VIRT-INSTALL(1) Virtual Machine Install Tools VIRT-INSTALL(1)NAMEvirt-install - provision new virtual machines
SYNOPSISvirt-install [OPTION]...
DESCRIPTIONvirt-install is a command line tool for creating new KVM, Xen, or Linux
container guests using the "libvirt" hypervisor management library.
See the EXAMPLES section at the end of this document to quickly get
started.
virt-install tool supports both text based & graphical installations,
using VNC or SDL graphics, or a text serial console. The guest can be
configured to use one or more virtual disks, network interfaces, audio
devices, physical USB or PCI devices, among others.
The installation media can be held locally or remotely on NFS, HTTP,
FTP servers. In the latter case "virt-install" will fetch the minimal
files necessary to kick off the installation process, allowing the
guest to fetch the rest of the OS distribution as needed. PXE booting,
and importing an existing disk image (thus skipping the install phase)
are also supported.
Given suitable command line arguments, "virt-install" is capable of
running completely unattended, with the guest 'kickstarting' itself
too. This allows for easy automation of guest installs. An interactive
mode is also available with the --prompt option, but this will only ask
for the minimum required options.
OPTIONS
Most options are not required. Minimum requirements are --name, --ram,
guest storage (--disk, --filesystem or --nodisks), and an install
option.
-h, --help
Show the help message and exit
--connect=CONNECT
Connect to a non-default hypervisor. The default connection is chosen
based on the following rules:
xen If running on a host with the Xen kernel (checks against
/proc/xen)
qemu:///system
If running on a bare metal kernel as root (needed for KVM
installs)
qemu:///session
If running on a bare metal kernel as non-root
It is only necessary to provide the "--connect" argument if this
default prioritization is incorrect, eg if wanting to use QEMU
while on a Xen kernel.
General Options
General configuration parameters that apply to all types of guest
installs.
-n NAME, --name=NAME
Name of the new guest virtual machine instance. This must be unique
amongst all guests known to the hypervisor on the connection,
including those not currently active. To re-define an existing guest,
use the virsh(1) tool to shut it down ('virsh shutdown') & delete
('virsh undefine') it prior to running "virt-install".
-r MEMORY, --ram=MEMORY
Memory to allocate for guest instance in megabytes. If the hypervisor
does not have enough free memory, it is usual for it to automatically
take memory away from the host operating system to satisfy this
allocation.
--arch=ARCH
Request a non-native CPU architecture for the guest virtual machine.
If omitted, the host CPU architecture will be used in the guest.
--machine=MACHINE
The machine type to emulate. This will typically not need to be
specified for Xen or KVM, but is useful for choosing machine types of
more exotic architectures.
-u UUID, --uuid=UUID
UUID for the guest; if none is given a random UUID will be generated.
If you specify UUID, you should use a 32-digit hexadecimal number.
UUID are intended to be unique across the entire data center, and
indeed world. Bear this in mind if manually specifying a UUID
--vcpus=VCPUS[,maxvcpus=MAX][,sockets=#][,cores=#][,threads=#]
Number of virtual cpus to configure for the guest. If 'maxvcpus' is
specified, the guest will be able to hotplug up to MAX vcpus while
the guest is running, but will startup with VCPUS.
CPU topology can additionally be specified with sockets, cores, and
threads. If values are omitted, the rest will be autofilled
prefering sockets over cores over threads.
--cpuset=CPUSET
Set which physical cpus the guest can use. "CPUSET" is a comma
separated list of numbers, which can also be specified in ranges or
cpus to exclude. Example:
0,2,3,5 : Use processors 0,2,3 and 5
1-5,^3,8 : Use processors 1,2,4,5 and 8
If the value 'auto' is passed, virt-install attempts to automatically
determine an optimal cpu pinning using NUMA data, if available.
--numatune=NODESET,[mode=MODE]
Tune NUMA policy for the domain process. Example invocations
--numatune 1,2,3,4-7
--numatune \"1-3,5\",mode=preferred
Specifies the numa nodes to allocate memory from. This has the same
syntax as "--cpuset" option. mode can be one of 'interleave',
'preferred', or 'strict' (the default). See 'man 8 numactl' for
information about each mode.
The nodeset string must use escaped-quotes if specifying any other
option.
--cpu MODEL[,+feature][,-feature][,match=MATCH][,vendor=VENDOR]
Configure the CPU model and CPU features exposed to the guest. The
only required value is MODEL, which is a valid CPU model as listed in
libvirt's cpu_map.xml file.
Specific CPU features can be specified in a number of ways: using one
of libvirt's feature policy values force, require, optional, disable,
or forbid, or with the shorthand '+feature' and '-feature', which
equal 'force=feature' and 'disable=feature' respectively
Some examples:
--cpu core2duo,+x2apic,disable=vmx
Expose the core2duo CPU model, force enable x2apic, but do not
expose vmx
--cpu host
Expose the host CPUs configuration to the guest. This enables the
guest to take advantage of many of the host CPUs features (better
performance), but may cause issues if migrating the guest to a host
without an identical CPU.
--description
Human readable text description of the virtual machine. This will be
stored in the guests XML configuration for access by other
applications.
--security type=TYPE[,label=LABEL][,relabel=yes|no]
Configure domain security driver settings. Type can be either
'static' or 'dynamic'. 'static' configuration requires a security
LABEL. Specifying LABEL without TYPE implies static configuration. To
have libvirt automatically apply your static label, you must specify
relabel=yes.
Installation Method options
-c CDROM, --cdrom=CDROM
File or device use as a virtual CD-ROM device for fully virtualized
guests. It can be path to an ISO image, or to a CDROM device. It can
also be a URL from which to fetch/access a minimal boot ISO image.
The URLs take the same format as described for the "--location"
argument. If a cdrom has been specified via the "--disk" option, and
neither "--cdrom" nor any other install option is specified, the
"--disk" cdrom is used as the install media.
-l LOCATION, --location=LOCATION
Distribution tree installtion source. virt-install can recognize
certain distribution trees and fetches a bootable kernel/initrd pair
to launch the install.
With libvirt 0.9.4 or later, network URL installs work for remote
connections. virt-install will download kernel/initrd to the local
machine, and then upload the media to the remote host. This option
requires the URL to be accessible by both the local and remote host.
The "LOCATION" can take one of the following forms:
DIRECTORY
Path to a local directory containing an installable distribution
image
nfs:host:/path or nfs://host/path
An NFS server location containing an installable distribution
image
http://host/path
An HTTP server location containing an installable distribution
image
ftp://host/path
An FTP server location containing an installable distribution
image
Some distro specific url samples:
Fedora/Red Hat Based
http://download.fedoraproject.org/pub/fedora/linux/releases/10/Fedora/i386/os/
Debian/Ubuntu
http://ftp.us.debian.org/debian/dists/etch/main/installer-amd64/
Suse
http://download.opensuse.org/distribution/11.0/repo/oss/
Mandriva
ftp://ftp.uwsg.indiana.edu/linux/mandrake/official/2009.0/i586/
--pxe
Use the PXE boot protocol to load the initial ramdisk and kernel for
starting the guest installation process.
--import
Skip the OS installation process, and build a guest around an
existing disk image. The device used for booting is the first device
specified via "--disk" or "--filesystem".
--init=INITPATH
Path to a binary that the container guest will init. If a root
"--filesystem" is has been specified, virt-install will default to
/sbin/init, otherwise will default to /bin/sh.
--livecd
Specify that the installation media is a live CD and thus the guest
needs to be configured to boot off the CDROM device permanently. It
may be desirable to also use the "--nodisks" flag in combination.
-x EXTRA, --extra-args=EXTRA
Additional kernel command line arguments to pass to the installer
when performing a guest install from "--location". One common usage
is specifying an anaconda kickstart file for automated installs, such
as --extra-args "ks=http://myserver/my.ks"
--initrd-inject=PATH
Add PATH to the root of the initrd fetched with "--location". This
can be used to run an automated install without requiring a network
hosted kickstart file:
--initrd-inject=/path/to/my.ks --extra-args "ks=file:/my.ks"
--os-type=OS_TYPE
Optimize the guest configuration for a type of operating system (ex.
'linux', 'windows'). This will attempt to pick the most suitable ACPI
& APIC settings, optimally supported mouse drivers, virtio, and
generally accommodate other operating system quirks.
By default, virt-install will attempt to auto detect this value from
the install media (currently only supported for URL installs).
Autodetection can be disabled with the special value 'none'
See "--os-variant" for valid options.
--os-variant=OS_VARIANT
Further optimize the guest configuration for a specific operating
system variant (ex. 'fedora8', 'winxp'). This parameter is optional,
and does not require an "--os-type" to be specified.
By default, virt-install will attempt to auto detect this value from
the install media (currently only supported for URL installs).
Autodetection can be disabled with the special value 'none'.
If the special value 'list' is passed, virt-install will print the
full list of variant values and exit. The printed format is not a
stable interface, DO NOT PARSE IT.
If the special value 'none' is passed, no os variant is recorded and
OS autodetection is disabled.
Values for some recent OS options are:
win7 : Microsoft Windows 7
vista : Microsoft Windows Vista
winxp64 : Microsoft Windows XP (x86_64)
winxp : Microsoft Windows XP
win2k8 : Microsoft Windows Server 2008
win2k3 : Microsoft Windows Server 2003
freebsd8 : FreeBSD 8.x
generic : Generic
debiansqueeze : Debian Squeeze
debianlenny : Debian Lenny
fedora16 : Fedora 16
fedora15 : Fedora 15
fedora14 : Fedora 14
mes5.1 : Mandriva Enterprise Server 5.1 and later
mandriva2010 : Mandriva Linux 2010 and later
rhel6 : Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6
rhel5.4 : Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.4 or later
rhel4 : Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4
sles11 : Suse Linux Enterprise Server 11
sles10 : Suse Linux Enterprise Server
ubuntuoneiric : Ubuntu 11.10 (Oneiric Ocelot)
ubuntunatty : Ubuntu 11.04 (Natty Narwhal)
ubuntumaverick : Ubuntu 10.10 (Maverick Meerkat)
ubuntulucid : Ubuntu 10.04 (Lucid Lynx)
ubuntuhardy : Ubuntu 8.04 LTS (Hardy Heron)
Use '--os-variant list' to see the full OS list
--boot=BOOTOPTS
Optionally specify the post-install VM boot configuration. This
option allows specifying a boot device order, permanently booting off
kernel/initrd with option kernel arguments, and enabling a BIOS boot
menu (requires libvirt 0.8.3 or later)
--boot can be specified in addition to other install options (such as
--location, --cdrom, etc.) or can be specified on it's own. In the
latter case, behavior is similar to the --import install option:
there is no 'install' phase, the guest is just created and launched
as specified.
Some examples:
--boot cdrom,fd,hd,network,menu=on
Set the boot device priority as first cdrom, first floppy, first
harddisk, network PXE boot. Additionally enable BIOS boot menu
prompt.
--boot kernel=KERNEL,initrd=INITRD,kernel_args="console=/dev/ttyS0"
Have guest permanently boot off a local kernel/initrd pair, with
the specified kernel options.
Storage Configuration
--disk=DISKOPTS
Specifies media to use as storage for the guest, with various
options. The general format of a disk string is
--disk opt1=val1,opt2=val2,...
To specify media, the command can either be:
--disk /some/storage/path,opt1=val1
or explicitly specify one of the following arguments:
path
A path to some storage media to use, existing or not. Existing
media can be a file or block device. If installing on a remote
host, the existing media must be shared as a libvirt storage
volume.
Specifying a non-existent path implies attempting to create the
new storage, and will require specifyng a 'size' value. If the
base directory of the path is a libvirt storage pool on the host,
the new storage will be created as a libvirt storage volume. For
remote hosts, the base directory is required to be a storage pool
if using this method.
pool
An existing libvirt storage pool name to create new storage on.
Requires specifying a 'size' value.
vol An existing libvirt storage volume to use. This is specified as
'poolname/volname'.
Other available options:
device
Disk device type. Value can be 'cdrom', 'disk', or 'floppy'.
Default is 'disk'. If a 'cdrom' is specified, and no install
method is chosen, the cdrom is used as the install media.
bus Disk bus type. Value can be 'ide', 'scsi', 'usb', 'virtio' or
'xen'. The default is hypervisor dependent since not all
hypervisors support all bus types.
perms
Disk permissions. Value can be 'rw' (Read/Write), 'ro'
(Readonly), or 'sh' (Shared Read/Write). Default is 'rw'
size
size (in GB) to use if creating new storage
sparse
whether to skip fully allocating newly created storage. Value is
'true' or 'false'. Default is 'true' (do not fully allocate).
The initial time taken to fully-allocate the guest virtual disk
(sparse=false) will be usually by balanced by faster install
times inside the guest. Thus use of this option is recommended to
ensure consistently high performance and to avoid I/O errors in
the guest should the host filesystem fill up.
cache
The cache mode to be used. The host pagecache provides cache
memory. The cache value can be 'none', 'writethrough', or
'writeback'. 'writethrough' provides read caching. 'writeback'
provides read and write caching.
format
Image format to be used if creating managed storage. For file
volumes, this can be 'raw', 'qcow2', 'vmdk', etc. See format
types in <http://libvirt.org/storage.html> for possible values.
This is often mapped to the driver_type value as well.
With libvirt 0.8.3 and later, this option should be specified if
reusing and existing disk image, since libvirt does not
autodetect storage format as it is a potential security issue.
For example, if reusing an existing qcow2 image, you will want to
specify format=qcow2, otherwise the hypervisor may not be able to
read your disk image.
driver_name
Driver name the hypervisor should use when accessing the
specified storage. Typically does not need to be set by the user.
driver_type
Driver format/type the hypervisor should use when accessing the
specified storage. Typically does not need to be set by the user.
io Disk IO backend. Can be either "threads" or "native".
error_policy
How guest should react if a write error is encountered. Can be
one of "stop", "none", or "enospace"
serial
Serial number of the emulated disk device. This is used in linux
guests to set /dev/disk/by-id symlinks. An example serial number
might be: WD-WMAP9A966149
See the examples section for some uses. This option deprecates
"--file", "--file-size", and "--nonsparse".
--filesystem
Specifies a directory on the host to export to the guest. The most
simple invocation is:
--filesystem /source/on/host,/target/point/in/guest
Which will work for recent QEMU and linux guest OS or LXC containers.
For QEMU, the target point is just a mounting hint in sysfs, so will
not be automatically mounted.
The following explicit options can be specified:
type
The type or the source directory. Valid values are 'mount' (the
default) or 'template' for OpenVZ templates.
mode
The access mode for the source directory from the guest OS. Only
used with QEMU and type=mount. Valid modes are 'passthrough' (the
default), 'mapped', or 'squash'. See libvirt domain XML
documentation for more info.
source
The directory on the host to share.
target
The mount location to use in the guest.
--nodisks
Request a virtual machine without any local disk storage, typically
used for running 'Live CD' images or installing to network storage
(iSCSI or NFS root).
-f DISKFILE, --file=DISKFILE
This option is deprecated in favor of "--disk path=DISKFILE".
-s DISKSIZE, --file-size=DISKSIZE
This option is deprecated in favor of "--disk ...,size=DISKSIZE,..."
--nonsparse
This option is deprecated in favor of "--disk ...,sparse=false,..."
Networking Configuration
-w NETWORK, --network=NETWORK,opt1=val1,opt2=val2
Connect the guest to the host network. The value for "NETWORK" can
take one of 3 formats:
bridge=BRIDGE
Connect to a bridge device in the host called "BRIDGE". Use this
option if the host has static networking config & the guest
requires full outbound and inbound connectivity to/from the LAN.
Also use this if live migration will be used with this guest.
network=NAME
Connect to a virtual network in the host called "NAME". Virtual
networks can be listed, created, deleted using the "virsh"
command line tool. In an unmodified install of "libvirt" there is
usually a virtual network with a name of "default". Use a virtual
network if the host has dynamic networking (eg NetworkManager),
or using wireless. The guest will be NATed to the LAN by
whichever connection is active.
user
Connect to the LAN using SLIRP. Only use this if running a QEMU
guest as an unprivileged user. This provides a very limited form
of NAT.
If this option is omitted a single NIC will be created in the guest.
If there is a bridge device in the host with a physical interface
enslaved, that will be used for connectivity. Failing that, the
virtual network called "default" will be used. This option can be
specified multiple times to setup more than one NIC.
Other available options are:
model
Network device model as seen by the guest. Value can be any nic
model supported by the hypervisor, e.g.: 'e1000', 'rtl8139',
'virtio', ...
mac Fixed MAC address for the guest; If this parameter is omitted, or
the value "RANDOM" is specified a suitable address will be
randomly generated. For Xen virtual machines it is required that
the first 3 pairs in the MAC address be the sequence '00:16:3e',
while for QEMU or KVM virtual machines it must be '52:54:00'.
--nonetworks
Request a virtual machine without any network interfaces.
-b BRIDGE, --bridge=BRIDGE
This parameter is deprecated in favour of "--network
bridge=bridge_name".
-m MAC, --mac=MAC
This parameter is deprecated in favour of "--network
NETWORK,mac=12:34..."
Graphics Configuration
If no graphics option is specified, "virt-install" will default to
'--graphics vnc' if the DISPLAY environment variable is set, otherwise
'--graphics none' is used.
--graphics TYPE,opt1=arg1,opt2=arg2,...
Specifies the graphical display configuration. This does not
configure any virtual hardware, just how the guest's graphical
display can be accessed. Typically the user does not need to specify
this option, virt-install will try and choose a useful default, and
launch a suitable connection.
General format of a graphical string is
--graphics TYPE,opt1=arg1,opt2=arg2,...
For example:
--graphics vnc,password=foobar
The supported options are:
type
The display type. This is one of:
vnc
Setup a virtual console in the guest and export it as a VNC
server in the host. Unless the "port" parameter is also provided,
the VNC server will run on the first free port number at 5900 or
above. The actual VNC display allocated can be obtained using the
"vncdisplay" command to "virsh" (or virt-viewer(1) can be used
which handles this detail for the use).
sdl
Setup a virtual console in the guest and display an SDL window in
the host to render the output. If the SDL window is closed the
guest may be unconditionally terminated.
spice
Export the guest's console using the Spice protocol. Spice allows
advanced features like audio and USB device streaming, as well as
improved graphical performance.
Using spice graphic type will work as if those arguments were
given:
--video qxl --channel spicevmc
none
No graphical console will be allocated for the guest. Fully
virtualized guests (Xen FV or QEmu/KVM) will need to have a text
console configured on the first serial port in the guest (this
can be done via the --extra-args option). Xen PV will set this up
automatically. The command 'virsh console NAME' can be used to
connect to the serial device.
port
Request a permanent, statically assigned port number for the
guest console. This is used by 'vnc' and 'spice'
tlsport
Specify the spice tlsport.
listen
Address to listen on for VNC/Spice connections. Default is
typically 127.0.0.1 (localhost only), but some hypervisors allow
changing this globally (for example, the qemu driver default can
be changed in /etc/libvirt/qemu.conf). Use 0.0.0.0 to allow
access from other machines. This is use by 'vnc' and 'spice'
keymap
Request that the virtual VNC console be configured to run with a
specific keyboard layout. If the special value 'local' is
specified, virt-install will attempt to configure to use the same
keymap as the local system. A value of 'none' specifically defers
to the hypervisor. Default behavior is hypervisor specific, but
typically is the same as 'local'. This is used by 'vnc'
password
Request a VNC password, required at connection time. Beware, this
info may end up in virt-install log files, so don't use an
important password. This is used by 'vnc' and 'spice'
passwordvalidto
Set an expiration date for password. After the date/time has
passed, all new graphical connections are denyed until a new
password is set. This is used by 'vnc' and 'spice'
The format for this value is YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SS, for example
2011-04-01T14:30:15
--vnc
This option is deprecated in favor of "--graphics vnc,..."
--vncport=VNCPORT
This option is deprecated in favor of "--graphics vnc,port=PORT,..."
--vnclisten=VNCLISTEN
This option is deprecated in favor of "--graphics
vnc,listen=LISTEN,..."
-k KEYMAP, --keymap=KEYMAP
This option is deprecated in favor of "--graphics
vnc,keymap=KEYMAP,..."
--sdl
This option is deprecated in favor of "--graphics sdl,..."
--nographics
This option is deprecated in favor of "--graphics none"
--noautoconsole
Don't automatically try to connect to the guest console. The default
behaviour is to launch a VNC client to display the graphical console,
or to run the "virsh" "console" command to display the text console.
Use of this parameter will disable this behaviour.
Virtualization Type options
Options to override the default virtualization type choices.
-v, --hvm
Request the use of full virtualization, if both para & full
virtualization are available on the host. This parameter may not be
available if connecting to a Xen hypervisor on a machine without
hardware virtualization support. This parameter is implied if
connecting to a QEMU based hypervisor.
-p, --paravirt
This guest should be a paravirtualized guest. If the host supports
both para & full virtualization, and neither this parameter nor the
"--hvm" are specified, this will be assumed.
--container
This guest should be a container type guest. This option is only
required if the hypervisor supports other guest types as well (so for
example this option is the default behavior for LXC and OpenVZ, but
is provided for completeness).
--virt-type
The hypervisor to install on. Example choices are kvm, qemu, xen, or
kqemu. Availabile options are listed via 'virsh capabilities' in the
<domain> tags.
--accelerate
Prefer KVM or KQEMU (in that order) if installing a QEMU guest. This
behavior is now the default, and this option is deprecated. To
install a plain QEMU guest, use '--virt-type qemu'
--noapic
Force disable APIC for the guest.
--noacpi
Force disable ACPI for the guest.
Device Options
--host-device=HOSTDEV
Attach a physical host device to the guest. Some example values for
HOSTDEV:
--host-device pci_0000_00_1b_0
A node device name via libvirt, as shown by 'virsh nodedev-list'
--host-device 001.003
USB by bus, device (via lsusb).
--host-device 0x1234:0x5678
USB by vendor, product (via lsusb).
--host-device 1f.01.02
PCI device (via lspci).
--soundhw MODEL
Attach a virtual audio device to the guest. MODEL specifies the
emulated sound card model. Possible values are ich6, ac97, es1370,
sb16, pcspk, or default. 'default' will be AC97 if the hypervisor
supports it, otherwise it will be ES1370.
This deprecates the old boolean --sound model (which still works the
same as a single '--soundhw default')
--watchdog MODEL[,action=ACTION]
Attach a virtual hardware watchdog device to the guest. This requires
a daemon and device driver in the guest. The watchdog fires a signal
when the virtual machine appears to hung. ACTION specifies what
libvirt will do when the watchdog fires. Values are
reset
Forcefully reset the guest (the default)
poweroff
Forcefully power off the guest
pause
Pause the guest
none
Do nothing
shutdown
Gracefully shutdown the guest (not recommended, since a hung
guest probably won't respond to a graceful shutdown)
MODEL is the emulated device model: either i6300esb (the default) or
ib700. Some examples:
Use the recommended settings:
--watchdog default
Use the i6300esb with the 'poweroff' action
--watchdog i6300esb,action=poweroff
--parallel=CHAROPTS
--serial=CHAROPTS
Specifies a serial device to attach to the guest, with various
options. The general format of a serial string is
--serial type,opt1=val1,opt2=val2,...
--serial and --parallel devices share all the same options, unless
otherwise noted. Some of the types of character device redirection
are:
--serial pty
Pseudo TTY. The allocated pty will be listed in the running
guests XML description.
--serial dev,path=HOSTPATH
Host device. For serial devices, this could be /dev/ttyS0. For
parallel devices, this could be /dev/parport0.
--serial file,path=FILENAME
Write output to FILENAME.
--serial pipe,path=PIPEPATH
Named pipe (see pipe(7))
--serial tcp,host=HOST:PORT,mode=MODE,protocol=PROTOCOL
TCP net console. MODE is either 'bind' (wait for connections on
HOST:PORT) or 'connect' (send output to HOST:PORT), default is
'connect'. HOST defaults to '127.0.0.1', but PORT is required.
PROTOCOL can be either 'raw' or 'telnet' (default 'raw'). If
'telnet', the port acts like a telnet server or client. Some
examples:
Connect to localhost, port 1234:
--serial tcp,host=:1234
Wait for connections on any address, port 4567:
--serial tcp,host=0.0.0.0:4567,mode=bind
Wait for telnet connection on localhost, port 2222. The user
could then connect interactively to this console via 'telnet
localhost 2222':
--serial tcp,host=:2222,mode=bind,protocol=telnet
--serial udp,host=CONNECT_HOST:PORT,bind_host=BIND_HOST:BIND_PORT
UDP net console. HOST:PORT is the destination to send output to
(default HOST is '127.0.0.1', PORT is required).
BIND_HOST:BIND_PORT is the optional local address to bind to
(default BIND_HOST is 127.0.0.1, but is only set if BIND_PORT is
specified). Some examples:
Send output to default syslog port (may need to edit
/etc/rsyslog.conf accordingly):
--serial udp,host=:514
Send output to remote host 192.168.10.20, port 4444 (this output
can be read on the remote host using 'nc -u -l 4444'):
--serial udp,host=192.168.10.20:4444
--serial unix,path=UNIXPATH,mode=MODE
Unix socket, see unix(7). MODE has similar behavior and defaults
as --serial tcp,mode=MODE
--channel
Specifies a communication channel device to connect the guest and
host machine. This option uses the same options as --serial and
--parallel for specifying the host/source end of the channel. Extra
'target' options are used to specify how the guest machine sees the
channel.
Some of the types of character device redirection are:
--channel SOURCE,target_type=guestfwd,target_address=HOST:PORT
Communication channel using QEMU usermode networking stack. The
guest can connect to the channel using the specified HOST:PORT
combination.
--channel SOURCE,target_type=virtio[,name=NAME]
Communication channel using virtio serial (requires 2.6.34 or
later host and guest). Each instance of a virtio --channel line
is exposed in the guest as /dev/vport0p1, /dev/vport0p2, etc.
NAME is optional metadata, and can be any string, such as
org.linux-kvm.virtioport1. If specified, this will be exposed in
the guest at /sys/class/virtio-ports/vport0p1/NAME
--channel spicevmc,target_type=virtio[,name=NAME]
Communication channel for QEMU spice agent, using virtio serial
(requires 2.6.34 or later host and guest). NAME is optional
metadata, and can be any string, such as the default
com.redhat.spice.0 that specifies how the guest will see the
channel.
--console
Connect a text console between the guest and host. Certain guest and
hypervisor combinations can automatically set up a getty in the
guest, so an out of the box text login can be provided
(target_type=xen for xen paravirt guests, and possibly
target_type=virtio in the future).
Example:
--console pty,target_type=virtio
Connect a virtio console to the guest, redirected to a PTY on the
host. For supported guests, this exposes /dev/hvc0 in the guest.
See http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Features/VirtioSerial for more
info. virtio console requires libvirt 0.8.3 or later.
--video=VIDEO
Specify what video device model will be attached to the guest. Valid
values for VIDEO are hypervisor specific, but some options for recent
kvm are cirrus, vga, qxl, or vmvga (vmware).
--smartcard=MODE[,OPTS]
Configure a virtual smartcard device.
Mode is one of host, host-certificates, or passthrough. Additional
options are:
type
Character device type to connect to on the host. This is only
applicable for passthrough mode.
An example invocation:
--smartcard passthrough,type=spicevmc
Use the smartcard channel of a SPICE graphics device to pass
smartcard info to the guest
See "http://libvirt.org/formatdomain.html#elementsSmartcard" for
complete details.
Miscellaneous Options
--autostart
Set the autostart flag for a domain. This causes the domain to be
started on host boot up.
--print-xml
If the requested guest has no install phase (--import, --boot), print
the generated XML instead of defining the guest. By default this WILL
do storage creation (can be disabled with --dry-run).
If the guest has an install phase, you will need to use --print-step
to specify exactly what XML output you want. This option implies
--quiet.
--print-step
Acts similarly to --print-xml, except requires specifying which
install step to print XML for. Possible values are 1, 2, 3, or all.
Stage 1 is typically booting from the install media, and stage 2 is
typically the final guest config booting off hardisk. Stage 3 is only
relevant for windows installs, which by default have a second install
stage. This option implies --quiet.
--noreboot
Prevent the domain from automatically rebooting after the install has
completed.
--wait=WAIT
Amount of time to wait (in minutes) for a VM to complete its install.
Without this option, virt-install will wait for the console to close
(not neccessarily indicating the guest has shutdown), or in the case
of --noautoconsole, simply kick off the install and exit. Any
negative value will make virt-install wait indefinitely, a value of 0
triggers the same results as noautoconsole. If the time limit is
exceeded, virt-install simply exits, leaving the virtual machine in
its current state.
--force
Prevent interactive prompts. If the intended prompt was a yes/no
prompt, always say yes. For any other prompts, the application will
exit.
--dry-run
Proceed through the guest creation process, but do NOT create storage
devices, change host device configuration, or actually teach libvirt
about the guest. virt-install may still fetch install media, since
this is required to properly detect the OS to install.
--prompt
Specifically enable prompting for required information. Default
prompting is off (as of virtinst 0.400.0)
--check-cpu
Check that the number virtual cpus requested does not exceed physical
CPUs and warn if they do.
-q, --quiet
Only print fatal error messages.
-d, --debug
Print debugging information to the terminal when running the install
process. The debugging information is also stored in
"$HOME/.virtinst/virt-install.log" even if this parameter is omitted.
EXAMPLES
Install a Fedora 13 KVM guest with virtio accelerated disk/network,
creating a new 8GB storage file, installing from media in the hosts
CDROM drive, auto launching a graphical VNC viewer
# virt-install \
--connect qemu:///system \
--virt-type kvm \
--name demo \
--ram 500 \
--disk path=/var/lib/libvirt/images/demo.img,size=8 \
--graphics vnc \
--cdrom /dev/cdrom \
--os-variant fedora13
Install a Fedora 9 plain QEMU guest, using LVM partition, virtual
networking, booting from PXE, using VNC server/viewer
# virt-install \
--connect qemu:///system \
--name demo \
--ram 500 \
--disk path=/dev/HostVG/DemoVM \
--network network=default \
--virt-type qemu
--graphics vnc \
--os-variant fedora9
Install a guest with a real partition, with the default QEMU hypervisor
for a different architecture using SDL graphics, using a remote kernel
and initrd pair:
# virt-install \
--connect qemu:///system \
--name demo \
--ram 500 \
--disk path=/dev/hdc \
--network bridge=eth1 \
--arch ppc64 \
--graphics sdl \
--location http://download.fedora.redhat.com/pub/fedora/linux/core/6/x86_64/os/
Run a Live CD image under Xen fullyvirt, in diskless environment
# virt-install \
--hvm \
--name demo \
--ram 500 \
--nodisks \
--livecd \
--graphics vnc \
--cdrom /root/fedora7live.iso
Run /usr/bin/httpd in a linux container guest (LXC). Resource usage is
capped at 512 MB of ram and 2 host cpus:
# virt-install \
--connect lxc:/// \
--name httpd_guest \
--ram 512 \
--vcpus 2 \
--init /usr/bin/httpd
Install a paravirtualized Xen guest, 500 MB of RAM, a 5 GB of disk, and
Fedora Core 6 from a web server, in text-only mode, with old style
--file options:
# virt-install \
--paravirt \
--name demo \
--ram 500 \
--file /var/lib/xen/images/demo.img \
--file-size 6 \
--graphics none \
--location http://download.fedora.redhat.com/pub/fedora/linux/core/6/x86_64/os/
Create a guest from an existing disk image 'mydisk.img' using defaults
for the rest of the options.
# virt-install \
--name demo
--ram 512
--disk /home/user/VMs/mydisk.img
--import
Test a custom kernel/initrd using an existing disk image, manually
specifying a serial device hooked to a PTY on the host machine.
# virt-install \
--name mykernel
--ram 512
--disk /home/user/VMs/mydisk.img
--boot kernel=/tmp/mykernel,initrd=/tmp/myinitrd,kernel_args="console=ttyS0"
--serial pty
AUTHORS
Written by Daniel P. Berrange, Hugh Brock, Jeremy Katz, Cole Robinson
and a team of many other contributors. See the AUTHORS file in the
source distribution for the complete list of credits.
BUGS
Please see http://virt-manager.org/page/BugReporting
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2006-2011 Red Hat, Inc, and various contributors. This
is free software. You may redistribute copies of it under the terms of
the GNU General Public License "http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html".
There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.
SEE ALSOvirsh(1), "virt-clone(1)", "virt-manager(1)", the project website
"http://virt-manager.org"
2013-11-21 VIRT-INSTALL(1)