Linux KVM Virtualization Guest Operations: Difference between revisions
Line 62: | Line 62: | ||
{{Internal|Linux Virtualization Cloning a KVM Guest Virtual Machine|Cloning a Guest Virtual Machine}} | {{Internal|Linux Virtualization Cloning a KVM Guest Virtual Machine|Cloning a Guest Virtual Machine}} | ||
=Remove a Guest= | |||
virsh | |||
==Snapshot a Guest Virtual Machine== | ==Snapshot a Guest Virtual Machine== |
Revision as of 22:02, 3 November 2017
Internal
Overview
List Available Guests
virsh list [--all]
Information about a Guest
Guest Configuration
The following command provides details, about:
- the amount of virtual memory and virtual CPU allocated to the guest.
- guest disk devices, their type (qcow, raw, etc.), their mapping on external storage volumes, etc.
- guest network devices.
- etc.
virsh dumpxml <guest-name>
Filesystems
virt-filesystems --all -lh -d <guest-name>
Running State of a Guest
virsh domstate
Start/Stop Guest Virtual Machines
virsh start [--console] <vm-name>
virsh shutdown <vm-name>
Connect to the Guest Virtual Machine
virsh console
Create a Guest Virtual Machine
Can I name a guest "ose36.master", or "environment-name.host-in-environment-name"?. It would be useful in virsh list.
Virtualization host storage and host-level networking must be configured as a prerequisite to creating guest virtual machines. Once storage pools and storage volumes are made available, and the networking is configured, guest virtual machines can be created with
virt-install
If the XML definition of a virtual machine is available, it can be created with:
virsh define
Add Storage to Guests
Cloning and Snapshotting
Clone a Guest Virtual Machine
The goal of a cloning operation is to create an entirely new guest, based on the configuration of an existing guest. Entirely new storage must be provisioned during the cloning operation, and the O/S image must be transferred on the new storage and updated as described below. Also, care should be taken to avoid conflict while accessing shared resources - memory, CPUs, network devices.
Remove a Guest
virsh
Snapshot a Guest Virtual Machine
The goal of a snapshotting operation is to preserve the state of the guest, at a certain moment in time, so it can be reverted to, later, possibly after the guest was removed for a while from the virtualization host. For more theoretical considerations concerning guest snapshots, see "Linux Virtualization Concepts - KVM Virtual Machine Snapshot".