libvir.html 114.1 KB
Newer Older
1 2
<html>
<head>
3
  <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="">
D
Daniel Veillard 已提交
4
  <title>Libvirt the virtualization API</title>
5
</head>
6

7
<body bgcolor="#ffffff">
D
Daniel Veillard 已提交
8
<h1 align="center">Libvirt the virtualization API</h1>
9

10 11
<h1>Note: this is the flat content of the <a href="index.html">web
site</a></h1>
12

13
<h1 style="text-align: center">libvirt</h1>
14

15
<h3>what is <span class="style1">libvirt?</span></h3>
16

17 18 19 20 21 22
<p>Libvirt is a C toolkit to interact with the virtualization capabilities
of recent versions of Linux (and other OSes). It is free software available
under the <a href="http://www.opensource.org/licenses/lgpl-license.html">GNU
Lesser General Public License</a>. Virtualization of the Linux Operating
System means the ability to run multiple instances of Operating Systems
concurently on a single hardware system where the basic resources are driven
23
by a Linux (or Solaris) instance. The library aim at providing long term stable C API
24 25 26 27 28 29
initially for the <a
href="http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/Research/SRG/netos/xen/index.html">Xen
paravirtualization</a> but should be able to integrate other
virtualization mechanisms, it currently also support <a
href="http://fabrice.bellard.free.fr/qemu/">QEmu</a> and <a
href="http://kvm.qumranet.com/">KVM</a>.</p>
30

31 32
<h2><a name="News">Releases</a></h2>

33 34 35 36
<p>Here is the list of official releases, however since it is early on in the
development of libvirt, it is preferable when possible to just use the <a
href="downloads.html">CVS version or snapshot</a>, contact the mailing list
and check the <a href="ChangeLog.html">ChangeLog</a> to gauge progresses.</p>
37

38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64
<h3>0.3.1: Jul 24 2007</h3>
<ul>
  <li>Documentation: index to remote page, script to test certificates,
      IPv6 remote support docs (Daniel Berrange), document
      VIRSH_DEFAULT_CONNECT_URI in virsh man page (David Lutterkort),
      Relax-NG early grammar for the network XML (David Lutterkort)</li>
  <li>Bug fixes: leaks in disk XML parsing (Masayuki Sunou), hypervisor
      alignment call problems on PPC64 (Christian Ehrhardt), dead client
      registration in daemon event loop (Daniel Berrange), double free
      in error handling (Daniel Berrange), close on exec for log file
      descriptors in the daemon (Daniel Berrange), avoid caching problem
      in remote daemon (Daniel Berrange), avoid crash after QEmu domain
      failure (Daniel Berrange)</li>
  <li>Improvements: checks of x509 certificates and keys (Daniel Berrange),
      error reports in the daemon (Daniel Berrange), checking of Ethernet MAC
      addresses in XML configs (Masayuki Sunou), support for a new
      clock switch between UTC and localtime (Daniel Berrange), early
      version of OpenVZ support (Shuveb Hussain), support for input devices
      on PS/2 and USB buses (Daniel Berrange), more tests especially
      the QEmu support (Daniel Berrange), range check in credit scheduler
      (with Saori Fukuta and Atsushi Sakai), add support for listen VNC
      parameter un QEmu and fix command line arg (Daniel Berrange)</li>
  <li>Cleanups: debug tracing (Richard Jones), removal of --with-qemud-pid-file
      (Richard Jones), remove unused virDeviceMode, new util module for
      code shared between drivers (Shuveb Hussain), xen header location
      detection (Richard Jones)</li>
</ul>
65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105
<h3>0.3.0: Jul 9 2007</h3>
<ul>
  <li>Secure Remote support (Richard Jones).
      See <a href="http://libvirt.org/remote.html">the remote page</a>
      of the documentation
  <li>Documentation: remote support (Richard Jones), description of
      the URI connection strings (Richard Jones), update of virsh man
      page, matrix of libvirt API/hypervisor support with version
      informations (Richard Jones)</li>
  <li>Bug fixes: examples Makefile.am generation (Richard Jones), 
      SetMem fix (Mark Johnson), URI handling and ordering of 
      drivers (Daniel Berrange), fix virsh help without hypervisor (Richard
      Jones), id marshalling fix (Daniel Berrange), fix virConnectGetMaxVcpus
      on remote (Richard Jones), avoid a realloc leak (Jim Meyering), scheduler
      parameters handling for Xen (Richard Jones), various early remote
      bug fixes (Richard Jones), remove virsh leaks of domains references
      (Masayuki Sunou), configCache refill bug (Richard Jones), fix
      XML serialization bugs</li>
  <li>Improvements: QEmu switch to XDR-based protocol (Dan Berrange),
      device attach/detach commands (Masayuki Sunou), OCaml bindings
      (Richard Jones), new entry points virDomainGetConnect and 
      virNetworkGetConnect useful for bindings (Richard Jones), 
      reunitifaction of remote and qemu daemon under a single libvirtd
      with a config file (Daniel Berrange)</li>
  <li>Cleanups: parsing of connection URIs (Richard Jones), messages
      from virsh (Saori Fukuta), Coverage files (Daniel Berrange), 
      Solaris fixes (Mark Johnson), avoid [r]index calls (Richard Jones),
      release information in Xen backend, virsh cpupin command cleanups
      (Masayuki Sunou), xen:/// suppport as standard Xen URI (Richard Jones and
      Daniel Berrange), improve driver selection/decline mechanism (Richard
      Jones), error reporting on XML dump (Richard Jones), Remove unused
      virDomainKernel structure (Richard Jones), daemon event loop event
      handling (Daniel Berrange), various unifications cleanup in the daemon
      merging (Daniel Berrange), internal file and timer monitoring API
      (Daniel Berrange), remove libsysfs dependancy, call brctl program
      directly (Daniel Berrange), virBuffer functions cleanups (Richard Jones),
      make init script LSB compliant, error handling on lookup functions
      (Richard Jones), remove internal virGetDomainByID (Richard Jones),
      revamp of xen subdrivers interfaces (Richard Jones)</li>
  <li>Localization updates</li>
</ul>
106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141
<h3>0.2.3: Jun 8 2007</h3>
<ul>
  <li>Documentation: documentation for upcoming remote access (Richard Jones),
      virConnectNumOfDefinedDomains doc (Jan Michael), virsh help messages
      for dumpxml and net-dumpxml (Chris Wright), </li>
  <li>Bug fixes: RelaxNG schemas regexp fix (Robin Green), RelaxNG arch bug
      (Mark McLoughlin), large buffers bug fixes (Shigeki Sakamoto), error
      on out of memory condition (Shigeki Sakamoto), virshStrdup fix, non-root
      driver when using Xen bug (Richard Jones), use --strict-order when
      running dnsmasq (Daniel Berrange), virbr0 weirdness on restart (Mark
      McLoughlin), keep connection error messages (Richard Jones), increase
      QEmu read buffer on help (Daniel Berrange), rpm dependance on
      dnsmasq (Daniel Berrange), fix XML boot device syntax (Daniel Berrange),
      QEmu memory bug (Daniel Berrange), memory leak fix (Masayuki Sunou),
      fix compiler flags (Richard Jones), remove type ioemu on recent Xen
      HVM for paravirt drivers (Saori Fukuta), uninitialized string bug
      (Masayuki Sunou), allow init even if the daemon is not running, 
      XML to config fix (Daniel Berrange)</li>
  <li>Improvements: add a special error class for the test module (Richard
      Jones), virConnectGetCapabilities on proxy (Richard Jones), allow
      network driver to decline usage (Richard Jones), extend error messages
      for upcoming remote access (Richard Jones), on_reboot support for QEmu
      (Daniel Berrange), save daemon output in a log file (Daniel Berrange),
      xenXMDomainDefineXML can override guest config (Hugh Brock),
      add attach-device and detach-device commands to virsh (Masayuki Sunou
      and Mark McLoughlin and Richard Jones), make virGetVersion case
      insensitive and Python bindings (Richard Jones), new scheduler API
      (Atsushi SAKAI), localizations updates, add logging option for virsh
      (Nobuhiro Itou), allow arguments to be passed to bootloader (Hugh Brock),
      increase the test suite (Daniel Berrange and Hugh Brock)</li>
  <li>Cleanups: Remove VIR_DRV_OPEN_QUIET (Richard Jones), disable xm_internal.c
      for Xen &gt; 3.0.3 (Daniel Berrange), unused fields in _virDomain (Richard
      Jones), export __virGetDomain and __virGetNetwork for libvirtd only
      (Richard Jones), ignore old VNC config for HVM on recent Xen (Daniel
      Berrange), various code cleanups, -Werror cleanup (Hugh Brock)</li>
</ul>
142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178
<h3>0.2.2: Apr 17 2007</h3>
<ul>
  <li>Documentation: fix errors due to Amaya (with Simon Hernandez), 
      virsh uses kB not bytes (Atsushi SAKAI), add command line help to
      qemud (Richard Jones), xenUnifiedRegister docs (Atsushi SAKAI),
      strings typos (Nikolay Sivov), ilocalization probalem raised by 
      Thomas Canniot</li>
  <li>Bug fixes: virsh memory values test (Masayuki Sunou), operations without
      libvirt_qemud (Atsushi SAKAI), fix spec file (Florian La Roche, Jeremy
      Katz, Michael Schwendt),
      direct hypervisor call (Atsushi SAKAI), buffer overflow on qemu
      networking command (Daniel Berrange), buffer overflow in quemud (Daniel
      Berrange), virsh vcpupin bug (Masayuki Sunou), host PAE detections
      and strcuctures size (Richard Jones), Xen PAE flag handling (Daniel
      Berrange), bridged config configuration (Daniel Berrange), erroneous
      XEN_V2_OP_SETMAXMEM value (Masayuki Sunou), memory free error (Mark
      McLoughlin), set VIR_CONNECT_RO on read-only connections (S.Sakamoto),
      avoid memory explosion bug (Daniel Berrange), integer overflow 
      for qemu CPU time (Daniel Berrange), QEMU binary path check (Daniel
      Berrange)</li>
  <li>Cleanups: remove some global variables (Jim Meyering), printf-style
      functions checks (Jim Meyering), better virsh error messages, increase
      compiler checkings and security (Daniel Berrange), virBufferGrow usage
      and docs, use calloc instead of malloc/memset, replace all sprintf by
      snprintf, avoid configure clobbering user's CTAGS (Jim Meyering), 
      signal handler error cleanup (Richard Jones), iptables internal code
      claenup (Mark McLoughlin), unified Xen driver (Richard Jones),
      cleanup XPath libxml2 calls, IPTables rules tightening (Daniel
      Berrange), </li>
  <li>Improvements: more regression tests on XML (Daniel Berrange), Python
      bindings now generate exception in error cases (Richard Jones),
      Python bindings for vir*GetAutoStart (Daniel Berrange),
      handling of CD-Rom device without device name (Nobuhiro Itou),
      fix hypervisor call to work with Xen 3.0.5 (Daniel Berrange),
      DomainGetOSType for inactive domains (Daniel Berrange), multiple boot
      devices for HVM (Daniel Berrange), 
      </li>
179
</ul>
180 181 182 183
<h3>0.2.1: Mar 16 2007</h3>
<ul>
  <li>Various internal cleanups (Richard Jones,Daniel Berrange,Mark McLoughlin)</li>
  <li>Bug fixes: libvirt_qemud daemon path (Daniel Berrange), libvirt
184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199
      config directory (Daniel Berrange and Mark McLoughlin), memory leak
      in qemud (Mark), various fixes on network support (Mark), avoid Xen
      domain zombies on device hotplug errors (Daniel Berrange), various
      fixes on qemud (Mark), args parsing (Richard Jones), virsh -t argument
      (Saori Fukuta), avoid virsh crash on TAB key (Daniel Berrange), detect
      xend operation failures (Kazuki Mizushima), don't listen on null socket
      (Rich Jones), read-only socket cleanup (Rich Jones), use of vnc port 5900
      (Nobuhiro Itou), assorted networking fixes (Daniel Berrange), shutoff and
      shutdown mismatches (Kazuki Mizushima), unlimited memory handling
      (Atsushi SAKAI), python binding fixes (Tatsuro Enokura)</li>
  <li>Build and portability fixes: IA64 fixes (Atsushi SAKAI), dependancies
      and build (Daniel Berrange), fix xend port detection (Daniel
      Berrange), icompile time warnings (Mark), avoid const related
      compiler warnings (Daniel Berrange), automated builds (Daniel
      Berrange), pointer/int mismatch (Richard Jones), configure time
      selection of drivers, libvirt spec hacking (Daniel Berrange)</li>
200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211
  <li>Add support for network autostart and init scripts (Mark McLoughlin)</li>
  <li>New API virConnectGetCapabilities() to detect the virtualization 
    capabilities of a host (Richard Jones)</li>
  <li>Minor improvements: qemud signal handling (Mark), don't shutdown or reboot
    domain0 (Kazuki Mizushima), QEmu version autodetection (Daniel Berrange),
    network UUIDs (Mark), speed up UUID domain lookups (Tatsuro Enokura and
    Daniel Berrange), support for paused QEmu CPU (Daniel Berrange), keymap
    VNC attribute support (Takahashi Tomohiro and Daniel Berrange), maximum
    number of virtual CPU (Masayuki Sunou), virtsh --readonly option (Rich
    Jones), python bindings for new functions (Daniel Berrange)</li>
  <li>Documentation updates especially on the XML formats</li>
</ul>
212

213 214
<h3>0.2.0: Feb 14 2007</h3>
<ul>
215 216 217 218
  <li>Various internal cleanups (Mark McLoughlin, Richard Jones,
      Daniel Berrange, Karel Zak)</li>
  <li>Bug fixes: avoid a crash in connect (Daniel Berrange), virsh args
      parsing (Richard Jones)</li>
219 220
  <li>Add support for QEmu and KVM virtualization (Daniel Berrange)</li>
  <li>Add support for network configuration (Mark McLoughlin)</li>
221 222
  <li>Minor improvements: regression testing (Daniel Berrange), 
      localization string updates</li>
223 224
</ul>

225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232
<h3>0.1.11: Jan 22 2007</h3>
<ul>
  <li>Finish XML &lt;-&gt; XM config files support</li>
  <li>Remove memory leak when freeing virConf objects</li>
  <li>Finishing inactive domain support (Daniel Berrange)</li>
  <li>Added a Relax-NG schemas to check XML instances</li>
</ul>

233 234 235
<h3>0.1.10: Dec 20 2006</h3>
<ul>
  <li>more localizations</li>
236 237
  <li>bug fixes: VCPU info breakages on xen 3.0.3, xenDaemonListDomains buffer overflow (Daniel Berrange), reference count bug when creating Xen domains (Daniel Berrange).</li>
  <li>improvements: support graphic framebuffer for Xen paravirt (Daniel Berrange), VNC listen IP range support (Daniel Berrange), support for default Xen config files and inactive domains of 3.0.4 (Daniel Berrange).</li>
238 239
</ul>

240 241
<h3>0.1.9: Nov 29 2006</h3>
<ul>
242
  <li>python bindings: release interpeter lock when calling C (Daniel Berrange)</li>
243 244 245 246 247 248 249
  <li>don't raise HTTP error when looking informations for a domain</li>
  <li>some refactoring to use the driver for all entry points</li>
  <li>better error reporting (Daniel Berrange)</li>
  <li>fix OS reporting when running as non-root</li>
  <li>provide XML parsing errors</li>
  <li>extension of the test framework (Daniel Berrange)</li>
  <li>fix the reconnect regression test</li>
250 251
  <li>python bindings: Domain instances now link to the Connect to avoid garbage collection and disconnect</li>
  <li>separate the notion of maximum memory and current use at the XML level</li>
252 253
  <li>Fix a memory leak (Daniel Berrange)</li>
  <li>add support for shareable drives</li>
254
  <li>add support for non-bridge style networking configs for guests(Daniel Berrange)</li>
255
  <li>python bindings: fix unsigned long marshalling (Daniel Berrange)</li>
256
  <li>new config APIs virConfNew() and virConfSetValue() to build configs from scratch</li>
257
  <li>hot plug device support based on Michel Ponceau patch</li>
258
  <li>added support for inactive domains, new APIs, various associated cleanup (Daniel Berrange)</li>
259 260 261 262 263
  <li>special device model for HVM guests (Daniel Berrange)</li>
  <li>add API to dump core of domains (but requires a patched xend)</li>
  <li>pygrub bootloader informations take over &lt;os&gt; informations</li>
  <li>updated the localization strings</li>
</ul>
264 265
<h3>0.1.8: Oct 16 2006</h3>
<ul>
266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274
  <li> Bug for system with page size != 4k</li>
  <li> vcpu number initialization (Philippe Berthault)</li>
  <li> don't label crashed domains as shut off (Peter Vetere)</li>
  <li> fix virsh man page (Noriko Mizumoto)</li>
  <li> blktapdd support for alternate drivers like blktap (Daniel Berrange)</li>
  <li> memory leak fixes (xend interface and XML parsing) (Daniel Berrange)</li>
  <li> compile fix</li>
  <li> mlock/munlock size fixes (Daniel Berrange)</li>
  <li> improve error reporting</li>
275
</ul>
276 277
<h3>0.1.7: Sep 29 2006</h3>
<ul>
278 279 280
  <li> fix a memory bug on getting vcpu informations from xend (Daniel Berrange)</li>
  <li> fix another problem in the hypercalls change in Xen changeset
       86d26e6ec89b when getting domain informations (Daniel Berrange)</li>
281 282
</ul>
<h3>0.1.6: Sep 22 2006</h3>
283 284
<ul>
  <li>Support for localization of strings using gettext (Daniel Berrange)</li>
285 286 287
  <li>Support for new Xen-3.0.3 cdrom and disk configuration (Daniel Berrange)</li>
  <li>Support for setting VNC port when creating domains with new
      xend config files (Daniel Berrange) </li>
288 289 290
  <li>Fix bug when running against xen-3.0.2 hypercalls (Jim Fehlig)</li>
  <li>Fix reconnection problem when talking directly to http xend</li>
</ul>
291 292 293
<h3>0.1.5: Sep 5 2006</h3>
<ul>
  <li>Support for new hypercalls change in Xen changeset 86d26e6ec89b</li>
294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304
  <li>bug fixes: virParseUUID() was wrong, netwoking for paravirt guestsi
      (Daniel Berrange), virsh on non-existent domains (Daniel Berrange),
      string cast bug when handling error in python (Pete Vetere), HTTP
      500 xend error code handling (Pete Vetere and Daniel Berrange)</li>
  <li>improvements: test suite for SEXPR &lt;-&gt; XML format conversions (Daniel
      Berrange), virsh output regression suite (Daniel Berrange), new environ
      variable VIRSH_DEFAULT_CONNECT_URI for the default URI when connecting
      (Daniel Berrange), graphical console support for paravirt guests
      (Jeremy Katz), parsing of simple Xen config files (with Daniel Berrange),
      early work on defined (not running) domains (Daniel Berrange),
      virsh output improvement (Daniel Berrange</li>
305 306
</ul>

307 308
<h3>0.1.4: Aug 16 2006</h3>
<ul>
309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322
  <li>bug fixes: spec file fix (Mark McLoughlin), error report problem (with
    Hugh Brock), long integer in Python bindings (with Daniel Berrange), XML
    generation bug for CDRom (Daniel Berrange), bug whem using number() XPath
    function (Mark McLoughlin), fix python detection code, remove duplicate
    initialization errors (Daniel Berrange)</li>
  <li>improvements: UUID in XML description (Peter Vetere), proxy code
    cleanup, virtual CPU and affinity support + virsh support (Michel
    Ponceau, Philippe Berthault, Daniel Berrange), port and tty informations
    for console in XML (Daniel Berrange), added XML dump to driver and proxy
    support (Daniel Berrange), extention of boot options with support for
    floppy and cdrom (Daniel Berrange), features block in XML to report/ask
    PAE, ACPI, APIC for HVM domains (Daniel Berrange), fail saide-effect
    operations when using read-only connection, large improvements to test
    driver (Daniel Berrange) </li>
323 324 325
  <li>documentation: spelling (Daniel Berrange), test driver examples.</li>
</ul>

326 327
<h3>0.1.3: Jul 11 2006</h3>
<ul>
328 329 330 331 332 333
  <li>bugfixes: build as non-root, fix xend access when root, handling of
    empty XML elements (Mark McLoughlin), XML serialization and parsing fixes
    (Mark McLoughlin), allow to create domains without disk (Mark
  McLoughlin),</li>
  <li>improvement: xenDaemonLookupByID from O(n^2) to O(n) (Daniel Berrange),
    support for fully virtualized guest (Jim Fehlig, DV, Mark McLoughlin)</li>
334 335 336
  <li>documentation: augmented to cover hvm domains</li>
</ul>

337 338
<h3>0.1.2: Jul 3 2006</h3>
<ul>
339 340
  <li>headers include paths fixup</li>
  <li>proxy mechanism for unpriviledged read-only access by httpu</li>
341
</ul>
342

343 344
<h3>0.1.1: Jun 21 2006</h3>
<ul>
345 346 347 348
  <li>building fixes: ncurses fallback (Jim Fehlig), VPATH builds (Daniel P.
    Berrange)</li>
  <li>driver cleanups: new entry points, cleanup of libvirt.c (with Daniel P.
    Berrange)</li>
349 350
  <li>Cope with API change introduced in Xen changeset 10277</li>
  <li>new test driver for regression checks (Daniel P. Berrange)</li>
351 352 353 354 355 356 357
  <li>improvements: added UUID to XML serialization, buffer usage (Karel
    Zak), --connect argument to virsh (Daniel P. Berrange),</li>
  <li>bug fixes: uninitialized memory access in error reporting, S-Expr
    parsing (Jim Fehlig, Jeremy Katz), virConnectOpen bug, remove a TODO in
    xs_internal.c</li>
  <li>documentation: Python examples (David Lutterkort), new Perl binding
    URL, man page update (Karel Zak)</li>
358
</ul>
359

360 361
<h3>0.1.0: Apr 10 2006</h3>
<ul>
362 363 364 365
  <li>building fixes: --with-xen-distdir option (Ronald Aigner), out of tree
    build and pkginfo cflag fix (Daniel Berrange)</li>
  <li>enhancement and fixes of the XML description format (David Lutterkort
    and Jim Fehlig)</li>
366
  <li>new APIs: for Node information and Reboot</li>
367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377
  <li>internal code cleanup: refactoring internals into a driver model, more
    error handling, structure sharing, thread safety and ref counting</li>
  <li>bug fixes: error message (Jim Meyering), error allocation in virsh (Jim
    Meyering), virDomainLookupByID (Jim Fehlig),</li>
  <li>documentation: updates on architecture, and format, typo fix (Jim
    Meyering)</li>
  <li>bindings: exception handling in examples (Jim Meyering), perl ones out
    of tree (Daniel Berrange)</li>
  <li>virsh: more options, create, nodeinfo (Karel Zak), renaming of some
    options (Karel Zak), use stderr only for errors (Karel Zak), man page
    (Andrew Puch)</li>
378 379
</ul>

380 381 382 383
<h3>0.0.6: Feb 28 2006</h3>
<ul>
  <li>add UUID lookup and extract API</li>
  <li>add error handling APIs both synchronous and asynchronous</li>
384 385
  <li>added minimal hook for error handling at the python level, improved the
    python bindings</li>
386 387 388
  <li>augment the documentation and tests to cover error handling</li>
</ul>

389 390
<h3>0.0.5: Feb 23 2006</h3>
<ul>
391 392
  <li>Added XML description parsing, dependance to libxml2, implemented the
    creation API virDomainCreateLinux()</li>
393 394 395 396
  <li>new APIs to lookup and name domain by UUID</li>
  <li>fixed the XML dump when using the Xend access</li>
  <li>Fixed a few more problem related to the name change</li>
  <li>Adding regression tests in python and examples in C</li>
397 398
  <li>web site improvement, extended the documentation to cover the XML
    format and Python API</li>
399 400 401
  <li>Added devhelp help for Gnome/Gtk programmers</li>
</ul>

402 403 404 405 406
<h3>0.0.4: Feb 10 2006</h3>
<ul>
  <li>Fix various bugs introduced in the name change</li>
</ul>

407 408 409 410 411 412 413
<h3>0.0.3: Feb 9 2006</h3>
<ul>
  <li>Switch name from from 'libvir' to libvirt</li>
  <li>Starting infrastructure to add code examples</li>
  <li>Update of python bindings for completeness</li>
</ul>

414 415 416
<h3>0.0.2: Jan 29 2006</h3>
<ul>
  <li>Update of the documentation, web site redesign (Diana Fong)</li>
417 418
  <li>integration of HTTP xend RPC based on libxend by Anthony Liquori for
    most operations</li>
419 420 421 422 423 424
  <li>Adding Save and Restore APIs</li>
  <li>extended the virsh command line tool (Karel Zak)</li>
  <li>remove xenstore transactions (Anthony Liguori)</li>
  <li>fix the Python bindings bug when domain and connections where freed</li>
</ul>

425 426 427 428 429 430 431
<h3>0.0.1: Dec 19 2005</h3>
<ul>
  <li>First release</li>
  <li>Basic management of existing Xen domains</li>
  <li>Minimal autogenerated Python bindings</li>
</ul>

432
<h2><a name="Introducti">Introduction</a></h2>
433

434 435 436
<p>Libvirt is a C toolkit to interact with the virtualization capabilities of
recent versions of Linux (and other OSes), but libvirt won't try to provide
all possible interfaces for interacting with the virtualization features.</p>
437

438 439
<p>To avoid ambiguity about the terms used here here are the definitions for
some of the specific concepts used in libvirt documentation:</p>
440
<ul>
441 442 443 444 445 446
  <li>a <strong>node</strong> is a single physical machine</li>
  <li>an <strong>hypervisor</strong> is a layer of software allowing to
    virtualize a node in a set of virtual machines with possibly different
    configurations than the node itself</li>
  <li>a <strong>domain</strong> is an instance of an operating system running
    on a virtualized machine provided by the hypervisor</li>
447 448
</ul>

449 450 451
<p style="text-align: center"><img
alt="Hypervisor and domains running on a node" src="node.gif"></p>

452 453
<p>Now we can define the goal of libvirt: to provide the lowest possible
generic and stable layer to manage domains on a node.</p>
454 455 456

<p>This implies the following:</p>
<ul>
457 458 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 466 467 468
  <li>the API should not be targetted to a single virtualization environment
    though Xen is the current default, which also means that some very
    specific capabilities which are not generic enough may not be provided as
    libvirt APIs</li>
  <li>the API should allow to do efficiently and cleanly all the operations
    needed to manage domains on a node</li>
  <li>the API will not try to provide hight level multi-nodes management
    features like load balancing, though they could be implemented on top of
    libvirt</li>
  <li>stability of the API is a big concern, libvirt should isolate
    applications from the frequent changes expected at the lower level of the
    virtualization framework</li>
469 470
</ul>

471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478
<p>So libvirt should be a building block for higher level management tools
and for applications focusing on virtualization of a single node (the only
exception being domain migration between node capabilities which may need to
be added at the libvirt level). Where possible libvirt should be extendable
to be able to provide the same API for remote nodes, however this is not the
case at the moment, the code currently handle only local node accesses
(extension for remote access support is being worked on, see <a
href="bugs.html">the mailing list</a> discussions about it).</p>
479

480
<h2><a name="architecture">libvirt architecture</a></h2>
481

482
<p>Currently libvirt supports 2 kind of virtualization, and its
483
internal structure is based on a driver model which simplifies adding new
484
engines:</p>
485

486
<ul>
487 488 489
  <li><a href="#Xen">Xen hypervisor</a></li>
  <li><a href="#QEmu">QEmu and KVM based virtualization</a></li>
  <li><a href="#drivers">the driver architecture</a></li>
490 491 492
</ul>

<h3><a name="Xen">Libvirt Xen support</a></h3>
493

494 495 496 497 498 499 500 501 502
<p>When running in a Xen environment, programs using libvirt have to execute
in "Domain 0", which is the primary Linux OS loaded on the machine. That OS
kernel provides most if not all of the actual drivers used by the set of
domains. It also runs the Xen Store, a database of informations shared by the
hypervisor, the kernels, the drivers and the xen daemon. Xend. The xen daemon
supervise the control and execution of the sets of domains. The hypervisor,
drivers, kernels and daemons communicate though a shared system bus
implemented in the hypervisor. The figure below tries to provide a view of
this environment:</p>
503 504
<img src="architecture.gif" alt="The Xen architecture">

505 506 507 508
<p>The library can be initialized in 2 ways depending on the level of
priviledge of the embedding program. If it runs with root access,
virConnectOpen() can be used, it will use three different ways to connect to
the Xen infrastructure:</p>
509 510 511 512
<ul>
  <li>a connection to the Xen Daemon though an HTTP RPC layer</li>
  <li>a read/write connection to the Xen Store</li>
  <li>use Xen Hypervisor calls</li>
513 514
  <li>when used as non-root libvirt connect to a proxy daemon running
      as root and providing read-only support</li>
515 516
</ul>

517 518 519 520 521
<p>The library will usually interact with the Xen daemon for any operation
changing the state of the system, but for performance and accuracy reasons
may talk directly to the hypervisor when gathering state informations at
least when possible (i.e. when the running program using libvirt has root
priviledge access).</p>
522

523 524 525 526
<p>If it runs without root access virConnectOpenReadOnly() should be used to
connect to initialize the library. It will then fork a libvirt_proxy
program running as root and providing read_only access to the API, this is
then only useful for reporting and monitoring.</p>
527 528

<h3><a name="QEmu">Libvirt QEmu and KVM support</a></h3>
529

530 531 532 533 534 535 536 537 538
<p>The model for QEmu and KVM is completely similar, basically KVM is based
on QEmu for the process controlling a new domain, only small details differs
between the two. In both case the libvirt API is provided by a controlling
process forked by libvirt in the background and which launch and control the
QEmu or KVM process. That program called libvirt_qemud talks though a specific
protocol to the library, and connects to the console of the QEmu process in
order to control and report on its status. Libvirt tries to expose all the
emulations models of QEmu, the selection is done when creating the new
domain, by specifying the architecture and machine type targetted.</p>
539

540 541
<p>The code controlling the QEmu process is available in the
<code>qemud/</code> directory.</p>
542 543

<h3><a name="drivers">the driver based architecture</a></h3>
544

545 546 547 548 549 550 551 552 553 554
<p>As the previous section explains, libvirt can communicate using different
channels with the current hypervisor, and should also be able to use
different kind of hypervisor. To simplify the internal design, code, ease
maintainance and simplify the support of other virtualization engine the
internals have been structured as one core component, the libvirt.c module
acting as a front-end for the library API and a set of hypvisor drivers
defining a common set of routines. That way the Xen Daemon accces, the Xen
Store one, the Hypervisor hypercall are all isolated in separate C modules
implementing at least a subset of the common operations defined by the
drivers present in driver.h:</p>
555
<ul>
556 557 558 559 560 561 562 563
  <li>xend_internal: implements the driver functions though the Xen
  Daemon</li>
  <li>xs_internal: implements the subset of the driver availble though the
    Xen Store</li>
  <li>xen_internal: provide the implementation of the functions possible via
    direct hypervisor access</li>
  <li>proxy_internal: provide read-only Xen access via a proxy, the proxy code
    is in the <code>proxy/</code>directory.</li>
564
  <li>xm_internal: provide support for Xen defined but not running
565
    domains.</li>
566
  <li>qemu_internal: implement the driver functions for QEmu and
567 568 569 570
    KVM virtualization engines. It also uses a qemud/ specific daemon
    which interracts with the QEmu process to implement libvirt API.</li>
  <li>test: this is a test driver useful for regression tests of the
    front-end part of libvirt.</li>
571 572
</ul>

573 574 575 576
<p>Note that a given driver may only implement a subset of those functions,
(for example saving a Xen domain state to disk and restoring it is only
possible though the Xen Daemon), in that case the driver entry points for
unsupported functions are initialized to NULL.</p>
577

578
<p></p>
579

580 581
<h2><a name="Downloads">Downloads</a></h2>

582
<p>The latest versions of libvirt can be found on the  <a
583
href="ftp://libvirt.org/libvirt/">libvirt.org</a> server ( <a
584
href="http://libvirt.org/sources/">HTTP</a>, <a
585 586 587 588
href="ftp://libvirt.org/libvirt/">FTP</a>). You will find there the released
versions as well as <a
href="http://libvirt.org/sources/libvirt-cvs-snapshot.tar.gz">snapshot
tarballs</a> updated from CVS head every hour</p>
589

590 591
<p>Anonymous <a href="http://ximbiot.com/cvs/cvshome/docs/">CVS</a> is also
available, first register onto the server:</p>
592

593
<p><code>cvs -d :pserver:anoncvs@libvirt.org:2401/data/cvs login</code></p>
594

595 596 597 598 599
<p>it will request a password, enter <strong>anoncvs</strong>. Then you can
checkout the development tree with:</p>

<p><code>cvs -d :pserver:anoncvs@libvirt.org:2401/data/cvs co
libvirt</code></p>
600

601 602 603
<p>Use ./autogen.sh to configure the local checkout, then <code>make</code>
and <code>make install</code>, as usual. All normal cvs commands are now
available except commiting to the base.</p>
604

605
<h2><a name="Format">XML Format</a></h2>
606

607 608 609
<p>This section describes the XML format used to represent domains, there are
variations on the format based on the kind of domains run and the options
used to launch them:</p>
610

611
<ul>
612 613 614
  <li><a href="#Normal1">Normal paravirtualized Xen domains</a></li>
  <li><a href="#Fully1">Fully virtualized Xen domains</a></li>
  <li><a href="#KVM1">KVM domains</a></li>
615
  <li><a href="#Net1">Networking options for QEmu and KVM</a></li>
616
  <li><a href="#QEmu1">QEmu domains</a></li>
617
  <li><a href="#Capa1">Discovering virtualization capabilities</a></li>
618
</ul>
619

620 621
<p>The formats try as much as possible to follow the same structure and reuse
elements and attributes where it makes sense.</p>
622

623 624
<h3 id="Normal"><a name="Normal1" id="Normal1">Normal paravirtualized Xen
guests</a>:</h3>
625

626
<p>The library use an XML format to describe domains, as input to <a
627 628 629 630 631
href="html/libvirt-libvirt.html#virDomainCreateLinux">virDomainCreateLinux()</a>
and as the output of <a
href="html/libvirt-libvirt.html#virDomainGetXMLDesc">virDomainGetXMLDesc()</a>,
the following is an example of the format as returned by the shell command
<code>virsh xmldump fc4</code> , where fc4 was one of the running domains:</p>
632 633 634 635 636 637 638 639 640 641 642 643 644 645 646 647 648 649 650 651 652
<pre>&lt;domain type='xen' <span style="color: #0071FF; background-color: #FFFFFF">id='18'</span>&gt;
  &lt;name&gt;fc4&lt;/name&gt;
  <span style="color: #00B200; background-color: #FFFFFF">&lt;os&gt;
    &lt;type&gt;linux&lt;/type&gt;
    &lt;kernel&gt;/boot/vmlinuz-2.6.15-1.43_FC5guest&lt;/kernel&gt;
    &lt;initrd&gt;/boot/initrd-2.6.15-1.43_FC5guest.img&lt;/initrd&gt;
    &lt;root&gt;/dev/sda1&lt;/root&gt;
    &lt;cmdline&gt; ro selinux=0 3&lt;/cmdline&gt;
  &lt;/os&gt;</span>
  &lt;memory&gt;131072&lt;/memory&gt;
  &lt;vcpu&gt;1&lt;/vcpu&gt;
  &lt;devices&gt;
    <span style="color: #FF0080; background-color: #FFFFFF">&lt;disk type='file'&gt;
      &lt;source file='/u/fc4.img'/&gt;
      &lt;target dev='sda1'/&gt;
    &lt;/disk&gt;</span>
    <span style="color: #0000FF; background-color: #FFFFFF">&lt;interface type='bridge'&gt;
      &lt;source bridge='xenbr0'/&gt;
      &lt;mac address='</span><span style="color: #0000FF; background-color: #FFFFFF"></span><span style="color: #0000FF; background-color: #FFFFFF">aa:00:00:00:00:11'/&gt;
      &lt;script path='/etc/xen/scripts/vif-bridge'/&gt;
    &lt;/interface&gt;</span>
653
    <span style="color: #FF8000; background-color: #FFFFFF">&lt;console tty='/dev/pts/5'/&gt;</span>
654 655 656
  &lt;/devices&gt;
&lt;/domain&gt;</pre>

657 658 659 660 661 662
<p>The root element must be called <code>domain</code> with no namespace, the
<code>type</code> attribute indicates the kind of hypervisor used, 'xen' is
the default value. The <code>id</code> attribute gives the domain id at
runtime (not however that this may change, for example if the domain is saved
to disk and restored). The domain has a few children whose order is not
significant:</p>
663 664 665 666
<ul>
  <li>name: the domain name, preferably ASCII based</li>
  <li>memory: the maximum memory allocated to the domain in kilobytes</li>
  <li>vcpu: the number of virtual cpu configured for the domain</li>
667 668
  <li>os: a block describing the Operating System, its content will be
    dependant on the OS type
669 670 671
    <ul>
      <li>type: indicate the OS type, always linux at this point</li>
      <li>kernel: path to the kernel on the Domain 0 filesystem</li>
672 673
      <li>initrd: an optional path for the init ramdisk on the Domain 0
        filesystem</li>
674
      <li>cmdline: optional command line to the kernel</li>
675 676
      <li>root: the root filesystem from the guest viewpoint, it may be
        passed as part of the cmdline content too</li>
677 678
    </ul>
  </li>
679 680
  <li>devices: a list of <code>disk</code>, <code>interface</code> and
    <code>console</code> descriptions in no special order</li>
681 682
</ul>

683 684
<p>The format of the devices and their type may grow over time, but the
following should be sufficient for basic use:</p>
685

686 687 688 689
<p>A <code>disk</code> device indicates a block device, it can have two
values for the type attribute either 'file' or 'block' corresponding to the 2
options availble at the Xen layer. It has two mandatory children, and one
optional one in no specific order:</p>
690
<ul>
691 692 693 694 695 696 697
  <li>source with a file attribute containing the path in Domain 0 to the
    file or a dev attribute if using a block device, containing the device
    name ('hda5' or '/dev/hda5')</li>
  <li>target indicates in a dev attribute the device where it is mapped in
    the guest</li>
  <li>readonly an optional empty element indicating the device is
  read-only</li>
698 699
</ul>

700 701 702
<p>An <code>interface</code> element describes a network device mapped on the
guest, it also has a type whose value is currently 'bridge', it also have a
number of children in no specific order:</p>
703 704 705 706 707 708 709 710
<ul>
  <li>source: indicating the bridge name</li>
  <li>mac: the optional mac address provided in the address attribute</li>
  <li>ip: the optional IP address provided in the address attribute</li>
  <li>script: the script used to bridge the interfcae in the Domain 0</li>
  <li>target: and optional target indicating the device name.</li>
</ul>

711 712 713 714
<p>A <code>console</code> element describes a serial console connection to
the guest. It has no children, and a single attribute <code>tty</code> which
provides the path to the Pseudo TTY on which the guest console can be
accessed</p>
715

716 717 718
<p>Life cycle actions for the domain can also be expressed in the XML format,
they drive what should be happening if the domain crashes, is rebooted or is
poweroff. There is various actions possible when this happen:</p>
719
<ul>
720 721 722 723 724 725 726 727
  <li>destroy: The domain is cleaned up (that's the default normal processing
    in Xen)</li>
  <li>restart: A new domain is started in place of the old one with the same
    configuration parameters</li>
  <li>preserve: The domain will remain in memory until it is destroyed
    manually, it won't be running but allows for post-mortem debugging</li>
  <li>rename-restart: a variant of the previous one but where the old domain
    is renamed before being saved to allow a restart</li>
728 729 730 731 732 733 734 735 736 737 738
</ul>

<p>The following could be used for a Xen production system:</p>
<pre>&lt;domain&gt;
  ...
  &lt;on_reboot&gt;restart&lt;/on_reboot&gt;
  &lt;on_poweroff&gt;destroy&lt;/on_poweroff&gt;
  &lt;on_crash&gt;rename-restart&lt;/on_crash&gt;
  ...
&lt;/domain&gt;</pre>

739 740 741
<p>While the format may be extended in various ways as support for more
hypervisor types and features are added, it is expected that this core subset
will remain functional in spite of the evolution of the library.</p>
742

743 744
<h3 id="Fully"><a name="Fully1" id="Fully1">Fully virtualized guests</a>
(added in 0.1.3):</h3>
745

746 747 748 749
<p>Here is an example of a domain description used to start a fully
virtualized (a.k.a. HVM) Xen domain. This requires hardware virtualization
support at the processor level but allows to run unmodified operating
systems:</p>
750 751 752 753 754 755
<pre>&lt;domain type='xen' id='3'&gt;
  &lt;name&gt;fv0&lt;/name&gt;
  &lt;uuid&gt;4dea22b31d52d8f32516782e98ab3fa0&lt;/uuid&gt;
  &lt;os&gt;
    <span style="color: #0000E5; background-color: #FFFFFF">&lt;type&gt;hvm&lt;/type&gt;</span>
    <span style="color: #0000E5; background-color: #FFFFFF">&lt;loader&gt;/usr/lib/xen/boot/hvmloader&lt;/loader&gt;</span>
756
    <span style="color: #0000E5; background-color: #FFFFFF">&lt;boot dev='hd'/&gt;</span>
757 758 759 760 761 762
  &lt;/os&gt;
  &lt;memory&gt;524288&lt;/memory&gt;
  &lt;vcpu&gt;1&lt;/vcpu&gt;
  &lt;on_poweroff&gt;destroy&lt;/on_poweroff&gt;
  &lt;on_reboot&gt;restart&lt;/on_reboot&gt;
  &lt;on_crash&gt;restart&lt;/on_crash&gt;
763 764 765 766 767
  &lt;features&gt;
     <span style="color: #E50000; background-color: #FFFFFF">&lt;pae/&gt;
     &lt;acpi/&gt;
     &lt;apic/&gt;</span>
  &lt;/features&gt;
768
  <span style="color: #0000E5; background-color: #FFFFFF">&lt;clock sync="localtime"/&gt;</span>
769 770 771 772 773 774 775 776 777
  &lt;devices&gt;
    <span style="color: #0000E5; background-color: #FFFFFF">&lt;emulator&gt;/usr/lib/xen/bin/qemu-dm&lt;/emulator&gt;</span>
    &lt;interface type='bridge'&gt;
      &lt;source bridge='xenbr0'/&gt;
      &lt;mac address='00:16:3e:5d:c7:9e'/&gt;
      &lt;script path='vif-bridge'/&gt;
    &lt;/interface&gt;
    &lt;disk type='file'&gt;
      &lt;source file='/root/fv0'/&gt;
778 779 780 781 782 783 784 785 786 787
      &lt;target <span style="color: #0000E5; background-color: #FFFFFF">dev='hda'</span>/&gt;
    &lt;/disk&gt;
    &lt;disk type='file' <span style="color: #0000E5; background-color: #FFFFFF">device='cdrom'</span>&gt;
      &lt;source file='/root/fc5-x86_64-boot.iso'/&gt;
      &lt;target <span style="color: #0000E5; background-color: #FFFFFF">dev='hdc'</span>/&gt;
      &lt;readonly/&gt;
    &lt;/disk&gt;
    &lt;disk type='file' <span style="color: #0000E5; background-color: #FFFFFF">device='floppy'</span>&gt;
      &lt;source file='/root/fd.img'/&gt;
      &lt;target <span style="color: #0000E5; background-color: #FFFFFF">dev='fda'</span>/&gt;
788
    &lt;/disk&gt;
789
    <span style="color: #0000E5; background-color: #FFFFFF">&lt;graphics type='vnc' port='5904'/&gt;</span>
790 791 792 793 794
  &lt;/devices&gt;
&lt;/domain&gt;</pre>

<p>There is a few things to notice specifically for HVM domains:</p>
<ul>
795 796 797
  <li>the optional <code>&lt;features&gt;</code> block is used to enable
    certain guest CPU / system features. For HVM guests the following
    features are defined:
798
    <ul>
799 800 801
      <li><code>pae</code> - enable PAE memory addressing</li>
      <li><code>apic</code> - enable IO APIC</li>
      <li><code>acpi</code> - enable ACPI bios</li>
802 803
    </ul>
  </li>
804 805 806 807 808
  <li>the optional <code>&lt;clock&gt;</code> element is used to specify
     whether the emulated BIOS clock in the guest is synced to either
     <code>localtime</code> or <code>utc</code>. In general Windows will
     want <code>localtime</code> while all other operating systems will
     want <code>utc</code>. The default is thus <code>utc</code></li>
809 810 811 812 813 814
  <li>the <code>&lt;os&gt;</code> block description is very different, first
    it indicates that the type is 'hvm' for hardware virtualization, then
    instead of a kernel, boot and command line arguments, it points to an os
    boot loader which will extract the boot informations from the boot device
    specified in a separate boot element. The <code>dev</code> attribute on
    the <code>boot</code> tag can be one of:
815
    <ul>
816 817 818
      <li><code>fd</code> - boot from first floppy device</li>
      <li><code>hd</code> - boot from first harddisk device</li>
      <li><code>cdrom</code> - boot from first cdrom device</li>
819 820
    </ul>
  </li>
821 822 823 824 825 826 827 828 829
  <li>the <code>&lt;devices&gt;</code> section includes an emulator entry
    pointing to an additional program in charge of emulating the devices</li>
  <li>the disk entry indicates in the dev target section that the emulation
    for the drive is the first IDE disk device hda. The list of device names
    supported is dependant on the Hypervisor, but for Xen it can be any IDE
    device <code>hda</code>-<code>hdd</code>, or a floppy device
    <code>fda</code>, <code>fdb</code>. The <code>&lt;disk&gt;</code> element
    also supports a 'device' attribute to indicate what kinda of hardware to
    emulate. The following values are supported:
830
    <ul>
831 832 833 834
      <li><code>floppy</code> - a floppy disk controller</li>
      <li><code>disk</code> - a generic hard drive (the default it
      omitted)</li>
      <li><code>cdrom</code> - a CDROM device</li>
835
    </ul>
836 837 838 839 840 841 842 843
    For Xen 3.0.2 and earlier a CDROM device can only be emulated on the
    <code>hdc</code> channel, while for 3.0.3 and later, it can be emulated
    on any IDE channel.</li>
  <li>the <code>&lt;devices&gt;</code> section also include at least one
    entry for the graphic device used to render the os. Currently there is
    just 2 types possible 'vnc' or 'sdl'. If the type is 'vnc', then an
    additional <code>port</code> attribute will be present indicating the TCP
    port on which the VNC server is accepting client connections.</li>
844 845
</ul>

846 847 848 849
<p>It is likely that the HVM description gets additional optional elements
and attributes as the support for fully virtualized domain expands,
especially for the variety of devices emulated and the graphic support
options offered.</p>
850 851 852

<h3><a name="KVM1">KVM domain (added in 0.2.0)</a></h3>

853 854 855 856
<p>Support for the <a href="http://kvm.qumranet.com/">KVM virtualization</a>
is provided in recent Linux kernels (2.6.20 and onward). This requires
specific hardware with acceleration support and the availability of the
special version of the <a
857 858 859 860 861 862 863 864 865 866 867
href="http://fabrice.bellard.free.fr/qemu/">QEmu</a> binary. Since this
relies on QEmu for the machine emulation like fully virtualized guests the
XML description is quite similar, here is a simple example:</p>
<pre>&lt;domain <span style="color: #FF0000; background-color: #FFFFFF">type='kvm'</span>&gt;
  &lt;name&gt;demo2&lt;/name&gt;
  &lt;uuid&gt;4dea24b3-1d52-d8f3-2516-782e98a23fa0&lt;/uuid&gt;
  &lt;memory&gt;131072&lt;/memory&gt;
  &lt;vcpu&gt;1&lt;/vcpu&gt;
  &lt;os&gt;
    &lt;type&gt;hvm&lt;/type&gt;
  &lt;/os&gt;
868
  <span style="color: #0000E5; background-color: #FFFFFF">&lt;clock sync="localtime"/&gt;</span>
869 870 871 872 873 874 875 876 877 878 879 880 881 882 883 884
  &lt;devices&gt;
    <span style="color: #FF0000; background-color: #FFFFFF">&lt;emulator&gt;/home/user/usr/kvm-devel/bin/qemu-system-x86_64&lt;/emulator&gt;</span>
    &lt;disk type='file' device='disk'&gt;
      &lt;source file='/home/user/fedora/diskboot.img'/&gt;
      &lt;target dev='hda'/&gt;
    &lt;/disk&gt;
    &lt;interface <span style="color: #FF0000; background-color: #FFFFFF">type='user'</span>&gt;
      &lt;mac address='24:42:53:21:52:45'/&gt;
    &lt;/interface&gt;
    &lt;graphics type='vnc' port='-1'/&gt;
  &lt;/devices&gt;
&lt;/domain&gt;</pre>

<p>The specific points to note if using KVM are:</p>
<ul>
  <li>the top level domain element carries a type of 'kvm'</li>
885
  <li>the &lt;clock&gt; optional is supported as with Xen HVM</li>
886 887 888
  <li>the &lt;devices&gt; emulator points to the special qemu binary required
    for KVM</li>
  <li>networking interface definitions definitions are somewhat different due
889
    to a different model from Xen see below</li>
890 891 892 893 894
</ul>

<p>except those points the options should be quite similar to Xen HVM
ones.</p>

895 896 897 898 899 900 901 902 903 904 905 906 907 908 909 910 911 912 913 914 915 916 917 918 919 920 921 922 923 924 925 926 927 928 929 930 931 932 933 934 935 936 937 938 939 940 941 942 943 944 945 946 947 948 949 950 951 952 953 954 955 956 957 958 959 960 961 962 963 964 965 966 967 968 969 970 971 972 973 974 975 976 977 978 979 980 981 982 983 984 985 986 987 988 989 990 991 992 993 994 995 996 997 998 999 1000 1001 1002 1003 1004 1005 1006 1007 1008 1009 1010 1011 1012 1013 1014 1015 1016 1017 1018 1019 1020 1021 1022 1023 1024 1025 1026 1027 1028 1029 1030 1031 1032 1033 1034 1035 1036 1037 1038 1039 1040 1041 1042 1043 1044 1045 1046
<h3><a name="Net1">Networking options for QEmu and KVM (added in 0.2.0)</a></h3>

<p>The networking support in the QEmu and KVM case is more flexible, and
support a variety of options:</p>
<ol>
  <li>Userspace SLIRP stack
    <p>Provides a virtual LAN with NAT to the outside world. The virtual
    network has DHCP &amp; DNS services and will give the guest VM addresses
    starting from <code>10.0.2.15</code>. The default router will be
    <code>10.0.2.2</code> and the DNS server will be <code>10.0.2.3</code>.
    This networking is the only option for unprivileged users who need their
    VMs to have outgoing access. Example configs are:</p>
    <pre>&lt;interface type='user'/&gt;</pre>
    <pre>
&lt;interface type='user'&gt;                                                  
  &lt;mac address="11:22:33:44:55:66:/&gt;                                     
&lt;/interface&gt;
    </pre>
  </li>
  <li>Virtual network
    <p>Provides a virtual network using a bridge device in the host.
    Depending on the virtual network configuration, the network may be
    totally isolated,NAT'ing to aan explicit network device, or NAT'ing to
    the default route. DHCP and DNS are provided on the virtual network in
    all cases and the IP range can be determined by examining the virtual
    network config with '<code>virsh net-dumpxml &lt;network
    name&gt;</code>'. There is one virtual network called'default' setup out
    of the box which does NAT'ing to the default route and has an IP range of
    <code>192.168.22.0/255.255.255.0</code>. Each guest will have an
    associated tun device created with a name of vnetN, which can also be
    overriden with the &lt;target&gt; element. Example configs are:</p>
    <pre>&lt;interface type='network'&gt;
  &lt;source network='default'/&gt;
&lt;/interface&gt;

&lt;interface type='network'&gt;
  &lt;source network='default'/&gt;
  &lt;target dev='vnet7'/&gt;
  &lt;mac address="11:22:33:44:55:66:/&gt;
&lt;/interface&gt;
    </pre>
  </li>
  <li>Bridge to to LAN
    <p>Provides a bridge from the VM directly onto the LAN. This assumes
    there is a bridge device on the host which has one or more of the hosts
    physical NICs enslaved. The guest VM will have an associated tun device
    created with a name of vnetN, which can also be overriden with the
    &lt;target&gt; element. The tun device will be enslaved to the bridge.
    The IP range / network configuration is whatever is used on the LAN. This
    provides the guest VM full incoming &amp; outgoing net access just like a
    physical machine. Examples include:</p>
    <pre>&lt;interface type='bridge'&gt;
 &lt;source dev='br0'/&gt;
&lt;/interface&gt;

&lt;interface type='bridge'&gt;
  &lt;source dev='br0'/&gt;
  &lt;target dev='vnet7'/&gt;
  &lt;mac address="11:22:33:44:55:66:/&gt;
&lt;/interface&gt;       &lt;interface type='bridge'&gt;
         &lt;source dev='br0'/&gt;
         &lt;target dev='vnet7'/&gt;
         &lt;mac address="11:22:33:44:55:66:/&gt;
       &lt;/interface&gt;</pre>
  </li>
  <li>Generic connection to LAN
    <p>Provides a means for the administrator to execute an arbitrary script
    to connect the guest's network to the LAN. The guest will have a tun
    device created with a name of vnetN, which can also be overriden with the
    &lt;target&gt; element. After creating the tun device a shell script will
    be run which is expected to do whatever host network integration is
    required. By default this script is called /etc/qemu-ifup but can be
    overriden.</p>
    <pre>&lt;interface type='ethernet'/&gt;

&lt;interface type='ethernet'&gt;
  &lt;target dev='vnet7'/&gt;
  &lt;script path='/etc/qemu-ifup-mynet'/&gt;
&lt;/interface&gt;</pre>
  </li>
  <li>Multicast tunnel
    <p>A multicast group is setup to represent a virtual network. Any VMs
    whose network devices are in the same multicast group can talk to each
    other even across hosts. This mode is also available to unprivileged
    users. There is no default DNS or DHCP support and no outgoing network
    access. To provide outgoing network access, one of the VMs should have a
    2nd NIC which is connected to one of the first 4 network types and do the
    appropriate routing. The multicast protocol is compatible with that used
    by user mode linux guests too. The source address used must be from the
    multicast address block.</p>
    <pre>&lt;interface type='mcast'&gt;
  &lt;source address='230.0.0.1' port='5558'/&gt;
&lt;/interface&gt;</pre>
  </li>
  <li>TCP tunnel
    <p>A TCP client/server architecture provides a virtual network. One VM
    provides the server end of the netowrk, all other VMS are configured as
    clients. All network traffic is routed between the VMs via the server.
    This mode is also available to unprivileged users. There is no default
    DNS or DHCP support and no outgoing network access. To provide outgoing
    network access, one of the VMs should have a 2nd NIC which is connected
    to one of the first 4 network types and do the appropriate routing.</p>
    <p>Example server config:</p>
    <pre>&lt;interface type='server'&gt;
  &lt;source address='192.168.0.1' port='5558'/&gt;
&lt;/interface&gt;</pre>
    <p>Example client config:</p>
    <pre>&lt;interface type='client'&gt;
  &lt;source address='192.168.0.1' port='5558'/&gt;
&lt;/interface&gt;</pre>
  </li>
</ol>

<p>To be noted, options 2, 3, 4 are also supported by Xen VMs, so it is
possible to use these configs to have networking with both Xen &amp;
QEMU/KVMs connected to each other.</p>

<h3>Q<a name="QEmu1">Emu domain (added in 0.2.0)</a></h3>

<p>Libvirt support for KVM and QEmu is the same code base with only minor
changes. The configuration is as a result nearly identical, the only changes
are related to QEmu ability to emulate <a
href="http://www.qemu.org/status.html">various CPU type and hardware
platforms</a>, and kqemu support (QEmu own kernel accelerator when the
emulated CPU is i686 as well as the target machine):</p>
<pre>&lt;domain <span style="color: #FF0000; background-color: #FFFFFF">type='qemu'</span>&gt;
  &lt;name&gt;QEmu-fedora-i686&lt;/name&gt;
  &lt;uuid&gt;c7a5fdbd-cdaf-9455-926a-d65c16db1809&lt;/uuid&gt;
  &lt;memory&gt;219200&lt;/memory&gt;
  &lt;currentMemory&gt;219200&lt;/currentMemory&gt;
  &lt;vcpu&gt;2&lt;/vcpu&gt;
  &lt;os&gt;
    <span style="color: #FF0000; background-color: #FFFFFF">&lt;type arch='i686' machine='pc'&gt;hvm&lt;/type&gt;</span>
    &lt;boot dev='cdrom'/&gt;
  &lt;/os&gt;
  &lt;devices&gt;
    <span style="color: #FF0000; background-color: #FFFFFF">&lt;emulator&gt;/usr/bin/qemu&lt;/emulator&gt;</span>
    &lt;disk type='file' device='cdrom'&gt;
      &lt;source file='/home/user/boot.iso'/&gt;
      &lt;target dev='hdc'/&gt;
      &lt;readonly/&gt;
    &lt;/disk&gt;
    &lt;disk type='file' device='disk'&gt;
      &lt;source file='/home/user/fedora.img'/&gt;
      &lt;target dev='hda'/&gt;
    &lt;/disk&gt;
    &lt;interface type='network'&gt;
      &lt;source name='default'/&gt;
    &lt;/interface&gt;
    &lt;graphics type='vnc' port='-1'/&gt;
  &lt;/devices&gt;
&lt;/domain&gt;</pre>
1047

1048 1049 1050 1051 1052 1053 1054 1055 1056 1057 1058 1059 1060 1061 1062 1063 1064 1065 1066 1067 1068 1069 1070 1071 1072 1073 1074 1075 1076 1077 1078 1079 1080 1081 1082 1083 1084 1085 1086 1087 1088 1089 1090 1091 1092 1093 1094 1095 1096 1097 1098 1099 1100 1101 1102 1103 1104 1105 1106 1107 1108 1109 1110 1111 1112 1113 1114 1115 1116 1117 1118 1119 1120 1121 1122 1123 1124 1125 1126 1127 1128 1129
<p>The difference here are:</p>
<ul>
  <li>the value of type on top-level domain, it's 'qemu' or kqemu if asking
    for <a href="http://www.qemu.org/kqemu-tech.html">kernel assisted
    acceleration</a></li>
  <li>the os type block defines the architecture to be emulated, and
    optionally the machine type, see the discovery API below</li>
  <li>the emulator string must point to the right emulator for that
    architecture</li>
</ul>

<h3><a name="Capa1">Discovering virtualization capabilities (Added in 0.2.1)</a></h3>

<p>As new virtualization engine support gets added to libvirt, and to handle
cases like QEmu supporting a variety of emulations, a query interface has
been added in 0.2.1 allowing to list the set of supported virtualization
capabilities on the host:</p>
<pre>    char * virConnectGetCapabilities (virConnectPtr conn);</pre>

<p>The value returned is an XML document listing the virtualization
capabilities of the host and virtualization engine to which
<code>@conn</code> is connected. One can test it using <code>virsh</code>
command line tool command '<code>capabilities</code>', it dumps the XML
associated to the current connection. For example in the case of a 64 bits
machine with hardware virtualization capabilities enabled in the chip and
BIOS you will see</p>
<pre>&lt;capabilities&gt;
  <span style="color: #E50000; background-color: #FFFFFF">&lt;host&gt;
    &lt;cpu&gt;
      &lt;arch&gt;x86_64&lt;/arch&gt;
      &lt;features&gt;
        &lt;vmx/&gt;
      &lt;/features&gt;
    &lt;/cpu&gt;
  &lt;/host&gt;</span>

  &lt;!-- xen-3.0-x86_64 --&gt;
  <span style="color: #0000E5; background-color: #FFFFFF">&lt;guest&gt;
    &lt;os_type&gt;xen&lt;/os_type&gt;
    &lt;arch name="x86_64"&gt;
      &lt;wordsize&gt;64&lt;/wordsize&gt;
      &lt;domain type="xen"&gt;&lt;/domain&gt;
      &lt;emulator&gt;/usr/lib64/xen/bin/qemu-dm&lt;/emulator&gt;
    &lt;/arch&gt;
    &lt;features&gt;
    &lt;/features&gt;
  &lt;/guest&gt;</span>

  &lt;!-- hvm-3.0-x86_32 --&gt;
  <span style="color: #00B200; background-color: #FFFFFF">&lt;guest&gt;
    &lt;os_type&gt;hvm&lt;/os_type&gt;
    &lt;arch name="i686"&gt;
      &lt;wordsize&gt;32&lt;/wordsize&gt;
      &lt;domain type="xen"&gt;&lt;/domain&gt;
      &lt;emulator&gt;/usr/lib/xen/bin/qemu-dm&lt;/emulator&gt;
      &lt;machine&gt;pc&lt;/machine&gt;
      &lt;machine&gt;isapc&lt;/machine&gt;
      &lt;loader&gt;/usr/lib/xen/boot/hvmloader&lt;/loader&gt;
    &lt;/arch&gt;
    &lt;features&gt;
    &lt;/features&gt;
  &lt;/guest&gt;</span>
  ...
&lt;/capabilities&gt;</pre>

<p>The fist block (in red) indicates the host hardware capbilities, currently
it is limited to the CPU properties but other information may be available,
it shows the CPU architecture, and the features of the chip (the feature
block is similar to what you will find in a Xen fully virtualized domain
description).</p>

<p>The second block (in blue) indicates the paravirtualization support of the
Xen support, you will see the os_type of xen to indicate a paravirtual
kernel, then architecture informations and potential features.</p>

<p>The third block (in green) gives similar informations but when running a
32 bit OS fully virtualized with Xen using the hvm support.</p>

<p>This section is likely to be updated and augmented in the future, see <a
href="https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2007-March/msg00215.html">the
discussion</a> which led to the capabilities format in the mailing-list
archives.</p>
1130

D
Daniel Veillard 已提交
1131 1132
<h2><a name="Python" id="Python">Binding for Python</a></h2>

1133 1134 1135 1136 1137 1138 1139
<p>Libvirt comes with direct support for the Python language (just
make sure you installed the libvirt-python package if not compiling
from sources). Also note that Daniel Berrange provides <a
href="http://search.cpan.org/~danberr/Sys-Virt-0.1.0/">bindings for
Perl</a> and Richard Jones supplies <a
href="http://et.redhat.com/~rjones/ocaml-libvirt/">bindings for
OCaml</a> too.</p>
1140

1141 1142 1143 1144 1145 1146 1147
<p>The Python binding should be complete and are mostly automatically
generated from the formal description of the API in xml. The bindings are
articulated around 2 classes <code>virConnect</code> and virDomain mapping to
the C types. Functions in the C API taking either type as argument then
becomes methods for the classes, their name is just stripped from the
virConnect or virDomain(Get) prefix and the first letter gets converted to
lower case, for example the C functions:</p>
D
Daniel Veillard 已提交
1148 1149

<p><code>int <a
1150 1151
href="html/libvirt-libvirt.html#virConnectNumOfDomains">virConnectNumOfDomains</a>
(virConnectPtr conn);</code></p>
D
Daniel Veillard 已提交
1152 1153

<p><code>int <a
1154 1155
href="html/libvirt-libvirt.html#virDomainSetMaxMemory">virDomainSetMaxMemory</a>
(virDomainPtr domain, unsigned long memory);</code></p>
D
Daniel Veillard 已提交
1156 1157 1158 1159 1160 1161 1162

<p>become</p>

<p><code>virConn::numOfDomains(self)</code></p>

<p><code>virDomain::setMaxMemory(self, memory)</code></p>

1163 1164 1165 1166
<p>This process is fully automated, you can get a summary of the conversion
in the file libvirtclass.txt present in the python dir or in the docs.There
is a couple of function who don't map directly to their C counterparts due to
specificities in their argument conversions:</p>
D
Daniel Veillard 已提交
1167 1168
<ul>
  <li><code><a
1169 1170 1171
    href="html/libvirt-libvirt.html#virConnectListDomains">virConnectListDomains</a></code>
    is replaced by <code>virDomain::listDomainsID(self)</code> which returns
    a list of the integer ID for the currently running domains</li>
D
Daniel Veillard 已提交
1172
  <li><code><a
1173 1174
    href="html/libvirt-libvirt.html#virDomainGetInfo">virDomainGetInfo</a></code>
    is replaced by <code>virDomain::info()</code> which returns a list of
D
Daniel Veillard 已提交
1175 1176 1177 1178 1179 1180 1181 1182 1183 1184
    <ol>
      <li>state: one of the state values (virDomainState)</li>
      <li>maxMemory: the maximum memory used by the domain</li>
      <li>memory: the current amount of memory used by the domain</li>
      <li>nbVirtCPU: the number of virtual CPU</li>
      <li>cpuTime: the time used by the domain in nanoseconds</li>
    </ol>
  </li>
</ul>

1185 1186
<p>So let's look at a simple example inspired from the <code>basic.py</code>
test found in <code>python/tests/</code> in the source tree:</p>
D
Daniel Veillard 已提交
1187 1188 1189 1190 1191 1192 1193 1194
<pre>import <span style="color: #0071FF; background-color: #FFFFFF">libvirt</span>
import sys

conn = <span style="color: #0071FF; background-color: #FFFFFF">libvirt</span>.openReadOnly(None)
if conn == None:
    print 'Failed to open connection to the hypervisor'
    sys.exit(1)

1195 1196 1197
try:
    dom0 = conn.<span style="color: #007F00; background-color: #FFFFFF">lookupByName</span>("Domain-0")
except:
D
Daniel Veillard 已提交
1198 1199 1200 1201 1202 1203
    print 'Failed to find the main domain'
    sys.exit(1)

print "Domain 0: id %d running %s" % (dom0.<span style="color: #FF0080; background-color: #FFFFFF">ID</span>(), dom0.<span style="color: #FF0080; background-color: #FFFFFF">OSType</span>())
print dom0.<span style="color: #FF0080; background-color: #FFFFFF">info</span>()</pre>

1204 1205
<p>There is not much to comment about it, it really is a straight mapping
from the C API, the only points to notice are:</p>
D
Daniel Veillard 已提交
1206 1207 1208
<ul>
  <li>the import of the module called <code><span
    style="color: #0071FF; background-color: #FFFFFF">libvirt</span></code></li>
1209 1210
  <li>getting a connection to the hypervisor, in that case using the
    openReadOnly function allows the code to execute as a normal user.</li>
D
Daniel Veillard 已提交
1211 1212
  <li>getting an object representing the Domain 0 using <span
    style="color: #007F00; background-color: #FFFFFF">lookupByName</span></li>
1213
  <li>if the domain is not found a libvirtError exception will be raised</li>
1214 1215 1216 1217
  <li>extracting and printing some informations about the domain using
    various <span
    style="color: #E50073; background-color: #FFFFFF">methods</span>
    associated to the virDomain class.</li>
D
Daniel Veillard 已提交
1218 1219
</ul>

1220 1221 1222 1223 1224 1225 1226 1227 1228
<h2><a name="Errors" id="Errors">Handling of errors</a></h2>

<p>The main goals of libvirt when it comes to error handling are:</p>
<ul>
  <li>provide as much detail as possible</li>
  <li>provide the informations as soon as possible</li>
  <li>dont force the library user into one style of error handling</li>
</ul>

1229 1230 1231 1232 1233 1234
<p>As result the library provide both synchronous, callback based and
asynchronous error reporting. When an error happens in the library code the
error is logged, allowing to retrieve it later and if the user registered an
error callback it will be called synchronously. Once the call to libvirt ends
the error can be detected by the return value and the full information for
the last logged error can be retrieved.</p>
1235

1236 1237 1238 1239 1240
<p>To avoid as much as prossible troubles with a global variable in a
multithreaded environment, libvirt will associate when possible the errors to
the current connection they are related to, that way the error is stored in a
dynamic structure which can be made thread specific. Error callback can be
set specifically to a connection with</p>
1241 1242 1243

<p>So error handling in the code is the following:</p>
<ol>
1244 1245
  <li>if the error can be associated to a connection for example when failing
    to look up a domain
1246 1247
    <ol>
      <li>if there is a callback associated to the connection set with <a
1248 1249
        href="html/libvirt-virterror.html#virConnSetErrorFunc">virConnSetErrorFunc</a>,
        call it with the error informations</li>
1250
      <li>otherwise if there is a global callback set with <a
1251 1252
        href="html/libvirt-virterror.html#virSetErrorFunc">virSetErrorFunc</a>,
        call it with the error information</li>
1253
      <li>otherwise call <a
1254 1255 1256
        href="html/libvirt-virterror.html#virDefaultErrorFunc">virDefaultErrorFunc</a>
        which is the default error function of the library issuing the error
        on stderr</li>
1257 1258 1259 1260 1261 1262 1263
      <li>save the error in the connection for later retrieval with <a
        href="html/libvirt-virterror.html#virConnGetLastError">virConnGetLastError</a></li>
    </ol>
  </li>
  <li>otherwise like when failing to create an hypervisor connection:
    <ol>
      <li>if there is a global callback set with <a
1264 1265
        href="html/libvirt-virterror.html#virSetErrorFunc">virSetErrorFunc</a>,
        call it with the error information</li>
1266
      <li>otherwise call <a
1267 1268 1269
        href="html/libvirt-virterror.html#virDefaultErrorFunc">virDefaultErrorFunc</a>
        which is the default error function of the library issuing the error
        on stderr</li>
1270 1271 1272 1273 1274 1275 1276
      <li>save the error in the connection for later retrieval with <a
        href="html/libvirt-virterror.html#virGetLastError">virGetLastError</a></li>
    </ol>
  </li>
</ol>

<p>In all cases the error informations are provided as a <a
1277 1278 1279 1280
href="html/libvirt-virterror.html#virErrorPtr">virErrorPtr</a> pointer to
read-only structure <a
href="html/libvirt-virterror.html#virError">virError</a> containing the
following fields:</p>
1281 1282
<ul>
  <li>code: an error number from the <a
1283 1284 1285 1286 1287 1288 1289
    href="html/libvirt-virterror.html#virErrorNumber">virErrorNumber</a>
  enum</li>
  <li>domain: an enum indicating which part of libvirt raised the error see
    <a
  href="html/libvirt-virterror.html#virErrorDomain">virErrorDomain</a></li>
  <li>level: the error level, usually VIR_ERR_ERROR, though there is room for
    warnings like VIR_ERR_WARNING</li>
1290
  <li>message: the full human-readable formatted string of the error</li>
1291
  <li>conn: if available a pointer to the <a
1292 1293
    href="html/libvirt-libvirt.html#virConnectPtr">virConnectPtr</a>
    connection to the hypervisor where this happened</li>
1294
  <li>dom: if available a pointer to the <a
1295 1296
    href="html/libvirt-libvirt.html#virDomainPtr">virDomainPtr</a> domain
    targetted in the operation</li>
1297 1298
</ul>

1299 1300
<p>and then extra raw informations about the error which may be initialized
to 0 or NULL if unused</p>
1301
<ul>
1302 1303
  <li>str1, str2, str3: string informations, usually str1 is the error
    message format</li>
1304 1305 1306
  <li>int1, int2: integer informations</li>
</ul>

1307 1308 1309 1310 1311 1312 1313 1314 1315 1316 1317 1318 1319 1320 1321 1322 1323 1324
<p>So usually, setting up specific error handling with libvirt consist of
registering an handler with with <a
href="html/libvirt-virterror.html#virSetErrorFunc">virSetErrorFunc</a> or
with <a
href="html/libvirt-virterror.html#virConnSetErrorFunc">virConnSetErrorFunc</a>,
chech the value of the code value, take appropriate action, if needed let
libvirt print the error on stderr by calling <a
href="html/libvirt-virterror.html#virDefaultErrorFunc">virDefaultErrorFunc</a>.
For asynchronous error handing, set such a function doing nothing to avoid
the error being reported on stderr, and call virConnGetLastError or
virGetLastError when an API call returned an error value. It can be a good
idea to use <a
href="html/libvirt-virterror.html#virResetLastError">virResetError</a> or <a
href="html/libvirt-virterror.html#virConnResetLastError">virConnResetLastError</a>
once an error has been processed fully.</p>

<p>At the python level, there only a global reporting callback function at
this point, see the error.py example about it:</p>
1325 1326 1327 1328 1329 1330 1331 1332
<pre>def handler(ctxt, err):
    global errno

    #print "handler(%s, %s)" % (ctxt, err)
    errno = err

libvirt.registerErrorHandler(handler, 'context') </pre>

1333 1334 1335
<p>the second argument to the registerErrorHandler function is passed as the
fist argument of the callback like in the C version. The error is a tuple
containing the same field as a virError in C, but cast to Python.</p>
1336

D
Daniel Veillard 已提交
1337
<h2><a name="FAQ" id="FAQ">FAQ</a></h2>
1338

D
Daniel Veillard 已提交
1339 1340 1341 1342 1343 1344 1345 1346 1347 1348
<p>Table of Contents:</p>
<ul>
  <li><a href="FAQ.html#License">License(s)</a></li>
  <li><a href="FAQ.html#Installati">Installation</a></li>
  <li><a href="FAQ.html#Compilatio">Compilation</a></li>
  <li><a href="FAQ.html#Developer">Developer corner</a></li>
</ul>

<h3><a name="License">License</a>(s)</h3>
<ol>
1349 1350
  <li><em>Licensing Terms for libvirt</em>
    <p>libvirt is released under the <a
1351 1352 1353 1354
    href="http://www.opensource.org/licenses/lgpl-license.html">GNU Lesser
    General Public License</a>, see the file COPYING.LIB in the distribution
    for the precise wording. The only library that libvirt depends upon is
    the Xen store access library which is also licenced under the LGPL.</p>
D
Daniel Veillard 已提交
1355
  </li>
1356
  <li><em>Can I embed libvirt in a proprietary application ?</em>
1357 1358 1359 1360
    <p>Yes. The LGPL allows you to embed libvirt into a proprietary
    application. It would be graceful to send-back bug fixes and improvements
    as patches for possible incorporation in the main development tree. It
    will decrease your maintainance costs anyway if you do so.</p>
D
Daniel Veillard 已提交
1361 1362 1363 1364 1365
  </li>
</ol>

<h3><a name="Installati">Installation</a></h3>
<ol>
1366
  <li><em>Where can I get libvirt</em> ?
D
Daniel Veillard 已提交
1367
    <p>The original distribution comes from <a
1368
    href="ftp://libvirt.org/libvirt/">ftp://libvirt.org/libvirt/</a>.</p>
D
Daniel Veillard 已提交
1369
  </li>
1370 1371 1372 1373
  <li><em>I can't install the libvirt/libvirt-devel RPM packages due to
    failed dependencies</em>
    <p>The most generic solution is to re-fetch the latest src.rpm , and
    rebuild it locally with</p>
1374
    <p><code>rpm --rebuild libvirt-xxx.src.rpm</code>.</p>
1375 1376 1377 1378
    <p>If everything goes well it will generate two binary rpm packages (one
    providing the shared libs and virsh, and the other one, the -devel
    package, providing includes, static libraries and scripts needed to build
    applications with libvirt that you can install locally.</p>
1379 1380 1381 1382
    <p>One can also rebuild the RPMs from a tarball:</p>
    <p><code>rpmbuild -ta libdir-xxx.tar.gz</code></p>
    <p>Or from a configured tree with:</p>
    <p><code>make rpm</code></p>
D
Daniel Veillard 已提交
1383
  </li>
1384
  <li><em>Failure to use the API for non-root users</em>
1385 1386 1387 1388 1389
    <p>Large parts of the API may only be accessible with root priviledges,
    however the read only access to the xenstore data doesnot have to be
    forbidden to user, at least for monitoring purposes. If "virsh dominfo"
    fails to run as an user, change the mode of the xenstore read-only socket
    with:</p>
1390
    <p><code>chmod 666 /var/run/xenstored/socket_ro</code></p>
1391 1392 1393 1394
    <p>and also make sure that the Xen Daemon is running correctly with local
    HTTP server enabled, this is defined in
    <code>/etc/xen/xend-config.sxp</code> which need the following line to be
    enabled:</p>
1395
    <p><code>(xend-http-server yes)</code></p>
1396 1397
    <p>If needed restart the xend daemon after making the change with the
    following command run as root:</p>
1398
    <p><code>service xend restart</code></p>
1399
  </li>
D
Daniel Veillard 已提交
1400 1401 1402 1403
</ol>

<h3><a name="Compilatio">Compilation</a></h3>
<ol>
1404 1405 1406 1407
  <li><em>What is the process to compile libvirt ?</em>
    <p>As most UNIX libraries libvirt follows the "standard":</p>
    <p><code>gunzip -c libvirt-xxx.tar.gz | tar xvf -</code></p>
    <p><code>cd libvirt-xxxx</code></p>
D
Daniel Veillard 已提交
1408 1409 1410 1411 1412
    <p><code>./configure --help</code></p>
    <p>to see the options, then the compilation/installation proper</p>
    <p><code>./configure [possible options]</code></p>
    <p><code>make</code></p>
    <p><code>make install</code></p>
1413 1414
    <p>At that point you may have to rerun ldconfig or a similar utility to
    update your list of installed shared libs.</p>
D
Daniel Veillard 已提交
1415
  </li>
1416
  <li><em>What other libraries are needed to compile/install libvirt ?</em>
1417 1418
    <p>Libvirt requires libxenstore, which is usually provided by the xen
    packages as well as the public headers to compile against libxenstore.</p>
D
Daniel Veillard 已提交
1419 1420
  </li>
  <li><em>I use the CVS version and there is no configure script</em>
1421 1422 1423
    <p>The configure script (and other Makefiles) are generated. Use the
    autogen.sh script to regenerate the configure script and Makefiles,
    like:</p>
D
Daniel Veillard 已提交
1424 1425 1426 1427
    <p><code>./autogen.sh --prefix=/usr --disable-shared</code></p>
  </li>
</ol>

1428
<h3><a name="Developer">Developer</a> corner</h3>
D
Daniel Veillard 已提交
1429
<ol>
1430
  <li><em>Troubles compiling or linking programs using libvirt</em>
1431 1432 1433
    <p>To simplify the process of reusing the library, libvirt comes with
    pkgconfig support, which can be used directly from autoconf support or
    via the pkg-config command line tool, like:</p>
1434
    <p><code>pkg-config libvirt --libs</code></p>
D
Daniel Veillard 已提交
1435 1436
  </li>
</ol>
1437 1438 1439 1440

<h2><a name="Reporting">Reporting bugs and getting help</a></h2>

<p>There is a mailing-list <a
1441 1442 1443 1444 1445 1446 1447 1448
href="mailto:libvir-list@redhat.com">libvir-list@redhat.com</a> for libvirt,
with an  <a href="https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/">on-line
archive</a>. Please subscribe to this list before posting by visiting the <a
href="https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/libvir-list">associated Web</a>
page and follow the instructions. Patches with explanations and provided as
attachments are really appreciated and will be discussed on the mailing list.
If possible generate the patches by using cvs diff -u in a CVS checkout.</p>

1449 1450 1451
<p>We use Red Hat Bugzilla to track bugs and new feature requests to libvirt.
If you want to report a bug or ask for a feature, please check <a href="http://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/buglist.cgi?component=libvirt&amp;component=libvirt-devel&amp;component=libvirt-python&amp;bug_status=ASSIGNED&amp;bug_status=INVESTIGATE&amp;bug_status=NEW&amp;bug_status=REOPENED&amp;bug_status=VERIFIED&amp;short_desc_type=allwordssubstr&amp;short_desc=&amp;long_desc_type=allwordssubstr&amp;long_desc=&amp;Search=Search">the existing open bugs</a>, then if yours isn't a duplicate of
an existing bug, <a href="http://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/enter_bug.cgi?product=Fedora%20Core&amp;component=libvirt">log a new bug</a> and attach any patch or extra data that you may have available. It is always a good idea to also
1452
to post to the <a href="mailto:libvir-list@redhat.com">mailing-list</a>
1453
too, so that everybody working on the project can see it, thanks !</p>
1454

1455 1456 1457 1458 1459 1460 1461 1462 1463
<p>Some of the libvirt developpers may be found on IRC on the OFTC
network. Use the settings:</p>
<ul>
  <li>server: irc.oftc.net</li>
  <li>port: 6667 (the usual IRC port)</li>
  <li>channel: #virt</li>
</ul>
<p> But there is no garantee that someone will be watching or able to reply,
use the mailing-list if you don't get an answer there.</p>
1464
<h2><a name="Remote">Remote support</a></h2>
1465 1466 1467 1468 1469

<p>
Libvirt allows you to access hypervisors running on remote
machines through authenticated and encrypted connections.
</p>
1470 1471 1472 1473 1474 1475 1476 1477 1478 1479 1480 1481 1482 1483 1484 1485 1486 1487 1488 1489 1490
<ul>
 <li><a href="#Remote_basic_usage">Basic usage</a></li>
 <li><a href="#Remote_transports">Transports</a></li>
 <li><a href="#Remote_URI_reference">Remote URIs</a>
 <ul>
   <li><a href="#Remote_URI_parameters">Extra parameters</a></li>
 </ul></li>
 <li><a href="#Remote_certificates">Generating TLS certificates</a>
 <ul>
   <li><a href="#Remote_PKI">Public Key Infrastructure set up</a></li>
   <li><a href="#Remote_TLS_background">Background to TLS certificates</a></li>
   <li><a href="#Remote_TLS_CA">Setting up a Certificate Authority (CA)</a></li>
   <li><a href="#Remote_TLS_server_certificates">Issuing server certificates</a></li>
   <li><a href="#Remote_TLS_client_certificates">Issuing client certificates</a></li>
   <li><a href="#Remote_TLS_troubleshooting">Troubleshooting TLS certificate problems</a></li>
 </ul></li>
 <li><a href="#Remote_libvirtd_configuration">libvirtd configuration file</a></li>
 <li><a href="#Remote_IPv6">IPv6 support</a></li>
 <li><a href="#Remote_limitations">Limitations</a></li>
 <li><a href="#Remote_implementation_notes">Implementation notes</a></li>
</ul>
1491 1492 1493 1494 1495 1496 1497 1498 1499 1500 1501

<h3><a name="Remote_basic_usage">Basic usage</a></h3>

<p>
On the remote machine, <code>libvirtd</code> should be running.
See <a href="#Remote_libvirtd_configuration">the section
on configuring libvirtd</a> for more information.
</p>

<p>
To tell libvirt that you want to access a remote resource,
1502
you should supply a hostname in the normal <a href="uri.html">URI</a> that is passed
1503 1504 1505 1506 1507 1508 1509 1510 1511 1512 1513 1514 1515 1516 1517 1518 1519 1520 1521 1522 1523 1524 1525 1526 1527 1528 1529 1530 1531 1532 1533 1534 1535 1536 1537 1538 1539 1540 1541 1542 1543 1544 1545 1546 1547 1548 1549 1550 1551 1552 1553 1554 1555 1556 1557 1558 1559 1560 1561 1562 1563 1564 1565 1566 1567 1568 1569 1570 1571 1572 1573 1574 1575 1576 1577 1578 1579 1580 1581 1582 1583 1584 1585 1586 1587 1588
to <code>virConnectOpen</code> (or <code>virsh -c ...</code>).
For example, if you normally use <code>qemu:///system</code>
to access the system-wide QEMU daemon, then to access
the system-wide QEMU daemon on a remote machine called
<code>oirase</code> you would use <code>qemu://oirase/system</code>.
</p>

<p>
The <a href="#Remote_URI_reference">section on remote URIs</a>
describes in more detail these remote URIs.
</p>

<p>
From an API point of view, apart from the change in URI, the
API should behave the same.  For example, ordinary calls
are routed over the remote connection transparently, and
values or errors from the remote side are returned to you
as if they happened locally.  Some differences you may notice:
</p>

<ul>
<li> Additional errors can be generated, specifically ones
relating to failures in the remote transport itself. </li>
<li> Remote calls are handled synchronously, so they will be
much slower than, say, direct hypervisor calls. </li>
</ul>

<h3><a name="Remote_transports">Transports</a></h3>

<p>
Remote libvirt supports a range of transports:
</p>

<dl>
<dt> tls </dt>
<dd> <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transport_Layer_Security"
   title="Transport Layer Security">TLS</a>
 1.0 (SSL 3.1) authenticated and encrypted TCP/IP socket, usually
 listening on a public port number.  To use this you will need to
 <a href="#Remote_certificates"
 title="Generating TLS certificates">generate client and
 server certificates</a>.
 The standard port is 16514.
 </dd>

<dt> unix </dt>
<dd> Unix domain socket.  Since this is only accessible on the
 local machine, it is not encrypted, and uses Unix permissions or
 SELinux for authentication.
 The standard socket names are
 <code>/var/run/libvirt/libvirt-sock</code> and
 <code>/var/run/libvirt/libvirt-sock-ro</code> (the latter
 for read-only connections).
 </dd>

<dt> ssh </dt>
<dd> Transported over an ordinary
 <a href="http://www.openssh.com/" title="OpenSSH homepage">ssh
 (secure shell)</a> connection.
 Requires <a href="http://netcat.sourceforge.net/">Netcat (nc)</a>
 installed on the remote machine, and the remote libvirtd should
 be listening on the unix transport.  You should use some sort of
 ssh key management (eg.
 <a href="http://mah.everybody.org/docs/ssh"
 title="Using ssh-agent with ssh">ssh-agent</a>)
 otherwise programs which use
 this transport will stop to ask for a password. </dd>

<dt> ext </dt>
<dd> Any external program which can make a connection to the
 remote machine by means outside the scope of libvirt. </dd>

<dt> tcp </dt>
<dd> Unencrypted TCP/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.
 The standard port is 16509.
 </dd>
</dl>

<p>
The default transport, if no other is specified, is <code>tls</code>.
</p>

<h3><a name="Remote_URI_reference">Remote URIs</a></h3>

1589 1590 1591 1592
<p>
See also: <a href="uri.html">documentation on ordinary ("local") URIs</a>.
</p>

1593 1594 1595 1596 1597
<p>
Remote URIs have the general form ("[...]" meaning an optional part):
</p>

<p>
1598
<code>driver</code>[<code>+transport</code>]<code>://</code>[<code>username@</code>][<code>hostname</code>][<code>:port</code>]<code>/</code>[<code>path</code>][<code>?extraparameters</code>]
1599 1600 1601 1602 1603 1604 1605 1606 1607 1608 1609 1610 1611 1612 1613 1614 1615 1616 1617 1618 1619 1620 1621 1622 1623 1624 1625 1626 1627 1628 1629 1630 1631 1632 1633 1634 1635 1636 1637 1638 1639 1640 1641 1642 1643 1644 1645 1646 1647 1648 1649
</p>

<p>
Either the transport or the hostname must be given in order
to distinguish this from a local URI.
</p>

<p>
Some examples:
</p>

<ul>
<li> <code>xen+ssh://rjones@towada/</code> <br/> &mdash; Connect to a
remote Xen hypervisor on host <code>towada</code> using ssh transport and ssh
username <code>rjones</code>.
</li>

<li> <code>xen://towada/</code> <br/> &mdash; Connect to a
remote Xen hypervisor on host <code>towada</code> using TLS.
</li>

<li> <code>xen://towada/?no_verify=1</code> <br/> &mdash; Connect to a
remote Xen hypervisor on host <code>towada</code> using TLS.  Do not verify
the server's certificate.
</li>

<li> <code>qemu+unix:///system?socket=/opt/libvirt/run/libvirt/libvirt-sock</code> <br/> &mdash;
Connect to the local qemu instances over a non-standard
Unix socket (the full path to the Unix socket is
supplied explicitly in this case).
</li>

<li> <code>test+tcp://localhost:5000/default</code> <br/> &mdash;
Connect to a libvirtd daemon offering unencrypted TCP/IP connections
on localhost port 5000 and use the test driver with default
settings.
</li>

</ul>

<h4><a name="Remote_URI_parameters">Extra parameters</a></h4>

<p>
Extra parameters can be added to remote URIs as part
of the query string (the part following <q><code>?</code></q>).
Remote URIs understand the extra parameters shown below.
Any others are passed unmodified through to the back end.
Note that parameter values must be
<a href="http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-uri.html#xmlURIEscapeStr">URI-escaped</a>.
</p>

1650
<table class="top_table">
1651 1652 1653 1654 1655 1656 1657 1658
<tr>
<th> Name </th>
<th> Transports </th>
<th> Meaning </th>
</tr>

<tr>
<td> <code>name</code> </td>
1659
<td> <i>any transport</i> </td>
1660 1661 1662 1663 1664 1665 1666 1667 1668 1669 1670 1671 1672 1673 1674 1675 1676 1677 1678 1679 1680 1681 1682 1683 1684 1685 1686 1687 1688 1689 1690 1691 1692 1693 1694 1695 1696 1697 1698 1699 1700 1701 1702 1703 1704 1705 1706 1707 1708 1709 1710 1711 1712 1713 1714 1715 1716 1717 1718 1719 1720 1721 1722 1723 1724 1725 1726 1727 1728 1729 1730 1731 1732 1733 1734 1735 1736 1737 1738
<td>
  The name passed to the remote virConnectOpen function.  The
  name is normally formed by removing transport, hostname, port
  number, username and extra parameters from the remote URI, but in certain
  very complex cases it may be better to supply the name explicitly.
</td>
</tr>
<tr> <td colspan="2"></td>
<td> Example: <code>name=qemu:///system</code> </td>
</tr>

<tr>
<td> <code>command</code> </td>
<td> ssh, ext </td>
<td>
  The external command.  For ext transport this is required.
  For ssh the default is <code>ssh</code>.
  The PATH is searched for the command.
</td>
</tr>
<tr> <td colspan="2"></td>
<td> Example: <code>command=/opt/openssh/bin/ssh</code> </td>
</tr>

<tr>
<td> <code>socket</code> </td>
<td> unix, ssh </td>
<td>
  The path to the Unix domain socket, which overrides the
  compiled-in default.  For ssh transport, this is passed to
  the remote netcat command (see next).
</td>
</tr>
<tr> <td colspan="2"></td>
<td> Example: <code>socket=/opt/libvirt/run/libvirt/libvirt-sock</code> </td>
</tr>

<tr>
<td> <code>netcat</code> </td>
<td> ssh </td>
<td>
  The name of the netcat command on the remote machine.
  The default is <code>nc</code>.  For ssh transport, libvirt
  constructs an ssh command which looks like:

<pre>
<i>command</i> -p <i>port</i> [-l <i>username</i>] <i>hostname</i> <i>netcat</i> -U <i>socket</i>
</pre>

  where <i>port</i>, <i>username</i>, <i>hostname</i> can be
  specified as part of the remote URI, and <i>command</i>, <i>netcat</i>
  and <i>socket</i> come from extra parameters (or
  sensible defaults).

</td>
</tr>
<tr> <td colspan="2"></td>
<td> Example: <code>netcat=/opt/netcat/bin/nc</code> </td>
</tr>

<tr>
<td> <code>no_verify</code> </td>
<td> tls </td>
<td>
  If set to a non-zero value, this disables client checks of the
  server's certificate.  Note that to disable server checks of
  the client's certificate or IP address you must
  <a href="#Remote_libvirtd_configuration">change the libvirtd
  configuration</a>.
</td>
</tr>
<tr> <td colspan="2"></td>
<td> Example: <code>no_verify=1</code> </td>
</tr>

</table>

<h3><a name="Remote_certificates">Generating TLS certificates</a></h3>

1739
<h4><a name="Remote_PKI">Public Key Infrastructure set up</a></h4>
1740 1741 1742 1743 1744 1745 1746 1747 1748 1749 1750 1751 1752 1753 1754 1755 1756 1757 1758 1759 1760 1761 1762 1763 1764 1765 1766 1767 1768 1769 1770 1771 1772 1773 1774 1775 1776 1777 1778 1779 1780 1781 1782 1783 1784 1785 1786 1787 1788

<p>
If you are unsure how to create TLS certificates, skip to the
next section.
</p>

<table class="top_table">
<tr>
<th> Location </th>
<th> Machine </th>
<th> Description </th>
<th> Required fields </th>
</tr>

<tr>
<td> <code>/etc/pki/CA/cacert.pem</code> </td>
<td> Installed on all clients and servers </td>
<td> CA's certificate (<a href="#Remote_TLS_CA">more info</a>)</td>
<td> n/a </td>
</tr>

<tr>
<td> <code>/etc/pki/libvirt/ private/serverkey.pem</code> </td>
<td> Installed on the server </td>
<td> Server's private key (<a href="#Remote_TLS_server_certificates">more info</a>)</td>
<td> n/a </td>
</tr>

<tr>
<td> <code>/etc/pki/libvirt/ servercert.pem</code> </td>
<td> Installed on the server </td>
<td> Server's certificate signed by the CA.
 (<a href="#Remote_TLS_server_certificates">more info</a>) </td>
<td> CommonName (CN) must be the hostname of the server as it
  is seen by clients. </td>
</tr>

<tr>
<td> <code>/etc/pki/libvirt/ private/clientkey.pem</code> </td>
<td> Installed on the client </td>
<td> Client's private key. (<a href="#Remote_TLS_client_certificates">more info</a>) </td>
<td> n/a </td>
</tr>

<tr>
<td> <code>/etc/pki/libvirt/ clientcert.pem</code> </td>
<td> Installed on the client </td>
<td> Client's certificate signed by the CA
  (<a href="#Remote_TLS_client_certificates">more info</a>) </td>
1789 1790
<td> Distinguished Name (DN) can be checked against an access
  control list (<code>tls_allowed_dn_list</code>).
1791 1792 1793 1794 1795 1796 1797 1798 1799 1800 1801 1802 1803 1804 1805 1806 1807 1808 1809 1810 1811 1812 1813 1814 1815 1816 1817 1818 1819 1820 1821 1822 1823 1824 1825 1826 1827 1828 1829 1830 1831 1832 1833 1834 1835 1836 1837 1838 1839 1840
  </td>
</tr>
</table>


<h4><a name="Remote_TLS_background">Background to TLS certificates</a></h4>

<p>
Libvirt supports TLS certificates for verifying the identity
of the server and clients.  There are two distinct checks involved:
</p>

<ul>
<li> The client should know that it is connecting to the right
server.  Checking done by client by matching the certificate that
the server sends to the server's hostname.  May be disabled by adding
<code>?no_verify=1</code> to the
<a href="#Remote_URI_parameters">remote URI</a>.
</li>

<li> The server should know that only permitted clients are
connecting.  This can be done based on client's IP address, or on
client's IP address and client's certificate.  Checking done by the
server.  May be enabled and disabled in the <a
href="#Remote_libvirtd_configuration">libvirtd.conf file</a>.
</li>
</ul>

<p>
For full certificate checking you will need to have certificates
issued by a recognised <a
href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Certificate_authority">Certificate
Authority (CA)</a> for your server(s) and all clients.  To avoid the
expense of getting certificates from a commercial CA, you can set up
your own CA and tell your server(s) and clients to trust certificates
issues by your own CA.  Follow the instructions in the next section.
</p>

<p>
Be aware that the <a href="#Remote_libvirtd_configuration">default
configuration for libvirtd</a> allows any client to connect provided
they have a valid certificate issued by the CA for their own IP
address.  You may want to change this to make it less (or more)
permissive, depending on your needs.
</p>

<h4><a name="Remote_TLS_CA">Setting up a Certificate Authority (CA)</a></h4>

<p>
You will need the <a
1841 1842 1843
href="http://www.gnu.org/software/gnutls/manual/html_node/Invoking-certtool.html">GnuTLS
certtool program documented here</a>.  In Fedora, it is in the
<code>gnutls-utils</code> package.
1844 1845
</p>

1846 1847 1848
<p>
Create a private key for your CA:
</p>
1849 1850

<pre>
1851
certtool --generate-privkey &gt; cakey.pem
1852 1853 1854
</pre>

<p>
1855 1856 1857
and self-sign it by creating a file with the
signature details called
<code>ca.info</code> containing:
1858 1859
</p>

1860 1861 1862 1863 1864
<pre>
cn = <i>Name of your organization</i>
ca
cert_signing_key
</pre>
1865

1866
and sign:
1867

1868 1869 1870 1871
<pre>
certtool --generate-self-signed --load-privkey cakey.pem \
  --template ca.info --outfile cacert.pem
</pre>
1872 1873

<p>
1874 1875
(You can delete <code>ca.info</code> file now if you
want).
1876 1877 1878
</p>

<p>
1879
Now you have two files which matter:
1880 1881
</p>

1882 1883 1884 1885 1886 1887 1888 1889
<ul>
<li>
<code>cakey.pem</code> - Your CA's private key (keep this very secret!)
</li>
<li>
<code>cacert.pem</code> - Your CA's certificate (this is public).
</li>
</ul>
1890 1891

<p>
1892
<code>cacert.pem</code> has to be installed on clients and
1893 1894 1895 1896 1897 1898 1899 1900 1901 1902 1903 1904 1905 1906
server(s) to let them know that they can trust certificates issued by
your CA.
</p>

<p>
The normal installation directory for <code>cacert.pem</code>
is <code>/etc/pki/CA/cacert.pem</code> on all clients and servers.
</p>

<p>
To see the contents of this file, do:
</p>

<pre>
1907 1908 1909 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 1916 1917 1918
<b>certtool -i --infile cacert.pem</b>

X.509 certificate info:

Version: 3
Serial Number (hex): 00
Subject: CN=Red Hat Emerging Technologies
Issuer: CN=Red Hat Emerging Technologies
Signature Algorithm: RSA-SHA
Validity:
        Not Before: Mon Jun 18 16:22:18 2007
        Not After: Tue Jun 17 16:22:18 2008
1919 1920 1921 1922
<i>[etc]</i>
</pre>

<p>
1923 1924 1925
This is all that is required to set up your CA.  Keep the CA's private
key carefully as you will need it when you come to issue certificates
for your clients and servers.
1926 1927 1928 1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943
</p>

<h4><a name="Remote_TLS_server_certificates">Issuing server certificates</a></h4>

<p>
For each server (libvirtd) you need to issue a certificate
with the X.509 CommonName (CN) field set to the hostname
of the server.  The CN must match the hostname which
clients will be using to connect to the server.
</p>

<p>
In the example below, clients will be connecting to the
server using a <a href="#Remote_URI_reference">URI</a> of
<code>xen://oirase/</code>, so the CN must be "<code>oirase</code>".
</p>

<p>
1944
Make a private key for the server:
1945 1946 1947
</p>

<pre>
1948
certtool --generate-privkey &gt; serverkey.pem
1949 1950 1951
</pre>

<p>
1952 1953 1954 1955
and sign that key with the CA's private key by first
creating a template file called <code>server.info</code>
(only the CN field matters, which as explained above must
be the server's hostname):
1956 1957 1958
</p>

<pre>
1959 1960 1961 1962 1963
organization = <i>Name of your organization</i>
cn = oirase
tls_www_server
encryption_key
signing_key
1964 1965
</pre>

1966
<p>
1967
and sign:
1968 1969
</p>

1970
<pre>
1971 1972 1973
certtool --generate-certificate --load-privkey serverkey.pem \
  --load-ca-certificate cacert.pem --load-ca-privkey cakey.pem \
  --template server.info --outfile servercert.pem
1974
</pre>
1975

1976
<p>
1977
This gives two files:
1978
</p>
1979

1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988
<ul>
<li>
<code>serverkey.pem</code> - The server's private key.
</li>
<li>
<code>servercert.pem</code> - The server's public key.
</li>
</ul>

1989
<p>
1990
We can examine this certificate and its signature:
1991
</p>
1992

1993
<pre>
1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004
<b>certtool -i --infile servercert.pem</b>
X.509 certificate info:

Version: 3
Serial Number (hex): 00
Subject: O=Red Hat Emerging Technologies,CN=oirase
Issuer: CN=Red Hat Emerging Technologies
Signature Algorithm: RSA-SHA
Validity:
        Not Before: Mon Jun 18 16:34:49 2007
        Not After: Tue Jun 17 16:34:49 2008
2005 2006
</pre>

2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
<p>
Note the "Issuer" CN is "Red Hat Emerging Technologies" (the CA) and
the "Subject" CN is "oirase" (the server).
</p>

2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 2031 2032 2033 2034 2035
<p>
Finally we have two files to install:
</p>

<ul>
<li>
<code>serverkey.pem</code> is
the server's private key which should be copied to the
server <i>only</i> as
<code>/etc/pki/libvirt/private/serverkey.pem</code>.
</li>

<li>
<code>servercert.pem</code> is the server's certificate
which can be installed on the server as
<code>/etc/pki/libvirt/servercert.pem</code>.
</li>
</ul>

<h4><a name="Remote_TLS_client_certificates">Issuing client certificates</a></h4>

<p>
For each client (ie. any program linked with libvirt, such as
<a href="http://virt-manager.et.redhat.com/">virt-manager</a>)
2036 2037 2038
you need to issue a certificate with the X.509 Distinguished Name (DN)
set to a suitable name.  You can decide this on a company / organisation
policy.  For example, I use:
2039 2040
</p>

2041 2042 2043
<pre>
C=GB,ST=London,L=London,O=Red Hat,CN=<i>name_of_client</i>
</pre>
2044 2045 2046 2047 2048 2049 2050 2051 2052 2053

<p>
The process is the same as for
<a href="#Remote_TLS_server_certificates">setting up the
server certificate</a> so here we just briefly cover the
steps.
</p>

<ol>
<li>
2054
Make a private key:
2055
<pre>
2056
certtool --generate-privkey &gt; clientkey.pem
2057 2058 2059 2060
</pre>
</li>

<li>
2061
Act as CA and sign the certificate.  Create client.info containing:
2062
<pre>
2063 2064 2065 2066 2067 2068 2069 2070
country = GB
state = London
locality = London
organization = Red Hat
cn = client1
tls_www_client
encryption_key
signing_key
2071
</pre>
2072
and sign by doing:
2073
<pre>
2074 2075 2076
certtool --generate-certificate --load-privkey clientkey.pem \
  --load-ca-certificate cacert.pem --load-ca-privkey cakey.pem \
  --template client.info --outfile clientcert.pem
2077 2078 2079 2080 2081 2082 2083 2084 2085 2086 2087 2088 2089 2090 2091 2092 2093 2094 2095 2096
</pre>
</li>

<li>
Install the certificates on the client machine:
<pre>
cp clientkey.pem /etc/pki/libvirt/private/clientkey.pem
cp clientcert.pem /etc/pki/libvirt/clientcert.pem
</pre>
</li>
</ol>


<h4><a name="Remote_TLS_troubleshooting">Troubleshooting TLS certificate problems</a></h4>

<dl>
<dt> failed to verify client's certificate </dt>
<dd>
<p>
On the server side, run the libvirtd server with
2097
the '--listen' and '--verbose' options while the
2098 2099
client is connecting.  The verbose log messages should
tell you enough to diagnose the problem.
2100 2101 2102
</p>
</dd>
</dl>
2103 2104 2105 2106
<p> You can use the <a href="pki_check.sh">pki_check.sh</a> shell script
to analyze the setup on the client or server machines, preferably as root.
It will try to point out the possible problems and provide solutions to
fix the set up up to a point where you have secure remote access.</p>
2107 2108


2109
<h3><a name="Remote_libvirtd_configuration">libvirtd configuration file</a></h3>
2110 2111

<p>
2112 2113 2114 2115 2116 2117 2118 2119 2120
Libvirtd (the remote daemon) is configured from a file called
<code>/etc/libvirt/libvirtd.conf</code>, or specified on
the command line using <code>-f filename</code> or
<code>--config filename</code>.
</p>

<p>
This file should contain lines of the form below.
Blank lines and comments beginning with <code>#</code> are ignored.
2121
</p>
2122 2123
<pre>setting = value</pre>
<p>The following settings, values and default are:</p>
2124

2125 2126 2127 2128 2129 2130
<table class="top_table">
<tr>
<th> Line </th>
<th> Default </th>
<th> Meaning </th>
</tr>
2131

2132 2133 2134 2135 2136 2137 2138
<tr>
<td> listen_tls <i>[0|1]</i> </td>
<td> 1 (on) </td>
<td>
  Listen for secure TLS connections on the public TCP/IP port.
</td>
</tr>
2139

2140 2141 2142 2143 2144 2145 2146
<tr>
<td> listen_tcp <i>[0|1]</i> </td>
<td> 0 (off) </td>
<td>
  Listen for unencrypted TCP connections on the public TCP/IP port.
</td>
</tr>
2147

2148 2149 2150 2151 2152 2153 2154 2155 2156 2157 2158 2159 2160 2161 2162 2163 2164 2165 2166 2167 2168 2169 2170 2171 2172 2173 2174 2175 2176 2177 2178 2179 2180 2181 2182 2183 2184 2185 2186 2187 2188 2189 2190 2191 2192 2193 2194 2195 2196 2197 2198 2199 2200 2201 2202 2203 2204 2205 2206 2207 2208 2209 2210 2211 2212 2213 2214 2215 2216
<tr>
<td> tls_port <i>"service"</i> </td>
<td> "16514" </td>
<td>
  The port number or service name to listen on for secure TLS connections.
</td>
</tr>

<tr>
<td> tcp_port <i>"service"</i> </td>
<td> "16509" </td>
<td>
  The port number or service name to listen on for unencrypted TCP connections.
</td>
</tr>

<tr>
<td> tls_no_verify_certificate <i>[0|1]</i> </td>
<td> 0 (certificates are verified) </td>
<td>
  If set to 1 then if a client certificate check fails, it is not an error.
</td>
</tr>

<tr>
<td> tls_no_verify_address <i>[0|1]</i> </td>
<td> 0 (addresses are verified) </td>
<td>
  If set to 1 then if a client IP address check fails, it is not an error.
</td>
</tr>

<tr>
<td> key_file <i>"filename"</i> </td>
<td> "/etc/pki/libvirt/ private/serverkey.pem" </td>
<td>
  Change the path used to find the server's private key.
  If you set this to an empty string, then no private key is loaded.
</td>
</tr>

<tr>
<td> cert_file <i>"filename"</i> </td>
<td> "/etc/pki/libvirt/ servercert.pem" </td>
<td>
  Change the path used to find the server's certificate.
  If you set this to an empty string, then no certificate is loaded.
</td>
</tr>

<tr>
<td> ca_file <i>"filename"</i> </td>
<td> "/etc/pki/CA/cacert.pem" </td>
<td>
  Change the path used to find the trusted CA certificate.
  If you set this to an empty string, then no trusted CA certificate is loaded.
</td>
</tr>

<tr>
<td> crl_file <i>"filename"</i> </td>
<td> (no CRL file is used) </td>
<td>
  Change the path used to find the CA certificate revocation list (CRL) file.
  If you set this to an empty string, then no CRL is loaded.
</td>
</tr>

<tr>
2217 2218 2219 2220 2221 2222 2223 2224 2225 2226 2227 2228 2229 2230 2231 2232 2233 2234 2235 2236 2237 2238 2239 2240 2241 2242 2243 2244
<td> tls_allowed_dn_list ["DN1", "DN2"] </td>
<td> (none - DNs are not checked) </td>
<td>
  <p>
  Enable an access control list of client certificate Distinguished
  Names (DNs) which can connect to the TLS port on this server.
  </p>
  <p>
  The default is that DNs are not checked.
  </p>
  <p>
  This list may contain wildcards such as <code>"C=GB,ST=London,L=London,O=Red Hat,CN=*"</code>
  See the POSIX <code>fnmatch</code> function for the format
  of the wildcards.
  </p>
  <p>
  Note that if this is an empty list, <i>no client can connect</i>.
  </p>
  <p>
  Note also that GnuTLS returns DNs without spaces
  after commas between the fields (and this is what we check against),
  but the <code>openssl x509</code> tool shows spaces.
</td>
</tr>

<tr>
<td> tls_allowed_ip_list ["ip1", "ip2", "ip3"] </td>
<td> (none - clients can connect from anywhere) </td>
2245 2246 2247 2248 2249 2250
<td>
  <p>
  Enable an access control list of the IP addresses of clients
  who can connect to the TLS or TCP ports on this server.
  </p>
  <p>
2251
  The default is that clients can connect from any IP address.
2252 2253 2254 2255 2256 2257 2258 2259 2260 2261 2262 2263
  </p>
  <p>
  This list may contain wildcards such as <code>192.168.*</code>
  See the POSIX <code>fnmatch</code> function for the format
  of the wildcards.
  </p>
  <p>
  Note that if this is an empty list, <i>no client can connect</i>.
  </p>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
2264 2265 2266 2267 2268


<h3><a name="Remote_IPv6">IPv6 support</a></h3>

<p>
D
Daniel P. Berrange 已提交
2269 2270 2271 2272 2273 2274 2275 2276
The libvirtd service and libvirt remote client driver both use the
<code>getaddrinfo()</code> functions for name resolution and are
thus fully IPv6 enabled. ie, if a server has IPv6 address configured
the daemon will listen for incoming connections on both IPv4 and IPv6
protocols. If a client has an IPv6 address configured and the DNS
address resolved for a service is reachable over IPv6, then an IPv6
connection will be made, otherwise IPv4 will be used. In summary it
should just 'do the right thing(tm)'.
2277 2278 2279 2280 2281 2282 2283 2284 2285 2286 2287 2288 2289 2290 2291 2292 2293 2294 2295 2296 2297 2298 2299 2300 2301 2302 2303 2304 2305 2306 2307 2308 2309 2310 2311 2312 2313 2314 2315 2316 2317 2318 2319 2320 2321 2322 2323 2324 2325 2326 2327 2328 2329 2330 2331 2332 2333 2334 2335 2336 2337 2338 2339 2340 2341 2342 2343 2344 2345 2346 2347 2348 2349 2350 2351 2352 2353 2354 2355 2356 2357 2358 2359 2360
</p>

<h3><a name="Remote_limitations">Limitations</a></h3>

<ul>
<li> Remote storage: To be fully useful, particularly for
creating new domains, it should be possible to enumerate
and provision storage on the remote machine.  This is currently
in the design phase. </li>

<li> Migration: We expect libvirt will support migration,
and obviously remote support is what makes migration worthwhile.
This is also in the design phase.  Issues <a
href="https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/libvir-list"
title="libvir-list mailing list">to discuss</a> include
which path the migration data should follow (eg. client to
client direct, or client to server to client) and security.
</li>

<li> Fine-grained authentication: libvirt in general,
but in particular the remote case should support more
fine-grained authentication for operations, rather than
just read-write/read-only as at present.
</li>
</ul>

<p>
Please come and discuss these issues and more on <a
href="https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/libvir-list"
title="libvir-list mailing list">the mailing list</a>.
</p>

<h3><a name="Remote_implementation_notes">Implementation notes</a></h3>

<p>
The current implementation uses <a
href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/External_Data_Representation"
title="External Data Representation">XDR</a>-encoded packets with a
simple remote procedure call implementation which also supports
asynchronous messaging and asynchronous and out-of-order replies,
although these latter features are not used at the moment.
</p>

<p>
The implementation should be considered <b>strictly internal</b> to
libvirt and <b>subject to change at any time without notice</b>.  If
you wish to talk to libvirtd, link to libvirt.  If there is a problem
that means you think you need to use the protocol directly, please
first discuss this on <a
href="https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/libvir-list"
title="libvir-list mailing list">the mailing list</a>.
</p>

<p>
The messaging protocol is described in
<code>qemud/remote_protocol.x</code>.
</p>

<p>
Authentication and encryption (for TLS) is done using <a
href="http://www.gnu.org/software/gnutls/" title="GnuTLS project
page">GnuTLS</a> and the RPC protocol is unaware of this layer.
</p>

<p>
Protocol messages are sent using a simple 32 bit length word (encoded
XDR int) followed by the message header (XDR
<code>remote_message_header</code>) followed by the message body.  The
length count includes the length word itself, and is measured in
bytes.  Maximum message size is <code>REMOTE_MESSAGE_MAX</code> and to
avoid denial of services attacks on the XDR decoders strings are
individually limited to <code>REMOTE_STRING_MAX</code> bytes.  In the
TLS case, messages may be split over TLS records, but a TLS record
cannot contain parts of more than one message.  In the common RPC case
a single <code>REMOTE_CALL</code> message is sent from client to
server, and the server then replies synchronously with a single
<code>REMOTE_REPLY</code> message, but other forms of messaging are
also possible.
</p>

<p>
The protocol contains support for multiple program types and protocol
versioning, modelled after SunRPC.
</p>
2361

2362 2363
<h2><a name="uri">Connection URIs</a></h2>

2364 2365 2366 2367 2368 2369 2370 2371 2372 2373 2374 2375 2376 2377 2378 2379 2380 2381 2382 2383 2384 2385 2386 2387 2388 2389 2390 2391 2392 2393 2394 2395 2396 2397 2398 2399 2400 2401 2402 2403 2404 2405 2406 2407 2408 2409 2410 2411 2412 2413 2414 2415 2416 2417 2418 2419 2420 2421 2422 2423 2424 2425 2426 2427 2428 2429 2430 2431 2432 2433 2434 2435 2436 2437 2438 2439 2440 2441 2442 2443 2444 2445 2446 2447 2448 2449 2450 2451 2452 2453 2454 2455 2456 2457 2458 2459 2460 2461 2462 2463 2464 2465 2466 2467 2468 2469 2470 2471 2472 2473 2474 2475 2476 2477 2478 2479 2480 2481 2482 2483 2484 2485 2486 2487 2488 2489 2490 2491 2492 2493 2494 2495 2496 2497 2498 2499 2500 2501 2502 2503 2504 2505 2506 2507 2508 2509 2510 2511 2512 2513 2514 2515 2516 2517 2518 2519 2520 2521 2522 2523 2524 2525 2526 2527 2528 2529 2530 2531 2532 2533 2534 2535 2536 2537 2538 2539 2540 2541 2542 2543 2544 2545 2546 2547 2548 2549 2550 2551 2552 2553 2554 2555 2556 2557 2558 2559 2560 2561 2562 2563 2564 2565 2566 2567 2568 2569 2570 2571 2572 2573 2574 2575 2576 2577 2578 2579 2580 2581 2582 2583 2584 2585 2586 2587 2588 2589 2590 2591 2592 2593 2594 2595 2596 2597 2598 2599 2600 2601 2602 2603 2604 2605 2606 2607 2608 2609 2610 2611 2612 2613 2614 2615 2616 2617 2618 2619 2620 2621 2622 2623 2624 2625 2626 2627 2628 2629 2630 2631 2632 2633 2634 2635 2636 2637 2638 2639 2640 2641 2642 2643 2644 2645 2646 2647 2648 2649 2650 2651 2652 2653 2654 2655 2656 2657 2658 2659 2660 2661 2662 2663
<p>
Since libvirt supports many different kinds of virtualization
(often referred to as "drivers" or "hypervisors"), we need a
way to be able to specify which driver a connection refers to.
Additionally we may want to refer to a driver on a remote
machine over the network.
</p>

<p>
To this end, libvirt uses URIs as used on the Web and as defined in <a
href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2396.txt">RFC 2396</a>. This page
documents libvirt URIs.
</p>

<ul>
  <li><a href="#URI_libvirt">Specifying URIs to libvirt</a></li>
  <li><a href="#URI_virsh">Specifying URIs to virsh, virt-manager and virt-install</a></li>
  <li><a href="#URI_xen">xen:/// URI</a></li>
  <li><a href="#URI_qemu">qemu:///... QEMU and KVM URIs</a></li>
  <li><a href="#URI_remote">Remote URIs</a></li>
  <li><a href="#URI_test">test:///... Test URIs</a></li>
  <li><a href="#URI_legacy">Other &amp; legacy URI formats</a></li>
</ul>

<h3><a name="URI_libvirt">Specifying URIs to libvirt</a></h3>

<p>
The URI is passed as the <code>name</code> parameter to <a href="html/libvirt-libvirt.html#virConnectOpen"><code>virConnectOpen</code></a> or <a href="html/libvirt-libvirt.html#virConnectOpenReadOnly"><code>virConnectOpenReadOnly</code></a>.  For example:
</p>

<pre>
virConnectPtr conn = virConnectOpenReadOnly (<b>"test:///default"</b>);
</pre>

<h3><a name="URI_virsh">Specifying URIs to virsh, virt-manager and virt-install</a></h3>

<p>
In virsh use the <code>-c</code> or <code>--connect</code> option:
</p>

<pre>
virsh <b>-c test:///default</b> list
</pre>

<p>
If virsh finds the environment variable
<code>VIRSH_DEFAULT_CONNECT_URI</code> set, it will try this URI by
default.
</p>

<p>
When using the interactive virsh shell, you can also use the
<code>connect</code> <i>URI</i> command to reconnect to another
hypervisor.
</p>

<p>
In virt-manager use the <code>-c</code> or <code>--connect=</code><i>URI</i> option:
</p>

<pre>
virt-manager <b>-c test:///default</b>
</pre>

<p>
In virt-install use the <code>--connect=</code><i>URI</i> option:
</p>

<pre>
virt-install <b>--connect=test:///default</b> <i>[other options]</i>
</pre>

<h3><a name="URI_xen">xen:/// URI</a></h3>

<p><i>This section describes a feature which is new in libvirt &gt;
0.2.3.  For libvirt &le; 0.2.3 use <a href="#URI_legacy_xen"><code>"xen"</code></a>.</i>
</p>

<p>
To access a Xen hypervisor running on the local machine
use the URI <code>xen:///</code>.
</p>

<h3><a name="URI_qemu">qemu:///... QEMU and KVM URIs</a></h3>

<p>
To use QEMU support in libvirt you must be running the
<code>libvirt_qemud</code> daemon.  The purpose of this
daemon is to manage qemu instances.
</p>

<p>
The <code>libvirt_qemud</code> daemon can be run in two ways.  It may
be started by init scripts when the machine boots and run in "system
mode" (<code>libvirt_qemud --system</code>), in which case it manages
qemu instances on behalf of all users of the machine.  It may be also
be started by the local user in what is known as "session mode"
(<code>libvirt_qemud --session</code>), to manage qemu instances for
just the current user.  If no <code>libvirt_qemud</code> is running at
all, then the qemu driver starts one running in session mode.
</p>

<p>
So to connect to the daemon, one of two different URIs is used:
</p>

<ul>
<li> <code>qemu:///system</code> connects to a system mode daemon. </li>
<li> <code>qemu:///session</code> connects to a session mode daemon. </li>
</ul>

<p>
(If you do <code>libvirt_qemud --help</code>, the daemon will print
out the paths of the Unix domain socket(s) that it listens on in
the various different modes).
</p>

<p>
KVM URIs are identical.  You select between qemu, qemu accelerated and
KVM guests in the <a href="format.html#KVM1">guest XML as described
here</a>.
</p>

<h3><a name="URI_remote">Remote URIs</a></h3>

<p>
Remote URIs are formed by taking ordinary local URIs and adding a
hostname and/or transport name.  For example:
</p>

<table class="top_table">
<tr>
<th> Local URI </th>
<th> Remote URI </th>
<th> Meaning </th>
</tr>

<tr>
<td> <code>xen:///</code> </td>
<td> <code>xen://oirase/</code> </td>
<td> Connect to the Xen hypervisor running on host <code>oirase</code>
  using TLS. </td>
</tr>

<tr>
<td> <code>xen:///</code> </td>
<td> <code>xen+ssh://oirase/</code> </td>
<td> Connect to the Xen hypervisor running on host <code>oirase</code>
  by going over an <code>ssh</code> connection. </td>
</tr>

<tr>
<td> <code>test:///default</code> </td>
<td> <code>test+tcp://oirase/default</code> </td>
<td> Connect to the test driver on host <code>oirase</code>
  using an unsecured TCP connection. </td>
</tr>
</table>

<p>
Remote URIs in libvirt offer a rich syntax and many features.
We refer you to <a href="remote.html#Remote_URI_reference">the libvirt
remote URI reference</a> and <a href="remote.html">full documentation
for libvirt remote support</a>.
</p>

<h3><a name="URI_test">test:///... Test URIs</a></h3>

<p>
The test driver is a dummy hypervisor for test purposes.
The URIs supported are:
</p>

<ul>
<li> <code>test:///default</code> connects to a default set of
host definitions built into the driver. </li>
<li> <code>test:///path/to/host/definitions</code> connects to
a set of host definitions held in the named file.
</ul>

<h3><a name="URI_legacy">Other &amp; legacy URI formats</a></h3>

<h4><a name="URI_NULL">NULL and empty string URIs</a></h4>

<p>
Libvirt allows you to pass a <code>NULL</code> pointer to
<code>virConnectOpen*</code>.  Empty string (<code>""</code>) acts in
the same way.  Traditionally this has meant
<q>connect to the local Xen hypervisor</q>.  However in future this
may change to mean <q>connect to the best available hypervisor</q>.
</p>

<p>
The theory is that if, for example, Xen is unavailable but the
machine is running an OpenVZ kernel, then we should not try to
connect to the Xen hypervisor since that is obviously the wrong
thing to do.
</p>

<p>
In any case applications linked to libvirt can continue to pass
<code>NULL</code> as a default choice, but should always allow the
user to override the URI, either by constructing one or by allowing
the user to type a URI in directly (if that is appropriate).  If your
application wishes to connect specifically to a Xen hypervisor, then
for future proofing it should choose a full <a
href="#URI_xen"><code>xen:///</code> URI</a>.
</p>

<h4><a name="URI_file">File paths (xend-unix-server)</a></h4>

<p>
If XenD is running and configured in <code>/etc/xen/xend-config.sxp</code>:
</p>

<pre>
(xend-unix-server yes)
</pre>

<p>
then it listens on a Unix domain socket, usually at
<code>/var/lib/xend/xend-socket</code>.  You may pass a different path
using a file URI such as:
</p>

<pre>
virsh -c ///var/run/xend/xend-socket
</pre>

<h4><a name="URI_http">Legacy: <code>http://...</code> (xend-http-server)</a></h4>

<p>
If XenD is running and configured in <code>/etc/xen/xend-config.sxp</code>:

<pre>
(xend-http-server yes)
</pre>

<p>
then it listens on TCP port 8000.  libvirt allows you to
try to connect to xend running on remote machines by passing
<code>http://<i>hostname</i>[:<i>port</i>]/</code>, for example:

<pre>
virsh -c http://oirase/ list
</pre>

<p>
This method is unencrypted and insecure and is definitely not
recommended for production use.  Instead use <a
href="remote.html">libvirt's remote support</a>.
</p>

<p>
Notes:
</p>

<ol>
<li> The HTTP client does not fully support IPv6. </li>
<li> Many features do not work as expected across HTTP connections, in
 particular, <a
 href="html/libvirt-libvirt.html#virConnectGetCapabilities">virConnectGetCapabilities</a>.
 The <a href="remote.html">remote support</a> however does work
 correctly. </li>
<li> XenD's new-style XMLRPC interface is not supported by
 libvirt, only the old-style sexpr interface known in the Xen
 documentation as "unix server" or "http server".</li>
</ol>

<h4><a name="URI_legacy_xen">Legacy: <code>"xen"</code></a></h4>

<p>
Another legacy URI is to specify name as the string
<code>"xen"</code>.  This will continue to refer to the Xen
hypervisor.  However you should prefer a full <a
href="#URI_xen"><code>xen:///</code> URI</a> in all future code.
</p>

<h4><a name="URI_http">Legacy: Xen proxy</a></h4>

<p>
Libvirt continues to support connections to a separately running Xen
proxy daemon.  This provides a way to allow non-root users to make a
safe (read-only) subset of queries to the hypervisor.
</p>

<p>
There is no specific "Xen proxy" URI.  However if a Xen URI of any of
the ordinary or legacy forms is used (eg. <code>NULL</code>,
<code>""</code>, <code>"xen"</code>, ...) which fails, <i>and</i> the
user is not root, <i>and</i> the Xen proxy socket can be connected to
(<code>/tmp/libvirt_proxy_conn</code>), then libvirt will use a proxy
connection.
</p>

<p>
You should consider using <a href="remote.html">libvirt remote support</a>
in future.
</p>

2664 2665 2666 2667 2668 2669 2670 2671 2672 2673 2674 2675 2676 2677 2678 2679 2680 2681 2682 2683 2684 2685 2686 2687 2688 2689 2690 2691 2692 2693 2694 2695 2696 2697 2698 2699 2700 2701 2702 2703 2704 2705 2706 2707 2708 2709 2710 2711 2712 2713 2714 2715 2716 2717 2718 2719 2720 2721 2722 2723 2724 2725 2726 2727 2728 2729 2730 2731 2732 2733 2734 2735 2736 2737 2738 2739 2740 2741 2742 2743 2744 2745 2746 2747 2748 2749 2750 2751 2752 2753 2754 2755 2756 2757 2758 2759 2760 2761 2762 2763 2764 2765 2766 2767 2768 2769 2770 2771 2772 2773 2774 2775 2776 2777 2778 2779 2780 2781 2782 2783 2784 2785 2786 2787 2788 2789 2790 2791 2792 2793 2794 2795 2796 2797 2798 2799 2800 2801 2802 2803 2804 2805 2806 2807 2808 2809 2810 2811 2812 2813 2814 2815 2816 2817 2818 2819 2820 2821 2822 2823 2824 2825 2826 2827 2828 2829 2830 2831 2832 2833 2834 2835 2836 2837 2838 2839 2840 2841 2842 2843 2844 2845 2846 2847 2848 2849 2850 2851 2852 2853 2854 2855 2856 2857 2858 2859 2860 2861 2862 2863 2864 2865 2866 2867 2868 2869 2870 2871 2872 2873 2874 2875 2876 2877 2878 2879 2880 2881 2882 2883 2884 2885 2886 2887 2888 2889 2890 2891 2892 2893 2894 2895 2896 2897 2898 2899 2900 2901 2902 2903 2904 2905 2906 2907 2908 2909 2910 2911 2912 2913 2914 2915 2916 2917 2918 2919 2920 2921 2922 2923 2924 2925 2926 2927 2928 2929 2930 2931 2932 2933 2934 2935 2936 2937 2938 2939 2940 2941 2942 2943 2944 2945 2946 2947 2948 2949 2950 2951 2952 2953 2954 2955 2956 2957 2958 2959 2960 2961 2962 2963 2964 2965 2966 2967 2968 2969 2970 2971 2972 2973 2974 2975 2976 2977 2978 2979 2980 2981 2982 2983 2984 2985 2986 2987 2988 2989 2990 2991 2992 2993 2994 2995 2996 2997 2998 2999 3000 3001 3002 3003 3004 3005 3006 3007 3008 3009 3010 3011 3012 3013 3014 3015 3016 3017 3018 3019 3020 3021 3022 3023 3024 3025 3026 3027 3028 3029 3030 3031 3032 3033 3034 3035 3036 3037 3038 3039 3040 3041 3042 3043 3044 3045 3046 3047 3048 3049 3050 3051 3052 3053 3054 3055 3056 3057 3058 3059 3060 3061 3062 3063 3064 3065 3066 3067 3068 3069 3070 3071 3072 3073 3074 3075 3076 3077 3078 3079 3080 3081 3082 3083 3084 3085 3086 3087 3088 3089 3090 3091 3092 3093 3094 3095 3096 3097 3098 3099 3100 3101 3102 3103 3104 3105 3106 3107 3108 3109 3110 3111 3112 3113 3114 3115 3116 3117 3118 3119 3120 3121 3122 3123 3124 3125 3126 3127 3128 3129 3130 3131 3132 3133 3134 3135 3136 3137 3138 3139 3140 3141 3142 3143 3144 3145 3146 3147 3148 3149 3150 3151 3152 3153 3154 3155 3156 3157 3158 3159 3160 3161 3162 3163 3164 3165 3166 3167 3168 3169 3170 3171 3172 3173 3174 3175 3176 3177 3178 3179 3180 3181 3182 3183 3184 3185 3186 3187 3188 3189 3190 3191 3192 3193 3194 3195 3196 3197 3198 3199 3200 3201 3202 3203
<h2><a name="HVSupport">Hypervisor support</a></h2>

<p>
This page documents which <a href="html/">libvirt calls</a> work on
which hypervisors.
</p>

<p>
This information changes frequently.  This page was last checked or
updated on <i>2007-06-29</i>.
</p>

<h3>Domain functions</h3>

<p> x = not supported; empty cell means no information </p>

<table class="top_table">
<tr>
  <th> Function </th>
  <th> Since </th>
  <th> Xen </th>
  <th> QEMU </th>
  <th> KVM </th>
  <th> <a href="remote.html">Remote</a> </th>
</tr>

<tr>
  <td> virConnectClose </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virConnectGetCapabilities </td>
  <td> 0.2.1 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.1 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.1 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.1 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virConnectGetHostname </td>
  <td> 0.3.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
  <td>  </td>
  <td>  </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virConnectGetMaxVcpus </td>
  <td> 0.2.1 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.1 </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virConnectGetType </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virConnectGetURI </td>
  <td> 0.3.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
  <td>  </td>
  <td>  </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virConnectGetVersion </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virConnectListDefinedDomains </td>
  <td> 0.1.5 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.1.9 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virConnectListDomains </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virConnectNumOfDefinedDomains </td>
  <td> 0.1.5 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.1.9 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virConnectNumOfDomains </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virConnectOpen </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virConnectOpenReadOnly </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainAttachDevice </td>
  <td> 0.1.9 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.1.9 </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainCoreDump </td>
  <td> 0.1.9 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.1.9 </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainCreate </td>
  <td> 0.1.5 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.1.9 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainCreateLinux </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.0.5 </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainDefineXML </td>
  <td> 0.1.5 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.1.9 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainDestroy </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainDetachDevice </td>
  <td> 0.1.9 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.1.9 </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainFree </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainGetAutostart </td>
  <td> 0.2.1 </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.1 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.1 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainGetConnect </td>
  <td> 0.3.0 </td>
  <td colspan="4"> not a HV function </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainGetID </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainGetInfo </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainGetMaxMemory </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainGetMaxVcpus </td>
  <td> 0.2.1 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.1 </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainGetName </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainGetOSType </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainGetSchedulerParameters </td>
  <td> 0.2.3 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.3 </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainGetSchedulerType </td>
  <td> 0.2.3 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.3 </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainGetUUID </td>
  <td> 0.1.10 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.1.10 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainGetUUIDString </td>
  <td> 0.1.10 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.1.10 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainGetVcpus </td>
  <td> 0.1.4 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.1.4 </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainGetXMLDesc </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainLookupByID </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainLookupByName </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainLookupByUUID </td>
  <td> 0.1.10 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.1.10 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainLookupByUUIDString </td>
  <td> 0.1.10 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.1.10 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainPinVcpu </td>
  <td> 0.1.4 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.1.4 </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainReboot </td>
  <td> 0.1.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.1.0 </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainRestore </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainResume </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainSave </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainSetAutostart </td>
  <td> 0.2.1 </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.1 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.1 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainSetMaxMemory </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainSetMemory </td>
  <td> 0.1.1 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.1.1 </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainSetSchedulerParameters </td>
  <td> 0.2.3 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.3 </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainSetVcpus </td>
  <td> 0.1.4 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.1.4 </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> x </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainShutdown </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainSuspend </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virDomainUndefine </td>
  <td> 0.1.5 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.1.9 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virGetVersion </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td> All </td>
  <td colspan="3"> Returns -1 if HV unsupported. </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virInitialize </td>
  <td> 0.1.0 </td>
  <td colspan="4"> not a HV function </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virNodeGetInfo </td>
  <td> 0.1.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.1.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.2.0 </td>
  <td> &ge; 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
</table>

<h3>Network functions</h3>

<p>
Network functions are not hypervisor-specific.  For historical
reasons they require the QEMU daemon to be running (this
restriction may be lifted in future).  Most network functions
first appeared in libvirt 0.2.0.
</p>

<table class="top_table">
<tr>
<th> Function </th>
<th> Since </th>
</tr>

<tr>
  <td> virConnectNumOfNetworks </td> <td> 0.2.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virConnectListNetworks </td> <td> 0.2.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virConnectNumOfDefinedNetworks </td> <td> 0.2.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virConnectListDefinedNetworks </td> <td> 0.2.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virNetworkCreate </td> <td> 0.2.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virNetworkCreateXML </td> <td> 0.2.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virNetworkDefineXML </td> <td> 0.2.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virNetworkDestroy </td> <td> 0.2.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virNetworkFree </td> <td> 0.2.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virNetworkGetAutostart </td> <td> 0.2.1 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virNetworkGetConnect </td> <td> 0.3.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virNetworkGetBridgeName </td> <td> 0.2.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virNetworkGetName </td> <td> 0.2.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virNetworkGetUUID </td> <td> 0.2.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virNetworkGetUUIDString </td> <td> 0.2.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virNetworkGetXMLDesc </td> <td> 0.2.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virNetworkLookupByName </td> <td> 0.2.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virNetworkLookupByUUID </td> <td> 0.2.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virNetworkLookupByUUIDString </td> <td> 0.2.0 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virNetworkSetAutostart </td> <td> 0.2.1 </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td> virNetworkUndefine </td> <td> 0.2.0 </td>
</tr>
</table>

3204 3205
</body>
</html>