virsh.pod 169.9 KB
Newer Older
1 2 3 4 5 6
=head1 NAME

virsh - management user interface

=head1 SYNOPSIS

L
Lai Jiangshan 已提交
7 8 9
B<virsh> [I<OPTION>]... [I<COMMAND_STRING>]

B<virsh> [I<OPTION>]... I<COMMAND> [I<ARG>]...
10 11 12 13 14

=head1 DESCRIPTION

The B<virsh> program is the main interface for managing virsh guest
domains. The program can be used to create, pause, and shutdown
E
Eric Blake 已提交
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
domains. It can also be used to list current domains. 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 GNU Lesser General Public License. Virtualization of the
Linux Operating System means the ability to run multiple instances of
Operating Systems concurrently on a single hardware system where the
basic resources are driven by a Linux instance. The library aims at
P
Peter Krempa 已提交
22
providing a long term stable C API.  It currently supports Xen, QEMU,
23
KVM, LXC, OpenVZ, VirtualBox and VMware ESX.
24

25
The basic structure of most virsh usage is:
26

27
  virsh [OPTION]... <command> <domain> [ARG]...
28

29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38
Where I<command> is one of the commands listed below; I<domain> is the
numeric domain id, or the domain name, or the domain UUID; and I<ARGS>
are command specific options.  There are a few exceptions to this rule
in the cases where the command in question acts on all domains, the
entire machine, or directly on the xen hypervisor.  Those exceptions
will be clear for each of those commands.  Note: it is permissible to
give numeric names to domains, however, doing so will result in a
domain that can only be identified by domain id. In other words, if a
numeric value is supplied it will be interpreted as a domain id, not
as a name.
39

L
Lai Jiangshan 已提交
40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48
The B<virsh> program can be used either to run one I<COMMAND> by giving the
command and its arguments on the shell command line, or a I<COMMAND_STRING>
which is a single shell argument consisting of multiple I<COMMAND> actions
and their arguments joined with whitespace, and separated by semicolons
between commands.  Within I<COMMAND_STRING>, virsh understands the
same single, double, and backslash escapes as the shell, although you must
add another layer of shell escaping in creating the single shell argument.
If no command is given in the command line, B<virsh> will then start a minimal
interpreter waiting for your commands, and the B<quit> command will then exit
49
the program.
50

E
Eric Blake 已提交
51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62
The B<virsh> program understands the following I<OPTIONS>.

=over 4

=item B<-c>, B<--connect> I<URI>

Connect to the specified I<URI>, as if by the B<connect> command,
instead of the default connection.

=item B<-d>, B<--debug> I<LEVEL>

Enable debug messages at integer I<LEVEL> and above.  I<LEVEL> can
63
range from 0 to 4 (default).  See the documentation of B<VIRSH_DEBUG>
64
environment variable below for the description of each I<LEVEL>.
E
Eric Blake 已提交
65

66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76
=item B<-e>, B<--escape> I<string>

Set alternative escape sequence for I<console> command. By default,
telnet's B<^]> is used. Allowed characters when using hat notation are:
alphabetic character, @, [, ], \, ^, _.

=item B<-h>, B<--help>

Ignore all other arguments, and behave as if the B<help> command were
given instead.

77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88
=item B<-k>, B<--keepalive-interval> I<INTERVAL>

Set an I<INTERVAL> (in seconds) for sending keepalive messages to
check whether connection to the server is still alive.  Setting the
interval to 0 disables client keepalive mechanism.

=item B<-K>, B<--keepalive-count> I<COUNT>

Set a number of times keepalive message can be sent without getting an
answer from the server without marking the connection dead.  There is
no effect to this setting in case the I<INTERVAL> is set to 0.

E
Eric Blake 已提交
89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105
=item B<-l>, B<--log> I<FILE>

Output logging details to I<FILE>.

=item B<-q>, B<--quiet>

Avoid extra informational messages.

=item B<-r>, B<--readonly>

Make the initial connection read-only, as if by the I<--readonly>
option of the B<connect> command.

=item B<-t>, B<--timing>

Output elapsed time information for each command.

106
=item B<-v>, B<--version[=short]>
107

108 109 110 111 112 113 114
Ignore all other arguments, and prints the version of the libvirt library
virsh is coming from

=item B<-V>, B<--version=long>

Ignore all other arguments, and prints the version of the libvirt library
virsh is coming from and which options and driver are compiled in.
115

E
Eric Blake 已提交
116 117
=back

118 119
=head1 NOTES

E
Eric Blake 已提交
120 121 122
Most B<virsh> operations rely upon the libvirt library being able to
connect to an already running libvirtd service.  This can usually be
done using the command B<service libvirtd start>.
123

124
Most B<virsh> commands require root privileges to run due to the
125 126 127
communications channels used to talk to the hypervisor.  Running as
non root will return an error.

128
Most B<virsh> commands act synchronously, except maybe shutdown,
L
Luiz Capitulino 已提交
129
setvcpus and setmem. In those cases the fact that the B<virsh>
130 131 132
program returned, may not mean the action is complete and you
must poll periodically to detect that the guest completed the
operation.
133

E
Eric Blake 已提交
134 135 136 137 138 139
B<virsh> strives for backward compatibility.  Although the B<help>
command only lists the preferred usage of a command, if an older
version of B<virsh> supported an alternate spelling of a command or
option (such as I<--tunnelled> instead of I<--tunneled>), then
scripts using that older spelling will continue to work.

E
Eric Blake 已提交
140 141 142 143
Several B<virsh> commands take an optionally scaled integer; if no
scale is provided, then the default is listed in the command (for
historical reasons, some commands default to bytes, while other
commands default to kibibytes).  The following case-insensitive
J
Ján Tomko 已提交
144
suffixes can be used to select a specific scale:
E
Eric Blake 已提交
145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158
  b, byte  byte      1
  KB       kilobyte  1,000
  k, KiB   kibibyte  1,024
  MB       megabyte  1,000,000
  M, MiB   mebibyte  1,048,576
  GB       gigabyte  1,000,000,000
  G, GiB   gibibyte  1,073,741,824
  TB       terabyte  1,000,000,000,000
  T, TiB   tebibyte  1,099,511,627,776
  PB       petabyte  1,000,000,000,000,000
  P, PiB   pebibyte  1,125,899,906,842,624
  EB       exabyte   1,000,000,000,000,000,000
  E, EiB   exbibyte  1,152,921,504,606,846,976

159
=head1 GENERIC COMMANDS
160

161
The following commands are generic i.e. not specific to a domain.
162 163 164

=over 4

165
=item B<help> [I<command-or-group>]
166

167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177
This lists each of the virsh commands.  When used without options, all
commands are listed, one per line, grouped into related categories,
displaying the keyword for each group.

To display only commands for a specific group, give the keyword for that
group as an option.  For example:

 virsh # help host

  Host and Hypervisor (help keyword 'host'):
     capabilities                   capabilities
178
     cpu-models                     show the CPU models for an architecture
179 180 181
     connect                        (re)connect to hypervisor
     freecell                       NUMA free memory
     hostname                       print the hypervisor hostname
182 183
     qemu-attach                    Attach to existing QEMU process
     qemu-monitor-command           QEMU Monitor Command
184
     qemu-agent-command             QEMU Guest Agent Command
E
Eric Blake 已提交
185
     sysinfo                        print the hypervisor sysinfo
186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203
     uri                            print the hypervisor canonical URI

To display detailed information for a specific command, give its name as the
option instead.  For example:

 virsh # help list
   NAME
     list - list domains

   SYNOPSIS
     list [--inactive] [--all]

   DESCRIPTION
     Returns list of domains.

   OPTIONS
     --inactive       list inactive domains
     --all            list inactive & active domains
204

205
=item B<quit>, B<exit>
206

207
quit this interactive terminal
208

209
=item B<version> [I<--daemon>]
210

211
Will print out the major version info about what this built from.
212 213
If I<--daemon> is specified then the version of the libvirt daemon
is included in the output.
214

215
=over 4
216

217
B<Example>
218

219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230
 $ virsh version
 Compiled against library: libvirt 1.2.3
 Using library: libvirt 1.2.3
 Using API: QEMU 1.2.3
 Running hypervisor: QEMU 2.0.50

 $ virsh version --daemon
 Compiled against library: libvirt 1.2.3
 Using library: libvirt 1.2.3
 Using API: QEMU 1.2.3
 Running hypervisor: QEMU 2.0.50
 Running against daemon: 1.2.6
231

232
=back
233

234
=item B<cd> [I<directory>]
P
Paolo Bonzini 已提交
235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245

Will change current directory to I<directory>.  The default directory
for the B<cd> command is the home directory or, if there is no I<HOME>
variable in the environment, the root directory.

This command is only available in interactive mode.

=item B<pwd>

Will print the current directory.

J
Jiri Denemark 已提交
246
=item B<connect> [I<URI>] [I<--readonly>]
247

E
Eric Blake 已提交
248 249 250 251 252 253
(Re)-Connect to the hypervisor. When the shell is first started, this
is automatically run with the I<URI> parameter requested by the C<-c>
option on the command line. The I<URI> parameter specifies how to
connect to the hypervisor. The documentation page at
L<http://libvirt.org/uri.html> list the values supported, but the most
common are:
254

255
=over 4
256

257
=item xen:///
258

J
Jiri Denemark 已提交
259
this is used to connect to the local Xen hypervisor
260

261
=item qemu:///system
262

P
Peter Krempa 已提交
263
connect locally as root to the daemon supervising QEMU and KVM domains
264

265 266
=item qemu:///session

P
Peter Krempa 已提交
267
connect locally as a normal user to his own set of QEMU and KVM domains
268

D
David Jorm 已提交
269 270 271 272
=item lxc:///

connect to a local linux container

273
=back
274

275 276
To find the currently used URI, check the I<uri> command documented below.

277 278
For remote access see the documentation page at
L<http://libvirt.org/uri.html> on how to make URIs.
279
The I<--readonly> option allows for read-only connection
280

281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288
=item B<uri>

Prints the hypervisor canonical URI, can be useful in shell mode.

=item B<hostname>

Print the hypervisor hostname.

E
Eric Blake 已提交
289 290 291 292
=item B<sysinfo>

Print the XML representation of the hypervisor sysinfo, if available.

293
=item B<nodeinfo>
294

295
Returns basic information about the node, like number and type of CPU,
J
Jiri Denemark 已提交
296 297 298
and size of the physical memory. The output corresponds to virNodeInfo
structure. Specifically, the "CPU socket(s)" field means number of CPU
sockets per NUMA cell.
299

300
=item B<nodecpumap> [I<--pretty>]
301 302 303 304

Displays the node's total number of CPUs, the number of online CPUs
and the list of online CPUs.

305 306
With I<--pretty> the online CPUs are printed as a range instead of a list.

307
=item B<nodecpustats> [I<cpu>] [I<--percent>]
308 309 310 311 312 313

Returns cpu stats of the node.
If I<cpu> is specified, this will prints specified cpu statistics only.
If I<--percent> is specified, this will prints percentage of each kind of cpu
statistics during 1 second.

314
=item B<nodememstats> [I<cell>]
315 316 317 318

Returns memory stats of the node.
If I<cell> is specified, this will prints specified cell statistics only.

319
=item B<nodesuspend> [I<target>] [I<duration>]
320

321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328
Puts the node (host machine) into a system-wide sleep state and schedule
the node's Real-Time-Clock interrupt to resume the node after the time
duration specified by I<duration> is out.
I<target> specifies the state to which the host will be suspended to, it
can be "mem" (suspend to RAM), "disk" (suspend to disk), or "hybrid"
(suspend to both RAM and disk).  I<duration> specifies the time duration
in seconds for which the host has to be suspended, it should be at least
60 seconds.
329

330
=item B<node-memory-tune> [I<shm-pages-to-scan>] [I<shm-sleep-millisecs>]
331
[I<shm-merge-across-nodes>]
332 333 334 335 336

Allows you to display or set the node memory parameters.
I<shm-pages-to-scan> can be used to set the number of pages to scan
before the shared memory service goes to sleep; I<shm-sleep-millisecs>
can be used to set the number of millisecs the shared memory service should
337 338 339 340
sleep before next scan; I<shm-merge-across-nodes> specifies if pages from
different numa nodes can be merged. When set to 0, only pages which physically
reside in the memory area of same NUMA node can be merged. When set to 1,
pages from all nodes can be merged. Default to 1.
341

342 343 344
B<Note>: Currently the "shared memory service" only means KSM (Kernel Samepage
Merging).

345
=item B<capabilities>
346 347 348 349 350

Print an XML document describing the capabilities of the hypervisor
we are currently connected to. This includes a section on the host
capabilities in terms of CPU and features, and a set of description
for each kind of guest which can be virtualized. For a more complete
351
description see:
M
Mark McLoughlin 已提交
352
  L<http://libvirt.org/formatcaps.html>
353
The XML also show the NUMA topology information if available.
354

355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389
=item B<domcapabilities> [I<virttype>] [I<emulatorbin>]
[I<arch>] [I<machine>]

Print an XML document describing the domain capabilities for the
hypervisor we are connected to using information either sourced from an
existing domain or taken from the B<virsh capabilities> output. This may
be useful if you intend to create a new domain and are curious if for
instance it could make use of VFIO by creating a domain for the
hypervisor with a specific emulator and architecture.

Each hypervisor will have different requirements regarding which options
are required and which are optional. A hypervisor can support providing
a default value for any of the options.

The I<virttype> option specifies the virtualization type used. The value
to be used is either from the 'type' attribute of the <domain/> top
level element from the domain XML or the 'type' attribute found within
each <guest/> element from the B<virsh capabilities> output.  The
I<emulatorbin> option specifies the path to the emulator. The value to
be used is either the <emulator> element in the domain XML or the
B<virsh capabilities> output. The I<arch> option specifies the
architecture to be used for the domain. The value to be used is either
the "arch" attribute from the domain's XML <os/> element and <type/>
subelement or the "name" attribute of an <arch/> element from the
B<virsh capabililites> output. The I<machine> specifies the machine type
for the emulator. The value to be used is either the "machine" attribute
from the domain's XML <os/> element and <type/> subelement or one from a
list of machines from the B<virsh capabilities> output for a specific
architecture and domain type.

For the qemu hypervisor, a I<virttype> of either 'qemu' or 'kvm' must be
supplied along with either the I<emulatorbin> or I<arch> in order to
generate output for the default I<machine>.  Supplying a I<machine>
value will generate output for the specific machine.

390
=item B<inject-nmi> I<domain>
391 392 393

Inject NMI to the guest.

394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402
=item B<list> [I<--inactive> | I<--all>]
              [I<--managed-save>] [I<--title>]
              { [I<--table>] | I<--name> | I<--uuid> }
              [I<--persistent>] [I<--transient>]
              [I<--with-managed-save>] [I<--without-managed-save>]
              [I<--autostart>] [I<--no-autostart>]
              [I<--with-snapshot>] [I<--without-snapshot>]
              [I<--state-running>] [I<--state-paused>]
              [I<--state-shutoff>] [I<--state-other>]
403

404
Prints information about existing domains.  If no options are
405
specified it prints out information about running domains.
406 407 408 409

An example format for the list is as follows:

B<virsh> list
410 411 412 413
  Id    Name                           State
 ----------------------------------------------------
  0     Domain-0                       running
  2     fedora                         paused
414

415
Name is the name of the domain.  ID the domain numeric id.
416
State is the run state (see below).
417

418 419
B<STATES>

O
Osier Yang 已提交
420
The State field lists 8 states for a domain, and which ones the
421
current domain is in.
422

423 424
=over 4

425 426 427 428
=item B<cpu-models> I<arch>

Print the list of CPU models known for the specified architecture.

429
=item B<running>
430 431 432

The domain is currently running on a CPU

433
=item B<idle>
434

435
The domain is idle, and not running or runnable.  This can be caused
436 437 438
because the domain is waiting on IO (a traditional wait state) or has
gone to sleep because there was nothing else for it to do.

439
=item B<paused>
440 441

The domain has been paused, usually occurring through the administrator
442
running B<virsh suspend>.  When in a paused state the domain will still
443
consume allocated resources like memory, but will not be eligible for
444
scheduling by the hypervisor.
445

446
=item B<shutdown>
447

448
The domain is in the process of shutting down, i.e. the guest operating system
449
has been notified and should be in the process of stopping its operations
450
gracefully.
451

452 453 454 455 456
=item B<shut off>

The domain is not running.  Usually this indicates the domain has been
shut down completely, or has not been started.

457
=item B<crashed>
458 459 460

The domain has crashed, which is always a violent ending.  Usually
this state can only occur if the domain has been configured not to
461
restart on crash.
462

463
=item B<dying>
464 465 466 467

The domain is in process of dying, but hasn't completely shutdown or
crashed.

O
Osier Yang 已提交
468 469 470 471 472
=item B<pmsuspended>

The domain has been suspended by guest power management, e.g. entered
into s3 state.

473 474
=back

475 476 477
Normally only active domains are listed. To list inactive domains specify
I<--inactive> or I<--all> to list both active and inactive domains.

478 479 480 481 482
To further filter the list of domains you may specify one or more of filtering
flags supported by the B<list> command. These flags are grouped by function.
Specifying one or more flags from a group enables the filter group. Note that
some combinations of flags may yield no results. Supported filtering flags and
groups:
483 484 485 486 487 488 489 490 491 492 493 494 495 496 497 498 499 500 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510 511 512 513 514 515 516 517 518 519 520 521 522 523 524 525

=over 4

=item B<Persistence>

Flag I<--persistent> is used to include persistent domains in the returned
list. To include transient domains specify I<--transient>.

=item B<Existence of managed save image>

To list domains having a managed save image specify flag
I<--with-managed-save>. For domains that don't have a managed save image
specify I<--without-managed-save>.

=item B<Domain state>

The following filter flags select a domain by its state:
I<--state-running> for running domains, I<--state-paused>  for paused domains,
I<--state-shutoff> for turned off domains and I<--state-other> for all
other states as a fallback.

=item B<Autostarting domains>

To list autostarting domains use the flag I<--autostart>. To list domains with
this feature disabled use I<--no-autostart>.

=item B<Snapshot existence>

Domains that have snapshot images can be listed using flag I<--with-snapshot>,
domains without a snapshot I<--without-snapshot>.

=back

When talking to older servers, this command is forced to use a series of API
calls with an inherent race, where a domain might not be listed or might appear
more than once if it changed state between calls while the list was being
collected.  Newer servers do not have this problem.

If I<--managed-save> is specified, then domains that have managed save state
(only possible if they are in the B<shut off> state, so you need to specify
I<--inactive> or I<--all> to actually list them) will instead show as B<saved>
in the listing. This flag is usable only with the default I<--table> output.
Note that this flag does not filter the list of domains.
526 527 528 529 530 531 532

If I<--name> is specified, domain names are printed instead of the table
formatted one per line. If I<--uuid> is specified domain's UUID's are printed
instead of names. Flag I<--table> specifies that the legacy table-formatted
output should be used. This is the default. All of these are mutually
exclusive.

533 534
If I<--title> is specified, then the short domain description (title) is
printed in an extra column. This flag is usable only with the default
535
I<--table> output.
536

537 538
Example:

P
Peter Krempa 已提交
539
B<virsh> list --title
540 541 542 543
  Id    Name                           State      Title
 --------------------------------------------------------------------------
  0     Domain-0                       running    Mailserver 1
  2     fedora                         paused
544

545 546 547 548 549 550 551 552 553 554
=item B<freecell> [{ [I<--cellno>] B<cellno> | I<--all> }]

Prints the available amount of memory on the machine or within a NUMA
cell.  The freecell command can provide one of three different
displays of available memory on the machine depending on the options
specified.  With no options, it displays the total free memory on the
machine.  With the --all option, it displays the free memory in each
cell and the total free memory on the machine.  Finally, with a
numeric argument or with --cellno plus a cell number it will display
the free memory for the specified cell only.
555

556 557 558 559 560 561 562 563
=item B<freepages> [{ [I<--cellno>] I<cellno> [I<--pagesize>] I<pagesize> |
    I<--all> }]

Prints the available amount of pages within a NUMA cell. I<cellno> refers
to the NUMA cell you're interested in. I<pagesize> is a scaled integer (see
B<NOTES> above).  Alternatively, if I<--all> is used, info on each possible
combination of NUMA cell and page size is printed out.

564 565 566 567 568 569 570 571 572 573 574 575
=item B<allocpages> [I<--pagesize>] I<pagesize> [I<--pagecount>] I<pagecount>
[[I<--cellno>] I<cellno>] [I<--add>] [I<--all>]

Change the size of pages pool of I<pagesize> on the host. If
I<--add> is specified, then I<pagecount> pages are added into the
pool. However, if I<--add> wasn't specified, then the
I<pagecount> is taken as the new absolute size of the pool (this
may be used to free some pages and size the pool down). The
I<cellno> modifier can be used to narrow the modification down to
a single host NUMA cell. On the other end of spectrum lies
I<--all> which executes the modification on all NUMA cells.

576
=item B<cpu-baseline> I<FILE> [I<--features>]
577 578 579 580 581

Compute baseline CPU which will be supported by all host CPUs given in <file>.
The list of host CPUs is built by extracting all <cpu> elements from the
<file>. Thus, the <file> can contain either a set of <cpu> elements separated
by new lines or even a set of complete <capabilities> elements printed by
582 583 584 585
B<capabilities> command.  If I<--features> is specified then the
resulting XML description will explicitly include all features that make
up the CPU, without this option features that are part of the CPU model
will not be listed in the XML description.
586

587
=item B<cpu-compare> I<FILE> [I<--error>]
588 589 590 591 592 593

Compare CPU definition from XML <file> with host CPU. The XML <file> may
contain either host or guest CPU definition. The host CPU definition is the
<cpu> element and its contents as printed by B<capabilities> command. The
guest CPU definition is the <cpu> element and its contents from domain XML
definition. For more information on guest CPU definition see:
594 595 596 597
L<http://libvirt.org/formatdomain.html#elementsCPU>. If I<--error> is
specified, the command will return an error when the given CPU is
incompatible with host CPU and a message providing more details about the
incompatibility will be printed out.
598

599 600 601 602 603 604 605
=item B<echo> [I<--shell>] [I<--xml>] [I<arg>...]

Echo back each I<arg>, separated by space.  If I<--shell> is
specified, then the output will be single-quoted where needed, so that
it is suitable for reuse in a shell context.  If I<--xml> is
specified, then the output will be escaped for use in XML.

606 607
=back

608
=head1 DOMAIN COMMANDS
609

610
The following commands manipulate domains directly, as stated
611 612
previously most commands take domain as the first parameter. The
I<domain> can be specified as a short integer, a name or a full UUID.
613

614 615
=over 4

616
=item B<autostart> [I<--disable>] I<domain>
617 618 619

Configure a domain to be automatically started at boot.

E
Eric Blake 已提交
620
The option I<--disable> disables autostarting.
621

622
=item B<console> I<domain> [I<devname>] [I<--safe>] [I<--force>]
623

624 625 626 627
Connect the virtual serial console for the guest. The optional
I<devname> parameter refers to the device alias of an alternate
console, serial or parallel device configured for the guest.
If omitted, the primary console will be opened.
628

629 630 631 632 633 634
If the flag I<--safe> is specified, the connection is only attempted
if the driver supports safe console handling. This flag specifies that
the server has to ensure exclusive access to console devices. Optionally
the I<--force> flag may be specified, requesting to disconnect any existing
sessions, such as in a case of a broken connection.

635
=item B<create> I<FILE> [I<--console>] [I<--paused>] [I<--autodestroy>]
636
[I<--pass-fds N,M,...>]
637

E
Eric Blake 已提交
638 639
Create a domain from an XML <file>. An easy way to create the XML
<file> is to use the B<dumpxml> command to obtain the definition of a
640 641 642
pre-existing guest.  The domain will be paused if the I<--paused> option
is used and supported by the driver; otherwise it will be running.
If I<--console> is requested, attach to the console after creation.
643 644 645
If I<--autodestroy> is requested, then the guest will be automatically
destroyed when virsh closes its connection to libvirt, or otherwise
exits.
646

647 648
If I<--pass-fds> is specified, the argument is a comma separated list
of open file descriptors which should be pass on into the guest. The
N
Nehal J Wani 已提交
649
file descriptors will be re-numbered in the guest, starting from 3. This
650 651
is only supported with container based virtualization.

652 653
B<Example>

654
 virsh dumpxml <domain> > domain.xml
O
Osier Yang 已提交
655
 vi domain.xml (or make changes with your other text editor)
G
Guido Günther 已提交
656
 virsh create domain.xml
657 658 659

=item B<define> I<FILE>

660
Define a domain from an XML <file>. The domain definition is registered
E
Eric Blake 已提交
661 662
but not started.  If domain is already running, the changes will take
effect on the next boot.
663

664
=item B<desc> I<domain> [[I<--live>] [I<--config>] |
665 666
              [I<--current>]] [I<--title>] [I<--edit>] [I<--new-desc>
              New description or title message]
667 668 669 670

Show or modify description and title of a domain. These values are user
fields that allow to store arbitrary textual data to allow easy
identification of domains. Title should be short, although it's not enforced.
671
(See also B<metadata> that works with XML based domain metadata.)
672 673

Flags I<--live> or I<--config> select whether this command works on live
674 675 676
or persistent definitions of the domain. If both I<--live> and I<--config>
are specified, the I<--config> option takes precedence on getting the current
description and both live configuration and config are updated while setting
677 678
the description. I<--current> is exclusive and implied if none of these was
specified.
679 680 681 682 683 684

Flag I<--edit> specifies that an editor with the contents of current
description or title should be opened and the contents saved back afterwards.

Flag I<--title> selects operation on the title field instead of description.

685
If neither of I<--edit> and I<--new-desc> are specified the note or description
686 687
is displayed instead of being modified.

688
=item B<destroy> I<domain> [I<--graceful>]
689

690
Immediately terminate the domain I<domain>.  This doesn't give the domain
L
Luiz Capitulino 已提交
691
OS any chance to react, and it's the equivalent of ripping the power
692
cord out on a physical machine.  In most cases you will want to use
693 694 695
the B<shutdown> command instead.  However, this does not delete any
storage volumes used by the guest, and if the domain is persistent, it
can be restarted later.
696

697
If I<domain> is transient, then the metadata of any snapshots will
698 699 700 701
be lost once the guest stops running, but the snapshot contents still
exist, and a new domain with the same name and UUID can restore the
snapshot metadata with B<snapshot-create>.

702 703 704 705
If I<--graceful> is specified, don't resort to extreme measures
(e.g. SIGKILL) when the guest doesn't stop after a reasonable timeout;
return an error instead.

706
=item B<domblkstat> I<domain> [I<block-device>] [I<--human>]
707

708 709
Get device block stats for a running domain.  A I<block-device> corresponds
to a unique target name (<target dev='name'/>) or source file (<source
710
file='name'/>) for one of the disk devices attached to I<domain> (see
711 712
also B<domblklist> for listing these names). On a lxc domain, omitting the
I<block-device> yields device block stats summarily for the entire domain.
713

714 715 716 717 718 719
Use I<--human> for a more human readable output.

Availability of these fields depends on hypervisor. Unsupported fields are
missing from the output. Other fields may appear if communicating with a newer
version of libvirtd.

J
Ján Tomko 已提交
720
B<Explanation of fields> (fields appear in the following order):
721 722 723 724 725 726 727 728 729 730 731
  rd_req            - count of read operations
  rd_bytes          - count of read bytes
  wr_req            - count of write operations
  wr_bytes          - count of written bytes
  errs              - error count
  flush_operations  - count of flush operations
  rd_total_times    - total time read operations took (ns)
  wr_total_times    - total time write operations took (ns)
  flush_total_times - total time flush operations took (ns)
    <-- other fields provided by hypervisor -->

732 733 734 735
=item B<domifstat> I<domain> I<interface-device>

Get network interface stats for a running domain.

736
=item B<domif-setlink> I<domain> I<interface-device> I<state> [I<--config>]
737 738

Modify link state of the domain's virtual interface. Possible values for
739 740 741
state are "up" and "down. If I<--config> is specified, only the persistent
configuration of the domain is modified, for compatibility purposes,
I<--persistent> is alias of I<--config>.
742
I<interface-device> can be the interface's target name or the MAC address.
743

744 745 746 747 748
=item B<domif-getlink> I<domain> I<interface-device> [I<--config>]

Query link state of the domain's virtual interface. If I<--config>
is specified, query the persistent configuration, for compatibility
purposes, I<--persistent> is alias of I<--config>.
749

750
I<interface-device> can be the interface's target name or the MAC address.
751

752 753 754 755 756 757 758 759 760 761 762 763
=item B<domiftune> I<domain> I<interface-device>
[[I<--config>] [I<--live>] | [I<--current>]]
[I<--inbound average,peak,burst>]
[I<--outbound average,peak,burst>]

Set or query the domain's network interface's bandwidth parameters.
I<interface-device> can be the interface's target name (<target dev='name'/>),
or the MAC address.

If no I<--inbound> or I<--outbound> is specified, this command will
query and show the bandwidth settings. Otherwise, it will set the
inbound or outbound bandwidth. I<average,peak,burst> is the same as
J
John Ferlan 已提交
764 765 766 767
in command I<attach-interface>.  Values for I<average> and I<peak> are
expressed in kilobytes per second, while I<burst> is expressed in kilobytes
in a single burst at -I<peak> speed as described in the Network XML
documentation at L<http://libvirt.org/formatnetwork.html#elementQoS>.
768

769
To clear inbound or outbound settings, use I<--inbound> or I<--outbound>
770
respectfully with average value of zero.
771

772 773 774
If I<--live> is specified, affect a running guest.
If I<--config> is specified, affect the next boot of a persistent guest.
If I<--current> is specified, affect the current guest state.
775
Both I<--live> and I<--config> flags may be given, but I<--current> is
776 777 778
exclusive. If no flag is specified, behavior is different depending
on hypervisor.

779 780
=item B<dommemstat> I<domain> [I<--period> B<seconds>]
[[I<--config>] [I<--live>] | [I<--current>]]
781 782 783

Get memory stats for a running domain.

784 785 786 787 788 789 790 791 792 793 794 795 796 797 798 799 800 801 802
Depending on the hypervisor a variety of statistics can be returned

For QEMU/KVM with a memory balloon, setting the optional I<--period> to a
value larger than 0 in seconds will allow the balloon driver to return
additional statistics which will be displayed by subsequent B<dommemstat>
commands. Setting the I<--period> to 0 will stop the balloon driver collection,
but does not clear the statistics in the balloon driver. Requires at least
QEMU/KVM 1.5 to be running on the host.

The I<--live>, I<--config>, and I<--current> flags are only valid when using
the I<--period> option in order to set the collection period for the balloon
driver. If I<--live> is specified, only the running guest collection period
is affected. If I<--config> is specified, affect the next boot of a persistent
guest. If I<--current> is specified, affect the current guest state.

Both I<--live> and I<--config> flags may be given, but I<--current> is
exclusive. If no flag is specified, behavior is different depending
on the guest state.

803
=item B<domblkerror> I<domain>
804 805 806 807 808 809

Show errors on block devices.  This command usually comes handy when
B<domstate> command says that a domain was paused due to I/O error.
The B<domblkerror> command lists all block devices in error state and
the error seen on each of them.

810 811
=item B<domblkinfo> I<domain> I<block-device>

812 813
Get block device size info for a domain.  A I<block-device> corresponds
to a unique target name (<target dev='name'/>) or source file (<source
814 815 816
file='name'/>) for one of the disk devices attached to I<domain> (see
also B<domblklist> for listing these names).

817 818 819 820 821 822 823 824 825 826
=item B<domblklist> I<domain> [I<--inactive>] [I<--details>]

Print a table showing the brief information of all block devices
associated with I<domain>. If I<--inactive> is specified, query the
block devices that will be used on the next boot, rather than those
currently in use by a running domain. If I<--details> is specified,
disk type and device value will also be printed. Other contexts
that require a block device name (such as I<domblkinfo> or
I<snapshot-create> for disk snapshots) will accept either target
or unique source names printed by this command.
827

828
=item B<domstats> [I<--raw>] [I<--enforce>] [I<--backing>] [I<--state>]
829
[I<--cpu-total>] [I<--balloon>] [I<--vcpu>] [I<--interface>] [I<--block>]
830 831 832 833 834 835 836 837 838 839 840 841 842 843 844 845 846
[[I<--list-active>] [I<--list-inactive>] [I<--list-persistent>]
[I<--list-transient>] [I<--list-running>] [I<--list-paused>]
[I<--list-shutoff>] [I<--list-other>]] | [I<domain> ...]

Get statistics for multiple or all domains. Without any argument this
command prints all available statistics for all domains.

The list of domains to gather stats for can be either limited by listing
the domains as a space separated list, or by specifying one of the
filtering flags I<--list-*>. (The approaches can't be combined.)

By default some of the returned fields may be converted to more
human friendly values by a set of pretty-printers. To suppress this
behavior use the I<--raw> flag.

The individual statistics groups are selectable via specific flags. By
default all supported statistics groups are returned. Supported
847 848
statistics groups flags are: I<--state>, I<--cpu-total>, I<--balloon>,
I<--vcpu>, I<--interface>, I<--block>.
849

850 851
When selecting the I<--state> group the following fields are returned:
"state.state" - state of the VM, returned as number from virDomainState enum,
852
"state.reason" - reason for entering given state, returned as int from
853 854 855 856 857 858 859 860 861 862 863 864 865 866 867 868 869 870 871 872 873 874 875 876 877 878 879 880
virDomain*Reason enum corresponding to given state.

I<--cpu-total> returns:
"cpu.time" - total cpu time spent for this domain in nanoseconds,
"cpu.user" - user cpu time spent in nanoseconds,
"cpu.system" - system cpu time spent in nanoseconds

I<--balloon> returns:
"balloon.current" - the memory in kiB currently used,
"balloon.maximum" - the maximum memory in kiB allowed

I<--vcpu> returns:
"vcpu.current" - current number of online virtual CPUs,
"vcpu.maximum" - maximum number of online virtual CPUs,
"vcpu.<num>.state" - state of the virtual CPU <num>, as number
from virVcpuState enum,
"vcpu.<num>.time" - virtual cpu time spent by virtual CPU <num>

I<--interface> returns:
"net.count" - number of network interfaces on this domain,
"net.<num>.name" - name of the interface <num>,
"net.<num>.rx.bytes" - number of bytes received,
"net.<num>.rx.pkts" - number of packets received,
"net.<num>.rx.errs" - number of receive errors,
"net.<num>.rx.drop" - number of receive packets dropped,
"net.<num>.tx.bytes" - number of bytes transmitted,
"net.<num>.tx.pkts" - number of packets transmitted,
"net.<num>.tx.errs" - number of transmission errors,
881
"net.<num>.tx.drop" - number of transmit packets dropped
882

883 884 885 886 887 888 889 890 891 892
I<--block> returns information about disks associated with each
domain.  Using the I<--backing> flag extends this information to
cover all resources in the backing chain, rather than the default
of limiting information to the active layer for each guest disk.
Information listed includes:
"block.count" - number of block devices being listed,
"block.<num>.name" - name of the target of the block device <num> (the
same name for multiple entries if I<--backing> is present),
"block.<num>.backingIndex" - when I<--backing> is present, matches up
with the <backingStore> index listed in domain XML for backing files,
E
Eric Blake 已提交
893 894
"block.<num>.path" - file source of block device <num>, if it is a
local file or block device,
895 896 897 898 899 900 901 902 903
"block.<num>.rd.reqs" - number of read requests,
"block.<num>.rd.bytes" - number of read bytes,
"block.<num>.rd.times" - total time (ns) spent on reads,
"block.<num>.wr.reqs" - number of write requests,
"block.<num>.wr.bytes" - number of written bytes,
"block.<num>.wr.times" - total time (ns) spent on writes,
"block.<num>.fl.reqs" - total flush requests,
"block.<num>.fl.times" - total time (ns) spent on cache flushing,
"block.<num>.errors" - Xen only: the 'oo_req' value,
904 905 906
"block.<num>.allocation" - offset of highest written sector in bytes,
"block.<num>.capacity" - logical size of source file in bytes,
"block.<num>.physical" - physical size of source file in bytes
907

908 909 910 911 912
Selecting a specific statistics groups doesn't guarantee that the
daemon supports the selected group of stats. Flag I<--enforce>
forces the command to fail if the daemon doesn't support the
selected group.

913 914 915 916 917 918 919 920 921
=item B<domiflist> I<domain> [I<--inactive>]

Print a table showing the brief information of all virtual interfaces
associated with I<domain>. If I<--inactive> is specified, query the
virtual interfaces that will be used on the next boot, rather than those
currently in use by a running domain. Other contexts that require a MAC
address of virtual interface (such as I<detach-interface> or
I<domif-setlink>) will accept the MAC address printed by this command.

E
Eric Blake 已提交
922
=item B<blockcommit> I<domain> I<path> [I<bandwidth>]
923
[I<base>] [I<--shallow>] [I<top>] [I<--delete>] [I<--keep-relative>]
924 925
[I<--wait> [I<--async>] [I<--verbose>]] [I<--timeout> B<seconds>]
[I<--active>] [{I<--pivot> | I<--keep-overlay>}]
E
Eric Blake 已提交
926 927 928 929 930 931 932 933 934

Reduce the length of a backing image chain, by committing changes at the
top of the chain (snapshot or delta files) into backing images.  By
default, this command attempts to flatten the entire chain.  If I<base>
and/or I<top> are specified as files within the backing chain, then the
operation is constrained to committing just that portion of the chain;
I<--shallow> can be used instead of I<base> to specify the immediate
backing file of the resulting top image to be committed.  The files
being committed are rendered invalid, possibly as soon as the operation
935
starts; using the I<--delete> flag will attempt to remove these invalidated
936 937
files at the successful completion of the commit operation. When the
I<--keep-relative> flag is used, the backing file paths will be kept relative.
938 939 940 941 942 943 944 945 946

When I<top> is omitted or specified as the active image, it is also
possible to specify I<--active> to trigger a two-phase active commit. In
the first phase, I<top> is copied into I<base> and the job can only be
canceled, with top still containing data not yet in base. In the second
phase, I<top> and I<base> remain identical until a call to B<blockjob>
with the I<--abort> flag (keeping top as the active image that tracks
changes from that point in time) or the I<--pivot> flag (making base
the new active image and invalidating top).
E
Eric Blake 已提交
947 948 949 950

By default, this command returns as soon as possible, and data for
the entire disk is committed in the background; the progress of the
operation can be checked with B<blockjob>.  However, if I<--wait> is
951 952 953
specified, then this command will block until the operation completes
(or for I<--active>, enters the second phase), or until the operation
is canceled because the optional I<timeout> in seconds elapses
E
Eric Blake 已提交
954
or SIGINT is sent (usually with C<Ctrl-C>).  Using I<--verbose> along
955 956 957
with I<--wait> will produce periodic status updates.  If job cancellation
is triggered, I<--async> will return control to the user as fast as
possible, otherwise the command may continue to block a little while
958 959 960 961
longer until the job is done cleaning up.  Using I<--pivot> is shorthand
for combining I<--active> I<--wait> with an automatic B<blockjob>
I<--pivot>; and using I<--keep-overlay> is shorthand for combining
I<--active> I<--wait> with an automatic B<blockjob> I<--abort>.
E
Eric Blake 已提交
962 963 964 965 966 967

I<path> specifies fully-qualified path of the disk; it corresponds
to a unique target name (<target dev='name'/>) or source file (<source
file='name'/>) for one of the disk devices attached to I<domain> (see
also B<domblklist> for listing these names).
I<bandwidth> specifies copying bandwidth limit in MiB/s, although for
968 969 970 971
qemu, it may be non-zero only for an online domain. Specifying a negative
value is interpreted as an unsigned long long value or essentially
unlimited. The hypervisor can choose whether to reject the value or
convert it to the maximum value allowed.
E
Eric Blake 已提交
972

E
Eric Blake 已提交
973 974 975 976 977 978 979 980 981 982 983 984 985 986 987 988 989 990 991
=item B<blockcopy> I<domain> I<path> { I<dest> [I<format>] [I<--blockdev>]
| I<xml> } [I<--shallow>] [I<--reuse-external>] [I<bandwidth>]
[I<--wait> [I<--async>] [I<--verbose>]] [{I<--pivot> | I<--finish>}]
[I<--timeout> B<seconds>] [I<granularity>] [I<buf-size>]

Copy a disk backing image chain to a destination.  Either I<dest> as
the destination file name, or I<xml> as the name of an XML file containing
a top-level <disk> element describing the destination, must be present.
Additionally, if I<dest> is given, I<format> should be specified to declare
the format of the destination (if I<format> is omitted, then libvirt
will reuse the format of the source, or with I<--reuse-external> will
be forced to probe the destination format, which could be a potential
security hole).  The command supports I<--raw> as a boolean flag synonym for
I<--format=raw>.  When using I<dest>, the destination is treated as a regular
file unless I<--blockdev> is used to signal that it is a block device. By
default, this command flattens the entire chain; but if I<--shallow> is
specified, the copy shares the backing chain.

If I<--reuse-external> is specified, then the destination must exist and have
992 993 994 995 996
sufficient space to hold the copy. If I<--shallow> is used in
conjunction with I<--reuse-external> then the pre-created image must have
guest visible contents identical to guest visible contents of the backing
file of the original image. This may be used to modify the backing file
names on the destination.
E
Eric Blake 已提交
997 998 999 1000 1001 1002 1003 1004 1005 1006 1007 1008

By default, the copy job runs in the background, and consists of two
phases.  Initially, the job must copy all data from the source, and
during this phase, the job can only be canceled to revert back to the
source disk, with no guarantees about the destination.  After this phase
completes, both the source and the destination remain mirrored until a
call to B<blockjob> with the I<--abort> and I<--pivot> flags pivots over
to the copy, or a call without I<--pivot> leaves the destination as a
faithful copy of that point in time.  However, if I<--wait> is specified,
then this command will block until the mirroring phase begins, or cancel
the operation if the optional I<timeout> in seconds elapses or SIGINT is
sent (usually with C<Ctrl-C>).  Using I<--verbose> along with I<--wait>
E
Eric Blake 已提交
1009 1010 1011 1012 1013 1014 1015
will produce periodic status updates.  Using I<--pivot> (similar to
B<blockjob> I<--pivot>) or I<--finish> (similar to B<blockjob> I<--abort>)
implies I<--wait>, and will additionally end the job cleanly rather than
leaving things in the mirroring phase.  If job cancellation is triggered
by timeout or by I<--finish>, I<--async> will return control to the user
as fast as possible, otherwise the command may continue to block a little
while longer until the job has actually cancelled.
E
Eric Blake 已提交
1016 1017

I<path> specifies fully-qualified path of the disk.
1018
I<bandwidth> specifies copying bandwidth limit in MiB/s. Specifying a negative
E
Eric Blake 已提交
1019 1020 1021 1022 1023 1024 1025 1026 1027
value is interpreted as an unsigned long long value that might be essentially
unlimited, but more likely would overflow; it is safer to use 0 for that
purpose.  Specifying I<granularity> allows fine-tuning of the granularity that
will be copied when a dirty region is detected; larger values trigger less
I/O overhead but may end up copying more data overall (the default value is
usually correct); this value must be a power of two.  Specifying I<buf-size>
will control how much data can be simultaneously in-flight during the copy;
larger values use more memory but may allow faster completion (the default
value is usually correct).
E
Eric Blake 已提交
1028

E
Eric Blake 已提交
1029
=item B<blockpull> I<domain> I<path> [I<bandwidth>] [I<base>]
J
Jiri Denemark 已提交
1030
[I<--wait> [I<--verbose>] [I<--timeout> B<seconds>] [I<--async>]]
1031
[I<--keep-relative>]
E
Eric Blake 已提交
1032 1033 1034 1035 1036 1037 1038

Populate a disk from its backing image chain. By default, this command
flattens the entire chain; but if I<base> is specified, containing the
name of one of the backing files in the chain, then that file becomes
the new backing file and only the intermediate portion of the chain is
pulled.  Once all requested data from the backing image chain has been
pulled, the disk no longer depends on that portion of the backing chain.
1039 1040 1041 1042 1043 1044 1045 1046 1047 1048 1049

By default, this command returns as soon as possible, and data for
the entire disk is pulled in the background; the progress of the
operation can be checked with B<blockjob>.  However, if I<--wait> is
specified, then this command will block until the operation completes,
or cancel the operation if the optional I<timeout> in seconds elapses
or SIGINT is sent (usually with C<Ctrl-C>).  Using I<--verbose> along
with I<--wait> will produce periodic status updates.  If job cancellation
is triggered, I<--async> will return control to the user as fast as
possible, otherwise the command may continue to block a little while
longer until the job is done cleaning up.
1050

1051 1052 1053
Using the I<--keep-relative> flag will keep the backing chain names
relative.

1054 1055 1056 1057
I<path> specifies fully-qualified path of the disk; it corresponds
to a unique target name (<target dev='name'/>) or source file (<source
file='name'/>) for one of the disk devices attached to I<domain> (see
also B<domblklist> for listing these names).
1058 1059 1060 1061
I<bandwidth> specifies copying bandwidth limit in MiB/s. Specifying a negative
value is interpreted as an unsigned long long value or essentially
unlimited. The hypervisor can choose whether to reject the value or
convert it to the maximum value allowed.
1062

L
Lei Li 已提交
1063 1064
=item B<blkdeviotune> I<domain> I<device>
[[I<--config>] [I<--live>] | [I<--current>]]
E
Eric Blake 已提交
1065 1066
[[I<total-bytes-sec>] | [I<read-bytes-sec>] [I<write-bytes-sec>]]
[[I<total-iops-sec>] | [I<read-iops-sec>] [I<write-iops-sec>]]
1067 1068 1069
[[I<total-bytes-sec-max>] | [I<read-bytes-sec-max>] [I<write-bytes-sec-max>]]
[[I<total-iops-sec-max>] | [I<read-iops-sec-max>] [I<write-iops-sec-max>]]
[I<size-iops-sec>]
L
Lei Li 已提交
1070 1071 1072 1073 1074 1075 1076 1077

Set or query the block disk io parameters for a block device of I<domain>.
I<device> specifies a unique target name (<target dev='name'/>) or source
file (<source file='name'/>) for one of the disk devices attached to
I<domain> (see also B<domblklist> for listing these names).

If no limit is specified, it will query current I/O limits setting.
Otherwise, alter the limits with these flags:
E
Eric Blake 已提交
1078 1079 1080 1081 1082 1083
I<--total-bytes-sec> specifies total throughput limit in bytes per second.
I<--read-bytes-sec> specifies read throughput limit in bytes per second.
I<--write-bytes-sec> specifies write throughput limit in bytes per second.
I<--total-iops-sec> specifies total I/O operations limit per second.
I<--read-iops-sec> specifies read I/O operations limit per second.
I<--write-iops-sec> specifies write I/O operations limit per second.
1084 1085 1086 1087 1088 1089 1090
I<--total-bytes-sec-max> specifies maximum total throughput limit in bytes per second.
I<--read-bytes-sec-max> specifies maximum read throughput limit in bytes per second.
I<--write-bytes-sec-max> specifies maximum write throughput limit in bytes per second.
I<--total-iops-sec-max> specifies maximum total I/O operations limit per second.
I<--read-iops-sec-max> specifies maximum read I/O operations limit per second.
I<--write-iops-sec-max> specifies maximum write I/O operations limit per second.
I<--size-iops-sec> specifies size I/O operations limit per second.
E
Eric Blake 已提交
1091 1092 1093

Older versions of virsh only accepted these options with underscore
instead of dash, as in I<--total_bytes_sec>.
L
Lei Li 已提交
1094

E
Eric Blake 已提交
1095
Bytes and iops values are independent, but setting only one value (such
E
Eric Blake 已提交
1096
as --read-bytes-sec) resets the other two in that category to unlimited.
E
Eric Blake 已提交
1097
An explicit 0 also clears any limit.  A non-zero value for a given total
L
Lei Li 已提交
1098 1099 1100 1101 1102
cannot be mixed with non-zero values for read or write.

If I<--live> is specified, affect a running guest.
If I<--config> is specified, affect the next boot of a persistent guest.
If I<--current> is specified, affect the current guest state.
1103
Both I<--live> and I<--config> flags may be given, but I<--current> is
L
Lei Li 已提交
1104 1105 1106
exclusive. If no flag is specified, behavior is different depending
on hypervisor.

E
Eric Blake 已提交
1107
=item B<blockjob> I<domain> I<path> { [I<--abort>] [I<--async>] [I<--pivot>] |
1108
[I<--info>] [I<--raw>] [I<--bytes>] | [I<bandwidth>] }
1109

1110 1111 1112 1113
Manage active block operations.  There are three mutually-exclusive modes:
I<--info>, I<bandwidth>, and I<--abort>.  I<--async> and I<--pivot> imply
abort mode; I<--raw> implies info mode; and if no mode was given, I<--info>
mode is assumed.
1114 1115 1116 1117 1118

I<path> specifies fully-qualified path of the disk; it corresponds
to a unique target name (<target dev='name'/>) or source file (<source
file='name'/>) for one of the disk devices attached to I<domain> (see
also B<domblklist> for listing these names).
1119

1120
In I<--abort> mode, the active job on the specified disk will
1121
be aborted.  If I<--async> is also specified, this command will return
N
Nehal J Wani 已提交
1122
immediately, rather than waiting for the cancellation to complete.  If
1123 1124
I<--pivot> is specified, this requests that an active copy or active
commit job be pivoted over to the new image.
1125 1126 1127 1128

In I<--info> mode, the active job information on the specified
disk will be printed.  By default, the output is a single human-readable
summary line; this format may change in future versions.  Adding
1129 1130 1131 1132 1133
I<--raw> lists each field of the struct, in a stable format.  If the
I<--bytes> flag is set, then the command errors out if the server could
not supply bytes/s resolution; when omitting the flag, raw output is
listed in MiB/s and human-readable output automatically selects the
best resolution supported by the server.
1134

1135
I<bandwidth> can be used to set bandwidth limit for the active job.
1136 1137 1138
Specifying a negative value is interpreted as an unsigned long long
value or essentially unlimited. The hypervisor can choose whether to
reject the value or convert it to the maximum value allowed.
1139

E
Eric Blake 已提交
1140
=item B<blockresize> I<domain> I<path> I<size>
1141

E
Eric Blake 已提交
1142
Resize a block device of domain while the domain is running, I<path>
1143 1144 1145 1146 1147 1148 1149 1150 1151
specifies the absolute path of the block device; it corresponds
to a unique target name (<target dev='name'/>) or source file (<source
file='name'/>) for one of the disk devices attached to I<domain> (see
also B<domblklist> for listing these names).

I<size> is a scaled integer (see B<NOTES> above) which defaults to KiB
(blocks of 1024 bytes) if there is no suffix.  You must use a suffix of
"B" to get bytes (note that for historical reasons, this differs from
B<vol-resize> which defaults to bytes without a suffix).
1152

1153
=item B<domdisplay> I<domain> [I<--include-password>] [[I<--type>] B<type>]
1154 1155

Output a URI which can be used to connect to the graphical display of the
1156 1157 1158 1159
domain via VNC, SPICE or RDP.  The particular graphical display type can
be selected using the B<type> parameter (e.g. "vnc", "spice", "rdp").  If
I<--include-password> is specified, the SPICE channel password will be
included in the URI.
1160

T
Tomoki Sekiyama 已提交
1161 1162 1163 1164 1165 1166 1167 1168 1169
=item B<domfsinfo> I<domain>

Show a list of mounted filesystems within the running domain. The list contains
mountpoints, names of a mounted device in the guest, filesystem types, and
unique target names used in the domain XML (<target dev='name'/>).

Note that this command requires a guest agent configured and running in the
domain's guest OS.

1170 1171 1172 1173 1174 1175 1176 1177 1178 1179 1180 1181 1182 1183 1184 1185 1186 1187 1188 1189 1190 1191 1192
=item B<domfsfreeze> I<domain> [[I<--mountpoint>] B<mountpoint>...]

Freeze mounted filesystems within a running domain to prepare for consistent
snapshots.

The I<--mountpoint> option takes a parameter B<mountpoint>, which is a
mount point path of the filesystem to be frozen. This option can occur
multiple times. If this is not specified, every mounted filesystem is frozen.

Note: B<snapshot-create> command has a I<--quiesce> option to freeze
and thaw the filesystems automatically to keep snapshots consistent.
B<domfsfreeze> command is only needed when a user wants to utilize the
native snapshot features of storage devices not supported by libvirt.

=item B<domfsthaw> I<domain> [[I<--mountpoint>] B<mountpoint>...]

Thaw mounted filesystems within a running domain, which have been frozen by
domfsfreeze command.

The I<--mountpoint> option takes a parameter B<mountpoint>, which is a
mount point path of the filesystem to be thawed. This option can occur
multiple times. If this is not specified, every mounted filesystem is thawed.

1193 1194 1195 1196 1197 1198 1199 1200 1201 1202 1203 1204 1205 1206
=item B<domfstrim> I<domain> [I<--minimum> B<bytes>]
[I<--mountpoint mountPoint>]

Issue a fstrim command on all mounted filesystems within a running
domain. It discards blocks which are not in use by the filesystem.
If I<--minimum> B<bytes> is specified, it tells guest kernel length
of contiguous free range. Smaller than this may be ignored (this is
a hint and the guest may not respect it). By increasing this value,
the fstrim operation will complete more quickly for filesystems
with badly fragmented free space, although not all blocks will
be discarded.  The default value is zero, meaning "discard
every free block". Moreover, a if user wants to trim only one mount
point, it can be specified via optional I<--mountpoint> parameter.

1207
=item B<domhostname> I<domain>
G
Guido Günther 已提交
1208 1209 1210

Returns the hostname of a domain, if the hypervisor makes it available.

1211
=item B<dominfo> I<domain>
1212 1213 1214 1215 1216 1217 1218

Returns basic information about the domain.

=item B<domuuid> I<domain-name-or-id>

Convert a domain name or id to domain UUID

1219
=item B<domid> I<domain-name-or-uuid>
1220

1221
Convert a domain name (or UUID) to a domain id
1222

1223
=item B<domjobabort> I<domain>
E
Eric Blake 已提交
1224 1225 1226

Abort the currently running domain job.

1227
=item B<domjobinfo> I<domain> [I<--completed>]
E
Eric Blake 已提交
1228

1229 1230 1231
Returns information about jobs running on a domain. I<--completed> tells
virsh to return information about a recently finished job. Statistics of
a completed job are automatically destroyed once read or when libvirtd
1232 1233 1234 1235
is restarted. Note that time information returned for completed
migrations may be completely irrelevant unless both source and
destination hosts have synchronized time (i.e., NTP daemon is running
on both of them).
E
Eric Blake 已提交
1236

1237
=item B<domname> I<domain-id-or-uuid>
1238

1239
Convert a domain Id (or UUID) to domain name
1240

1241
=item B<domstate> I<domain> [I<--reason>]
1242

1243 1244
Returns state about a domain.  I<--reason> tells virsh to also print
reason for the state.
1245

1246
=item B<domcontrol> I<domain>
1247 1248 1249 1250 1251

Returns state of an interface to VMM used to control a domain.  For
states other than "ok" or "error" the command also prints number of
seconds elapsed since the control interface entered its current state.

1252 1253 1254 1255 1256 1257 1258 1259 1260 1261 1262 1263 1264 1265 1266 1267 1268 1269
=item B<domtime> I<domain> { [I<--now>] [I<--pretty>] [I<--sync>]
[I<--time> B<time>] }

Gets or sets the domain's system time. When run without any arguments
(but I<domain>), the current domain's system time is printed out. The
I<--pretty> modifier can be used to print the time in more human
readable form.

When I<--time> B<time> is specified, the domain's time is
not gotten but set instead. The I<--now> modifier acts like if it was
an alias for I<--time> B<$now>, which means it sets the time that is
currently on the host virsh is running at. In both cases (setting and
getting), time is in seconds relative to Epoch of 1970-01-01 in UTC.
The I<--sync> modifies the set behavior a bit: The time passed is
ignored, but the time to set is read from domain's RTC instead. Please
note, that some hypervisors may require a guest agent to be configured
in order to get or set the guest time.

E
Eric Blake 已提交
1270 1271 1272
=item B<domxml-from-native> I<format> I<config>

Convert the file I<config> in the native guest configuration format
1273 1274
named by I<format> to a domain XML format. For QEMU/KVM hypervisor,
the I<format> argument must be B<qemu-argv>. For Xen hypervisor, the
1275 1276
I<format> argument may be B<xen-xm> or B<xen-sxpr>. For LXC hypervisor,
the I<format> argument must be B<lxc-tools>.
E
Eric Blake 已提交
1277 1278 1279 1280

=item B<domxml-to-native> I<format> I<xml>

Convert the file I<xml> in domain XML format to the native guest
1281 1282
configuration format named by I<format>. For QEMU/KVM hypervisor,
the I<format> argument must be B<qemu-argv>. For Xen hypervisor, the
1283 1284
I<format> argument may be B<xen-xm> or B<xen-sxpr>. For LXC hypervisor,
the I<format> argument must be B<lxc-tools>.
E
Eric Blake 已提交
1285

1286
=item B<dump> I<domain> I<corefilepath> [I<--bypass-cache>]
1287
{ [I<--live>] | [I<--crash>] | [I<--reset>] } [I<--verbose>] [I<--memory-only>]
1288
[I<--format> I<string>]
1289 1290

Dumps the core of a domain to a file for analysis.
1291 1292 1293 1294
If I<--live> is specified, the domain continues to run until the core
dump is complete, rather than pausing up front.
If I<--crash> is specified, the domain is halted with a crashed status,
rather than merely left in a paused state.
1295 1296
If I<--reset> is specified, the domain is reset after successful dump.
Note, these three switches are mutually exclusive.
1297 1298
If I<--bypass-cache> is specified, the save will avoid the file system
cache, although this may slow down the operation.
1299 1300 1301
If I<--memory-only> is specified, the file is elf file, and will only
include domain's memory and cpu common register value. It is very
useful if the domain uses host devices directly.
1302 1303 1304 1305
I<--format> I<string> is used to specify the format of 'memory-only'
dump, and I<string> can be one of them: elf, kdump-zlib(kdump-compressed
format with zlib-compressed), kdump-lzo(kdump-compressed format with
lzo-compressed), kdump-snappy(kdump-compressed format with snappy-compressed).
1306

1307
The progress may be monitored using B<domjobinfo> virsh command and canceled
1308 1309 1310
with B<domjobabort> command (sent by another virsh instance). Another option
is to send SIGINT (usually with C<Ctrl-C>) to the virsh process running
B<dump> command. I<--verbose> displays the progress of dump.
1311

1312 1313 1314
NOTE: Some hypervisors may require the user to manually ensure proper
permissions on file and path specified by argument I<corefilepath>.

1315
=item B<dumpxml> I<domain> [I<--inactive>] [I<--security-info>]
1316
[I<--update-cpu>] [I<--migratable>]
1317 1318 1319 1320 1321

Output the domain information as an XML dump to stdout, this format can be used
by the B<create> command. Additional options affecting the XML dump may be
used. I<--inactive> tells virsh to dump domain configuration that will be used
on next start of the domain as opposed to the current domain configuration.
1322
Using I<--security-info> will also include security sensitive information
1323
in the XML dump. I<--update-cpu> updates domain CPU requirements according to
1324 1325 1326 1327
host CPU. With I<--migratable> one can request an XML that is suitable for
migrations, i.e., compatible with older libvirt releases and possibly amended
with internal run-time options. This option may automatically enable other
options (I<--update-cpu>, I<--security-info>, ...) as necessary.
1328

1329
=item B<edit> I<domain>
1330

E
Eric Blake 已提交
1331 1332
Edit the XML configuration file for a domain, which will affect the
next boot of the guest.
1333 1334

This is equivalent to:
E
Eric Blake 已提交
1335

E
Eric Blake 已提交
1336
 virsh dumpxml --inactive --security-info domain > domain.xml
O
Osier Yang 已提交
1337
 vi domain.xml (or make changes with your other text editor)
1338
 virsh define domain.xml
E
Eric Blake 已提交
1339

1340 1341
except that it does some error checking.

1342 1343
The editor used can be supplied by the C<$VISUAL> or C<$EDITOR> environment
variables, and defaults to C<vi>.
1344

1345 1346
=item B<event> {[I<domain>] { I<event> | I<--all> } [I<--loop>]
[I<--timeout> I<seconds>] | I<--list>}
1347 1348 1349 1350 1351

Wait for a class of domain events to occur, and print appropriate details
of events as they happen.  The events can optionally be filtered by
I<domain>.  Using I<--list> as the only argument will provide a list
of possible I<event> values known by this client, although the connection
1352 1353 1354
might not allow registering for all these events.  It is also possible
to use I<--all> instead of I<event> to register for all possible event
types at once.
1355 1356 1357 1358 1359 1360 1361

By default, this command is one-shot, and returns success once an event
occurs; you can send SIGINT (usually via C<Ctrl-C>) to quit immediately.
If I<--timeout> is specified, the command gives up waiting for events
after I<seconds> have elapsed.   With I<--loop>, the command prints all
events until a timeout or interrupt key.

1362
=item B<managedsave> I<domain> [I<--bypass-cache>]
1363
[{I<--running> | I<--paused>}] [I<--verbose>]
1364

1365
Save and destroy (stop) a running domain, so it can be restarted from the same
1366 1367
state at a later time.  When the virsh B<start> command is next run for
the domain, it will automatically be started from this saved state.
1368 1369
If I<--bypass-cache> is specified, the save will avoid the file system
cache, although this may slow down the operation.
1370

1371
The progress may be monitored using B<domjobinfo> virsh command and canceled
1372 1373 1374
with B<domjobabort> command (sent by another virsh instance). Another option
is to send SIGINT (usually with C<Ctrl-C>) to the virsh process running
B<managedsave> command. I<--verbose> displays the progress of save.
1375

1376 1377 1378 1379 1380
Normally, starting a managed save will decide between running or paused
based on the state the domain was in when the save was done; passing
either the I<--running> or I<--paused> flag will allow overriding which
state the B<start> should use.

1381 1382 1383
The B<dominfo> command can be used to query whether a domain currently
has any managed save image.

1384
=item B<managedsave-remove> I<domain>
1385

1386 1387
Remove the B<managedsave> state file for a domain, if it exists.  This
ensures the domain will do a full boot the next time it is started.
1388

1389
=item B<maxvcpus> [I<type>]
E
Eric Blake 已提交
1390 1391 1392 1393 1394

Provide the maximum number of virtual CPUs supported for a guest VM on
this connection.  If provided, the I<type> parameter must be a valid
type attribute for the <domain> element of XML.

1395 1396 1397 1398 1399 1400 1401 1402
=item B<cpu-stats> I<domain> [I<--total>] [I<start>] [I<count>]

Provide cpu statistics information of a domain. The domain should
be running. Default it shows stats for all CPUs, and a total. Use
I<--total> for only the total stats, I<start> for only the per-cpu
stats of the CPUs from I<start>, I<count> for only I<count> CPUs'
stats.

1403 1404 1405 1406 1407 1408 1409
=item B<metadata> I<domain> [[I<--live>] [I<--config>] | [I<--current>]]
[I<--edit>] [I<uri>] [I<key>] [I<set>] [I<--remove>]

Show or modify custom XML metadata of a domain. The metadata is a user
defined XML that allows to store arbitrary XML data in the domain definition.
Multiple separate custom metadata pieces can be stored in the domain XML.
The pieces are identified by a private XML namespace provided via the
1410 1411
I<uri> argument. (See also B<desc> that works with textual metadata of
a domain.)
1412 1413 1414 1415 1416 1417 1418 1419 1420 1421 1422 1423 1424 1425 1426 1427 1428 1429 1430 1431 1432 1433

Flags I<--live> or I<--config> select whether this command works on live
or persistent definitions of the domain. If both I<--live> and I<--config>
are specified, the I<--config> option takes precedence on getting the current
description and both live configuration and config are updated while setting
the description. I<--current> is exclusive and implied if none of these was
specified.

Flag I<--remove> specifies that the metadata element specified by the I<uri>
argument should be removed rather than updated.

Flag I<--edit> specifies that an editor with the metadata identified by the
I<uri> argument should be opened and the contents saved back afterwards.
Otherwise the new contents can be provided via the I<set> argument.

When setting metadata via I<--edit> or I<set> the I<key> argument must be
specified and is used to prefix the custom elements to bind them
to the private namespace.

If neither of I<--edit> and I<set> are specified the XML metadata corresponding
to the I<uri> namespace is displayed instead of being modified.

L
liguang 已提交
1434
=item B<migrate> [I<--live>] [I<--offline>] [I<--direct>] [I<--p2p> [I<--tunnelled>]]
1435
[I<--persistent>] [I<--undefinesource>] [I<--suspend>] [I<--copy-storage-all>]
1436
[I<--copy-storage-inc>] [I<--change-protection>] [I<--unsafe>] [I<--verbose>]
1437
[I<--compressed>] [I<--abort-on-error>] [I<--auto-converge>]
1438 1439
I<domain> I<desturi> [I<migrateuri>] [I<graphicsuri>] [I<listen-address>]
[I<dname>] [I<--timeout> B<seconds>] [I<--xml> B<file>]
1440

L
liguang 已提交
1441
Migrate domain to another host.  Add I<--live> for live migration; <--p2p>
1442
for peer-2-peer migration; I<--direct> for direct migration; or I<--tunnelled>
L
liguang 已提交
1443 1444 1445 1446
for tunnelled migration.  I<--offline> migrates domain definition without
starting the domain on destination and without stopping it on source host.
Offline migration may be used with inactive domains and it must be used with
I<--persistent> option.  I<--persistent> leaves the domain persistent on
1447 1448 1449 1450 1451
destination host, I<--undefinesource> undefines the domain on the source host,
and I<--suspend> leaves the domain paused on the destination host.
I<--copy-storage-all> indicates migration with non-shared storage with full
disk copy, I<--copy-storage-inc> indicates migration with non-shared storage
with incremental copy (same base image shared between source and destination).
1452 1453 1454 1455 1456 1457
In both cases the disk images have to exist on destination host, the
I<--copy-storage-...> options only tell libvirt to transfer data from the
images on source host to the images found at the same place on the destination
host. I<--change-protection> enforces that no incompatible configuration
changes will be made to the domain while the migration is underway; this flag
is implicitly enabled when supported by the hypervisor, but can be explicitly
1458
used to reject the migration if the hypervisor lacks change protection
1459 1460
support.  I<--verbose> displays the progress of migration.  I<--compressed>
activates compression of memory pages that have to be transferred repeatedly
1461
during live migration. I<--abort-on-error> cancels the migration if a soft
1462 1463
error (for example I/O error) happens during the migration. I<--auto-converge>
forces convergence during live migration.
1464

J
Jiri Denemark 已提交
1465 1466 1467
B<Note>: Individual hypervisors usually do not support all possible types of
migration. For example, QEMU does not support direct migration.

1468 1469 1470 1471 1472 1473 1474 1475
In some cases libvirt may refuse to migrate the domain because doing so may
lead to potential problems such as data corruption, and thus the migration is
considered unsafe. For QEMU domain, this may happen if the domain uses disks
without explicitly setting cache mode to "none". Migrating such domains is
unsafe unless the disk images are stored on coherent clustered filesystem,
such as GFS2 or GPFS. If you are sure the migration is safe or you just do not
care, use I<--unsafe> to force the migration.

1476
I<dname> is used for renaming the domain to new name during migration, which
1477 1478 1479 1480 1481
also usually can be omitted.  Likewise, I<--xml> B<file> is usually
omitted, but can be used to supply an alternative XML file for use on
the destination to supply a larger set of changes to any host-specific
portions of the domain XML, such as accounting for naming differences
between source and destination in accessing underlying storage.
1482

1483 1484
I<--timeout> B<seconds> forces guest to suspend when live migration exceeds
that many seconds, and
W
Wen Congyang 已提交
1485 1486
then the migration will complete offline. It can only be used with I<--live>.

1487 1488 1489
Running migration can be canceled by interrupting virsh (usually using
C<Ctrl-C>) or by B<domjobabort> command sent from another virsh instance.

1490 1491 1492 1493 1494 1495
The I<desturi> and I<migrateuri> parameters can be used to control which
destination the migration uses.  I<desturi> is important for managed
migration, but unused for direct migration; I<migrateuri> is required
for direct migration, but can usually be automatically determined for
managed migration.

1496 1497 1498 1499 1500 1501 1502 1503 1504 1505 1506 1507 1508
B<Note>: The I<desturi> parameter for normal migration and peer2peer migration
has different semantics:

=over 4

=item * normal migration: the I<desturi> is an address of the target host as
seen from the client machine.

=item * peer2peer migration: the I<desturi> is an address of the target host as
seen from the source machine.

=back

1509
When I<migrateuri> is not specified, libvirt will automatically determine the
1510 1511 1512 1513 1514
hypervisor specific URI.  Some hypervisors, including QEMU, have an optional
"migration_host" configuration parameter (useful when the host has multiple
network interfaces).  If this is unspecified, libvirt determines a name
by looking up the target host's configured hostname.

1515 1516 1517 1518 1519 1520 1521 1522 1523
There are a few scenarios where specifying I<migrateuri> may help:

=over 4

=item * The configured hostname is incorrect, or DNS is broken.  If a host has a
hostname which will not resolve to match one of its public IP addresses, then
libvirt will generate an incorrect URI.  In this case I<migrateuri> should be
explicitly specified, using an IP address, or a correct hostname.

N
Nehal J Wani 已提交
1524
=item * The host has multiple network interfaces.  If a host has multiple network
1525 1526 1527 1528 1529 1530 1531 1532 1533 1534 1535 1536 1537 1538
interfaces, it might be desirable for the migration data stream to be sent over
a specific interface for either security or performance reasons.  In this case
I<migrateuri> should be explicitly specified, using an IP address associated
with the network to be used.

=item * The firewall restricts what ports are available.  When libvirt generates
a migration URI, it will pick a port number using hypervisor specific rules.
Some hypervisors only require a single port to be open in the firewalls, while
others require a whole range of port numbers.  In the latter case I<migrateuri>
might be specified to choose a specific port number outside the default range in
order to comply with local firewall policies.

=back

1539 1540 1541
See L<http://libvirt.org/migration.html#uris> for more details on
migration URIs.

1542 1543 1544 1545 1546 1547 1548 1549 1550 1551 1552 1553 1554 1555 1556 1557
Optional I<graphicsuri> overrides connection parameters used for automatically
reconnecting a graphical clients at the end of migration. If omitted, libvirt
will compute the parameters based on target host IP address. In case the
client does not have a direct access to the network virtualization hosts are
connected to and needs to connect through a proxy, I<graphicsuri> may be used
to specify the address the client should connect to. The URI is formed as
follows:

    protocol://hostname[:port]/[?parameters]

where protocol is either "spice" or "vnc" and parameters is a list of protocol
specific parameters separated by '&'. Currently recognized parameters are
"tlsPort" and "tlsSubject". For example,

    spice://target.host.com:1234/?tlsPort=4567

1558 1559 1560 1561 1562 1563
Optional I<listen-address> sets the listen address that hypervisor on the
destination side should bind to for incoming migration. Both IPv4 and IPv6
addresses are accepted as well as hostnames (the resolving is done on
destination). Some hypervisors do not support this feature and will return an
error if this parameter is used.

1564
=item B<migrate-setmaxdowntime> I<domain> I<downtime>
1565 1566 1567 1568 1569

Set maximum tolerable downtime for a domain which is being live-migrated to
another host.  The I<downtime> is a number of milliseconds the guest is allowed
to be down at the end of live migration.

1570 1571 1572 1573 1574 1575 1576 1577 1578 1579 1580 1581
=item B<migrate-compcache> I<domain> [I<--size> B<bytes>]

Sets and/or gets size of the cache (in bytes) used for compressing repeatedly
transferred memory pages during live migration. When called without I<size>,
the command just prints current size of the compression cache. When I<size>
is specified, the hypervisor is asked to change compression cache to I<size>
bytes and then the current size is printed (the result may differ from the
requested size due to rounding done by the hypervisor). The I<size> option
is supposed to be used while the domain is being live-migrated as a reaction
to migration progress and increasing number of compression cache misses
obtained from domjobinfo.

1582
=item B<migrate-setspeed> I<domain> I<bandwidth>
1583

1584
Set the maximum migration bandwidth (in MiB/s) for a domain which is being
1585 1586 1587 1588
migrated to another host. I<bandwidth> is interpreted as an unsigned long
long value. Specifying a negative value results in an essentially unlimited
value being provided to the hypervisor. The hypervisor can choose whether to
reject the value or convert it to the maximum value allowed.
1589

1590
=item B<migrate-getspeed> I<domain>
1591

1592
Get the maximum migration bandwidth (in MiB/s) for a domain.
1593

H
Hu Tao 已提交
1594 1595 1596 1597 1598 1599 1600
=item B<numatune> I<domain> [I<--mode> B<mode>] [I<--nodeset> B<nodeset>]
[[I<--config>] [I<--live>] | [I<--current>]]

Set or get a domain's numa parameters, corresponding to the <numatune>
element of domain XML.  Without flags, the current settings are
displayed.

1601 1602 1603 1604 1605
I<mode> can be one of `strict', `interleave' and `preferred' or any
valid number from the virDomainNumatuneMemMode enum in case the daemon
supports it.  For a running domain, the mode can't be changed, and the
nodeset can be changed only if the domain was started with a mode of
`strict'.
H
Hu Tao 已提交
1606 1607 1608 1609 1610 1611 1612 1613 1614

I<nodeset> is a list of numa nodes used by the host for running the domain.
Its syntax is a comma separated list, with '-' for ranges and '^' for
excluding a node.

If I<--live> is specified, set scheduler information of a running guest.
If I<--config> is specified, affect the next boot of a persistent guest.
If I<--current> is specified, affect the current guest state.

1615
=item B<reboot> I<domain> [I<--mode MODE-LIST>]
1616

1617 1618 1619 1620
Reboot a domain.  This acts just as if the domain had the B<reboot>
command run from the console.  The command returns as soon as it has
executed the reboot action, which may be significantly before the
domain actually reboots.
1621

1622 1623
The exact behavior of a domain when it reboots is set by the
I<on_reboot> parameter in the domain's XML definition.
1624

1625 1626
By default the hypervisor will try to pick a suitable shutdown
method. To specify an alternative method, the I<--mode> parameter
1627
can specify a comma separated list which includes C<acpi>, C<agent>,
1628 1629
C<initctl>, C<signal> and C<paravirt>. The order in which drivers will
try each mode is undefined, and not related to the order specified to virsh.
1630 1631
For strict control over ordering, use a single mode at a time and
repeat the command.
1632

1633
=item B<reset> I<domain>
X
Xu He Jie 已提交
1634 1635 1636 1637 1638 1639 1640

Reset a domain immediately without any guest shutdown. B<reset>
emulates the power reset button on a machine, where all guest
hardware sees the RST line set and reinitializes internal state.

B<Note>: Reset without any guest OS shutdown risks data loss.

1641
=item B<restore> I<state-file> [I<--bypass-cache>] [I<--xml> B<file>]
1642
[{I<--running> | I<--paused>}]
1643

E
Eric Blake 已提交
1644
Restores a domain from a B<virsh save> state file. See I<save> for more info.
1645

1646 1647 1648
If I<--bypass-cache> is specified, the restore will avoid the file system
cache, although this may slow down the operation.

1649 1650 1651 1652 1653 1654
I<--xml> B<file> is usually omitted, but can be used to supply an
alternative XML file for use on the restored guest with changes only
in the host-specific portions of the domain XML.  For example, it can
be used to account for file naming differences in underlying storage
due to disk snapshots taken after the guest was saved.

1655 1656 1657 1658 1659
Normally, restoring a saved image will use the state recorded in the
save image to decide between running or paused; passing either the
I<--running> or I<--paused> flag will allow overriding which state the
domain should be started in.

1660
B<Note>: To avoid corrupting file system contents within the domain, you
E
Eric Blake 已提交
1661 1662 1663
should not reuse the saved state file for a second B<restore> unless you
have also reverted all storage volumes back to the same contents as when
the state file was created.
1664

1665
=item B<save> I<domain> I<state-file> [I<--bypass-cache>] [I<--xml> B<file>]
1666
[{I<--running> | I<--paused>}] [I<--verbose>]
1667

E
Eric Blake 已提交
1668 1669
Saves a running domain (RAM, but not disk state) to a state file so that
it can be restored
1670 1671 1672
later.  Once saved, the domain will no longer be running on the
system, thus the memory allocated for the domain will be free for
other domains to use.  B<virsh restore> restores from this state file.
1673 1674
If I<--bypass-cache> is specified, the save will avoid the file system
cache, although this may slow down the operation.
1675

1676
The progress may be monitored using B<domjobinfo> virsh command and canceled
1677 1678 1679
with B<domjobabort> command (sent by another virsh instance). Another option
is to send SIGINT (usually with C<Ctrl-C>) to the virsh process running
B<save> command. I<--verbose> displays the progress of save.
1680

1681 1682 1683 1684
This is roughly equivalent to doing a hibernate on a running computer,
with all the same limitations.  Open network connections may be
severed upon restore, as TCP timeouts may have expired.

1685 1686 1687 1688 1689 1690
I<--xml> B<file> is usually omitted, but can be used to supply an
alternative XML file for use on the restored guest with changes only
in the host-specific portions of the domain XML.  For example, it can
be used to account for file naming differences that are planned to
be made via disk snapshots of underlying storage after the guest is saved.

1691 1692 1693 1694 1695
Normally, restoring a saved image will decide between running or paused
based on the state the domain was in when the save was done; passing
either the I<--running> or I<--paused> flag will allow overriding which
state the B<restore> should use.

E
Eric Blake 已提交
1696 1697 1698 1699 1700
Domain saved state files assume that disk images will be unchanged
between the creation and restore point.  For a more complete system
restore point, where the disk state is saved alongside the memory
state, see the B<snapshot> family of commands.

1701
=item B<save-image-define> I<file> I<xml> [{I<--running> | I<--paused>}]
1702 1703 1704 1705 1706 1707 1708 1709

Update the domain XML that will be used when I<file> is later
used in the B<restore> command.  The I<xml> argument must be a file
name containing the alternative XML, with changes only in the
host-specific portions of the domain XML.  For example, it can
be used to account for file naming differences resulting from creating
disk snapshots of underlying storage after the guest was saved.

1710 1711 1712 1713 1714
The save image records whether the domain should be restored to a
running or paused state.  Normally, this command does not alter the
recorded state; passing either the I<--running> or I<--paused> flag
will allow overriding which state the B<restore> should use.

1715 1716 1717 1718 1719 1720
=item B<save-image-dumpxml> I<file> [I<--security-info>]

Extract the domain XML that was in effect at the time the saved state
file I<file> was created with the B<save> command.  Using
I<--security-info> will also include security sensitive information.

1721
=item B<save-image-edit> I<file> [{I<--running> | I<--paused>}]
1722 1723 1724 1725

Edit the XML configuration associated with a saved state file I<file>
created by the B<save> command.

1726 1727 1728 1729 1730
The save image records whether the domain should be restored to a
running or paused state.  Normally, this command does not alter the
recorded state; passing either the I<--running> or I<--paused> flag
will allow overriding which state the B<restore> should use.

1731 1732 1733 1734 1735 1736 1737 1738 1739 1740 1741
This is equivalent to:

 virsh save-image-dumpxml state-file > state-file.xml
 vi state-file.xml (or make changes with your other text editor)
 virsh save-image-define state-file state-file-xml

except that it does some error checking.

The editor used can be supplied by the C<$VISUAL> or C<$EDITOR> environment
variables, and defaults to C<vi>.

1742 1743
=item B<schedinfo> I<domain> [[I<--config>] [I<--live>] | [I<--current>]]
[[I<--set>] B<parameter=value>]...
1744

1745
=item B<schedinfo> [I<--weight> B<number>] [I<--cap> B<number>]
1746
I<domain>
1747

1748 1749
Allows you to show (and set) the domain scheduler parameters. The parameters
available for each hypervisor are:
D
David Jorm 已提交
1750

1751
LXC (posix scheduler) : cpu_shares, vcpu_period, vcpu_quota
1752

1753 1754
QEMU/KVM (posix scheduler): cpu_shares, vcpu_period, vcpu_quota,
emulator_period, emulator_quota
D
David Jorm 已提交
1755 1756 1757 1758 1759

Xen (credit scheduler): weight, cap

ESX (allocation scheduler): reservation, limit, shares

1760 1761 1762 1763
If I<--live> is specified, set scheduler information of a running guest.
If I<--config> is specified, affect the next boot of a persistent guest.
If I<--current> is specified, affect the current guest state.

1764 1765
B<Note>: The cpu_shares parameter has a valid value range of 0-262144; Negative
values are wrapped to positive, and larger values are capped at the maximum.
1766 1767
Therefore, -1 is a useful shorthand for 262144. On the Linux kernel, the
values 0 and 1 are automatically converted to a minimal value of 2.
1768 1769 1770

B<Note>: The weight and cap parameters are defined only for the
XEN_CREDIT scheduler and are now I<DEPRECATED>.
1771

1772 1773 1774 1775
B<Note>: The vcpu_period/emulator_period parameters have a valid value range
of 1000-1000000 or 0, and the vcpu_quota/emulator_quota parameters have a
valid value range of 1000-18446744073709551 or less than 0. The value 0 for
either parameter is the same as not specifying that parameter.
1776

1777
=item B<screenshot> I<domain> [I<imagefilepath>] [I<--screen> B<screenID>]
1778 1779 1780 1781 1782 1783 1784 1785

Takes a screenshot of a current domain console and stores it into a file.
Optionally, if hypervisor supports more displays for a domain, I<screenID>
allows to specify which screen will be captured. It is the sequential number
of screen. In case of multiple graphics cards, heads are enumerated before
devices, e.g. having two graphics cards, both with four heads, screen ID 5
addresses the second head on the second card.

1786
=item B<send-key> I<domain> [I<--codeset> B<codeset>]
1787 1788
[I<--holdtime> B<holdtime>] I<keycode>...

1789
Parse the I<keycode> sequence as keystrokes to send to I<domain>.
1790 1791 1792 1793 1794 1795
Each I<keycode> can either be a numeric value or a symbolic name from
the corresponding codeset.  If I<--holdtime> is given, each keystroke
will be held for that many milliseconds.  The default codeset is
B<linux>, but use of the I<--codeset> option allows other codesets to
be chosen.

1796 1797 1798 1799
If multiple keycodes are specified, they are all sent simultaneously
to the guest, and they may be received in random order. If you need
distinct keypresses, you must use multiple send-key invocations.

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 1841 1842 1843 1844 1845 1846 1847 1848 1849 1850 1851 1852 1853 1854 1855 1856 1857 1858 1859 1860 1861 1862 1863
=over 4

=item B<linux>

The numeric values are those defined by the Linux generic input
event subsystem. The symbolic names match the corresponding
Linux key constant macro names.

=item B<xt>

The numeric values are those defined by the original XT keyboard
controller. No symbolic names are provided

=item B<atset1>

The numeric values are those defined by the AT keyboard controller,
set 1 (aka XT compatible set). Extended keycoes from B<atset1>
may differ from extended keycodes in the B<xt> codeset. No symbolic
names are provided

=item B<atset2>

The numeric values are those defined by the AT keyboard controller,
set 2. No symbolic names are provided

=item B<atset3>

The numeric values are those defined by the AT keyboard controller,
set 3 (aka PS/2 compatible set). No symbolic names are provided

=item B<os_x>

The numeric values are those defined by the OS-X keyboard input
subsystem. The symbolic names match the corresponding OS-X key
constant macro names

=item B<xt_kbd>

The numeric values are those defined by the Linux KBD device.
These are a variant on the original XT codeset, but often with
different encoding for extended keycodes. No symbolic names are
provided.

=item B<win32>

The numeric values are those defined by the Win32 keyboard input
subsystem. The symbolic names match the corresponding Win32 key
constant macro names

=item B<usb>

The numeric values are those defined by the USB HID specification
for keyboard input. No symbolic names are provided

=item B<rfb>

The numeric values are those defined by the RFB extension for sending
raw keycodes. These are a variant on the XT codeset, but extended
keycodes have the low bit of the second byte set, instead of the high
bit of the first byte. No symbolic names are provided.

=back

B<Examples>
1864 1865 1866
  # send three strokes 'k', 'e', 'y', using xt codeset. these
  # are all pressed simultaneously and may be received by the guest
  # in random order
1867
  virsh send-key dom --codeset xt 37 18 21
1868

1869 1870
  # send one stroke 'right-ctrl+C'
  virsh send-key dom KEY_RIGHTCTRL KEY_C
1871

1872 1873 1874
  # send a tab, held for 1 second
  virsh send-key --holdtime 1000 0xf

1875 1876 1877 1878 1879 1880 1881 1882 1883 1884 1885 1886 1887 1888 1889 1890 1891 1892 1893 1894 1895 1896 1897 1898 1899 1900 1901 1902 1903 1904 1905
=item B<send-process-signal> I<domain-id> I<pid> I<signame>

Send a signal I<signame> to the process identified by I<pid> running in
the virtual domain I<domain-id>. The I<pid> is a process ID in the virtual
domain namespace.

The I<signame> argument may be either an integer signal constant number,
or one of the symbolic names:

    "nop", "hup", "int", "quit", "ill",
    "trap", "abrt", "bus", "fpe", "kill",
    "usr1", "segv", "usr2", "pipe", "alrm",
    "term", "stkflt", "chld", "cont", "stop",
    "tstp", "ttin", "ttou", "urg", "xcpu",
    "xfsz", "vtalrm", "prof", "winch", "poll",
    "pwr", "sys", "rt0", "rt1", "rt2", "rt3",
    "rt4", "rt5", "rt6", "rt7", "rt8", "rt9",
    "rt10", "rt11", "rt12", "rt13", "rt14", "rt15",
    "rt16", "rt17", "rt18", "rt19", "rt20", "rt21",
    "rt22", "rt23", "rt24", "rt25", "rt26", "rt27",
    "rt28", "rt29", "rt30", "rt31", "rt32"

The symbol name may optionally be prefixed with 'sig' or 'sig_' and
may be in uppercase or lowercase.

B<Examples>
  virsh send-process-signal myguest 1 15
  virsh send-process-signal myguest 1 term
  virsh send-process-signal myguest 1 sigterm
  virsh send-process-signal myguest 1 SIG_HUP

1906
=item B<setmem> I<domain> B<size> [[I<--config>] [I<--live>] |
1907
[I<--current>]]
1908

1909 1910 1911
Change the memory allocation for a guest domain.
If I<--live> is specified, perform a memory balloon of a running guest.
If I<--config> is specified, affect the next boot of a persistent guest.
1912 1913 1914 1915
If I<--current> is specified, affect the current guest state.
Both I<--live> and I<--config> flags may be given, but I<--current> is
exclusive. If no flag is specified, behavior is different depending
on hypervisor.
1916

E
Eric Blake 已提交
1917 1918 1919 1920 1921 1922
I<size> is a scaled integer (see B<NOTES> above); it defaults to kibibytes
(blocks of 1024 bytes) unless you provide a suffix (and the older option
name I<--kilobytes> is available as a deprecated synonym) .  Libvirt rounds
up to the nearest kibibyte.  Some hypervisors require a larger granularity
than KiB, and requests that are not an even multiple will be rounded up.
For example, vSphere/ESX rounds the parameter up to mebibytes (1024 kibibytes).
1923 1924 1925

For Xen, you can only adjust the memory of a running domain if the domain is
paravirtualized or running the PV balloon driver.
1926

1927
=item B<setmaxmem> I<domain> B<size> [[I<--config>] [I<--live>] |
1928
[I<--current>]]
1929

1930 1931 1932 1933
Change the maximum memory allocation limit for a guest domain.
If I<--live> is specified, affect a running guest.
If I<--config> is specified, affect the next boot of a persistent guest.
If I<--current> is specified, affect the current guest state.
J
Jiri Denemark 已提交
1934
Both I<--live> and I<--config> flags may be given, but I<--current> is
1935 1936
exclusive. If no flag is specified, behavior is different depending
on hypervisor.
1937

1938 1939
Some hypervisors such as QEMU/KVM don't support live changes (especially
increasing) of the maximum memory limit.
1940

E
Eric Blake 已提交
1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1946
I<size> is a scaled integer (see B<NOTES> above); it defaults to kibibytes
(blocks of 1024 bytes) unless you provide a suffix (and the older option
name I<--kilobytes> is available as a deprecated synonym) .  Libvirt rounds
up to the nearest kibibyte.  Some hypervisors require a larger granularity
than KiB, and requests that are not an even multiple will be rounded up.
For example, vSphere/ESX rounds the parameter up to mebibytes (1024 kibibytes).
1947

1948
=item B<memtune> I<domain> [I<--hard-limit> B<size>]
E
Eric Blake 已提交
1949 1950
[I<--soft-limit> B<size>] [I<--swap-hard-limit> B<size>]
[I<--min-guarantee> B<size>] [[I<--config>] [I<--live>] | [I<--current>]]
E
Eric Blake 已提交
1951 1952 1953 1954

Allows you to display or set the domain memory parameters. Without
flags, the current settings are displayed; with a flag, the
appropriate limit is adjusted if supported by the hypervisor.  LXC and
1955
QEMU/KVM support I<--hard-limit>, I<--soft-limit>, and I<--swap-hard-limit>.
E
Eric Blake 已提交
1956 1957
I<--min-guarantee> is supported only by ESX hypervisor.  Each of these
limits are scaled integers (see B<NOTES> above), with a default of
1958 1959 1960 1961
kibibytes (blocks of 1024 bytes) if no suffix is present. Libvirt rounds
up to the nearest kibibyte.  Some hypervisors require a larger granularity
than KiB, and requests that are not an even multiple will be rounded up.
For example, vSphere/ESX rounds the parameter up to mebibytes (1024 kibibytes).
1962

1963 1964 1965
If I<--live> is specified, affect a running guest.
If I<--config> is specified, affect the next boot of a persistent guest.
If I<--current> is specified, affect the current guest state.
J
Jiri Denemark 已提交
1966
Both I<--live> and I<--config> flags may be given, but I<--current> is
1967 1968 1969
exclusive. If no flag is specified, behavior is different depending
on hypervisor.

1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978
For QEMU/KVM, the parameters are applied to the QEMU process as a whole.
Thus, when counting them, one needs to add up guest RAM, guest video RAM, and
some memory overhead of QEMU itself.  The last piece is hard to determine so
one needs guess and try.

=over 4

=item I<--hard-limit>

E
Eric Blake 已提交
1979
The maximum memory the guest can use.
1980 1981 1982

=item I<--soft-limit>

E
Eric Blake 已提交
1983
The memory limit to enforce during memory contention.
1984 1985 1986

=item I<--swap-hard-limit>

E
Eric Blake 已提交
1987 1988
The maximum memory plus swap the guest can use.  This has to be more
than hard-limit value provided.
1989 1990 1991

=item I<--min-guarantee>

E
Eric Blake 已提交
1992
The guaranteed minimum memory allocation for the guest.
1993 1994

=back
1995

1996 1997
Specifying -1 as a value for these limits is interpreted as unlimited.

1998
=item B<blkiotune> I<domain> [I<--weight> B<weight>]
1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004
[I<--device-weights> B<device-weights>]
[I<--device-read-iops-sec> B<device-read-iops-sec>]
[I<--device-write-iops-sec> B<device-write-iops-sec>]
[I<--device-read-bytes-sec> B<device-read-bytes-sec>]
[I<--device-write-bytes-sec> B<device-write-bytes-sec>]
[[I<--config>] [I<--live>] | [I<--current>]]
2005 2006

Display or set the blkio parameters. QEMU/KVM supports I<--weight>.
2007 2008
I<--weight> is in range [100, 1000]. After kernel 2.6.39, the value
could be in the range [10, 1000].
2009

2010 2011
B<device-weights> is a single string listing one or more device/weight
pairs, in the format of /path/to/device,weight,/path/to/device,weight.
2012 2013 2014 2015
Each weight is in the range [100, 1000], [10, 1000] after kernel 2.6.39,
or the value 0 to remove that device from per-device listings.
Only the devices listed in the string are modified;
any existing per-device weights for other devices remain unchanged.
2016

2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 2031 2032 2033 2034 2035 2036 2037 2038 2039 2040 2041 2042 2043 2044
B<device-read-iops-sec> is a single string listing one or more device/read_iops_sec
pairs, int the format of /path/to/device,read_iops_sec,/path/to/device,read_iops_sec.
Each read_iops_sec is a number which type is unsigned int, value 0 to remove that
device from per-decice listing.
Only the devices listed in the string are modified;
any existing per-device read_iops_sec for other devices remain unchanged.

B<device-write-iops-sec> is a single string listing one or more device/write_iops_sec
pairs, int the format of /path/to/device,write_iops_sec,/path/to/device,write_iops_sec.
Each write_iops_sec is a number which type is unsigned int, value 0 to remove that
device from per-decice listing.
Only the devices listed in the string are modified;
any existing per-device write_iops_sec for other devices remain unchanged.

B<device-read-bytes-sec> is a single string listing one or more device/read_bytes_sec
pairs, int the format of /path/to/device,read_bytes_sec,/path/to/device,read_bytes_sec.
Each read_bytes_sec is a number which type is unsigned long long, value 0 to remove
that device from per-decice listing.
Only the devices listed in the string are modified;
any existing per-device read_bytes_sec for other devices remain unchanged.

B<device-write-bytes-sec> is a single string listing one or more device/write_bytes_sec
pairs, int the format of /path/to/device,write_bytes_sec,/path/to/device,write_bytes_sec.
Each write_bytes_sec is a number which type is unsigned long long, value 0 to remove
that device from per-decice listing.
Only the devices listed in the string are modified;
any existing per-device write_bytes_sec for other devices remain unchanged.

H
Hu Tao 已提交
2045 2046 2047
If I<--live> is specified, affect a running guest.
If I<--config> is specified, affect the next boot of a persistent guest.
If I<--current> is specified, affect the current guest state.
J
Jiri Denemark 已提交
2048
Both I<--live> and I<--config> flags may be given, but I<--current> is
H
Hu Tao 已提交
2049 2050 2051
exclusive. If no flag is specified, behavior is different depending
on hypervisor.

2052
=item B<setvcpus> I<domain> I<count> [I<--maximum>] [[I<--config>]
2053
[I<--live>] | [I<--current>]] [I<--guest>]
2054

2055 2056 2057 2058 2059 2060 2061 2062 2063 2064 2065
Change the number of virtual CPUs active in a guest domain.  By default,
this command works on active guest domains.  To change the settings for an
inactive guest domain, use the I<--config> flag.

The I<count> value may be limited by host, hypervisor, or a limit coming
from the original description of the guest domain. For Xen, you can only
adjust the virtual CPUs of a running domain if the domain is paravirtualized.

If the I<--config> flag is specified, the change is made to the stored XML
configuration for the guest domain, and will only take effect when the guest
domain is next started.
2066

2067 2068
If I<--live> is specified, the guest domain must be active, and the change
takes place immediately.  Both the I<--config> and I<--live> flags may be
2069 2070 2071
specified together if supported by the hypervisor.  If this command is run
before the guest has finished booting, the guest may fail to process
the change.
2072

2073 2074 2075
If I<--current> is specified, affect the current guest state.

When no flags are given, the I<--live>
2076 2077 2078 2079
flag is assumed and the guest domain must be active.  In this situation it
is up to the hypervisor whether the I<--config> flag is also assumed, and
therefore whether the XML configuration is adjusted to make the change
persistent.
E
Eric Blake 已提交
2080

2081 2082 2083
If I<--guest> is specified, then the count of cpus is modified in the guest
instead of the hypervisor. This flag is usable only for live domains
and may require guest agent to be configured in the guest.
2084

2085 2086 2087
The I<--maximum> flag controls the maximum number of virtual cpus that can
be hot-plugged the next time the domain is booted.  As such, it must only be
used with the I<--config> flag, and not with the I<--live> flag.
E
Eric Blake 已提交
2088

2089
=item B<shutdown> I<domain> [I<--mode MODE-LIST>]
2090 2091

Gracefully shuts down a domain.  This coordinates with the domain OS
2092
to perform graceful shutdown, so there is no guarantee that it will
2093
succeed, and may take a variable length of time depending on what
2094
services must be shutdown in the domain.
2095

2096 2097
The exact behavior of a domain when it shuts down is set by the
I<on_shutdown> parameter in the domain's XML definition.
2098

2099
If I<domain> is transient, then the metadata of any snapshots will
2100 2101 2102 2103
be lost once the guest stops running, but the snapshot contents still
exist, and a new domain with the same name and UUID can restore the
snapshot metadata with B<snapshot-create>.

2104 2105
By default the hypervisor will try to pick a suitable shutdown
method. To specify an alternative method, the I<--mode> parameter
2106
can specify a comma separated list which includes C<acpi>, C<agent>,
2107 2108
C<initctl>, C<signal> and C<paravirt>. The order in which drivers will
try each mode is undefined, and not related to the order specified to virsh.
2109 2110
For strict control over ordering, use a single mode at a time and
repeat the command.
2111

2112
=item B<start> I<domain-name-or-uuid> [I<--console>] [I<--paused>]
2113
[I<--autodestroy>] [I<--bypass-cache>] [I<--force-boot>] [I<--pass-fds N,M,...>]
2114

2115 2116 2117 2118
Start a (previously defined) inactive domain, either from the last
B<managedsave> state, or via a fresh boot if no managedsave state is
present.  The domain will be paused if the I<--paused> option is
used and supported by the driver; otherwise it will be running.
E
Eric Blake 已提交
2119
If I<--console> is requested, attach to the console after creation.
2120 2121
If I<--autodestroy> is requested, then the guest will be automatically
destroyed when virsh closes its connection to libvirt, or otherwise
2122 2123
exits.  If I<--bypass-cache> is specified, and managedsave state exists,
the restore will avoid the file system cache, although this may slow
2124 2125
down the operation.  If I<--force-boot> is specified, then any
managedsave state is discarded and a fresh boot occurs.
2126

2127 2128 2129 2130 2131
If I<--pass-fds> is specified, the argument is a comma separated list
of open file descriptors which should be pass on into the guest. The
file descriptors will be re-numered in the guest, starting from 3. This
is only supported with container based virtualization.

2132
=item B<suspend> I<domain>
2133 2134 2135

Suspend a running domain. It is kept in memory but won't be scheduled
anymore.
2136

2137
=item B<resume> I<domain>
2138

2139
Moves a domain out of the suspended state.  This will allow a previously
2140
suspended domain to now be eligible for scheduling by the underlying
2141
hypervisor.
2142

2143
=item B<dompmsuspend> I<domain> I<target> [I<--duration>]
2144 2145 2146

Suspend a running domain into one of these states (possible I<target>
values):
N
Nehal J Wani 已提交
2147 2148
    mem equivalent of S3 ACPI state
    disk equivalent of S4 ACPI state
2149 2150
    hybrid RAM is saved to disk but not powered off

2151 2152 2153 2154 2155 2156 2157 2158
The I<--duration> argument specifies number of seconds before the domain is
woken up after it was suspended (see also B<dompmwakeup>). Default is 0 for
unlimited suspend time. (This feature isn't currently supported by any
hypervisor driver and 0 should be used.).

Note that this command requires a guest agent configured and running in the
domain's guest OS.

2159 2160 2161 2162 2163 2164 2165
Beware that at least for QEMU, the domain's process will be terminated when
target disk is used and a new process will be launched when libvirt is asked
to wake up the domain. As a result of this, any runtime changes, such as
device hotplug or memory settings, are lost unless such changes were made
with I<--config> flag.


2166
=item B<dompmwakeup> I<domain>
2167

2168 2169 2170 2171
Wakeup a domain from pmsuspended state (either suspended by dompmsuspend or
from the guest itself). Injects a wakeup into the guest that is in pmsuspended
state, rather than waiting for the previously requested duration (if any) to
elapse. This operation doesn't not necessarily fail if the domain is running.
2172

2173
=item B<ttyconsole> I<domain>
2174 2175

Output the device used for the TTY console of the domain. If the information
2176
is not available the processes will provide an exit code of 1.
2177

2178
=item B<undefine> I<domain> [I<--managed-save>] [I<--snapshots-metadata>]
2179
[I<--nvram>] [ {I<--storage> B<volumes> | I<--remove-all-storage>} I<--wipe-storage>]
2180

2181 2182 2183 2184
Undefine a domain. If the domain is running, this converts it to a
transient domain, without stopping it. If the domain is inactive,
the domain configuration is removed.

2185
The I<--managed-save> flag guarantees that any managed save image (see
2186 2187 2188
the B<managedsave> command) is also cleaned up.  Without the flag, attempts
to undefine a domain with a managed save image will fail.

2189 2190 2191 2192 2193 2194
The I<--snapshots-metadata> flag guarantees that any snapshots (see the
B<snapshot-list> command) are also cleaned up when undefining an inactive
domain.  Without the flag, attempts to undefine an inactive domain with
snapshot metadata will fail.  If the domain is active, this flag is
ignored.

2195 2196 2197 2198
The I<--nvram> flag ensures no nvram (/domain/os/nvram/) file is
left behind. If the domain has an nvram file and the flag is
omitted, the undefine will fail.

2199 2200 2201 2202 2203 2204 2205
The I<--storage> flag takes a parameter B<volumes>, which is a comma separated
list of volume target names or source paths of storage volumes to be removed
along with the undefined domain. Volumes can be undefined and thus removed only
on inactive domains. Volume deletion is only attempted after the domain is
undefined; if not all of the requested volumes could be deleted, the
error message indicates what still remains behind. If a volume path is not
found in the domain definition, it's treated as if the volume was successfully
2206 2207
deleted. Only volumes managed by libvirt in storage pools can be removed this
way.
2208 2209 2210 2211 2212 2213 2214 2215 2216
(See B<domblklist> for list of target names associated to a domain).
Example: --storage vda,/path/to/storage.img

The I<--remove-all-storage> flag specifies that all of the domain's storage
volumes should be deleted.

The flag I<--wipe-storage> specifies that the storage volumes should be
wiped before removal.

2217
NOTE: For an inactive domain, the domain name or UUID must be used as the
2218
I<domain>.
2219

2220
=item B<vcpucount> I<domain>  [{I<--maximum> | I<--active>}
2221
{I<--config> | I<--live> | I<--current>}] [I<--guest>]
E
Eric Blake 已提交
2222 2223

Print information about the virtual cpu counts of the given
2224
I<domain>.  If no flags are specified, all possible counts are
E
Eric Blake 已提交
2225
listed in a table; otherwise, the output is limited to just the
2226 2227 2228
numeric value requested.  For historical reasons, the table
lists the label "current" on the rows that can be queried in isolation
via the I<--active> flag, rather than relating to the I<--current> flag.
E
Eric Blake 已提交
2229 2230

I<--maximum> requests information on the maximum cap of vcpus that a
2231
domain can add via B<setvcpus>, while I<--active> shows the current
E
Eric Blake 已提交
2232
usage; these two flags cannot both be specified.  I<--config>
2233 2234 2235 2236 2237
requires a persistent domain and requests information regarding the next
time the domain will be booted, I<--live> requires a running domain and
lists current values, and I<--current> queries according to the current
state of the domain (corresponding to I<--live> if running, or
I<--config> if inactive); these three flags are mutually exclusive.
2238

2239 2240 2241
If I<--guest> is specified, then the count of cpus is reported from
the perspective of the guest. This flag is usable only for live domains
and may require guest agent to be configured in the guest.
E
Eric Blake 已提交
2242

2243
=item B<vcpuinfo> I<domain> [I<--pretty>]
2244

2245 2246
Returns basic information about the domain virtual CPUs, like the number of
vCPUs, the running time, the affinity to physical processors.
2247

2248 2249
With I<--pretty>, cpu affinities are shown as ranges.

2250
=item B<vcpupin> I<domain> [I<vcpu>] [I<cpulist>] [[I<--live>]
2251
[I<--config>] | [I<--current>]]
2252

2253 2254 2255 2256 2257
Query or change the pinning of domain VCPUs to host physical CPUs.  To
pin a single I<vcpu>, specify I<cpulist>; otherwise, you can query one
I<vcpu> or omit I<vcpu> to list all at once.

I<cpulist> is a list of physical CPU numbers. Its syntax is a comma
2258 2259
separated list and a special markup using '-' and '^' (ex. '0-4', '0-3,^2') can
also be allowed. The '-' denotes the range and the '^' denotes exclusive.
2260 2261
If you want to reset vcpupin setting, that is, to pin vcpu all physical cpus,
simply specify 'r' as a cpulist.
2262 2263 2264
If I<--live> is specified, affect a running guest.
If I<--config> is specified, affect the next boot of a persistent guest.
If I<--current> is specified, affect the current guest state.
2265 2266
Both I<--live> and I<--config> flags may be given if I<cpulist> is present,
but I<--current> is exclusive.
2267
If no flag is specified, behavior is different depending on hypervisor.
2268

2269 2270
B<Note>: The expression is sequentially evaluated, so "0-15,^8" is
identical to "9-14,0-7,15" but not identical to "^8,0-15".
2271

H
Hu Tao 已提交
2272 2273 2274 2275 2276 2277 2278 2279 2280 2281 2282 2283 2284 2285 2286 2287
=item B<emulatorpin> I<domain> [I<cpulist>] [[I<--live>] [I<--config>]
 | [I<--current>]]

Query or change the pinning of domain's emulator threads to host physical
CPUs.

See B<vcpupin> for I<cpulist>.

If I<--live> is specified, affect a running guest.
If I<--config> is specified, affect the next boot of a persistent guest.
If I<--current> is specified, affect the current guest state.
Both I<--live> and I<--config> flags may be given if I<cpulist> is present,
but I<--current> is exclusive.
If no flag is specified, behavior is different depending on hypervisor.


2288
=item B<vncdisplay> I<domain>
2289

2290
Output the IP address and port number for the VNC display. If the information
2291
is not available the processes will provide an exit code of 1.
2292

2293 2294 2295
=back

=head1 DEVICE COMMANDS
2296 2297

The following commands manipulate devices associated to domains.
2298
The I<domain> can be specified as a short integer, a name or a full UUID.
2299
To better understand the values allowed as options for the command
M
Mark McLoughlin 已提交
2300
reading the documentation at L<http://libvirt.org/formatdomain.html> on the
2301 2302
format of the device sections to get the most accurate set of accepted values.

2303 2304
=over 4

2305 2306
=item B<attach-device> I<domain> I<FILE>
[[[I<--live>] [I<--config>] | [I<--current>]] | [I<--persistent>]]
2307

2308 2309 2310 2311 2312 2313
Attach a device to the domain, using a device definition in an XML
file using a device definition element such as <disk> or <interface>
as the top-level element.  See the documentation at
L<http://libvirt.org/formatdomain.html#elementsDevices> to learn about
libvirt XML format for a device.  If I<--config> is specified the
command alters the persistent domain configuration with the device
2314
attach taking effect the next time libvirt starts the domain.
2315 2316 2317 2318
For cdrom and floppy devices, this command only replaces the media
within an existing device; consider using B<update-device> for this
usage.  For passthrough host devices, see also B<nodedev-detach>,
needed if the device does not use managed mode.
2319

2320 2321 2322 2323 2324 2325 2326 2327 2328 2329
If I<--live> is specified, affect a running domain.
If I<--config> is specified, affect the next startup of a persistent domain.
If I<--current> is specified, affect the current domain state.
Both I<--live> and I<--config> flags may be given, but I<--current> is
exclusive. When no flag is specified legacy API is used whose behavior depends
on the hypervisor driver.

For compatibility purposes, I<--persistent> behaves like I<--config> for
an offline domain, and like I<--live> I<--config> for a running domain.

2330 2331 2332 2333
B<Note>: using of partial device definition XML files may lead to unexpected
results as some fields may be autogenerated and thus match devices other than
expected.

2334 2335
=item B<attach-disk> I<domain> I<source> I<target> [[[I<--live>] [I<--config>]
| [I<--current>]] | [I<--persistent>]] [I<--targetbus bus>] [I<--driver
2336 2337
driver>] [I<--subdriver subdriver>] [I<--iothread iothread>]
[I<--cache cache>] [I<--type type>]
2338 2339
[I<--mode mode>] [I<--sourcetype sourcetype>] [I<--serial serial>] [I<--wwn
wwn>] [I<--rawio>] [I<--address address>] [I<--multifunction>] [I<--print-xml>]
2340 2341

Attach a new disk device to the domain.
2342 2343
I<source> is path for the files and devices. I<target> controls the bus or
device under which the disk is exposed to the guest OS. It indicates the
2344 2345 2346 2347 2348 2349
"logical" device name; the optional I<targetbus> attribute specifies the type
of disk device to emulate; possible values are driver specific, with typical
values being I<ide>, I<scsi>, I<virtio>, I<xen>, I<usb>, I<sata>, or I<sd>, if
omitted, the bus type is inferred from the style of the device name (e.g.  a
device named 'sda' will typically be exported using a SCSI bus).  I<driver> can
be I<file>, I<tap> or I<phy> for the Xen
2350
hypervisor depending on the kind of access; or I<qemu> for the QEMU emulator.
2351 2352 2353 2354 2355 2356 2357 2358 2359
Further details to the driver can be passed using I<subdriver>. For Xen
I<subdriver> can be I<aio>, while for QEMU subdriver should match the format
of the disk source, such as I<raw> or I<qcow2>.  Hypervisor default will be
used if I<subdriver> is not specified.  However, the default may not be
correct, esp. for QEMU as for security reasons it is configured not to detect
disk formats.  I<type> can indicate I<lun>, I<cdrom> or I<floppy> as
alternative to the disk default, although this use only replaces the media
within the existing virtual cdrom or floppy device; consider using
B<update-device> for this usage instead.
2360
I<mode> can specify the two specific mode I<readonly> or I<shareable>.
2361
I<sourcetype> can indicate the type of source (block|file)
2362 2363
I<cache> can be one of "default", "none", "writethrough", "writeback",
"directsync" or "unsafe".
2364 2365
I<iothread> is the number within the range of domain IOThreads to which
this disk may be attached (QEMU only).
2366
I<serial> is the serial of disk device. I<wwn> is the wwn of disk device.
2367
I<rawio> indicates the disk needs rawio capability.
2368 2369
I<address> is the address of disk device in the form of pci:domain.bus.slot.function,
scsi:controller.bus.unit or ide:controller.bus.unit.
2370 2371
I<multifunction> indicates specified pci address is a multifunction pci device
address.
2372

2373 2374 2375
If I<--print-xml> is specified, then the XML of the disk that would be attached
is printed instead.

2376 2377 2378 2379 2380 2381 2382 2383 2384
If I<--live> is specified, affect a running domain.
If I<--config> is specified, affect the next startup of a persistent domain.
If I<--current> is specified, affect the current domain state.
Both I<--live> and I<--config> flags may be given, but I<--current> is
exclusive. When no flag is specified legacy API is used whose behavior depends
on the hypervisor driver.

For compatibility purposes, I<--persistent> behaves like I<--config> for
an offline domain, and like I<--live> I<--config> for a running domain.
2385
Likewise, I<--shareable> is an alias for I<--mode shareable>.
2386

2387
=item B<attach-interface> I<domain> I<type> I<source>
2388
[[[I<--live>] [I<--config>] | [I<--current>]] | [I<--persistent>]]
2389
[I<--target target>] [I<--mac mac>] [I<--script script>] [I<--model model>]
2390
[I<--config>] [I<--inbound average,peak,burst>] [I<--outbound average,peak,burst>]
2391

2392 2393 2394 2395 2396 2397 2398 2399 2400 2401 2402 2403 2404 2405 2406 2407 2408 2409 2410 2411 2412 2413 2414
Attach a new network interface to the domain.  I<type> can be either
I<network> to indicate connection via a libvirt virtual network or
I<bridge> to indicate connection via a bridge device on the host.
I<source> indicates the source of the connection (either the name of a
network, or of a bridge device).  I<target> is used to specify the
tap/macvtap device to be used to connect the domain to the
source. Names starting with 'vnet' are considered as auto-generated
and are blanked out/regenerated each time the interface is attached.
I<mac> specifies the MAC address of the network interface; if a MAC
address is not given, a new address will be automatically generated
(and stored in the persistent configuration if "--config" is given on
the commandline).  I<script> is used to specify a path to a custom
script to be called while attaching to a bridge - this will be called
instead of the default script not in addition to it; --script is valid
only for interfaces of type I<bridge> and only for Xen domains.
I<model> specifies the network device model to be presented to the
domain.  I<inbound> and I<outbound> control the bandwidth of the
interface.  I<peak> and I<burst> are optional, so "average,peak",
"average,,burst" and "average" are also legal. Values for I<average>
and I<peak> are expressed in kilobytes per second, while I<burst> is
expressed in kilobytes in a single burst at -I<peak> speed as
described in the Network XML documentation at
L<http://libvirt.org/formatnetwork.html#elementQoS>.
2415

2416 2417 2418 2419 2420 2421 2422 2423 2424 2425
If I<--live> is specified, affect a running domain.
If I<--config> is specified, affect the next startup of a persistent domain.
If I<--current> is specified, affect the current domain state.
Both I<--live> and I<--config> flags may be given, but I<--current> is
exclusive. When no flag is specified legacy API is used whose behavior depends
on the hypervisor driver.

For compatibility purposes, I<--persistent> behaves like I<--config> for
an offline domain, and like I<--live> I<--config> for a running domain.

2426 2427 2428 2429
B<Note>: the optional target value is the name of a device to be created
as the back-end on the node. If not provided a device named "vnetN" or "vifN"
will be created automatically.

2430 2431
=item B<detach-device> I<domain> I<FILE>
[[[I<--live>] [I<--config>] | [I<--current>]] | [I<--persistent>]]
2432 2433 2434

Detach a device from the domain, takes the same kind of XML descriptions
as command B<attach-device>.
2435 2436
For passthrough host devices, see also B<nodedev-reattach>, needed if
the device does not use managed mode.
2437

2438 2439 2440 2441
B<Note>: using of partial device definition XML files may lead to unexpected
results as some fields may be autogenerated and thus match devices other than
expected.

2442 2443 2444 2445 2446 2447 2448 2449 2450 2451 2452 2453 2454
If I<--live> is specified, affect a running domain.
If I<--config> is specified, affect the next startup of a persistent domain.
If I<--current> is specified, affect the current domain state.
Both I<--live> and I<--config> flags may be given, but I<--current> is
exclusive. When no flag is specified legacy API is used whose behavior depends
on the hypervisor driver.

For compatibility purposes, I<--persistent> behaves like I<--config> for
an offline domain, and like I<--live> I<--config> for a running domain.

Note that older versions of virsh used I<--config> as an alias for
I<--persistent>.

2455 2456
=item B<detach-disk> I<domain> I<target>
[[[I<--live>] [I<--config>] | [I<--current>]] | [I<--persistent>]]
2457 2458 2459

Detach a disk device from a domain. The I<target> is the device as seen
from the domain.
2460 2461 2462 2463 2464 2465 2466 2467 2468 2469 2470 2471 2472

If I<--live> is specified, affect a running domain.
If I<--config> is specified, affect the next startup of a persistent domain.
If I<--current> is specified, affect the current domain state.
Both I<--live> and I<--config> flags may be given, but I<--current> is
exclusive. When no flag is specified legacy API is used whose behavior depends
on the hypervisor driver.

For compatibility purposes, I<--persistent> behaves like I<--config> for
an offline domain, and like I<--live> I<--config> for a running domain.

Note that older versions of virsh used I<--config> as an alias for
I<--persistent>.
2473

2474 2475
=item B<detach-interface> I<domain> I<type> [I<--mac mac>]
[[[I<--live>] [I<--config>] | [I<--current>]] | [I<--persistent>]]
2476

2477
Detach a network interface from a domain.
2478 2479 2480 2481
I<type> can be either I<network> to indicate a physical network device or
I<bridge> to indicate a bridge to a device. It is recommended to use the
I<mac> option to distinguish between the interfaces if more than one are
present on the domain.
2482 2483 2484 2485 2486 2487 2488 2489 2490 2491 2492 2493 2494

If I<--live> is specified, affect a running domain.
If I<--config> is specified, affect the next startup of a persistent domain.
If I<--current> is specified, affect the current domain state.
Both I<--live> and I<--config> flags may be given, but I<--current> is
exclusive. When no flag is specified legacy API is used whose behavior depends
on the hypervisor driver.

For compatibility purposes, I<--persistent> behaves like I<--config> for
an offline domain, and like I<--live> I<--config> for a running domain.

Note that older versions of virsh used I<--config> as an alias for
I<--persistent>.
2495

2496 2497
=item B<update-device> I<domain> I<file> [I<--force>]
[[[I<--live>] [I<--config>] | [I<--current>]] | [I<--persistent>]]
2498

2499
Update the characteristics of a device associated with I<domain>,
2500 2501 2502
based on the device definition in an XML I<file>.  The I<--force> option
can be used to force device update, e.g., to eject a CD-ROM even if it is
locked/mounted in the domain. See the documentation at
2503 2504
L<http://libvirt.org/formatdomain.html#elementsDevices> to learn about
libvirt XML format for a device.
E
Eric Blake 已提交
2505

2506 2507 2508 2509 2510 2511 2512 2513 2514 2515 2516 2517
If I<--live> is specified, affect a running domain.
If I<--config> is specified, affect the next startup of a persistent domain.
If I<--current> is specified, affect the current domain state.
Both I<--live> and I<--config> flags may be given, but I<--current> is
exclusive. Not specifying any flag is the same as specifying I<--current>.

For compatibility purposes, I<--persistent> behaves like I<--config> for
an offline domain, and like I<--live> I<--config> for a running domain.

Note that older versions of virsh used I<--config> as an alias for
I<--persistent>.

2518 2519 2520 2521
B<Note>: using of partial device definition XML files may lead to unexpected
results as some fields may be autogenerated and thus match devices other than
expected.

2522
=item B<change-media> I<domain> I<path> [I<--eject>] [I<--insert>]
O
Osier Yang 已提交
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
[I<--update>] [I<source>] [I<--force>] [[I<--live>] [I<--config>] | [I<--current>]]

Change media of CDROM or floppy drive. I<path> can be the fully-qualified path
or the unique target name (<target dev='hdc'>) of the disk device. I<source>
specifies the path of the media to be inserted or updated.

I<--eject> indicates the media will be ejected.
I<--insert> indicates the media will be inserted. I<source> must be specified.
If the device has source (e.g. <source file='media'>), and I<source> is not
specified, I<--update> is equal to I<--eject>. If the device has no source,
and I<source> is specified, I<--update> is equal to I<--insert>. If the device
has source, and I<source> is specified, I<--update> behaves like combination
of I<--eject> and I<--insert>.
If none of I<--eject>, I<--insert>, and I<--update> is specified, I<--update>
is used by default.
The I<--force> option can be used to force media changing.
If I<--live> is specified, alter live configuration of running guest.
If I<--config> is specified, alter persistent configuration, effect observed
on next boot.
I<--current> can be either or both of I<live> and I<config>, depends on
the hypervisor's implementation.
Both I<--live> and I<--config> flags may be given, but I<--current> is
exclusive. If no flag is specified, behavior is different depending
on hypervisor.

2548 2549
=back

2550 2551 2552 2553 2554 2555 2556 2557 2558 2559 2560 2561 2562 2563 2564 2565 2566
=head1 NODEDEV COMMANDS

The following commands manipulate host devices that are intended to be
passed through to guest domains via <hostdev> elements in a domain's
<devices> section.  A node device key is generally specified by the bus
name followed by its address, using underscores between all components,
such as pci_0000_00_02_1, usb_1_5_3, or net_eth1_00_27_13_6a_fe_00.
The B<nodedev-list> gives the full list of host devices that are known
to libvirt, although this includes devices that cannot be assigned to
a guest (for example, attempting to detach the PCI device that controls
the host's hard disk controller where the guest's disk images live could
cause the host system to lock up or reboot).

For more information on node device definition see:
L<http://libvirt.org/formatnode.html>.

Passthrough devices cannot be simultaneously used by the host and its
2567 2568 2569 2570
guest domains, nor by multiple active guests at once.  If the
<hostdev> description includes the attribute B<managed='yes'>, and the
hypervisor driver supports it, then the device is in managed mode, and
attempts to use that passthrough device in an active guest will
2571
automatically behave as if B<nodedev-detach> (guest start, device
2572 2573 2574 2575 2576 2577 2578
hot-plug) and B<nodedev-reattach> (guest stop, device hot-unplug) were
called at the right points (currently, qemu does this for PCI devices,
but not USB).  If a device is not marked as managed, then it must
manually be detached before guests can use it, and manually reattached
to be returned to the host.  Also, if a device is manually detached,
then the host does not regain control of the device without a matching
reattach, even if the guests use the device in managed mode.
2579 2580 2581 2582 2583 2584 2585 2586 2587 2588 2589

=over 4

=item B<nodedev-create> I<FILE>

Create a device on the host node that can then be assigned to virtual
machines. Normally, libvirt is able to automatically determine which
host nodes are available for use, but this allows registration of
host hardware that libvirt did not automatically detect.  I<file>
contains xml for a top-level <device> description of a node device.

2590
=item B<nodedev-destroy> I<device>
2591

2592
Destroy (stop) a device on the host. I<device> can be either device
2593 2594 2595
name or wwn pair in "wwnn,wwpn" format (only works for vHBA currently).
Note that this makes libvirt quit managing a host device, and may even
make that device unusable by the rest of the physical host until a reboot.
2596

2597
=item B<nodedev-detach> I<nodedev> [I<--driver backend_driver>]
2598 2599 2600

Detach I<nodedev> from the host, so that it can safely be used by
guests via <hostdev> passthrough.  This is reversed with
2601
B<nodedev-reattach>, and is done automatically for managed devices.
2602 2603
For compatibility purposes, this command can also be spelled
B<nodedev-dettach>.
2604

2605 2606 2607 2608 2609 2610
Different backend drivers expect the device to be bound to different
dummy devices. For example, QEMU's "kvm" backend driver (the default)
expects the device to be bound to pci-stub, but its "vfio" backend
driver expects the device to be bound to vfio-pci. The I<--driver>
parameter can be used to specify the desired backend driver.

2611
=item B<nodedev-dumpxml> I<device>
2612 2613 2614 2615

Dump a <device> XML representation for the given node device, including
such information as the device name, which bus owns the device, the
vendor and product id, and any capabilities of the device usable by
2616 2617 2618
libvirt (such as whether device reset is supported). I<device> can
be either device name or wwn pair in "wwnn,wwpn" format (only works
for HBA).
2619 2620 2621 2622

=item B<nodedev-list> I<cap> I<--tree>

List all of the devices available on the node that are known by libvirt.
2623 2624 2625
I<cap> is used to filter the list by capability types, the types must be
separated by comma, e.g. --cap pci,scsi, valid capability types include
'system', 'pci', 'usb_device', 'usb', 'net', 'scsi_host', 'scsi_target',
2626 2627 2628
'scsi', 'storage', 'fc_host', 'vports', 'scsi_generic'. If I<--tree> is
used, the output is formatted in a tree representing parents of each node.
I<cap> and I<--tree> are mutually exclusive.
2629

2630 2631 2632
=item B<nodedev-reattach> I<nodedev>

Declare that I<nodedev> is no longer in use by any guests, and that
2633 2634
the host can resume normal use of the device.  This is done
automatically for devices in managed mode, but must be done explicitly
2635
to match any explicit B<nodedev-detach>.
2636 2637 2638 2639 2640 2641 2642 2643 2644 2645

=item B<nodedev-reset> I<nodedev>

Trigger a device reset for I<nodedev>, useful prior to transferring
a node device between guest passthrough or the host.  Libvirt will
often do this action implicitly when required, but this command
allows an explicit reset when needed.

=back

2646
=head1 VIRTUAL NETWORK COMMANDS
2647 2648 2649

The following commands manipulate networks. Libvirt has the capability to
define virtual networks which can then be used by domains and linked to
2650
actual network devices. For more detailed information about this feature
E
Eric Blake 已提交
2651 2652
see the documentation at L<http://libvirt.org/formatnetwork.html> . Many
of the commands for virtual networks are similar to the ones used for domains,
2653 2654
but the way to name a virtual network is either by its name or UUID.

2655 2656
=over 4

2657
=item B<net-autostart> I<network> [I<--disable>]
2658 2659 2660 2661 2662 2663

Configure a virtual network to be automatically started at boot.
The I<--disable> option disable autostarting.

=item B<net-create> I<file>

G
Gene Czarcinski 已提交
2664 2665 2666 2667
Create a transient (temporary) virtual network from an
XML I<file> and instantiate (start) the network.
See the documentation at L<http://libvirt.org/formatnetwork.html>
to get a description of the XML network format used by libvirt.
2668 2669 2670

=item B<net-define> I<file>

G
Gene Czarcinski 已提交
2671 2672
Define a persistent virtual network from an XML I<file>, the network is just
defined but not instantiated (started).
2673 2674 2675

=item B<net-destroy> I<network>

G
Gene Czarcinski 已提交
2676 2677
Destroy (stop) a given transient or persistent virtual network
specified by its name or UUID. This takes effect immediately.
2678

2679
=item B<net-dumpxml> I<network> [I<--inactive>]
2680 2681

Output the virtual network information as an XML dump to stdout.
2682 2683
If I<--inactive> is specified, then physical functions are not
expanded into their associated virtual functions.
2684

2685 2686 2687 2688 2689
=item B<net-edit> I<network>

Edit the XML configuration file for a network.

This is equivalent to:
E
Eric Blake 已提交
2690

2691
 virsh net-dumpxml --inactive network > network.xml
O
Osier Yang 已提交
2692
 vi network.xml (or make changes with your other text editor)
E
Eric Blake 已提交
2693 2694
 virsh net-define network.xml

2695 2696
except that it does some error checking.

2697 2698
The editor used can be supplied by the C<$VISUAL> or C<$EDITOR> environment
variables, and defaults to C<vi>.
2699

E
Eric Blake 已提交
2700 2701 2702 2703 2704 2705 2706 2707 2708 2709 2710 2711 2712 2713 2714
=item B<net-event> {[I<network>] I<event> [I<--loop>] [I<--timeout>
I<seconds>] | I<--list>}

Wait for a class of network events to occur, and print appropriate details
of events as they happen.  The events can optionally be filtered by
I<network>.  Using I<--list> as the only argument will provide a list
of possible I<event> values known by this client, although the connection
might not allow registering for all these events.

By default, this command is one-shot, and returns success once an event
occurs; you can send SIGINT (usually via C<Ctrl-C>) to quit immediately.
If I<--timeout> is specified, the command gives up waiting for events
after I<seconds> have elapsed.   With I<--loop>, the command prints all
events until a timeout or interrupt key.

O
Osier Yang 已提交
2715 2716 2717 2718
=item B<net-info> I<network>

Returns basic information about the I<network> object.

2719
=item B<net-list> [I<--inactive> | I<--all>]
2720 2721
                  [I<--persistent>] [<--transient>]
                  [I<--autostart>] [<--no-autostart>]
2722 2723 2724

Returns the list of active networks, if I<--all> is specified this will also
include defined but inactive networks, if I<--inactive> is specified only the
2725
inactive ones will be listed. You may also want to filter the returned networks
P
Peter Krempa 已提交
2726
by I<--persistent> to list the persistent ones, I<--transient> to list the
2727 2728 2729 2730 2731 2732 2733
transient ones, I<--autostart> to list the ones with autostart enabled, and
I<--no-autostart> to list the ones with autostart disabled.

NOTE: When talking to older servers, this command is forced to use a series of
API calls with an inherent race, where a pool might not be listed or might appear
more than once if it changed state between calls while the list was being
collected.  Newer servers do not have this problem.
2734 2735 2736 2737 2738 2739 2740 2741 2742 2743 2744

=item B<net-name> I<network-UUID>

Convert a network UUID to network name.

=item B<net-start> I<network>

Start a (previously defined) inactive network.

=item B<net-undefine> I<network>

L
Li Yang 已提交
2745 2746
Undefine the configuration for a persistent network. If the network is active,
make it transient.
2747 2748 2749 2750 2751

=item B<net-uuid> I<network-name>

Convert a network name to network UUID.

L
Laine Stump 已提交
2752 2753 2754 2755 2756 2757 2758 2759 2760 2761
=item B<net-update> I<network> I<command> I<section> I<xml>
 [I<--parent-index> I<index>] [[I<--live>] [I<--config>] | [I<--current>]]

Update the given section of an existing network definition, with the
changes optionally taking effect immediately, without needing to
destroy and re-start the network.

I<command> is one of "add-first", "add-last", "add" (a synonym for
add-last), "delete", or "modify".

E
Eric Blake 已提交
2762
I<section> is one of "bridge", "domain", "ip", "ip-dhcp-host",
L
Laine Stump 已提交
2763 2764 2765 2766 2767 2768 2769 2770 2771 2772 2773 2774 2775 2776 2777 2778 2779 2780 2781 2782 2783 2784
"ip-dhcp-range", "forward", "forward-interface", "forward-pf",
"portgroup", "dns-host", "dns-txt", or "dns-srv", each section being
named by a concatenation of the xml element hierarchy leading to the
element being changed. For example, "ip-dhcp-host" will change a
<host> element that is contained inside a <dhcp> element inside an
<ip> element of the network.

I<xml> is either the text of a complete xml element of the type being
changed (e.g. "<host mac="00:11:22:33:44:55' ip='1.2.3.4'/>", or the
name of a file that contains a complete xml element. Disambiguation is
done by looking at the first character of the provided text - if the
first character is "<", it is xml text, if the first character is not
"<", it is the name of a file that contains the xml text to be used.

The I<--parent-index> option is used to specify which of several
parent elements the requested element is in (0-based). For example, a
dhcp <host> element could be in any one of multiple <ip> elements in
the network; if a parent-index isn't provided, the "most appropriate"
<ip> element will be selected (usually the only one that already has a
<dhcp> element), but if I<--parent-index> is given, that particular
instance of <ip> will get the modification.

2785 2786 2787
If I<--live> is specified, affect a running network.
If I<--config> is specified, affect the next startup of a persistent network.
If I<--current> is specified, affect the current network state.
L
Laine Stump 已提交
2788 2789 2790
Both I<--live> and I<--config> flags may be given, but I<--current> is
exclusive. Not specifying any flag is the same as specifying I<--current>.

2791 2792 2793 2794 2795 2796
=item B<net-dhcp-leases> I<network> [I<mac>]

Get a list of dhcp leases for all network interfaces connected to the given
virtual I<network> or limited output just for one interface if I<mac> is
specified.

2797 2798
=back

E
Eric Blake 已提交
2799 2800 2801 2802 2803 2804 2805 2806 2807 2808 2809 2810 2811 2812 2813 2814 2815 2816
=head1 INTERFACE COMMANDS

The following commands manipulate host interfaces.  Often, these host
interfaces can then be used by name within domain <interface> elements
(such as a system-created bridge interface), but there is no
requirement that host interfaces be tied to any particular guest
configuration XML at all.

Many of the commands for host interfaces are similar to the ones used
for domains, and the way to name an interface is either by its name or
its MAC address.  However, using a MAC address for an I<iface>
argument only works when that address is unique (if an interface and a
bridge share the same MAC address, which is often the case, then using
that MAC address results in an error due to ambiguity, and you must
resort to a name instead).

=over 4

2817 2818 2819 2820 2821 2822 2823 2824 2825 2826 2827 2828
=item B<iface-bridge> I<interface> I<bridge> [I<--no-stp>] [I<delay>]
[I<--no-start>]

Create a bridge device named I<bridge>, and attach the existing
network device I<interface> to the new bridge.  The new bridge
defaults to starting immediately, with STP enabled and a delay of 0;
these settings can be altered with I<--no-stp>, I<--no-start>, and an
integer number of seconds for I<delay>. All IP address configuration
of I<interface> will be moved to the new bridge device.

See also B<iface-unbridge> for undoing this operation.

E
Eric Blake 已提交
2829 2830 2831 2832 2833 2834 2835
=item B<iface-define> I<file>

Define a host interface from an XML I<file>, the interface is just defined but
not started.

=item B<iface-destroy> I<interface>

2836
Destroy (stop) a given host interface, such as by running "if-down" to
E
Eric Blake 已提交
2837 2838
disable that interface from active use. This takes effect immediately.

2839
=item B<iface-dumpxml> I<interface> [I<--inactive>]
E
Eric Blake 已提交
2840 2841 2842 2843 2844 2845 2846 2847 2848 2849 2850 2851 2852 2853 2854 2855 2856 2857 2858 2859

Output the host interface information as an XML dump to stdout.  If
I<--inactive> is specified, then the output reflects the persistent
state of the interface that will be used the next time it is started.

=item B<iface-edit> I<interface>

Edit the XML configuration file for a host interface.

This is equivalent to:

 virsh iface-dumpxml iface > iface.xml
 vi iface.xml (or make changes with your other text editor)
 virsh iface-define iface.xml

except that it does some error checking.

The editor used can be supplied by the C<$VISUAL> or C<$EDITOR> environment
variables, and defaults to C<vi>.

2860
=item B<iface-list> [I<--inactive> | I<--all>]
E
Eric Blake 已提交
2861 2862 2863 2864 2865

Returns the list of active host interfaces.  If I<--all> is specified
this will also include defined but inactive interfaces.  If
I<--inactive> is specified only the inactive ones will be listed.

2866
=item B<iface-name> I<interface>
E
Eric Blake 已提交
2867

2868 2869
Convert a host interface MAC to interface name, if the MAC address is unique
among the host's interfaces.
E
Eric Blake 已提交
2870

2871 2872 2873
I<interface> specifies the interface MAC address.

=item B<iface-mac> I<interface>
E
Eric Blake 已提交
2874 2875 2876

Convert a host interface name to MAC address.

2877 2878 2879
I<interface> specifies the interface name.

=item B<iface-start> I<interface>
E
Eric Blake 已提交
2880 2881 2882

Start a (previously defined) host interface, such as by running "if-up".

2883 2884 2885 2886 2887 2888 2889 2890 2891 2892
=item B<iface-unbridge> I<bridge> [I<--no-start>]

Tear down a bridge device named I<bridge>, releasing its underlying
interface back to normal usage, and moving all IP address
configuration from the bridge device to the underlying device.  The
underlying interface is restarted unless I<--no-start> is present;
this flag is present for symmetry, but generally not recommended.

See also B<iface-bridge> for creating a bridge.

2893
=item B<iface-undefine> I<interface>
E
Eric Blake 已提交
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

Undefine the configuration for an inactive host interface.

=item B<iface-begin>

Create a snapshot of current host interface settings, which can later
be committed (I<iface-commit>) or restored (I<iface-rollback>).  If a
snapshot already exists, then this command will fail until the
previous snapshot has been committed or restored.  Undefined behavior
results if any external changes are made to host interfaces outside of
the libvirt API between the beginning of a snapshot and its eventual
commit or rollback.

=item B<iface-commit>

Declare all changes since the last I<iface-begin> as working, and
delete the rollback point.  If no interface snapshot has already been
started, then this command will fail.

=item B<iface-rollback>

Revert all host interface settings back to the state recorded in the
last I<iface-begin>.  If no interface snapshot has already been
started, then this command will fail.  Rebooting the host also serves
as an implicit rollback point.

=back

E
Eric Blake 已提交
2922 2923 2924 2925 2926 2927 2928
=head1 STORAGE POOL COMMANDS

The following commands manipulate storage pools. Libvirt has the
capability to manage various storage solutions, including files, raw
partitions, and domain-specific formats, used to provide the storage
volumes visible as devices within virtual machines. For more detailed
information about this feature, see the documentation at
E
Eric Blake 已提交
2929
L<http://libvirt.org/formatstorage.html> . Many of the commands for
E
Eric Blake 已提交
2930 2931 2932 2933
pools are similar to the ones used for domains.

=over 4

2934
=item B<find-storage-pool-sources> I<type> [I<srcSpec>]
E
Eric Blake 已提交
2935 2936 2937 2938 2939

Returns XML describing all storage pools of a given I<type> that could
be found.  If I<srcSpec> is provided, it is a file that contains XML
to further restrict the query for pools.

2940 2941
=item B<find-storage-pool-sources-as> I<type> [I<host>] [I<port>]
[I<initiator>]
E
Eric Blake 已提交
2942 2943

Returns XML describing all storage pools of a given I<type> that could
2944 2945
be found.  If I<host>, I<port>, or I<initiator> are provided, they control
where the query is performed.
E
Eric Blake 已提交
2946

2947
=item B<pool-autostart> I<pool-or-uuid> [I<--disable>]
E
Eric Blake 已提交
2948 2949 2950

Configure whether I<pool> should automatically start at boot.

2951
=item B<pool-build> I<pool-or-uuid> [I<--overwrite>] [I<--no-overwrite>]
E
Eric Blake 已提交
2952 2953 2954

Build a given pool.

2955 2956 2957 2958 2959 2960 2961 2962 2963
Options I<--overwrite> and I<--no-overwrite> can only be used for
B<pool-build> a filesystem pool. If neither of them is specified,
B<pool-build> on a filesystem pool only makes the directory; If
I<--no-overwrite> is specified, it probes to determine if a
filesystem already exists on the target device, returning an error
if exists, or using mkfs to format the target device if not; If
I<--overwrite> is specified, mkfs is always executed, any existed
data on the target device is overwritten unconditionally.

E
Eric Blake 已提交
2964 2965 2966 2967
=item B<pool-create> I<file>

Create and start a pool object from the XML I<file>.

2968 2969 2970
=item B<pool-create-as> I<name> I<type> [I<--print-xml>]
[I<--source-host hostname>] [I<--source-path path>] [I<--source-dev path>]
[I<--source-name name>] [I<--target path>] [I<--source-format format>]
2971
[I<--auth-type authtype> I<--auth-username username> I<--secret-usage usage>]
2972 2973 2974
[[I<--adapter-name name>] | [I<--adapter-wwnn> I<--adapter-wwpn>]
[I<--adapter-parent parent>]]

E
Eric Blake 已提交
2975 2976 2977 2978 2979 2980

Create and start a pool object I<name> from the raw parameters.  If
I<--print-xml> is specified, then print the XML of the pool object
without creating the pool.  Otherwise, the pool has the specified
I<type>.

2981 2982 2983 2984 2985 2986 2987 2988 2989 2990 2991 2992 2993 2994 2995 2996 2997 2998 2999
[I<--source-host hostname>] provides the source hostname for pools backed
by storage from a remote server (pool types netfs, iscsi, rbd, sheepdog,
gluster).

[I<--source-path path>] provides the source directory path for pools backed
by directories (pool type dir).

[I<--source-dev path>] provides the source path for pools backed by physical
devices (pool types fs, logical, disk, iscsi, zfs).

[I<--source-name name>] provides the source name for pools backed by storage
from a named element (pool types logical, rbd, sheepdog, gluster).

[I<--target path>] is the path for the mapping of the storage pool into
the host file system.

[I<--source-format format>] provides information about the format of the
pool (pool types fs, netfs, disk, logical).

3000 3001 3002 3003 3004
[I<--auth-type authtype> I<--auth-username username> I<--secret-usage usage>]
provides the elements required to generate authentication credentials for
the storage pool. The I<authtype> is either chap for iscsi I<type> pools or
ceph for rbd I<type> pools.

3005 3006 3007 3008 3009 3010 3011 3012
[I<--adapter-name name>] defines the scsi_hostN adapter name to be used for
the scsi_host adapter type pool.

[I<--adapter-wwnn> I<--adapter-wwpn> [I<--adapter-parent parent>]] defines
the wwnn and wwpn to be used for the fc_host adapter type pool. The parent
optionally provides the name of the scsi_hostN node device to be used for
the vHBA.

E
Eric Blake 已提交
3013 3014 3015 3016
=item B<pool-define> I<file>

Create, but do not start, a pool object from the XML I<file>.

3017 3018 3019
=item B<pool-define-as> I<name> I<type> [I<--print-xml>]
[I<--source-host hostname>] [I<--source-path path>] [I<--source-dev path>]
[I<--source-name name>] [I<--target path>] [I<--source-format format>]
3020
[I<--auth-type authtype> I<--auth-username username> I<--secret-usage usage>]
3021 3022
[[I<--adapter-name name>] | [I<--adapter-wwnn> I<--adapter-wwpn>]
[I<--adapter-parent parent>]]
E
Eric Blake 已提交
3023 3024 3025 3026 3027 3028

Create, but do not start, a pool object I<name> from the raw parameters.  If
I<--print-xml> is specified, then print the XML of the pool object
without defining the pool.  Otherwise, the pool has the specified
I<type>.

J
John Ferlan 已提交
3029
Use the same arguments as B<pool-create-as>.
3030

E
Eric Blake 已提交
3031 3032
=item B<pool-destroy> I<pool-or-uuid>

3033
Destroy (stop) a given I<pool> object. Libvirt will no longer manage the
E
Eric Blake 已提交
3034 3035 3036 3037 3038 3039 3040 3041
storage described by the pool object, but the raw data contained in
the pool is not changed, and can be later recovered with
B<pool-create>.

=item B<pool-delete> I<pool-or-uuid>

Destroy the resources used by a given I<pool> object. This operation
is non-recoverable.  The I<pool> object will still exist after this
3042
command, ready for the creation of new storage volumes.
E
Eric Blake 已提交
3043

3044
=item B<pool-dumpxml> [I<--inactive>] I<pool-or-uuid>
E
Eric Blake 已提交
3045 3046

Returns the XML information about the I<pool> object.
3047 3048
I<--inactive> tells virsh to dump pool configuration that will be used
on next start of the pool as opposed to the current pool configuration.
E
Eric Blake 已提交
3049 3050 3051 3052 3053 3054 3055 3056

=item B<pool-edit> I<pool-or-uuid>

Edit the XML configuration file for a storage pool.

This is equivalent to:

 virsh pool-dumpxml pool > pool.xml
O
Osier Yang 已提交
3057
 vi pool.xml (or make changes with your other text editor)
E
Eric Blake 已提交
3058 3059 3060 3061 3062 3063 3064 3065 3066 3067 3068
 virsh pool-define pool.xml

except that it does some error checking.

The editor used can be supplied by the C<$VISUAL> or C<$EDITOR> environment
variables, and defaults to C<vi>.

=item B<pool-info> I<pool-or-uuid>

Returns basic information about the I<pool> object.

3069 3070 3071 3072
=item B<pool-list> [I<--inactive>] [I<--all>]
                   [I<--persistent>] [I<--transient>]
                   [I<--autostart>] [I<--no-autostart>]
                   [[I<--details>] [<type>]
E
Eric Blake 已提交
3073

3074 3075
List pool objects known to libvirt.  By default, only active pools
are listed; I<--inactive> lists just the inactive pools, and I<--all>
3076 3077
lists all pools.

3078 3079 3080 3081
In addition, there are several sets of filtering flags. I<--persistent> is to
list the persistent pools, I<--transient> is to list the transient pools.
I<--autostart> lists the autostarting pools, I<--no-autostart> lists the pools
with autostarting disabled.
3082 3083 3084 3085

You may also want to list pools with specified types using I<type>, the
pool types must be separated by comma, e.g. --type dir,disk. The valid pool
types include 'dir', 'fs', 'netfs', 'logical', 'disk', 'iscsi', 'scsi',
3086
'mpath', 'rbd', 'sheepdog' and 'gluster'.
3087 3088

The I<--details> option instructs virsh to additionally
3089
display pool persistence and capacity related information where available.
E
Eric Blake 已提交
3090

3091 3092 3093 3094 3095
NOTE: When talking to older servers, this command is forced to use a series of
API calls with an inherent race, where a pool might not be listed or might appear
more than once if it changed state between calls while the list was being
collected.  Newer servers do not have this problem.

E
Eric Blake 已提交
3096 3097 3098 3099 3100 3101 3102 3103 3104 3105 3106 3107
=item B<pool-name> I<uuid>

Convert the I<uuid> to a pool name.

=item B<pool-refresh> I<pool-or-uuid>

Refresh the list of volumes contained in I<pool>.

=item B<pool-start> I<pool-or-uuid>

Start the storage I<pool>, which is previously defined but inactive.

3108 3109 3110 3111 3112 3113 3114 3115 3116
B<Note>: A storage pool that relies on remote resources such as an
"iscsi" or a (v)HBA backed "scsi" pool may need to be refreshed multiple
times in order to have all the volumes detected (see B<pool-refresh>).
This is because the corresponding volume devices may not be present in
the host's filesystem during the initial pool startup or the current
refresh attempt. The number of refresh retries is dependant upon the
network connection and the time the host takes to export the
corresponding devices.

E
Eric Blake 已提交
3117 3118 3119 3120 3121 3122 3123 3124
=item B<pool-undefine> I<pool-or-uuid>

Undefine the configuration for an inactive I<pool>.

=item B<pool-uuid> I<pool>

Returns the UUID of the named I<pool>.

3125 3126
=back

3127 3128
=head1 VOLUME COMMANDS

J
Jiri Denemark 已提交
3129 3130
=over 4

3131
=item B<vol-create> I<pool-or-uuid> I<FILE> [I<--prealloc-metadata>]
3132 3133 3134 3135 3136 3137

Create a volume from an XML <file>.
I<pool-or-uuid> is the name or UUID of the storage pool to create the volume in.
I<FILE> is the XML <file> with the volume definition. An easy way to create the
XML <file> is to use the B<vol-dumpxml> command to obtain the definition of a
pre-existing volume.
3138 3139 3140 3141
[I<--prealloc-metadata>] preallocate metadata (for qcow2 images which don't
support full allocation). This option creates a sparse image file with metadata,
resulting in higher performance compared to images with no preallocation and
only slightly higher initial disk space usage.
3142 3143 3144 3145

B<Example>

 virsh vol-dumpxml --pool storagepool1 appvolume1 > newvolume.xml
O
Osier Yang 已提交
3146
 vi newvolume.xml (or make changes with your other text editor)
3147 3148
 virsh vol-create differentstoragepool newvolume.xml

3149
=item B<vol-create-from> I<pool-or-uuid> I<FILE> [I<--inputpool>
3150
I<pool-or-uuid>] I<vol-name-or-key-or-path> [I<--prealloc-metadata>]
3151 3152 3153 3154 3155 3156 3157

Create a volume, using another volume as input.
I<pool-or-uuid> is the name or UUID of the storage pool to create the volume in.
I<FILE> is the XML <file> with the volume definition.
I<--inputpool> I<pool-or-uuid> is the name or uuid of the storage pool the
source volume is in.
I<vol-name-or-key-or-path> is the name or key or path of the source volume.
3158 3159 3160 3161
[I<--prealloc-metadata>] preallocate metadata (for qcow2 images which don't
support full allocation). This option creates a sparse image file with metadata,
resulting in higher performance compared to images with no preallocation and
only slightly higher initial disk space usage.
3162

3163 3164 3165
=item B<vol-create-as> I<pool-or-uuid> I<name> I<capacity>
[I<--allocation> I<size>] [I<--format> I<string>] [I<--backing-vol>
I<vol-name-or-key-or-path>] [I<--backing-vol-format> I<string>]
3166
[I<--prealloc-metadata>]
3167 3168 3169 3170 3171

Create a volume from a set of arguments.
I<pool-or-uuid> is the name or UUID of the storage pool to create the volume
in.
I<name> is the name of the new volume.
E
Eric Blake 已提交
3172 3173 3174 3175
I<capacity> is the size of the volume to be created, as a scaled integer
(see B<NOTES> above), defaulting to bytes if there is no suffix.
I<--allocation> I<size> is the initial size to be allocated in the volume,
also as a scaled integer defaulting to bytes.
3176
I<--format> I<string> is used in file based storage pools to specify the volume
3177
file format to use; raw, bochs, qcow, qcow2, vmdk, qed.
3178
I<--backing-vol> I<vol-name-or-key-or-path> is the source backing
3179
volume to be used if taking a snapshot of an existing volume.
3180
I<--backing-vol-format> I<string> is the format of the snapshot backing volume;
3181 3182
raw, bochs, qcow, qcow2, qed, vmdk, host_device. These are, however, meant for
file based storage pools.
3183 3184 3185 3186
[I<--prealloc-metadata>] preallocate metadata (for qcow2 images which don't
support full allocation). This option creates a sparse image file with metadata,
resulting in higher performance compared to images with no preallocation and
only slightly higher initial disk space usage.
3187

3188
=item B<vol-clone> [I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid>] I<vol-name-or-key-or-path>
3189
I<name> [I<--prealloc-metadata>]
3190 3191 3192

Clone an existing volume.  Less powerful, but easier to type, version of
B<vol-create-from>.
3193 3194
I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid> is the name or UUID of the storage pool to create
the volume in.
3195 3196
I<vol-name-or-key-or-path> is the name or key or path of the source volume.
I<name> is the name of the new volume.
3197 3198 3199 3200
[I<--prealloc-metadata>] preallocate metadata (for qcow2 images which don't
support full allocation). This option creates a sparse image file with metadata,
resulting in higher performance compared to images with no preallocation and
only slightly higher initial disk space usage.
3201

3202
=item B<vol-delete> [I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid>] I<vol-name-or-key-or-path>
3203 3204

Delete a given volume.
3205 3206
I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid> is the name or UUID of the storage pool the volume
is in.
3207 3208
I<vol-name-or-key-or-path> is the name or key or path of the volume to delete.

3209 3210
=item B<vol-upload> [I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid>] [I<--offset> I<bytes>]
[I<--length> I<bytes>] I<vol-name-or-key-or-path> I<local-file>
3211 3212

Upload the contents of I<local-file> to a storage volume.
3213 3214
I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid> is the name or UUID of the storage pool the volume
is in.
3215 3216
I<vol-name-or-key-or-path> is the name or key or path of the volume where the
file will be uploaded.
3217
I<--offset> is the position in the storage volume at which to start writing
3218 3219 3220 3221
the data. The value must be 0 or larger. I<--length> is an upper bound
of the amount of data to be uploaded. A negative value is interpreted
as an unsigned long long value to essentially include everything from
the offset to the end of the volume.
J
Ján Tomko 已提交
3222
An error will occur if the I<local-file> is greater than the specified length.
3223 3224 3225
See the description for the libvirt virStorageVolUpload API for details
regarding possible target volume and pool changes as a result of the
pool refresh when the upload is attempted.
3226

3227 3228
=item B<vol-download> [I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid>] [I<--offset> I<bytes>]
[I<--length> I<bytes>] I<vol-name-or-key-or-path> I<local-file>
3229

3230
Download the contents of a storage volume to I<local-file>.
3231 3232
I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid> is the name or UUID of the storage pool the volume
is in.
3233
I<vol-name-or-key-or-path> is the name or key or path of the volume to download.
3234
I<--offset> is the position in the storage volume at which to start reading
3235 3236 3237 3238
the data. The value must be 0 or larger. I<--length> is an upper bound of
the amount of data to be downloaded. A negative value is interpreted as
an unsigned long long value to essentially include everything from the
offset to the end of the volume.
3239

3240 3241
=item B<vol-wipe> [I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid>] [I<--algorithm> I<algorithm>]
I<vol-name-or-key-or-path>
3242

3243 3244 3245
Wipe a volume, ensure data previously on the volume is not accessible to
future reads. I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid> is the name or UUID of the storage
pool the volume is in.
3246
I<vol-name-or-key-or-path> is the name or key or path of the volume to wipe.
3247 3248 3249 3250 3251 3252 3253 3254 3255
It is possible to choose different wiping algorithms instead of re-writing
volume with zeroes. This can be done via I<--algorithm> switch.

B<Supported algorithms>
  zero       - 1-pass all zeroes
  nnsa       - 4-pass NNSA Policy Letter NAP-14.1-C (XVI-8) for
               sanitizing removable and non-removable hard disks:
               random x2, 0x00, verify.
  dod        - 4-pass DoD 5220.22-M section 8-306 procedure for
N
Nehal J Wani 已提交
3256
               sanitizing removable and non-removable rigid
3257 3258 3259 3260 3261 3262 3263 3264 3265 3266 3267 3268 3269
               disks: random, 0x00, 0xff, verify.
  bsi        - 9-pass method recommended by the German Center of
               Security in Information Technologies
               (http://www.bsi.bund.de): 0xff, 0xfe, 0xfd, 0xfb,
               0xf7, 0xef, 0xdf, 0xbf, 0x7f.
  gutmann    - The canonical 35-pass sequence described in
               Gutmann's paper.
  schneier   - 7-pass method described by Bruce Schneier in
               "Applied Cryptography" (1996): 0x00, 0xff,
               random x5.
  pfitzner7  - Roy Pfitzner's 7-random-pass method: random x7.
  pfitzner33 - Roy Pfitzner's 33-random-pass method: random x33.
  random     - 1-pass pattern: random.
3270

3271 3272 3273
B<Note>: The availability of algorithms may be limited by the version
of the C<scrub> binary installed on the host.

3274
=item B<vol-dumpxml> [I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid>] I<vol-name-or-key-or-path>
3275 3276

Output the volume information as an XML dump to stdout.
3277 3278 3279
I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid> is the name or UUID of the storage pool the volume
is in. I<vol-name-or-key-or-path> is the name or key or path of the volume
to output the XML of.
3280

3281
=item B<vol-info> [I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid>] I<vol-name-or-key-or-path>
3282 3283

Returns basic information about the given storage volume.
3284 3285 3286
I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid> is the name or UUID of the storage pool the volume
is in. I<vol-name-or-key-or-path> is the name or key or path of the volume
to return information for.
3287

3288
=item B<vol-list> [I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid>] [I<--details>]
3289 3290 3291

Return the list of volumes in the given storage pool.
I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid> is the name or UUID of the storage pool.
3292 3293
The I<--details> option instructs virsh to additionally display volume
type and capacity related information where available.
3294

3295
=item B<vol-pool> [I<--uuid>] I<vol-key-or-path>
3296

3297 3298 3299 3300
Return the pool name or UUID for a given volume. By default, the pool name is
returned. If the I<--uuid> option is given, the pool UUID is returned instead.
I<vol-key-or-path> is the key or path of the volume to return the pool
information for.
3301

3302
=item B<vol-path> [I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid>] I<vol-name-or-key>
3303 3304

Return the path for a given volume.
3305 3306
I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid> is the name or UUID of the storage pool the volume
is in.
3307 3308 3309 3310 3311 3312 3313
I<vol-name-or-key> is the name or key of the volume to return the path for.

=item B<vol-name> I<vol-key-or-path>

Return the name for a given volume.
I<vol-key-or-path> is the key or path of the volume to return the name for.

3314
=item B<vol-key> [I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid>] I<vol-name-or-path>
3315

3316
Return the volume key for a given volume.
3317 3318 3319
I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid> is the name or UUID of the storage pool the volume
is in. I<vol-name-or-path> is the name or path of the volume to return the
volume key for.
3320

3321 3322 3323 3324 3325 3326 3327 3328 3329
=item B<vol-resize> [I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid>] I<vol-name-or-path>
I<pool-or-uuid> I<capacity> [I<--allocate>] [I<--delta>] [I<--shrink>]

Resize the capacity of the given volume, in bytes.
I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid> is the name or UUID of the storage pool the volume
is in. I<vol-name-or-key-or-path> is the name or key or path of the volume
to resize.  The new capacity might be sparse unless I<--allocate> is
specified.  Normally, I<capacity> is the new size, but if I<--delta>
is present, then it is added to the existing size.  Attempts to shrink
E
Eric Blake 已提交
3330 3331 3332 3333 3334 3335
the volume will fail unless I<--shrink> is present; I<capacity> cannot
be negative unless I<--shrink> is provided, but a negative sign is not
necessary. I<capacity> is a scaled integer (see B<NOTES> above), which
defaults to bytes if there is no suffix.  This command is only safe
for storage volumes not in use by an active guest; see also
B<blockresize> for live resizing.
3336

3337 3338
=back

E
Eric Blake 已提交
3339
=head1 SECRET COMMANDS
3340 3341 3342 3343

The following commands manipulate "secrets" (e.g. passwords, passphrases and
encryption keys).  Libvirt can store secrets independently from their use, and
other objects (e.g. volumes or domains) can refer to the secrets for encryption
N
Nehal J Wani 已提交
3344
or possibly other uses.  Secrets are identified using a UUID.  See
3345 3346 3347 3348 3349 3350 3351 3352 3353
L<http://libvirt.org/formatsecret.html> for documentation of the XML format
used to represent properties of secrets.

=over 4

=item B<secret-define> I<file>

Create a secret with the properties specified in I<file>, with no associated
secret value.  If I<file> does not specify a UUID, choose one automatically.
N
Nehal J Wani 已提交
3354
If I<file> specifies a UUID of an existing secret, replace its properties by
3355 3356 3357 3358 3359 3360 3361 3362 3363 3364 3365 3366 3367 3368 3369 3370 3371 3372 3373 3374 3375
properties defined in I<file>, without affecting the secret value.

=item B<secret-dumpxml> I<secret>

Output properties of I<secret> (specified by its UUID) as an XML dump to stdout.

=item B<secret-set-value> I<secret> I<base64>

Set the value associated with I<secret> (specified by its UUID) to the value
Base64-encoded value I<base64>.

=item B<secret-get-value> I<secret>

Output the value associated with I<secret> (specified by its UUID) to stdout,
encoded using Base64.

=item B<secret-undefine> I<secret>

Delete a I<secret> (specified by its UUID), including the associated value, if
any.

3376 3377
=item B<secret-list> [I<--ephemeral>] [I<--no-ephemeral>]
                     [I<--private>] [I<--no-private>]
3378

3379 3380 3381 3382
Returns the list of secrets. You may also want to filter the returned secrets
by I<--ephemeral> to list the ephemeral ones, I<--no-ephemeral> to list the
non-ephemeral ones, I<--private> to list the private ones, and
I<--no-private> to list the non-private ones.
3383 3384 3385

=back

E
Eric Blake 已提交
3386
=head1 SNAPSHOT COMMANDS
3387 3388 3389 3390 3391 3392 3393 3394 3395 3396 3397

The following commands manipulate domain snapshots.  Snapshots take the
disk, memory, and device state of a domain at a point-of-time, and save it
for future use.  They have many uses, from saving a "clean" copy of an OS
image to saving a domain's state before a potentially destructive operation.
Snapshots are identified with a unique name.  See
L<http://libvirt.org/formatsnapshot.html> for documentation of the XML format
used to represent properties of snapshots.

=over 4

3398
=item B<snapshot-create> I<domain> [I<xmlfile>] {[I<--redefine> [I<--current>]]
E
Eric Blake 已提交
3399
| [I<--no-metadata>] [I<--halt>] [I<--disk-only>] [I<--reuse-external>]
3400
[I<--quiesce>] [I<--atomic>] [I<--live>]}
3401 3402

Create a snapshot for domain I<domain> with the properties specified in
3403
I<xmlfile>.  Normally, the only properties settable for a domain snapshot
3404 3405
are the <name> and <description> elements, as well as <disks> if
I<--disk-only> is given; the rest of the fields are
3406 3407 3408 3409
ignored, and automatically filled in by libvirt.  If I<xmlfile> is
completely omitted, then libvirt will choose a value for all fields.
The new snapshot will become current, as listed by B<snapshot-current>.

3410 3411 3412
If I<--halt> is specified, the domain will be left in an inactive state
after the snapshot is created.

3413 3414 3415 3416 3417 3418 3419 3420
If I<--disk-only> is specified, the snapshot will only include disk
state rather than the usual system checkpoint with vm state.  Disk
snapshots are faster than full system checkpoints, but reverting to a
disk snapshot may require fsck or journal replays, since it is like
the disk state at the point when the power cord is abruptly pulled;
and mixing I<--halt> and I<--disk-only> loses any data that was not
flushed to disk at the time.

3421 3422 3423 3424 3425 3426 3427 3428 3429 3430 3431 3432 3433 3434 3435 3436
If I<--redefine> is specified, then all XML elements produced by
B<snapshot-dumpxml> are valid; this can be used to migrate snapshot
hierarchy from one machine to another, to recreate hierarchy for the
case of a transient domain that goes away and is later recreated with
the same name and UUID, or to make slight alterations in the snapshot
metadata (such as host-specific aspects of the domain XML embedded in
the snapshot).  When this flag is supplied, the I<xmlfile> argument
is mandatory, and the domain's current snapshot will not be altered
unless the I<--current> flag is also given.

If I<--no-metadata> is specified, then the snapshot data is created,
but any metadata is immediately discarded (that is, libvirt does not
treat the snapshot as current, and cannot revert to the snapshot
unless I<--redefine> is later used to teach libvirt about the
metadata again).

3437 3438
If I<--reuse-external> is specified, and the snapshot XML requests an
external snapshot with a destination of an existing file, then the
3439 3440
destination must exist and be pre-created with correct format and
metadata. The file is then reused; otherwise, a snapshot is refused
3441 3442
to avoid losing contents of the existing files.

3443 3444 3445 3446 3447
If I<--quiesce> is specified, libvirt will try to use guest agent
to freeze and unfreeze domain's mounted file systems. However,
if domain has no guest agent, snapshot creation will fail.
Currently, this requires I<--disk-only> to be passed as well.

E
Eric Blake 已提交
3448 3449 3450 3451 3452 3453
If I<--atomic> is specified, libvirt will guarantee that the snapshot
either succeeds, or fails with no changes; not all hypervisors support
this.  If this flag is not specified, then some hypervisors may fail
after partially performing the action, and B<dumpxml> must be used to
see whether any partial changes occurred.

3454 3455 3456 3457
If I<--live> is specified, libvirt takes the snapshot while the guest is
running. This increases the size of the memory image of the external
checkpoint. This is currently supported only for external checkpoints.

3458 3459 3460 3461 3462
Existence of snapshot metadata will prevent attempts to B<undefine>
a persistent domain.  However, for transient domains, snapshot
metadata is silently lost when the domain quits running (whether
by command such as B<destroy> or by internal guest action).

3463
=item B<snapshot-create-as> I<domain> {[I<--print-xml>]
E
Eric Blake 已提交
3464
| [I<--no-metadata>] [I<--halt>] [I<--reuse-external>]} [I<name>]
3465 3466
[I<description>] [I<--disk-only> [I<--quiesce>]] [I<--atomic>]
[[I<--live>] [I<--memspec> B<memspec>]] [I<--diskspec>] B<diskspec>]...
3467 3468 3469

Create a snapshot for domain I<domain> with the given <name> and
<description>; if either value is omitted, libvirt will choose a
E
Eric Blake 已提交
3470 3471
value.  If I<--print-xml> is specified, then XML appropriate for
I<snapshot-create> is output, rather than actually creating a snapshot.
3472
Otherwise, if I<--halt> is specified, the domain will be left in an
3473 3474 3475
inactive state after the snapshot is created, and if I<--disk-only>
is specified, the snapshot will not include vm state.

3476 3477 3478
The I<--memspec> option can be used to control whether a checkpoint
is internal or external.  The I<--memspec> flag is mandatory, followed
by a B<memspec> of the form B<[file=]name[,snapshot=type]>, where
3479
type can be B<no>, B<internal>, or B<external>.  To include a literal
3480 3481
comma in B<file=name>, escape it with a second comma. I<--memspec> cannot
be used together with I<--disk-only>.
3482 3483 3484 3485 3486

The I<--diskspec> option can be used to control how I<--disk-only> and
external checkpoints create external files.  This option can occur
multiple times, according to the number of <disk> elements in the domain
xml.  Each <diskspec> is in the
3487 3488 3489
form B<disk[,snapshot=type][,driver=type][,file=name]>.  A I<diskspec>
must be provided for disks backed by block devices as libvirt doesn't
auto-generate file names for those.  To include a
3490
literal comma in B<disk> or in B<file=name>, escape it with a second
J
Ján Tomko 已提交
3491
comma.  A literal I<--diskspec> must precede each B<diskspec> unless
3492 3493
all three of I<domain>, I<name>, and I<description> are also present.
For example, a diskspec of "vda,snapshot=external,file=/path/to,,new"
3494 3495 3496 3497
results in the following XML:
  <disk name='vda' snapshot='external'>
    <source file='/path/to,new'/>
  </disk>
3498

3499 3500
If I<--reuse-external> is specified, and the domain XML or I<diskspec>
option requests an external snapshot with a destination of an existing
3501 3502 3503
file, then the destination must exist and be pre-created with correct
format and metadata. The file is then reused; otherwise, a snapshot
is refused to avoid losing contents of the existing files.
3504

3505 3506 3507 3508 3509
If I<--quiesce> is specified, libvirt will try to use guest agent
to freeze and unfreeze domain's mounted file systems. However,
if domain has no guest agent, snapshot creation will fail.
Currently, this requires I<--disk-only> to be passed as well.

3510 3511 3512 3513 3514 3515
If I<--no-metadata> is specified, then the snapshot data is created,
but any metadata is immediately discarded (that is, libvirt does not
treat the snapshot as current, and cannot revert to the snapshot
unless B<snapshot-create> is later used to teach libvirt about the
metadata again).  This flag is incompatible with I<--print-xml>.

E
Eric Blake 已提交
3516 3517 3518 3519 3520 3521
If I<--atomic> is specified, libvirt will guarantee that the snapshot
either succeeds, or fails with no changes; not all hypervisors support
this.  If this flag is not specified, then some hypervisors may fail
after partially performing the action, and B<dumpxml> must be used to
see whether any partial changes occurred.

3522 3523 3524 3525
If I<--live> is specified, libvirt takes the snapshot while the guest is
running. This increases the size of the memory image of the external
checkpoint. This is currently supported only for external checkpoints.

E
Eric Blake 已提交
3526
=item B<snapshot-current> I<domain> {[I<--name>] | [I<--security-info>]
3527 3528 3529 3530 3531 3532 3533 3534 3535 3536
| [I<snapshotname>]}

Without I<snapshotname>, this will output the snapshot XML for the domain's
current snapshot (if any).  If I<--name> is specified, just the
current snapshot name instead of the full xml.  Otherwise, using
I<--security-info> will also include security sensitive information in
the XML.

With I<snapshotname>, this is a request to make the existing named
snapshot become the current snapshot, without reverting the domain.
3537

3538
=item B<snapshot-edit> I<domain> [I<snapshotname>] [I<--current>]
3539
{[I<--rename>] | [I<--clone>]}
3540 3541

Edit the XML configuration file for I<snapshotname> of a domain.  If
3542 3543 3544 3545
both I<snapshotname> and I<--current> are specified, also force the
edited snapshot to become the current snapshot.  If I<snapshotname>
is omitted, then I<--current> must be supplied, to edit the current
snapshot.
3546 3547 3548 3549 3550 3551 3552 3553 3554 3555 3556

This is equivalent to:

 virsh snapshot-dumpxml dom name > snapshot.xml
 vi snapshot.xml (or make changes with your other text editor)
 virsh snapshot-create dom snapshot.xml --redefine [--current]

except that it does some error checking.

The editor used can be supplied by the C<$VISUAL> or C<$EDITOR> environment
variables, and defaults to C<vi>.
3557

3558 3559 3560 3561 3562 3563 3564 3565
If I<--rename> is specified, then the edits can change the snapshot
name.  If I<--clone> is specified, then changing the snapshot name
will create a clone of the snapshot metadata.  If neither is specified,
then the edits must not change the snapshot name.  Note that changing
a snapshot name must be done with care, since the contents of some
snapshots, such as internal snapshots within a single qcow2 file, are
accessible only from the original name.

E
Eric Blake 已提交
3566 3567 3568 3569 3570
=item B<snapshot-info> I<domain> {I<snapshot> | I<--current>}

Output basic information about a named <snapshot>, or the current snapshot
with I<--current>.

3571 3572
=item B<snapshot-list> I<domain> [I<--metadata>] [I<--no-metadata>]
[{I<--parent> | I<--roots> | [{I<--tree> | I<--name>}]}]
3573
[{[I<--from>] B<snapshot> | I<--current>} [I<--descendants>]]
3574
[I<--leaves>] [I<--no-leaves>] [I<--inactive>] [I<--active>]
3575
[I<--disk-only>] [I<--internal>] [I<--external>]
3576

3577 3578
List all of the available snapshots for the given domain, defaulting
to show columns for the snapshot name, creation time, and domain state.
3579

3580
If I<--parent> is specified, add a column to the output table giving
3581 3582 3583
the name of the parent of each snapshot.  If I<--roots> is specified,
the list will be filtered to just snapshots that have no parents.
If I<--tree> is specified, the output will be in a tree format, listing
3584 3585 3586
just snapshot names.  These three options are mutually exclusive. If
I<--name> is specified only the snapshot name is printed. This option is
mutually exclusive with I<--tree>.
3587

3588
If I<--from> is provided, filter the list to snapshots which are
3589 3590
children of the given B<snapshot>; or if I<--current> is provided,
start at the current snapshot.  When used in isolation or with
3591 3592 3593
I<--parent>, the list is limited to direct children unless
I<--descendants> is also present.  When used with I<--tree>, the
use of I<--descendants> is implied.  This option is not compatible
3594 3595 3596
with I<--roots>.  Note that the starting point of I<--from> or
I<--current> is not included in the list unless the I<--tree>
option is also present.
3597

3598
If I<--leaves> is specified, the list will be filtered to just
E
Eric Blake 已提交
3599 3600 3601 3602 3603
snapshots that have no children.  Likewise, if I<--no-leaves> is
specified, the list will be filtered to just snapshots with
children.  (Note that omitting both options does no filtering,
while providing both options will either produce the same list
or error out depending on whether the server recognizes the flags).
3604
Filtering options are not compatible with I<--tree>.
3605

3606 3607 3608
If I<--metadata> is specified, the list will be filtered to just
snapshots that involve libvirt metadata, and thus would prevent
B<undefine> of a persistent domain, or be lost on B<destroy> of
E
Eric Blake 已提交
3609 3610 3611
a transient domain.  Likewise, if I<--no-metadata> is specified,
the list will be filtered to just snapshots that exist without
the need for libvirt metadata.
3612

3613 3614 3615 3616 3617 3618 3619 3620 3621 3622 3623 3624 3625 3626
If I<--inactive> is specified, the list will be filtered to snapshots
that were taken when the domain was shut off.  If I<--active> is
specified, the list will be filtered to snapshots that were taken
when the domain was running, and where the snapshot includes the
memory state to revert to that running state.  If I<--disk-only> is
specified, the list will be filtered to snapshots that were taken
when the domain was running, but where the snapshot includes only
disk state.

If I<--internal> is specified, the list will be filtered to snapshots
that use internal storage of existing disk images.  If I<--external>
is specified, the list will be filtered to snapshots that use external
files for disk images or memory state.

3627
=item B<snapshot-dumpxml> I<domain> I<snapshot> [I<--security-info>]
3628 3629

Output the snapshot XML for the domain's snapshot named I<snapshot>.
3630
Using I<--security-info> will also include security sensitive information.
3631
Use B<snapshot-current> to easily access the XML of the current snapshot.
3632

3633
=item B<snapshot-parent> I<domain> {I<snapshot> | I<--current>}
E
Eric Blake 已提交
3634

3635 3636
Output the name of the parent snapshot, if any, for the given
I<snapshot>, or for the current snapshot with I<--current>.
E
Eric Blake 已提交
3637

3638 3639
=item B<snapshot-revert> I<domain> {I<snapshot> | I<--current>}
[{I<--running> | I<--paused>}] [I<--force>]
3640

3641 3642
Revert the given domain to the snapshot specified by I<snapshot>, or to
the current snapshot with I<--current>.  Be aware
3643
that this is a destructive action; any changes in the domain since the last
3644
snapshot was taken will be lost.  Also note that the state of the domain after
3645
snapshot-revert is complete will be the state of the domain at the time
3646 3647
the original snapshot was taken.

3648 3649 3650 3651 3652 3653 3654 3655
Normally, reverting to a snapshot leaves the domain in the state it was
at the time the snapshot was created, except that a disk snapshot with
no vm state leaves the domain in an inactive state.  Passing either the
I<--running> or I<--paused> flag will perform additional state changes
(such as booting an inactive domain, or pausing a running domain).  Since
transient domains cannot be inactive, it is required to use one of these
flags when reverting to a disk snapshot of a transient domain.

E
Eric Blake 已提交
3656 3657 3658 3659 3660 3661 3662 3663 3664 3665 3666 3667 3668 3669 3670 3671
There are two cases where a snapshot revert involves extra risk, which
requires the use of I<--force> to proceed.  One is the case of a
snapshot that lacks full domain information for reverting
configuration (such as snapshots created prior to libvirt 0.9.5);
since libvirt cannot prove that the current configuration matches what
was in use at the time of the snapshot, supplying I<--force> assures
libvirt that the snapshot is compatible with the current configuration
(and if it is not, the domain will likely fail to run).  The other is
the case of reverting from a running domain to an active state where a
new hypervisor has to be created rather than reusing the existing
hypervisor, because it implies drawbacks such as breaking any existing
VNC or Spice connections; this condition happens with an active
snapshot that uses a provably incompatible configuration, as well as
with an inactive snapshot that is combined with the I<--start> or
I<--pause> flag.

3672
=item B<snapshot-delete> I<domain> {I<snapshot> | I<--current>} [I<--metadata>]
3673
[{I<--children> | I<--children-only>}]
3674

3675 3676
Delete the snapshot for the domain named I<snapshot>, or the current
snapshot with I<--current>.  If this snapshot
3677 3678
has child snapshots, changes from this snapshot will be merged into the
children.  If I<--children> is passed, then delete this snapshot and any
3679 3680 3681 3682 3683 3684 3685 3686
children of this snapshot.  If I<--children-only> is passed, then delete
any children of this snapshot, but leave this snapshot intact.  These
two flags are mutually exclusive.

If I<--metadata> is specified, then only delete the snapshot metadata
maintained by libvirt, while leaving the snapshot contents intact for
access by external tools; otherwise deleting a snapshot also removes
the data contents from that point in time.
3687 3688 3689

=back

E
Eric Blake 已提交
3690
=head1 NWFILTER COMMANDS
3691 3692 3693 3694 3695 3696 3697 3698 3699 3700 3701 3702 3703 3704 3705 3706 3707 3708 3709 3710 3711 3712 3713 3714 3715 3716 3717 3718 3719 3720 3721 3722 3723 3724 3725 3726 3727 3728 3729 3730

The following commands manipulate network filters. Network filters allow
filtering of the network traffic coming from and going to virtual machines.
Individual network traffic filters are written in XML and may contain
references to other network filters, describe traffic filtering rules,
or contain both. Network filters are referenced by virtual machines
from within their interface description. A network filter may be referenced
by multiple virtual machines' interfaces.

=over 4

=item B<nwfilter-define> I<xmlfile>

Make a new network filter known to libvirt. If a network filter with
the same name already exists, it will be replaced with the new XML.
Any running virtual machine referencing this network filter will have
its network traffic rules adapted. If for any reason the network traffic
filtering rules cannot be instantiated by any of the running virtual
machines, then the new XML will be rejected.

=item B<nwfilter-undefine> I<nwfilter-name>

Delete a network filter. The deletion will fail if any running virtual
machine is currently using this network filter.

=item B<nwfilter-list>

List all of the available network filters.

=item B<nwfilter-dumpxml> I<nwfilter-name>

Output the network filter XML.

=item B<nwfilter-edit> I<nwfilter-name>

Edit the XML of a network filter.

This is equivalent to:

 virsh nwfilter-dumpxml myfilter > myfilter.xml
O
Osier Yang 已提交
3731
 vi myfilter.xml (or make changes with your other text editor)
3732 3733 3734 3735 3736 3737 3738 3739 3740 3741 3742
 virsh nwfilter-define myfilter.xml

except that it does some error checking.
The new network filter may be rejected due to the same reason as
mentioned in I<nwfilter-define>.

The editor used can be supplied by the C<$VISUAL> or C<$EDITOR> environment
variables, and defaults to C<vi>.

=back

E
Eric Blake 已提交
3743
=head1 HYPERVISOR-SPECIFIC COMMANDS
3744 3745 3746

NOTE: Use of the following commands is B<strongly> discouraged.  They
can cause libvirt to become confused and do the wrong thing on subsequent
E
Eric Blake 已提交
3747 3748 3749 3750 3751
operations.  Once you have used these commands, please do not report
problems to the libvirt developers; the reports will be ignored.  If
you find that these commands are the only way to accomplish something,
then it is better to request that the feature be added as a first-class
citizen in the regular libvirt library.
3752 3753 3754

=over 4

3755 3756 3757 3758 3759 3760 3761 3762 3763 3764 3765 3766 3767 3768 3769 3770 3771 3772 3773 3774
=item B<qemu-attach> I<pid>

Attach an externally launched QEMU process to the libvirt QEMU driver.
The QEMU process must have been created with a monitor connection
using the UNIX driver. Ideally the process will also have had the
'-name' argument specified.

=over 4

     $ qemu-kvm -cdrom ~/demo.iso \
         -monitor unix:/tmp/demo,server,nowait \
         -name foo \
         -uuid cece4f9f-dff0-575d-0e8e-01fe380f12ea  &
     $ QEMUPID=$!
     $ virsh qemu-attach $QEMUPID

=back

Not all functions of libvirt are expected to work reliably after
attaching to an externally launched QEMU process. There may be
3775 3776 3777
issues with the guest ABI changing upon migration and device hotplug
or hotunplug may not work. The attached environment should be considered
primarily read-only.
3778

3779 3780
=item B<qemu-monitor-command> I<domain> { [I<--hmp>] | [I<--pretty>] }
I<command>...
3781 3782

Send an arbitrary monitor command I<command> to domain I<domain> through the
3783 3784 3785
qemu monitor.  The results of the command will be printed on stdout.  If
I<--hmp> is passed, the command is considered to be a human monitor command
and libvirt will automatically convert it into QMP if needed.  In that case
3786 3787 3788 3789
the result will also be converted back from QMP.  If I<--pretty> is given,
and the monitor uses QMP, then the output will be pretty-printed.  If more
than one argument is provided for I<command>, they are concatenated with a
space in between before passing the single command to the monitor.
3790

E
Eric Blake 已提交
3791 3792
=item B<qemu-agent-command> I<domain> [I<--timeout> I<seconds> | I<--async> |
I<--block>] I<command>...
3793 3794 3795 3796 3797 3798 3799 3800 3801

Send an arbitrary guest agent command I<command> to domain I<domain> through
qemu agent.
I<--timeout>, I<--async> and I<--block> options are exclusive.
I<--timeout> requires timeout seconds I<seconds> and it must be positive.
When I<--aysnc> is given, the command waits for timeout whether success or
failed. And when I<--block> is given, the command waits forever with blocking
timeout.

E
Eric Blake 已提交
3802
=item B<qemu-monitor-event> [I<domain>] [I<--event> I<event-name>] [I<--loop>]
3803
[I<--timeout> I<seconds>] [I<--pretty>] [I<--regex>] [I<--no-case>]
E
Eric Blake 已提交
3804 3805 3806 3807 3808

Wait for arbitrary QEMU monitor events to occur, and print out the
details of events as they happen.  The events can optionally be filtered
by I<domain> or I<event-name>.  The 'query-events' QMP command can be
used via I<qemu-monitor-command> to learn what events are supported.
3809 3810 3811
If I<--regex> is used, I<event-name> is a basic regular expression
instead of a literal string.  If I<--no-case> is used, I<event-name>
will match case-insensitively.
E
Eric Blake 已提交
3812 3813 3814 3815 3816 3817 3818 3819

By default, this command is one-shot, and returns success once an event
occurs; you can send SIGINT (usually via C<Ctrl-C>) to quit immediately.
If I<--timeout> is specified, the command gives up waiting for events
after I<seconds> have elapsed.  With I<--loop>, the command prints all
events until a timeout or interrupt key.  If I<--pretty> is specified,
any JSON event details are pretty-printed for better legibility.

3820 3821 3822 3823 3824 3825
=item B<lxc-enter-namespace> I<domain> -- /path/to/binary [arg1, [arg2, ...]]

Enter the namespace of I<domain> and execute the command C</path/to/binary>
passing the requested args. The binary path is relative to the container
root filesystem, not the host root filesystem. The binary will inherit the
environment variables / console visible to virsh. This command only works
3826 3827
when connected to the LXC hypervisor driver.  This command succeeds only
if C</path/to/binary> has 0 exit status.
3828

3829 3830
=back

3831 3832
=head1 ENVIRONMENT

3833 3834 3835 3836 3837
The following environment variables can be set to alter the behaviour
of C<virsh>

=over 4

S
Supriya Kannery 已提交
3838 3839 3840 3841
=item VIRSH_DEBUG=<0 to 4>

Turn on verbose debugging of virsh commands. Valid levels are

3842 3843
=over 4

S
Supriya Kannery 已提交
3844 3845 3846 3847 3848 3849 3850 3851 3852 3853 3854 3855 3856 3857 3858 3859 3860 3861 3862 3863
=item * VIRSH_DEBUG=0

DEBUG - Messages at ALL levels get logged

=item * VIRSH_DEBUG=1

INFO - Logs messages at levels INFO, NOTICE, WARNING and ERROR

=item * VIRSH_DEBUG=2

NOTICE - Logs messages at levels NOTICE, WARNING and ERROR

=item * VIRSH_DEBUG=3

WARNING - Logs messages at levels WARNING and ERROR

=item * VIRSH_DEBUG=4

ERROR - Messages at only ERROR level gets logged.

3864 3865
=back

S
Supriya Kannery 已提交
3866 3867 3868 3869
=item VIRSH_LOG_FILE=C<LOGFILE>

The file to log virsh debug messages.

3870 3871 3872
=item VIRSH_DEFAULT_CONNECT_URI

The hypervisor to connect to by default. Set this to a URI, in the same
3873 3874 3875 3876 3877 3878 3879 3880 3881 3882
format as accepted by the B<connect> option. This environment variable
is deprecated in favour of the global B<LIBVIRT_DEFAULT_URI> variable
which serves the same purpose.

=item LIBVIRT_DEFAULT_URI

The hypervisor to connect to by default. Set this to a URI, in the
same format as accepted by the B<connect> option. This overrides
the default URI set in any client config file and prevents libvirt
from probing for drivers.
3883

3884
=item VISUAL
E
Eric Blake 已提交
3885

E
Eric Blake 已提交
3886
The editor to use by the B<edit> and related options.
E
Eric Blake 已提交
3887

3888 3889
=item EDITOR

E
Eric Blake 已提交
3890
The editor to use by the B<edit> and related options, if C<VISUAL>
3891 3892
is not set.

3893 3894 3895 3896 3897
=item VIRSH_HISTSIZE

The number of commands to remember in the command  history.  The
default value is 500.

3898
=item LIBVIRT_DEBUG=LEVEL
3899

3900
Turn on verbose debugging of all libvirt API calls. Valid levels are
3901

3902 3903 3904 3905 3906 3907 3908 3909 3910 3911 3912 3913 3914 3915 3916 3917 3918 3919 3920 3921 3922 3923 3924 3925 3926 3927 3928 3929 3930 3931 3932
=over 4

=item * LIBVIRT_DEBUG=1

Messages at level DEBUG or above

=item * LIBVIRT_DEBUG=2

Messages at level INFO or above

=item * LIBVIRT_DEBUG=3

Messages at level WARNING or above

=item * LIBVIRT_DEBUG=4

Messages at level ERROR or above

=back

For further information about debugging options consult C<http://libvirt.org/logging.html>

=back

=head1 BUGS

Report any bugs discovered to the libvirt community via the mailing
list C<http://libvirt.org/contact.html> or bug tracker C<http://libvirt.org/bugs.html>.
Alternatively report bugs to your software distributor / vendor.

=head1 AUTHORS
3933

3934
  Please refer to the AUTHORS file distributed with libvirt.
3935

3936
  Based on the xm man page by:
3937 3938 3939
  Sean Dague <sean at dague dot net>
  Daniel Stekloff <dsteklof at us dot ibm dot com>

3940
=head1 COPYRIGHT
3941

3942
Copyright (C) 2005, 2007-2014 Red Hat, Inc., and the authors listed in the
3943
libvirt AUTHORS file.
3944 3945

=head1 LICENSE
3946

3947 3948 3949 3950 3951 3952
virsh is distributed under the terms of the GNU LGPL v2+.
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There
is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
PURPOSE

=head1 SEE ALSO
3953

3954 3955
L<virt-install(1)>, L<virt-xml-validate(1)>, L<virt-top(1)>, L<virt-df(1)>,
L<http://www.libvirt.org/>
3956

3957
=cut