Erik Skultety 1a8728fc2d virtinst: guest: Fill in SEV platform specific data automatically
The data in question are 'cbitpos' denoting which addressing bit is the
encryption bit and 'reduced_phys_bits' denoting how many physical
address space we lose by turning on the encryption. Both of these are
hypervisor dependent and thus will be the same for all the guest
residing on the same host, but need to be specified for future migration
purposes.
But given we can probe them from domain capabilities, we don't need the
user to provide them and thus enhancing cli user experience. This
requires a new _SEV domaincapabilities XML class to be created so that
we can query the specific properties.

Reviewed-by: Cole Robinson <crobinso@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Erik Skultety <eskultet@redhat.com>
2019-06-11 13:00:34 -04:00
2019-04-14 17:05:14 -04:00
2019-02-07 09:58:25 -05:00
2019-06-07 18:21:24 -04:00
2013-04-03 18:13:25 -04:00
2019-05-16 16:31:27 -04:00
2019-05-16 16:31:27 -04:00
2019-02-03 16:26:44 -05:00
2019-01-30 17:25:14 -05:00
2019-05-16 16:31:27 -04:00
2019-06-07 18:21:24 -04:00

Virtual Machine Manager

virt-manager is a graphical tool for managing virtual machines via libvirt. Most usage is with QEMU/KVM virtual machines, but Xen and libvirt LXC containers are well supported. Common operations for any libvirt driver should work.

Several command line tools are also provided:

  • virt-install: Create new libvirt virtual machines
  • virt-clone: Duplicate existing libvirt virtual machines
  • virt-xml: Edit existing libvirt virtual machines/manipulate libvirt XML
  • virt-convert: Convert VMX or OVF configs to libvirt virtual machines

For dependency info and installation instructions, see the INSTALL.md file. If you just want to quickly test the code from a git checkout, you can launch any of the commands like:

./virt-manager --debug ...

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Description
Desktop tool for managing virtual machines via libvirt
Readme 99 MiB
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