libvirt/tools/virsh.pod

3179 lines
130 KiB
Plaintext
Raw Normal View History

=head1 NAME
virsh - management user interface
=head1 SYNOPSIS
B<virsh> [I<OPTION>]... [I<COMMAND_STRING>]
B<virsh> [I<OPTION>]... I<COMMAND> [I<ARG>]...
=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
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
providing a long term stable C API. It currently supports Xen, QEmu,
KVM, LXC, OpenVZ, VirtualBox and VMware ESX.
The basic structure of most virsh usage is:
virsh [OPTION]... <command> <domain> [ARG]...
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.
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
the program.
The B<virsh> program understands the following I<OPTIONS>.
=over 4
=item B<-h>, B<--help>
Ignore all other arguments, and behave as if the B<help> command were
given instead.
=item B<-v>, B<--version[=short]>
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.
=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
range from 0 to 4 (default). See the documentation of B<VIRSH_DEBUG>
environment variable below for the description of each I<LEVEL>.
=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.
=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, @, [, ], \, ^, _.
=back
=head1 NOTES
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>.
Most B<virsh> commands require root privileges to run due to the
communications channels used to talk to the hypervisor. Running as
non root will return an error.
Most B<virsh> commands act synchronously, except maybe shutdown,
setvcpus and setmem. In those cases the fact that the B<virsh>
program returned, may not mean the action is complete and you
must poll periodically to detect that the guest completed the
operation.
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.
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
2012-10-11 16:31:20 +00:00
suffixes can be used to select a specific scale:
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
=head1 GENERIC COMMANDS
The following commands are generic i.e. not specific to a domain.
=over 4
=item B<help> [I<command-or-group>]
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
connect (re)connect to hypervisor
freecell NUMA free memory
hostname print the hypervisor hostname
qemu-attach Attach to existing QEMU process
qemu-monitor-command QEMU Monitor Command
qemu-agent-command QEMU Guest Agent Command
sysinfo print the hypervisor sysinfo
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
=item B<quit>, B<exit>
quit this interactive terminal
=item B<version>
Will print out the major version info about what this built from.
=over 4
B<Example>
B<virsh> version
Compiled against library: libvir 0.0.6
Using library: libvir 0.0.6
Using API: Xen 3.0.0
Running hypervisor: Xen 3.0.0
=back
=item B<cd> [I<directory>]
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.
=item B<connect> I<URI> [I<--readonly>]
(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:
=over 4
=item xen:///
this is used to connect to the local Xen hypervisor, this is the default
=item qemu:///system
connect locally as root to the daemon supervising QEmu and KVM domains
=item qemu:///session
connect locally as a normal user to his own set of QEmu and KVM domains
2010-01-17 23:48:39 +00:00
=item lxc:///
connect to a local linux container
=back
For remote access see the documentation page at
L<http://libvirt.org/uri.html> on how to make URIs.
The I<--readonly> option allows for read-only connection
=item B<uri>
Prints the hypervisor canonical URI, can be useful in shell mode.
=item B<hostname>
Print the hypervisor hostname.
=item B<sysinfo>
Print the XML representation of the hypervisor sysinfo, if available.
=item B<nodeinfo>
Returns basic information about the node, like number and type of CPU,
2011-06-02 08:56:43 +00:00
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.
=item B<nodecpumap>
Displays the node's total number of CPUs, the number of online CPUs
and the list of online CPUs.
=item B<nodecpustats> [I<cpu>] [I<--percent>]
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.
=item B<nodememstats> [I<cell>]
Returns memory stats of the node.
If I<cell> is specified, this will prints specified cell statistics only.
=item B<nodesuspend> [I<target>] [I<duration>]
Puts the node (host machine) into a system-wide sleep state such as
Suspend-to-RAM, Suspend-to-Disk or Hybrid-Suspend and sets up a
Real-Time-Clock interrupt to fire (to wake up the node) after a time delay
specified by the 'duration' parameter. The duration time should be
at least 60 seconds.
=item B<node-memory-tune> [I<shm-pages-to-scan>] [I<shm-sleep-millisecs>]
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
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.
=item B<capabilities>
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
description see:
L<http://libvirt.org/formatcaps.html>
The XML also show the NUMA topology information if available.
=item B<inject-nmi> I<domain>
Inject NMI to the guest.
=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>]
Prints information about existing domains. If no options are
specified it prints out information about running domains.
An example format for the list is as follows:
B<virsh> list
Id Name State
----------------------------------------------------
0 Domain-0 running
2 fedora paused
Name is the name of the domain. ID the domain numeric id.
State is the run state (see below).
B<STATES>
The State field lists 8 states for a domain, and which ones the
current domain is in.
=over 4
=item B<running>
The domain is currently running on a CPU
=item B<idle>
The domain is idle, and not running or runnable. This can be caused
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.
=item B<paused>
The domain has been paused, usually occurring through the administrator
running B<virsh suspend>. When in a paused state the domain will still
consume allocated resources like memory, but will not be eligible for
scheduling by the hypervisor.
=item B<shutdown>
The domain is in the process of shutting down, i.e. the guest operating system
has been notified and should be in the process of stopping its operations
gracefully.
=item B<shut off>
The domain is not running. Usually this indicates the domain has been
shut down completely, or has not been started.
=item B<crashed>
The domain has crashed, which is always a violent ending. Usually
this state can only occur if the domain has been configured not to
restart on crash.
=item B<dying>
The domain is in process of dying, but hasn't completely shutdown or
crashed.
=item B<pmsuspended>
The domain has been suspended by guest power management, e.g. entered
into s3 state.
=back
Normally only active domains are listed. To list inactive domains specify
I<--inactive> or I<--all> to list both active and inactive domains.
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:
=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.
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.
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
I<--table> output.
Example:
B<virsh> list --title
Id Name State Title
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
0 Domain-0 running Mailserver 1
2 fedora paused
2012-03-22 20:49:07 +00:00
=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.
=item B<cpu-baseline> I<FILE>
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
B<capabilities> command.
=item B<cpu-compare> I<FILE>
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:
L<http://libvirt.org/formatdomain.html#elementsCPU>
=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.
=back
=head1 DOMAIN COMMANDS
The following commands manipulate domains directly, as stated
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.
=over 4
=item B<autostart> [I<--disable>] I<domain>
Configure a domain to be automatically started at boot.
The option I<--disable> disables autostarting.
=item B<console> I<domain> [I<devname>] [I<--safe>] [I<--force>]
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.
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.
=item B<create> I<FILE> [I<--console>] [I<--paused>] [I<--autodestroy>]
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
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.
If I<--autodestroy> is requested, then the guest will be automatically
destroyed when virsh closes its connection to libvirt, or otherwise
exits.
B<Example>
virsh dumpxml <domain> > domain.xml
vi domain.xml (or make changes with your other text editor)
virsh create domain.xml
=item B<define> I<FILE>
Define a domain from an XML <file>. The domain definition is registered
but not started. If domain is already running, the changes will take
effect on the next boot.
=item B<desc> I<domain> [[I<--live>] [I<--config>] |
[I<--current>]] [I<--title>] [I<--edit>] [I<--new-desc>
New description or title message]
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.
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<--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.
If neither of I<--edit> and I<--new-desc> are specified the note or description
is displayed instead of being modified.
=item B<destroy> I<domain> [I<--graceful>]
Immediately terminate the domain I<domain>. This doesn't give the domain
OS any chance to react, and it's the equivalent of ripping the power
cord out on a physical machine. In most cases you will want to use
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.
If I<domain> is transient, then the metadata of any snapshots will
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>.
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.
=item B<domblkstat> I<domain> I<block-device> [I<--human>]
snapshot: also support disks by path I got confused when 'virsh domblkinfo dom disk' required the path to a disk (which can be ambiguous, since a single file can back multiple disks), rather than the unambiguous target device name that I was using in disk snapshots. So, in true developer fashion, I went for the best of both worlds - all interfaces that operate on a disk (aka block) now accept either the target name or the unambiguous path to the backing file used by the disk. * src/conf/domain_conf.h (virDomainDiskIndexByName): Add parameter. (virDomainDiskPathByName): New prototype. * src/libvirt_private.syms (domain_conf.h): Export it. * src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainDiskIndexByName): Also allow searching by path, and decide whether ambiguity is okay. (virDomainDiskPathByName): New function. (virDomainDiskRemoveByName, virDomainSnapshotAlignDisks): Update callers. * src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemudDomainBlockPeek) (qemuDomainAttachDeviceConfig, qemuDomainUpdateDeviceConfig) (qemuDomainGetBlockInfo, qemuDiskPathToAlias): Likewise. * src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessFindDomainDiskByPath): Likewise. * src/libxl/libxl_driver.c (libxlDomainAttachDeviceDiskLive) (libxlDomainDetachDeviceDiskLive, libxlDomainAttachDeviceConfig) (libxlDomainUpdateDeviceConfig): Likewise. * src/uml/uml_driver.c (umlDomainBlockPeek): Likewise. * src/xen/xend_internal.c (xenDaemonDomainBlockPeek): Likewise. * docs/formatsnapshot.html.in: Update documentation. * tools/virsh.pod (domblkstat, domblkinfo): Likewise. * docs/schemas/domaincommon.rng (diskTarget): Tighten pattern on disk targets. * docs/schemas/domainsnapshot.rng (disksnapshot): Update to match. * tests/domainsnapshotxml2xmlin/disk_snapshot.xml: Update test.
2011-08-20 02:38:36 +00:00
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
file='name'/>) for one of the disk devices attached to I<domain> (see
also B<domblklist> for listing these names).
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.
2012-10-11 16:31:20 +00:00
B<Explanation of fields> (fields appear in the following order):
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 -->
=item B<domifstat> I<domain> I<interface-device>
Get network interface stats for a running domain.
=item B<domif-setlink> I<domain> I<interface-device> I<state> [I<--config>]
Modify link state of the domain's virtual interface. Possible values for
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>.
I<interface-device> can be the interface's target name or the MAC address.
=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>.
I<interface-device> can be the interface's target name or the MAC address.
=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
in command I<attach-interface>.
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<--current> flags may be given, but I<--current> is
exclusive. If no flag is specified, behavior is different depending
on hypervisor.
=item B<dommemstat> I<domain>
Get memory stats for a running domain.
=item B<domblkerror> I<domain>
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.
=item B<domblkinfo> I<domain> I<block-device>
snapshot: also support disks by path I got confused when 'virsh domblkinfo dom disk' required the path to a disk (which can be ambiguous, since a single file can back multiple disks), rather than the unambiguous target device name that I was using in disk snapshots. So, in true developer fashion, I went for the best of both worlds - all interfaces that operate on a disk (aka block) now accept either the target name or the unambiguous path to the backing file used by the disk. * src/conf/domain_conf.h (virDomainDiskIndexByName): Add parameter. (virDomainDiskPathByName): New prototype. * src/libvirt_private.syms (domain_conf.h): Export it. * src/conf/domain_conf.c (virDomainDiskIndexByName): Also allow searching by path, and decide whether ambiguity is okay. (virDomainDiskPathByName): New function. (virDomainDiskRemoveByName, virDomainSnapshotAlignDisks): Update callers. * src/qemu/qemu_driver.c (qemudDomainBlockPeek) (qemuDomainAttachDeviceConfig, qemuDomainUpdateDeviceConfig) (qemuDomainGetBlockInfo, qemuDiskPathToAlias): Likewise. * src/qemu/qemu_process.c (qemuProcessFindDomainDiskByPath): Likewise. * src/libxl/libxl_driver.c (libxlDomainAttachDeviceDiskLive) (libxlDomainDetachDeviceDiskLive, libxlDomainAttachDeviceConfig) (libxlDomainUpdateDeviceConfig): Likewise. * src/uml/uml_driver.c (umlDomainBlockPeek): Likewise. * src/xen/xend_internal.c (xenDaemonDomainBlockPeek): Likewise. * docs/formatsnapshot.html.in: Update documentation. * tools/virsh.pod (domblkstat, domblkinfo): Likewise. * docs/schemas/domaincommon.rng (diskTarget): Tighten pattern on disk targets. * docs/schemas/domainsnapshot.rng (disksnapshot): Update to match. * tests/domainsnapshotxml2xmlin/disk_snapshot.xml: Update test.
2011-08-20 02:38:36 +00:00
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
file='name'/>) for one of the disk devices attached to I<domain> (see
also B<domblklist> for listing these names).
=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.
=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.
=item B<blockcommit> I<domain> I<path> [I<bandwidth>]
{[I<base>] | [I<--shallow>]} [I<top>] [I<--delete>]
[I<--wait> [I<--verbose>] [I<--timeout> B<seconds>]]
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
starts; using the I<--delete> flag will remove these files at the successful
completion of the commit operation.
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
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.
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
qemu, it may be non-zero only for an online domain.
=item B<blockcopy> I<domain> I<path> I<dest> [I<bandwidth>] [I<--shallow>]
[I<--reuse-external>] [I<--raw>] [I<--wait> [I<--verbose>]
[{I<--pivot> | I<--finish>}] [I<--timeout> B<seconds>] [I<--async>]]
Copy a disk backing image chain to I<dest>. 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 I<dest> must exist and have
contents identical to the resulting backing file (that is, it must
start with contents matching the backing file I<disk> if I<--shallow>
is used, otherwise it must start empty); this option is typically used
to set up a relative backing file name in the destination.
The format of the destination is determined by the first match in the
following list: if I<--raw> is specified, it will be raw; if
I<--reuse-external> is specified, the existing destination is probed
for a format; and in all other cases, the destination format will
match the source format.
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>
will produce periodic status updates. Using I<--pivot> or I<--finish>
along with I<--wait> will additionally end the job cleanly rather than
leaving things in the mirroring phase. 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.
I<path> specifies fully-qualified path of the disk.
I<bandwidth> specifies copying bandwidth limit in MiB/s.
=item B<blockpull> I<domain> I<path> [I<bandwidth>] [I<base>]
[I<--wait> [I<--verbose>] [I<--timeout> B<seconds>] [I<--async>]]
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.
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.
blockjob: add API for async virDomainBlockJobAbort Block job cancellation can take a while. Now that upstream qemu 1.1 has asynchronous block cancellation, we want to expose that to the user. Therefore, the following updates are made to the virDomainBlockJob API: A new block job event type VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_JOB_CANCELED is managed by libvirt. Regardless of the flags used with virDomainBlockJobAbort, this event will be raised: 1. when using synchronous block_job_cancel (the event will be synthesized by libvirt), and 2. whenever it is received from qemu (via asynchronous block-job-cancel). Note that the event may be detected by libvirt even before the virDomainBlockJobAbort completes (always true when it is synthesized, but also possible if cancellation was fast). A new extension flag VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_JOB_ABORT_ASYNC is added to the virDomainBlockJobAbort API. When enabled, this function will allow (but not require) asynchronous operation (ie, it returns as soon as possible, which might be before the job has actually been canceled). When the API is used in this mode, it is the responsibility of the caller to wait for a VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_JOB_CANCELED event or poll via the virDomainGetBlockJobInfo API to check the cancellation status. This patch also exposes the new flag through virsh, and makes virsh slightly easier to use (--async implies --abort, and lack of any options implies --info), although it leaves the qemu implementation for later patches. Signed-off-by: Adam Litke <agl@us.ibm.com> Cc: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
2012-01-13 20:51:23 +00:00
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.
=item B<blkdeviotune> I<domain> I<device>
[[I<--config>] [I<--live>] | [I<--current>]]
[[I<total-bytes-sec>] | [I<read-bytes-sec>] [I<write-bytes-sec>]]
[[I<total-iops-sec>] | [I<read-iops-sec>] [I<write-iops-sec>]]
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:
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.
Older versions of virsh only accepted these options with underscore
instead of dash, as in I<--total_bytes_sec>.
Bytes and iops values are independent, but setting only one value (such
as --read-bytes-sec) resets the other two in that category to unlimited.
An explicit 0 also clears any limit. A non-zero value for a given total
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.
Both I<--live> and I<--current> flags may be given, but I<--current> is
exclusive. If no flag is specified, behavior is different depending
on hypervisor.
=item B<blockjob> I<domain> I<path> { [I<--abort>] [I<--async>] [I<--pivot>] |
blockjob: add API for async virDomainBlockJobAbort Block job cancellation can take a while. Now that upstream qemu 1.1 has asynchronous block cancellation, we want to expose that to the user. Therefore, the following updates are made to the virDomainBlockJob API: A new block job event type VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_JOB_CANCELED is managed by libvirt. Regardless of the flags used with virDomainBlockJobAbort, this event will be raised: 1. when using synchronous block_job_cancel (the event will be synthesized by libvirt), and 2. whenever it is received from qemu (via asynchronous block-job-cancel). Note that the event may be detected by libvirt even before the virDomainBlockJobAbort completes (always true when it is synthesized, but also possible if cancellation was fast). A new extension flag VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_JOB_ABORT_ASYNC is added to the virDomainBlockJobAbort API. When enabled, this function will allow (but not require) asynchronous operation (ie, it returns as soon as possible, which might be before the job has actually been canceled). When the API is used in this mode, it is the responsibility of the caller to wait for a VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_JOB_CANCELED event or poll via the virDomainGetBlockJobInfo API to check the cancellation status. This patch also exposes the new flag through virsh, and makes virsh slightly easier to use (--async implies --abort, and lack of any options implies --info), although it leaves the qemu implementation for later patches. Signed-off-by: Adam Litke <agl@us.ibm.com> Cc: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
2012-01-13 20:51:23 +00:00
[I<--info>] | [I<bandwidth>] }
blockjob: add API for async virDomainBlockJobAbort Block job cancellation can take a while. Now that upstream qemu 1.1 has asynchronous block cancellation, we want to expose that to the user. Therefore, the following updates are made to the virDomainBlockJob API: A new block job event type VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_JOB_CANCELED is managed by libvirt. Regardless of the flags used with virDomainBlockJobAbort, this event will be raised: 1. when using synchronous block_job_cancel (the event will be synthesized by libvirt), and 2. whenever it is received from qemu (via asynchronous block-job-cancel). Note that the event may be detected by libvirt even before the virDomainBlockJobAbort completes (always true when it is synthesized, but also possible if cancellation was fast). A new extension flag VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_JOB_ABORT_ASYNC is added to the virDomainBlockJobAbort API. When enabled, this function will allow (but not require) asynchronous operation (ie, it returns as soon as possible, which might be before the job has actually been canceled). When the API is used in this mode, it is the responsibility of the caller to wait for a VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_JOB_CANCELED event or poll via the virDomainGetBlockJobInfo API to check the cancellation status. This patch also exposes the new flag through virsh, and makes virsh slightly easier to use (--async implies --abort, and lack of any options implies --info), although it leaves the qemu implementation for later patches. Signed-off-by: Adam Litke <agl@us.ibm.com> Cc: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
2012-01-13 20:51:23 +00:00
Manage active block operations. There are three modes: I<--info>,
I<bandwidth>, and I<--abort>; I<--info> is default except that I<--async>
or I<--pivot> implies I<--abort>.
blockjob: add API for async virDomainBlockJobAbort Block job cancellation can take a while. Now that upstream qemu 1.1 has asynchronous block cancellation, we want to expose that to the user. Therefore, the following updates are made to the virDomainBlockJob API: A new block job event type VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_JOB_CANCELED is managed by libvirt. Regardless of the flags used with virDomainBlockJobAbort, this event will be raised: 1. when using synchronous block_job_cancel (the event will be synthesized by libvirt), and 2. whenever it is received from qemu (via asynchronous block-job-cancel). Note that the event may be detected by libvirt even before the virDomainBlockJobAbort completes (always true when it is synthesized, but also possible if cancellation was fast). A new extension flag VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_JOB_ABORT_ASYNC is added to the virDomainBlockJobAbort API. When enabled, this function will allow (but not require) asynchronous operation (ie, it returns as soon as possible, which might be before the job has actually been canceled). When the API is used in this mode, it is the responsibility of the caller to wait for a VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_JOB_CANCELED event or poll via the virDomainGetBlockJobInfo API to check the cancellation status. This patch also exposes the new flag through virsh, and makes virsh slightly easier to use (--async implies --abort, and lack of any options implies --info), although it leaves the qemu implementation for later patches. Signed-off-by: Adam Litke <agl@us.ibm.com> Cc: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
2012-01-13 20:51:23 +00:00
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).
If I<--abort> is specified, the active job on the specified disk will
blockjob: add API for async virDomainBlockJobAbort Block job cancellation can take a while. Now that upstream qemu 1.1 has asynchronous block cancellation, we want to expose that to the user. Therefore, the following updates are made to the virDomainBlockJob API: A new block job event type VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_JOB_CANCELED is managed by libvirt. Regardless of the flags used with virDomainBlockJobAbort, this event will be raised: 1. when using synchronous block_job_cancel (the event will be synthesized by libvirt), and 2. whenever it is received from qemu (via asynchronous block-job-cancel). Note that the event may be detected by libvirt even before the virDomainBlockJobAbort completes (always true when it is synthesized, but also possible if cancellation was fast). A new extension flag VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_JOB_ABORT_ASYNC is added to the virDomainBlockJobAbort API. When enabled, this function will allow (but not require) asynchronous operation (ie, it returns as soon as possible, which might be before the job has actually been canceled). When the API is used in this mode, it is the responsibility of the caller to wait for a VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_JOB_CANCELED event or poll via the virDomainGetBlockJobInfo API to check the cancellation status. This patch also exposes the new flag through virsh, and makes virsh slightly easier to use (--async implies --abort, and lack of any options implies --info), although it leaves the qemu implementation for later patches. Signed-off-by: Adam Litke <agl@us.ibm.com> Cc: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
2012-01-13 20:51:23 +00:00
be aborted. If I<--async> is also specified, this command will return
immediately, rather than waiting for the cancelation to complete. If
I<--pivot> is specified, this requests that an active copy job
be pivoted over to the new copy.
If I<--info> is specified, the active job information on the specified
disk will be printed.
I<bandwidth> can be used to set bandwidth limit for the active job.
=item B<blockresize> I<domain> I<path> I<size>
Resize a block device of domain while the domain is running, I<path>
blockjob: add API for async virDomainBlockJobAbort Block job cancellation can take a while. Now that upstream qemu 1.1 has asynchronous block cancellation, we want to expose that to the user. Therefore, the following updates are made to the virDomainBlockJob API: A new block job event type VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_JOB_CANCELED is managed by libvirt. Regardless of the flags used with virDomainBlockJobAbort, this event will be raised: 1. when using synchronous block_job_cancel (the event will be synthesized by libvirt), and 2. whenever it is received from qemu (via asynchronous block-job-cancel). Note that the event may be detected by libvirt even before the virDomainBlockJobAbort completes (always true when it is synthesized, but also possible if cancellation was fast). A new extension flag VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_JOB_ABORT_ASYNC is added to the virDomainBlockJobAbort API. When enabled, this function will allow (but not require) asynchronous operation (ie, it returns as soon as possible, which might be before the job has actually been canceled). When the API is used in this mode, it is the responsibility of the caller to wait for a VIR_DOMAIN_BLOCK_JOB_CANCELED event or poll via the virDomainGetBlockJobInfo API to check the cancellation status. This patch also exposes the new flag through virsh, and makes virsh slightly easier to use (--async implies --abort, and lack of any options implies --info), although it leaves the qemu implementation for later patches. Signed-off-by: Adam Litke <agl@us.ibm.com> Cc: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
2012-01-13 20:51:23 +00:00
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).
=item B<domdisplay> I<domain> [I<--include-password>]
Output a URI which can be used to connect to the graphical display of the
domain via VNC, SPICE or RDP. If I<--include-password> is specified, the
SPICE channel password will be included in the URI.
=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.
=item B<domhostname> I<domain>
Returns the hostname of a domain, if the hypervisor makes it available.
=item B<dominfo> I<domain>
Returns basic information about the domain.
=item B<domuuid> I<domain-name-or-id>
Convert a domain name or id to domain UUID
=item B<domid> I<domain-name-or-uuid>
Convert a domain name (or UUID) to a domain id
=item B<domjobabort> I<domain>
Abort the currently running domain job.
=item B<domjobinfo> I<domain>
Returns information about jobs running on a domain.
=item B<domname> I<domain-id-or-uuid>
Convert a domain Id (or UUID) to domain name
=item B<domstate> I<domain> [I<--reason>]
Returns state about a domain. I<--reason> tells virsh to also print
reason for the state.
=item B<domcontrol> I<domain>
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.
=item B<domxml-from-native> I<format> I<config>
Convert the file I<config> in the native guest configuration format
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
I<format> argument may be B<xen-xm> or B<xen-sxpr>.
=item B<domxml-to-native> I<format> I<xml>
Convert the file I<xml> in domain XML format to the native guest
configuration format named by I<format>. For QEMU/KVM hypervisor,
the I<format> argument must be B<qemu-argv>. For Xen hypervisor, the
I<format> argument may be B<xen-xm> or B<xen-sxpr>.
=item B<dump> I<domain> I<corefilepath> [I<--bypass-cache>]
{ [I<--live>] | [I<--crash>] | [I<--reset>] } [I<--verbose>] [I<--memory-only>]
Dumps the core of a domain to a file for analysis.
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.
If I<--reset> is specified, the domain is reset after successful dump.
Note, these three switches are mutually exclusive.
If I<--bypass-cache> is specified, the save will avoid the file system
cache, although this may slow down the operation.
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.
The progress may be monitored using B<domjobinfo> virsh command and canceled
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.
NOTE: Some hypervisors may require the user to manually ensure proper
permissions on file and path specified by argument I<corefilepath>.
=item B<dumpxml> I<domain> [I<--inactive>] [I<--security-info>]
[I<--update-cpu>] [I<--migratable>]
2010-04-06 13:51:41 +00:00
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.
Using I<--security-info> will also include security sensitive information
2010-04-06 13:51:41 +00:00
in the XML dump. I<--update-cpu> updates domain CPU requirements according to
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.
=item B<edit> I<domain>
Edit the XML configuration file for a domain, which will affect the
next boot of the guest.
This is equivalent to:
virsh dumpxml --inactive --security-info domain > domain.xml
vi domain.xml (or make changes with your other text editor)
virsh define domain.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<managedsave> I<domain> [I<--bypass-cache>]
[{I<--running> | I<--paused>}] [I<--verbose>]
Save and destroy (stop) a running domain, so it can be restarted from the same
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.
If I<--bypass-cache> is specified, the save will avoid the file system
cache, although this may slow down the operation.
The progress may be monitored using B<domjobinfo> virsh command and canceled
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.
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.
The B<dominfo> command can be used to query whether a domain currently
has any managed save image.
=item B<managedsave-remove> I<domain>
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.
=item B<maxvcpus> [I<type>]
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.
=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.
=item B<migrate> [I<--live>] [I<--offline>] [I<--direct>] [I<--p2p> [I<--tunnelled>]]
[I<--persistent>] [I<--undefinesource>] [I<--suspend>] [I<--copy-storage-all>]
[I<--copy-storage-inc>] [I<--change-protection>] [I<--unsafe>] [I<--verbose>]
I<domain> I<desturi> [I<migrateuri>] [I<dname>]
[I<--timeout> B<seconds>] [I<--xml> B<file>]
Migrate domain to another host. Add I<--live> for live migration; <--p2p>
for peer-2-peer migration; I<--direct> for direct migration; or I<--tunnelled>
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
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).
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
used to reject the migration if the hypervisor lacks change protection
support. I<--verbose> displays the progress of migration.
B<Note>: Individual hypervisors usually do not support all possible types of
migration. For example, QEMU does not support direct migration.
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.
The I<desturi> is the connection URI of the destination host, and
I<migrateuri> is the migration URI, which usually can be omitted.
I<dname> is used for renaming the domain to new name during migration, which
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.
I<--timeout> B<seconds> forces guest to suspend when live migration exceeds
that many seconds, and
then the migration will complete offline. It can only be used with I<--live>.
Running migration can be canceled by interrupting virsh (usually using
C<Ctrl-C>) or by B<domjobabort> command sent from another virsh instance.
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
=item B<migrate-setmaxdowntime> I<domain> I<downtime>
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.
=item B<migrate-setspeed> I<domain> I<bandwidth>
Set the maximum migration bandwidth (in Mbps) for a domain which is being
migrated to another host.
=item B<migrate-getspeed> I<domain>
Get the maximum migration bandwidth (in Mbps) for a domain.
=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.
I<mode> can be one of `strict', `interleave' and `preferred'. 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'.
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.
=item B<reboot> I<domain> [I<--mode MODE-LIST>]
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.
The exact behavior of a domain when it reboots is set by the
I<on_reboot> parameter in the domain's XML definition.
By default the hypervisor will try to pick a suitable shutdown
method. To specify an alternative method, the I<--mode> parameter
can specify a comma separated list which includes C<acpi>, C<agent>,
C<initctl> and C<signal>. The order in which drivers will try each
mode is undefined, and not related to the order specified to virsh.
For strict control over ordering, use a single mode at a time and
repeat the command.
=item B<reset> I<domain>
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.
=item B<restore> I<state-file> [I<--bypass-cache>] [I<--xml> B<file>]
[{I<--running> | I<--paused>}]
Restores a domain from a B<virsh save> state file. See I<save> for more info.
If I<--bypass-cache> is specified, the restore will avoid the file system
cache, although this may slow down the operation.
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.
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.
B<Note>: To avoid corrupting file system contents within the domain, you
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.
=item B<save> I<domain> I<state-file> [I<--bypass-cache>] [I<--xml> B<file>]
[{I<--running> | I<--paused>}] [I<--verbose>]
Saves a running domain (RAM, but not disk state) to a state file so that
it can be restored
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.
If I<--bypass-cache> is specified, the save will avoid the file system
cache, although this may slow down the operation.
The progress may be monitored using B<domjobinfo> virsh command and canceled
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
=item B<save-image-define> I<file> I<xml> [{I<--running> | I<--paused>}]
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.
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.
=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.
=item B<save-image-edit> I<file> [{I<--running> | I<--paused>}]
Edit the XML configuration associated with a saved state file I<file>
created by the B<save> command.
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.
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>.
=item B<schedinfo> [I<--set> B<parameter=value>] I<domain> [[I<--config>]
[I<--live>] | [I<--current>]]
=item B<schedinfo> [I<--weight> B<number>] [I<--cap> B<number>]
I<domain>
Allows you to show (and set) the domain scheduler parameters. The parameters
available for each hypervisor are:
2010-01-17 23:48:39 +00:00
LXC (posix scheduler) : cpu_shares
QEMU/KVM (posix scheduler): cpu_shares, vcpu_period, vcpu_quota,
emulator_period, emulator_quota
2010-01-17 23:48:39 +00:00
Xen (credit scheduler): weight, cap
ESX (allocation scheduler): reservation, limit, shares
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.
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.
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.
B<Note>: The weight and cap parameters are defined only for the
XEN_CREDIT scheduler and are now I<DEPRECATED>.
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.
=item B<screenshot> I<domain> [I<imagefilepath>] [I<--screen> B<screenID>]
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.
=item B<send-key> I<domain> [I<--codeset> B<codeset>]
[I<--holdtime> B<holdtime>] I<keycode>...
Parse the I<keycode> sequence as keystrokes to send to I<domain>.
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.
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.
=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>
# send three strokes 'k', 'e', 'y', using xt codeset. these
# are all pressed simultaneously and may be received by the guest
# in random order
virsh send-key dom --codeset xt 37 18 21
# send one stroke 'right-ctrl+C'
virsh send-key dom KEY_RIGHTCTRL KEY_C
# send a tab, held for 1 second
virsh send-key --holdtime 1000 0xf
=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
=item B<setmem> I<domain> B<size> [[I<--config>] [I<--live>] |
[I<--current>]]
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.
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.
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).
For Xen, you can only adjust the memory of a running domain if the domain is
paravirtualized or running the PV balloon driver.
=item B<setmaxmem> I<domain> B<size> [[I<--config>] [I<--live>] |
[I<--current>]]
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.
2011-11-29 11:45:18 +00:00
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.
This command works for at least the Xen, QEMU/KVM and vSphere/ESX hypervisors.
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).
=item B<memtune> I<domain> [I<--hard-limit> B<size>]
[I<--soft-limit> B<size>] [I<--swap-hard-limit> B<size>]
[I<--min-guarantee> B<size>] [[I<--config>] [I<--live>] | [I<--current>]]
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
QEMU/KVM support I<--hard-limit>, I<--soft-limit>, and I<--swap-hard-limit>.
I<--min-guarantee> is supported only by ESX hypervisor. Each of these
limits are scaled integers (see B<NOTES> above), with a default of
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).
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.
2011-11-29 11:45:18 +00:00
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.
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>
The maximum memory the guest can use.
=item I<--soft-limit>
The memory limit to enforce during memory contention.
=item I<--swap-hard-limit>
The maximum memory plus swap the guest can use. This has to be more
than hard-limit value provided.
=item I<--min-guarantee>
The guaranteed minimum memory allocation for the guest.
=back
Specifying -1 as a value for these limits is interpreted as unlimited.
=item B<blkiotune> I<domain> [I<--weight> B<weight>]
[I<--device-weights> B<device-weights>] [[I<--config>]
[I<--live>] | [I<--current>]]
Display or set the blkio parameters. QEMU/KVM supports I<--weight>.
I<--weight> is in range [100, 1000].
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.
Each weight is in the range [100, 1000], 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.
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.
2011-11-29 11:45:18 +00:00
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.
=item B<setvcpus> I<domain> I<count> [I<--maximum>] [[I<--config>]
[I<--live>] | [I<--current>]]
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.
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
specified together if supported by the hypervisor.
If I<--current> is specified, affect the current guest state.
When no flags are given, the I<--live>
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.
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.
=item B<shutdown> I<domain> [I<--mode MODE-LIST>]
Gracefully shuts down a domain. This coordinates with the domain OS
to perform graceful shutdown, so there is no guarantee that it will
succeed, and may take a variable length of time depending on what
services must be shutdown in the domain.
The exact behavior of a domain when it shuts down is set by the
I<on_shutdown> parameter in the domain's XML definition.
If I<domain> is transient, then the metadata of any snapshots will
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>.
By default the hypervisor will try to pick a suitable shutdown
method. To specify an alternative method, the I<--mode> parameter
can specify a comma separated list which includes C<acpi>, C<agent>,
C<initctl> and C<signal>. The order in which drivers will try each
mode is undefined, and not related to the order specified to virsh.
For strict control over ordering, use a single mode at a time and
repeat the command.
=item B<start> I<domain-name-or-uuid> [I<--console>] [I<--paused>]
[I<--autodestroy>] [I<--bypass-cache>] [I<--force-boot>]
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.
If I<--console> is requested, attach to the console after creation.
If I<--autodestroy> is requested, then the guest will be automatically
destroyed when virsh closes its connection to libvirt, or otherwise
exits. If I<--bypass-cache> is specified, and managedsave state exists,
the restore will avoid the file system cache, although this may slow
down the operation. If I<--force-boot> is specified, then any
managedsave state is discarded and a fresh boot occurs.
=item B<suspend> I<domain>
Suspend a running domain. It is kept in memory but won't be scheduled
anymore.
=item B<resume> I<domain>
Moves a domain out of the suspended state. This will allow a previously
suspended domain to now be eligible for scheduling by the underlying
hypervisor.
=item B<dompmsuspend> I<domain> I<target> [I<--duration>]
Suspend a running domain into one of these states (possible I<target>
values):
mem equivallent of S3 ACPI state
disk equivallent of S4 ACPI state
hybrid RAM is saved to disk but not powered off
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.
=item B<dompmwakeup> I<domain>
2012-02-10 12:07:24 +00:00
2012-09-04 10:01:41 +00:00
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.
2012-02-10 12:07:24 +00:00
=item B<ttyconsole> I<domain>
Output the device used for the TTY console of the domain. If the information
is not available the processes will provide an exit code of 1.
=item B<undefine> I<domain> [I<--managed-save>] [I<--snapshots-metadata>]
[ {I<--storage> B<volumes> | I<--remove-all-storage>} I<--wipe-storage>]
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.
The I<--managed-save> flag guarantees that any managed save image (see
the B<managedsave> command) is also cleaned up. Without the flag, attempts
to undefine a domain with a managed save image will fail.
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.
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
deleted.
(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.
NOTE: For an inactive domain, the domain name or UUID must be used as the
I<domain>.
=item B<vcpucount> I<domain> [{I<--maximum> | I<--active>}
{I<--config> | I<--live> | I<--current>}]
Print information about the virtual cpu counts of the given
I<domain>. If no flags are specified, all possible counts are
listed in a table; otherwise, the output is limited to just the
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.
I<--maximum> requests information on the maximum cap of vcpus that a
domain can add via B<setvcpus>, while I<--active> shows the current
usage; these two flags cannot both be specified. I<--config>
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.
Thus, this command always takes exactly zero or two flags.
=item B<vcpuinfo> I<domain>
Returns basic information about the domain virtual CPUs, like the number of
vCPUs, the running time, the affinity to physical processors.
=item B<vcpupin> I<domain> [I<vcpu>] [I<cpulist>] [[I<--live>]
[I<--config>] | [I<--current>]]
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
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.
If you want to reset vcpupin setting, that is, to pin vcpu all physical cpus,
simply specify 'r' as a 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.
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".
2012-08-21 09:18:40 +00:00
=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.
=item B<vncdisplay> I<domain>
Output the IP address and port number for the VNC display. If the information
is not available the processes will provide an exit code of 1.
=back
=head1 DEVICE COMMANDS
The following commands manipulate devices associated to domains.
The I<domain> can be specified as a short integer, a name or a full UUID.
To better understand the values allowed as options for the command
reading the documentation at L<http://libvirt.org/formatdomain.html> on the
format of the device sections to get the most accurate set of accepted values.
=over 4
=item B<attach-device> I<domain> I<FILE> [I<--config>]
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
attach taking effect the next time libvirt starts the domain. For
compatibility purposes, I<--persistent> is an alias of I<--config>.
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.
=item B<attach-disk> I<domain> I<source> I<target>
[I<--driver driver>] [I<--subdriver subdriver>] [I<--cache cache>]
[I<--type type>] [I<--mode mode>] [I<--config>] [I<--sourcetype soucetype>]
[I<--serial serial>] [I<--shareable>] [I<--rawio>] [I<--address address>]
[I<--multifunction>]
Attach a new disk device to the domain.
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
"logical" device name. I<driver> can be I<file>, I<tap> or I<phy> for the Xen
hypervisor depending on the kind of access; or I<qemu> for the QEMU emulator.
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.
I<mode> can specify the two specific mode I<readonly> or I<shareable>.
I<--config> indicates the changes will affect the next boot of the domain,
for compatibility purposes, I<--persistent> is alias of I<--config>.
I<sourcetype> can indicate the type of source (block|file)
I<cache> can be one of "default", "none", "writethrough", "writeback",
"directsync" or "unsafe".
I<serial> is the serial of disk device. I<shareable> indicates the disk device
is shareable between domains.
I<rawio> indicates the disk needs rawio capability.
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.
I<multifunction> indicates specified pci address is a multifunction pci device
address.
=item B<attach-interface> I<domain> I<type> I<source>
[I<--target target>] [I<--mac mac>] [I<--script script>] [I<--model model>]
[I<--config>] [I<--inbound average,peak,burst>] [I<--outbound average,peak,burst>]
Attach a new network interface to the domain.
I<type> can be either I<network> to indicate a physical network device or
I<bridge> to indicate a bridge to a device.
I<source> indicates the source device.
I<target> allows to indicate the target device in the guest. Names starting
with 'vnet' are considered as auto-generated an hence blanked out.
I<mac> allows to specify the MAC address of the network interface.
I<script> allows to specify a path to a script handling a bridge instead of
the default one.
I<model> allows to specify the model type.
I<--config> indicates the changes will affect the next boot of the domain,
for compatibility purposes, I<--persistent> is alias of I<--config>.
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.
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.
=item B<detach-device> I<domain> I<FILE> [I<--config>]
Detach a device from the domain, takes the same kind of XML descriptions
as command B<attach-device>.
If I<--config> is specified, alter persistent configuration, effect observed
on next boot, for compatibility purposes, I<--persistent> is alias of
I<--config>.
For passthrough host devices, see also B<nodedev-reattach>, needed if
the device does not use managed mode.
=item B<detach-disk> I<domain> I<target> [I<--config>]
Detach a disk device from a domain. The I<target> is the device as seen
from the domain.
If I<--config> is specified, alter persistent configuration, effect observed
on next boot, for compatibility purposes, I<--persistent> is alias of
I<--config>.
=item B<detach-interface> I<domain> I<type> [I<--mac mac>] [I<--config>]
Detach a network interface from a domain.
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.
If I<--config> is specified, alter persistent configuration, effect observed
on next boot, for compatibility purposes, I<--persistent> is alias of
I<--config>.
=item B<update-device> I<domain> I<file> [I<--config>] [I<--force>]
Update the characteristics of a device associated with I<domain>,
based on the device definition in an XML I<file>. If the I<--config>
option is used, the changes will take affect the next time libvirt
starts the domain. For compatibility purposes, I<--persistent> is
alias of I<--config>. 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
L<http://libvirt.org/formatdomain.html#elementsDevices> to learn about
libvirt XML format for a device.
=item B<change-media> I<domain> I<path> [I<--eject>] [I<--insert>]
[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.
=back
=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
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
automatically behave as if B<nodedev-detach> (guest start, device
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.
=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.
=item B<nodedev-destroy> I<nodedev>
Destroy (stop) a device on the host. 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.
=item B<nodedev-detach> I<nodedev>
Detach I<nodedev> from the host, so that it can safely be used by
guests via <hostdev> passthrough. This is reversed with
B<nodedev-reattach>, and is done automatically for managed devices.
For compatibility purposes, this command can also be spelled
B<nodedev-dettach>.
=item B<nodedev-dumpxml> I<nodedev>
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
libvirt (such as whether device reset is supported).
=item B<nodedev-list> I<cap> I<--tree>
List all of the devices available on the node that are known by libvirt.
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',
'scsi', 'storage'. 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.
=item B<nodedev-reattach> I<nodedev>
Declare that I<nodedev> is no longer in use by any guests, and that
the host can resume normal use of the device. This is done
automatically for devices in managed mode, but must be done explicitly
to match any explicit B<nodedev-detach>.
=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
=head1 VIRTUAL NETWORK COMMANDS
The following commands manipulate networks. Libvirt has the capability to
define virtual networks which can then be used by domains and linked to
actual network devices. For more detailed information about this feature
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,
but the way to name a virtual network is either by its name or UUID.
=over 4
=item B<net-autostart> I<network> [I<--disable>]
Configure a virtual network to be automatically started at boot.
The I<--disable> option disable autostarting.
=item B<net-create> I<file>
Create a virtual network from an XML I<file>, see the documentation at
L<http://libvirt.org/formatnetwork.html> to get a description of the
XML network format used by libvirt.
=item B<net-define> I<file>
Define a virtual network from an XML I<file>, the network is just defined but
not instantiated.
=item B<net-destroy> I<network>
Destroy (stop) a given virtual network specified by its name or UUID. This
takes effect immediately.
=item B<net-dumpxml> I<network> [I<--inactive>]
Output the virtual network information as an XML dump to stdout.
If I<--inactive> is specified, then physical functions are not
expanded into their associated virtual functions.
=item B<net-edit> I<network>
Edit the XML configuration file for a network.
This is equivalent to:
virsh net-dumpxml --inactive network > network.xml
vi network.xml (or make changes with your other text editor)
virsh net-define network.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<net-info> I<network>
Returns basic information about the I<network> object.
=item B<net-list> [I<--inactive> | I<--all>]
[I<--persistent>] [<--transient>]
[I<--autostart>] [<--no-autostart>]
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
inactive ones will be listed. You may also want to filter the returned networks
by I<--persistent> to list the persitent ones, I<--transient> to list the
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.
=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>
Undefine the configuration for an inactive network.
=item B<net-uuid> I<network-name>
Convert a network name to network UUID.
virsh: new net-update command This command uses the new virNetworkUpdate() API to modify an existing network definition, and optionally have those modifications take effect immediately without restarting the network. An example usage: virsh net-update mynet add-last ip-dhcp-host \ "<host mac='00:11:22:33:44:55' ip='192.168.122.45'/>" \ --live --config If you like, you can instead put the xml into a file, and call like this: virsh net-update mynet add ip-dhcp-host /tmp/myxml.xml --live --config virsh will autodetect whether the argument is itself an xml element, or if it's a file, by looking at the first character - the first character of an xml element is always "<", and the first character of a file is almost always *not* "<" (in the rare case that it is, the user could specify "./<filename..."). A --parent-index option is also available (to give the index within a list of parent objects, e.g. the index of the parent <ip> element when updating ip-dhcp-host elements), but is optional and at least for now will probably be used rarely. --live, --config, and --current options - if you specify --live, only the live state of the network will be updated. If you also specify --config, then the persistent configuration will also be updated; these two commands can be given separately, or both together. If you don't specify either (you can optionally specify "--current" for the same effect), then the "current" config will be updated (i.e. if the network is active, then only its live config is affected, but if the network is inactive, only the persistent config is affected).
2012-09-19 11:38:43 +00:00
=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".
I<section> is one of ""bridge", "domain", "ip", "ip-dhcp-host",
"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.
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.
virsh: new net-update command This command uses the new virNetworkUpdate() API to modify an existing network definition, and optionally have those modifications take effect immediately without restarting the network. An example usage: virsh net-update mynet add-last ip-dhcp-host \ "<host mac='00:11:22:33:44:55' ip='192.168.122.45'/>" \ --live --config If you like, you can instead put the xml into a file, and call like this: virsh net-update mynet add ip-dhcp-host /tmp/myxml.xml --live --config virsh will autodetect whether the argument is itself an xml element, or if it's a file, by looking at the first character - the first character of an xml element is always "<", and the first character of a file is almost always *not* "<" (in the rare case that it is, the user could specify "./<filename..."). A --parent-index option is also available (to give the index within a list of parent objects, e.g. the index of the parent <ip> element when updating ip-dhcp-host elements), but is optional and at least for now will probably be used rarely. --live, --config, and --current options - if you specify --live, only the live state of the network will be updated. If you also specify --config, then the persistent configuration will also be updated; these two commands can be given separately, or both together. If you don't specify either (you can optionally specify "--current" for the same effect), then the "current" config will be updated (i.e. if the network is active, then only its live config is affected, but if the network is inactive, only the persistent config is affected).
2012-09-19 11:38:43 +00:00
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>.
=back
=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
virsh: add iface-bridge and iface-unbridge commands One of the top questions by libvirt users is how to create a host bridge device so that guests can be directly on the physical network. There are several example documents that explain how to do this manually, but following them often results in confusion and failure. virt-manager does a good job of creating a bridge based on an existing network device, but not everyone wants to use virt-manager. This patch adds a new command, iface-bridge that makes it just about as simple as possible to create a new bridge device based on an existing ethernet/vlan/bond device (including associating IP configuration with the bridge rather than the now-attached device), and start that new bridge up ready for action, eg: virsh iface-bridge eth0 br0 For symmetry's sake, it also adds a command to remove a device from a bridge, restoring the IP config to the now-unattached device: virsh iface-unbridge br0 (I had a short debate about whether to do "iface-unbridge eth0" instead, but that would involve searching through all bridge devices for the one that contained eth0, which seems like a bit too much trouble). NOTE: These two commands require that the netcf library be available on the host. Hopefully this will provide some extra incentive for people using suse, debian, ubuntu, and other similar systems to polish up (and push downstream) the ports to those distros recently pushed to the upstream netcf repo by Dan Berrange. Anyone interested in helping with that effort in any way should join the netcf-devel mailing list (subscription info at https://fedorahosted.org/mailman/listinfo/netcf-devel) During creation of the bridge, it's possible to specify whether or not the STP protocol should be started up on the bridge and, if so, how many seconds the bridge should squelch traffic from newly added devices while learning new topology (defaults are stp='on' and delay='0', which seems to usually work best for bridges used in the context of libvirt guests). There is also an option to not immediately start the bridge (and a similar option to not immediately start the un-attached device after destroying the bridge. Default is to start the new device, because in the case of iface-unbridge not starting is strongly discouraged as it will leave the system with no network connectivity on that interface (because it's necessary to destroy/undefine the bridge device before the unattached device can be defined), and it seemed better to make the option for iface-bridge behave consistently. NOTE TO THOSE TRYING THESE COMMANDS FOR THE FIRST TIME: to guard against any "unexpected" change to configuration, it is advisable to issue an "virsh iface-begin" command before starting any interface config changes, and "virsh iface-commit" only after you've verified that everything is working as you expect. If something goes wrong, you can always run "virsh iface-rollback" or reboot the system (which should automatically do iface-rollback). Aside from adding the code for these two functions, and the two entries into the command table, the only other change to virsh.c was to add the option name to vshCommandOptInterfaceBy(), because the iface-unbridge command names its interface option as "bridge". virsh.pod has also been updated with short descriptions of these two new commands.
2011-11-07 16:15:58 +00:00
=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.
=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>
Destroy (stop) a given host interface, such as by running "if-down" to
disable that interface from active use. This takes effect immediately.
=item B<iface-dumpxml> I<interface> [I<--inactive>]
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>.
=item B<iface-list> [I<--inactive> | I<--all>]
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.
=item B<iface-name> I<interface>
Convert a host interface MAC to interface name, if the MAC address is unique
among the host's interfaces.
I<interface> specifies the interface MAC address.
=item B<iface-mac> I<interface>
Convert a host interface name to MAC address.
I<interface> specifies the interface name.
=item B<iface-start> I<interface>
Start a (previously defined) host interface, such as by running "if-up".
virsh: add iface-bridge and iface-unbridge commands One of the top questions by libvirt users is how to create a host bridge device so that guests can be directly on the physical network. There are several example documents that explain how to do this manually, but following them often results in confusion and failure. virt-manager does a good job of creating a bridge based on an existing network device, but not everyone wants to use virt-manager. This patch adds a new command, iface-bridge that makes it just about as simple as possible to create a new bridge device based on an existing ethernet/vlan/bond device (including associating IP configuration with the bridge rather than the now-attached device), and start that new bridge up ready for action, eg: virsh iface-bridge eth0 br0 For symmetry's sake, it also adds a command to remove a device from a bridge, restoring the IP config to the now-unattached device: virsh iface-unbridge br0 (I had a short debate about whether to do "iface-unbridge eth0" instead, but that would involve searching through all bridge devices for the one that contained eth0, which seems like a bit too much trouble). NOTE: These two commands require that the netcf library be available on the host. Hopefully this will provide some extra incentive for people using suse, debian, ubuntu, and other similar systems to polish up (and push downstream) the ports to those distros recently pushed to the upstream netcf repo by Dan Berrange. Anyone interested in helping with that effort in any way should join the netcf-devel mailing list (subscription info at https://fedorahosted.org/mailman/listinfo/netcf-devel) During creation of the bridge, it's possible to specify whether or not the STP protocol should be started up on the bridge and, if so, how many seconds the bridge should squelch traffic from newly added devices while learning new topology (defaults are stp='on' and delay='0', which seems to usually work best for bridges used in the context of libvirt guests). There is also an option to not immediately start the bridge (and a similar option to not immediately start the un-attached device after destroying the bridge. Default is to start the new device, because in the case of iface-unbridge not starting is strongly discouraged as it will leave the system with no network connectivity on that interface (because it's necessary to destroy/undefine the bridge device before the unattached device can be defined), and it seemed better to make the option for iface-bridge behave consistently. NOTE TO THOSE TRYING THESE COMMANDS FOR THE FIRST TIME: to guard against any "unexpected" change to configuration, it is advisable to issue an "virsh iface-begin" command before starting any interface config changes, and "virsh iface-commit" only after you've verified that everything is working as you expect. If something goes wrong, you can always run "virsh iface-rollback" or reboot the system (which should automatically do iface-rollback). Aside from adding the code for these two functions, and the two entries into the command table, the only other change to virsh.c was to add the option name to vshCommandOptInterfaceBy(), because the iface-unbridge command names its interface option as "bridge". virsh.pod has also been updated with short descriptions of these two new commands.
2011-11-07 16:15:58 +00:00
=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.
=item B<iface-undefine> I<interface>
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
=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
L<http://libvirt.org/formatstorage.html> . Many of the commands for
pools are similar to the ones used for domains.
=over 4
=item B<find-storage-pool-sources> I<type> [I<srcSpec>]
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.
=item B<find-storage-pool-sources-as> I<type> [I<host>] [I<port>]
[I<initiator>]
Returns XML describing all storage pools of a given I<type> that could
be found. If I<host>, I<port>, or I<initiator> are provided, they control
where the query is performed.
=item B<pool-autostart> I<pool-or-uuid> [I<--disable>]
Configure whether I<pool> should automatically start at boot.
=item B<pool-build> I<pool-or-uuid> [I<--overwrite>] [I<--no-overwrite>]
Build a given pool.
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.
=item B<pool-create> I<file>
Create and start a pool object from the XML I<file>.
=item B<pool-create-as> I<name> I<--print-xml> I<type> [I<source-host>]
[I<source-path>] [I<source-dev>] [I<source-name>] [<target>]
[I<--source-format format>]
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>.
=item B<pool-define> I<file>
Create, but do not start, a pool object from the XML I<file>.
=item B<pool-define-as> I<name> I<--print-xml> I<type> [I<source-host>]
[I<source-path>] [I<source-dev>] [I<source-name>] [<target>]
[I<--source-format format>]
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>.
=item B<pool-destroy> I<pool-or-uuid>
Destroy (stop) a given I<pool> object. Libvirt will no longer manage the
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
command, ready for the creation of new storage volumes.
=item B<pool-dumpxml> [I<--inactive>] I<pool-or-uuid>
Returns the XML information about the I<pool> object.
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.
=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
vi pool.xml (or make changes with your other text editor)
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.
=item B<pool-list> [I<--inactive>] [I<--all>]
[I<--persistent>] [I<--transient>]
[I<--autostart>] [I<--no-autostart>]
[[I<--details>] [<type>]
List pool objects known to libvirt. By default, only active pools
are listed; I<--inactive> lists just the inactive pools, and I<--all>
lists all pools.
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.
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',
'mpath', 'rbd', and 'sheepdog'.
The I<--details> option instructs virsh to additionally
display pool persistence and capacity related information where available.
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.
=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.
=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>.
=back
=head1 VOLUME COMMANDS
=over 4
=item B<vol-create> I<pool-or-uuid> I<FILE> [I<--prealloc-metadata>]
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.
[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.
B<Example>
virsh vol-dumpxml --pool storagepool1 appvolume1 > newvolume.xml
vi newvolume.xml (or make changes with your other text editor)
virsh vol-create differentstoragepool newvolume.xml
=item B<vol-create-from> I<pool-or-uuid> I<FILE> [I<--inputpool>
I<pool-or-uuid>] I<vol-name-or-key-or-path> [I<--prealloc-metadata>]
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.
[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.
=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>]
[I<--prealloc-metadata>]
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.
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.
I<--format> I<string> is used in file based storage pools to specify the volume
file format to use; raw, bochs, qcow, qcow2, vmdk, qed.
I<--backing-vol> I<vol-name-or-key-or-path> is the source backing
volume to be used if taking a snapshot of an existing volume.
I<--backing-vol-format> I<string> is the format of the snapshot backing volume;
raw, bochs, qcow, qcow2, qed, vmdk, host_device. These are, however, meant for
file based storage pools.
[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.
=item B<vol-clone> [I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid>] I<vol-name-or-key-or-path>
I<name> [I<--prealloc-metadata>]
Clone an existing volume. Less powerful, but easier to type, version of
B<vol-create-from>.
I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid> is the name or UUID of the storage pool to create
the volume in.
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.
[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.
=item B<vol-delete> [I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid>] I<vol-name-or-key-or-path>
Delete a given volume.
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 delete.
=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>
Upload the contents of I<local-file> to a storage volume.
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 wipe.
I<--offset> is the position in the storage volume at which to start writing
the data. I<--length> is an upper bound of the amount of data to be uploaded.
2012-10-11 16:31:20 +00:00
An error will occur if the I<local-file> is greater than the specified length.
=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>
Download the contents of I<local-file> from a storage volume.
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 wipe.
I<--offset> is the position in the storage volume at which to start reading
the data. I<--length> is an upper bound of the amount of data to be downloaded.
=item B<vol-wipe> [I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid>] [I<--algorithm> I<algorithm>]
I<vol-name-or-key-or-path>
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.
I<vol-name-or-key-or-path> is the name or key or path of the volume to wipe.
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
sanitizing removeable and non-removeable rigid
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.
B<Note>: The availability of algorithms may be limited by the version
of the C<scrub> binary installed on the host.
=item B<vol-dumpxml> [I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid>] I<vol-name-or-key-or-path>
Output the volume information as an XML dump to stdout.
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.
=item B<vol-info> [I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid>] I<vol-name-or-key-or-path>
Returns basic information about the given storage volume.
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.
=item B<vol-list> [I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid>] [I<--details>]
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.
The I<--details> option instructs virsh to additionally display volume
type and capacity related information where available.
=item B<vol-pool> [I<--uuid>] I<vol-key-or-path>
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.
=item B<vol-path> [I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid>] I<vol-name-or-key>
Return the path for a given volume.
I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid> is the name or UUID of the storage pool the volume
is in.
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.
=item B<vol-key> [I<--pool> I<pool-or-uuid>] I<vol-name-or-path>
Return the volume key for a given volume.
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.
=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
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.
=back
=head1 SECRET COMMMANDS
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
or possibly other uses. Secrets are identified using an UUID. See
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.
If I<file> specifies an UUID of an existing secret, replace its properties by
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.
=item B<secret-list> [I<--ephemeral>] [I<--no-ephemeral>]
[I<--private>] [I<--no-private>]
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.
=back
=head1 SNAPSHOT COMMMANDS
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
=item B<snapshot-create> I<domain> [I<xmlfile>] {[I<--redefine> [I<--current>]]
| [I<--no-metadata>] [I<--halt>] [I<--disk-only>] [I<--reuse-external>]
[I<--quiesce>] [I<--atomic>] [I<--live>]}
Create a snapshot for domain I<domain> with the properties specified in
I<xmlfile>. Normally, the only properties settable for a domain snapshot
are the <name> and <description> elements, as well as <disks> if
I<--disk-only> is given; the rest of the fields are
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>.
If I<--halt> is specified, the domain will be left in an inactive state
after the snapshot is created.
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.
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).
If I<--reuse-external> is specified, and the snapshot XML requests an
external snapshot with a destination of an existing file, then the
destination must exist, and is reused; otherwise, a snapshot is refused
to avoid losing contents of the existing files.
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.
snapshot: add atomic create flag Right now, it is appallingly easy to cause qemu disk snapshots to alter a domain then fail; for example, by requesting a two-disk snapshot where the second disk name resides on read-only storage. In this failure scenario, libvirt reports failure, but modifies the live domain XML in-place to record that the first disk snapshot was taken; and places a difficult burden on the management app to grab the XML and reparse it to see which disks, if any, were altered by the partial snapshot. This patch adds a new flag where implementations can request that the hypervisor make snapshots atomically; either no changes to XML occur, or all disks were altered as a group. If you request the flag, you either get outright failure up front, or you take advantage of hypervisor abilities to make an atomic snapshot. Of course, drivers should prefer the atomic means even without the flag explicitly requested. There's no way to make snapshots 100% bulletproof - even if the hypervisor does it perfectly atomic, we could run out of memory during the followup tasks of updating our in-memory XML, and report a failure. However, these sorts of catastrophic failures are rare and unlikely, and it is still nicer to know that either all snapshots happened or none of them, as that is an easier state to recover from. * include/libvirt/libvirt.h.in (VIR_DOMAIN_SNAPSHOT_CREATE_ATOMIC): New flag. * src/libvirt.c (virDomainSnapshotCreateXML): Document it. * tools/virsh.c (cmdSnapshotCreate, cmdSnapshotCreateAs): Expose it. * tools/virsh.pod (snapshot-create, snapshot-create-as): Document it.
2012-03-16 21:23:00 +00:00
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.
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.
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).
=item B<snapshot-create-as> I<domain> {[I<--print-xml>]
| [I<--no-metadata>] [I<--halt>] [I<--reuse-external>]} [I<name>]
[I<description>] [I<--disk-only> [I<--quiesce>]] [I<--atomic>]
[[I<--live>] [I<--memspec> B<memspec>]] [I<--diskspec>] B<diskspec>]...
Create a snapshot for domain I<domain> with the given <name> and
<description>; if either value is omitted, libvirt will choose a
value. If I<--print-xml> is specified, then XML appropriate for
I<snapshot-create> is output, rather than actually creating a snapshot.
Otherwise, if I<--halt> is specified, the domain will be left in an
inactive state after the snapshot is created, and if I<--disk-only>
is specified, the snapshot will not include vm state.
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
type can be B<none>, B<internal>, or B<external>. To include a literal
comma in B<file=name>, escape it with a second comma.
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
form B<disk[,snapshot=type][,driver=type][,file=name]>. To include a
literal comma in B<disk> or in B<file=name>, escape it with a second
2012-10-11 16:31:20 +00:00
comma. A literal I<--diskspec> must precede each B<diskspec> unless
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"
results in the following XML:
<disk name='vda' snapshot='external'>
<source file='/path/to,new'/>
</disk>
If I<--reuse-external> is specified, and the domain XML or I<diskspec>
option requests an external snapshot with a destination of an existing
file, then the destination must exist, and is reused; otherwise, a
snapshot is refused to avoid losing contents of the existing files.
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.
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>.
snapshot: add atomic create flag Right now, it is appallingly easy to cause qemu disk snapshots to alter a domain then fail; for example, by requesting a two-disk snapshot where the second disk name resides on read-only storage. In this failure scenario, libvirt reports failure, but modifies the live domain XML in-place to record that the first disk snapshot was taken; and places a difficult burden on the management app to grab the XML and reparse it to see which disks, if any, were altered by the partial snapshot. This patch adds a new flag where implementations can request that the hypervisor make snapshots atomically; either no changes to XML occur, or all disks were altered as a group. If you request the flag, you either get outright failure up front, or you take advantage of hypervisor abilities to make an atomic snapshot. Of course, drivers should prefer the atomic means even without the flag explicitly requested. There's no way to make snapshots 100% bulletproof - even if the hypervisor does it perfectly atomic, we could run out of memory during the followup tasks of updating our in-memory XML, and report a failure. However, these sorts of catastrophic failures are rare and unlikely, and it is still nicer to know that either all snapshots happened or none of them, as that is an easier state to recover from. * include/libvirt/libvirt.h.in (VIR_DOMAIN_SNAPSHOT_CREATE_ATOMIC): New flag. * src/libvirt.c (virDomainSnapshotCreateXML): Document it. * tools/virsh.c (cmdSnapshotCreate, cmdSnapshotCreateAs): Expose it. * tools/virsh.pod (snapshot-create, snapshot-create-as): Document it.
2012-03-16 21:23:00 +00:00
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.
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.
=item B<snapshot-current> I<domain> {[I<--name>] | [I<--security-info>]
| [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.
=item B<snapshot-edit> I<domain> [I<snapshotname>] [I<--current>]
{[I<--rename>] | [I<--clone>]}
Edit the XML configuration file for I<snapshotname> of a domain. If
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.
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>.
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.
=item B<snapshot-info> I<domain> {I<snapshot> | I<--current>}
Output basic information about a named <snapshot>, or the current snapshot
with I<--current>.
=item B<snapshot-list> I<domain> [{I<--parent> | I<--roots> | I<--tree>}]
[{[I<--from>] B<snapshot> | I<--current>} [I<--descendants>]]
[I<--metadata>] [I<--no-metadata>] [I<--leaves>] [I<--no-leaves>]
[I<--inactive>] [I<--active>] [I<--disk-only>] [I<--internal>] [I<--external>]
List all of the available snapshots for the given domain, defaulting
to show columns for the snapshot name, creation time, and domain state.
If I<--parent> is specified, add a column to the output table giving
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
just snapshot names. These three options are mutually exclusive.
If I<--from> is provided, filter the list to snapshots which are
children of the given B<snapshot>; or if I<--current> is provided,
start at the current snapshot. When used in isolation or with
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
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.
If I<--leaves> is specified, the list will be filtered to just
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).
Filtering options are not compatible with I<--tree>.
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
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.
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.
=item B<snapshot-dumpxml> I<domain> I<snapshot> [I<--security-info>]
Output the snapshot XML for the domain's snapshot named I<snapshot>.
Using I<--security-info> will also include security sensitive information.
Use B<snapshot-current> to easily access the XML of the current snapshot.
=item B<snapshot-parent> I<domain> {I<snapshot> | I<--current>}
Output the name of the parent snapshot, if any, for the given
I<snapshot>, or for the current snapshot with I<--current>.
=item B<snapshot-revert> I<domain> {I<snapshot> | I<--current>}
[{I<--running> | I<--paused>}] [I<--force>]
Revert the given domain to the snapshot specified by I<snapshot>, or to
the current snapshot with I<--current>. Be aware
that this is a destructive action; any changes in the domain since the last
snapshot was taken will be lost. Also note that the state of the domain after
snapshot-revert is complete will be the state of the domain at the time
the original snapshot was taken.
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.
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.
=item B<snapshot-delete> I<domain> {I<snapshot> | I<--current>} [I<--metadata>]
[{I<--children> | I<--children-only>}]
Delete the snapshot for the domain named I<snapshot>, or the current
snapshot with I<--current>. If this snapshot
has child snapshots, changes from this snapshot will be merged into the
children. If I<--children> is passed, then delete this snapshot and any
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.
=back
=head1 NWFILTER COMMMANDS
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
vi myfilter.xml (or make changes with your other text editor)
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
=head1 QEMU-SPECIFIC COMMANDS
NOTE: Use of the following commands is B<strongly> discouraged. They
can cause libvirt to become confused and do the wrong thing on subsequent
operations. Once you have used this command, please do not report
problems to the libvirt developers; the reports will be ignored.
=over 4
=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
issues with the guest ABI changing upon migration, and hotunplug
may not work.
=item B<qemu-monitor-command> I<domain> { [I<--hmp>] | [I<--pretty>] }
I<command>...
Send an arbitrary monitor command I<command> to domain I<domain> through the
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
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.
=item B<qemu-agent-command> I<domain> [I<--timeout> I<seconds> | I<--async> | I<--block>] I<command>...
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.
=back
=head1 ENVIRONMENT
The following environment variables can be set to alter the behaviour
of C<virsh>
=over 4
=item VIRSH_DEBUG=<0 to 4>
Turn on verbose debugging of virsh commands. Valid levels are
=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.
=item VIRSH_LOG_FILE=C<LOGFILE>
The file to log virsh debug messages.
=item VIRSH_DEFAULT_CONNECT_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 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.
=item VISUAL
The editor to use by the B<edit> and related options.
=item EDITOR
The editor to use by the B<edit> and related options, if C<VISUAL>
is not set.
=item LIBVIRT_DEBUG=LEVEL
Turn on verbose debugging of all libvirt API calls. Valid levels are
=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
Please refer to the AUTHORS file distributed with libvirt.
Based on the xm man page by:
Sean Dague <sean at dague dot net>
Daniel Stekloff <dsteklof at us dot ibm dot com>
=head1 COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2005, 2007-2010 Red Hat, Inc., and the authors listed in the
libvirt AUTHORS file.
=head1 LICENSE
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
L<virt-install(1)>, L<virt-xml-validate(1)>, L<virt-top(1)>, L<virt-df(1)>,
L<http://www.libvirt.org/>
=cut