KVM

From Blue-IT.org Wiki

Revision as of 20:02, 29 October 2013 by Apos (talk | contribs) (Migration from VirtualBox to KVM)

Using VirtualBox and KVM together

Using VirtualBox and KVM together at the same server at the same time is NOT possible!!!

Use VirtualBox

sudo service qemu-kvm stop
sudo service vboxdrv start

OR use KVM

sudo service vboxdrv stop
sudo service qemu-kvm start

Decide!

Migration from VirtualBox to KVM

This boils down to

  1. having a lot of time
  2. having a lot of free harddisk space
  3. creating a clone of the vbox-machine with VBoxManage clonehd (this can take a looooong time!). Kloning is the easiest way of getting rid of snapshots of an existing virtual machine.
  4. converting the images from vdi to qcow-format with qemu-img convert
  5. creating and configuring a new kvm-guest
  6. adding some fou to NAT with a qemu-hook (see next section)

To clone an image - on the same machine - you have to STOP kvm and start vboxdr (see above). Also be aware, that the raw-images take up a lot of space!

# The conversion can take some time. Other virtual machines are not accessible in this time
VBoxManage clonehd -format RAW myOldVM.vdi /home/vm-exports/myNewVM.raw
0%...
cd /home/vm-exports/
qemu-img convert -f raw myNewVM.raw -O qcow2 myNewVM.qcow

Cloning a Snapshot:

# for a snapshot do (not tested)
cd /to/the/SnapShot/dir
VBoxManage clonehd -format RAW "SNAPSHOT_UUID" /home/vm-exports/myNewVM.raw

Accessing services on KVM guests behind a NAT

I am referring to this article:

which ist mentioned in the libvirt wiki:

I installed the qemu-python script of the first article under ubuntu 12.04 LTS, which worked like expected.

So I can access a port in the virtualmachine-guest with the IP/Port of the host (!). From within the host, it is possible to reach the guest via it's real ip. I am using the virtio-Interface (performance).