1.8 KiB
1.8 KiB
title, description, published, date, tags, editor, dateCreated
title | description | published | date | tags | editor | dateCreated |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Display | How to access a virtual machine's display | true | 2022-08-12T23:57:15.072Z | markdown | 2022-07-31T09:22:05.854Z |
Display
A virtual display can be attached to a virtual machine to se the content of it. It is a must-have for non-headless scenarios.
Summary
- to-be done. Add table here.
Specific displays
VNC
- to-be done
Spice
- to-be done
SDL
The Simple DirectMedia Layer is a local-only low-latency display.
SDL is currently only avalable with virtual machines created using the QEMU/KVM User Session mode {.is-info}
As of now, this method is not compatible with Wayland {.is-info}
Mouse grab does not currently work in SDL {.is-warning}
- The display resolution of your guest display should not exceed that of your physical screen.
SELinux configuration
By default, SELinux will block access to X Windows Server for the virtualization stack. An exception has to be set.
- Set new rule
sudo setsebool -P virt_use_xserver 1
- Do some magic trick
sudo ausearch -c 'qemu-system-x86' --raw | audit2allow -M my-qemusystemx86
k
- And another one
sudo semodule -X 300 -i my-qemusystemx86.pp
XML SDL example
- Example of an XML SDL configuration, with OpenGL enabled. This example requires a 3D-capable graphic card to be attached to the guest computer, such as
virtio-gpu
orvfio-pci
.
<graphics type="sdl" display=":0.0">
<gl enable="yes"/>
</graphics>
You can identify your display using the following command:
echo $DISPLAY
{.is-info}
Xephyr
- to-be done
WebRTC
- to-be done
Looking Glass
- to-be done
virtio-wayland
- to-be done
egl-headless
- to-be done
Dbus
- to-be done