b417259465
Partial-Bug: #1250515 author: diane fleming Change-Id: I92c9ad25ee5bbd2c9334c4860637faa1b358718b backport: havana
73 lines
3.7 KiB
XML
73 lines
3.7 KiB
XML
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
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<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
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xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
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xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" version="5.0"
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xml:id="qemu">
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<?dbhtml stop-chunking?>
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<title>QEMU</title>
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<para>From the perspective of the Compute service, the QEMU hypervisor is very similar to the KVM
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hypervisor. Both are controlled through libvirt, both support the same feature set, and all
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virtual machine images that are compatible with KVM are also compatible with QEMU. The main
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difference is that QEMU does not support native virtualization. Consequently, QEMU has worse
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performance than KVM and is a poor choice for a production deployment.</para>
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<para>The typical uses cases for QEMU are<itemizedlist>
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<listitem>
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<para>Running on older hardware that lacks
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virtualization support.</para>
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</listitem>
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<listitem>
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<para>Running the Compute service inside of a virtual
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machine for development or testing purposes, where
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the hypervisor does not support native
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virtualization for guests.</para>
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</listitem>
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</itemizedlist></para>
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<para>
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To enable QEMU, add these settings to
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<filename>nova.conf</filename>:<programlisting language="ini">compute_driver=libvirt.LibvirtDriver
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libvirt_type=qemu</programlisting></para>
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<para>
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For some operations you may also have to install the <command>guestmount</command> utility:</para>
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<para>On Ubuntu:
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<screen><prompt>$></prompt> <userinput>sudo apt-get install guestmount</userinput></screen>
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</para>
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<para>On RHEL, Fedora or CentOS:
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<screen><prompt>$></prompt> <userinput>sudo yum install libguestfs-tools</userinput></screen>
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</para>
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<para>On openSUSE:
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<screen><prompt>$></prompt> <userinput>sudo zypper install guestfs-tools</userinput></screen>
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</para>
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<para>The QEMU hypervisor supports the following virtual machine image formats:</para>
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<itemizedlist>
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<listitem>
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<para>Raw</para>
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</listitem>
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<listitem>
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<para>QEMU Copy-on-write (qcow2)</para>
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</listitem>
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<listitem>
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<para>VMWare virtual machine disk format (vmdk)</para>
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</listitem>
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</itemizedlist>
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<section xml:id="fixes-rhel-qemu">
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<title>Tips and fixes for QEMU on RHEL</title>
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<para>If you are testing OpenStack in a virtual machine, you need
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to configure nova to use qemu without KVM and hardware
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virtualization. The second command relaxes SELinux rules
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to allow this mode of operation
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(<link xlink:href="https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=753589">
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https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=753589</link>). The
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last two commands here work around a libvirt issue fixed in
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RHEL 6.4. Note nested virtualization will be the much
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slower TCG variety, and you should provide lots of memory
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to the top level guest, as the OpenStack-created guests
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default to 2GM RAM with no overcommit.</para>
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<note><para>The second command, <command>setsebool</command>, may take a while.
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</para></note>
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<screen><prompt>$></prompt> <userinput>sudo openstack-config --set /etc/nova/nova.conf DEFAULT libvirt_type qemu</userinput>
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<prompt>$></prompt> <userinput>sudo setsebool -P virt_use_execmem on</userinput>
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<prompt>$></prompt> <userinput>sudo ln -s /usr/libexec/qemu-kvm /usr/bin/qemu-system-x86_64</userinput>
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<prompt>$></prompt> <userinput>sudo service libvirtd restart</userinput></screen>
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</section>
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</section>
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