- Preface
- I Introduction
- II Managing virtual machines with
libvirt
- 7 Starting and stopping
libvirtd
- 8 Preparing the VM Host Server
- 9 Guest installation
- 10 Basic VM Guest management
- 11 Connecting and authorizing
- 12 Advanced storage topics
- 13 Configuring virtual machines with Virtual Machine Manager
- 13.1 Machine setup
- 13.2 Storage
- 13.3 Controllers
- 13.4 Networking
- 13.5 Input devices
- 13.6 Video
- 13.7 USB redirectors
- 13.8 Miscellaneous
- 13.9 Adding a CD/DVD-ROM device with Virtual Machine Manager
- 13.10 Adding a floppy device with Virtual Machine Manager
- 13.11 Ejecting and changing floppy or CD/DVD-ROM media with Virtual Machine Manager
- 13.12 Assigning a host PCI device to a VM Guest
- 13.13 Assigning a host USB device to a VM Guest
- 14 Configuring virtual machines with
virsh
- 14.1 Editing the VM configuration
- 14.2 Changing the machine type
- 14.3 Configuring hypervisor features
- 14.4 Configuring CPU
- 14.5 Changing boot options
- 14.6 Configuring memory allocation
- 14.7 Adding a PCI device
- 14.8 Adding a USB device
- 14.9 Adding SR-IOV devices
- 14.10 Listing attached devices
- 14.11 Configuring storage devices
- 14.12 Configuring controller devices
- 14.13 Configuring video devices
- 14.14 Configuring network devices
- 14.15 Using macvtap to share VM Host Server network interfaces
- 14.16 Disabling a memory balloon device
- 14.17 Configuring multiple monitors (dual head)
- 14.18 Crypto adapter pass-through to KVM guests on IBM Z
- 15 Xen to KVM migration guide
- 7 Starting and stopping
- III Hypervisor-independent features
- IV Managing virtual machines with Xen
- 22 Setting up a virtual machine host
- 23 Virtual networking
- 24 Managing a virtualization environment
- 25 Block devices in Xen
- 26 Virtualization: configuration options and settings
- 27 Administrative tasks
- 28 XenStore: configuration database shared between domains
- 29 Xen as a high-availability virtualization host
- 30 Xen: converting a paravirtual (PV) guest into a fully virtual (FV/HVM) guest
- V Managing virtual machines with QEMU
- 31 QEMU overview
- 32 Setting up a KVM VM Host Server
- 33 Guest installation
- 34 Running virtual machines with qemu-system-ARCH
- 35 Virtual machine administration using QEMU monitor
- 35.1 Accessing monitor console
- 35.2 Getting information about the guest system
- 35.3 Changing VNC password
- 35.4 Managing devices
- 35.5 Controlling keyboard and mouse
- 35.6 Changing available memory
- 35.7 Dumping virtual machine memory
- 35.8 Managing virtual machine snapshots
- 35.9 Suspending and resuming virtual machine execution
- 35.10 Live migration
- 35.11 QMP - QEMU machine protocol
- VI Troubleshooting
- Glossary
- A Configuring GPU Pass-Through for NVIDIA cards
- B GNU licenses
- 3.1 Xen virtualization architecture
- 4.1 KVM virtualization architecture
- 6.1 System Role screen
- 8.1 Connection details
- 8.2 Create virtual network
- 9.1 Specifying default options for new VMs
- 13.1 view of a VM Guest
- 13.2 Overview details
- 13.3 VM Guest title and description
- 13.4 Performance
- 13.5 Statistics charts
- 13.6 Processor view
- 13.7 Memory view
- 13.8 Boot options
- 13.9 Add a new storage
- 13.10 Add a new controller
- 13.11 Add a new network interface
- 13.12 Add a new input device
- 13.13 Add a new video device
- 13.14 Add a new USB redirector
- 13.15 Adding a PCI device
- 13.16 Adding a USB device
- 16.1 Caching mechanism
- 27.1 Boot loader settings
- 32.1 Installing the KVM hypervisor and tools
- 32.2 Network bridge
- 34.1 QEMU window with SLES as VM Guest
- 34.2 QEMU VNC session
- 34.3 Authentication dialog in Remmina
- 8.1 NAT-based network
- 8.2 Routed network
- 8.3 Isolated network
- 8.4 Using an existing bridge on VM Host Server
- 9.1 Loading kernel and initrd from HTTP server
- 9.2 Example of a
virt-install
command line - 10.1 Typical output of
kvm_stat
- 14.1 Example XML configuration file
- 24.1 Guest domain configuration file for SLED 12:
/etc/xen/sled12.cfg
- 32.1 Exporting host's file system with VirtFS
- 34.1 Restricted user-mode networking
- 34.2 User-mode networking with custom IP range
- 34.3 User-mode networking with network-boot and TFTP
- 34.4 User-mode networking with host port forwarding
- 34.5 Password authentication
- 34.6 x509 certificate authentication
- 34.7 x509 certificate and password authentication
- 34.8 SASL authentication
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