virt-builder - Build virtual machine images quickly
virt-builder os-version
[-o|--output DISKIMAGE] [--size SIZE] [--format raw|qcow2]
[--arch ARCHITECTURE] [--attach ISOFILE]
virt-builder -l|--list [--long] [--list-format short|long|json] [os-version]
virt-builder --notes os-version
virt-builder --print-cache
virt-builder --cache-all-templates
virt-builder --delete-cache
virt-builder --get-kernel DISKIMAGE
[--format raw|qcow2] [--output OUTPUTDIR]
Virt-builder is a tool for quickly building new virtual machines. You can build
a variety of VMs for local or cloud use, usually within a few minutes or less.
Virt-builder also has many ways to customize these VMs. Everything is run from
the command line and nothing requires root privileges, so automation and
scripting is simple.
Note that virt-builder does not install guests from scratch. It takes cleanly
prepared, digitally signed OS templates and customizes them. This approach is
used because it is much faster, but if you need to do fresh installs you may
want to look at
virt-install(1) and
oz-install(1).
The easiest way to get started is by looking at the examples in the next
section.
virt-builder --list
will list out the operating systems available to install. A selection of freely
redistributable OSes is available as standard. You can add your own too (see
below).
After choosing a guest from the list, you may want to see if there are any
installation notes:
virt-builder --notes fedora-27
virt-builder fedora-27
will build a Fedora 25 image for the same architecture as virt-builder (so
running it from an i686 installation will try to build an i686 image, if
available). This will have all default configuration (minimal size, no user
accounts, random root password, only the bare minimum installed software,
etc.).
You
do not need to run this command as root.
The first time this runs it has to download the template over the network, but
this gets cached (see "CACHING").
The name of the output file is derived from the template name, so above it will
be
fedora-27.img. You can change the output filename using the
-o option:
virt-builder fedora-27 -o mydisk.img
You can also use the
-o option to write to existing devices or logical
volumes.
virt-builder fedora-27 --format qcow2
As above, but write the output in qcow2 format to
fedora-27.qcow2.
virt-builder fedora-27 --size 20G
As above, but the output size will be 20 GB. The guest OS is resized as it is
copied to the output (automatically, using
virt-resize(1)).
virt-builder fedora-27 --arch i686
As above, but using an i686 template, if available.
virt-builder fedora-27 --root-password file:/tmp/rootpw
Create a Fedora 25 image. The root password is taken from the file
/tmp/rootpw.
Note if you
don’t set
--root-password then the guest is
given a
random root password which is printed on stdout.
You can also create user accounts. See "USERS AND PASSWORDS" below.
virt-builder fedora-27 --hostname virt.example.com
Set the hostname to "virt.example.com".
To install packages from the ordinary (guest) software repository (eg. dnf or
apt):
virt-builder fedora-27 --install "inkscape,@Xfce Desktop"
(In Fedora, "@" is used to install groups of packages. On Debian you
would install a meta-package instead.)
To update the installed packages to the latest version:
virt-builder debian-7 --update
For guests which use SELinux, like Fedora and Red Hat Enterprise Linux, you may
need to do SELinux relabelling after installing or updating packages (see
"SELINUX" below):
virt-builder fedora-27 --update --selinux-relabel
There are many options that let you customize the installation. These include:
--run/
--run-command, which run a shell script or command while
the disk image is being generated and lets you add or edit files that go into
the disk image.
--firstboot/
--firstboot-command, which let you
add scripts/commands that are run the first time the guest boots.
--edit to edit files.
--upload to upload files.
例:
cat <<'EOF' > /tmp/dnf-update.sh
dnf -y --best update
EOF
virt-builder fedora-27 --firstboot /tmp/dnf-update.sh
or simply:
virt-builder fedora-27 --firstboot-command 'dnf -y --best update'
which makes the
dnf(8) "update" command run once the first time
the guest boots.
Or:
virt-builder fedora-27 \
--edit '/etc/dnf/dnf.conf:
s/gpgcheck=1/gpgcheck=0/'
which edits
/etc/dnf/dnf.conf inside the disk image (during disk image
creation, long before boot).
You can combine these options, and have multiple options of all types.
- --help
- ヘルプを表示します。
-
--arch ARCHITECTURE
- Use the specified architecture for the output image. This
means there must be sources providing the requested template for the
requested architecture.
See also "ARCHITECTURE".
-
--attach ISOFILE
- During the customization phase, the given disk is attached
to the libguestfs appliance. This is used to provide extra software
repositories or other data for customization.
You probably want to ensure the volume(s) or filesystems in the attached
disks are labelled (or use an ISO volume name) so that you can mount them
by label in your run-scripts:
mkdir /tmp/mount
mount LABEL=EXTRA /tmp/mount
You can have multiple --attach options, and the format can be any
disk format (not just an ISO).
See also: --run, "Installing packages at build time from a side
repository", genisoimage(1), virt-make-fs(1).
-
--attach-format FORMAT
- Specify the disk format for the next --attach
option. The "FORMAT" is usually "raw" or
"qcow2". Use "raw" for ISOs.
-
--cache DIR
- --no-cache
-
--cache DIR sets the directory to use/check for
cached template files. If not set, defaults to either
$XDG_CACHE_HOME /virt-builder/ or
$HOME/.cache/virt-builder/.
--no-cache disables template caching.
- --cache-all-templates
- Download all templates to the cache and then exit. See
"CACHING".
Note this doesn't cache everything. More templates might be uploaded. Also
this doesn't cache packages (the --install, --update
options).
- --check-signature
- --no-check-signature
- Check/don’t check the digital signature of the OS
template. The default is to check the signature and exit if it is not
correct. Using --no-check-signature bypasses this check.
See also --fingerprint.
- --colors
- --colours
- Use ANSI colour sequences to colourize messages. This is
the default when the output is a tty. If the output of the program is
redirected to a file, ANSI colour sequences are disabled unless you use
this option.
-
--curl CURL
- Specify an alternate curl(1) binary. You can also
use this to add curl parameters, for example to disable https certificate
checks:
virt-builder --curl "curl --insecure" [...]
- --delete-cache
- Delete the template cache. See "CACHING".
- --no-delete-on-failure
- Don’t delete the output file on failure to build.
You can use this to debug failures to run scripts. See "DEBUGGING
BUILDS" for ways to debug images.
The default is to delete the output file if virt-builder fails (or, for
example, some script that it runs fails).
-
--fingerprint 'AAAA BBBB ...'
- Check that the index and templates are signed by the key
with the given fingerprint. (The fingerprint is a long string, usually
written as 10 groups of 4 hexadecimal digits).
You can give this option multiple times. If you have multiple source URLs,
then you can have either no fingerprint, one fingerprint or multiple
fingerprints. If you have multiple, then each must correspond 1-1 with a
source URL.
-
--format qcow2
-
--format raw
- For ordinary builds, this selects the output format. The
default is raw.
With --get-kernel this specifies the input format.
To create an old-style qcow2 file (for compatibility with RHEL 6 or very old
qemu < 1.1), after running virt-builder, use this command:
qemu-img amend -f qcow2 -o compat=0.10 output.qcow2
-
--get-kernel IMAGE
- This option extracts the kernel and initramfs from a
previously built disk image called "IMAGE" (in fact it works for
any VM disk image, not just ones built using virt-builder).
Note this method is deprecated: there is a separate tool for this,
virt-get-kernel(1), which has more options for the file extraction.
The kernel and initramfs are written to the current directory, unless you
also specify the --output "outputdir" directory
name.
The format of the disk image is automatically detected unless you specify it
by using the --format option.
In the case where the guest contains multiple kernels, the one with the
highest version number is chosen. To extract arbitrary kernels from the
disk image, see guestfish(1). To extract the entire /boot
directory of a guest, see virt-copy-out(1).
-
--gpg GPG
- Specify an alternate gpg(1) (GNU Privacy Guard)
binary. By default virt-builder looks for either "gpg2" or
"gpg" in the $PATH.
You can also use this to add gpg parameters, for example to specify an
alternate home directory:
virt-builder --gpg "gpg --homedir /tmp" [...]
-
-l [os-version]
-
--list [os-version]
-
--list --list-format format [os-version]
-
--list --long [os-version]
- List all the available templates if no guest is specified,
or only for the specified one.
It is possible to choose with --list-format the output format for the
list templates:
- short
- The default format, prints only the template identifier
and, next to it, its short description.
- long
- Prints a textual list with the details of the available
sources, followed by the details of the available templates.
- json
- Prints a JSON object with the details of the available
sources and the details of the available templates.
The "version" key in the main object represents the
"compatibility version", and it is bumped every time the
resulting JSON output is incompatible with the previous versions (for
example the structure has changed, or non-optional keys are no more
present).
--long is a shorthand for the "long" format.
See also:
--source,
--notes, "SOURCES OF
TEMPLATES".
- --machine-readable
-
--machine-readable=format
- このオプションは、他のプログラムにより解析されるときに、よりマシンに易しい出力を作成するために使用されます。以下の
"マシン可読な出力"
参照。
-
-m MB
-
--memsize MB
- Change the amount of memory allocated to --run
scripts. Increase this if you find that --run scripts or the
--install option are running out of memory.
The default can be found with this command:
guestfish get-memsize
- --network
- --no-network
- Enable or disable network access from the guest during the
installation.
Enabled is the default. Use --no-network to disable access.
The network only allows outgoing connections and has other minor
limitations. See "NETWORK" in virt-rescue(1).
If you use --no-network then certain other options such as
--install will not work.
This does not affect whether the guest can access the network once it has
been booted, because that is controlled by your hypervisor or cloud
environment and has nothing to do with virt-builder.
Generally speaking you should not use --no-network. But here
are some reasons why you might want to:
- 1.
- Because the libguestfs backend that you are using doesn't
support the network. (See: "BACKEND" in guestfs(3)).
- 2.
- Any software you need to install comes from an attached
ISO, so you don't need the network.
- 3.
- You don’t want untrusted guest code trying to access
your host network when running virt-builder. This is particularly an issue
when you don't trust the source of the operating system templates. (See
"SECURITY" below).
- 4.
- You don’t have a host network (eg. in
secure/restricted environments).
- --no-sync
- Do not sync the output file on exit.
Virt-builder "fsync"s the output file or disk image when it exits.
The reason is that qemu/KVM’s default caching mode is
"none" or "directsync", both of which bypass the host
page cache. Therefore these would not work correctly if you immediately
started the guest after running virt-builder - they would not see the
complete output file. (Note that you should not use these caching modes -
they are fundamentally broken for this and other reasons.)
If you are not using these broken caching modes, you can use
--no-sync to avoid this unnecessary sync and gain considerable
extra performance.
-
--notes os-version
- List any notes associated with this guest, then exit (this
does not do the install).
-
-o filename
-
--output filename
- Write the output to filename. If you don’t
specify this option, then the output filename is generated by taking the
"os-version" string and adding ".img" (for raw format)
or ".qcow2" (for qcow2 format).
Note that the output filename could be a device, partition or logical
volume.
When used with --get-kernel, this option specifies the output
directory.
- --print-cache
- Print information about the template cache. See
"CACHING".
- -q
- --quiet
- Don’t print ordinary progress messages.
-
--size SIZE
- Select the size of the output disk, where the size can be
specified using common names such as "32G" (32 gigabytes) etc.
Virt-builder will resize filesystems inside the disk image automatically.
If the size is not specified, then one of two things happens. If the output
is a file, then the size is the same as the template. If the output is a
device, partition, etc then the size of that device is used.
To specify size in bytes, the number must be followed by the lowercase
letter b, eg: "--size 10737418240b".
-
--smp N
- Enable N ≥ 2 virtual CPUs for --run scripts
to use.
-
--source URL
- Set the source URL to look for indexes.
You can give this option multiple times to specify multiple sources.
See also "SOURCES OF TEMPLATES" below.
Note that you should not point --source to sources that you
don’t trust (unless the source is signed by someone you do trust).
See also the --no-network option.
- --no-warn-if-partition
- Do not emit a warning if the output device is a partition.
This warning avoids a common user error when writing to a USB key or
external drive, when you should normally write to the whole device (
--output /dev/sdX), not to a partition on the device (
--output /dev/sdX1). Use this option to suppress this
warning.
- -v
- --verbose
- Enable debug messages and/or produce verbose output.
When reporting bugs, use this option and attach the complete output to your
bug report.
- -V
- --version
- バージョン番号を表示して、終了します。
- --wrap
- Wrap error, warning, and informative messages. This is the
default when the output is a tty. If the output of the program is
redirected to a file, wrapping is disabled unless you use this
option.
- -x
- libguestfs API
呼び出しのトレースを有効にします。
-
--append-line FILE:LINE
- Append a single line of text to the "FILE". If
the file does not already end with a newline, then one is added before the
appended line. Also a newline is added to the end of the "LINE"
string automatically.
For example (assuming ordinary shell quoting) this command:
--append-line '/etc/hosts:10.0.0.1 foo'
will add either "10.0.0.1 foo⏎" or "⏎10.0.0.1
foo⏎" to the file, the latter only if the existing file does
not already end with a newline.
"⏎" represents a newline character, which is guessed by
looking at the existing content of the file, so this command does the
right thing for files using Unix or Windows line endings. It also works
for empty or non-existent files.
To insert several lines, use the same option several times:
--append-line '/etc/hosts:10.0.0.1 foo'
--append-line '/etc/hosts:10.0.0.2 bar'
To insert a blank line before the appended line, do:
--append-line '/etc/hosts:'
--append-line '/etc/hosts:10.0.0.1 foo'
-
--chmod PERMISSIONS:FILE
- Change the permissions of "FILE" to
"PERMISSIONS".
Note: "PERMISSIONS" by default would be decimal, unless
you prefix it with 0 to get octal, ie. use 0700 not 700.
-
--commands-from-file FILENAME
- Read the customize commands from a file, one (and its
arguments) each line.
Each line contains a single customization command and its arguments, for
example:
delete /some/file
install some-package
password some-user:password:its-new-password
Empty lines are ignored, and lines starting with "#" are comments
and are ignored as well. Furthermore, arguments can be spread across
multiple lines, by adding a "\" (continuation character) at the
of a line, for example
edit /some/file:\
s/^OPT=.*/OPT=ok/
The commands are handled in the same order as they are in the file, as if
they were specified as --delete /some/file on the command
line.
-
--copy SOURCE:DEST
- Copy files or directories recursively inside the guest.
Wildcards cannot be used.
-
--copy-in LOCALPATH:REMOTEDIR
- Copy local files or directories recursively into the disk
image, placing them in the directory "REMOTEDIR" (which must
exist).
Wildcards cannot be used.
-
--delete PATH
- Delete a file from the guest. Or delete a directory (and
all its contents, recursively).
You can use shell glob characters in the specified path. Be careful to
escape glob characters from the host shell, if that is required. For
example:
virt-customize --delete '/var/log/*.log'.
See also: --upload, --scrub.
-
--edit FILE:EXPR
- Edit "FILE" using the Perl expression
"EXPR".
表現がシェルにより変更されるのを防ぐために、適切に引用符でくくるよう注意してください。
このオプションは Perl 5
がインストールされているときのみ利用可能であることに注意してください。
See "NON-INTERACTIVE EDITING" in virt-edit(1).
-
--firstboot SCRIPT
- Install "SCRIPT" inside the guest, so that when
the guest first boots up, the script runs (as root, late in the boot
process).
The script is automatically chmod +x after installation in the guest.
The alternative version --firstboot-command is the same, but it
conveniently wraps the command up in a single line script for you.
You can have multiple --firstboot options. They run in the same order
that they appear on the command line.
Please take a look at "FIRST BOOT SCRIPTS" for more information
and caveats about the first boot scripts.
See also --run.
-
--firstboot-command 'CMD+ARGS'
- Run command (and arguments) inside the guest when the guest
first boots up (as root, late in the boot process).
You can have multiple --firstboot options. They run in the same order
that they appear on the command line.
Please take a look at "FIRST BOOT SCRIPTS" for more information
and caveats about the first boot scripts.
See also --run.
-
--firstboot-install PKG,PKG..
- Install the named packages (a comma-separated list). These
are installed when the guest first boots using the guest’s package
manager (eg. apt, yum, etc.) and the guest’s network connection.
For an overview on the different ways to install packages, see
"INSTALLING PACKAGES".
-
--hostname HOSTNAME
- Set the hostname of the guest to "HOSTNAME". You
can use a dotted hostname.domainname (FQDN) if you want.
-
--install PKG,PKG..
- Install the named packages (a comma-separated list). These
are installed during the image build using the guest’s package
manager (eg. apt, yum, etc.) and the host’s network connection.
For an overview on the different ways to install packages, see
"INSTALLING PACKAGES".
See also --update, --uninstall.
-
--link TARGET:LINK[:LINK..]
- Create symbolic link(s) in the guest, starting at
"LINK" and pointing at "TARGET".
-
--mkdir DIR
- Create a directory in the guest.
This uses "mkdir -p" so any intermediate directories are
created, and it also works if the directory already exists.
-
--move SOURCE:DEST
- Move files or directories inside the guest.
Wildcards cannot be used.
- --no-logfile
- Scrub "builder.log" (log file from build
commands) from the image after building is complete. If you don't want to
reveal precisely how the image was built, use this option.
See also: "LOG FILE".
-
--password USER:SELECTOR
- Set the password for "USER". (Note this option
does not create the user account).
See "USERS AND PASSWORDS" for the format of the
"SELECTOR" field, and also how to set up user accounts.
-
--password-crypto md5|sha256|sha512
- When the virt tools change or set a password in the guest,
this option sets the password encryption of that password to
"md5", "sha256" or "sha512".
"sha256" and "sha512" require glibc ≥ 2.7 (check
crypt(3) inside the guest).
"md5" will work with relatively old Linux guests (eg. RHEL 3), but
is not secure against modern attacks.
The default is "sha512" unless libguestfs detects an old guest
that didn't have support for SHA-512, in which case it will use
"md5". You can override libguestfs by specifying this option.
Note this does not change the default password encryption used by the guest
when you create new user accounts inside the guest. If you want to do
that, then you should use the --edit option to modify
"/etc/sysconfig/authconfig" (Fedora, RHEL) or
"/etc/pam.d/common-password" (Debian, Ubuntu).
-
--root-password SELECTOR
- Set the root password.
See "USERS AND PASSWORDS" for the format of the
"SELECTOR" field, and also how to set up user accounts.
Note: In virt-builder, if you don't set --root-password then
the guest is given a random root password.
-
--run SCRIPT
- Run the shell script (or any program) called
"SCRIPT" on the disk image. The script runs virtualized inside a
small appliance, chrooted into the guest filesystem.
The script is automatically chmod +x.
If libguestfs supports it then a limited network connection is available but
it only allows outgoing network connections. You can also attach data
disks (eg. ISO files) as another way to provide data (eg. software
packages) to the script without needing a network connection (
--attach). You can also upload data files ( --upload).
You can have multiple --run options. They run in the same order that
they appear on the command line.
See also: --firstboot, --attach, --upload.
-
--run-command 'CMD+ARGS'
- Run the command and arguments on the disk image. The
command runs virtualized inside a small appliance, chrooted into the guest
filesystem.
If libguestfs supports it then a limited network connection is available but
it only allows outgoing network connections. You can also attach data
disks (eg. ISO files) as another way to provide data (eg. software
packages) to the script without needing a network connection (
--attach). You can also upload data files ( --upload).
You can have multiple --run-command options. They run in the same
order that they appear on the command line.
See also: --firstboot, --attach, --upload.
-
--scrub FILE
- Scrub a file from the guest. This is like --delete
except that:
- •
- It scrubs the data so a guest could not recover it.
- •
- It cannot delete directories, only regular files.
- --selinux-relabel
- Relabel files in the guest so that they have the correct
SELinux label.
This will attempt to relabel files immediately, but if the operation fails
this will instead touch /.autorelabel on the image to schedule a
relabel operation for the next time the image boots.
You should only use this option for guests which support SELinux.
-
--sm-attach SELECTOR
- Attach to a pool using "subscription-manager".
See "SUBSCRIPTION-MANAGER" for the format of the
"SELECTOR" field.
-
--sm-credentials SELECTOR
- Set the credentials for "subscription-manager".
See "SUBSCRIPTION-MANAGER" for the format of the
"SELECTOR" field.
- --sm-register
- Register the guest using "subscription-manager".
This requires credentials being set using --sm-credentials.
- --sm-remove
- Remove all the subscriptions from the guest using
"subscription-manager".
- --sm-unregister
- Unregister the guest using
"subscription-manager".
-
--ssh-inject USER[:SELECTOR]
- Inject an ssh key so the given "USER" will be
able to log in over ssh without supplying a password. The "USER"
must exist already in the guest.
See "SSH KEYS" for the format of the "SELECTOR" field.
You can have multiple --ssh-inject options, for different users and
also for more keys for each user.
-
--timezone TIMEZONE
- Set the default timezone of the guest to
"TIMEZONE". Use a location string like
"Europe/London"
-
--touch FILE
- This command performs a touch(1)-like operation on
"FILE".
-
--truncate FILE
- This command truncates "FILE" to a zero-length
file. The file must exist already.
-
--truncate-recursive PATH
- This command recursively truncates all files under
"PATH" to zero-length.
-
--uninstall PKG,PKG..
- Uninstall the named packages (a comma-separated list).
These are removed during the image build using the guest’s package
manager (eg. apt, yum, etc.). Dependent packages may also need to be
uninstalled to satisfy the request.
See also --install, --update.
- --update
- Do the equivalent of "yum update", "apt-get
upgrade", or whatever command is required to update the packages
already installed in the template to their latest versions.
See also --install, --uninstall.
-
--upload FILE:DEST
- Upload local file "FILE" to destination
"DEST" in the disk image. File owner and permissions from the
original are preserved, so you should set them to what you want them to be
in the disk image.
"DEST" could be the final filename. This can be used to rename the
file on upload.
If "DEST" is a directory name (which must already exist in the
guest) then the file is uploaded into that directory, and it keeps the
same name as on the local filesystem.
See also: --mkdir, --delete, --scrub.
-
--write FILE:CONTENT
- Write "CONTENT" to "FILE".
There are several approaches to installing packages or applications in the guest
which have different trade-offs.
Installing packages at build time
If the guest OS you are installing is similar to the host OS (eg. both are
Linux), and if libguestfs supports network connections, then you can use
--install to install packages like this:
virt-builder fedora-27 --install inkscape
This uses the guest’s package manager and the host’s network
connection.
Updating packages at build time
To update the installed packages in the template at build time:
virt-builder fedora-27 --update
Most of the templates that ship with virt-builder come with a very minimal
selection of packages (known as a "JEOS" or "Just Enough
Operating System"), which are up to date at the time the template is
created, but could be out of date by the time you come to install an OS from
the template. This option updates those template packages.
Installing packages at first boot
Another option is to install the packages when the guest first boots:
virt-builder fedora-27 --firstboot-install inkscape
This uses the guest’s package manager and the guest’s network
connection.
The downsides are that it will take the guest a lot longer to boot first time,
and there’s nothing much you can do if package installation fails (eg.
if a network problem means the guest can't reach the package repositories).
Installing packages at build time from a side repository
If the software you want to install is not available in the main package
repository of the guest, then you can add a side repository. Usually this is
presented as an ISO (CD disk image) file containing extra packages.
You can create the disk image using either
genisoimage(1) or
virt-make-fs(1). For genisoimage, use a command like this:
genisoimage -o extra-packages.iso -R -J -V EXTRA cdcontents/
Create a script that mounts the ISO and sets up the repository. For dnf, create
/tmp/install.sh containing:
mkdir /tmp/mount
mount LABEL=EXTRA /tmp/mount
cat <<'EOF' > /etc/yum.repos.d/extra.repo
[extra]
name=extra
baseurl=file:///tmp/mount
enabled=1
EOF
dnf -y install famousdatabase
For apt, create /tmp/install.sh containing:
mkdir /tmp/mount
mount LABEL=EXTRA /tmp/mount
apt-cdrom -d=/tmp/mount add
apt-get -y install famousdatabase
Use the
--attach option to attach the CD / disk image and the
--run option to run the script:
virt-builder fedora-27 \
--attach extra-packages.iso \
--run /tmp/install.sh
The
--root-password option is used to change the root password (otherwise
a random password is used). This option takes a password "SELECTOR"
in one of the following formats:
-
--root-password file:FILENAME
- Read the root password from "FILENAME". The whole
first line of this file is the replacement password. Any other lines are
ignored. You should create the file with mode 0600 to ensure no one else
can read it.
-
--root-password password:PASSWORD
- Set the root password to the literal string
"PASSWORD".
Note: this is not secure since any user on the same machine can see
the cleartext password using ps(1).
-
--root-password random
- Choose a random password, which is printed on stdout. The
password has approximately 120 bits of randomness.
これがデフォルトです。
-
--root-password disabled
- The root account password is disabled. This is like putting
"*" in the password field.
-
--root-password locked:file:FILENAME
-
--root-password locked:password:PASSWORD
-
--root-password locked:random
- The root account is locked, but a password is placed on the
account. If first unlocked (using "passwd -u") then logins will
use the given password.
-
--root-password locked
-
--root-password locked:disabled
- The root account is locked and password is
disabled.
Creating user accounts
To create user accounts, use the
useradd(8) command with
--firstboot-command like this:
virt-builder --firstboot-command \
'useradd -m -p "" rjones ; chage -d 0 rjones'
The above command will create an "rjones" account with no password,
and force the user to set a password when they first log in. There are other
ways to manage passwords, see
useradd(8) for details.
Because there are so many different ways to set the keyboard layout in Linux
distributions, virt-builder does not yet attempt to have a simple command line
option. This section describes how to set the keyboard for some common Linux
distributions.
Keyboard layout with systemd
For distros that use systemd "localectl", use a command like this:
virt-builder fedora-27 \
--firstboot-command 'localectl set-keymap uk'
See
localectl(1) and
https://www.happyassassin.net/2013/11/23/keyboard-layouts-in-fedora-20-and-previously/
for more details.
Keyboard layout using /etc/sysconfig/keyboard
For RHEL ≤ 6, Fedora ≤ 18 and similar, upload or modify the
keyboard configuration file using the
--upload,
--write or
--edit options. For example:
virt-builder centos-6 \
--edit '/etc/sysconfig/keyboard: s/^KEYTABLE=.*/KEYTABLE="uk"/'
The format of this file can be found documented in many places online.
Keyboard layout with Debian-derived distros
For Debian-derived distros using
/etc/default/keyboard, upload or modify
the keyboard file using the
--upload,
--write or
--edit
options. For example:
virt-builder debian-8 \
--edit '/etc/default/keyboard: s/^XKBLAYOUT=.*/XKBLAYOUT="gb"/'
See
https://wiki.debian.org/Keyboard.
Most Linux distributions support multiple locale settings so that you can have
guest messages printed in another language such as Russian.
However there is no single setting which controls this, since extra packages may
need to be installed to support console and X fonts, and keyboard input
methods. The packages required, and their configuration is highly
distro-specific, and it is outside the scope of virt-builder to do this.
This section contains examples for some common Linux distributions.
Setting Japanese in Fedora 25
virt-builder fedora-27 \
--size 20G \
--update \
--install @japanese-support \
--install @xfce \
--install xorg-x11-server-Xorg,xorg-x11-drivers,rsyslog \
--link /usr/lib/systemd/system/graphical.target:/etc/systemd/system/default.target \
--firstboot-command 'localectl set-locale LANG=ja_JP.utf8' \
--firstboot-command 'localectl set-keymap jp' \
--firstboot-command 'systemctl isolate graphical.target'
Setting Japanese in Debian 8 (Jessie)
Note that although this enables Japanese in the text console too, it is unlikely
that you will see properly rendered Japanese there. However Japanese is
properly rendered in X applications and terminals.
pkgs=locales,xfce4,\
ibus,ibus-anthy,\
fonts-ipafont-gothic,fonts-ipafont-mincho,\
fonts-takao-mincho,\
xfonts-intl-japanese,xfonts-intl-japanese-big,\
iceweasel-l10n-ja,manpages-ja
virt-builder debian-8 \
--size 20G \
--install $pkgs \
--edit '/etc/locale.gen: s,^#\s*ja,ja,' \
--write '/etc/default/locale:LANG="ja_JP.UTF-8"' \
--run-command "locale-gen"
Scripts and package installation that runs at build time (
--run,
--run-command,
--install,
--update, but
not
firstboot) is logged in one of the following locations:
- /tmp/builder.log
- On Linux, BSD, and other non-Windows guests.
- C:\Temp\builder.log
- On Windows, DOS guests.
- /builder.log
- If /tmp or C:\Temp is missing.
If you don’t want the log file to appear in the final image, then use the
--no-logfile command line option.
The
--ssh-inject option is used to inject ssh keys for users in the
guest, so they can login without supplying a password.
The "SELECTOR" part of the option value is optional; in this case,
--ssh-inject "USER" means that we look in the
current
user’s
~/.ssh directory to find the default public ID file. That
key is uploaded. "default public ID" is the
default_ID_file
file described in
ssh-copy-id(1).
If specified, the "SELECTOR" can be in one of the following formats:
-
--ssh-inject USER:file:FILENAME
- Read the ssh key from FILENAME. FILENAME is
usually a .pub file.
-
--ssh-inject USER:string:KEY_STRING
- Use the specified "KEY_STRING".
"KEY_STRING" is usually a public string like ssh-rsa AAAA....
user@localhost.
In any case, the
~USER/.ssh directory and the
~USER/.ssh/authorized_keys file will be created if not existing
already.
The
--firstboot and
--firstboot-command options allow you to
execute commands at the first boot of the guest. To do so, an init script for
the guest init system is installed, which takes care of running all the added
scripts and commands.
Supported operating systems are:
- Linux
- Init systems supported are: systemd, System-V init (known
also as sysvinit), and Upstart (using the System-V scripts).
Note that usually init scripts run as root, but with a more limited
environment than what could be available from a normal shell: for example,
$HOME may be unset or empty.
The output of the first boot scripts is available in the guest as
~root/virt-sysprep-firstboot.log.
- Windows
-
rhsrvany.exe, available from sources at
https://github.com/rwmjones/rhsrvany, or pvvxsvc.exe, available
with SUSE VMDP is installed to run the first boot scripts. It is required,
and the setup of first boot scripts will fail if it is not present.
rhsrvany.exe or pvvxsvc.exe is copied from the location
pointed to by the "VIRT_TOOLS_DATA_DIR" environment variable; if
not set, a compiled-in default will be used (something like
/usr/share/virt-tools).
The output of the first boot scripts is available in the guest as
C:\Program Files\Guestfs\Firstboot\log.txt.
It is possible to automate the registration and attaching of the system using
"subscription-manager". This is typical on Red Hat Enterprise Linux
guests. There are few options which ease this process, avoid executing
commands manually and exposing passwords on command line.
--sm-register starts the registration process, and requires
--sm-credentials to be specified; the format of the
"SELECTOR" of
--sm-credentials is one of the following
formats:
-
--sm-credentials USER:file:FILENAME
- Read the password for the specified "USER" from
FILENAME.
-
--sm-credentials USER:password:PASSWORD
- Use the literal string "PASSWORD" for the
specified "USER".
--sm-attach attaches the system to subscriptions; the format of its
"SELECTOR" is one of the following:
-
--sm-attach auto
- "subscription-manager" attaches to the
best-fitting subscriptions for the system.
-
--sm-attach file:FILENAME
- Read the pool ID from FILENAME.
-
--sm-attach pool:POOL
- Use the literal string "POOL" as pool ID.
--sm-remove removes all the subscriptions from the guest, while
--sm-unregister completely unregister the system.
When you invoke virt-builder, installation proceeds as follows:
- •
- The template image is downloaded.
If the template image is present in the cache, the cached version is used
instead. (See "CACHING").
- •
- The template signature is checked.
- •
- The template is uncompressed to a tmp file.
- •
- The template image is resized into the destination, using
virt-resize(1).
- •
- Extra disks are attached (--attach).
- •
- A new random seed is generated for the guest.
- •
- Guest customization is performed, in the order specified on
the command line.
- •
- SELinux relabelling is done
(--selinux-relabel).
Importing into libvirt
Import the disk image into libvirt using
virt-install(1) --import
option.
virt-install --import \
--name guest --ram 2048 \
--disk path=disk.img,format=raw --os-variant fedora27
注:
- 1.
- You must specify the correct format. The format is
"raw" unless you used virt-builder’s --format
option.
- 2.
-
--os-variant is highly recommended, because it will
present optimum devices to enable the guest to run most efficiently. To
get a list of all variants, do:
osinfo-query os
The above tool is provided by libosinfo package.
- 3.
- You can run virt-install as root or non-root. Each works
slightly differently because libvirt manages a different set of virtual
machines for each user. In particular virt-manager normally shows the
root-owned VMs, whereas Boxes shows the user-owned VMs, and other tools
probably work differently as well.
Importing into OpenStack
Import the image into Glance (the OpenStack image store) by doing:
glance image-create --name fedora-27-image --file fedora-27.img \
--disk-format raw --container-format bare \
--is-public True
The
--file parameter is the virt-builder-generated disk image. It should
match virt-builder’s
--output option. The
--disk-format
parameter should match virt-builder’s
--format option (or
"raw" if you didn't use that option). The
--container-format
should always be "bare" since virt-builder doesn't put images into
containers.
You can use the "glance image-show
fedora-27-image" command to display the properties of the image.
To boot up an instance of your image on a Nova compute node, do:
nova boot fedora-27-server --image fedora-27-image \
--flavor m1.medium
Use "nova flavor-list" to list possible machine flavors. Use
"nova list" to list running instances.
Booting directly using qemu or KVM
The qemu command line is not very stable or easy to use, hence libvirt should be
used if possible. However a command line similar to the following could be
used to boot the virtual machine:
qemu-system-x86_64 \
-machine accel=kvm:tcg \
-cpu host \
-m 2048 \
-drive file=disk.img,format=raw,if=virtio
As with libvirt, it is very important that the correct format is chosen. It will
be "raw" unless the
--format option was used.
Puppet
To enable the Puppet agent in a guest, install the package, point the
configuration at your Puppetmaster, and ensure the agent runs at boot.
A typical virt-builder command would be:
virt-builder fedora-27 \
--hostname client.example.com \
--update \
--install puppet \
--append-line '/etc/puppet/puppet.conf:[agent]' \
--append-line '/etc/puppet/puppet.conf:server = puppetmaster.example.com/' \
--run-command 'systemctl enable puppet' \
--selinux-relabel
The precise instructions vary according to the Linux distro. For further
information see:
https://docs.puppet.com/puppet/latest/install_pre.html
If virt-builder itself fails, then enable debugging (
-v) and report a
bug (see "BUGS" below).
If virt-builder fails because some script or package it is installing fails, try
using
--no-delete-on-failure to preserve the output file, and continue
reading this section.
If virt-builder is successful but the image doesn't work, here are some things
to try:
- Use virt-rescue
- Run virt-rescue(1) on the disk image:
virt-rescue -a disk.img
This gives you a rescue shell. You can mount the filesystems from the disk
image on /sysroot and examine them using ordinary Linux commands.
You can also chroot into the guest to reinstall the bootloader. The
virt-rescue man page has a lot more information and examples.
- Use guestfish
- Run guestfish(1) on the disk image:
guestfish -a disk.img -i
Use guestfish commands like "ll /directory" and "cat
/file" to examine directories and files.
- Use guestmount
- Mount the disk image safely on the host using FUSE and
guestmount(1):
mkdir /tmp/mp
guestmount -a disk.img -i /tmp/mp
cd /tmp/mp
To unmount the disk image do:
fusermount -u /tmp/mp
- Add a serial console
- If the guest hangs during boot, it can be helpful to add a
serial console to the guest, and direct kernel messages to the serial
console. Adding the serial console will involve looking at the
documentation for your hypervisor. To direct kernel messages to the serial
console, add the following on the kernel command line:
console=tty0 console=ttyS0,115200
virt-builder reads the available sources from configuration files, with the
.conf extension and located in the following paths:
- •
- $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/virt-builder/repos.d/ ($XDG_CONFIG_HOME is
$HOME/.config if not set).
- •
- $VIRT_BUILDER_DIRS/virt-builder/repos.d/ (where
$VIRT_BUILDER_DIRS means any of the directories in that environment
variable, or just /etc if not set).
Each
.conf file in those paths has a simple text format like the
following:
[libguestfs.org]
uri=http://libguestfs.org/download/builder/index.asc
gpgkey=file:///etc/xdg/virt-builder/repos.d/libguestfs.gpg
The part in square brackets is the repository identifier, which is used as
unique identifier.
The following fields can appear:
- "uri=URI"
- The URI of the index file which this repository refers to.
This field is required.
- "gpgkey=URI"
- This optional field represents the URI (although only
file:// URIs are accepted) of the key used to sign the index file.
If not present, the index file referred by uri=.. is not
signed.
- "proxy=MODE"
- This optional field specifies the proxy mode, to be used
when downloading the index file of this repository. The possible values
are:
-
no, off
- No proxy is being used at all, even overriding the system
configuration.
- system
- The proxy used is the system one.
- anything else
- Specifies the actual proxy configuration to be used,
overriding the system configuration.
If not present, the assumed value is to respect the proxy settings of the system
(i.e. as if
system would be specified).
- "format=FORMAT"
- This optional field specifies the format of the repository.
The possible values are:
- native
- The native format of the "virt-builder"
repository. See also "Creating and signing the index file"
below.
- simplestreams
- The URI represents the root of a Simple Streams v1.0 tree
of metadata.
For more information about Simple Streams, see also
https://launchpad.net/simplestreams.
If not present, the assumed value is "native".
For serious virt-builder use, you may want to create your own repository of
templates.
Libguestfs.org repository
Out of the box, virt-builder downloads the file
http://libguestfs.org/download/builder/index.asc which is an index of
available templates plus some information about each one, wrapped up in a
digital signature. The command "virt-builder --list" lists out the
information in this index file.
The templates hosted on libguestfs.org were created using shell scripts,
kickstart files and preseed files which can be found in the libguestfs source
tree, in "builder/templates".
Setting up the repository
You can set up your own site containing an index file and some templates, and
then point virt-builder at the site by creating a
.conf file pointing
to it.
Note that if your index is signed, you will need to properly fill
gpgkey=.. in your
.conf file, making sure to deploy also the GPG
key file.
virt-builder --source https://example.com/builder/index.asc \
--fingerprint 'AAAA BBBB ...' \
--list
You can host this on any web or FTP server, or a local or network filesystem.
Setting up a GPG key
If you don’t have a GnuPG key, you will need to set one up. (Strictly
speaking this is optional, but if your index and template files are not signed
then virt-builder users will have to use the
--no-check-signature flag
every time they use virt-builder.)
To create a key, see the GPG manual
http://www.gnupg.org/gph/en/manual.html.
Export your GPG public key:
gpg --export -a "[email protected]" > pubkey
Create the templates
There are many ways to create the templates. For example you could clone
existing guests (see
virt-sysprep(1)), or you could install a guest by
hand (
virt-install(1)). To see how the templates were created for
virt-builder, look at the scripts in "builder/templates"
Virt-builder supports any image format (e.g. raw, qcow2, etc) as template, both
as-is, and compressed as XZ. This way, existing images (e.g. cleaned using
virt-sysprep(1)) can be used as templates.
For best results when compressing the templates, use the following xz options
(see
nbdkit-xz-plugin(1) for further explanation):
xz --best --block-size=16777216 disk
Creating and signing the index file
The index file has a simple text format (shown here without the digital
signature):
[fedora-18]
name=Fedora® 18
osinfo=fedora18
arch=x86_64
file=fedora-18.xz
checksum[sha512]=...
format=raw
size=6442450944
compressed_size=148947524
expand=/dev/sda3
[fedora-19]
name=Fedora® 19
osinfo=fedora19
arch=x86_64
file=fedora-19.xz
checksum[sha512]=...
revision=3
format=raw
size=4294967296
compressed_size=172190964
expand=/dev/sda3
The part in square brackets is the "os-version", which is the same
string that is used on the virt-builder command line to build that OS.
The index file creation and signature can be eased with the
virt-builder-repository(1) tool.
After preparing the "index" file in the correct format, clearsign it
using the following command:
gpg --clearsign --armor index
This will create the final file called
index.asc which can be uploaded to
the server (and is the
uri=.. URL). As noted above, signing the index
file is optional, but recommended.
The following fields can appear:
- "name=NAME"
- The user-friendly name of this template. This is displayed
in the --list output but is otherwise not significant.
- "osinfo=ID"
- This optional field maps the operating system to the
associated libosinfo ID. Virt-builder does not use it (yet).
- "arch=ARCH"
- The architecture of the operating system installed within
the template. This field is required.
- "file=PATH"
- The path (relative to the index) of the xz-compressed
template.
Note that absolute paths or URIs are not permitted here. This is
because virt-builder has a "same origin" policy for templates so
they cannot come from other servers.
- "sig=PATH"
-
This option is deprecated. Use the checksum field
instead.
The path (relative to the index) of the GPG detached signature of the xz
file.
Note that absolute paths or URIs are not permitted here. This is
because virt-builder has a "same origin" policy for templates so
they cannot come from other servers.
The file can be created as follows:
gpg --detach-sign --armor -o disk.xz.sig disk.xz
- "checksum[sha512]=7b882fe9b82eb0fef..."
- The SHA-512 checksum of the file specified in
file=.. is checked after it is downloaded. To work out the
signature, do:
sha512sum disk.xz
Note if you use this, you don’t need to sign the file, ie.
don’t use "sig". This option overrides
"sig".
- "checksum=7b882fe9b82eb0fef..."
- "checksum" is an alias for
"checksum[sha512]".
If you need to interoperate with virt-builder = 1.24.0 then you have to use
"checksum" because that version would give a parse error with
square brackets and numbers in the key of a field. This is fixed in
virt-builder ≥ 1.24.1.
- "revision=N"
- The revision is an integer which is used to control the
template cache. Increasing the revision number causes clients to download
the template again even if they have a copy in the cache.
The revision number is optional. If omitted it defaults to 1.
- "format=raw"
- "format=qcow2"
- Specify the format of the disk image; in case it is
compressed, that is the format before the compression. If not given, the
format is autodetected, but generally it is better to be explicit about
the intended format.
Note this is the source format, which is different from the --format
option (requested output format). Virt-builder does on-the-fly conversion
from the source format to the requested output format.
- "size=NNN"
- The virtual size of the image in bytes. This is the size of
the image when uncompressed. If using a non-raw format such as qcow2 then
it means the virtual disk size, not the size of the qcow2 file.
This field is required.
Virt-builder also uses this as the minimum size that users can request via
the --size option, or as the default size if there is no
--size option.
- "compressed_size=NNN"
- The actual size of the disk image in bytes, i.e. what was
specified in file=... This is just used for information (when using
"long", and "json" formats of --list).
- "expand=/dev/sdaX"
- When expanding the image to its final size, instruct
virt-resize(1) to expand the named partition in the guest image to
fill up all available space. This works like the virt-resize
--expand option.
You should usually put the device name of the guest’s root filesystem
here.
It’s a good idea to use this, but not required. If the field is
omitted then virt-resize will create an extra partition at the end of the
disk to cover the free space, which is much less user-friendly.
- "lvexpand=/dev/VolGroup/LogVol"
- When expanding the image to its final size, instruct
virt-resize(1) to expand the named logical volume in the guest
image to fill up all available space. This works like the virt-resize
--lv-expand option.
If the guest uses LVM2 you should usually put the LV of the guest’s
root filesystem here. If the guest does not use LVM2 or its root
filesystem is not on an LV, don't use this option.
- "notes=NOTES"
- Any notes that go with this image, especially notes
describing what packages are in the image, how the image was prepared, and
licensing information.
This information is shown in the --notes and --list
--long modes.
You can use multi-line notes here by indenting each new line with at least
one character of whitespace (even on blank lines):
notes=This image was prepared using
the following kickstart script:
<-- one space at beginning of line
part /boot --fstype ext3
...
- "hidden=true"
- Using the hidden flag prevents the template from being
listed by the --list option (but it is still installable). This is
used for test images.
- "aliases=ALIAS1 ALIAS2 ..."
- This optional field specifies a list of aliases, separated
by spaces, for the image. For example, an alias could be used to always
point to the latest version of a certain image, leaving the old versions
available in the index instead of updating the same image (see the
"revision" field).
Running virt-builder against multiple sources
It is possible to use multiple sources with virt-builder. The recommended way is
to deploy
.conf files pointing to the index files. Another way is to
specify the sources using multiple
--source and/or
--fingerprint
options:
virt-builder \
--source http://example.com/s1/index.asc \
--source http://example.com/s2/index.asc
You can provide N or 1 fingerprints. In the case where you provide N
fingerprints, N = number of sources and there is a 1-1 correspondence between
each source and each fingerprint:
virt-builder \
--source http://example.com/s1/index.asc --fingerprint '0123 ...' \
--source http://example.com/s2/index.asc --fingerprint '9876 ...'
In the case where you provide 1 fingerprint, the same fingerprint is used for
all sources.
You "must" provide at least 1 fingerprint.
Licensing of templates
You should be aware of the licensing of images that you distribute. For open
source guests, provide a link to the source code in the "notes"
field and comply with other requirements (eg. around trademarks).
Formal specification of the index file
The index file format has a formal specification defined by the flex scanner and
bison parser used to parse the file. This can be found in the following files
in the libguestfs source tree:
builder/index-scan.l
builder/index-parse.y
A tool called
virt-index-validate(1) is available to validate the index
file to ensure it is correct.
Note that the parser and tool can work on either the signed or unsigned index
file (ie.
index or
index.asc).
The index is always encoded in UTF-8.
Caching templates
Since the templates are usually very large, downloaded templates are cached in
the user’s home directory.
The location of the cache is
$XDG_CACHE_HOME/virt-builder/
or
$HOME/.cache/virt-builder.
You can print out information about the cache directory, including which guests
are currently cached, by doing:
virt-builder --print-cache
The cache can be deleted if you want to save space by doing:
virt-builder --delete-cache
You can download all (current) templates to the local cache by doing:
virt-builder --cache-all-templates
To disable the template cache, use
--no-cache.
Only templates are cached. The index and detached digital signatures are not
cached.
Caching packages
Virt-builder uses
curl(1) to download files and it also uses the current
"http_proxy" (etc) settings when installing packages (
--install,
--update).
You may therefore want to set those environment variables in order to maximize
the amount of local caching that happens. See "ENVIRONMENT
VARIABLES" and
curl(1).
Local mirrors
To increase both speed and reliability of installing packages, you can set up a
local mirror of the target distribution, and point the guest package manager
at that.
Using a local mirror with Fedora
To install a Fedora guest using a local mirror:
virt-builder fedora-27 \
--edit '/etc/yum.repos.d/fedora.repo:
s{.*baseurl=.*}{baseurl=http://example.com/mirror/};
s{.*metalink=.*}{};
' \
--edit '/etc/yum.repos.d/fedora-updates.repo:
s{.*baseurl=.*}{baseurl=http://example.com/mirror-updates/};
s{.*metalink=.*}{};
' \
--run-command 'dnf -y update' \
--install 'pkg1,pkg2,...'
Using a local mirror with Debian
Assuming that you are using "apt-proxy" to mirror the repository, you
should create a new
sources.list file to point to your proxy (see
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/AptProxy) and then do:
virt-builder debian-8 \
--upload sources.list:/etc/apt/sources.list \
--run-command 'apt-get -y update' \
--install 'pkg1,pkg2,...'
Virt-builder uses GNU Privacy Guard (GnuPG or gpg) to verify that the index and
templates have not been tampered with.
The source points to an index file, which is optionally signed.
Virt-builder downloads the index and checks that the signature is valid and the
signer’s fingerprint matches the specified fingerprint (ie. the one
specified in
gpgkey=.. in the
.conf, or with
--fingerprint, in that order).
For checking against the built-in public key/fingerprint, this requires
importing the public key into the user’s local gpg keyring
(that’s just the way that gpg works).
When a template is downloaded, its signature is checked in the same way.
Although the signatures are optional, if you don’t have them then
virt-builder users will have to use
--no-check-signature on the command
line. This prevents an attacker from replacing the signed index file with an
unsigned index file and having virt-builder silently work without checking the
signature. In any case it is highly recommended that you always create signed
index and templates.
Virt-builder can build a guest for any architecture no matter what the host
architecture is. For example an x86-64 guest on an ARM host.
However certain options may not work, specifically options that require running
commands in the guest during the build process:
--install,
--update,
--run,
--run-command. You may need to replace
these with their firstboot-equivalents.
An x86-64 host building 32 bit i686 guests should work without any special
steps.
Virt-builder does not need to run as root (in fact, should not be run as root),
and doesn't use setuid, "sudo" or any similar mechanism.
--install,
--update,
--run and
--run-command are
implemented using an appliance (a small virtual machine) so these commands do
not run on the host. If you are using the libguestfs libvirt backend and have
SELinux enabled then the virtual machine is additionally encapsulated in an
SELinux container (sVirt).
However these options will have access to the host’s network and since
the template may contain untrusted code, the code might try to access host
network resources which it should not. You can use
--no-network to
prevent this.
Firstboot commands run in the context of the guest when it is booted, and so the
security of your hypervisor / cloud should be considered.
Virt-builder injects a random seed into every guest which it builds. This helps
to ensure that TCP sequence numbers, UUIDs, ssh host keys etc are truly random
when the guest boots.
You should check digital signatures and not ignore any signing errors.
If you wish to create many new guests of the same type, it is tempting to run
virt-builder once and then copy the output file. You should
not do
this. You should run virt-builder once for each new guest you need.
The reason is that each clone needs to have (at least) a separate random seed,
and possibly other unique features (such as filesystem UUIDs) in future
versions of virt-builder.
Another thing you should
not do is to boot the guest, then clone the
booted disk image. The reason is that some guests create unique machine IDs,
SSH host keys and so on at first boot, and you would not want clones to have
duplicate identities.
See also:
virt-sysprep(1).
The most important aspect of getting good performance is caching. Templates gets
downloaded into the cache the first time they are used, or if you use the
--cache-all-templates option. See "CACHING" above for further
information.
Packages required for the
--install and
--update options are
downloaded using the host network connection. Setting the
"http_proxy", "https_proxy" and "ftp_proxy"
environment variables to point to a local web cache may ensure they only need
to be downloaded once. You can also try using a local package repository,
although this can be complex to set up and varies according to which Linux
distro you are trying to install.
Using --no-sync
Use
--no-sync. However read the caveats in the "OPTIONS"
section above, since this can cause disk corruption if not used correctly.
Skipping virt-resize
Virt-builder can skip the virt-resize step under certain conditions. This makes
virt-builder much faster. The conditions are:
- •
- the output must be a regular file (not a block device),
and
- •
- the user did not use the --size option,
and
- •
- the output format is the same as the template format
(usually raw).
pxzcat
Virt-builder uses an internal implementation of pxzcat (parallel xzcat) if
liblzma was found at build time. If liblzma was not found at build time,
regular "xzcat" is used which is single-threaded.
Guests which use SELinux (such as Fedora and Red Hat Enterprise Linux) require
that each file has a correct SELinux label.
Virt-builder does not know how to give new files a label, so there are two
possible strategies it can use to ensure correct labelling:
- Using --selinux-relabel
- This runs setfiles(8) just before finalizing the
guest, which sets SELinux labels correctly in the disk image.
This is the recommended method.
-
--touch /.autorelabel
- Guest templates may already contain a file called
/.autorelabel or you may touch it.
For guests that use SELinux, this causes restorecon(8) to run at
first boot. Guests will reboot themselves once the first time you use
them, which is normal and harmless.
Please note that if your guest uses SELinux, and you are doing operations on it
which might create new files or change existing ones, you are recommended to
use
--selinux-relabel. This will help in making sure that files have
the right SELinux labels.
The
--machine-readable option can be used to make the output more machine
friendly, which is useful when calling virt-builder from other programs, GUIs
etc.
Use the option on its own to query the capabilities of the virt-builder binary.
Typical output looks like this:
$ virt-builder --machine-readable
virt-builder
arch
config-file
customize
json-list
pxzcat
A list of features is printed, one per line, and the program exits with status
0.
It is possible to specify a format string for controlling the output; see
"ADVANCED MACHINE READABLE OUTPUT" in
guestfs(3).
For other environment variables which affect all libguestfs programs, see
"ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES" in
guestfs(3).
- "http_proxy"
- "https_proxy"
- "no_proxy"
- Set the proxy for downloads. These environment variables
(and more) are actually interpreted by curl(1), not
virt-builder.
- "HOME"
- Used to determine the location of the template cache, and
the location of the user' sources. See "CACHING" and
"SOURCES OF TEMPLATES".
- "VIRT_TOOLS_DATA_DIR"
- This can point to the directory containing data files used
for Windows firstboot installation.
Normally you do not need to set this. If not set, a compiled-in default will
be used (something like /usr/share/virt-tools).
This directory may contain the following files:
- rhsrvany.exe
- This is the RHSrvAny Windows binary, used to install a
"firstboot" script in Windows guests. It is required if you
intend to use the --firstboot or --firstboot-command options
with Windows guests.
See also: "https://github.com/rwmjones/rhsrvany"
- pvvxsvc.exe
- This is a Windows binary shipped with SUSE VMDP, used to
install a "firstboot" script in Windows guests. It is required
if you intend to use the --firstboot or --firstboot-command
options with Windows guests.
- "XDG_CACHE_HOME"
- Used to determine the location of the template cache. See
"CACHING".
- "XDG_CONFIG_HOME"
- Used to determine the location of the user' sources. See
"SOURCES OF TEMPLATES".
- "VIRT_BUILDER_DIRS"
- Used to determine the location of the system sources. See
"SOURCES OF TEMPLATES".
このプログラムは、成功すると
0 を、エラーがあると 0
以外を返します。
guestfs(3),
guestfish(1),
guestmount(1),
virt-builder-repository(1),
virt-copy-out(1),
virt-customize(1),
virt-get-kernel(1),
virt-install(1),
virt-rescue(1),
virt-resize(1),
virt-sysprep(1),
oz-install(1),
gpg(1),
gpg2(1),
curl(1),
virt-make-fs(1),
genisoimage(1),
http://libguestfs.org/.
Richard W.M. Jones
http://people.redhat.com/~rjones/
Copyright (C) 2013 Red Hat Inc.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software
Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later
version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR
A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with
this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin
Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
To get a list of bugs against libguestfs, use this link:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/buglist.cgi?component=libguestfs&product=Virtualization+Tools
To report a new bug against libguestfs, use this link:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/enter_bug.cgi?component=libguestfs&product=Virtualization+Tools
When reporting a bug, please supply:
- •
- The version of libguestfs.
- •
- Where you got libguestfs (eg. which Linux distro, compiled
from source, etc)
- •
- Describe the bug accurately and give a way to reproduce
it.
- •
- Run libguestfs-test-tool(1) and paste the
complete, unedited output into the bug report.