical console via VNC is only
possible from a graphical user interface.
If started on a VM Host Server, the libvirt
tools Virtual Machine Manager,
virsh
, and virt-viewer
can be used to
manage VM Guests on the host. However, it is also possible to manage
VM Guests on a remote VM Host Server. This requires configuring remote access for
libvirt
on the host. For instructions, see
Chapter 10, Connecting and Authorizing.
To connect to such a remote host with Virtual Machine Manager, you need to set up a connection
as explained in Section 10.2.2, “Managing Connections with Virtual Machine Manager”. If
connecting to a remote host using virsh
or
virt-viewer
, you need to specify a connection URI with
the parameter -c
(for example, virsh -c
qemu+tls://saturn.example.com/system
or virsh -c
xen+ssh://
). The form of connection URI depends on the connection
type and the hypervisor—see
Section 10.2, “Connecting to a VM Host Server” for details.
Examples in this chapter are all listed without a connection URI.
9.1 Listing VM Guests #
The VM Guest listing shows all VM Guests managed by libvirt
on a
VM Host Server.
9.1.1 Listing VM Guests with Virtual Machine Manager #
The main window of the Virtual Machine Manager lists all VM Guests for each VM Host Server it is connected to. Each VM Guest entry contains the machine's name, its status (
, , or ) displayed as an icon and literally, and a CPU usage bar.9.1.2 Listing VM Guests with virsh
#
Use the command virsh
list
to get a
list of VM Guests:
- List all running guests
>
virsh list- List all running and inactive guests
>
virsh list --all
For more information and further options, see virsh help
list
or man 1 virsh
.
9.2 Accessing the VM Guest via Console #
VM Guests can be accessed via a VNC connection (graphical console) or, if supported by the guest operating system, via a serial console.
9.2.1 Opening a Graphical Console #
Opening a graphical console to a VM Guest lets you interact with the machine like a physical host via a VNC connection. If accessing the VNC server requires authentication, you are prompted to enter a user name (if applicable) and a password.
When you click into the VNC console, the cursor is “grabbed” and cannot be used outside the console anymore. To release it, press Alt–Ctrl.
To prevent the console from grabbing the cursor and to enable seamless cursor movement, add a tablet input device to the VM Guest. See Section 13.5, “Input Devices” for more information.
Certain key combinations such as Ctrl–Alt–Del are
interpreted by the host system and are not passed to the VM Guest. To pass
such key combinations to a VM Guest, open the
menu from the VNC window and choose the desired key combination entry. The
menu is only available when using Virtual Machine Manager and
virt-viewer
. With Virtual Machine Manager, you can alternatively use the
“sticky key” feature as explained in
Tip: Passing Key Combinations to Virtual Machines.
Principally all VNC viewers can connect to the console of a VM Guest.
However, if you are using SASL authentication and/or TLS/SSL connection to
access the guest, the options are limited. Common VNC viewers such as
tightvnc
or tigervnc
support neither
SASL authentication nor TLS/SSL. The only supported alternative to Virtual Machine Manager
and virt-viewer
is Remmina (refer to
Section 10.2, “Remmina: the Remote Desktop Client”).
9.2.1.1 Opening a Graphical Console with Virtual Machine Manager #
In the Virtual Machine Manager, right-click a VM Guest entry.
Choose
from the pop-up menu.
9.2.1.2 Opening a Graphical Console with virt-viewer
#
virt-viewer
is a simple VNC viewer with added
functionality for displaying VM Guest consoles. For example, it can be
started in “wait” mode, where it waits for a VM Guest to
start before it connects. It also supports automatically reconnecting to a
VM Guest that is rebooted.
virt-viewer
addresses VM Guests by name, by ID or by
UUID. Use virsh
list --all
to get this
data.
To connect to a guest that is running or paused, use either the ID, UUID, or name. VM Guests that are shut off do not have an ID—you can only connect to them by UUID or name.
- Connect to guest with the ID
8
>
virt-viewer 8- Connect to the inactive guest named
sles12
; the connection window will open once the guest starts >
virt-viewer --wait sles12With the
--wait
option, the connection will be upheld even if the VM Guest is not running at the moment. When the guest starts, the viewer will be launched.
For more information, see virt-viewer
--help
or man 1 virt-viewer
.
When using virt-viewer
to open a connection to a
remote host via SSH, the SSH password needs to be entered twice. The
first time for authenticating with libvirt
, the second time for
authenticating with the VNC server. The second password needs to be
provided on the command line where virt-viewer was started.
9.2.2 Opening a Serial Console #
Accessing the graphical console of a virtual machine requires a graphical
environment on the client accessing the VM Guest. As an alternative,
virtual machines managed with libvirt can also be accessed from the shell
via the serial console and virsh
. To open a serial
console to a VM Guest named “sles12”, run the following
command:
>
virsh console sles12
virsh console
takes two optional flags:
--safe
ensures exclusive access to the console,
--force
disconnects any existing sessions before
connecting. Both features need to be supported by the guest operating
system.
Being able to connect to a VM Guest via serial console requires that the guest operating system supports serial console access and is properly supported. Refer to the guest operating system manual for more information.
Serial console access in SUSE Linux Enterprise and openSUSE is disabled by default. To enable it, proceed as follows:
- SLES 12 and Up/openSUSE
Launch the YaST Boot Loader module and switch to the
tab. Addconsole=ttyS0
to the field .- SLES 11
Launch the YaST Boot Loader module and select the boot entry for which to activate serial console access. Choose
and addconsole=ttyS0
to the field . Additionally, edit/etc/inittab
and uncomment the line with the following content:#S0:12345:respawn:/sbin/agetty -L 9600 ttyS0 vt102
9.3 Changing a VM Guest's State: Start, Stop, Pause #
Starting, stopping or pausing a VM Guest can be done with either Virtual Machine Manager or
virsh
. You can also configure a VM Guest to be
automatically started when booting the VM Host Server.
When shutting down a VM Guest, you may either shut it down gracefully, or force the shutdown. The latter is equivalent to pulling the power plug on a physical host and is only recommended if there are no alternatives. Forcing a shutdown may cause file system corruption and loss of data on the VM Guest.
To be able to perform a graceful shutdown, the VM Guest must be configured to support ACPI. If you have created the guest with the Virtual Machine Manager, ACPI should be available in the VM Guest.
Depending on the guest operating system, availability of ACPI may not be sufficient to perform a graceful shutdown. It is strongly recommended to test shutting down and rebooting a guest before using it in production. openSUSE or SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop, for example, can require Polkit authorization for shutdown and reboot. Make sure this policy is turned off on all VM Guests.
If ACPI was enabled during a Windows XP/Windows Server 2003 guest installation, turning it on in the VM Guest configuration only is not sufficient. For more information, see:
Regardless of the VM Guest's configuration, a graceful shutdown is always possible from within the guest operating system.
9.3.1 Changing a VM Guest's State with Virtual Machine Manager #
Changing a VM Guest's state can be done either from Virtual Machine Manager's main window, or from a VNC window.
Right-click a VM Guest entry.
Choose
, , or one of the from the pop-up menu.
Open a VNC Window as described in Section 9.2.1.1, “Opening a Graphical Console with Virtual Machine Manager”.
Choose
, , or one of the options either from the toolbar or from the menu.
9.3.1.1 Automatically Starting a VM Guest #
You can automatically start a guest when the VM Host Server boots. This feature is not enabled by default and needs to be enabled for each VM Guest individually. There is no way to activate it globally.
Double-click the VM Guest entry in Virtual Machine Manager to open its console.
Choose
› to open the VM Guest configuration window.Choose
and check .Save the new configuration with
.
9.3.2 Changing a VM Guest's State with virsh
#
In the following examples, the state of a VM Guest named “sles12” is changed.
- Start
>
virsh start sles12- Pause
>
virsh suspend sles12- Resume (a Suspended VM Guest)
>
virsh resume sles12- Reboot
>
virsh reboot sles12- Graceful shutdown
>
virsh shutdown sles12- Force shutdown
>
virsh destroy sles12- Turn on automatic start
>
virsh autostart sles12- Turn off automatic start
>
virsh autostart --disable sles12
9.4 Saving and Restoring the State of a VM Guest #
Saving a VM Guest preserves the exact state of the guest’s memory. The operation is similar to hibernating a computer. A saved VM Guest can be quickly restored to its previously saved running condition.
When saved, the VM Guest is paused, its current memory state is saved to disk, and then the guest is stopped. The operation does not make a copy of any portion of the VM Guest’s virtual disk. The amount of time taken to save the virtual machine depends on the amount of memory allocated. When saved, a VM Guest’s memory is returned to the pool of memory available on the VM Host Server.
The restore operation loads a VM Guest’s previously saved memory state file and starts it. The guest is not booted but instead resumed at the point where it was previously saved. The operation is similar to coming out of hibernation.
The VM Guest is saved to a state file. Make sure there is enough space on the partition you are going to save to. For an estimation of the file size in megabytes to be expected, issue the following command on the guest:
>
free -mh | awk '/^Mem:/ {print $3}'
After using the save operation, do not boot or start the saved VM Guest. Doing so would cause the machine's virtual disk and the saved memory state to get out of synchronization. This can result in critical errors when restoring the guest.
To be able to work with a saved VM Guest again, use the restore operation.
If you used virsh
to save a VM Guest, you cannot
restore it using Virtual Machine Manager. In this case, make sure to restore using
virsh
.
If you restore the VM Guest after a long pause (hours) since
it was saved, its time synchronization service—for example,
chronyd
—may refuse to synchronize its time. In this case,
manually synchronize VM Guest's time. For example, for KVM hosts,
you can use the QEMU guest agent and instruct the guest with the
guest-set-time
. Refer to Chapter 19, QEMU Guest Agent
for more details.
raw
, qcow2
Saving and restoring VM Guests is only possible if the VM Guest is using
a virtual disk of the type raw
(.img
), or qcow2.
9.4.1 Saving/Restoring with Virtual Machine Manager #
Open a VNC connection window to a VM Guest. Make sure the guest is running.
Choose
› › .
Open a VNC connection window to a VM Guest. Make sure the guest is not running.
Choose
› .If the VM Guest was previously saved using Virtual Machine Manager, you will not be offered an option to
the guest. However, note the caveats on machines saved withvirsh
outlined in Warning: Always Restore Saved Guests.
9.4.2 Saving and Restoring with virsh
#
Save a running VM Guest with the command virsh
save
and specify the file which it is saved to.
- Save the guest named
opensuse13
>
virsh save opensuse13 /virtual/saves/opensuse13.vmsav- Save the guest with the ID
37
>
virsh save 37 /virtual/saves/opensuse13.vmsave
To restore a VM Guest, use virsh
restore
:
>
virsh restore /virtual/saves/opensuse13.vmsave
9.5 Creating and Managing Snapshots #
VM Guest snapshots are snapshots of the complete virtual machine including the state of CPU, RAM, devices, and the content of all writable disks. To use virtual machine snapshots, all the attached hard disks need to use the qcow2 disk image format, and at least one of them needs to be writable.
Snapshots let you restore the state of the machine at a particular point in time. This is useful when undoing a faulty configuration or the installation of a lot of packages. After starting a snapshot that was created while the VM Guest was shut off, you will need to boot it. Any changes written to the disk after that point in time will be lost when starting the snapshot.
Snapshots are supported on KVM VM Host Servers only.
9.5.1 Terminology #
There are several specific terms used to describe the types of snapshots:
- Internal snapshots
Snapshots that are saved into the qcow2 file of the original VM Guest. The file holds both the saved state of the snapshot and the changes made since the snapshot was taken. The main advantage of internal snapshots is that they are all stored in one file and therefore it is easy to copy or move them across multiple machines.
- External snapshots
When creating an external snapshot, the original qcow2 file is saved and made read-only, while a new qcow2 file is created to hold the changes. The original file is sometimes called a 'backing' or 'base' file, while the new file with all the changes is called an 'overlay' or 'derived' file. External snapshots are useful when performing backups of VM Guests. However, external snapshots are not supported by Virtual Machine Manager, and cannot be deleted by
virsh
directly. For more information on external snapshots in QEMU, refer to Section 31.2.4, “Manipulate Disk Images Effectively”.- Live snapshots
Snapshots created when the original VM Guest is running. Internal live snapshots support saving the devices, and memory and disk states, while external live snapshots with
virsh
support saving either the memory state, or the disk state, or both.- Offline snapshots
Snapshots created from a VM Guest that is shut off. This ensures data integrity as all the guest's processes are stopped and no memory is in use.
9.5.2 Creating and Managing Snapshots with Virtual Machine Manager #
Virtual Machine Manager supports only internal snapshots, either live or offline.
To open the snapshot management view in Virtual Machine Manager, open the VNC window as described in Section 9.2.1.1, “Opening a Graphical Console with Virtual Machine Manager”. Now either choose › or click in the toolbar.
The list of existing snapshots for the chosen VM Guest is displayed in the left-hand part of the window. The snapshot that was last started is marked with a green tick. The right-hand part of the window shows details of the snapshot currently marked in the list. These details include the snapshot's title and time stamp, the state of the VM Guest at the time the snapshot was taken and a description. Snapshots of running guests also include a screenshot. The
can be changed directly from this view. Other snapshot data cannot be changed.9.5.2.1 Creating a Snapshot #
To take a new snapshot of a VM Guest, proceed as follows:
Optionally, shut down the VM Guest if you want to create an offline snapshot.
Click
in the bottom left corner of the VNC window.The window
opens.Provide a “speaking name”.
and, optionally, a description. The name cannot be changed after the snapshot has been taken. To be able to identify the snapshot later easily, use aConfirm with
.
9.5.2.2 Deleting a Snapshot #
To delete a snapshot of a VM Guest, proceed as follows:
Click
in the bottom left corner of the VNC window.Confirm the deletion with
.
9.5.2.3 Starting a Snapshot #
To start a snapshot, proceed as follows:
Click
in the bottom left corner of the VNC window.Confirm the start with
.
9.5.3 Creating and Managing Snapshots with virsh
#
To list all existing snapshots for a domain
(admin_server in the following), run the
snapshot-list
command:
>
virsh snapshot-list --domain sle-ha-node1
Name Creation Time State
------------------------------------------------------------
sleha_12_sp2_b2_two_node_cluster 2016-06-06 15:04:31 +0200 shutoff
sleha_12_sp2_b3_two_node_cluster 2016-07-04 14:01:41 +0200 shutoff
sleha_12_sp2_b4_two_node_cluster 2016-07-14 10:44:51 +0200 shutoff
sleha_12_sp2_rc3_two_node_cluster 2016-10-10 09:40:12 +0200 shutoff
sleha_12_sp2_gmc_two_node_cluster 2016-10-24 17:00:14 +0200 shutoff
sleha_12_sp3_gm_two_node_cluster 2017-08-02 12:19:37 +0200 shutoff
sleha_12_sp3_rc1_two_node_cluster 2017-06-13 13:34:19 +0200 shutoff
sleha_12_sp3_rc2_two_node_cluster 2017-06-30 11:51:24 +0200 shutoff
sleha_15_b6_two_node_cluster 2018-02-07 15:08:09 +0100 shutoff
sleha_15_rc1_one-node 2018-03-09 16:32:38 +0100 shutoff
The snapshot that was last started is shown with the
snapshot-current command:
>
virsh snapshot-current --domain admin_server
Basic installation incl. SMT for CLOUD4
Details about a particular snapshot can be obtained by running the
snapshot-info
command:
>
virsh snapshot-info --domain admin_server \
-name "Basic installation incl. SMT for CLOUD4"
Name: Basic installation incl. SMT for CLOUD4
Domain: admin_server
Current: yes
State: shutoff
Location: internal
Parent: Basic installation incl. SMT for CLOUD3-HA
Children: 0
Descendants: 0
Metadata: yes
9.5.3.1 Creating Internal Snapshots #
To take an internal snapshot of a VM Guest, either a live or offline, use
the snapshot-create-as
command as follows:
>
virsh snapshot-create-as --domain admin_server1 --name "Snapshot 1"2 \
--description "First snapshot"3
9.5.3.2 Creating External Snapshots #
With virsh
, you can take external snapshots of the
guest's memory state, disk state, or both.
To take both live and offline external snapshots of the guest's disk,
specify the --disk-only
option:
>
virsh snapshot-create-as --domain admin_server --name \
"Offline external snapshot" --disk-only
You can specify the --diskspec
option to control how the
external files are created:
>
virsh snapshot-create-as --domain admin_server --name \
"Offline external snapshot" \
--disk-only --diskspec vda,snapshot=external,file=/path/to/snapshot_file
To take a live external snapshot of the guest's memory, specify the
--live
and --memspec
options:
>
virsh snapshot-create-as --domain admin_server --name \
"Offline external snapshot" --live \
--memspec snapshot=external,file=/path/to/snapshot_file
To take a live external snapshot of both the guest's disk and memory
states, combine the --live
, --diskspec
,
and --memspec
options:
>
virsh snapshot-create-as --domain admin_server --name \
"Offline external snapshot" --live \
--memspec snapshot=external,file=/path/to/snapshot_file
--diskspec vda,snapshot=external,file=/path/to/snapshot_file
Refer to the SNAPSHOT COMMANDS section in
man 1 virsh
for more details.
9.5.3.3 Deleting a Snapshot #
External snapshots cannot be deleted with virsh
.
To delete an internal snapshot of a VM Guest and restore the disk space
it occupies, use the snapshot-delete
command:
>
virsh snapshot-delete --domain admin_server --snapshotname "Snapshot 2"
9.5.3.4 Starting a Snapshot #
To start a snapshot, use the snapshot-revert
command:
>
virsh snapshot-revert --domain admin_server --snapshotname "Snapshot 1"
To start the current snapshot (the one the VM Guest was started off), it
is sufficient to use --current
rather than specifying the
snapshot name:
>
virsh snapshot-revert --domain admin_server --current
9.6 Deleting a VM Guest #
By default, deleting a VM Guest using virsh
removes only
its XML configuration. Since attached storage is not deleted by default, you
can reuse it with another VM Guest. With Virtual Machine Manager, you can also delete a
guest's storage files as well—this will completely erase the guest.
9.6.1 Deleting a VM Guest with Virtual Machine Manager #
In the Virtual Machine Manager, right-click a VM Guest entry.
From the context menu, choose
.A confirmation window opens. Clicking
will permanently erase the VM Guest. The deletion is not recoverable.You can also permanently delete the guest's virtual disk by activating
. The deletion is not recoverable either.
9.6.2 Deleting a VM Guest with virsh
#
To delete a VM Guest, it needs to be shut down first. It is not possible to delete a running guest. For information on shutting down, see Section 9.3, “Changing a VM Guest's State: Start, Stop, Pause”.
To delete a VM Guest with virsh
, run
virsh
undefine
VM_NAME.
>
virsh undefine sles12
There is no option to automatically delete the attached storage files. If they are managed by libvirt, delete them as described in Section 11.2.4, “Deleting Volumes from a Storage Pool”.
9.7 Migrating VM Guests #
One of the major advantages of virtualization is that VM Guests are portable. When a VM Host Server needs to go down for maintenance, or when the host gets overloaded, the guests can easily be moved to another VM Host Server. KVM and Xen even support “live” migrations during which the VM Guest is constantly available.
9.7.1 Migration Requirements #
To successfully migrate a VM Guest to another VM Host Server, the following requirements need to be met:
It is recommended that the source and destination systems have the same architecture.
Storage devices must be accessible from both machines (for example, via NFS or iSCSI) and must be configured as a storage pool on both machines. For more information, see Chapter 11, Managing Storage.
This is also true for CD-ROM or floppy images that are connected during the move. However, you can disconnect them prior to the move as described in Section 13.11, “Ejecting and Changing Floppy or CD/DVD-ROM Media with Virtual Machine Manager”.
libvirtd
needs to run on both VM Host Servers and you must be able to open a remotelibvirt
connection between the target and the source host (or vice versa). Refer to Section 10.3, “Configuring Remote Connections” for details.If a firewall is running on the target host, ports need to be opened to allow the migration. If you do not specify a port during the migration process,
libvirt
chooses one from the range 49152:49215. Make sure that either this range (recommended) or a dedicated port of your choice is opened in the firewall on the target host.Host and target machine should be in the same subnet on the network, otherwise networking will not work after the migration.
All VM Host Servers participating in migration must have the same UID for the qemu user and the same GIDs for the kvm, qemu, and libvirt groups.
No running or paused VM Guest with the same name must exist on the target host. If a shut down machine with the same name exists, its configuration will be overwritten.
All CPU models except host cpu model are supported when migrating VM Guests.
SATA disk device type is not migratable.
File system pass-through feature is incompatible with migration.
The VM Host Server and VM Guest need to have proper timekeeping installed. See Chapter 17, VM Guest Clock Settings.
No physical devices can be passed from host to guest. Live migration is currently not supported when using devices with PCI pass-through or SR-IOV. If live migration needs to be supported, you need to use software virtualization (paravirtualization or full virtualization).
Cache mode setting is an important setting for migration. See: Section 16.5, “Effect of Cache Modes on Live Migration”.
Backward migration (for example, from SLES 15 SP2 to 15 SP1) is not supported.
SUSE strives to support live migration of VM Guests from a VM Host Server running a service pack under LTSS to a VM Host Server running a newer service pack, within the same SLES major version. For example, VM Guest migration from an SLES 12 SP2 host to an SLES 12 SP5 host. SUSE only performs minimal testing of LTSS-to-newer migration scenarios and recommends thorough on-site testing before attempting to migrate critical VM Guests.
The image directory should be located in the same path on both hosts.
All hosts should be on the same level of microcode (especially the spectre microcode updates). This can be achieved by installing the latest updates of SUSE Linux Enterprise Server on all hosts.
9.7.2 Migrating with Virtual Machine Manager #
When using the Virtual Machine Manager to migrate VM Guests, it does not matter on which machine it is started. You can start Virtual Machine Manager on the source or the target host or even on a third host. In the latter case you need to be able to open remote connections to both the target and the source host.
Start Virtual Machine Manager and establish a connection to the target or the source host. If the Virtual Machine Manager was started neither on the target nor the source host, connections to both hosts need to be opened.
Right-click the VM Guest that you want to migrate and choose
. Make sure the guest is running or paused—it is not possible to migrate guests that are shut down.Tip: Increasing the Speed of the MigrationTo increase the speed of the migration somewhat, pause the VM Guest. This is the equivalent of the former so-called “offline migration” option of Virtual Machine Manager.
Choose a
for the VM Guest. If the desired target host does not show up, make sure that you are connected to the host.To change the default options for connecting to the remote host, under
, set the , and the target host's (IP address or host name) and . If you specify a , you must also specify an .Under
, choose whether the move should be permanent (default) or temporary, using .Additionally, there is the option
, which allows migrating without disabling the cache of the VM Host Server. This can speed up the migration but only works when the current configuration allows for a consistent view of the VM Guest storage without usingcache="none"
/0_DIRECT
.Note: Bandwidth OptionIn recent versions of Virtual Machine Manager, the option of setting a bandwidth for the migration has been removed. To set a specific bandwidth, use
virsh
instead.To perform the migration, click
.When the migration is complete, the
window closes and the VM Guest is now listed on the new host in the Virtual Machine Manager window. The original VM Guest will still be available on the target host (in shut down state).
9.7.3 Migrating with virsh
#
To migrate a VM Guest with virsh
migrate
, you need to have direct or remote shell access to
the VM Host Server, because the command needs to be run on the host. The
migration command looks like this:
>
virsh migrate [OPTIONS] VM_ID_or_NAME CONNECTION_URI [--migrateuri tcp://REMOTE_HOST:PORT]
The most important options are listed below. See virsh help
migrate
for a full list.
--live
Does a live migration. If not specified, the guest will be paused during the migration (“offline migration”).
--suspend
Does an offline migration and does not restart the VM Guest on the target host.
--persistent
By default a migrated VM Guest will be migrated temporarily, so its configuration is automatically deleted on the target host if it is shut down. Use this switch to make the migration persistent.
--undefinesource
When specified, the VM Guest definition on the source host will be deleted after a successful migration (however, virtual disks attached to this guest will not be deleted).
--parallel --parallel-connections NUM_OF_CONNECTIONS
Parallel migration can be used to increase migration data throughput in cases where a single migration thread is not capable of saturating the network link between source and destination hosts. On hosts with 40 GB network interfaces, it may require four migration threads to saturate the link. With parallel migration, the time required to migrate large memory VMs can be significantly reduced.
The following examples use mercury.example.com as the source system and jupiter.example.com as
the target system; the VM Guest's name is opensuse131
with Id 37
.
- Offline migration with default parameters
>
virsh migrate 37 qemu+ssh://tux@jupiter.example.com/system- Transient live migration with default parameters
>
virsh migrate --live opensuse131 qemu+ssh://tux@jupiter.example.com/system- Persistent live migration; delete VM definition on source
>
virsh migrate --live --persistent --undefinesource 37 \ qemu+tls://tux@jupiter.example.com/system- Offline migration using port 49152
>
virsh migrate opensuse131 qemu+ssh://tux@jupiter.example.com/system \ --migrateuri tcp://@jupiter.example.com:49152
By default virsh migrate
creates a temporary
(transient) copy of the VM Guest on the target host. A shut down version
of the original guest description remains on the source host. A transient
copy will be deleted from the server after it is shut down.
To create a permanent copy of a guest on the target host, use the switch
--persistent
. A shut down version of the original guest
description remains on the source host, too. Use the option
--undefinesource
together with
--persistent
for a “real” move where a
permanent copy is created on the target host and the version on the source
host is deleted.
It is not recommended to use --undefinesource
without the
--persistent
option, since this will result in the loss
of both VM Guest definitions when the guest is shut down on the target
host.
9.7.4 Step-by-Step Example #
9.7.4.1 Exporting the Storage #
First you need to export the storage, to share the Guest image between
host. This can be done by an NFS server. In the following example we want
to share the /volume1/VM
directory for all machines
that are on the network 10.0.1.0/24. We will use a SUSE Linux Enterprise NFS server. As
root user, edit the /etc/exports
file and add:
/volume1/VM 10.0.1.0/24 (rw,sync,no_root_squash)
You need to restart the NFS server:
>
sudo
systemctl restart nfsserver>
sudo
exportfs /volume1/VM 10.0.1.0/24
9.7.4.2 Defining the Pool on the Target Hosts #
On each host where you want to migrate the VM Guest, the pool must be
defined to be able to access the volume (that contains the Guest image).
Our NFS server IP address is 10.0.1.99, its share is the
/volume1/VM
directory, and we want to get it mounted
in the /var/lib/libvirt/images/VM
directory. The pool
name will be VM. To define this pool, create a
VM.xml
file with the following content:
<pool type='netfs'> <name>VM</name> <source> <host name='10.0.1.99'/> <dir path='/volume1/VM'/> <format type='auto'/> </source> <target> <path>/var/lib/libvirt/images/VM</path> <permissions> <mode>0755</mode> <owner>-1</owner> <group>-1</group> </permissions> </target> </pool>
Then load it into libvirt
using the pool-define
command:
#
virsh pool-define VM.xml
An alternative way to define this pool is to use the
virsh
command:
#
virsh pool-define-as VM --type netfs --source-host 10.0.1.99 \
--source-path /volume1/VM --target /var/lib/libvirt/images/VM
Pool VM created
The following commands assume that you are in the interactive shell of
virsh
which can also be reached by using the command
virsh
without any arguments. Then the pool can be set
to start automatically at host boot (autostart option):
virsh #
pool-autostart VM
Pool VM marked as autostarted
If you want to disable the autostart:
virsh #
pool-autostart VM --disable
Pool VM unmarked as autostarted
Check if the pool is present:
virsh #
pool-list --all Name State Autostart ------------------------------------------- default active yes VM active yesvirsh #
pool-info VM Name: VM UUID: 42efe1b3-7eaa-4e24-a06a-ba7c9ee29741 State: running Persistent: yes Autostart: yes Capacity: 2,68 TiB Allocation: 2,38 TiB Available: 306,05 GiB
Remember: this pool must be defined on each host where you want to be able to migrate your VM Guest.
9.7.4.3 Creating the Volume #
The pool has been defined—now we need a volume which will contain the disk image:
virsh #
vol-create-as VM sled12.qcow2 8G --format qcow2
Vol sled12.qcow2 created
The volume names shown will be used later to install the guest with virt-install.
9.7.4.4 Creating the VM Guest #
Let's create a SUSE Linux Enterprise Server VM Guest with the
virt-install
command. The VM pool
will be specified with the --disk
option,
cache=none is recommended if you do not want to use
the --unsafe
option while doing the migration.
#
virt-install --connect qemu:///system --virt-type kvm --name \
sled12 --memory 1024 --disk vol=VM/sled12.qcow2,cache=none --cdrom \
/mnt/install/ISO/SLE-12-Desktop-DVD-x86_64-Build0327-Media1.iso --graphics \
vnc --os-variant sled12
Starting install...
Creating domain...
9.7.4.5 Migrate the VM Guest #
Everything is ready to do the migration now. Run the
migrate
command on the VM Host Server that is currently
hosting the VM Guest, and choose the destination.
virsh # migrate --live sled12 --verbose qemu+ssh://IP/Hostname/system Password: Migration: [ 12 %]
9.8 Monitoring #
9.8.1 Monitoring with Virtual Machine Manager #
After starting Virtual Machine Manager and connecting to the VM Host Server, a CPU usage graph of all the running guests is displayed.
It is also possible to get information about disk and network usage with this tool, however, you must first activate this in
:Run
virt-manager
.Select
› .Change the tab from
to .Activate the check boxes for the kind of activity you want to see:
, , and .If desired, also change the update interval using
.Close the
dialog.Activate the graphs that should be displayed under
› .
Afterward, the disk and network statistics are also displayed in the main window of the Virtual Machine Manager.
More precise data is available from the VNC window. Open a VNC window as described in Section 9.2.1, “Opening a Graphical Console”. Choose from the toolbar or the menu. The statistics are displayed from the entry of the left-hand tree menu.
9.8.2 Monitoring with virt-top
#
virt-top
is a command line tool similar to the
well-known process monitoring tool top
.
virt-top
uses libvirt and therefore is capable of
showing statistics for VM Guests running on different hypervisors. It is
recommended to use virt-top
instead of
hypervisor-specific tools like xentop
.
By default virt-top
shows statistics for all running
VM Guests. Among the data that is displayed is the percentage of memory
used (%MEM
) and CPU (%CPU
) and the
uptime of the guest (TIME
). The data is updated
regularly (every three seconds by default). The following shows the output
on a VM Host Server with seven VM Guests, four of them inactive:
virt-top 13:40:19 - x86_64 8/8CPU 1283MHz 16067MB 7.6% 0.5% 7 domains, 3 active, 3 running, 0 sleeping, 0 paused, 4 inactive D:0 O:0 X:0 CPU: 6.1% Mem: 3072 MB (3072 MB by guests) ID S RDRQ WRRQ RXBY TXBY %CPU %MEM TIME NAME 7 R 123 1 18K 196 5.8 6.0 0:24.35 sled12_sp1 6 R 1 0 18K 0 0.2 6.0 0:42.51 sles12_sp1 5 R 0 0 18K 0 0.1 6.0 85:45.67 opensuse_leap - (Ubuntu_1410) - (debian_780) - (fedora_21) - (sles11sp3)
By default the output is sorted by ID. Use the following key combinations to change the sort field:
Shift–P: CPU usage |
Shift–M: Total memory allocated by the guest |
Shift–T: Time |
Shift–I: ID |
To use any other field for sorting, press Shift–F and select a field from the list. To toggle the sort order, use Shift–R.
virt-top
also supports different views on the VM Guests
data, which can be changed on-the-fly by pressing the following keys:
0: default view |
1: show physical CPUs |
2: show network interfaces |
3: show virtual disks |
virt-top
supports more hot keys to change the view of
the data and many command line switches that affect the behavior of the
program. For more information, see man 1 virt-top
.
9.8.3 Monitoring with kvm_stat
#
kvm_stat
can be used to trace KVM performance events.
It monitors /sys/kernel/debug/kvm
, so it needs the
debugfs to be mounted. On SUSE Linux Enterprise Server it should be mounted by default. In
case it is not mounted, use the following command:
>
sudo
mount -t debugfs none /sys/kernel/debug
kvm_stat
can be used in three different modes:
kvm_stat # update in 1 second intervals kvm_stat -1 # 1 second snapshot kvm_stat -l > kvmstats.log # update in 1 second intervals in log format # can be imported to a spreadsheet
kvm_stat
#kvm statistics efer_reload 0 0 exits 11378946 218130 fpu_reload 62144 152 halt_exits 414866 100 halt_wakeup 260358 50 host_state_reload 539650 249 hypercalls 0 0 insn_emulation 6227331 173067 insn_emulation_fail 0 0 invlpg 227281 47 io_exits 113148 18 irq_exits 168474 127 irq_injections 482804 123 irq_window 51270 18 largepages 0 0 mmio_exits 6925 0 mmu_cache_miss 71820 19 mmu_flooded 35420 9 mmu_pde_zapped 64763 20 mmu_pte_updated 0 0 mmu_pte_write 213782 29 mmu_recycled 0 0 mmu_shadow_zapped 128690 17 mmu_unsync 46 -1 nmi_injections 0 0 nmi_window 0 0 pf_fixed 1553821 857 pf_guest 1018832 562 remote_tlb_flush 174007 37 request_irq 0 0 signal_exits 0 0 tlb_flush 394182 148
See http://clalance.blogspot.com/2009/01/kvm-performance-tools.html for further information on how to interpret these values.