Virtual Machine Viewer (virt-viewer) is a lightweight interface for interacting with the graphical display of a virtualized guest OS. It uses GTK-VNC and libvirt to look up the VNC server details associated with the guest. It is intended as a replacement for the traditional vncviewer client, since the latter does not support SSL/TLS encryption of x509 certificate authentication. License: GNU General Public License v2 Changes:
Accelerators are now blocked when keyboard grab is active. Password characters are hidden in text entry fields. The domain name is used in the title bar. The guest console can be resized using smooth hardware accelerated scaling. An experimental Firefox plugin for accessing a console from a Web browser was provided.
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VIRT-VIEWER(1) User Contributed Perl Documentation VIRT-VIEWER(1)NAME
virt-viewer - display the graphical console for a virtual machine
SYNOPSIS
virt-viewer [OPTIONS] -- DOMAIN-NAME|ID|UUID
DESCRIPTION
virt-viewer is a minimal tool for displaying the graphical console of a virtual machine. The console is accessed using the VNC or SPICE
protocol. The guest can be referred to based on its name, ID, or UUID. If the guest is not already running, then the viewer can be told to
wait until is starts before attempting to connect to the console The viewer can connect to remote hosts to lookup the console information
and then also connect to the remote console using the same network transport.
OPTIONS
The following options are accepted when running "virt-viewer":
-h, --help
Display command line help summary
-V, --version
Display program version number
-v, --verbose
Display information about the connection
-c URI, --connect=URI
Specify the hypervisor connection URI
-w, --wait
Wait for the domain to start up before attempting to connect to the console
-r, --reconnect
Automatically reconnect to the domain if it shuts down and restarts
-z PCT, --zoom=PCT
Zoom level of the display window in percentage. Range 10-200.
-d, --direct
Do not attempt to tunnel the console over SSH, even if the main connection URI used SSH.
-a, --attach
Use libvirt to directly attach to a local display, instead of making a TCP/UNIX socket connection. This avoids the need to
authentication with the remote display, if authentication with libvirt is already allowed. This option does not work with remote
displays.
-f, --full-screen
Start with the window maximised to fullscreen
--debug
Print debugging information
-H HOTKEYS, --hotkeys HOTKEYS
Override the default hotkey bindings with HOTKEYS. Where HOTKEYS is <action1>=<key1>[+<key2>][,<action2>=<key3>[+<key4>]]. Key-names
are case-insensitive, valid actions are: toggle-fullscreen, release-cursor, smartcard-insert and smartcard-remove. Examples:
--hotkeys=toggle-fullscreen=shift+f11,release-cursor=shift+f12
--hotkeys=release-cursor=ctrl+alt
Note that hotkeys for which no binding is given are disabled, specifying an empty string disables all hotkeys.
-k, --kiosk
Start in kiosk mode. In this mode, the application will start in fullscreen with minimal UI. It will prevent the user from quitting or
performing any interaction outside of usage of the remote desktop session.
Note that it can't offer a complete secure solution by itself. Your kiosk system must have additional configuration and security
settings to lock down the OS. In particular, you must configure or disable the window manager, limit the session capabilities, use some
restart/watchdog mechanism, disable VT switching etc.
--kiosk-quit <never|on-disconnect>
By default, when kiosk mode is enabled, virt-viewer will remain open when the connection to the remote server is terminated. By setting
kiosk-quit option to "on-disconnect" value, virt-viewer will quit instead. Please note that --reconnect takes precedence over this
option, and will attempt to do a reconnection before it quits.
EXAMPLES
To connect to the guest called 'demo' running under Xen
virt-viewer demo
To connect to the guest with ID 7 running under QEMU
virt-viewer --connect qemu:///system 7
To wait for the guest with UUID 66ab33c0-6919-a3f7-e659-16c82d248521 to startup and then connect, also reconnecting upon restart of VM
virt-viewer --reconnect --wait 66ab33c0-6919-a3f7-e659-16c82d248521
To connect to a remote console using TLS
virt-viewer --connect xen://example.org/ demo
To connect to a remote host using SSH, lookup the guest config and then make a direct non-tunnelled connection of the console
virt-viewer --direct --connect xen+ssh://root@example.org/ demo
AUTHOR
Written by Daniel P. Berrange, based on the GTK-VNC example program gvncviewer.
BUGS
Report bugs to the mailing list "http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/virt-tools-list"
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2007-2008 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 ALSO virsh(1), "virt-manager(1)", the project website "http://virt-manager.org"
perl v5.16.3 2014-06-10 VIRT-VIEWER(1)