The MinGW-w64 project has effectively replaced the original MinGW project, and distributions such as Fedora have been shipping packages based on the former for years now. Signed-off-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
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Windows support
Libvirt is known to work as a client (not server) on Windows XP (32-bit), and Windows 7 (64-bit). Other Windows variants likely work as well but we either haven't tested or received reports for them.
Installation packages
Users who need pre-built Windows DLLs of libvirt are advised to use the Virt Viewer pre-compiled Windows MSI packages
These installers include the libvirt, gtk-vnc and spice-gtk DLLs along with any of their pre-requisite supporting DLLs, the virsh command line tool and the virt-viewer & remote-viewer graphical tools. The development headers are not currently provided in this installer, so this cannot be used for compiling new applications against libvirt.
Connection types
These connection types are known to work:
- QEMU with TLS (qemu+tls://)
- QEMU with direct TCP (qemu+tcp://)
- VMware ESX (esx://)
- VMware VPX (vpx://)
These connection types are known not to work:
- QEMU with SSH (qemu+ssh://)
All other connection types may or may not work, and haven't been tested.
Please let us know either the results (either way) if you do.
Special note - Support for VirtualBox *on windows* was added in libvirt 0.8.7, so reports on success and failure if you're using that would be really helpful and appreciated.
WARNING - The qemu+tcp:// connection type passes all traffic without encryption. This is a security hazard, and should not be used in security sensitive environments.
Connecting to VMware ESX/vSphere
Details on the capabilities, certificates, and connection string syntax used for connecting to VMware ESX and vSphere can be found online here:
https://libvirt.org/drvesx.html
TLS Certificates
TLS certificates need to have been created and placed in the correct locations, before you will be able to connect to QEMU servers over TLS.
Information on generating TLS certificates can be found here:
https://wiki.libvirt.org/page/TLSSetup
These instructions are for *nix, and have not yet been adapted for Windows. You'll need to figure out the Windows equivalents until that's done (sorry). If you can help us out with this, that would be really welcome.
The locations of the TLS certificates and key file on Windows are hard coded, rather than being configurable.
The Certificate Authority (CA) certificate file must be placed in:
- %APPDATA%libvirtpkiCAcacert.pem
The Client certificate file must be placed in:
- %APPDATA%libvirtpkilibvirtclientcert.pem
The Client key file must be placed in:
- %APPDATA%libvirtpkilibvirtprivateclientkey.pem
On an example Windows 7 x64 system here, this resolves to these paths:
- C:UserssomeuserAppDataRoaminglibvirtpkiCAcacert.pem
- C:UserssomeuserAppDataRoaminglibvirtpkilibvirtclientcert.pem
- C:UserssomeuserAppDataRoaminglibvirtpkilibvirtprivateclientkey.pem
Feedback
Feedback and suggestions on changes to make and what else to include are desired.
Compiling yourself
Libvirt can be compiled on Windows using the free MinGW-w64 compiler.
MSYS Build script
The easiest way is to use the msys_setup script, developed by Matthias Bolte. This is actively developed and kept current with libvirt releases:
https://github.com/photron/msys_setup
Cross compiling
You can also cross-compile to a Windows target from a Fedora machine using the packages available in the Fedora repos.
By hand
Use these options when following the instructions on the Compiling page.
meson build \
-Dsasl=disabled \
-Dpolkit=disabled \
-Ddriver_libxl=disabled \
-Ddriver_qemu=disabled \
-Ddriver_lxc=disabled \
-Ddriver_openvz=disabled \
-Ddriver_libvirtd=disabled