Signed-off-by: Peter Krempa <pkrempa@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
4.9 KiB
virtsecretd
libvirt secret data management daemon
- Manual section
8
- Manual group
Virtualization Support
SYNOPSIS
virtsecretd
[OPTION]...
DESCRIPTION
The virtsecretd
program is a server side daemon component of the libvirt virtualization management system.
It is one of a collection of modular daemons that replace functionality previously provided by the monolithic libvirtd
daemon.
This daemon runs on virtualization hosts to provide management for secret data.
The virtsecretd
daemon only listens for requests on a local Unix domain socket. Remote off-host access and backwards compatibility with legacy clients expecting libvirtd
is provided by the virtproxy
daemon.
Restarting virtsecretd
does not interrupt running guests. Guests continue to operate and changes in their state will generally be picked up automatically during startup. None the less it is recommended to avoid restarting with running guests whenever practical.
DAEMON STARTUP MODES
The virtsecretd
daemon is capable of starting in two modes.
Socket activation mode
On hosts with systemd it is started in socket activation mode and it will rely on systemd to create and listen on the UNIX sockets and pass them as pre-opened file descriptors. In this mode most of the socket related config options in /etc/libvirt/virtsecretd.conf
will no longer have any effect.
Traditional service mode
On hosts without systemd, it will create and listen on UNIX sockets itself.
OPTIONS
-h
, --help
Display command line help usage then exit.
-d
, --daemon
Run as a daemon & write PID file.
-f
, --config *FILE*
Use this configuration file, overriding the default value.
-p
, --pid-file *FILE*
Use this name for the PID file, overriding the default value.
-t
, --timeout *SECONDS*
Exit after timeout period (in seconds), provided there are neither any client connections nor any ephemeral secrets.
-v
, --verbose
Enable output of verbose messages.
--version
Display version information then exit.
SIGNALS
On receipt of SIGHUP
virtsecretd
will reload its configuration.
FILES
When run as root
@SYSCONFDIR@/libvirt/virtsecretd.conf
The default configuration file used by virtsecretd
, unless overridden on the command line using the -f
| --config
option.
@RUNSTATEDIR@/libvirt/virtsecretd-sock
@RUNSTATEDIR@/libvirt/virtsecretd-sock-ro
@RUNSTATEDIR@/libvirt/virtsecretd-admin-sock
The sockets virtsecretd
will use.
The TLS Server private key virtsecretd
will use.
@RUNSTATEDIR@/virtsecretd.pid
The PID file to use, unless overridden by the -p
| --pid-file
option.
When run as non-root
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/libvirt/virtsecretd.conf
The default configuration file used by virtsecretd
, unless overridden on the command line using the -f
|--config
option.
$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/libvirt/virtsecretd-sock
$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/libvirt/virtsecretd-admin-sock
The sockets virtsecretd
will use.
$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/libvirt/virtsecretd.pid
The PID file to use, unless overridden by the -p
|--pid-file
option.
If $XDG_CONFIG_HOME
is not set in your environment, virtsecretd
will use $HOME/.config
If $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR
is not set in your environment, virtsecretd
will use $HOME/.cache
EXAMPLES
To retrieve the version of virtsecretd
:
# virtsecretd --version
virtsecretd (libvirt) @VERSION@
To start virtsecretd
, instructing it to daemonize and create a PID file:
# virtsecretd -d
# ls -la @RUNSTATEDIR@/virtsecretd.pid
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 6 Jul 9 02:40 @RUNSTATEDIR@/virtsecretd.pid
BUGS
Please report all bugs you discover. This should be done via either:
the mailing list
the bug tracker
Alternatively, you may report bugs to your software distributor / vendor.
AUTHORS
Please refer to the AUTHORS file distributed with libvirt.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2006-2020 Red Hat, Inc., and the authors listed in the libvirt AUTHORS file.
LICENSE
virtsecretd
is distributed under the terms of the GNU LGPL v2.1+. This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
SEE ALSO
virsh(1), libvirtd(8), https://libvirt.org/daemons.html, https://libvirt.org/drvsecret.html