Jump to contentJump to page navigation: previous page [access key p]/next page [access key n]
documentation.suse.com / Documentação do SUSE Linux Enterprise Server / Virtualization Guide / Hypervisor-independent features
Applies to SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP5

Part III Hypervisor-independent features

  • 18 Disk cache modes
  • 19 VM Guest clock settings
  • Keeping the correct time in a VM Guest is one of the more difficult aspects of virtualization. Keeping the correct time is especially important for network applications and is also a prerequisite to do a live migration of a VM Guest.

  • 20 libguestfs
  • Virtual Machines consist of disk images and definition files. Manually accessing and manipulating these guest components (outside of normal hypervisor processes) is possible, but inherently dangerous and risks compromising data integrity. libguestfs is a C library and a corresponding set of tools designed for safely accessing and modifying Virtual Machine disk images—outside of normal hypervisor processes, but without the risk normally associated with manual editing.

  • 21 QEMU guest agent
  • The QEMU guest agent (GA) runs inside the VM Guest and allows the VM Host Server to run commands in the guest operating system via libvirt. It supports many functions—for example, getting details about guest file systems, freezing and thawing file systems, or suspending or rebooting a guest.

  • 22 Software TPM emulator
  • The Trusted Platform Module (TPM) is a cryptoprocessor that secures hardware using cryptographic keys. For developers who use the TPM to develop security features, a software TPM emulator is a convenient solution. Compared to a hardware TPM device, the emulator has no limit on the number of guests t…

  • 23 Creating crash dumps of a VM Guest
  • Whenever a VM crashes, it is useful to collect a core dump of the VM memory for debugging and analysis. For physical machines, Kexec and Kdump takes care of collecting crash dumps. For virtual machines, it depends whether the guest is fully virtualized (FV) or paravirtualized (PV).