Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: KVM - VM Guest
Operating Systems Linux Red Hat KVM - VM Guest Post 302910670 by rbatte1 on Saturday 26th of July 2014 05:21:52 PM
Old 07-26-2014
A few questions to help us all first:-
  • Where do you get your storage for the VM from?
  • What did you allocate it the VM?
  • What can you see with the fdisk command?
  • Are you using LVM?
  • Do you have multiple volume groups, or is it all just one big one?
There may be more questions to follow.


Sorry about that,
Robin
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Red Hat

Filesystems disappear on KVM guest machine after reboot.

Hello, I have a KVM system running on RHEL 5.4. It hosts 4 guest VMs. One of the guest host fails to get back the mounted filesystems after the system reboots. Does anyone have any idea what the issue could be? Regards, Mahive. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mahive
1 Replies

2. Virtualization and Cloud Computing

KVM FC12 guest save not working ??

Howdy I am using Fedora12 with KVM, with XP64pro as a guest. Everything seems to be working just fine, BUT I can't Save. When I do instruction KVM to save, I get a continuing Saving display, but it continues for a long time until I finally terminate it due to boredom :) I have let it run for... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: TJMan
0 Replies

3. Red Hat

Could not see virtual fc in KVM guest OS

Hi All, I have RHEL 5u4 physical system with 2 Qlogic fc cards. It hosts 2 KVM virtual machines which are also running RHEL 5u4 OS. After all these I have created a virutal HBA (refered in google) successfully on the base OS. But the same is not visible to guest OS. My question here is, ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Vichu
1 Replies

4. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

[Solved] Cannot install KVM guest on CentOS/RedHat

Hi, I've a CentOS Server and I need to create KVM guest machine without X. /usr/sbin/virt-install --name server1 --ram 4000 --vcpus=8 --file=/srv/virtual/server1.img --file-size=20 --cdrom /tmp/server1.iso --mac=52:54:00:fd:48:7c The iso was created with cobbler... So, now the machine is... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: hiddenshadow
5 Replies

5. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

NFS3 over KVM-Guest don't map UnixACLs

Hi, I have an problem with ACLs over NFS3. The Problem is, when i mount a nfsshare from an KVMguest, the UnixACLs were not mapped too. I don't know why. But this is only when i have the NFSshares on an virtulamachine. When i do the same with ein real machine, ACLs work well. You can see that:... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: darktux
4 Replies

6. Red Hat

About KVM ?

Hi every body Umm. I have 4 physical servers and i need to make the 1 machine from 4 server by KVM like Vmware ESX ? Do KVM can consolidate physical servers to 1 machine ? If KVM can do it. can i find manual to do it from where thk.... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: infjustice
3 Replies

7. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Need commands to fetch Guest VM OS version from Xen and KVM

Im looking for the commands that can be executed to fetch the OS Version of the VMs running on the below Hypervisors. Xen (Not the citrix Xen server, but the Xen Sever hosted on a ubuntu Machine) KVM (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: ranvirsingh
0 Replies

8. Red Hat

How to export the KVM based guest VM as template or ovf or some other format ?

Hi All, I am new to the KVM virtualization. I have deployed and configured KVM in one of my server. I am using RHEL 6.5. Also I created the guest VM successfully and installed OS on it. Its up and running without any issues. Is there any way I can export the VM and import it in... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: kalpeer
2 Replies

9. Red Hat

KVM/Qemu allocated memory not showing in guest

So we have a RHEL 7.6 workstation with 128 gigs of ram. The OS sees all the ram and 80 cors (40 HT) We have 1 guest with 8 CPUs and 32gigs of ram running RHEL 7.6 workstation as well. We are trying to create another guest with 64 CPUs and 80 gigs of ram. We setup the system using... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: joeg1484
0 Replies
guestfs-testing(1)					      Virtualization Support						guestfs-testing(1)

NAME
guestfs-testing - manual testing of libguestfs, you can help! DESCRIPTION
This page has manual tests you can try on libguestfs. Everyone has a slightly different combination of platform, hardware and guests, so this testing is very valuable. Thanks for helping out! These tests require libguestfs >= 1.14. Tests marked with a * (asterisk) can destroy data if you're not careful. The others are safe and won't modify anything. You can report bugs you find through this link: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/enter_bug.cgi?component=libguestfs&product=Virtualization+Tools or post on the mailing list (registration is not required, but if you're not registered then you'll have to wait for a moderator to manually approve your message): https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/libguestfs TESTS
Run libguestfs-test-tool Run: libguestfs-test-tool This command does a very simple, non-destructive test that basic libguestfs is functioning. You don't need to run it as root. If it doesn't print "===== TEST FINISHED OK =====", report it as a bug. It is very important that you include the complete, unedited output of "libguestfs-test-tool" in your bug report. See the "BUGS" section at the end of this page. Check KVM acceleration is being used. If your host has hardware virt acceleration, then with a hot cache libguestfs should be able to start up in a few seconds. Run the following command a few times: time guestfish -a /dev/null run After a few runs, the time should settle down to a few seconds (under 5 seconds on fast 64 bit hardware). How to check for hardware virt: http://virt-tools.org/learning/check-hardware-virt/ If the command above does not work at all, use libguestfs-test-tool(1). Run virt-alignment-scan on all your guests. Run virt-alignment-scan(1) on guests or disk images: virt-alignment-scan -a /path/to/disk.img or: virt-alignment-scan -d Guest Does the alignment report match how the guest partitions are aligned? Run virt-cat on some files in guests. virt-cat(1) can display files from guests. For a Linux guest, try: virt-cat LinuxGuest /etc/passwd A recent feature is support for Windows paths, for example: virt-cat WindowsGuest 'c:windowswin.ini' An even better test is if you have a Windows guest with multiple drives. Do "D:", "E:" etc paths work correctly? * Copy some files into a shut off guest. virt-copy-in(1) can recursively copy files and directories into a guest or disk image. virt-copy-in -d Guest /etc /tmp This should copy local directory "/etc" to "/tmp/etc" in the guest (recursively). If you boot the guest, can you see all of the copied files and directories? Shut the guest down and try copying multiple files and directories: virt-copy-in -d Guest /home /etc/issue /tmp Copy some files out of a guest. virt-copy-out(1) can recursively copy files and directories out of a guest or disk image. virt-copy-out -d Guest /home . Note the final space and period in the command is not a typo. This should copy "/home" from the guest into the current directory. Run virt-df. virt-df(1) lists disk space. Run: virt-df You can try comparing this to the results from df(1) inside the guest, but there are some provisos: o The guest must be idle. o The guest disks must be synched using sync(1). o Any action such as booting the guest will write log files causing the numbers to change. We don't guarantee that the numbers will be identical even under these circumstances. They should be similar. It would indicate a bug if you saw greatly differing numbers. Try importing virt-df CSV output into a spreadsheet or database. Run: virt-df --csv > /tmp/report.csv Now try to load this into your favorite spreadsheet or database. Are the results reproduced faithfully in the spreadsheet/database? http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.1/static/sql-copy.html http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/load-data.html * Edit a file in a shut off guest. virt-edit(1) can edit files in guests. Try this command on a RHEL or Fedora guest: virt-edit LinuxGuest /etc/sysconfig/network On other Linux guests try editing other files such as: virt-edit LinuxGuest /etc/motd Are the changes seen inside the guest when it is booted? Display the filesystems / partitions / LVs in a guest. virt-filesystems(1) can be used to display filesystems in a guest. Try this command on any disk image or guest: virt-filesystems -a /path/to/disk.img --all --long -h or: virt-filesystems -d Guest --all --long -h Do the results match what is seen in the guest? Run virt-inspector on all your guests. Use virt-inspector(1) to get a report on all of your guests or disk images: virt-inspector -a /path/to/disk.img | less or: virt-inspector -d Guest | less Do the results match what is actually in the guest? Try the auditing features of virt-ls on all your guests. List all setuid or setgid programs in a Linux virtual machine: virt-ls -lR -d Guest / | grep '^- [42]' List all public-writable directories in a Linux virtual machine: virt-ls -lR -d Guest / | grep '^d ...7' List all Unix domain sockets in a Linux virtual machine: virt-ls -lR -d Guest / | grep '^s' List all regular files with filenames ending in '.png': virt-ls -lR -d Guest / | grep -i '^-.*.png$' Display files larger than 10MB in home directories: virt-ls -lR -d Guest /home | awk '$3 > 10*1024*1024' Find everything modified in the last 7 days: virt-ls -lR -d Guest --time-days / | awk '$6 <= 7' Find regular files modified in the last 24 hours: virt-ls -lR -d Guest --time-days / | grep '^-' | awk '$6 < 1' Do the results match what is in the guest? Create a disk image from a tarball. Use virt-make-fs(1) to create a disk image from any tarball that you happen to have: virt-make-fs --partition=mbr --type=vfat /any/tarball.tar.gz output.img Add 'output.img' as a raw disk to an existing guest. Check the guest can see the files. This test is particularly useful if you try it with a Windows guest. Try other partitioning schemes, eg. --partition=gpt. Try other filesystem formats, eg. --type=ntfs, --type=ext2. * Run virt-rescue on a shut off disk image or guest. Use virt-rescue(1) to examine, rescue or repair a shut off guest or disk image: virt-rescue -a /path/to/disk.img or: virt-rescue -d Guest Can you use ordinary shell commands to examine the guest? * Resize your guests. Use virt-resize(1) to give a guest some more disk space. For example, if you have a disk image that is smaller than 30G, increase it to 30G by doing: truncate -s 30G newdisk.img virt-filesystems -a /path/to/olddisk.img --all --long -h virt-resize /path/to/olddisk.img newdisk.img --expand /dev/sda1 qemu-kvm -m 1024 -hda newdisk.img Does the guest still boot? Try expanding other partitions. * Sparsify a guest disk. Using virt-sparsify(1), make a disk image more sparse: virt-sparsify /path/to/olddisk.img newdisk.img Is "newdisk.img" still bootable after sparsifying? Is the resulting disk image smaller (use "du" to check)? * "sysprep" a shut off Linux guest. Note that this really will mess up an existing guest, so it's better to clone the guest before trying this. virt-sysprep --hostname newhost.example.com -a /path/to/disk.img Was the sysprep successful? After booting, what changes were made and were they successful? Dump the Windows Registry from your Windows guests. Use virt-win-reg(1) to dump out the Windows Registry from any Windows guests that you have. virt-win-reg --unsafe-printable-strings WindowsGuest 'HKLMSoftware' | less virt-win-reg --unsafe-printable-strings WindowsGuest 'HKLMSystem' | less Does the output match running "regedit" inside the guest? A recent feature is the ability to dump user registries, so try this, replacing username with the name of a local user in the guest: virt-win-reg --unsafe-printable-strings WindowsGuest 'HKEY_USERSusername' | less SEE ALSO
guestfs(3), guestfish(1), guestfs-examples(3), http://libguestfs.org/. AUTHORS
Richard W.M. Jones ("rjones at redhat dot com") COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2011-2012 Red Hat Inc. LICENSE
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA BUGS
To get a list of bugs against libguestfs, use this link: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/buglist.cgi?component=libguestfs&product=Virtualization+Tools To report a new bug against libguestfs, use this link: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/enter_bug.cgi?component=libguestfs&product=Virtualization+Tools When reporting a bug, please supply: o The version of libguestfs. o Where you got libguestfs (eg. which Linux distro, compiled from source, etc) o Describe the bug accurately and give a way to reproduce it. o Run libguestfs-test-tool(1) and paste the complete, unedited output into the bug report. libguestfs-1.22.6 2013-08-24 guestfs-testing(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:19 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy