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Rename kvm-[command] into builtin-[command] to prevent clashes with non-command files such as kvm-cpu.h Suggested-by: Pekka Enberg <penberg@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <levinsasha928@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Pekka Enberg <penberg@kernel.org>
Native Linux KVM tool ===================== The goal of this tool is to provide a clean, from-scratch, lightweight KVM host tool implementation that can boot Linux guest images (just a hobby, won't be big and professional like QEMU) with no BIOS dependencies and with only the minimal amount of legacy device emulation. It's great as a learning tool if you want to get your feet wet in virtualization land: it's only 5 KLOC of clean C code that can already boot a guest Linux image. Right now it can boot a Linux image and provide you output via a serial console, over the host terminal, i.e. you can use it to boot a guest Linux image in a terminal or over ssh and log into the guest without much guest or host side setup work needed. 1. To try out the tool, clone the git repository: git clone git://github.com/penberg/linux-kvm.git or alternatively, if you already have a kernel source tree: git checkout -b kvm/tool git pull git://github.com/penberg/linux-kvm.git 2. Compile the tool: cd tools/kvm && make 3. Download a raw userspace image: wget http://wiki.qemu.org/download/linux-0.2.img.bz2 && bunzip2 linux-0.2.img.bz2 4. Build a kernel with CONFIG_VIRTIO_BLK=y CONFIG_VIRTIO_NET=y CONFIG_VIRTIO_CONSOLE=y CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_CONSOLE=y CONFIG_HW_RANDOM_VIRTIO=y configuration options. Note: also make sure you have CONFIG_EXT2_FS or CONFIG_EXT4_FS if you use the above image. 5. And finally, launch the hypervisor: ./kvm run --disk linux-0.2.img \ --kernel ../../arch/x86/boot/bzImage \ or sudo ./kvm run --disk linux-0.2.img \ --kernel ../../arch/x86/boot/bzImage \ --network virtio The tool has been written by Pekka Enberg, Cyrill Gorcunov, Asias He, Sasha Levin and Prasad Joshi. Special thanks to Avi Kivity for his help on KVM internals and Ingo Molnar for all-around support and encouragement! See the following thread for original discussion for motivation of this project: http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.linux.kernel/962051/focus=962620 Build dependencies ===================== For deb based systems: 32-bit: sudo apt-get install build-essential 64-bit: sudo apt-get install build-essential libc6-dev-i386 For rpm based systems: 32-bit: yum install glibc-devel 64-bit: yum install glibc-devel glibc-devel.i386 On 64-bit Arch Linux make sure the multilib repository is enabled in your /etc/pacman.conf and run pacman -Sy lib32-glibc
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