| virt-image - Format of the virtual image XML descriptor |
virt-image - Format of the virtual image XML descriptor
virt-image(1) relies on an XML descriptor to create virtual machines from virtual machine images. In general, a virtual machine image consists of the XML descriptor (usually in a file image.xml) and a number of files for the virtual machine's disks.
In the following explanation of the structure of the image descriptor, mandatory XML elements are marked as element, whereas optional elements are marked as element.
All file names in the image descriptor are relative to the location of the descriptor itself. Generally, disk files are either kept in the same directory as the image descriptor, or in a subdirectory.
The image descriptor contains information on the requirements a guest has on the host platform through one or more the /image/domain/boot descriptors (see section BOOT). The image can only be used if at least one of the boot descriptors is suitable for the host platform; a boot descriptor is suitable if:
The CPU architecture of the boot descriptor, given by the boot/guest/arch element, is supported by the host
The host supports a guest with the features requested in the boot/guest/features element, such as providing an APIC, or having ACPI turned off
If a suitable boot descriptor is found, the guest is created and booted according to the information about booting the OS from the boot/os element and with the disks specified in the boot/drive element. If more than one suitable boot descriptor is found, one of them is chosen based on a heuristic, generally preferring paravirtualized guests over full virtualized ones, though this is an implementation detail of the tool creating the virtual machine.
The image descriptor consists of three sections, all contained in the toplevel image element:
A number of elements like label, name, and description that give some simple information about the image. The name must be a string suitable as a name for the virtual machine, the label is a short human-readable string suitable for display in graphical UI's, and the description should be a longer, free-form description of the purpose of the image. The name is mandatory.
The domain element contains instructions on how to boot the image, and device attributes such as the number of virtual CPU's and the size of the memory. (see section DOMAIN)
The storage element lists the files to back the virtual machine's disks and some information about their format and use. (see section STORAGE)
The domain element contains one or more boot descriptors (see section BOOT) and a devices element. The Devices element lists the recommended number of virtual CPU's in the vcpu element and the recommended amount of memory in kB in the memory element. It also indicates whether the virtual machine should have a network interface through the interface element and whether the virtual machine has a graphical interface through the graphics element.
Each boot descriptor details how the virtual machine should be started
on a certain hypervisor. The type attribute of the boot element,
which can either be xen or hvm, depending on whether the boot
descriptor is for a paravirtualized Xen(tm) guest or a fully-virtualized
guest.
The boot element contains three subelements:
The platform requirements, contained in the guest element, consist of
the arch element and the features element. The arch element
indicates the CPU architecture the guest expects, e.g. i686, x86_64,
or ppc.
The features element indicates whether certain platform features should
be on or off. Currently, the platform features are pae, acpi, and
apic. They can be turned on or off by giving a state attribute of
either on or off. When a feature is mentioned in the features
element, it defaults to on.
The os element for fully-virtualized hvm guests contains a loader
element whose dev attribute indicates whether to boot off a hard disk
(dev='hd') or off a CD-ROM (dev='cdrom')
For paravirtualized guests, the os element either contains a
<loader>pygrub</loader> element, indicating that the guest should be
booted with pygrub, or kernel, initrd and cmdline elements. The
contents of the kernel and initrd elements are the names of the
kernel and initrd files, whereas the cmdline element contains the
command line that should be passed to the kernel on boot.
The mapping of disk files into the guest is performed by a list of drive elements inside the boot element. Each drive element references the name of a disk file from the STORAGE section through its disk attribute and can optionally specify as what device that disk file should appear in the guest through its target attribute. If the target is omitted, device names are assigned in the order in which the drive elements appear, skipping already assigned devices.
The storage element lists the disk image files that are part of the virtual machine image in a list of one or more disk elements. Each disk element can contain the following attributes:
the file attribute giving the name of the disk file
an optional id attribute. The name given with that attribute is used to reference the disk from the drive element of a boot descriptor. If the id attribute is missing, it defaults to the file attribute.
the use attribute indicating whether the disk file is a system,
user, or scratch disk. The use attribute differentiates disk files
so that an update based on replacing disk files can replace system
disks, but leave user disks untouched.
Generally, system disks contain application code, user disks contain
the application's data, and scratch disks contain temporary state that
can be erased between runs of the guest.
The virtual machine image must contain files for all system disks, and
may contain files for the user and scratch disks. If the latter are
not part of the image, they are initialized as empty files when a guest is
created, with the size given by the size attribute.
the size attribute giving the size of the disk in MB.
the format attribute giving the format of the disk file. Currently, this
can be either raw for a raw disk image and iso for an ISO image.
The image descriptor below can be used to create a virtual machine running
the System Rescue CD (http://www.sysresccd.org/) Besides the descriptor,
you only need the ISO image from the System Rescue CD website.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<image>
<name>sysresccd</name>
<domain>
<boot type="hvm">
<guest>
<arch>i686</arch>
</guest>
<os>
<loader dev="cdrom"/>
</os>
<drive disk="root.raw" target="hda"/>
<drive disk="sysresc"/>
</boot>
<devices>
<vcpu>1</vcpu>
<memory>262144</memory>
<interface/>
<graphics/>
</devices>
</domain>
<storage>
<disk file="root.raw" use="scratch" size="100" format="raw"/>
<disk id="sysresc" file="isos/systemrescuecd.iso"
use="system" format="iso"/>
</storage>
</image>
To create a virtual machine, save the above XML in image.xml and run:
# virt-image --vnc image.xml
Written by David Lutterkort. See the AUTHORS file in the source distribution for the complete list of credits.
Report bugs to the mailing list http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/et-mgmt-tools
or directly to BugZilla http://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/ against the
Fedora product, and the python-virtinst component.
Copyright (C) 2006-2007 Red Hat, Inc, and various contributors.
This is free software. You may redistribute copies of it under the terms of the GNU General
Public License http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html. There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent
permitted by law.
virt-image(1), virt-install(1), the project website
http://virt-manager.org, the Relax-NG grammar for image XML image.rng
| virt-image - Format of the virtual image XML descriptor |