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1 [[chapter_virtual_machines]]
2 ifdef::manvolnum[]
3 qm(1)
4 =====
5 :pve-toplevel:
6
7 NAME
8 ----
9
10 qm - Qemu/KVM Virtual Machine Manager
11
12
13 SYNOPSIS
14 --------
15
16 include::qm.1-synopsis.adoc[]
17
18 DESCRIPTION
19 -----------
20 endif::manvolnum[]
21 ifndef::manvolnum[]
22 Qemu/KVM Virtual Machines
23 =========================
24 :pve-toplevel:
25 endif::manvolnum[]
26
27 // deprecates
28 // http://pve.proxmox.com/wiki/Container_and_Full_Virtualization
29 // http://pve.proxmox.com/wiki/KVM
30 // http://pve.proxmox.com/wiki/Qemu_Server
31
32 Qemu (short form for Quick Emulator) is an open source hypervisor that emulates a
33 physical computer. From the perspective of the host system where Qemu is
34 running, Qemu is a user program which has access to a number of local resources
35 like partitions, files, network cards which are then passed to an
36 emulated computer which sees them as if they were real devices.
37
38 A guest operating system running in the emulated computer accesses these
39 devices, and runs as if it were running on real hardware. For instance, you can pass
40 an ISO image as a parameter to Qemu, and the OS running in the emulated computer
41 will see a real CD-ROM inserted into a CD drive.
42
43 Qemu can emulate a great variety of hardware from ARM to Sparc, but {pve} is
44 only concerned with 32 and 64 bits PC clone emulation, since it represents the
45 overwhelming majority of server hardware. The emulation of PC clones is also one
46 of the fastest due to the availability of processor extensions which greatly
47 speed up Qemu when the emulated architecture is the same as the host
48 architecture.
49
50 NOTE: You may sometimes encounter the term _KVM_ (Kernel-based Virtual Machine).
51 It means that Qemu is running with the support of the virtualization processor
52 extensions, via the Linux KVM module. In the context of {pve} _Qemu_ and
53 _KVM_ can be used interchangeably, as Qemu in {pve} will always try to load the KVM
54 module.
55
56 Qemu inside {pve} runs as a root process, since this is required to access block
57 and PCI devices.
58
59
60 Emulated devices and paravirtualized devices
61 --------------------------------------------
62
63 The PC hardware emulated by Qemu includes a mainboard, network controllers,
64 SCSI, IDE and SATA controllers, serial ports (the complete list can be seen in
65 the `kvm(1)` man page) all of them emulated in software. All these devices
66 are the exact software equivalent of existing hardware devices, and if the OS
67 running in the guest has the proper drivers it will use the devices as if it
68 were running on real hardware. This allows Qemu to runs _unmodified_ operating
69 systems.
70
71 This however has a performance cost, as running in software what was meant to
72 run in hardware involves a lot of extra work for the host CPU. To mitigate this,
73 Qemu can present to the guest operating system _paravirtualized devices_, where
74 the guest OS recognizes it is running inside Qemu and cooperates with the
75 hypervisor.
76
77 Qemu relies on the virtio virtualization standard, and is thus able to present
78 paravirtualized virtio devices, which includes a paravirtualized generic disk
79 controller, a paravirtualized network card, a paravirtualized serial port,
80 a paravirtualized SCSI controller, etc ...
81
82 It is highly recommended to use the virtio devices whenever you can, as they
83 provide a big performance improvement. Using the virtio generic disk controller
84 versus an emulated IDE controller will double the sequential write throughput,
85 as measured with `bonnie++(8)`. Using the virtio network interface can deliver
86 up to three times the throughput of an emulated Intel E1000 network card, as
87 measured with `iperf(1)`. footnote:[See this benchmark on the KVM wiki
88 https://www.linux-kvm.org/page/Using_VirtIO_NIC]
89
90
91 [[qm_virtual_machines_settings]]
92 Virtual Machines Settings
93 -------------------------
94
95 Generally speaking {pve} tries to choose sane defaults for virtual machines
96 (VM). Make sure you understand the meaning of the settings you change, as it
97 could incur a performance slowdown, or putting your data at risk.
98
99
100 [[qm_general_settings]]
101 General Settings
102 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
103
104 [thumbnail="screenshot/gui-create-vm-general.png"]
105
106 General settings of a VM include
107
108 * the *Node* : the physical server on which the VM will run
109 * the *VM ID*: a unique number in this {pve} installation used to identify your VM
110 * *Name*: a free form text string you can use to describe the VM
111 * *Resource Pool*: a logical group of VMs
112
113
114 [[qm_os_settings]]
115 OS Settings
116 ~~~~~~~~~~~
117
118 [thumbnail="screenshot/gui-create-vm-os.png"]
119
120 When creating a virtual machine (VM), setting the proper Operating System(OS)
121 allows {pve} to optimize some low level parameters. For instance Windows OS
122 expect the BIOS clock to use the local time, while Unix based OS expect the
123 BIOS clock to have the UTC time.
124
125 [[qm_system_settings]]
126 System Settings
127 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
128
129 On VM creation you can change some basic system components of the new VM. You
130 can specify which xref:qm_display[display type] you want to use.
131 [thumbnail="screenshot/gui-create-vm-system.png"]
132 Additionally, the xref:qm_hard_disk[SCSI controller] can be changed.
133 If you plan to install the QEMU Guest Agent, or if your selected ISO image
134 already ships and installs it automatically, you may want to tick the 'Qemu
135 Agent' box, which lets {pve} know that it can use its features to show some
136 more information, and complete some actions (for example, shutdown or
137 snapshots) more intelligently.
138
139 {pve} allows to boot VMs with different firmware and machine types, namely
140 xref:qm_bios_and_uefi[SeaBIOS and OVMF]. In most cases you want to switch from
141 the default SeaBIOS to OVMF only if you plan to use
142 xref:qm_pci_passthrough[PCIe pass through]. A VMs 'Machine Type' defines the
143 hardware layout of the VM's virtual motherboard. You can choose between the
144 default https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intel_440FX[Intel 440FX] or the
145 https://ark.intel.com/content/www/us/en/ark/products/31918/intel-82q35-graphics-and-memory-controller.html[Q35]
146 chipset, which also provides a virtual PCIe bus, and thus may be desired if
147 one wants to pass through PCIe hardware.
148
149 [[qm_hard_disk]]
150 Hard Disk
151 ~~~~~~~~~
152
153 [[qm_hard_disk_bus]]
154 Bus/Controller
155 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
156 Qemu can emulate a number of storage controllers:
157
158 * the *IDE* controller, has a design which goes back to the 1984 PC/AT disk
159 controller. Even if this controller has been superseded by recent designs,
160 each and every OS you can think of has support for it, making it a great choice
161 if you want to run an OS released before 2003. You can connect up to 4 devices
162 on this controller.
163
164 * the *SATA* (Serial ATA) controller, dating from 2003, has a more modern
165 design, allowing higher throughput and a greater number of devices to be
166 connected. You can connect up to 6 devices on this controller.
167
168 * the *SCSI* controller, designed in 1985, is commonly found on server grade
169 hardware, and can connect up to 14 storage devices. {pve} emulates by default a
170 LSI 53C895A controller.
171 +
172 A SCSI controller of type _VirtIO SCSI_ is the recommended setting if you aim for
173 performance and is automatically selected for newly created Linux VMs since
174 {pve} 4.3. Linux distributions have support for this controller since 2012, and
175 FreeBSD since 2014. For Windows OSes, you need to provide an extra iso
176 containing the drivers during the installation.
177 // https://pve.proxmox.com/wiki/Paravirtualized_Block_Drivers_for_Windows#During_windows_installation.
178 If you aim at maximum performance, you can select a SCSI controller of type
179 _VirtIO SCSI single_ which will allow you to select the *IO Thread* option.
180 When selecting _VirtIO SCSI single_ Qemu will create a new controller for
181 each disk, instead of adding all disks to the same controller.
182
183 * The *VirtIO Block* controller, often just called VirtIO or virtio-blk,
184 is an older type of paravirtualized controller. It has been superseded by the
185 VirtIO SCSI Controller, in terms of features.
186
187 [thumbnail="screenshot/gui-create-vm-hard-disk.png"]
188
189 [[qm_hard_disk_formats]]
190 Image Format
191 ^^^^^^^^^^^^
192 On each controller you attach a number of emulated hard disks, which are backed
193 by a file or a block device residing in the configured storage. The choice of
194 a storage type will determine the format of the hard disk image. Storages which
195 present block devices (LVM, ZFS, Ceph) will require the *raw disk image format*,
196 whereas files based storages (Ext4, NFS, CIFS, GlusterFS) will let you to choose
197 either the *raw disk image format* or the *QEMU image format*.
198
199 * the *QEMU image format* is a copy on write format which allows snapshots, and
200 thin provisioning of the disk image.
201 * the *raw disk image* is a bit-to-bit image of a hard disk, similar to what
202 you would get when executing the `dd` command on a block device in Linux. This
203 format does not support thin provisioning or snapshots by itself, requiring
204 cooperation from the storage layer for these tasks. It may, however, be up to
205 10% faster than the *QEMU image format*. footnote:[See this benchmark for details
206 https://events.static.linuxfound.org/sites/events/files/slides/CloudOpen2013_Khoa_Huynh_v3.pdf]
207 * the *VMware image format* only makes sense if you intend to import/export the
208 disk image to other hypervisors.
209
210 [[qm_hard_disk_cache]]
211 Cache Mode
212 ^^^^^^^^^^
213 Setting the *Cache* mode of the hard drive will impact how the host system will
214 notify the guest systems of block write completions. The *No cache* default
215 means that the guest system will be notified that a write is complete when each
216 block reaches the physical storage write queue, ignoring the host page cache.
217 This provides a good balance between safety and speed.
218
219 If you want the {pve} backup manager to skip a disk when doing a backup of a VM,
220 you can set the *No backup* option on that disk.
221
222 If you want the {pve} storage replication mechanism to skip a disk when starting
223 a replication job, you can set the *Skip replication* option on that disk.
224 As of {pve} 5.0, replication requires the disk images to be on a storage of type
225 `zfspool`, so adding a disk image to other storages when the VM has replication
226 configured requires to skip replication for this disk image.
227
228 [[qm_hard_disk_discard]]
229 Trim/Discard
230 ^^^^^^^^^^^^
231 If your storage supports _thin provisioning_ (see the storage chapter in the
232 {pve} guide), you can activate the *Discard* option on a drive. With *Discard*
233 set and a _TRIM_-enabled guest OS footnote:[TRIM, UNMAP, and discard
234 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trim_%28computing%29], when the VM's filesystem
235 marks blocks as unused after deleting files, the controller will relay this
236 information to the storage, which will then shrink the disk image accordingly.
237 For the guest to be able to issue _TRIM_ commands, you must enable the *Discard*
238 option on the drive. Some guest operating systems may also require the
239 *SSD Emulation* flag to be set. Note that *Discard* on *VirtIO Block* drives is
240 only supported on guests using Linux Kernel 5.0 or higher.
241
242 If you would like a drive to be presented to the guest as a solid-state drive
243 rather than a rotational hard disk, you can set the *SSD emulation* option on
244 that drive. There is no requirement that the underlying storage actually be
245 backed by SSDs; this feature can be used with physical media of any type.
246 Note that *SSD emulation* is not supported on *VirtIO Block* drives.
247
248
249 [[qm_hard_disk_iothread]]
250 IO Thread
251 ^^^^^^^^^
252 The option *IO Thread* can only be used when using a disk with the
253 *VirtIO* controller, or with the *SCSI* controller, when the emulated controller
254 type is *VirtIO SCSI single*.
255 With this enabled, Qemu creates one I/O thread per storage controller,
256 rather than a single thread for all I/O. This can increase performance when
257 multiple disks are used and each disk has its own storage controller.
258
259
260 [[qm_cpu]]
261 CPU
262 ~~~
263
264 [thumbnail="screenshot/gui-create-vm-cpu.png"]
265
266 A *CPU socket* is a physical slot on a PC motherboard where you can plug a CPU.
267 This CPU can then contain one or many *cores*, which are independent
268 processing units. Whether you have a single CPU socket with 4 cores, or two CPU
269 sockets with two cores is mostly irrelevant from a performance point of view.
270 However some software licenses depend on the number of sockets a machine has,
271 in that case it makes sense to set the number of sockets to what the license
272 allows you.
273
274 Increasing the number of virtual CPUs (cores and sockets) will usually provide a
275 performance improvement though that is heavily dependent on the use of the VM.
276 Multi-threaded applications will of course benefit from a large number of
277 virtual CPUs, as for each virtual cpu you add, Qemu will create a new thread of
278 execution on the host system. If you're not sure about the workload of your VM,
279 it is usually a safe bet to set the number of *Total cores* to 2.
280
281 NOTE: It is perfectly safe if the _overall_ number of cores of all your VMs
282 is greater than the number of cores on the server (for example, 4 VMs each with
283 4 cores (= total 16) on a machine with only 8 cores). In that case the host
284 system will balance the QEMU execution threads between your server cores, just
285 like if you were running a standard multi-threaded application. However, {pve}
286 will prevent you from starting VMs with more virtual CPU cores than physically
287 available, as this will only bring the performance down due to the cost of
288 context switches.
289
290 [[qm_cpu_resource_limits]]
291 Resource Limits
292 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
293
294 In addition to the number of virtual cores, you can configure how much resources
295 a VM can get in relation to the host CPU time and also in relation to other
296 VMs.
297 With the *cpulimit* (``Host CPU Time'') option you can limit how much CPU time
298 the whole VM can use on the host. It is a floating point value representing CPU
299 time in percent, so `1.0` is equal to `100%`, `2.5` to `250%` and so on. If a
300 single process would fully use one single core it would have `100%` CPU Time
301 usage. If a VM with four cores utilizes all its cores fully it would
302 theoretically use `400%`. In reality the usage may be even a bit higher as Qemu
303 can have additional threads for VM peripherals besides the vCPU core ones.
304 This setting can be useful if a VM should have multiple vCPUs, as it runs a few
305 processes in parallel, but the VM as a whole should not be able to run all
306 vCPUs at 100% at the same time. Using a specific example: lets say we have a VM
307 which would profit from having 8 vCPUs, but at no time all of those 8 cores
308 should run at full load - as this would make the server so overloaded that
309 other VMs and CTs would get to less CPU. So, we set the *cpulimit* limit to
310 `4.0` (=400%). If all cores do the same heavy work they would all get 50% of a
311 real host cores CPU time. But, if only 4 would do work they could still get
312 almost 100% of a real core each.
313
314 NOTE: VMs can, depending on their configuration, use additional threads, such
315 as for networking or IO operations but also live migration. Thus a VM can show
316 up to use more CPU time than just its virtual CPUs could use. To ensure that a
317 VM never uses more CPU time than virtual CPUs assigned set the *cpulimit*
318 setting to the same value as the total core count.
319
320 The second CPU resource limiting setting, *cpuunits* (nowadays often called CPU
321 shares or CPU weight), controls how much CPU time a VM gets compared to other
322 running VMs. It is a relative weight which defaults to `100` (or `1024` if the
323 host uses legacy cgroup v1). If you increase this for a VM it will be
324 prioritized by the scheduler in comparison to other VMs with lower weight. For
325 example, if VM 100 has set the default `100` and VM 200 was changed to `200`,
326 the latter VM 200 would receive twice the CPU bandwidth than the first VM 100.
327
328 For more information see `man systemd.resource-control`, here `CPUQuota`
329 corresponds to `cpulimit` and `CPUWeight` corresponds to our `cpuunits`
330 setting, visit its Notes section for references and implementation details.
331
332 CPU Type
333 ^^^^^^^^
334
335 Qemu can emulate a number different of *CPU types* from 486 to the latest Xeon
336 processors. Each new processor generation adds new features, like hardware
337 assisted 3d rendering, random number generation, memory protection, etc ...
338 Usually you should select for your VM a processor type which closely matches the
339 CPU of the host system, as it means that the host CPU features (also called _CPU
340 flags_ ) will be available in your VMs. If you want an exact match, you can set
341 the CPU type to *host* in which case the VM will have exactly the same CPU flags
342 as your host system.
343
344 This has a downside though. If you want to do a live migration of VMs between
345 different hosts, your VM might end up on a new system with a different CPU type.
346 If the CPU flags passed to the guest are missing, the qemu process will stop. To
347 remedy this Qemu has also its own CPU type *kvm64*, that {pve} uses by defaults.
348 kvm64 is a Pentium 4 look a like CPU type, which has a reduced CPU flags set,
349 but is guaranteed to work everywhere.
350
351 In short, if you care about live migration and moving VMs between nodes, leave
352 the kvm64 default. If you don’t care about live migration or have a homogeneous
353 cluster where all nodes have the same CPU, set the CPU type to host, as in
354 theory this will give your guests maximum performance.
355
356 Custom CPU Types
357 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
358
359 You can specify custom CPU types with a configurable set of features. These are
360 maintained in the configuration file `/etc/pve/virtual-guest/cpu-models.conf` by
361 an administrator. See `man cpu-models.conf` for format details.
362
363 Specified custom types can be selected by any user with the `Sys.Audit`
364 privilege on `/nodes`. When configuring a custom CPU type for a VM via the CLI
365 or API, the name needs to be prefixed with 'custom-'.
366
367 Meltdown / Spectre related CPU flags
368 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
369
370 There are several CPU flags related to the Meltdown and Spectre vulnerabilities
371 footnote:[Meltdown Attack https://meltdownattack.com/] which need to be set
372 manually unless the selected CPU type of your VM already enables them by default.
373
374 There are two requirements that need to be fulfilled in order to use these
375 CPU flags:
376
377 * The host CPU(s) must support the feature and propagate it to the guest's virtual CPU(s)
378 * The guest operating system must be updated to a version which mitigates the
379 attacks and is able to utilize the CPU feature
380
381 Otherwise you need to set the desired CPU flag of the virtual CPU, either by
382 editing the CPU options in the WebUI, or by setting the 'flags' property of the
383 'cpu' option in the VM configuration file.
384
385 For Spectre v1,v2,v4 fixes, your CPU or system vendor also needs to provide a
386 so-called ``microcode update'' footnote:[You can use `intel-microcode' /
387 `amd-microcode' from Debian non-free if your vendor does not provide such an
388 update. Note that not all affected CPUs can be updated to support spec-ctrl.]
389 for your CPU.
390
391
392 To check if the {pve} host is vulnerable, execute the following command as root:
393
394 ----
395 for f in /sys/devices/system/cpu/vulnerabilities/*; do echo "${f##*/} -" $(cat "$f"); done
396 ----
397
398 A community script is also available to detect is the host is still vulnerable.
399 footnote:[spectre-meltdown-checker https://meltdown.ovh/]
400
401 Intel processors
402 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
403
404 * 'pcid'
405 +
406 This reduces the performance impact of the Meltdown (CVE-2017-5754) mitigation
407 called 'Kernel Page-Table Isolation (KPTI)', which effectively hides
408 the Kernel memory from the user space. Without PCID, KPTI is quite an expensive
409 mechanism footnote:[PCID is now a critical performance/security feature on x86
410 https://groups.google.com/forum/m/#!topic/mechanical-sympathy/L9mHTbeQLNU].
411 +
412 To check if the {pve} host supports PCID, execute the following command as root:
413 +
414 ----
415 # grep ' pcid ' /proc/cpuinfo
416 ----
417 +
418 If this does not return empty your host's CPU has support for 'pcid'.
419
420 * 'spec-ctrl'
421 +
422 Required to enable the Spectre v1 (CVE-2017-5753) and Spectre v2 (CVE-2017-5715) fix,
423 in cases where retpolines are not sufficient.
424 Included by default in Intel CPU models with -IBRS suffix.
425 Must be explicitly turned on for Intel CPU models without -IBRS suffix.
426 Requires an updated host CPU microcode (intel-microcode >= 20180425).
427 +
428 * 'ssbd'
429 +
430 Required to enable the Spectre V4 (CVE-2018-3639) fix. Not included by default in any Intel CPU model.
431 Must be explicitly turned on for all Intel CPU models.
432 Requires an updated host CPU microcode(intel-microcode >= 20180703).
433
434
435 AMD processors
436 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
437
438 * 'ibpb'
439 +
440 Required to enable the Spectre v1 (CVE-2017-5753) and Spectre v2 (CVE-2017-5715) fix,
441 in cases where retpolines are not sufficient.
442 Included by default in AMD CPU models with -IBPB suffix.
443 Must be explicitly turned on for AMD CPU models without -IBPB suffix.
444 Requires the host CPU microcode to support this feature before it can be used for guest CPUs.
445
446
447
448 * 'virt-ssbd'
449 +
450 Required to enable the Spectre v4 (CVE-2018-3639) fix.
451 Not included by default in any AMD CPU model.
452 Must be explicitly turned on for all AMD CPU models.
453 This should be provided to guests, even if amd-ssbd is also provided, for maximum guest compatibility.
454 Note that this must be explicitly enabled when when using the "host" cpu model,
455 because this is a virtual feature which does not exist in the physical CPUs.
456
457
458 * 'amd-ssbd'
459 +
460 Required to enable the Spectre v4 (CVE-2018-3639) fix.
461 Not included by default in any AMD CPU model. Must be explicitly turned on for all AMD CPU models.
462 This provides higher performance than virt-ssbd, therefore a host supporting this should always expose this to guests if possible.
463 virt-ssbd should none the less also be exposed for maximum guest compatibility as some kernels only know about virt-ssbd.
464
465
466 * 'amd-no-ssb'
467 +
468 Recommended to indicate the host is not vulnerable to Spectre V4 (CVE-2018-3639).
469 Not included by default in any AMD CPU model.
470 Future hardware generations of CPU will not be vulnerable to CVE-2018-3639,
471 and thus the guest should be told not to enable its mitigations, by exposing amd-no-ssb.
472 This is mutually exclusive with virt-ssbd and amd-ssbd.
473
474
475 NUMA
476 ^^^^
477 You can also optionally emulate a *NUMA*
478 footnote:[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-uniform_memory_access] architecture
479 in your VMs. The basics of the NUMA architecture mean that instead of having a
480 global memory pool available to all your cores, the memory is spread into local
481 banks close to each socket.
482 This can bring speed improvements as the memory bus is not a bottleneck
483 anymore. If your system has a NUMA architecture footnote:[if the command
484 `numactl --hardware | grep available` returns more than one node, then your host
485 system has a NUMA architecture] we recommend to activate the option, as this
486 will allow proper distribution of the VM resources on the host system.
487 This option is also required to hot-plug cores or RAM in a VM.
488
489 If the NUMA option is used, it is recommended to set the number of sockets to
490 the number of nodes of the host system.
491
492 vCPU hot-plug
493 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
494
495 Modern operating systems introduced the capability to hot-plug and, to a
496 certain extent, hot-unplug CPUs in a running system. Virtualization allows us
497 to avoid a lot of the (physical) problems real hardware can cause in such
498 scenarios.
499 Still, this is a rather new and complicated feature, so its use should be
500 restricted to cases where its absolutely needed. Most of the functionality can
501 be replicated with other, well tested and less complicated, features, see
502 xref:qm_cpu_resource_limits[Resource Limits].
503
504 In {pve} the maximal number of plugged CPUs is always `cores * sockets`.
505 To start a VM with less than this total core count of CPUs you may use the
506 *vpus* setting, it denotes how many vCPUs should be plugged in at VM start.
507
508 Currently only this feature is only supported on Linux, a kernel newer than 3.10
509 is needed, a kernel newer than 4.7 is recommended.
510
511 You can use a udev rule as follow to automatically set new CPUs as online in
512 the guest:
513
514 ----
515 SUBSYSTEM=="cpu", ACTION=="add", TEST=="online", ATTR{online}=="0", ATTR{online}="1"
516 ----
517
518 Save this under /etc/udev/rules.d/ as a file ending in `.rules`.
519
520 Note: CPU hot-remove is machine dependent and requires guest cooperation. The
521 deletion command does not guarantee CPU removal to actually happen, typically
522 it's a request forwarded to guest OS using target dependent mechanism, such as
523 ACPI on x86/amd64.
524
525
526 [[qm_memory]]
527 Memory
528 ~~~~~~
529
530 For each VM you have the option to set a fixed size memory or asking
531 {pve} to dynamically allocate memory based on the current RAM usage of the
532 host.
533
534 .Fixed Memory Allocation
535 [thumbnail="screenshot/gui-create-vm-memory.png"]
536
537 When setting memory and minimum memory to the same amount
538 {pve} will simply allocate what you specify to your VM.
539
540 Even when using a fixed memory size, the ballooning device gets added to the
541 VM, because it delivers useful information such as how much memory the guest
542 really uses.
543 In general, you should leave *ballooning* enabled, but if you want to disable
544 it (like for debugging purposes), simply uncheck *Ballooning Device* or set
545
546 balloon: 0
547
548 in the configuration.
549
550 .Automatic Memory Allocation
551
552 // see autoballoon() in pvestatd.pm
553 When setting the minimum memory lower than memory, {pve} will make sure that the
554 minimum amount you specified is always available to the VM, and if RAM usage on
555 the host is below 80%, will dynamically add memory to the guest up to the
556 maximum memory specified.
557
558 When the host is running low on RAM, the VM will then release some memory
559 back to the host, swapping running processes if needed and starting the oom
560 killer in last resort. The passing around of memory between host and guest is
561 done via a special `balloon` kernel driver running inside the guest, which will
562 grab or release memory pages from the host.
563 footnote:[A good explanation of the inner workings of the balloon driver can be found here https://rwmj.wordpress.com/2010/07/17/virtio-balloon/]
564
565 When multiple VMs use the autoallocate facility, it is possible to set a
566 *Shares* coefficient which indicates the relative amount of the free host memory
567 that each VM should take. Suppose for instance you have four VMs, three of them
568 running an HTTP server and the last one is a database server. To cache more
569 database blocks in the database server RAM, you would like to prioritize the
570 database VM when spare RAM is available. For this you assign a Shares property
571 of 3000 to the database VM, leaving the other VMs to the Shares default setting
572 of 1000. The host server has 32GB of RAM, and is currently using 16GB, leaving 32
573 * 80/100 - 16 = 9GB RAM to be allocated to the VMs. The database VM will get 9 *
574 3000 / (3000 + 1000 + 1000 + 1000) = 4.5 GB extra RAM and each HTTP server will
575 get 1.5 GB.
576
577 All Linux distributions released after 2010 have the balloon kernel driver
578 included. For Windows OSes, the balloon driver needs to be added manually and can
579 incur a slowdown of the guest, so we don't recommend using it on critical
580 systems.
581 // see https://forum.proxmox.com/threads/solved-hyper-threading-vs-no-hyper-threading-fixed-vs-variable-memory.20265/
582
583 When allocating RAM to your VMs, a good rule of thumb is always to leave 1GB
584 of RAM available to the host.
585
586
587 [[qm_network_device]]
588 Network Device
589 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
590
591 [thumbnail="screenshot/gui-create-vm-network.png"]
592
593 Each VM can have many _Network interface controllers_ (NIC), of four different
594 types:
595
596 * *Intel E1000* is the default, and emulates an Intel Gigabit network card.
597 * the *VirtIO* paravirtualized NIC should be used if you aim for maximum
598 performance. Like all VirtIO devices, the guest OS should have the proper driver
599 installed.
600 * the *Realtek 8139* emulates an older 100 MB/s network card, and should
601 only be used when emulating older operating systems ( released before 2002 )
602 * the *vmxnet3* is another paravirtualized device, which should only be used
603 when importing a VM from another hypervisor.
604
605 {pve} will generate for each NIC a random *MAC address*, so that your VM is
606 addressable on Ethernet networks.
607
608 The NIC you added to the VM can follow one of two different models:
609
610 * in the default *Bridged mode* each virtual NIC is backed on the host by a
611 _tap device_, ( a software loopback device simulating an Ethernet NIC ). This
612 tap device is added to a bridge, by default vmbr0 in {pve}. In this mode, VMs
613 have direct access to the Ethernet LAN on which the host is located.
614 * in the alternative *NAT mode*, each virtual NIC will only communicate with
615 the Qemu user networking stack, where a built-in router and DHCP server can
616 provide network access. This built-in DHCP will serve addresses in the private
617 10.0.2.0/24 range. The NAT mode is much slower than the bridged mode, and
618 should only be used for testing. This mode is only available via CLI or the API,
619 but not via the WebUI.
620
621 You can also skip adding a network device when creating a VM by selecting *No
622 network device*.
623
624 .Multiqueue
625 If you are using the VirtIO driver, you can optionally activate the
626 *Multiqueue* option. This option allows the guest OS to process networking
627 packets using multiple virtual CPUs, providing an increase in the total number
628 of packets transferred.
629
630 //http://blog.vmsplice.net/2011/09/qemu-internals-vhost-architecture.html
631 When using the VirtIO driver with {pve}, each NIC network queue is passed to the
632 host kernel, where the queue will be processed by a kernel thread spawned by the
633 vhost driver. With this option activated, it is possible to pass _multiple_
634 network queues to the host kernel for each NIC.
635
636 //https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-US/Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux/7/html/Virtualization_Tuning_and_Optimization_Guide/sect-Virtualization_Tuning_Optimization_Guide-Networking-Techniques.html#sect-Virtualization_Tuning_Optimization_Guide-Networking-Multi-queue_virtio-net
637 When using Multiqueue, it is recommended to set it to a value equal
638 to the number of Total Cores of your guest. You also need to set in
639 the VM the number of multi-purpose channels on each VirtIO NIC with the ethtool
640 command:
641
642 `ethtool -L ens1 combined X`
643
644 where X is the number of the number of vcpus of the VM.
645
646 You should note that setting the Multiqueue parameter to a value greater
647 than one will increase the CPU load on the host and guest systems as the
648 traffic increases. We recommend to set this option only when the VM has to
649 process a great number of incoming connections, such as when the VM is running
650 as a router, reverse proxy or a busy HTTP server doing long polling.
651
652 [[qm_display]]
653 Display
654 ~~~~~~~
655
656 QEMU can virtualize a few types of VGA hardware. Some examples are:
657
658 * *std*, the default, emulates a card with Bochs VBE extensions.
659 * *cirrus*, this was once the default, it emulates a very old hardware module
660 with all its problems. This display type should only be used if really
661 necessary footnote:[https://www.kraxel.org/blog/2014/10/qemu-using-cirrus-considered-harmful/
662 qemu: using cirrus considered harmful], for example, if using Windows XP or
663 earlier
664 * *vmware*, is a VMWare SVGA-II compatible adapter.
665 * *qxl*, is the QXL paravirtualized graphics card. Selecting this also
666 enables https://www.spice-space.org/[SPICE] (a remote viewer protocol) for the
667 VM.
668 * *virtio-gl*, often named VirGL is a virtual 3D GPU for use inside VMs that
669 can offload workloads to the host GPU without requiring special (expensive)
670 models and drivers and neither binding the host GPU completely, allowing
671 reuse between multiple guests and or the host.
672 +
673 NOTE: VirGL support needs some extra libraries that aren't installed by
674 default due to being relatively big and also not available as open source for
675 all GPU models/vendors. For most setups you'll just need to do:
676 `apt install libgl1 libegl1`
677
678 You can edit the amount of memory given to the virtual GPU, by setting
679 the 'memory' option. This can enable higher resolutions inside the VM,
680 especially with SPICE/QXL.
681
682 As the memory is reserved by display device, selecting Multi-Monitor mode
683 for SPICE (such as `qxl2` for dual monitors) has some implications:
684
685 * Windows needs a device for each monitor, so if your 'ostype' is some
686 version of Windows, {pve} gives the VM an extra device per monitor.
687 Each device gets the specified amount of memory.
688
689 * Linux VMs, can always enable more virtual monitors, but selecting
690 a Multi-Monitor mode multiplies the memory given to the device with
691 the number of monitors.
692
693 Selecting `serialX` as display 'type' disables the VGA output, and redirects
694 the Web Console to the selected serial port. A configured display 'memory'
695 setting will be ignored in that case.
696
697 [[qm_usb_passthrough]]
698 USB Passthrough
699 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
700
701 There are two different types of USB passthrough devices:
702
703 * Host USB passthrough
704 * SPICE USB passthrough
705
706 Host USB passthrough works by giving a VM a USB device of the host.
707 This can either be done via the vendor- and product-id, or
708 via the host bus and port.
709
710 The vendor/product-id looks like this: *0123:abcd*,
711 where *0123* is the id of the vendor, and *abcd* is the id
712 of the product, meaning two pieces of the same usb device
713 have the same id.
714
715 The bus/port looks like this: *1-2.3.4*, where *1* is the bus
716 and *2.3.4* is the port path. This represents the physical
717 ports of your host (depending of the internal order of the
718 usb controllers).
719
720 If a device is present in a VM configuration when the VM starts up,
721 but the device is not present in the host, the VM can boot without problems.
722 As soon as the device/port is available in the host, it gets passed through.
723
724 WARNING: Using this kind of USB passthrough means that you cannot move
725 a VM online to another host, since the hardware is only available
726 on the host the VM is currently residing.
727
728 The second type of passthrough is SPICE USB passthrough. This is useful
729 if you use a SPICE client which supports it. If you add a SPICE USB port
730 to your VM, you can passthrough a USB device from where your SPICE client is,
731 directly to the VM (for example an input device or hardware dongle).
732
733
734 [[qm_bios_and_uefi]]
735 BIOS and UEFI
736 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
737
738 In order to properly emulate a computer, QEMU needs to use a firmware.
739 Which, on common PCs often known as BIOS or (U)EFI, is executed as one of the
740 first steps when booting a VM. It is responsible for doing basic hardware
741 initialization and for providing an interface to the firmware and hardware for
742 the operating system. By default QEMU uses *SeaBIOS* for this, which is an
743 open-source, x86 BIOS implementation. SeaBIOS is a good choice for most
744 standard setups.
745
746 Some operating systems (such as Windows 11) may require use of an UEFI
747 compatible implementation instead. In such cases, you must rather use *OVMF*,
748 which is an open-source UEFI implementation. footnote:[See the OVMF Project https://github.com/tianocore/tianocore.github.io/wiki/OVMF]
749
750 There are other scenarios in which the SeaBIOS may not be the ideal firmware to
751 boot from, for example if you want to do VGA passthrough. footnote:[Alex
752 Williamson has a good blog entry about this
753 https://vfio.blogspot.co.at/2014/08/primary-graphics-assignment-without-vga.html]
754
755 If you want to use OVMF, there are several things to consider:
756
757 In order to save things like the *boot order*, there needs to be an EFI Disk.
758 This disk will be included in backups and snapshots, and there can only be one.
759
760 You can create such a disk with the following command:
761
762 ----
763 # qm set <vmid> -efidisk0 <storage>:1,format=<format>,efitype=4m,pre-enrolled-keys=1
764 ----
765
766 Where *<storage>* is the storage where you want to have the disk, and
767 *<format>* is a format which the storage supports. Alternatively, you can
768 create such a disk through the web interface with 'Add' -> 'EFI Disk' in the
769 hardware section of a VM.
770
771 The *efitype* option specifies which version of the OVMF firmware should be
772 used. For new VMs, this should always be '4m', as it supports Secure Boot and
773 has more space allocated to support future development (this is the default in
774 the GUI).
775
776 *pre-enroll-keys* specifies if the efidisk should come pre-loaded with
777 distribution-specific and Microsoft Standard Secure Boot keys. It also enables
778 Secure Boot by default (though it can still be disabled in the OVMF menu within
779 the VM).
780
781 NOTE: If you want to start using Secure Boot in an existing VM (that still uses
782 a '2m' efidisk), you need to recreate the efidisk. To do so, delete the old one
783 (`qm set <vmid> -delete efidisk0`) and add a new one as described above. This
784 will reset any custom configurations you have made in the OVMF menu!
785
786 When using OVMF with a virtual display (without VGA passthrough),
787 you need to set the client resolution in the OVMF menu (which you can reach
788 with a press of the ESC button during boot), or you have to choose
789 SPICE as the display type.
790
791 [[qm_tpm]]
792 Trusted Platform Module (TPM)
793 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
794
795 A *Trusted Platform Module* is a device which stores secret data - such as
796 encryption keys - securely and provides tamper-resistance functions for
797 validating system boot.
798
799 Certain operating systems (such as Windows 11) require such a device to be
800 attached to a machine (be it physical or virtual).
801
802 A TPM is added by specifying a *tpmstate* volume. This works similar to an
803 efidisk, in that it cannot be changed (only removed) once created. You can add
804 one via the following command:
805
806 ----
807 # qm set <vmid> -tpmstate0 <storage>:1,version=<version>
808 ----
809
810 Where *<storage>* is the storage you want to put the state on, and *<version>*
811 is either 'v1.2' or 'v2.0'. You can also add one via the web interface, by
812 choosing 'Add' -> 'TPM State' in the hardware section of a VM.
813
814 The 'v2.0' TPM spec is newer and better supported, so unless you have a specific
815 implementation that requires a 'v1.2' TPM, it should be preferred.
816
817 NOTE: Compared to a physical TPM, an emulated one does *not* provide any real
818 security benefits. The point of a TPM is that the data on it cannot be modified
819 easily, except via commands specified as part of the TPM spec. Since with an
820 emulated device the data storage happens on a regular volume, it can potentially
821 be edited by anyone with access to it.
822
823 [[qm_ivshmem]]
824 Inter-VM shared memory
825 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
826
827 You can add an Inter-VM shared memory device (`ivshmem`), which allows one to
828 share memory between the host and a guest, or also between multiple guests.
829
830 To add such a device, you can use `qm`:
831
832 ----
833 # qm set <vmid> -ivshmem size=32,name=foo
834 ----
835
836 Where the size is in MiB. The file will be located under
837 `/dev/shm/pve-shm-$name` (the default name is the vmid).
838
839 NOTE: Currently the device will get deleted as soon as any VM using it got
840 shutdown or stopped. Open connections will still persist, but new connections
841 to the exact same device cannot be made anymore.
842
843 A use case for such a device is the Looking Glass
844 footnote:[Looking Glass: https://looking-glass.io/] project, which enables high
845 performance, low-latency display mirroring between host and guest.
846
847 [[qm_audio_device]]
848 Audio Device
849 ~~~~~~~~~~~~
850
851 To add an audio device run the following command:
852
853 ----
854 qm set <vmid> -audio0 device=<device>
855 ----
856
857 Supported audio devices are:
858
859 * `ich9-intel-hda`: Intel HD Audio Controller, emulates ICH9
860 * `intel-hda`: Intel HD Audio Controller, emulates ICH6
861 * `AC97`: Audio Codec '97, useful for older operating systems like Windows XP
862
863 There are two backends available:
864
865 * 'spice'
866 * 'none'
867
868 The 'spice' backend can be used in combination with xref:qm_display[SPICE] while
869 the 'none' backend can be useful if an audio device is needed in the VM for some
870 software to work. To use the physical audio device of the host use device
871 passthrough (see xref:qm_pci_passthrough[PCI Passthrough] and
872 xref:qm_usb_passthrough[USB Passthrough]). Remote protocols like Microsoft’s RDP
873 have options to play sound.
874
875
876 [[qm_virtio_rng]]
877 VirtIO RNG
878 ~~~~~~~~~~
879
880 A RNG (Random Number Generator) is a device providing entropy ('randomness') to
881 a system. A virtual hardware-RNG can be used to provide such entropy from the
882 host system to a guest VM. This helps to avoid entropy starvation problems in
883 the guest (a situation where not enough entropy is available and the system may
884 slow down or run into problems), especially during the guests boot process.
885
886 To add a VirtIO-based emulated RNG, run the following command:
887
888 ----
889 qm set <vmid> -rng0 source=<source>[,max_bytes=X,period=Y]
890 ----
891
892 `source` specifies where entropy is read from on the host and has to be one of
893 the following:
894
895 * `/dev/urandom`: Non-blocking kernel entropy pool (preferred)
896 * `/dev/random`: Blocking kernel pool (not recommended, can lead to entropy
897 starvation on the host system)
898 * `/dev/hwrng`: To pass through a hardware RNG attached to the host (if multiple
899 are available, the one selected in
900 `/sys/devices/virtual/misc/hw_random/rng_current` will be used)
901
902 A limit can be specified via the `max_bytes` and `period` parameters, they are
903 read as `max_bytes` per `period` in milliseconds. However, it does not represent
904 a linear relationship: 1024B/1000ms would mean that up to 1 KiB of data becomes
905 available on a 1 second timer, not that 1 KiB is streamed to the guest over the
906 course of one second. Reducing the `period` can thus be used to inject entropy
907 into the guest at a faster rate.
908
909 By default, the limit is set to 1024 bytes per 1000 ms (1 KiB/s). It is
910 recommended to always use a limiter to avoid guests using too many host
911 resources. If desired, a value of '0' for `max_bytes` can be used to disable
912 all limits.
913
914 [[qm_bootorder]]
915 Device Boot Order
916 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
917
918 QEMU can tell the guest which devices it should boot from, and in which order.
919 This can be specified in the config via the `boot` property, for example:
920
921 ----
922 boot: order=scsi0;net0;hostpci0
923 ----
924
925 [thumbnail="screenshot/gui-qemu-edit-bootorder.png"]
926
927 This way, the guest would first attempt to boot from the disk `scsi0`, if that
928 fails, it would go on to attempt network boot from `net0`, and in case that
929 fails too, finally attempt to boot from a passed through PCIe device (seen as
930 disk in case of NVMe, otherwise tries to launch into an option ROM).
931
932 On the GUI you can use a drag-and-drop editor to specify the boot order, and use
933 the checkbox to enable or disable certain devices for booting altogether.
934
935 NOTE: If your guest uses multiple disks to boot the OS or load the bootloader,
936 all of them must be marked as 'bootable' (that is, they must have the checkbox
937 enabled or appear in the list in the config) for the guest to be able to boot.
938 This is because recent SeaBIOS and OVMF versions only initialize disks if they
939 are marked 'bootable'.
940
941 In any case, even devices not appearing in the list or having the checkmark
942 disabled will still be available to the guest, once it's operating system has
943 booted and initialized them. The 'bootable' flag only affects the guest BIOS and
944 bootloader.
945
946
947 [[qm_startup_and_shutdown]]
948 Automatic Start and Shutdown of Virtual Machines
949 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
950
951 After creating your VMs, you probably want them to start automatically
952 when the host system boots. For this you need to select the option 'Start at
953 boot' from the 'Options' Tab of your VM in the web interface, or set it with
954 the following command:
955
956 ----
957 # qm set <vmid> -onboot 1
958 ----
959
960 .Start and Shutdown Order
961
962 [thumbnail="screenshot/gui-qemu-edit-start-order.png"]
963
964 In some case you want to be able to fine tune the boot order of your
965 VMs, for instance if one of your VM is providing firewalling or DHCP
966 to other guest systems. For this you can use the following
967 parameters:
968
969 * *Start/Shutdown order*: Defines the start order priority. For example, set it
970 * to 1 if
971 you want the VM to be the first to be started. (We use the reverse startup
972 order for shutdown, so a machine with a start order of 1 would be the last to
973 be shut down). If multiple VMs have the same order defined on a host, they will
974 additionally be ordered by 'VMID' in ascending order.
975 * *Startup delay*: Defines the interval between this VM start and subsequent
976 VMs starts. For example, set it to 240 if you want to wait 240 seconds before
977 starting other VMs.
978 * *Shutdown timeout*: Defines the duration in seconds {pve} should wait
979 for the VM to be offline after issuing a shutdown command. By default this
980 value is set to 180, which means that {pve} will issue a shutdown request and
981 wait 180 seconds for the machine to be offline. If the machine is still online
982 after the timeout it will be stopped forcefully.
983
984 NOTE: VMs managed by the HA stack do not follow the 'start on boot' and
985 'boot order' options currently. Those VMs will be skipped by the startup and
986 shutdown algorithm as the HA manager itself ensures that VMs get started and
987 stopped.
988
989 Please note that machines without a Start/Shutdown order parameter will always
990 start after those where the parameter is set. Further, this parameter can only
991 be enforced between virtual machines running on the same host, not
992 cluster-wide.
993
994 If you require a delay between the host boot and the booting of the first VM,
995 see the section on xref:first_guest_boot_delay[Proxmox VE Node Management].
996
997
998 [[qm_qemu_agent]]
999 Qemu Guest Agent
1000 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1001
1002 The Qemu Guest Agent is a service which runs inside the VM, providing a
1003 communication channel between the host and the guest. It is used to exchange
1004 information and allows the host to issue commands to the guest.
1005
1006 For example, the IP addresses in the VM summary panel are fetched via the guest
1007 agent.
1008
1009 Or when starting a backup, the guest is told via the guest agent to sync
1010 outstanding writes via the 'fs-freeze' and 'fs-thaw' commands.
1011
1012 For the guest agent to work properly the following steps must be taken:
1013
1014 * install the agent in the guest and make sure it is running
1015 * enable the communication via the agent in {pve}
1016
1017 Install Guest Agent
1018 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1019
1020 For most Linux distributions, the guest agent is available. The package is
1021 usually named `qemu-guest-agent`.
1022
1023 For Windows, it can be installed from the
1024 https://fedorapeople.org/groups/virt/virtio-win/direct-downloads/stable-virtio/virtio-win.iso[Fedora
1025 VirtIO driver ISO].
1026
1027 Enable Guest Agent Communication
1028 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1029
1030 Communication from {pve} with the guest agent can be enabled in the VM's
1031 *Options* panel. A fresh start of the VM is necessary for the changes to take
1032 effect.
1033
1034 It is possible to enable the 'Run guest-trim' option. With this enabled,
1035 {pve} will issue a trim command to the guest after the following
1036 operations that have the potential to write out zeros to the storage:
1037
1038 * moving a disk to another storage
1039 * live migrating a VM to another node with local storage
1040
1041 On a thin provisioned storage, this can help to free up unused space.
1042
1043 Troubleshooting
1044 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1045
1046 .VM does not shut down
1047
1048 Make sure the guest agent is installed and running.
1049
1050 Once the guest agent is enabled, {pve} will send power commands like
1051 'shutdown' via the guest agent. If the guest agent is not running, commands
1052 cannot get executed properly and the shutdown command will run into a timeout.
1053
1054 [[qm_spice_enhancements]]
1055 SPICE Enhancements
1056 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1057
1058 SPICE Enhancements are optional features that can improve the remote viewer
1059 experience.
1060
1061 To enable them via the GUI go to the *Options* panel of the virtual machine. Run
1062 the following command to enable them via the CLI:
1063
1064 ----
1065 qm set <vmid> -spice_enhancements foldersharing=1,videostreaming=all
1066 ----
1067
1068 NOTE: To use these features the <<qm_display,*Display*>> of the virtual machine
1069 must be set to SPICE (qxl).
1070
1071 Folder Sharing
1072 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1073
1074 Share a local folder with the guest. The `spice-webdavd` daemon needs to be
1075 installed in the guest. It makes the shared folder available through a local
1076 WebDAV server located at http://localhost:9843.
1077
1078 For Windows guests the installer for the 'Spice WebDAV daemon' can be downloaded
1079 from the
1080 https://www.spice-space.org/download.html#windows-binaries[official SPICE website].
1081
1082 Most Linux distributions have a package called `spice-webdavd` that can be
1083 installed.
1084
1085 To share a folder in Virt-Viewer (Remote Viewer) go to 'File -> Preferences'.
1086 Select the folder to share and then enable the checkbox.
1087
1088 NOTE: Folder sharing currently only works in the Linux version of Virt-Viewer.
1089
1090 CAUTION: Experimental! Currently this feature does not work reliably.
1091
1092 Video Streaming
1093 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1094
1095 Fast refreshing areas are encoded into a video stream. Two options exist:
1096
1097 * *all*: Any fast refreshing area will be encoded into a video stream.
1098 * *filter*: Additional filters are used to decide if video streaming should be
1099 used (currently only small window surfaces are skipped).
1100
1101 A general recommendation if video streaming should be enabled and which option
1102 to choose from cannot be given. Your mileage may vary depending on the specific
1103 circumstances.
1104
1105 Troubleshooting
1106 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1107
1108 .Shared folder does not show up
1109
1110 Make sure the WebDAV service is enabled and running in the guest. On Windows it
1111 is called 'Spice webdav proxy'. In Linux the name is 'spice-webdavd' but can be
1112 different depending on the distribution.
1113
1114 If the service is running, check the WebDAV server by opening
1115 http://localhost:9843 in a browser in the guest.
1116
1117 It can help to restart the SPICE session.
1118
1119 [[qm_migration]]
1120 Migration
1121 ---------
1122
1123 [thumbnail="screenshot/gui-qemu-migrate.png"]
1124
1125 If you have a cluster, you can migrate your VM to another host with
1126
1127 ----
1128 # qm migrate <vmid> <target>
1129 ----
1130
1131 There are generally two mechanisms for this
1132
1133 * Online Migration (aka Live Migration)
1134 * Offline Migration
1135
1136 Online Migration
1137 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1138
1139 If your VM is running and no locally bound resources are configured (such as
1140 passed-through devices), you can initiate a live migration with the `--online`
1141 flag in the `qm migration` command evocation. The web-interface defaults to
1142 live migration when the VM is running.
1143
1144 How it works
1145 ^^^^^^^^^^^^
1146
1147 Online migration first starts a new QEMU process on the target host with the
1148 'incoming' flag, which performs only basic initialization with the guest vCPUs
1149 still paused and then waits for the guest memory and device state data streams
1150 of the source Virtual Machine.
1151 All other resources, such as disks, are either shared or got already sent
1152 before runtime state migration of the VMs begins; so only the memory content
1153 and device state remain to be transferred.
1154
1155 Once this connection is established, the source begins asynchronously sending
1156 the memory content to the target. If the guest memory on the source changes,
1157 those sections are marked dirty and another pass is made to send the guest
1158 memory data.
1159 This loop is repeated until the data difference between running source VM
1160 and incoming target VM is small enough to be sent in a few milliseconds,
1161 because then the source VM can be paused completely, without a user or program
1162 noticing the pause, so that the remaining data can be sent to the target, and
1163 then unpause the targets VM's CPU to make it the new running VM in well under a
1164 second.
1165
1166 Requirements
1167 ^^^^^^^^^^^^
1168
1169 For Live Migration to work, there are some things required:
1170
1171 * The VM has no local resources that cannot be migrated. For example,
1172 PCI or USB devices that are passed through currently block live-migration.
1173 Local Disks, on the other hand, can be migrated by sending them to the target
1174 just fine.
1175 * The hosts are located in the same {pve} cluster.
1176 * The hosts have a working (and reliable) network connection between them.
1177 * The target host must have the same, or higher versions of the
1178 {pve} packages. Although it can sometimes work the other way around, this
1179 cannot be guaranteed.
1180 * The hosts have CPUs from the same vendor with similar capabilities. Different
1181 vendor *might* work depending on the actual models and VMs CPU type
1182 configured, but it cannot be guaranteed - so please test before deploying
1183 such a setup in production.
1184
1185 Offline Migration
1186 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1187
1188 If you have local resources, you can still migrate your VMs offline as long as
1189 all disk are on storage defined on both hosts.
1190 Migration then copies the disks to the target host over the network, as with
1191 online migration. Note that any hardware pass-through configuration may need to
1192 be adapted to the device location on the target host.
1193
1194 // TODO: mention hardware map IDs as better way to solve that, once available
1195
1196 [[qm_copy_and_clone]]
1197 Copies and Clones
1198 -----------------
1199
1200 [thumbnail="screenshot/gui-qemu-full-clone.png"]
1201
1202 VM installation is usually done using an installation media (CD-ROM)
1203 from the operating system vendor. Depending on the OS, this can be a
1204 time consuming task one might want to avoid.
1205
1206 An easy way to deploy many VMs of the same type is to copy an existing
1207 VM. We use the term 'clone' for such copies, and distinguish between
1208 'linked' and 'full' clones.
1209
1210 Full Clone::
1211
1212 The result of such copy is an independent VM. The
1213 new VM does not share any storage resources with the original.
1214 +
1215
1216 It is possible to select a *Target Storage*, so one can use this to
1217 migrate a VM to a totally different storage. You can also change the
1218 disk image *Format* if the storage driver supports several formats.
1219 +
1220
1221 NOTE: A full clone needs to read and copy all VM image data. This is
1222 usually much slower than creating a linked clone.
1223 +
1224
1225 Some storage types allows to copy a specific *Snapshot*, which
1226 defaults to the 'current' VM data. This also means that the final copy
1227 never includes any additional snapshots from the original VM.
1228
1229
1230 Linked Clone::
1231
1232 Modern storage drivers support a way to generate fast linked
1233 clones. Such a clone is a writable copy whose initial contents are the
1234 same as the original data. Creating a linked clone is nearly
1235 instantaneous, and initially consumes no additional space.
1236 +
1237
1238 They are called 'linked' because the new image still refers to the
1239 original. Unmodified data blocks are read from the original image, but
1240 modification are written (and afterwards read) from a new
1241 location. This technique is called 'Copy-on-write'.
1242 +
1243
1244 This requires that the original volume is read-only. With {pve} one
1245 can convert any VM into a read-only <<qm_templates, Template>>). Such
1246 templates can later be used to create linked clones efficiently.
1247 +
1248
1249 NOTE: You cannot delete an original template while linked clones
1250 exist.
1251 +
1252
1253 It is not possible to change the *Target storage* for linked clones,
1254 because this is a storage internal feature.
1255
1256
1257 The *Target node* option allows you to create the new VM on a
1258 different node. The only restriction is that the VM is on shared
1259 storage, and that storage is also available on the target node.
1260
1261 To avoid resource conflicts, all network interface MAC addresses get
1262 randomized, and we generate a new 'UUID' for the VM BIOS (smbios1)
1263 setting.
1264
1265
1266 [[qm_templates]]
1267 Virtual Machine Templates
1268 -------------------------
1269
1270 One can convert a VM into a Template. Such templates are read-only,
1271 and you can use them to create linked clones.
1272
1273 NOTE: It is not possible to start templates, because this would modify
1274 the disk images. If you want to change the template, create a linked
1275 clone and modify that.
1276
1277 VM Generation ID
1278 ----------------
1279
1280 {pve} supports Virtual Machine Generation ID ('vmgenid') footnote:[Official
1281 'vmgenid' Specification
1282 https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/desktop/hyperv_v2/virtual-machine-generation-identifier]
1283 for virtual machines.
1284 This can be used by the guest operating system to detect any event resulting
1285 in a time shift event, for example, restoring a backup or a snapshot rollback.
1286
1287 When creating new VMs, a 'vmgenid' will be automatically generated and saved
1288 in its configuration file.
1289
1290 To create and add a 'vmgenid' to an already existing VM one can pass the
1291 special value `1' to let {pve} autogenerate one or manually set the 'UUID'
1292 footnote:[Online GUID generator http://guid.one/] by using it as value, for
1293 example:
1294
1295 ----
1296 # qm set VMID -vmgenid 1
1297 # qm set VMID -vmgenid 00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000
1298 ----
1299
1300 NOTE: The initial addition of a 'vmgenid' device to an existing VM, may result
1301 in the same effects as a change on snapshot rollback, backup restore, etc., has
1302 as the VM can interpret this as generation change.
1303
1304 In the rare case the 'vmgenid' mechanism is not wanted one can pass `0' for
1305 its value on VM creation, or retroactively delete the property in the
1306 configuration with:
1307
1308 ----
1309 # qm set VMID -delete vmgenid
1310 ----
1311
1312 The most prominent use case for 'vmgenid' are newer Microsoft Windows
1313 operating systems, which use it to avoid problems in time sensitive or
1314 replicate services (such as databases or domain controller
1315 footnote:[https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-server/identity/ad-ds/get-started/virtual-dc/virtualized-domain-controller-architecture])
1316 on snapshot rollback, backup restore or a whole VM clone operation.
1317
1318 Importing Virtual Machines and disk images
1319 ------------------------------------------
1320
1321 A VM export from a foreign hypervisor takes usually the form of one or more disk
1322 images, with a configuration file describing the settings of the VM (RAM,
1323 number of cores). +
1324 The disk images can be in the vmdk format, if the disks come from
1325 VMware or VirtualBox, or qcow2 if the disks come from a KVM hypervisor.
1326 The most popular configuration format for VM exports is the OVF standard, but in
1327 practice interoperation is limited because many settings are not implemented in
1328 the standard itself, and hypervisors export the supplementary information
1329 in non-standard extensions.
1330
1331 Besides the problem of format, importing disk images from other hypervisors
1332 may fail if the emulated hardware changes too much from one hypervisor to
1333 another. Windows VMs are particularly concerned by this, as the OS is very
1334 picky about any changes of hardware. This problem may be solved by
1335 installing the MergeIDE.zip utility available from the Internet before exporting
1336 and choosing a hard disk type of *IDE* before booting the imported Windows VM.
1337
1338 Finally there is the question of paravirtualized drivers, which improve the
1339 speed of the emulated system and are specific to the hypervisor.
1340 GNU/Linux and other free Unix OSes have all the necessary drivers installed by
1341 default and you can switch to the paravirtualized drivers right after importing
1342 the VM. For Windows VMs, you need to install the Windows paravirtualized
1343 drivers by yourself.
1344
1345 GNU/Linux and other free Unix can usually be imported without hassle. Note
1346 that we cannot guarantee a successful import/export of Windows VMs in all
1347 cases due to the problems above.
1348
1349 Step-by-step example of a Windows OVF import
1350 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1351
1352 Microsoft provides
1353 https://developer.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/downloads/virtual-machines/[Virtual Machines downloads]
1354 to get started with Windows development.We are going to use one of these
1355 to demonstrate the OVF import feature.
1356
1357 Download the Virtual Machine zip
1358 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1359
1360 After getting informed about the user agreement, choose the _Windows 10
1361 Enterprise (Evaluation - Build)_ for the VMware platform, and download the zip.
1362
1363 Extract the disk image from the zip
1364 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1365
1366 Using the `unzip` utility or any archiver of your choice, unpack the zip,
1367 and copy via ssh/scp the ovf and vmdk files to your {pve} host.
1368
1369 Import the Virtual Machine
1370 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1371
1372 This will create a new virtual machine, using cores, memory and
1373 VM name as read from the OVF manifest, and import the disks to the +local-lvm+
1374 storage. You have to configure the network manually.
1375
1376 ----
1377 # qm importovf 999 WinDev1709Eval.ovf local-lvm
1378 ----
1379
1380 The VM is ready to be started.
1381
1382 Adding an external disk image to a Virtual Machine
1383 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1384
1385 You can also add an existing disk image to a VM, either coming from a
1386 foreign hypervisor, or one that you created yourself.
1387
1388 Suppose you created a Debian/Ubuntu disk image with the 'vmdebootstrap' tool:
1389
1390 vmdebootstrap --verbose \
1391 --size 10GiB --serial-console \
1392 --grub --no-extlinux \
1393 --package openssh-server \
1394 --package avahi-daemon \
1395 --package qemu-guest-agent \
1396 --hostname vm600 --enable-dhcp \
1397 --customize=./copy_pub_ssh.sh \
1398 --sparse --image vm600.raw
1399
1400 You can now create a new target VM, importing the image to the storage `pvedir`
1401 and attaching it to the VM's SCSI controller:
1402
1403 ----
1404 # qm create 600 --net0 virtio,bridge=vmbr0 --name vm600 --serial0 socket \
1405 --boot order=scsi0 --scsihw virtio-scsi-pci --ostype l26 \
1406 --scsi0 pvedir:0,import-from=/path/to/dir/vm600.raw
1407 ----
1408
1409 The VM is ready to be started.
1410
1411
1412 ifndef::wiki[]
1413 include::qm-cloud-init.adoc[]
1414 endif::wiki[]
1415
1416 ifndef::wiki[]
1417 include::qm-pci-passthrough.adoc[]
1418 endif::wiki[]
1419
1420 Hookscripts
1421 -----------
1422
1423 You can add a hook script to VMs with the config property `hookscript`.
1424
1425 ----
1426 # qm set 100 --hookscript local:snippets/hookscript.pl
1427 ----
1428
1429 It will be called during various phases of the guests lifetime.
1430 For an example and documentation see the example script under
1431 `/usr/share/pve-docs/examples/guest-example-hookscript.pl`.
1432
1433 [[qm_hibernate]]
1434 Hibernation
1435 -----------
1436
1437 You can suspend a VM to disk with the GUI option `Hibernate` or with
1438
1439 ----
1440 # qm suspend ID --todisk
1441 ----
1442
1443 That means that the current content of the memory will be saved onto disk
1444 and the VM gets stopped. On the next start, the memory content will be
1445 loaded and the VM can continue where it was left off.
1446
1447 [[qm_vmstatestorage]]
1448 .State storage selection
1449 If no target storage for the memory is given, it will be automatically
1450 chosen, the first of:
1451
1452 1. The storage `vmstatestorage` from the VM config.
1453 2. The first shared storage from any VM disk.
1454 3. The first non-shared storage from any VM disk.
1455 4. The storage `local` as a fallback.
1456
1457 Managing Virtual Machines with `qm`
1458 ------------------------------------
1459
1460 qm is the tool to manage Qemu/Kvm virtual machines on {pve}. You can
1461 create and destroy virtual machines, and control execution
1462 (start/stop/suspend/resume). Besides that, you can use qm to set
1463 parameters in the associated config file. It is also possible to
1464 create and delete virtual disks.
1465
1466 CLI Usage Examples
1467 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1468
1469 Using an iso file uploaded on the 'local' storage, create a VM
1470 with a 4 GB IDE disk on the 'local-lvm' storage
1471
1472 ----
1473 # qm create 300 -ide0 local-lvm:4 -net0 e1000 -cdrom local:iso/proxmox-mailgateway_2.1.iso
1474 ----
1475
1476 Start the new VM
1477
1478 ----
1479 # qm start 300
1480 ----
1481
1482 Send a shutdown request, then wait until the VM is stopped.
1483
1484 ----
1485 # qm shutdown 300 && qm wait 300
1486 ----
1487
1488 Same as above, but only wait for 40 seconds.
1489
1490 ----
1491 # qm shutdown 300 && qm wait 300 -timeout 40
1492 ----
1493
1494 Destroying a VM always removes it from Access Control Lists and it always
1495 removes the firewall configuration of the VM. You have to activate
1496 '--purge', if you want to additionally remove the VM from replication jobs,
1497 backup jobs and HA resource configurations.
1498
1499 ----
1500 # qm destroy 300 --purge
1501 ----
1502
1503 Move a disk image to a different storage.
1504
1505 ----
1506 # qm move-disk 300 scsi0 other-storage
1507 ----
1508
1509 Reassign a disk image to a different VM. This will remove the disk `scsi1` from
1510 the source VM and attaches it as `scsi3` to the target VM. In the background
1511 the disk image is being renamed so that the name matches the new owner.
1512
1513 ----
1514 # qm move-disk 300 scsi1 --target-vmid 400 --target-disk scsi3
1515 ----
1516
1517
1518 [[qm_configuration]]
1519 Configuration
1520 -------------
1521
1522 VM configuration files are stored inside the Proxmox cluster file
1523 system, and can be accessed at `/etc/pve/qemu-server/<VMID>.conf`.
1524 Like other files stored inside `/etc/pve/`, they get automatically
1525 replicated to all other cluster nodes.
1526
1527 NOTE: VMIDs < 100 are reserved for internal purposes, and VMIDs need to be
1528 unique cluster wide.
1529
1530 .Example VM Configuration
1531 ----
1532 boot: order=virtio0;net0
1533 cores: 1
1534 sockets: 1
1535 memory: 512
1536 name: webmail
1537 ostype: l26
1538 net0: e1000=EE:D2:28:5F:B6:3E,bridge=vmbr0
1539 virtio0: local:vm-100-disk-1,size=32G
1540 ----
1541
1542 Those configuration files are simple text files, and you can edit them
1543 using a normal text editor (`vi`, `nano`, ...). This is sometimes
1544 useful to do small corrections, but keep in mind that you need to
1545 restart the VM to apply such changes.
1546
1547 For that reason, it is usually better to use the `qm` command to
1548 generate and modify those files, or do the whole thing using the GUI.
1549 Our toolkit is smart enough to instantaneously apply most changes to
1550 running VM. This feature is called "hot plug", and there is no
1551 need to restart the VM in that case.
1552
1553
1554 File Format
1555 ~~~~~~~~~~~
1556
1557 VM configuration files use a simple colon separated key/value
1558 format. Each line has the following format:
1559
1560 -----
1561 # this is a comment
1562 OPTION: value
1563 -----
1564
1565 Blank lines in those files are ignored, and lines starting with a `#`
1566 character are treated as comments and are also ignored.
1567
1568
1569 [[qm_snapshots]]
1570 Snapshots
1571 ~~~~~~~~~
1572
1573 When you create a snapshot, `qm` stores the configuration at snapshot
1574 time into a separate snapshot section within the same configuration
1575 file. For example, after creating a snapshot called ``testsnapshot'',
1576 your configuration file will look like this:
1577
1578 .VM configuration with snapshot
1579 ----
1580 memory: 512
1581 swap: 512
1582 parent: testsnaphot
1583 ...
1584
1585 [testsnaphot]
1586 memory: 512
1587 swap: 512
1588 snaptime: 1457170803
1589 ...
1590 ----
1591
1592 There are a few snapshot related properties like `parent` and
1593 `snaptime`. The `parent` property is used to store the parent/child
1594 relationship between snapshots. `snaptime` is the snapshot creation
1595 time stamp (Unix epoch).
1596
1597 You can optionally save the memory of a running VM with the option `vmstate`.
1598 For details about how the target storage gets chosen for the VM state, see
1599 xref:qm_vmstatestorage[State storage selection] in the chapter
1600 xref:qm_hibernate[Hibernation].
1601
1602 [[qm_options]]
1603 Options
1604 ~~~~~~~
1605
1606 include::qm.conf.5-opts.adoc[]
1607
1608
1609 Locks
1610 -----
1611
1612 Online migrations, snapshots and backups (`vzdump`) set a lock to prevent
1613 incompatible concurrent actions on the affected VMs. Sometimes you need to
1614 remove such a lock manually (for example after a power failure).
1615
1616 ----
1617 # qm unlock <vmid>
1618 ----
1619
1620 CAUTION: Only do that if you are sure the action which set the lock is
1621 no longer running.
1622
1623
1624 ifdef::wiki[]
1625
1626 See Also
1627 ~~~~~~~~
1628
1629 * link:/wiki/Cloud-Init_Support[Cloud-Init Support]
1630
1631 endif::wiki[]
1632
1633
1634 ifdef::manvolnum[]
1635
1636 Files
1637 ------
1638
1639 `/etc/pve/qemu-server/<VMID>.conf`::
1640
1641 Configuration file for the VM '<VMID>'.
1642
1643
1644 include::pve-copyright.adoc[]
1645 endif::manvolnum[]