A bash wrapper around virt-install to build virtual machines on a local KVM
hypervisor. You can run it as a normal user which will use qemu:///session
to
connect locally to your KVM domains.
Tested on the latest Fedora.
You need to have the KVM hypervisor installed, along with a few other packages (naming of packages can differ on other distributions):
- genisoimage or mkisofs
- virt-install
- libguestfs-tools-c
- qemu-img
- libvirt-client
- libosinfo
To install the dependencies, run:
- Fedora example:
sudo dnf -y install genisoimage virt-install libguestfs-tools-c qemu-img libvirt-client wget libosinfo
- Ubuntu example:
sudo apt install -y genisoimage virtinst libguestfs-tools qemu-utils libvirt-clients wget libosinfo-bin
If you want to resolve guests by their hostnames, install the libvirt-nss
package:
- Fedora example:
sudo dnf -y install libvirt-nss
- Ubuntu example:
sudo apt install -y libnss-libvirt
Then, add libvirt
and libvirt_guest
to list of hosts databases in
/etc/nsswitch.conf
. See here for more
information.
$ kvm-install-vm help
NAME
kvm-install-vm - Install virtual guests using cloud-init on a local KVM
hypervisor.
SYNOPSIS
kvm-install-vm COMMAND [OPTIONS]
DESCRIPTION
A bash wrapper around virt-install to build virtual machines on a local KVM
hypervisor. You can run it as a normal user which will use qemu:///session
to connect locally to your KVM domains.
COMMANDS
help - show this help or help for a subcommand
create - create a new guest domain
list - list all domains, running and stopped
remove - delete a guest domain
$ kvm-install-vm help create
NAME
kvm-install-vm create [COMMANDS] [OPTIONS] VMNAME
DESCRIPTION
Create a new guest domain.
COMMANDS
help - show this help
OPTIONS
-a Autostart (default: false)
-b Bridge (default: virbr0)
-c Number of vCPUs (default: 1)
-d Disk Size (GB) (default: 10)
-D DNS Domain (default: example.local)
-f CPU Model / Feature (default: host)
-g Graphics type (default: spice)
-h Display help
-i Custom QCOW2 Image
-k SSH Public Key (default: $HOME/.ssh/id_rsa.pub)
-l Location of Images (default: $HOME/virt/images)
-L Location of VMs (default: $HOME/virt/vms)
-m Memory Size (MB) (default: 1024)
-M Mac address (default: auto-assigned)
-p Console port (default: auto)
-s Custom shell script
-t Linux Distribution (default: centos8)
-T Timezone (default: US/Eastern)
-u Custom user (default: $USER)
-y Assume yes to prompts (default: false)
-n Assume no to prompts (default: false)
-v Be verbose
DISTRIBUTIONS
NAME DESCRIPTION LOGIN
amazon2 Amazon Linux 2 ec2-user
centos8 CentOS 8 centos
centos7 CentOS 7 centos
centos7-atomic CentOS 7 Atomic Host centos
centos6 CentOS 6 centos
debian9 Debian 9 (Stretch) debian
debian10 Debian 10 (Buster) debian
fedora29 Fedora 29 fedora
fedora29-atomic Fedora 29 Atomic Host fedora
fedora30 Fedora 30 fedora
fedora31 Fedora 31 fedora
fedora32 Fedora 32 fedora
opensuse15 OpenSUSE Leap 15.2 opensuse
ubuntu1604 Ubuntu 16.04 LTS (Xenial Xerus) ubuntu
ubuntu1804 Ubuntu 18.04 LTS (Bionic Beaver) ubuntu
ubuntu2004 Ubuntu 20.04 LTS (Focal Fossa) ubuntu
EXAMPLES
kvm-install-vm create foo
Create VM with the default parameters: CentOS 8, 1 vCPU, 1GB RAM, 10GB
disk capacity.
kvm-install-vm create -c 2 -m 2048 -d 20 foo
Create VM with custom parameters: 2 vCPUs, 2GB RAM, and 20GB disk
capacity.
kvm-install-vm create -t debian9 foo
Create a Debian 9 VM with the default parameters.
kvm-install-vm create -T UTC foo
Create a default VM with UTC timezone.
$ kvm-install-vm help remove
NAME
kvm-install-vm remove [COMMANDS] VMNAME
DESCRIPTION
Destroys (stops) and undefines a guest domain. This also remove the
associated storage pool.
COMMANDS
help - show this help
EXAMPLE
kvm-install-vm remove foo
Remove (destroy and undefine) a guest domain. WARNING: This will
delete the guest domain and any changes made inside it!
$ kvm-install-vm help attach-disk
NAME
kvm-install-vm attach-disk [OPTIONS] [COMMANDS] VMNAME
DESCRIPTION
Attaches a new disk to a guest domain.
COMMANDS
help - show this help
OPTIONS
-d SIZE Disk size (GB)
-f FORMAT Disk image format (default: qcow2)
-s IMAGE Source of disk device
-t TARGET Disk device target
EXAMPLE
kvm-install-vm attach-disk -d 10 -s example-5g.qcow2 -t vdb foo
Attach a 10GB disk device named example-5g.qcow2 to the foo guest
domain.
Copy the .kivrc
file to your $HOME directory to set custom defaults. This is
convenient if you find yourself repeatedly setting the same options on the
command line, like the distribution or the number of vCPUs.
Options are evaluated in the following order:
- Default options set in the script
- Custom options set in
.kivrc
- Option flags set on the command line
-
This script will download a qcow2 cloud image from the respective distribution's download site. See script for URLs.
-
If using libvirt-nss, keep in mind that DHCP leases take some time to expire, so if you create a VM, delete it, and recreate another VM with the same name in a short period of time, there will be two DHCP leases for the same host and its hostname will likely not resolve until the old lease expires.
-
The Operating System information database (osinfo-db) provides Operating System specific information needed to create guests for the various systems supported by
kvm-install-vm
. The database files provided by your package manager may be out of date and not provide definitions for recent Operating System versions. If you encounter the following error message, you may need to update the database files:ERR: Unknown OS variant '<name>'. Please update your osinfo-db.
If you have already updated your system, and the osinfo-db is still to old, then you can use theosinfo-db-import
tool with the--local
option, to install an up-to-date database in your home directory which will not conflict with your package manager files. Theosinfo-db-import
tool is provided by the rpm/deb packagesosinfo-db-tools
. See https://libosinfo.org/download for more information.
Tests are written using Bats. To
execute the tests, run ./test.sh
in the root directory of the project.
If you don't need to use Docker or Vagrant, don't want to make changes to a production machine, or just want to spin up one or more VMs locally to test things like:
- high availability
- clustering
- package installs
- preparing for exams
- checking for system defaults
- anything else you would do with a VM
...then this wrapper could be useful for you.
If you will encounter something similar:
ERR: Unknown OS variant 'fedora31'. Please update your osinfo-db. See https://libosinfo.org/download for more information.
Then you need to update the DB in libosinfo. Check the url and select the latest date ( https://releases.pagure.org/libosinfo/ )
wget -O "/tmp/osinfo-db.tar.xz" https://releases.pagure.org/libosinfo/osinfo-db-20200515.tar.xz
sudo osinfo-db-import --local "/tmp/osinfo-db.tar.xz"