libvirt
A VM Guest consists of an image containing an operating system and data files and a configuration file describing the VM Guest's virtual hardware resources. VM Guests are hosted on and controlled by the VM Host Server. This section provides generalized instructions for installing a VM Guest.
Virtual machines have few if any requirements above those required to run the operating system. If the operating system has not been optimized for the virtual machine host environment, it can only run on hardware-assisted virtualization computer hardware, in full virtualization mode, and requires specific device drivers to be loaded. The hardware that is presented to the VM Guest depends on the configuration of the host.
You should be aware of any licensing issues related to running a single licensed copy of an operating system on multiple virtual machines. Consult the operating system license agreement for more information.
The
wizard helps you through the steps required to create a virtual machine and install its operating system. There are two ways to start it: Within Virtual Machine Manager, either click or choose › . Alternatively, start YaST and choose › .Start the
wizard either from YaST or Virtual Machine Manager.Choose an installation source—either a locally available media or a network installation source. If you want to set up your VM Guest from an existing image, choose
.On a VM Host Server running the Xen hypervisor, you can choose whether to install a paravirtualized or a fully virtualized guest. The respective option is available under
. Depending on this choice, not all installation options may be available.Depending on your choice in the previous step, you need to provide the following data:
Specify the path on the VM Host Server to an ISO image containing the installation data. If it is available as a volume in a libvirt storage pool, you can also select it using Chapter 10, Managing Storage.
. For more information, seeAlternatively, choose a physical CD-ROM or DVD inserted in the optical drive of the VM Host Server.
Provide the ftp://
,
http://
, https://
, and
nfs://
.
Under
, provide a path to an auto-installation file (AutoYaST or Kickstart, for example) and kernel parameters. Having provided a URL, the operating system should be automatically detected correctly. If this is not the case, deselect and manually select the and .When booting via PXE, you only need to provide the
and the .To set up the VM Guest from an existing image, you need to specify the path on the VM Host Server to the image. If it is available as a volume in a libvirt storage pool, you can also select it using Chapter 10, Managing Storage.
. For more information, seeChoose the memory size and number of CPUs for the new virtual machine.
This step is omitted when
is chosen in the first step.
Set up a virtual hard disk for the VM Guest. Either create a new disk
image or choose an existing one from a storage pool (for more information,
see Chapter 10, Managing Storage). If you choose to create a
disk, a qcow2
image will be created. By default, it is
stored under /var/lib/libvirt/images
.
Setting up a disk is optional. If you are running a live system directly from CD or DVD, for example, you can omit this step by deactivating
.On the last screen of the wizard, specify the name for the virtual machine. To be offered the possibility to review and make changes to the virtualized hardware selection, activate
. Find options to specify the network device under .Click
.(Optional) If you kept the defaults in the previous step, the installation will now start. If you selected , a VM Guest configuration dialog opens. For more information about configuring VM Guests, see Chapter 12, Configuring Virtual Machines with Virtual Machine Manager.
When you are done configuring, click
.The installation starts in a Virtual Machine Manager console window. Some key combinations, such as Ctrl–Alt–F1, are recognized by the VM Host Server but are not passed to the virtual machine. To bypass the VM Host Server, Virtual Machine Manager provides the “sticky key” functionality. Pressing Ctrl, Alt, or Shift three times makes the key sticky, then you can press the remaining keys to pass the combination to the virtual machine.
For example, to pass Ctrl–Alt–F2 to a Linux virtual machine, press Ctrl three times, then press Alt–F2. You can also press Alt three times, then press Ctrl–F2.
The sticky key functionality is available in the Virtual Machine Manager during and after installing a VM Guest.
virt-install
#Edit source
virt-install
is a command line tool that helps you create
new virtual machines using the libvirt
library. It is useful if you cannot
use the graphical user interface, or need to automatize the process of
creating virtual machines.
virt-install
is a complex script with a lot of command
line switches. The following are required. For more information, see the man
page of virt-install
(1).
--name VM_GUEST_NAME
:
Specify the name of the new virtual machine. The name must be unique
across all guests known to the hypervisor on the same connection. It is
used to create and name the guest’s configuration file and you can
access the guest with this name from virsh
.
Alphanumeric and _-.:+
characters are allowed.
--memory REQUIRED_MEMORY
:
Specify the amount of memory to allocate for the new virtual machine in
megabytes.
--vcpus NUMBER_OF_CPUS
:
Specify the number of virtual CPUs. For best performance, the number of
virtual processors should be less than or equal to the number of
physical processors.
--paravirt
: Set up a paravirtualized guest. This is
the default if the VM Host Server supports paravirtualization and full
virtualization.
--hvm
: Set up a fully virtualized guest.
--virt-type HYPERVISOR
:
Specify the hypervisor. Supported values are kvm
,
xen
, or lxc
.
Specify one of --disk
, --filesystem
or
--nodisks
the type of the storage for the new virtual
machine. For example, --disk size=10
creates 10 GB disk
in the default image location for the hypervisor and uses it for the
VM Guest. --filesystem
/export/path/on/vmhost
specifies the
directory on the VM Host Server to be exported to the guest. And
--nodisks
sets up a VM Guest without a local storage
(good for Live CDs).
Specify the installation method using one of --location
,
--cdrom
, --pxe
,
--import
, or --boot
.
Use the --graphics VALUE
option to specify how to access the installation. openSUSE Leap supports
the values vnc
or none
.
If using VNC, virt-install
tries to launch
virt-viewer
. If it is not installed or cannot be run,
connect to the VM Guest manually with you preferred viewer. To
explicitly prevent virt-install
from launching the
viewer use --noautoconsole
. To define a password for
accessing the VNC session, use the following syntax: --graphics
vnc,password=PASSWORD
.
In case you are using --graphics none
, you can access
the VM Guest through operating system supported services, such as SSH or
VNC. Refer to the operating system installation manual on how to set up
these services in the installation system.
It is possible to directly specify the Kernel and Initrd of the installer, for example from a network source.
To pass additional boot parameters, use the
--extra-args
option. This can be used to specify
a network configuration. For details, see https://en.opensuse.org/SDB:Linuxrc.
root #
virt-install
--location \ "http://download.opensuse.org/pub/opensuse/distribution/leap/15.0/repo/oss" \ --extra-args="textmode=1" --name "Leap15" --memory 2048 --virt-type kvm \ --connect qemu:///system --disk size=10 --graphics vnc --network \ network=vnet_nated
By default, the console is not enabled for new virtual machines installed
using virt-install
. To enable it, use
--extra-args="console=ttyS0 textmode=1"
as in the
following example:
tux >
virt-install --virt-type kvm --name sles12 --memory 1024 \
--disk /var/lib/libvirt/images/disk1.qcow2 --os-variant sles12
--extra-args="console=ttyS0 textmode=1" --graphics none
After the installation finishes, the
/etc/default/grub
file in the VM image will be
updated with the console=ttyS0
option on the
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT
line.
Install OVMF as described in Section 5.5, “Installing UEFI Support”. Then add the
--boot uefi
option to the
virt-install
command.
Secure boot will be used automatically when setting up a new VM
with OVMF. To use a specific firmware, use --boot
loader=/usr/share/qemu/ovmf-VERSION.bin
.
Replace VERSION with the file you
need.
virt-install
command line #The following command line example creates a new SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 12 virtual machine with a virtio accelerated disk and network card. It creates a new 10 GB qcow2 disk image as a storage, the source installation media being the host CD-ROM drive. It will use VNC graphics, and it will auto-launch the graphical client.
tux >
virt-install --connect qemu:///system --virt-type kvm --name sled12 \
--memory 1024 --disk size=10 --cdrom /dev/cdrom --graphics vnc \
--os-variant sled12
tux >
virt-install --connect xen:// --virt-type xen --name sled12 \
--memory 1024 --disk size=10 --cdrom /dev/cdrom --graphics vnc \
--os-variant sled12
This section provides instructions for operations exceeding the scope of a normal installation, such as memory ballooning and installing add-on products.
Some operating systems such as openSUSE Leap offer to include add-on products in the installation process. If the add-on product installation source is provided via SUSE Customer Center, no special VM Guest configuration is needed. If it is provided via CD/DVD or ISO image, it is necessary to provide the VM Guest installation system with both the standard installation medium image and the image of the add-on product.
If you are using the GUI-based installation, select
in the last step of the wizard and add the add-on product ISO image via › . Specify the path to the image and set the to .
If you are installing from the command line, you need to set up the virtual
CD/DVD drives with the --disk
parameter rather than with
--cdrom
. The device that is specified first is used for
booting. The following example will install SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 together with SUSE
Enterprise Storage extension:
tux >
virt-install --name sles15+storage --memory 2048 --disk size=10 \
--disk /path/to/SLE-15-SP2-Full-ARCH-GM-media1.iso-x86_64-GM-DVD1.iso,device=cdrom \
--disk /path/to/SUSE-Enterprise-Storage-VERSION-DVD-ARCH-Media1.iso,device=cdrom \
--graphics vnc --os-variant sles15