source: postlfs/virtualization/qemu.xml@ d5cc78a

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Last change on this file since d5cc78a was 42326ce, checked in by Xi Ruoyao <xry111@…>, 3 years ago

qemu: use -device ac97 instead of deprecated -soundhw

git-svn-id: svn://svn.linuxfromscratch.org/BLFS/trunk/BOOK@24253 af4574ff-66df-0310-9fd7-8a98e5e911e0

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File size: 24.1 KB
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1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
2<!DOCTYPE sect1 PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.5//EN"
3 "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.5/docbookx.dtd" [
4 <!ENTITY % general-entities SYSTEM "../../general.ent">
5 %general-entities;
6
7 <!ENTITY qemu-download-http "http://download.qemu-project.org/qemu-&qemu-version;.tar.xz">
8 <!ENTITY qemu-download-ftp " ">
9 <!ENTITY qemu-md5sum "179f86928835da857c237b42f4b2df73">
10 <!ENTITY qemu-size "102 MB">
11 <!ENTITY qemu-buildsize "1.7 GB">
12 <!ENTITY qemu-time "0.9 SBU (using parallelism=4; add 0.3 SBU for tests)">
13]>
14
15<sect1 id="qemu" xreflabel="qemu-&qemu-version;">
16 <?dbhtml filename="qemu.html"?>
17
18 <sect1info>
19 <othername>$LastChangedBy$</othername>
20 <date>$Date$</date>
21 </sect1info>
22
23 <title>qemu-&qemu-version;</title>
24
25 <indexterm zone="qemu">
26 <primary sortas="a-qemu">qemu</primary>
27 </indexterm>
28
29 <sect2 role="package">
30 <title>Introduction to qemu</title>
31
32 <para>
33 <application>qemu</application> is a full virtualization solution for
34 Linux on x86 hardware containing virtualization extensions (Intel VT or
35 AMD-V).
36 </para>
37
38 &lfs101_checked;
39
40 <bridgehead renderas="sect3">Package Information</bridgehead>
41 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
42 <listitem>
43 <para>
44 Download (HTTP): <ulink url="&qemu-download-http;"/>
45 </para>
46 </listitem>
47 <listitem>
48 <para>
49 Download (FTP): <ulink url="&qemu-download-ftp;"/>
50 </para>
51 </listitem>
52 <listitem>
53 <para>
54 Download MD5 sum: &qemu-md5sum;
55 </para>
56 </listitem>
57 <listitem>
58 <para>
59 Download size: &qemu-size;
60 </para>
61 </listitem>
62 <listitem>
63 <para>
64 Estimated disk space required: &qemu-buildsize;
65 </para>
66 </listitem>
67 <listitem>
68 <para>
69 Estimated build time: &qemu-time;
70 </para>
71 </listitem>
72 </itemizedlist>
73
74 <bridgehead renderas="sect3">Qemu Dependencies</bridgehead>
75
76 <bridgehead renderas="sect4">Required</bridgehead>
77 <para role="required">
78 <xref linkend="glib2"/>, and
79 <xref linkend="x-window-system"/>
80 </para>
81
82 <bridgehead renderas="sect4">Recommended</bridgehead>
83 <para role="recommended">
84 <xref linkend="alsa-lib"/> and
85 <xref linkend="sdl2"/>
86 </para>
87
88 <bridgehead renderas="sect4">Optional</bridgehead>
89 <para role="optional">
90 Depending on the sound system, various packages in <xref linkend="alsa"/>,
91 <xref linkend="python3"/>,
92 <xref linkend="pulseaudio"/>,
93 <xref linkend="bluez"/>,
94 <xref linkend="curl"/>,
95 <xref linkend="cyrus-sasl"/>,
96 <xref linkend="gnutls"/>,
97 <xref linkend="gtk2"/>,
98 <xref linkend="gtk3"/>,
99 <xref linkend="libusb"/>,
100 <xref linkend="libgcrypt"/>,
101 <xref linkend="libssh2"/>,
102 <xref linkend="lzo"/>,
103 <xref linkend="nettle"/>,
104 <xref linkend="mesa"/>,
105 <xref linkend="sdl"/>,
106 <xref role="nodep" linkend="vte"/> or <xref linkend="vte2"/>, and
107<!-- libcacard has been a standalone project since qemu-2.5.-->
108 <ulink url="https://www.spice-space.org/page/Libcacard">libcacard</ulink>
109 </para>
110
111 <note>
112 <para>
113 This optional dependencies list is not comprehensive. See the output of
114 <command>./configure --help</command> for a more complete list.
115 </para>
116 </note>
117
118 <para condition="html" role="usernotes">User Notes:
119 <ulink url="&blfs-wiki;/qemu"/></para>
120
121 </sect2>
122
123 <sect2 id='qemu-prereq'>
124 <title>KVM Prerequisites</title>
125
126 <para>
127 Before building <application>qemu</application>, check to see if
128 your processor supports Virtualization Technology (VT):
129 </para>
130
131 <screen><userinput>egrep '^flags.*(vmx|svm)' /proc/cpuinfo</userinput></screen>
132
133 <para>
134 If you get any output, you have VT technology (vmx for Intel
135 processors and svm for AMD processors). You then need to go into your
136 system BIOS and ensure it is enabled. After enabing, reboot back to your
137 LFS instance.
138 </para>
139
140 </sect2>
141
142 <sect2 role="kernel" id='qemu-kernel'>
143 <title>Kernel Configuration</title>
144
145 <para>
146 Enable the following options in the kernel configuration and
147 recompile the kernel if necessary:
148 </para>
149
150<screen><literal>[*] Virtualization: ---&gt; [CONFIG_VIRTUALIZATION]
151 &lt;*/M&gt; Kernel-based Virtual Machine (KVM) support [CONFIG_KVM]
152 &lt;*/M&gt; KVM for Intel (and compatible) processors support [CONFIG_KVM_INTEL]
153 &lt;*/M&gt; KVM for AMD processors support [CONFIG_KVM_AMD]</literal></screen>
154
155 <indexterm zone="qemu qemu-kernel">
156 <primary sortas="d-qemu">qemu</primary>
157 </indexterm>
158
159 <para>
160 The Intel or AMD settings are not both required, but the one matching
161 your system processor is required.
162 </para>
163
164 <para>
165 To use the <quote>bridge</quote> network device, as explained below,
166 check that <xref linkend='bridgeutils'/> is installed
167 and the following options in the kernel configuration are enabled:
168 </para>
169
170<screen><literal>[*] Networking support ---&gt; [CONFIG_NET]
171 Networking options ---&gt;
172 &lt;*/M&gt; 802.1d Ethernet Bridging [CONFIG_BRIDGE]
173Device Drivers ---&gt;
174 [*] Network device support ---&gt; [CONFIG_NETDEVICES]
175 &lt;*/M&gt; Universal TUN/TAP device driver support [CONFIG_TUN]</literal></screen>
176
177 </sect2>
178
179 <sect2 role="installation">
180 <title>Installation of qemu</title>
181
182 <para revision="sysv">
183 You will need a dedicated group that will contain users (other than root)
184 allowed to access the KVM device. Create this group by running the
185 following command as the
186 <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem> user:
187 </para>
188
189<screen role="root" revision="sysv"><userinput>groupadd -g 61 kvm</userinput></screen>
190
191 <para>
192 Add any users that might use the KVM device to that group:
193 </para>
194
195<screen role="root"><userinput>usermod -a -G kvm <replaceable>&lt;username&gt;</replaceable></userinput></screen>
196
197 <para>
198 Fix an issue exposed by binutils-2.36:
199 </para>
200
201<screen><userinput>sed -i "/LDFLAGS_NOPIE/d" configure pc-bios/optionrom/Makefile</userinput></screen>
202
203 <para>
204 Install <application>qemu</application> by running the following
205 commands:
206 </para>
207
208 <note>
209 <para>
210 Qemu is capable of running many targets. The build process
211 is also capable of building multiple targets at one time in a
212 comma delimited list assigned to <option>--target-list</option>. Run
213 <command>./configure --help</command> to get a complete list of
214 available targets.
215 </para>
216 </note>
217
218
219<screen><userinput>if [ $(uname -m) = i686 ]; then
220 QEMU_ARCH=i386-softmmu
221else
222 QEMU_ARCH=x86_64-softmmu
223fi
224
225
226mkdir -vp build &amp;&amp;
227cd build &amp;&amp;
228
229../configure --prefix=/usr \
230 --sysconfdir=/etc \
231 --target-list=$QEMU_ARCH \
232 --audio-drv-list=alsa \
233 --docdir=/usr/share/doc/qemu-&qemu-version; &amp;&amp;
234
235unset QEMU_ARCH &amp;&amp;
236
237make</userinput></screen>
238
239 <para>
240 <application>qemu</application> uses <command>ninja</command> as
241 a subprocess when building. To run the tests, issue:
242 <command>ninja test</command>.
243 </para>
244
245 <para>
246 Now, as the <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem> user:
247 </para>
248
249<screen role="root"><userinput>make install</userinput></screen>
250
251 <para>
252 You will also need to add an Udev rule so that the KVM device gets correct
253 permissions:
254 </para>
255
256<screen role="root"><userinput>cat > /lib/udev/rules.d/65-kvm.rules &lt;&lt; "EOF"
257<literal>KERNEL=="kvm", GROUP="kvm", MODE="0660"</literal>
258EOF</userinput></screen>
259
260 <para>
261 Change the permissions and ownership of a helper script, which is needed
262 when using the <quote>bridge</quote> network device (see below):
263 </para>
264
265<screen role="root"><userinput>chgrp kvm /usr/libexec/qemu-bridge-helper &amp;&amp;
266chmod 4750 /usr/libexec/qemu-bridge-helper</userinput></screen>
267
268 <note>
269 <para>
270 For convenience you may want to create a symbolic link to run
271 the installed program. For instance:
272 </para>
273
274<screen role="root"><userinput>ln -sv qemu-system-`uname -m` /usr/bin/qemu</userinput></screen>
275 </note>
276
277 </sect2>
278
279 <sect2 role="commands">
280 <title>Command Explanations</title>
281
282<!-- Not used anymore
283 <para>
284 <command>sed ... util/memfd.c</command>: This command fixes a conflict
285 introduced with glibc-2.27.
286 </para>
287-->
288 <para>
289 <parameter>--audio-drv-list=alsa</parameter>: This switch sets the audio
290 driver to ALSA. See below for enabling other audio drivers.
291 </para>
292
293 <para>
294 <option>--audio-drv-list=pa</option>: This switch sets the audio
295 driver to pulseaudio. For other drivers see the --audio-drv-list list in
296 <command>configure</command>'s help output. The default audio driver is
297 OSS. To enable support for both alsa and pulseaudio, use
298 <option>--audio-drv-list=alsa,pa</option>.
299 </para>
300
301 <!-- this appears to be rejected in 4.1.0
302 ERROR: unknown option \-\-with-gtkabi=3.0
303 <para>
304 <option>\-\-with-gtkabi=3.0</option>: builds with GTK+-3 if both GTK+-2
305 and GTK+-3 are installed.
306 </para> -->
307
308 </sect2>
309
310 <sect2 role="using">
311 <title>Using Qemu</title>
312
313 <para>
314 Since using qemu means using a virtual computer, the steps to set up
315 the virtual machine are in close analogy with those to set up a real
316 computer. You'll need to decide about CPU, memory, disk, USB devices,
317 network card(s), screen size, etc. Once the <quote>hardware</quote> is
318 decided, you'll have for example to choose how to connect the machine
319 to internet, and/or to install an OS. In the following, we show basic
320 ways of performing those steps. But qemu is much more than this, and it
321 is strongly advised to read the qemu documentation in
322 <filename>/usr/share/doc/qemu-&qemu-version;/qemu-doc.html</filename>.
323 </para>
324
325 <note>
326 <para>
327 It is standard practice to name the computer running qemu
328 <quote>host</quote> and the emulated machine running under qemu the
329 <quote>guest</quote>. We'll use those notations in the following.
330 </para>
331 </note>
332
333 <note>
334 <para>
335 The following instructions assume the optional symbolic link,
336 <filename>qemu</filename>, has been created. Additionally,
337 <command>qemu</command> must be run from an X Window System based
338 terminal (either locally or over ssh).
339 </para>
340 </note>
341
342 <bridgehead renderas="sect3">Disk</bridgehead>
343 <para>
344 A virtual disk may be set up in the following way:
345 </para>
346
347<screen><userinput>VDISK_SIZE=<replaceable>50G</replaceable>
348VDISK_FILENAME=<replaceable>vdisk.img</replaceable>
349qemu-img create -f qcow2 $VDISK_FILENAME $VDISK_SIZE</userinput></screen>
350
351 <para>
352 The virtual disk size and filename should be ajusted as desired. The
353 actual size of the file will be less than specified, but will expand as
354 needed, so it is safe to put a high value.
355 </para>
356
357 <bridgehead renderas="sect3">Operating System</bridgehead>
358 <para>
359 To install an operating system, download an iso image from your preferred
360 Linux distribution. For the purposes of this example, we'll use
361 <filename>Fedora-16-x86_64-Live-LXDE.iso</filename> in the current
362 directory. Run the following:
363 </para>
364
365<screen><userinput>qemu -enable-kvm \
366 -drive file=$VDISK_FILENAME \
367 -cdrom Fedora-16-x86_64-Live-LXDE.iso \
368 -boot d \
369 -m <replaceable>1G</replaceable></userinput></screen>
370
371 <para>
372 Follow the normal installation procedures for the chosen distribution.
373 The <parameter>-boot</parameter> option specifies the boot order of
374 drives as a string of drive letters. Valid drive letters are: a, b
375 (floppy 1 and 2), c (first hard disk), d (first CD-ROM). The
376 <parameter>-m</parameter> option is the amount of memory to use for the
377 virtual machine. The choice depends on the load of the host. Modern
378 distributions should be comfortable with 1GB.
379 The <parameter>-enable-kvm</parameter> option allows hardware
380 acceleration. Without this switch, the emulation is much slower.
381 </para>
382
383 <bridgehead renderas="sect3">Defining the virtual hardware</bridgehead>
384 <para>
385 The virtual machine hardware is defined by the qemu command line.
386 An example command is given below:
387 </para>
388
389<screen><userinput>qemu -enable-kvm \
390 -smp 4 \
391 -cpu host \
392 -m 1G \
393 -drive file=$VDISK_FILENAME \
394 -cdrom grub-img.iso \
395 -boot order=c,once=d,menu=on \
396 -net nic,netdev=net0 \
397 -netdev user,id=net0 \
398 -device ac97 \
399 -vga std \
400 -serial mon:stdio \
401 -name "fedora-16"</userinput></screen>
402
403 <bridgehead renderas="sect3">Meaning of the command line options</bridgehead>
404 <para>
405 <parameter>-enable-kvm</parameter>: enable full KVM virtualization
406 support. On some hardware, it may be necessary to add the undocumented
407 <option>-machine smm=off</option> option in order to enable KVM.
408 </para>
409
410 <para>
411 <parameter>-smp &lt;N&gt;</parameter>: enable symmetric multiprocessing
412 with &lt;N&gt; CPUs.
413 </para>
414
415 <para>
416 <parameter>-cpu &lt;model&gt;</parameter>: simulate CPU &lt;model&gt;.
417 the list of supported models can be obtained with <option>-cpu
418 help</option>.
419 </para>
420
421 <para>
422 <parameter>-drive file=&lt;filename&gt;</parameter>: defines a virtual
423 disk whose image is stored in <filename>&lt;filename&gt;</filename>.
424 </para>
425
426 <para>
427 <parameter>-cdrom grub-img.iso</parameter>: defines an iso formated file
428 to use as a cdrom. Here we use a grub rescue disk, which may turn handy
429 when something goes wrong at boot time.
430 </para>
431
432 <para>
433 <parameter>-boot order=c,once=d,menu=on</parameter>: defines the boot
434 order for the virtual BIOS.
435 </para>
436
437 <para>
438 <parameter>-net nic,netdev=&lt;netid&gt;</parameter>: defines a network
439 card connected to the network device with id &lt;netid&gt;.
440 </para>
441
442 <para>
443 <parameter>-netdev user,id=&lt;netid&gt;</parameter>: defines the
444 network <quote>user</quote> device. This is a virtual local network
445 with addresses 10.0.2.0/24, where the host has address 10.0.2.2 and
446 acts as a gateway to internet, and with a name server at address
447 10.0.2.3, and an smb server at address 10.0.2.4. A builtin DHCP server
448 can allocate addresses between 10.0.2.15 and 10.0.2.31.
449 </para>
450
451 <para>
452 <parameter>-soundhw &lt;model&gt;</parameter>: defines the soundcard
453 model. The list may be obtained with <option>-soundhw help</option>.
454 </para>
455
456 <para>
457 <parameter>-vga &lt;type&gt;</parameter>: defines the type of vga card
458 to emulate.
459 </para>
460
461 <para>
462 <parameter>-serial mon:stdio</parameter>: sends the serial port of the
463 guest (<filename>/dev/ttyS0</filename> on linux guests), multiplexed with
464 the qemu monitor, to the standard input and output of the qemu
465 process.
466 </para>
467
468 <para>
469 <parameter>-name &lt;name&gt;</parameter>: sets the name of the guest.
470 This name is displayed in the guest window caption. It may be useful
471 if you run several guests at the same time.
472 </para>
473
474 <bridgehead renderas="sect3">Controlling the Emulated Display</bridgehead>
475 <para>
476 It may happen that the guest window displayed by qemu does not correspond
477 to the full capability of the emulated vga card. For example, the vmware
478 card is 1600x900 capable, but only 1024x768 is displayed by default.
479 A suitable Xorg configuration on the guest allows to use the full size
480 (Note that the Xorg video driver to use is <xref
481 linkend="xorg-vmware-driver"/>):
482 </para>
483
484<screen role="root"><userinput>cat &gt; /usr/share/X11/xorg.conf.d/20-vmware.conf &lt;&lt; "EOF"
485<literal>Section "Monitor"
486 Identifier "Monitor0"
487 # cvt 1600 900
488 # 1600x900 59.95 Hz (CVT 1.44M9) hsync: 55.99 kHz; pclk: 118.25 MHz
489 Modeline "1600x900" 118.25 1600 1696 1856 2112 900 903 908 934 -hsync +vsync
490 Option "PreferredMode" "1600x900"
491 HorizSync 1-200
492 VertRefresh 1-200
493EndSection
494
495Section "Device"
496 Identifier "VMware SVGA II Adapter"
497 Option "Monitor" "default"
498 Driver "vmware"
499EndSection
500
501Section "Screen"
502 Identifier "Default Screen"
503 Device "VMware SVGA II Adapter"
504 Monitor "Monitor0"
505
506 SubSection "Display"
507 Depth 24
508 Modes "1600x900" "1440x900" "1366x768" "1280x720" "800x480"
509 EndSubSection
510
511EndSection</literal>
512EOF</userinput></screen>
513
514 <para>
515 New sizes will be available besides the native ones. You need to
516 restart X in order to have the new sizes available.
517 </para>
518
519 <bridgehead renderas="sect3">Networking</bridgehead>
520 <para>
521 The above solution for networking allows the guest to access the local
522 network through the host (and possibly to access internet through the
523 local routers), but the converse is not true. Not even the host can
524 access the guest, unless port forwarding is enabled. And in the case
525 several guests are running, they cannot communicate with each other.
526 Other network devices can be used for this purpose. For example, there
527 is the <quote>socket</quote> device, which allows several guests to
528 share a common virtual network. In the following, we describe in more
529 details how to set up the <quote>bridge</quote> device, which allows
530 the guests to appear as if connected to the local network. All the
531 commands below should be run as the <systemitem
532 class="username">root</systemitem> user.
533 </para>
534
535 <para revision="sysv">
536 Set up bridging with <xref linkend="bridgeutils"/>. Only the physical
537 interface(s) should be set up at boot. The virtual interface(s) will be
538 added as needed when qemu is started.
539 </para>
540
541 <para revision="systemd">
542 <!-- On SYS-V, IP_FORWARD is enabled by the bridge script. -->
543 Allow the host to forward IP packets:
544 </para>
545
546<screen role="root"
547 revision="systemd"><userinput>sysctl -w net.ipv4.ip_forward=1</userinput></screen>
548
549 <para revision="systemd">
550 To make this permanent, add the command to
551 <filename>/etc/sysctl.d/60-net-forward.conf:</filename>
552 </para>
553
554<screen role="root"
555 revision="systemd"><userinput>cat &gt;&gt; /etc/sysctl.d/60-net-forward.conf &lt;&lt; EOF
556<literal>net.ipv4.ip_forward=1</literal>
557EOF</userinput></screen>
558
559 <para>
560 Set up a required configuration file:
561 </para>
562
563<!-- /etc/qemu has not been installed by "make install" since version 2.4 -->
564<screen role="root"><userinput>install -vdm 755 /etc/qemu &amp;&amp;
565echo allow br0 &gt; /etc/qemu/bridge.conf</userinput></screen>
566
567 <para>
568 In the command above, replace the switch <parameter>-netdev user,...
569 </parameter> with <parameter>-netdev bridge,id=net0</parameter>.
570 </para>
571
572 </sect2>
573
574 <sect2 role="content">
575 <title>Contents</title>
576
577 <segmentedlist>
578 <segtitle>Installed Programs</segtitle>
579 <segtitle>Installed Library</segtitle>
580 <segtitle>Installed Directories</segtitle>
581
582 <seglistitem>
583 <seg>
584 ivshmem-client,
585 ivshmem-server,
586 qemu (symlink),
587 qemu-ga,
588 qemu-img,
589 qemu-io,
590 qemu-nbd,
591 qemu-system-&lt;arch&gt;, and
592 virtfs-proxy-helper
593 </seg>
594 <seg>None</seg>
595 <seg>
596 /usr/share/qemu and
597 /usr/share/doc/qemu-&qemu-version;
598 </seg>
599 </seglistitem>
600 </segmentedlist>
601
602 <variablelist>
603 <bridgehead renderas="sect3">Short Description</bridgehead>
604 <?dbfo list-presentation="list"?>
605 <?dbhtml list-presentation="table"?>
606
607 <varlistentry id="ivshmem-client">
608 <term><command>ivshmem-client</command></term>
609 <listitem>
610 <para>
611 is a standalone client for using the ivshmem device
612 </para>
613 <indexterm zone="qemu ivshmem-client">
614 <primary sortas="b-ivshmem-client">ivshmem-client</primary>
615 </indexterm>
616 </listitem>
617 </varlistentry>
618
619 <varlistentry id="ivshmem-server">
620 <term><command>ivshmem-server</command></term>
621 <listitem>
622 <para>
623 is an example server for the ivshmem device
624 </para>
625 <indexterm zone="qemu ivshmem-server">
626 <primary sortas="b-ivshmem-server">ivshmem-server</primary>
627 </indexterm>
628 </listitem>
629 </varlistentry>
630
631 <varlistentry id="qemu-edid">
632 <term><command>qemu-edid</command></term>
633 <listitem>
634 <para>
635 is a test tool for the qemu EDID generator
636 </para>
637 <indexterm zone="qemu qemu-edid">
638 <primary sortas="b-qemu-edid">qemu-edid</primary>
639 </indexterm>
640 </listitem>
641 </varlistentry>
642
643 <varlistentry id="qemu-ga">
644 <term><command>qemu-ga</command></term>
645 <listitem>
646 <para>
647 implements support for QMP (QEMU Monitor Protocol) commands and
648 events that terminate and originate respectively within the guest
649 using an agent built as part of QEMU
650 </para>
651 <indexterm zone="qemu qemu-ga">
652 <primary sortas="b-qemu-ga">qemu-ga</primary>
653 </indexterm>
654 </listitem>
655 </varlistentry>
656
657 <varlistentry id="qemu-img">
658 <term><command>qemu-img</command></term>
659 <listitem>
660 <para>
661 provides commands to manage QEMU disk images
662 </para>
663 <indexterm zone="qemu qemu-img">
664 <primary sortas="b-qemu-img">qemu-img</primary>
665 </indexterm>
666 </listitem>
667 </varlistentry>
668
669 <varlistentry id="qemu-io">
670 <term><command>qemu-io</command></term>
671 <listitem>
672 <para>
673 is a diagnostic and manipulation program for (virtual) memory
674 media. It is still at an early stage of development
675 </para>
676 <indexterm zone="qemu qemu-io">
677 <primary sortas="b-qemu-io">qemu-io</primary>
678 </indexterm>
679 </listitem>
680 </varlistentry>
681
682 <varlistentry id="qemu-nbd">
683 <term><command>qemu-nbd</command></term>
684 <listitem>
685 <para>
686 exports Qemu disk images using the QEMU Disk Network Block
687 Device (NBD) protocol
688 </para>
689 <indexterm zone="qemu qemu-nbd">
690 <primary sortas="b-qemu-nbd">qemu-nbd</primary>
691 </indexterm>
692 </listitem>
693 </varlistentry>
694
695 <varlistentry id="qemu-system">
696 <term><command>qemu-system-x86_64</command></term>
697 <listitem>
698 <para>
699 is the QEMU PC System emulator
700 </para>
701 <indexterm zone="qemu qemu-system">
702 <primary sortas="b-qemu-system">qemu-system-x86_64</primary>
703 </indexterm>
704 </listitem>
705 </varlistentry>
706
707 <varlistentry id="virtfs-proxy-helper">
708 <term><command>virtfs-proxy-helper</command></term>
709 <listitem>
710 <para>
711 creates a socket pair or a named socket. QEMU and proxy helper
712 communicate using this socket. QEMU proxy fs driver sends
713 filesystem request to proxy helper and receives the response
714 from it
715 </para>
716 <indexterm zone="qemu virtfs-proxy-helper">
717 <primary sortas="b-virtfs-proxy-helper">virtfs-proxy-helper</primary>
718 </indexterm>
719 </listitem>
720 </varlistentry>
721
722 </variablelist>
723
724 </sect2>
725
726</sect1>
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