--- title: Examples nav_order: 5 toc: true --- Examples of specific use cases, and/or in-depth configuration for special behaviour. ## No box and PXE boot There is support for PXE booting VMs with no disks as well as PXE booting VMs with blank disks. There are some limitations: * Requires Vagrant 1.6.0 or newer * No provisioning scripts are ran * No network configuration is being applied to the VM * No SSH connection can be made * `vagrant halt` will only work cleanly if the VM handles ACPI shutdown signals In short, VMs without a box can be created, halted and destroyed but all other functionality cannot be used. An example for a PXE booted VM with no disks whatsoever: ```ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| config.vm.define :pxeclient do |pxeclient| pxeclient.vm.provider :libvirt do |domain| domain.boot 'network' end end end ``` And an example for a PXE booted VM with no box but a blank disk which will boot from this HD if the NICs fail to PXE boot: ```ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| config.vm.define :pxeclient do |pxeclient| pxeclient.vm.provider :libvirt do |domain| domain.storage :file, :size => '100G', :type => 'qcow2' domain.boot 'network' domain.boot 'hd' end end end ``` Example for vm with 2 networks and only 1 is bootable and has dhcp server in this subnet, for example foreman with dhcp server Name of network "foreman_managed" is key for define boot order ```ruby config.vm.define :pxeclient do |pxeclient| pxeclient.vm.network :private_network,ip: '10.0.0.5', libvirt__network_name: "foreman_managed", libvirt__dhcp_enabled: false, libvirt__host_ip: '10.0.0.1' pxeclient.vm.provider :libvirt do |domain| domain.memory = 1000 boot_network = {'network' => 'foreman_managed'} domain.storage :file, :size => '100G', :type => 'qcow2' domain.boot boot_network domain.boot 'hd' end end ``` An example VM that is PXE booted from the `br1` device (which must already be configured in the host machine), and if that fails, is booted from the disk: ```ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| config.vm.define :pxeclient do |pxeclient| pxeclient.vm.network :public_network, dev: 'br1', auto_config: false pxeclient.vm.provider :libvirt do |domain| boot_network = {'dev' => 'br1'} domain.storage :file, :size => '100G' domain.boot boot_network domain.boot 'hd' end end end ``` ## Using kernel and initrd It's possible to use a direct kernel boot to modify the kernel boot parameters used to boot the VM. This typically involves either downloading the kernel/initrd directly and placing somewhere locally for use, or making use of a tool such as `virt-copy-out` to extract the relevant files from a disk image file. Looking at a generic/fedora35 image with the following contents of /boot and /boot/grub2, it should be possible to copy out the kernel, initrd, and the grub.cfg file (provides a starting cmdline). ```shell BOX_DIR="${VAGRANT_HOME:-~/.vagrant.d}/boxes/generic-VAGRANTSLASH-fedora35/4.1.10/libvirt" virt-ls -a ${BOX_DIR}/box.img /boot/ /boot/grub2 .vmlinuz-5.18.19-100.fc35.x86_64.hmac System.map-5.18.19-100.fc35.x86_64 config-5.18.19-100.fc35.x86_64 efi grub2 initramfs-0-rescue-5cbe0655dcd04b46a88f5a424135fbb8.img initramfs-5.18.19-100.fc35.x86_64.img loader symvers-5.18.19-100.fc35.x86_64.gz vmlinuz-0-rescue-5cbe0655dcd04b46a88f5a424135fbb8 vmlinuz-5.18.19-100.fc35.x86_64 device.map fonts grub.cfg grubenv i386-pc locale ``` Assuming you run something like the following: ```shell BOX_DIR="${VAGRANT_HOME:-~/.vagrant.d}/boxes/generic-VAGRANTSLASH-fedora35/4.1.10/libvirt" virt-copy-out -a ${BOX_DIR}/box.img \ /boot/vmlinuz-5.18.19-100.fc35.x86_64 \ /boot/initramfs-5.18.19-100.fc35.x86_64.img \ /boot/grub2/grub.cfg \ . ``` The final Vagrantfile should contain something like the following: ```ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| config.vm.box = "generic/fedora35" config.vm.provider :libvirt do |libvirt| libvirt.kernel = "#{Dir.pwd}/vmlinuz-5.18.19-100.fc35.x86_64" libvirt.initrd = "#{Dir.pwd}/initramfs-5.18.19-100.fc35.x86_64.img" # cmd_line is taken from the grub.cfg to ensure starting from a working value libvirt.cmd_line = 'root=/dev/mapper/fedora-root ro biosdevname=0 no_timer_check ' + 'resume=/dev/mapper/fedora-swap rd.lvm.lv=fedora/root rd.lvm.lv=fedora/swap net.ifnames=0' end end ``` ## SSH Access To VM vagrant-libvirt supports vagrant's [standard ssh settings](https://docs.vagrantup.com/v2/vagrantfile/ssh_settings.html). ## Forwarded Ports vagrant-libvirt supports Forwarded Ports via ssh port forwarding. Please note that due to a well known limitation only the TCP protocol is supported. For each `forwarded_port` directive you specify in your Vagrantfile, vagrant-libvirt will maintain an active ssh process for the lifetime of the VM. If your VM should happen to be rebooted, the SSH session will need to be re-established by halting the VM and bringing it back up. vagrant-libvirt supports an additional `forwarded_port` option `gateway_ports` which defaults to `false`, but can be set to `true` if you want the forwarded port to be accessible from outside the Vagrant host. In this case you should also set the `host_ip` option to `'*'` since it defaults to `'localhost'`. You can also provide a custom adapter to forward from by 'adapter' option. Default is `eth0`. **Internally Accessible Port Forward** `config.vm.network :forwarded_port, guest: 80, host: 2000` **Externally Accessible Port Forward** `config.vm.network :forwarded_port, guest: 80, host: 2000, host_ip: "0.0.0.0"` ## Forwarding the ssh-port Vagrant-libvirt now supports forwarding the standard ssh-port on port 2222 from the localhost to allow for consistent provisioning steps/ports to be used when defining across multiple providers. To enable, set the following: ```ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| config.vm.provider :libvirt do |libvirt| # Enable forwarding of forwarded_port with id 'ssh'. libvirt.forward_ssh_port = true end end ``` Previously by default libvirt skipped the forwarding of the ssh-port because you can access the machine directly. In the future it is expected that this will be enabled by default once autocorrect support is added to handle port collisions for multi machine environments gracefully. ## Synced Folders Vagrant automatically syncs the project folder on the host to `/vagrant` in the guest. You can also configure additional synced folders. If the type is not specified, vagrant will attempt to select one based on the highest priority that is usable. This can mean that depending on whether you have the packages installed to support nfs and or rsync, you may experience different behaviour on different machines. Recommendation is to be explicit. **SECURITY NOTE:** for remote Libvirt, nfs synced folders requires a bridged public network interface and you must connect to Libvirt via ssh. **NFS** `vagrant-libvirt` supports [NFS](https://www.vagrantup.com/docs/synced-folders/nfs) as with bidirectional synced folders. Example with NFS: ``` ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| config.vm.synced_folder "./", "/vagrant", type: "nfs" end ``` **RSync** `vagrant-libvirt` supports [rsync](https://www.vagrantup.com/docs/synced-folders/rsync) with unidirectional synced folders. Example with rsync: ``` ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| config.vm.synced_folder "./", "/vagrant", type: "rsync" end ``` **9P** `vagrant-libvirt` supports [VirtFS](http://www.linux-kvm.org/page/VirtFS) ([9p or Plan 9](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/9P_\(protocol\))) with bidirectional synced folders. Difference between NFS and 9p is explained [here](https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/240281/virtfs-plan-9-vs-nfs-as-tool-for-share-folder-for-virtual-machine). For 9p shares, a `mount: false` option allows to define synced folders without mounting them at boot. Example for `accessmode: "squash"` with 9p: ``` ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| config.vm.synced_folder "./", "/vagrant", type: "9p", disabled: false, accessmode: "squash", owner: "1000" end ``` Example for `accessmode: "mapped"` with 9p: ``` ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| config.vm.synced_folder "./", "/vagrant", type: "9p", disabled: false, accessmode: "mapped", mount: false end ``` Further documentation on using 9p can be found in [kernel docs](https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/filesystems/9p.txt) and in [QEMU wiki](https://wiki.qemu.org/Documentation/9psetup#Starting_the_Guest_directly). Please do note that 9p depends on support in the guest and not all distros come with the 9p module by default. **Virtio-fs** `vagrant-libvirt` supports [Virtio-fs](https://virtio-fs.gitlab.io/) with bidirectional synced folders. For virtiofs shares, a `mount: false` option allows to define synced folders without mounting them at boot. So far, passthrough is the only supported access mode and it requires running the virtiofsd daemon as root. QEMU needs to allocate the backing memory for all the guest RAM as shared memory, e.g. [Use file-backed memory](https://libvirt.org/kbase/virtiofs.html#host-setup) by enable `memory_backing_dir` option in `/etc/libvirt/qemu.conf`: ``` shell memory_backing_dir = "/dev/shm" ``` Example for Libvirt \>= 6.2.0 (e.g. Ubuntu 20.10 with Linux 5.8.0 + QEMU 5.0 + Libvirt 6.6.0, i.e. NUMA nodes required) with virtiofs: ``` ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| config.vm.provider :libvirt do |libvirt| libvirt.cpus = 2 libvirt.numa_nodes = [{ :cpus => "0-1", :memory => 8192, :memAccess => "shared" }] libvirt.memorybacking :access, :mode => "shared" end config.vm.synced_folder "./", "/vagrant", type: "virtiofs" end ``` Example for Libvirt \>= 6.9.0 (e.g. Ubuntu 21.04 with Linux 5.11.0 + QEMU 5.2 + Libvirt 7.0.0, or Ubuntu 20.04 + [PPA enabled](https://launchpad.net/~savoury1/+archive/ubuntu/virtualisation)) with virtiofs: ``` ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| config.vm.provider :libvirt do |libvirt| libvirt.cpus = 2 libvirt.memory = 8192 libvirt.memorybacking :access, :mode => "shared" end config.vm.synced_folder "./", "/vagrant", type: "virtiofs" end ``` Further documentation on using virtiofs can be found in [official HowTo](https://virtio-fs.gitlab.io/index.html#howto) and in [Libvirt KB](https://libvirt.org/kbase/virtiofs.html). Please do note that virtiofs depends on: - Host: Linux \>= 5.4, QEMU \>= 4.2 and Libvirt \>= 6.2 (e.g. Ubuntu 20.10) - Guest: Linux \>= 5.4 (e.g. Ubuntu 20.04) ## QEMU Session Support vagrant-libvirt supports using QEMU user sessions to maintain Vagrant VMs. As the session connection does not have root access to the system features which require root will not work. Access to networks created by the system QEMU connection can be granted by using the [QEMU bridge helper](https://wiki.qemu.org/Features/HelperNetworking). The bridge helper is enabled by default on some distros but may need to be enabled/installed on others. There must be a virbr network defined in the QEMU system session. The libvirt `default` network which comes by default, the vagrant `vagrant-libvirt` network which is generated if you run a Vagrantfile using the System session, or a manually defined network can be used. These networks can be set to autostart with `sudo virsh net-autostart `, which'll mean no further root access is required even after reboots. The QEMU bridge helper is configured via `/etc/qemu/bridge.conf`. This file must include the virbr you wish to use (e.g. virbr0, virbr1, etc). You can find this out via `sudo virsh net-dumpxml `. ``` allow virbr0 ``` An example configuration of a machine using the QEMU session connection: ```ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| config.vm.provider :libvirt do |libvirt| # Use QEMU session instead of system connection libvirt.qemu_use_session = true # URI of QEMU session connection, default is as below libvirt.uri = 'qemu:///session' # URI of QEMU system connection, use to obtain IP address for management, default is below libvirt.system_uri = 'qemu:///system' # Path to store Libvirt images for the virtual machine, default is as ~/.local/share/libvirt/images libvirt.storage_pool_path = '/home/user/.local/share/libvirt/images' # Management network device, default is below libvirt.management_network_device = 'virbr0' end # Public network configuration using existing network device # Note: Private networks do not work with QEMU session enabled as root access is required to create new network devices config.vm.network :public_network, :dev => "virbr1", :mode => "bridge", :type => "bridge" end ``` ## Customized Graphics vagrant-libvirt supports customizing the display and video settings of the managed guest. This is probably most useful for VNC-type displays with multiple guests. It lets you specify the exact port for each guest to use deterministically. Here is an example of using custom display options: ```ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| config.vm.provider :libvirt do |libvirt| libvirt.graphics_port = 5901 libvirt.graphics_ip = '0.0.0.0' libvirt.video_type = 'qxl' end end ``` ## TPM Devices Modern versions of Libvirt support connecting to TPM devices on the host system. This allows you to enable Trusted Boot Extensions, among other features, on your guest VMs. To passthrough a hardware TPM, you will generally only need to modify the `tpm_path` variable in your guest configuration. However, advanced usage, such as the application of a Software TPM, may require modifying the `tpm_model`, `tpm_type` and `tpm_version` variables. The TPM options will only be used if you specify a TPM path or version. Declarations of any TPM options without specifying a path or version will result in those options being ignored. Here is an example of using the TPM options: ```ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| config.vm.provider :libvirt do |libvirt| libvirt.tpm_model = 'tpm-tis' libvirt.tpm_type = 'passthrough' libvirt.tpm_path = '/dev/tpm0' end end ``` It's also possible for Libvirt to start an emulated TPM device on the host. Requires `swtpm` and `swtpm-tools` ```ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| config.vm.provider :libvirt do |libvirt| libvirt.tpm_model = "tpm-crb" libvirt.tpm_type = "emulator" libvirt.tpm_version = "2.0" end end ``` ## SMBIOS System Information Libvirt allows to specify [SMBIOS System Information](https://libvirt.org/formatdomain.html#smbios-system-information) like a base board or chassis manufacturer or a system serial number. ```ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| config.vm.provider :libvirt do |libvirt| libvirt.sysinfo = { 'bios': { 'vendor': 'Test Vendor', 'version': '0.1.2', }, 'system': { 'manufacturer': 'Test Manufacturer', 'version': '0.1.0', 'serial': '', }, 'base board': { 'manufacturer': 'Test Manufacturer', 'version': '1.2', }, 'chassis': { 'manufacturer': 'Test Manufacturer', 'serial': 'AABBCCDDEE', }, 'oem strings': [ 'app1: string1', 'app1: string2', 'app2: string1', 'app2: string2', ], } end end ``` ## Memory balloon The configuration of the memory balloon device can be overridden. By default, libvirt will automatically attach a memory balloon; this behavior is preserved by not configuring any memballoon-related options. The memory balloon can be explicitly disabled by setting `memballoon_enabled` to `false`. Setting `memballoon_enabled` to `true` will allow additional configuration of memballoon-related options. Here is an example of using the memballoon options: ```ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| config.vm.provider :libvirt do |libvirt| libvirt.memballoon_enabled = true libvirt.memballoon_model = 'virtio' libvirt.memballoon_pci_bus = '0x00' libvirt.memballoon_pci_slot = '0x0f' end end ``` ## Secure Encryption Virtualization (SEV) Secure Encryption Virtualization is supported by libvirt and by the vagrant-libvirt provider but comes with several requirements. This mode has only been tested with q35 types of machines, so you'll need an UEFI boot ```ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| config.vm.provider :libvirt do |libvirt| libvirt.loader = "/usr/share/OVMF/OVMF_CODE.fd" libvirt.nvram = "/path/to/ovmf/OVMF_VARS.fd" libvirt.machine_type = 'pc-q35-focal' end end ``` Read the libvirt documentaiton to understand what OVMF is and how to use it. Next, you'll want to call the following methods: ```ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| config.vm.provider :libvirt do |libvirt| libvirt.launchsecurity :type => 'sev', :cbitpos => 47, :reducedPhysBits => 1, :policy => "0x0003" libvirt.memtune :type => "hard_limit", :value => 2500000 # Note here the value in kB (not in Mb) end end ``` Note that the value provided in the memtune `hard_limit` is in Kb by default. It should be higher than the one given in `libvirt.memory` (which is in Mb, by the way) by some amount (again, check out the [https://libvirt.org/kbase/launch_security_sev.html](documentation)) to understand why. It is also necessary to explicitly define the memballoon for it to accept the iommu flag. ```ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| config.vm.provider :libvirt do |libvirt| libvirt.memballoon_enabled = true libvirt.memballoon_model = 'virtio' libvirt.memballoon_pci_bus = '0x07' libvirt.memballoon_pci_slot = '0x00' end end ``` And finally, because the iommu flag has to be passed to the networks, you also need to set it explicitly: ```ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| config.vm.provider :libvirt do |libvirt| # Management network only (the NAT'ed network provided by Vagrant) libvirt.management_network_driver_iommu = true end # Example in defining a bridge config.vm.network :public_network, :dev => "br0", :bridge => "br0", :mode => "bridge", :type => "bridge", :driver_iommu => true # <== Note here the additional flag end ``` Don't forget that you'll need an UEFI base box. ## Libvirt communication channels For certain functionality to be available within a guest, a private communication channel must be established with the host. Two notable examples of this are the QEMU guest agent, and the Spice/QXL graphics type. Below is a simple example which exposes a virtio serial channel to the guest. Note: in a multi-VM environment, the channel would be created for all VMs. ```ruby vagrant.configure(2) do |config| config.vm.provider :libvirt do |libvirt| libvirt.channel :type => 'unix', :target_name => 'org.qemu.guest_agent.0', :target_type => 'virtio' end end ``` Below is the syntax for creating a spicevmc channel for use by a qxl graphics card. ```ruby vagrant.configure(2) do |config| config.vm.provider :libvirt do |libvirt| libvirt.channel :type => 'spicevmc', :target_name => 'com.redhat.spice.0', :target_type => 'virtio' end end ``` These settings can be specified on a per-VM basis, however the per-guest settings will OVERRIDE any global 'config' setting. In the following example, we create 3 VMs with the following configuration: * **controller**: No channel settings specified, so we default to the provider setting of a single virtio guest agent channel. * **node1**: Override the channel setting, setting both the guest agent channel, and a spicevmc channel * **node2**: Override the channel setting, setting both the guest agent channel, and a 'guestfwd' channel. TCP traffic sent by the guest to the given IP address and port is forwarded to the host socket `/tmp/foo`. Note: this device must be unique for each VM. For example: ```ruby Vagrant.configure(2) do |config| config.vm.box = "fedora/32-cloud-base" config.vm.provider :libvirt do |libvirt| libvirt.channel :type => 'unix', :target_name => 'org.qemu.guest_agent.0', :target_type => 'virtio' end config.vm.define "controller" do |controller| controller.vm.provider :libvirt do |domain| domain.memory = 1024 end end config.vm.define "node1" do |node1| node1.vm.provider :libvirt do |domain| domain.channel :type => 'unix', :target_name => 'org.qemu.guest_agent.0', :target_type => 'virtio' domain.channel :type => 'spicevmc', :target_name => 'com.redhat.spice.0', :target_type => 'virtio' end end config.vm.define "node2" do |node2| node2.vm.provider :libvirt do |domain| domain.channel :type => 'unix', :target_name => 'org.qemu.guest_agent.0', :target_type => 'virtio' domain.channel :type => 'unix', :target_type => 'guestfwd', :target_address => '192.0.2.42', :target_port => '4242', :source_path => '/tmp/foo' end end end ``` ## Custom QEMU arguments and environment variables You can also specify multiple qemuargs arguments or qemuenv environment variables for qemu-system * `value` - Value ```ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| config.vm.provider :libvirt do |libvirt| libvirt.qemuargs :value => "-device" libvirt.qemuargs :value => "intel-iommu" libvirt.qemuenv QEMU_AUDIO_DRV: 'pa' libvirt.qemuenv QEMU_AUDIO_TIMER_PERIOD: '150' libvirt.qemuenv QEMU_PA_SAMPLES: '1024', QEMU_PA_SERVER: '/run/user/1000/pulse/native' end end ```