8 Starting and stopping libvirtd #
The communication between the virtualization solutions (KVM, Xen)
and the libvirt API is managed by the libvirtd daemon. It needs to run
on the VM Host Server. libvirt client applications such as virt-manager, possibly
running on a remote machine, communicate with libvirtd running on the
VM Host Server, which services the request using native hypervisor APIs. Use the
following commands to start and stop libvirtd or check its status:
>sudosystemctl start libvirtd>sudosystemctl status libvirtd libvirtd.service - Virtualization daemon Loaded: loaded (/usr/lib/systemd/system/libvirtd.service; enabled) Active: active (running) since Mon 2014-05-12 08:49:40 EDT; 2s ago [...]>sudosystemctl stop libvirtd>sudosystemctl status libvirtd [...] Active: inactive (dead) since Mon 2014-05-12 08:51:11 EDT; 4s ago [...]
To automatically start libvirtd at boot time, either activate it using the
YaST module or by entering the following
command:
>sudosystemctl enable libvirtd
libvirtd
and xendomains
If libvirtd fails to start,
check if the service xendomains is
loaded:
> systemctl is-active xendomains
active
If the command returns active, you need to stop
xendomains before you can
start the libvirtd daemon. If
you want libvirtd to also start
after rebooting, additionally prevent xendomains from starting automatically. Disable
the service:
>sudosystemctl stop xendomains>sudosystemctl disable xendomains>sudosystemctl start libvirtd
xendomains and libvirtd provide the same service and when used
in parallel may interfere with one another. As an example, xendomains may attempt to start a domU already
started by libvirtd.