KVM
From Blue-IT.org Wiki
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
- having a lot of time
- having a lot of free harddisk space
- 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.
- converting the images from vdi to qcow-format with qemu-img convert
- creating and configuring a new kvm-guest
- 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
This is done by editing a hook-script for quemu:
/etc/libvirt/hooks/qemu
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).