15 Configuring virtual machines with virsh #
You can use virsh to configure virtual machines (VM) on the command line
as an alternative to using the Virtual Machine Manager. With virsh, you can control the
state of a VM, edit the configuration of a VM or even migrate a VM to
another host. The following sections describe how to manage VMs by using
virsh.
15.1 Editing the VM configuration #
The configuration of a VM is stored in an XML file in
/etc/libvirt/qemu/ and looks like this:
<domain type='kvm'>
<name>sles15</name>
<uuid>ab953e2f-9d16-4955-bb43-1178230ee625</uuid>
<memory unit='KiB'>2097152</memory>
<currentMemory unit='KiB'>2097152</currentMemory>
<vcpu placement='static'>2</vcpu>
<os>
<type arch='x86_64' machine='pc-q35-2.0'>hvm</type>
</os>
<features>...</features>
<cpu mode='custom' match='exact' check='partial'>
<model fallback='allow'>Skylake-Client-IBRS</model>
</cpu>
<clock>...</clock>
<on_poweroff>destroy</on_poweroff>
<on_reboot>restart</on_reboot>
<on_crash>destroy</on_crash>
<pm>
<suspend-to-mem enabled='no'/>
<suspend-to-disk enabled='no'/>
</pm>
<devices>
<emulator>/usr/bin/qemu-system-x86_64</emulator>
<disk type='file' device='disk'>...</disk>
</devices>
...
</domain>If you want to edit the configuration of a VM Guest, check if it is offline:
>sudovirsh list --inactive
If your VM Guest is in this list, you can safely edit its configuration:
>sudovirsh edit NAME_OF_VM_GUEST
Before saving the changes, virsh validates your input against a RelaxNG
schema.
15.2 Changing the machine type #
When installing with the virt-install tool, the machine
type for a VM Guest is pc-q35 by default. The
machine type is stored in the VM Guest's configuration file in the
type element:
<type arch='x86_64' machine='pc-q35-2.3'>hvm</type>
As an example, the following procedure shows how to change this value to the
machine type q35. The value q35 is an
Intel* chipset and includes PCIe,
supports up to 12 USB ports, and has support for
SATA and
IOMMU.
Check whether your VM Guest is inactive:
>sudovirsh list --inactiveId Name State ---------------------------------------------------- - sles15 shut offEdit the configuration for this VM Guest:
>sudovirsh edit sles15Replace the value of the
machineattribute withpc-q35-2.0:<type arch='x86_64' machine='pc-q35-2.0'>hvm</type>
Restart the VM Guest:
>sudovirsh start sles15Check if the machine type has changed. Log in to the VM Guest and run the following command:
>sudodmidecode | grep ProductProduct Name: Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009)
Whenever the QEMU version on the host system is upgraded (for example, when
upgrading the VM Host Server to a new service pack), upgrade the machine type of
the VM Guests to the latest available version. To check, use the command
qemu-system-x86_64 -M help on the VM Host Server.
The default machine type pc-i440fx, for example, is
regularly updated. If your VM Guest still runs with a machine type of
pc-i440fx-1.X, we strongly
recommend an update to
pc-i440fx-2.X. This allows
taking advantage of the most recent updates and corrections in machine
definitions, and ensures better future compatibility.
15.3 Configuring hypervisor features #
libvirt automatically enables a default set of hypervisor
features that are sufficient in most circumstances, but also allows enabling
and disabling features as needed. As an example, Xen does not support
enabling PCI pass-through by default. It must be enabled with the
passthrough setting. Hypervisor features can be
configured with virsh. Look for the <features> element in
the VM Guest's configuration file and adjust the various features as
required. Continuing with the Xen pass-through example:
>sudovirsh edit sle15sp1 <features> <xen> <passthrough/> </xen> </features>
Save your changes and restart the VM Guest.
See the Hypervisor features section of the libvirt Domain XML format manual at https://libvirt.org/formatdomain.html#elementsFeatures for more information.
15.4 Configuring CPU #
Many aspects of the virtual CPUs presented to VM Guests are configurable
with virsh. The number of current and maximum CPUs allocated to a VM Guest
can be changed, as well as the model of the CPU and its feature set. The
following subsections describe how to change the common CPU settings of a
VM Guest.
15.4.1 Configuring the number of CPUs #
The number of allocated CPUs is stored in the VM Guest's XML configuration
file in /etc/libvirt/qemu/ in the
vcpu element:
<vcpu placement='static'>1</vcpu>
In this example, the VM Guest has only one allocated CPU. The following procedure shows how to change the number of allocated CPUs for the VM Guest:
Check whether your VM Guest is inactive:
>sudovirsh list --inactiveId Name State ---------------------------------------------------- - sles15 shut offEdit the configuration for an existing VM Guest:
>sudovirsh edit sles15Change the number of allocated CPUs:
<vcpu placement='static'>2</vcpu>
Restart the VM Guest:
>sudovirsh start sles15Check if the number of CPUs in the VM has changed.
>sudovirsh vcpuinfo sled15VCPU: 0 CPU: N/A State: N/A CPU time N/A CPU Affinity: yy VCPU: 1 CPU: N/A State: N/A CPU time N/A CPU Affinity: yy
You can also change the number of CPUs while the VM Guest is running. CPUs can be hotplugged until the maximum number configured at VM Guest start is reached. Likewise they can be hot-unplugged until the lower limit of 1 is reached. The following example demonstrates changing the active CPU count from 2 to pre-defined maximum of 4.
Check the current live vcpu count:
>sudovirsh vcpucount sles15 | grep livemaximum live 4 current live 2Change the current, or active, number of CPUs to 4:
>sudovirsh setvcpus sles15 --count 4 --liveCheck that the current live vcpu count is now 4:
>sudovirsh vcpucount sles15 | grep livemaximum live 4 current live 4
With KVM it is possible to define a VM Guest with more than 255
CPUs, however additional configuration is necessary to start and
run the VM Guest. The ioapic feature needs to be tuned and an IOMMU
device needs to be added to the VM Guest. Below is an example
configuration for 288 CPUs.
<domain> <vcpu placement='static'>288</vcpu> <features> <ioapic driver='qemu'/> </features> <devices> <iommu model='intel'> <driver intremap='on' eim='on'/> </iommu> </devices> </domain>
15.4.2 Configuring the CPU model #
The CPU model exposed to a VM Guest can often influence the workload
running within it. The default CPU model is derived from a CPU mode
known as host-model.
<cpu mode='host-model'/>
When starting a VM Guest with CPU mode host-model, libvirt will
copy its model of the host CPU into the VM Guest definition. The host
CPU model and features copied to the VM Guest definition can be
observed in the output of the virsh capabilities.
Another interesting CPU mode is host-passthrough.
<cpu mode='host-passthrough'/>
When starting a VM Guest with CPU mode host-passthrough, it is presented
with a CPU that is exactly the same as the VM Host Server CPU. This can be
useful when the VM Guest workload requires CPU features not available in
libvirt's simplified host-model CPU. The host-passthrough
CPU mode comes with the disadvantage of reduced migration flexibility. A VM Guest with
host-passthrough CPU mode can only be migrated to a VM Host Server with identical
hardware.
When using the host-passthrough CPU mode, it is still possible to
disable undesirable features. The following configuration will present
the VM Guest with a CPU that is exactly the same as the host CPU but
with the vmx feature disabled.
<cpu mode='host-passthrough'> <feature policy='disable' name='vmx'/> </cpu>
The custom CPU mode is another common mode used to define a normalized
CPU that can be migrated throughout dissimilar hosts in a cluster. For
example, in a cluster with hosts containing Nehalem, IvyBridge, and
SandyBridge CPUs, the VM Guest can be configured with a custom CPU
mode that contains a Nehalem CPU model.
<cpu mode='custom' match='exact'> <model fallback='allow'>Nehalem</model> <feature policy='require' name='vme'/> <feature policy='require' name='ds'/> <feature policy='require' name='acpi'/> <feature policy='require' name='ss'/> <feature policy='require' name='ht'/> <feature policy='require' name='tm'/> <feature policy='require' name='pbe'/> <feature policy='require' name='dtes64'/> <feature policy='require' name='monitor'/> <feature policy='require' name='ds_cpl'/> <feature policy='require' name='vmx'/> <feature policy='require' name='est'/> <feature policy='require' name='tm2'/> <feature policy='require' name='xtpr'/> <feature policy='require' name='pdcm'/> <feature policy='require' name='dca'/> <feature policy='require' name='rdtscp'/> <feature policy='require' name='invtsc'/> </cpu>
For more information on libvirt's CPU model and topology options, see
the CPU model and topology documentation
at https://libvirt.org/formatdomain.html#cpu-model-and-topology.
15.6 Configuring memory allocation #
The amount of memory allocated for the VM Guest can also be configured with
virsh. It is stored in the memory element and defines the
maximum allocation of memory for the VM Guest at boot time. The optional
currentMemory element defines the actual memory allocated to
the VM Guest. currentMemory can be less than memory,
allowing for increasing (or ballooning) the memory while the VM Guest is
running. If currentMemory is omitted, it defaults to the same
value as the memory element.
You can adjust memory settings by editing the VM Guest configuration, but be aware that changes do not take place until the next boot. The following steps demonstrate changing a VM Guest to boot with 4G of memory, but allow later expansion to 8G:
Open the VM Guest's XML configuration:
>sudovirsh edit sles15Search for the
memoryelement and set to 8G:... <memory unit='KiB'>8388608</memory> ...
If the
currentMemoryelement does not exist, add it below thememoryelement, or change its value to 4G:[...] <memory unit='KiB'>8388608</memory> <currentMemory unit='KiB'>4194304</currentMemory> [...]
Changing the memory allocation while the VM Guest is running can be done
with the setmem subcommand. The following example shows increasing the
memory allocation to 8G:
Check VM Guest existing memory settings:
>sudovirsh dominfo sles15 | grep memoryMax memory: 8388608 KiB Used memory: 4194608 KiBChange the used memory to 8G:
>sudovirsh setmem sles15 8388608Check the updated memory settings:
>sudovirsh dominfo sles15 | grep memoryMax memory: 8388608 KiB Used memory: 8388608 KiB
VM Guests with memory requirements of 4TB or more must either use the
host-passthrough CPU mode, or explicitly specify the
virtual CPU address size when using host-model or
custom CPU modes. The default virtual CPU address size
may not be sufficient for memory configurations of 4TB or more. The
following example shows how to use the VM Host Server's physical CPU address
size when using the host-model CPU mode.
[...] <cpu mode='host-model' check='partial'> <maxphysaddr mode='passthrough'> </cpu> [...]
For more information on specifying virtual CPU address size, see the
maxphysaddr option in the
CPU model and topology documentation at
https://libvirt.org/formatdomain.html#cpu-model-and-topology.
15.7 Adding a PCI device #
To assign a PCI device to VM Guest with virsh, follow these steps:
Identify the host PCI device to assign to the VM Guest. In the following example, we are assigning a DEC network card to the guest:
>sudolspci -nn[...] 03:07.0 Ethernet controller [0200]: Digital Equipment Corporation DECchip \ 21140 [FasterNet] [1011:0009] (rev 22) [...]Write down the device ID (
03:07.0in this case).Gather detailed information about the device using
virsh nodedev-dumpxml ID. To get the ID, replace the colon and the period in the device ID (03:07.0) with underscores. Prefix the result with “pci_0000_”:pci_0000_03_07_0.>sudovirsh nodedev-dumpxml pci_0000_03_07_0<device> <name>pci_0000_03_07_0</name> <path>/sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:14.4/0000:03:07.0</path> <parent>pci_0000_00_14_4</parent> <driver> <name>tulip</name> </driver> <capability type='pci'> <domain>0</domain> <bus>3</bus> <slot>7</slot> <function>0</function> <product id='0x0009'>DECchip 21140 [FasterNet]</product> <vendor id='0x1011'>Digital Equipment Corporation</vendor> <numa node='0'/> </capability> </device>Write down the values for domain, bus, and function (see the previous XML code printed in bold).
Detach the device from the host system prior to attaching it to the VM Guest:
>sudovirsh nodedev-detach pci_0000_03_07_0Device pci_0000_03_07_0 detachedTip: Multi-function PCI devicesWhen using a multi-function PCI device that does not support FLR (function level reset) or PM (power management) reset, you need to detach all its functions from the VM Host Server. The whole device must be reset for security reasons.
libvirtwill refuse to assign the device if one of its functions is still in use by the VM Host Server or another VM Guest.Convert the domain, bus, slot, and function value from decimal to hexadecimal. In our example, domain = 0, bus = 3, slot = 7, and function = 0. Ensure that the values are inserted in the right order:
>printf "<address domain='0x%x' bus='0x%x' slot='0x%x' function='0x%x'/>\n" 0 3 7 0This results in:
<address domain='0x0' bus='0x3' slot='0x7' function='0x0'/>
Run
virsh editon your domain, and add the following device entry in the<devices>section using the result from the previous step:<hostdev mode='subsystem' type='pci' managed='yes'> <source> <address domain='0x0' bus='0x03' slot='0x07' function='0x0'/> </source> </hostdev>Tip:managedcompared tounmanagedlibvirtrecognizes two modes for handling PCI devices: they can be eithermanagedorunmanaged. In the managed case,libvirthandles all details of unbinding the device from the existing driver if needed, resetting the device, binding it tovfio-pcibefore starting the domain, etc. When the domain is terminated or the device is removed from the domain,libvirtunbinds fromvfio-pciand rebinds to the original driver in the case of a managed device. If the device is unmanaged, the user must ensure all of these management aspects of the device are done before assigning it to a domain, and after the device is no longer used by the domain.In the example above, the
managed='yes'option means that the device is managed. To switch the device mode to unmanaged, setmanaged='no'in the listing above. If you do so, you need to take care of the related driver with thevirsh nodedev-detachandvirsh nodedev-reattachcommands. Prior to starting the VM Guest you need to detach the device from the host by runningvirsh nodedev-detach pci_0000_03_07_0. In case the VM Guest is not running, you can make the device available for the host by runningvirsh nodedev-reattach pci_0000_03_07_0.Shut down the VM Guest and disable SELinux if it is running on the host.
>sudosetsebool -P virt_use_sysfs 1Start your VM Guest to make the assigned PCI device available:
>sudovirsh start sles15
On a newer QEMU machine type (pc-i440fx-2.0 or higher) with SLES11 SP4
KVM guests, the acpiphp module
is not loaded by default in the guest. This module must be loaded to enable
hotplugging of disk and network devices. To load the module manually, use
the command modprobe acpiphp. It is also possible to
autoload the module by adding install acpiphp /bin/true
to the /etc/modprobe.conf.local file.
KVM guests using the QEMU Q35 machine type have a PCI topology that
includes a pcie-root controller and seven
pcie-root-port controllers. The
pcie-root controller does not support hotplugging. Each
pcie-root-port controller supports hotplugging a single
PCIe device. PCI controllers cannot be hotplugged, so plan accordingly and
add more pcie-root-ports if more than seven PCIe devices
will be hotplugged. A pcie-to-pci-bridge controller can
be added to support hotplugging legacy PCI devices. See
https://libvirt.org/pci-hotplug.html for more
information about PCI topology between QEMU machine types.
15.7.1 PCI Pass-Through for IBM Z #
In order to support IBM Z, QEMU extended PCI representation by
allowing to configure extra attributes. Two more
attributes—uid and fid—were
added to the <zpci/> libvirt specification.
uid represents user-defined identifier, while
fid represents PCI function identifier. These attributes
are optional and if you do not specify them, they are automatically
generated with non-conflicting values.
To include zPCI attribute in your domain specification, use the following example definition:
<controller type='pci' index='0' model='pci-root'/>
<controller type='pci' index='1' model='pci-bridge'>
<model name='pci-bridge'/>
<target chassisNr='1'/>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x00' slot='0x01' function='0x0'>
<zpci uid='0x0001' fid='0x00000000'/>
</address>
</controller>
<interface type='bridge'>
<source bridge='virbr0'/>
<model type='virtio'/>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x01' slot='0x01' function='0x0'>
<zpci uid='0x0007' fid='0x00000003'/>
</address>
</interface>15.8 Adding a USB device #
To assign a USB device to VM Guest using virsh, follow these steps:
Identify the host USB device to assign to the VM Guest:
>sudolsusb[...] Bus 001 Device 003: ID 0557:2221 ATEN International Co., Ltd Winbond Hermon [...]Write down the vendor and product IDs. In our example, the vendor ID is
0557and the product ID is2221.Run
virsh editon your domain, and add the following device entry in the<devices>section using the values from the previous step:<hostdev mode='subsystem' type='usb'> <source startupPolicy='optional'> <vendor id='0557'/> <product id='2221'/> </source> </hostdev>Tip: Vendor/product or device's addressInstead of defining the host device with
<vendor/>and<product/>IDs, you can use the<address/>element as described for host PCI devices in Section 15.7, “Adding a PCI device”.Shut down the VM Guest and disable SELinux if it is running on the host:
>sudosetsebool -P virt_use_sysfs 1Start your VM Guest to make the assigned PCI device available:
>sudovirsh start sles15
15.9 Adding SR-IOV devices #
Single Root I/O Virtualization (SR-IOV) capable PCIe devices can replicate their resources, so they appear to be multiple devices. Each of these “pseudo-devices” can be assigned to a VM Guest.
SR-IOV is an industry specification that was created by the Peripheral Component Interconnect Special Interest Group (PCI-SIG) consortium. It introduces physical functions (PF) and virtual functions (VF). PFs are full PCIe functions used to manage and configure the device. PFs also can move data. VFs lack the configuration and management part—they only can move data and a reduced set of configuration functions. As VFs do not have all PCIe functions, the host operating system or the Hypervisor must support SR-IOV to be able to access and initialize VFs. The theoretical maximum for VFs is 256 per device (consequently the maximum for a dual-port Ethernet card would be 512). In practice this maximum is much lower, since each VF consumes resources.
15.9.1 Requirements #
The following requirements must be met to use SR-IOV:
An SR-IOV-capable network card (as of SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15, only network cards support SR-IOV)
An AMD64/Intel 64 host supporting hardware virtualization (AMD-V or Intel VT-x), see Section 7.1.1, “KVM hardware requirements” for more information
A chipset that supports device assignment (AMD-Vi or Intel VT-d)
libvirt0.9.10 or betterSR-IOV drivers must be loaded and configured on the host system
A host configuration that meets the requirements listed at Important: Requirements for VFIO and SR-IOV
A list of the PCI addresses of the VF(s) that will be assigned to VM Guests
The information whether a device is SR-IOV-capable can be obtained from
its PCI descriptor by running lspci. A device that
supports SR-IOV reports a capability similar to the
following:
Capabilities: [160 v1] Single Root I/O Virtualization (SR-IOV)
Before adding an SR-IOV device to a VM Guest when initially setting it up, the VM Host Server already needs to be configured as described in Section 15.9.2, “Loading and configuring the SR-IOV host drivers”.
15.9.2 Loading and configuring the SR-IOV host drivers #
To access and initialize VFs, an SR-IOV-capable driver needs to be loaded on the host system.
Before loading the driver, make sure the card is properly detected by running
lspci. The following example shows thelspcioutput for the dual-port Intel 82576NS network card:>sudo/sbin/lspci | grep 8257601:00.0 Ethernet controller: Intel Corporation 82576NS Gigabit Network Connection (rev 01) 01:00.1 Ethernet controller: Intel Corporation 82576NS Gigabit Network Connection (rev 01) 04:00.0 Ethernet controller: Intel Corporation 82576NS Gigabit Network Connection (rev 01) 04:00.1 Ethernet controller: Intel Corporation 82576NS Gigabit Network Connection (rev 01)In case the card is not detected, it is likely that the hardware virtualization support in the BIOS/EFI has not been enabled. To check if hardware virtualization support is enabled, look at the settings in the host's BIOS.
Check whether the SR-IOV driver is already loaded by running
lsmod. In the following example a check for the igb driver (for the Intel 82576NS network card) returns a result. That means the driver is already loaded. If the command returns nothing, the driver is not loaded.>sudo/sbin/lsmod | egrep "^igb "igb 185649 0Skip the following step if the driver is already loaded. If the SR-IOV driver is not yet loaded, the non-SR-IOV driver needs to be removed first, before loading the new driver. Use
rmmodto unload a driver. The following example unloads the non-SR-IOV driver for the Intel 82576NS network card:>sudo/sbin/rmmod igbvfLoad the SR-IOV driver subsequently using the
modprobecommand—the VF parameter (max_vfs) is mandatory:>sudo/sbin/modprobe igb max_vfs=8
As an alternative, you can also load the driver via SYSFS:
Find the PCI ID of the physical NIC by listing Ethernet devices:
>sudolspci | grep Eth06:00.0 Ethernet controller: Emulex Corporation OneConnect NIC (Skyhawk) (rev 10) 06:00.1 Ethernet controller: Emulex Corporation OneConnect NIC (Skyhawk) (rev 10)To enable VFs, echo the number of desired VFs to load to the
sriov_numvfsparameter:>sudoecho 1 > /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000:06:00.1/sriov_numvfsVerify that the VF NIC was loaded:
>sudolspci | grep Eth06:00.0 Ethernet controller: Emulex Corporation OneConnect NIC (Skyhawk) (rev 10) 06:00.1 Ethernet controller: Emulex Corporation OneConnect NIC (Skyhawk) (rev 10) 06:08.0 Ethernet controller: Emulex Corporation OneConnect NIC (Skyhawk) (rev 10)Obtain the maximum number of VFs available:
>sudolspci -vvv -s 06:00.1 | grep 'Initial VFs'Initial VFs: 32, Total VFs: 32, Number of VFs: 0, Function Dependency Link: 01Create a
/etc/systemd/system/before.servicefile which loads VF via SYSFS on boot:[Unit] Before= [Service] Type=oneshot RemainAfterExit=true ExecStart=/bin/bash -c "echo 1 > /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000:06:00.1/sriov_numvfs" # beware, executable is run directly, not through a shell, check the man pages # systemd.service and systemd.unit for full syntax [Install] # target in which to start the service WantedBy=multi-user.target #WantedBy=graphical.target
Prior to starting the VM, it is required to create another service file (
after-local.service) pointing to the/etc/init.d/after.localscript that detaches the NIC. Otherwise the VM would fail to start:[Unit] Description=/etc/init.d/after.local Compatibility After=libvirtd.service Requires=libvirtd.service [Service] Type=oneshot ExecStart=/etc/init.d/after.local RemainAfterExit=true [Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target
Copy it to
/etc/systemd/system.#! /bin/sh # ... virsh nodedev-detach pci_0000_06_08_0
Save it as
/etc/init.d/after.local.Reboot the machine and check if the SR-IOV driver is loaded by re-running the
lspcicommand from the first step of this procedure. If the SR-IOV driver was loaded successfully you should see additional lines for the VFs:01:00.0 Ethernet controller: Intel Corporation 82576NS Gigabit Network Connection (rev 01) 01:00.1 Ethernet controller: Intel Corporation 82576NS Gigabit Network Connection (rev 01) 01:10.0 Ethernet controller: Intel Corporation 82576 Virtual Function (rev 01) 01:10.1 Ethernet controller: Intel Corporation 82576 Virtual Function (rev 01) 01:10.2 Ethernet controller: Intel Corporation 82576 Virtual Function (rev 01) [...] 04:00.0 Ethernet controller: Intel Corporation 82576NS Gigabit Network Connection (rev 01) 04:00.1 Ethernet controller: Intel Corporation 82576NS Gigabit Network Connection (rev 01) 04:10.0 Ethernet controller: Intel Corporation 82576 Virtual Function (rev 01) 04:10.1 Ethernet controller: Intel Corporation 82576 Virtual Function (rev 01) 04:10.2 Ethernet controller: Intel Corporation 82576 Virtual Function (rev 01) [...]
15.9.3 Adding a VF network device to a VM Guest #
When the SR-IOV hardware is properly set up on the VM Host Server, you can add VFs to VM Guests. To do so, you need to collect some data first.
The following procedure uses example data. Make sure to replace it by appropriate data from your setup.
Use the
virsh nodedev-listcommand to get the PCI address of the VF you want to assign and its corresponding PF. Numerical values from thelspcioutput shown in Section 15.9.2, “Loading and configuring the SR-IOV host drivers” (for example01:00.0or04:00.1) are transformed by adding the prefix "pci_0000_" and by replacing colons and dots with underscores. So a PCI ID listed as "04:00.0" bylspciis listed as "pci_0000_04_00_0" by virsh. The following example lists the PCI IDs for the second port of the Intel 82576NS network card:>sudovirsh nodedev-list | grep 0000_04_pci_0000_04_00_0 pci_0000_04_00_1 pci_0000_04_10_0 pci_0000_04_10_1 pci_0000_04_10_2 pci_0000_04_10_3 pci_0000_04_10_4 pci_0000_04_10_5 pci_0000_04_10_6 pci_0000_04_10_7 pci_0000_04_11_0 pci_0000_04_11_1 pci_0000_04_11_2 pci_0000_04_11_3 pci_0000_04_11_4 pci_0000_04_11_5The first two entries represent the PFs, whereas the other entries represent the VFs.
Run the following
virsh nodedev-dumpxmlcommand on the PCI ID of the VF you want to add:>sudovirsh nodedev-dumpxml pci_0000_04_10_0<device> <name>pci_0000_04_10_0</name> <parent>pci_0000_00_02_0</parent> <capability type='pci'> <domain>0</domain> <bus>4</bus> <slot>16</slot> <function>0</function> <product id='0x10ca'>82576 Virtual Function</product> <vendor id='0x8086'>Intel Corporation</vendor> <capability type='phys_function'> <address domain='0x0000' bus='0x04' slot='0x00' function='0x0'/> </capability> </capability> </device>The following data is needed for the next step:
<domain>0</domain><bus>4</bus><slot>16</slot><function>0</function>
Create a temporary XML file (for example
/tmp/vf-interface.xmlcontaining the data necessary to add a VF network device to an existing VM Guest. The minimal content of the file needs to look like the following:<interface type='hostdev'>1 <source> <address type='pci' domain='0' bus='11' slot='16' function='0'2/>2 </source> </interface>
VFs do not get a fixed MAC address; it changes every time the host reboots. When adding network devices the “traditional” way with
hostdev, it would require to reconfigure the VM Guest's network device after each reboot of the host, because of the MAC address change. To avoid this kind of problem,libvirtintroduced thehostdevvalue, which sets up network-specific data before assigning the device.Specify the data you acquired in the previous step here.
In case a device is already attached to the host, it cannot be attached to a VM Guest. To make it available for guests, detach it from the host first:
>sudovirsh nodedev-detach pci_0000_04_10_0Add the VF interface to an existing VM Guest:
>sudovirsh attach-device GUEST /tmp/vf-interface.xml --OPTIONGUEST needs to be replaced by the domain name, ID or UUID of the VM Guest. --OPTION can be one of the following:
--persistentThis option will always add the device to the domain's persistent XML. In addition, if the domain is running, it will be hotplugged.
--configThis option will only affect the persistent XML, even if the domain is running. The device will only show up in the VM Guest on next boot.
--liveThis option will only affect a running domain. If the domain is inactive, the operation will fail. The device is not persisted in the XML and will not be available in the VM Guest on next boot.
--currentThis option affects the current state of the domain. If the domain is inactive, the device is added to the persistent XML and will be available on next boot. If the domain is active, the device is hotplugged but not added to the persistent XML.
To detach a VF interface, use the
virsh detach-devicecommand, which also takes the options listed above.
15.9.4 Dynamic allocation of VFs from a pool #
If you define the PCI address of a VF into a VM Guest's configuration statically as described in Section 15.9.3, “Adding a VF network device to a VM Guest”, it is hard to migrate such guest to another host. The host must have identical hardware in the same location on the PCI bus, or the VM Guest configuration must be modified prior to each start.
Another approach is to create a libvirt network with a device pool that
contains all the VFs of an SR-IOV device. The
VM Guest then references this network, and each time it is started, a
single VF is dynamically allocated to it. When the VM Guest is stopped,
the VF is returned to the pool, available for another guest.
15.9.4.1 Defining network with pool of VFs on VM Host Server #
The following example of network definition creates a pool of all VFs for
the SR-IOV device with its physical function (PF)
at the network interface eth0 on the host:
<network>
<name>passthrough</name>
<forward mode='hostdev' managed='yes'>
<pf dev='eth0'/>
</forward>
</network>
To use this network on the host, save the above code to a file, for
example /tmp/passthrough.xml, and execute the
following commands. Remember to replace eth0 with the
real network interface name of your SR-IOV device's
PF:
>sudovirsh net-define /tmp/passthrough.xml>sudovirsh net-autostart passthrough>sudovirsh net-start passthrough
15.9.4.2 Configuring VM Guests to use VF from the pool #
The following example of VM Guest device interface definition uses a VF
of the SR-IOV device from the pool created in
Section 15.9.4.1, “Defining network with pool of VFs on VM Host Server”. libvirt automatically
derives the list of all VFs associated with that PF the first time the
guest is started.
<interface type='network'> <source network='passthrough'> </interface>
After the first VM Guest starts that uses the network with the pool of
VFs, verify the list of associated VFs. Do so by running virsh
net-dumpxml passthrough on the host.
<network connections='1'>
<name>passthrough</name>
<uuid>a6a26429-d483-d4ed-3465-4436ac786437</uuid>
<forward mode='hostdev' managed='yes'>
<pf dev='eth0'/>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x02' slot='0x10' function='0x1'/>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x02' slot='0x10' function='0x3'/>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x02' slot='0x10' function='0x5'/>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x02' slot='0x10' function='0x7'/>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x02' slot='0x11' function='0x1'/>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x02' slot='0x11' function='0x3'/>
<address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x02' slot='0x11' function='0x5'/>
</forward>
</network>15.10 Listing attached devices #
Although there is no mechanism in virsh to list all VM Host Server's devices
that have already been attached to its VM Guests, you can list all devices
attached to a specific VM Guest by running the following command:
virsh dumpxml VMGUEST_NAME | xpath -e /domain/devices/hostdev
For example:
>sudovirsh dumpxml sles12 | -e xpath /domain/devices/hostdev Found 2 nodes: -- NODE -- <hostdev mode="subsystem" type="pci" managed="yes"> <driver name="xen" /> <source> <address domain="0x0000" bus="0x0a" slot="0x10" function="0x1" /> </source> <address type="pci" domain="0x0000" bus="0x00" slot="0x0a" function="0x0" /> </hostdev> -- NODE -- <hostdev mode="subsystem" type="pci" managed="yes"> <driver name="xen" /> <source> <address domain="0x0000" bus="0x0a" slot="0x10" function="0x2" /> </source> <address type="pci" domain="0x0000" bus="0x00" slot="0x0b" function="0x0" /> </hostdev>
<interface type='hostdev'>
For SR-IOV devices that are attached to the VM Host Server by means of
<interface type='hostdev'>, you need to use a
different XPath query:
virsh dumpxml VMGUEST_NAME | xpath -e /domain/devices/interface/@type
15.11 Configuring storage devices #
Storage devices are defined within the disk element. The usual
disk element supports several attributes. The following two
attributes are the most important:
The
typeattribute describes the source of the virtual disk device. Valid values arefile,block,dir,network, orvolume.The
deviceattribute indicates how the disk is exposed to the VM Guest OS. As an example, possible values can includefloppy,disk,cdrom, and others.
The following child elements are the most important:
drivercontains the driver and the bus. These are used by the VM Guest to work with the new disk device.The
targetelement contains the device name under which the new disk is shown in the VM Guest. It also contains the optional bus attribute, which defines the type of bus on which the new disk should operate.
The following procedure shows how to add storage devices to the VM Guest:
Edit the configuration for an existing VM Guest:
>sudovirsh edit sles15Add a
diskelement inside thediskelement together with the attributestypeanddevice:<disk type='file' device='disk'>
Specify a
driverelement and use the default values:<driver name='qemu' type='qcow2'/>
Create a disk image, which will be used as a source for the new virtual disk device:
>sudoqemu-img create -f qcow2 /var/lib/libvirt/images/sles15.qcow2 32GAdd the path for the disk source:
<source file='/var/lib/libvirt/images/sles15.qcow2'/>
Define the target device name in the VM Guest and the bus on which the disk should work:
<target dev='vda' bus='virtio'/>
Restart your VM:
>sudovirsh start sles15
Your new storage device should be available in the VM Guest OS.
15.12 Configuring controller devices #
libvirt generally manages controllers automatically based
on the type of virtual devices used by the VM Guest. If the VM Guest
contains PCI and SCSI devices, PCI and SCSI controllers will be created and
managed automatically. libvirt will also model
controllers that are hypervisor-specific, for example, a
virtio-serial controller for KVM VM Guests or a
xenbus controller for Xen VM Guests. Although the
default controllers and their configuration are generally fine, there may be
use cases where controllers or their attributes need to be adjusted
manually. For example, a virtio-serial controller may need more ports, or a
xenbus controller may need more memory or more virtual interrupts.
The xenbus controller is unique in that it serves as the controller for all
Xen paravirtual devices. If a VM Guest has many disk and/or network
devices, the controller may need more memory. Xen's
max_grant_frames attribute sets how many grant frames, or
blocks of shared memory, are allocated to the xenbus
controller for each VM Guest.
The default of 32 is enough in most circumstances, but a VM Guest with a
large number of I/O devices and an I/O-intensive workload may experience
performance issues because of grant frame exhaustion. The
xen-diag can be used to check the current and maximum
max_grant_frames values for dom0 and your VM Guests. The
VM Guests must be running:
>sudovirsh list Id Name State -------------------------------- 0 Domain-0 running 3 sle15sp1 running>sudoxen-diag gnttab_query_size 0 domid=0: nr_frames=1, max_nr_frames=256>sudoxen-diag gnttab_query_size 3 domid=3: nr_frames=3, max_nr_frames=32
The sle15sp1 guest is using only three frames out of 32.
If you are seeing performance issues, and log entries that point to
insufficient frames, increase the value with virsh. Look for the
<controller type='xenbus'> line in the guest's
configuration file, and add the maxGrantFrames control
element:
>sudovirsh edit sle15sp1 <controller type='xenbus' index='0' maxGrantFrames='40'/>
Save your changes and restart the guest. Now it should show your change:
>sudoxen-diag gnttab_query_size 3 domid=3: nr_frames=3, max_nr_frames=40
Similar to maxGrantFrames, the xenbus controller also supports
maxEventChannels. Event channels are like paravirtual
interrupts, and in conjunction with grant frames, form a data transfer
mechanism for paravirtual drivers. They are also used for inter-processor
interrupts. VM Guests with a large number of vCPUs and/or many paravirtual
devices may need to increase the maximum default value of 1023.
maxEventChannels can be changed similarly to maxGrantFrames:
>sudovirsh edit sle15sp1 <controller type='xenbus' index='0' maxGrantFrames='128' maxEventChannels='2047'/>
See the Controllers section of the libvirt Domain XML format manual at https://libvirt.org/formatdomain.html#elementsControllers for more information.
15.13 Configuring video devices #
When using the Virtual Machine Manager, only the Video device model can be defined. The amount of allocated VRAM or 2D/3D acceleration can only be changed in the XML configuration.
15.13.1 Changing the amount of allocated VRAM #
Edit the configuration for an existing VM Guest:
>sudovirsh edit sles15Change the size of the allocated VRAM:
<video> <model type='vga' vram='65535' heads='1'> ... </model> </video>
Check if the amount of VRAM in the VM has changed by looking at the amount in the Virtual Machine Manager.
15.13.2 Changing the state of 2D/3D acceleration #
Edit the configuration for an existing VM Guest:
>sudovirsh edit sles15To enable/disable 2D/3D acceleration, change the value of
accel3dandaccel2daccordingly:<video> <model> <acceleration accel3d='yes' accel2d='no'> </model> </video>
Only virtio and vbox video devices
are capable of 2D/3D acceleration. You cannot enable it on other video
devices.
15.14 Configuring network devices #
This section describes how to configure specific aspects of virtual network
devices by using virsh.
Find more details about libvirt network interface specification in
https://libvirt.org/formatdomain.html#elementsDriverBackendOptions.
15.14.1 Scaling network performance with multiqueue virtio-net #
The multiqueue virtio-net feature scales the network performance by allowing the VM Guest's virtual CPUs to transfer packets in parallel. Refer to Section 33.3.3, “Scaling network performance with multiqueue virtio-net” for more general information.
To enable multiqueue virtio-net for a specific VM Guest, edit its XML configuration as described in Section 15.1, “Editing the VM configuration” and modify its network interface as follows:
<interface type='network'> [...] <model type='virtio'/> <driver name='vhost' queues='NUMBER_OF_QUEUES'/> </interface>
15.15 Using macvtap to share VM Host Server network interfaces #
Macvtap provides direct attachment of a VM Guest virtual interface to a host network interface. The macvtap-based interface extends the VM Host Server network interface and has its own MAC address on the same Ethernet segment. Typically, this is used to make both the VM Guest and the VM Host Server show up directly on the switch that the VM Host Server is connected to.
Macvtap cannot be used with network interfaces already connected to a Linux bridge. Before attempting to create the macvtap interface, remove the interface from the bridge.
When using macvtap, a VM Guest can communicate with other VM Guests, and with other external hosts on the network. But it cannot communicate with the VM Host Server on which the VM Guest runs. This is the defined behavior of macvtap, because of the way the VM Host Server's physical Ethernet is attached to the macvtap bridge. Traffic from the VM Guest into that bridge that is forwarded to the physical interface cannot be bounced back up to the VM Host Server's IP stack. Similarly, traffic from the VM Host Server's IP stack that is sent to the physical interface cannot be bounced back up to the macvtap bridge for forwarding to the VM Guest.
Virtual network interfaces based on macvtap are supported by libvirt by
specifying an interface type of direct. For example:
<interface type='direct'> <mac address='aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff'/> <source dev='eth0' mode='bridge'/> <model type='virtio'/> </interface>
The operation mode of the macvtap device can be controlled with the
mode attribute. The following list show its possible
values and a description for each:
vepa: All VM Guest packets are sent to an external bridge. Packets whose destination is a VM Guest on the same VM Host Server as where the packet originates from are sent back to the VM Host Server by the VEPA capable bridge (today's bridges are typically not VEPA capable).bridge: Packets whose destination is on the same VM Host Server as where they originate from are directly delivered to the target macvtap device. Both origin and destination devices need to be inbridgemode for direct delivery. If either one of them is invepamode, a VEPA capable bridge is required.private: All packets are sent to the external bridge and will only be delivered to a target VM Guest on the same VM Host Server if they are sent through an external router or gateway and that device sends them back to the VM Host Server. This procedure is followed if either the source or destination device is in private mode.passthrough: A special mode that gives more power to the network interface. All packets will be forwarded to the interface, allowing virtio VM Guests to change the MAC address or set promiscuous mode to bridge the interface or create VLAN interfaces on top of it. Note that a network interface is not shareable inpassthroughmode. Assigning an interface to a VM Guest will disconnect it from the VM Host Server. For this reason SR-IOV virtual functions are often assigned to the VM Guest inpassthroughmode.
15.16 Disabling a memory balloon device #
Memory Balloon has become a default option for KVM. The device will be added
to the VM Guest explicitly, so you do not need to add this element in the
VM Guest's XML configuration. However, if you want to disable Memory
Balloon in the VM Guest for any reason, you need to set
model='none' as shown below:
<devices> <memballoon model='none'/> </device>
15.17 Configuring multiple monitors (dual head) #
libvirt supports a dual head configuration to display the video output of
the VM Guest on multiple monitors.
The Xen hypervisor does not support dual head configuration.
While the virtual machine is running, verify that the xf86-video-qxl package is installed in the VM Guest:
>rpm -q xf86-video-qxlShut down the VM Guest and start editing its configuration XML as described in Section 15.1, “Editing the VM configuration”.
Verify that the model of the virtual graphics card is 'qxl':
<video> <model type='qxl' ... />
Increase the
headsparameter in the graphics card model specification from the default1to2, for example:<video> <model type='qxl' ram='65536' vram='65536' vgamem='16384' heads='2' primary='yes'/> <alias name='video0'/> <address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x00' slot='0x01' function='0x0'/> </video>
Configure the virtual machine to use the Spice display instead of VNC:
<graphics type='spice' port='5916' autoport='yes' listen='0.0.0.0'> <listen type='address' address='0.0.0.0'/> </graphics>
Start the virtual machine and connect to its display with
virt-viewer, for example:>virt-viewer --connect qemu+ssh://USER@VM_HOST/systemFrom the list of VMs, select the one whose configuration you have modified and confirm with .
After the graphical subsystem (Xorg) loads in the VM Guest, select › › to open a new window with the second monitor's output.
15.18 Crypto adapter pass-through to KVM guests on IBM Z #
15.18.1 Introduction #
IBM Z machines include cryptographic hardware with useful functions such as random number generation, digital signature generation, or encryption. KVM allows dedicating these crypto adapters to guests as pass-through devices. The means that the hypervisor cannot observe communications between the guest and the device.
15.18.2 What is covered #
You will learn how to dedicate a crypto adapter and domains on an IBM Z host to a KVM guest. The procedure includes the following basic steps:
Mask the crypto adapter and domains from the default driver on the host.
Load the
vfio-apdriver.Assign the crypto adapter and domains to the
vfio-apdriver.Configure the guest to use the crypto adapter.
15.18.3 Requirements #
You need to have the QEMU /
libvirtvirtualization environment correctly installed and functional.The
vfio_apandvfio_mdevmodules for the running kernel need to be available on the host operating system.
15.18.4 Dedicate a crypto adapter to a KVM host #
Verify that the
vfio_apandvfio_mdevkernel modules are loaded on the host:>lsmod | grep vfio_If any of them is not listed, load it manually, for example:
>sudomodprobe vfio_mdevCreate a new MDEV device on the host and verify that it was added:
uuid=$(uuidgen) $ echo ${uuid} | sudo tee /sys/devices/vfio_ap/matrix/mdev_supported_types/vfio_ap-passthrough/create dmesg | tail [...] [272197.818811] iommu: Adding device 24f952b3-03d1-4df2-9967-0d5f7d63d5f2 to group 0 [272197.818815] vfio_mdev 24f952b3-03d1-4df2-9967-0d5f7d63d5f2: MDEV: group_id = 0Identify the device on the host's logical partition that you intend to dedicate to a KVM guest:
>ls -l /sys/bus/ap/devices/ [...] lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 0 Nov 23 03:29 00.0016 -> ../../../devices/ap/card00/00.0016/ lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 0 Nov 23 03:29 card00 -> ../../../devices/ap/card00/In this example, it is card
0queue16. To match the Hardware Management Console (HMC) configuration, you need to convert from16hexadecimal to22decimal.Mask the adapter from the
zcryptuse:>lszcrypt CARD.DOMAIN TYPE MODE STATUS REQUEST_CNT ------------------------------------------------- 00 CEX5C CCA-Coproc online 5 00.0016 CEX5C CCA-Coproc online 5Mask the adapter:
>cat /sys/bus/ap/apmask 0xffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffff echo -0x0 | sudo tee /sys/bus/ap/apmask 0x7fffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffMask the domain:
>cat /sys/bus/ap/aqmask 0xffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffff echo -0x0 | sudo tee /sys/bus/ap/aqmask 0xfffffdffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffAssign adapter 0 and domain 16 (22 decimal) to
vfio-ap:>sudoecho +0x0 > /sys/devices/vfio_ap/matrix/${uuid}/assign_adapter>echo +0x16 | sudo tee /sys/devices/vfio_ap/matrix/${uuid}/assign_domain>echo +0x16 | sudo tee /sys/devices/vfio_ap/matrix/${uuid}/assign_control_domainVerify the matrix that you have configured:
>cat /sys/devices/vfio_ap/matrix/${uuid}/matrix 00.0016Either create a new VM (refer to Chapter 10, Guest installation) and wait until it is initialized, or use an existing VM. In both cases, make sure the VM is shut down.
Change its configuration to use the MDEV device:
>sudovirsh edit VM_NAME [...] <hostdev mode='subsystem' type='mdev' model='vfio-ap'> <source> <address uuid='24f952b3-03d1-4df2-9967-0d5f7d63d5f2'/> </source> </hostdev> [...]Restart the VM:
>sudovirsh reboot VM_NAMELog in to the guest and verify that the adapter is present:
>lszcrypt CARD.DOMAIN TYPE MODE STATUS REQUEST_CNT ------------------------------------------------- 00 CEX5C CCA-Coproc online 1 00.0016 CEX5C CCA-Coproc online 1
15.18.5 Further reading #
The installation of virtualization components is detailed in Chapter 6, Installation of virtualization components.
The
vfio_aparchitecture is detailed in https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/s390/vfio-ap.txt.A general outline together with a detailed procedure is described in https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/1787405.
The architecture of VFIO Mediated devices (MDEVs) is detailed in https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/driver-api/vfio-mediated-device.html.