Since libvirt supports many different kinds of virtualization (often referred to as "drivers" or "hypervisors"), we need a way to be able to specify which driver a connection refers to. Additionally we may want to refer to a driver on a remote machine over the network.
To this end, libvirt uses URIs as used on the Web and as defined in RFC 2396. This page documents libvirt URIs.
The URI is passed as the name
parameter to
virConnectOpen
or
virConnectOpenReadOnly
.
For example:
virConnectPtr conn = virConnectOpenReadOnly ("test:///default");
To simplify life for administrators, it is possible to setup URI aliases in a
libvirt client configuration file. The configuration file is /etc/libvirt/libvirt.conf
for the root user, or $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/libvirt/libvirt.conf
for any unprivileged user.
In this file, the following syntax can be used to setup aliases
uri_aliases = [ "hail=qemu+ssh://root@hail.cloud.example.com/system", "sleet=qemu+ssh://root@sleet.cloud.example.com/system", ]
A URI alias should be a string made up from the characters
a-Z, 0-9, _, -
. Following the =
can be any libvirt URI string, including arbitrary URI parameters.
URI aliases will apply to any application opening a libvirt
connection, unless it has explicitly passed the VIR_CONNECT_NO_ALIASES
parameter to virConnectOpenAuth
. If the passed in
URI contains characters outside the allowed alias character
set, no alias lookup will be attempted.
If the URI passed to virConnectOpen*
is NULL, then libvirt will use the following
logic to determine what URI to use.
LIBVIRT_DEFAULT_URI
uri_default
parameter
In virsh use the -c
or --connect
option:
virsh -c test:///default list
If virsh finds the environment variable
VIRSH_DEFAULT_CONNECT_URI
set, it will try this URI by
default. Use of this environment variable is, however, deprecated
now that libvirt supports LIBVIRT_DEFAULT_URI
itself.
When using the interactive virsh shell, you can also use the
connect
URI command to reconnect to another
hypervisor.
In virt-manager use the -c
or --connect=
URI option:
virt-manager -c test:///default
In virt-install use the --connect=
URI option:
virt-install --connect=test:///default [other options]
This section describes a feature which is new in libvirt >
0.2.3. For libvirt ≤ 0.2.3 use "xen"
.
To access a Xen hypervisor running on the local machine
use the URI xen:///system
.
To use QEMU support in libvirt you must be running the
libvirtd
daemon (named libvirt_qemud
in releases prior to 0.3.0). The purpose of this
daemon is to manage qemu instances.
The libvirtd
daemon should be started by the
init scripts when the machine boots. It should appear as
a process libvirtd --daemon
running as root
in the background and will handle qemu instances on behalf
of all users of the machine (among other things).
So to connect to the daemon, one of two different URIs is used:
qemu:///system
connects to a system mode daemon. qemu:///session
connects to a session mode daemon.
(If you do libvirtd --help
, the daemon will print
out the paths of the Unix domain socket(s) that it listens on in
the various different modes).
KVM URIs are identical. You select between qemu, qemu accelerated and KVM guests in the guest XML as described here.
Remote URIs have the general form ("[...]" meaning an optional part):
driver
[+transport
]://
[username@
][hostname
][:port
]/
[path
][?extraparameters
]
Either the transport or the hostname must be given in order to distinguish this from a local URI.
Some examples:
xen+ssh://rjones@towada/system
towada
using ssh transport and ssh
username rjones
.
xen://towada/system
towada
using TLS.
xen://towada/system?no_verify=1
towada
using TLS. Do not verify
the server's certificate.
qemu+unix:///system?socket=/opt/libvirt/run/libvirt/libvirt-sock
test+tcp://localhost:5000/default
qemu+libssh2://user@host/system?known_hosts=/home/user/.ssh/known_hosts
qemu+libssh://user@host/system?known_hosts=/home/user/.ssh/known_hosts
Extra parameters can be added to remote URIs as part
of the query string (the part following
).
Remote URIs understand the extra parameters shown below.
Any others are passed unmodified through to the back end.
Note that parameter values must be
URI-escaped.
?
Name | Transports | Meaning |
---|---|---|
name
|
any transport | The name passed to the remote virConnectOpen function. The name is normally formed by removing transport, hostname, port number, username and extra parameters from the remote URI, but in certain very complex cases it may be better to supply the name explicitly. |
Example: name=qemu:///system |
||
tls_priority
|
tls | A valid GNUTLS priority string |
Example: tls_priority=NORMAL:-VERS-SSL3.0 |
||
mode
|
unix, ssh, libssh, libssh2 |
libvirt.conf as remote_mode
|
Example: mode=direct |
||
proxy
|
auto, netcat, native |
libvirt.conf as remote_proxy
|
Example: proxy=native |
||
command
|
ssh, ext |
The external command. For ext transport this is required.
For ssh the default is ssh .
The PATH is searched for the command.
|
Example: command=/opt/openssh/bin/ssh |
||
socket
|
unix, ssh, libssh2, libssh | The path to the Unix domain socket, which overrides the compiled-in default. For ssh transport, this is passed to the remote netcat command (see next). |
Example: socket=/opt/libvirt/run/libvirt/libvirt-sock |
||
netcat
|
ssh, libssh2, libssh |
The name of the netcat command on the remote machine.
The default is nc . This is not permitted
when using the native proxy mode. For ssh
transport, libvirt constructs an ssh command which looks
like:
command -p port [-l username] hostname netcat -U socketwhere port, username, hostname can be specified as part of the remote URI, and command, netcat and socket come from extra parameters (or sensible defaults). |
Example: netcat=/opt/netcat/bin/nc |
||
keyfile
|
ssh, libssh2, libssh | The name of the private key file to use to authentication to the remote machine. If this option is not used the default keys are used. |
Example: keyfile=/root/.ssh/example_key |
||
no_verify
|
ssh, tls |
SSH: If set to a non-zero value, this disables client's strict host key
checking making it auto-accept new host keys. Existing host keys will
still be validated.
TLS: If set to a non-zero value, this disables client checks of the server's certificate. Note that to disable server checks of the client's certificate or IP address you must change the libvirtd configuration. |
Example: no_verify=1 |
||
no_tty
|
ssh | If set to a non-zero value, this stops ssh from asking for a password if it cannot log in to the remote machine automatically (eg. using ssh-agent etc.). Use this when you don't have access to a terminal - for example in graphical programs which use libvirt. |
Example: no_tty=1 |
||
pkipath
|
tls | Specifies x509 certificates path for the client. If any of the CA certificate, client certificate, or client key is missing, the connection will fail with a fatal error. |
Example: pkipath=/tmp/pki/client |
||
known_hosts
|
libssh2, libssh | Path to the known_hosts file to verify the host key against. LibSSH2 and libssh support OpenSSH-style known_hosts files, although LibSSH2 does not support all key types, so using files created by the OpenSSH binary may result into truncating the known_hosts file. Thus, with LibSSH2 it's recommended to use the default known_hosts file is located in libvirt's client local configuration directory e.g.: ~/.config/libvirt/known_hosts. Note: Use absolute paths. |
Example: known_hosts=/root/.ssh/known_hosts |
||
known_hosts_verify
|
libssh2, libssh |
If set to normal (default), then the user will be
asked to accept new host keys. If set to auto , new
host keys will be auto-accepted, but existing host keys will
still be validated. If set to ignore , this disables
client's strict host key checking.
|
Example: known_hosts_verify=ignore |
||
sshauth
|
libssh2, libssh | A comma separated list of authentication methods to use. Default (is "agent,privkey,password,keyboard-interactive". The order of the methods is preserved. Some methods may require additional parameters. |
Example: sshauth=privkey,agent |
The test driver is a dummy hypervisor for test purposes. The URIs supported are:
test:///default
connects to a default set of
host definitions built into the driver. test:///path/to/host/definitions
connects to
a set of host definitions held in the named file.
Libvirt allows you to pass a NULL
pointer to
virConnectOpen*
. Empty string (""
) acts in
the same way. Traditionally this has meant
connect to the local Xen hypervisor
. However in future this
may change to mean connect to the best available hypervisor
.
The theory is that if, for example, Xen is unavailable but the machine is running an OpenVZ kernel, then we should not try to connect to the Xen hypervisor since that is obviously the wrong thing to do.
In any case applications linked to libvirt can continue to pass
NULL
as a default choice, but should always allow the
user to override the URI, either by constructing one or by allowing
the user to type a URI in directly (if that is appropriate). If your
application wishes to connect specifically to a Xen hypervisor, then
for future proofing it should choose a full xen:///system
URI.
"xen"
Another legacy URI is to specify name as the string
"xen"
. This will continue to refer to the Xen
hypervisor. However you should prefer a full xen:///system
URI in all future code.