QEMU: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 21:31, 6 March 2022
QEMU is a very flexible open source virtual machine and emulator. QEMU is able to virtualize or emulate x86, PowerPC, ARM, and S390 guests.
Install Alpine Linux in QEMU
Before You Start
- Download the latest Alpine image.
- Install QEMU on your system (e.g.
sudo apt install qemu
on Ubuntu,yum -y install qemu
on Fedora)
If you are using Alpine Linux, you can install:
# apk add qemu qemu-img qemu-system-x86_64 qemu-ui-gtk
Create the Virtual Machine
Create a disk image if you want to install Alpine Linux.
qemu-img create -f qcow2 alpine.qcow2 8G
The following command starts QEMU with the Alpine ISO image as CDROM, the default network configuration, 512MB RAM, the disk image that was created in the previous step, and CDROM as the boot device.
qemu-system-x86_64 -m 512 -nic user -boot d -cdrom alpine-standard-3.20.3-x86_64.iso -hda alpine.qcow2 -display gtk -enable-kvm
-enable-kvm
if your hardware does not support this.
Log in as root
(no password) and run:
setup-alpine
Follow the setup-alpine installation steps.
Run poweroff
to shut down the machine.
Booting the Virtual Machine
After the installation, QEMU can be started from disk image (-boot c
) without CDROM.
qemu-system-x86_64 -m 512 -nic user -hda alpine.qcow2
Live mode
To just give Alpine Linux a try in diskless mode, qemu can be used to boot the .iso file without any need for a virtual HDD image or further configuration.
qemu-system-x86_64 -m 512 -nic user -boot d -cdrom alpine-3.20.3-x86_64.iso --accel kvm
Letting the .iso image load an apkovl
This works by mounting a persistent filesystem under /media and selecting it to store the apkovl and the apkcache.
Preparing a KVM with a virtual drive:
mkdir -p /media/usb/images qemu-img create -f raw /media/usb/images/mykvm.config 32M qemu-system-x86_64 -enable-kvm -m 384 \ -name mykvm \ -cdrom /media/usb/images/alpine-3.20.3-x86_64.iso \ -drive file=/media/usb/images/mykvm.config,if=virtio \ -net lan \ -boot d &
And inside the KVM (running Alpine Linux):
fdisk /dev/vda #creating a partition mkdosfs /dev/vda1 mkdir -p /media/vda1 echo "/dev/vda1 /media/vda1 vfat rw 0 0" >> /etc/fstab mount -a setup-alpine # (select vda1 for saving configs) lbu commit
The next reboot then loads the generated apkovl and apkcache found on /dev/vda1 -- completely running-from-ram based on the latest official ISO.
Advanced network configuration
To get networking running correctly, you can use the tun/tap interface, which then becomes a real interface. The key is to define the virtual network interface on the correct virtual vlan, and the correct ifup script.
You need 2 net commands on the command line interface, one for the host:
-net tap,vlan=[somenumber],ifname=[host if],script=[some script]
one for the guest
-net nic,vlan=[samenumber]
So to have a single NIC on the qemu virtual system that is connected to tap0 on the physical host:
qemu -net tap,vlan=0,ifname=tap0,script=./qemu-ifup -net nic,vlan0 \ -boot d -cdrom alpine*.iso}}
To create a qemu guest with more than one nic, just repeat the -net commands
qemu -net tap,vlan=0,ifname=tap0,script=./qemu-ifup -net nic,vlan0 \ -net tap,vlan=0,ifname=tap1,script=./qemu-ifup -net nic,vlan0 \ -net tap,vlan=0,ifname=tap2,script=./qemu-ifup -net nic,vlan0 \ -boot d -cdrom alpine*.iso}}
Now your alpine guest will have 3 NICs, mapped to tap0, tap1, and tap2 respectively.
What's actually happening is you are effectively creating a point-to-point tunnel, with the phys tap0 device being one endpoint, and the virtual box's eth0 being on the other point of the tunnel.
So you need to assign ip addresses to BOTH sides of the tunnel. The qemu-ifup script is what does that for the host. Here's an example:
#!/bin/sh case $1 in tun0 | tap0 ) sudo /sbin/ip addr add 192.168.1.100/24 dev $1 sudo /sbin/ip link set $1 up ;; tap1 | tun1 ) sudo /sbin/ip addr add 192.168.2.100/24 dev $1 sudo /sbin/ip link set $1 up ;; tap2 | tun2 ) sudo /sbin/ip addr add 192.168.3.100/24 dev $1 sudo /sbin/ip link set $1 up ;; esac
In your alpinebox, create an interfaces file like this:
iface eth0 inet static address 192.168.1.1 netmask 255.255.255.0 gateway 192.168.1.100 iface eth1 inet static address 192.168.2.1 netmask 255.255.255.0 iface eth0 inet static address 192.168.3.1 netmask 255.255.255.0
If on your host you now add a MASQUERADE rule for tap0 to your host's default nic, and you turn on ip_forward on your host, you can now do svn updates, surf, run tranmission, etc right from your qemu guest.
Using Xorg inside QEMU
The video driver needed for Xorg inside QEMU is xf86-video-modesetting
.
If you decided to use a qxl Video on KVM/Qemu guest, add this configuration to `/etc/X11/xorg.conf`
Section "Device" Identifier "qxl" Driver "qxl" Option "ENABLE_SURFACES" "False" EndSection
Run a guest OS on Alpine Linux using KVM/QEMU
Install:
# apk add qemu-system-x86_64 qemu-modules libvirt libvirt-qemu
Add tun to /etc/modules
:
(su) echo tun >> /etc/modules
Starting tun now:
# modprobe tun
Add your user to the kvm and qemu groups
# addgroup <username> kvm
# adduser <username> qemu
Logout for the group changes to take effect
Adding services:
# rc-update add libvirtd
# rc-update add libvirt-guests
Starting the services now:
# rc-service libvirtd start
# rc-service libvirt-guests start
If you are interested in using a bridged network (so that the guest machine can be reached easily from the outside), see Bridge.