From 82243206725644b255c7a7f0043c5a8e18f220cc Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eduard Alexander Lucena Mendoza Date: Wed, 11 Apr 2018 11:46:02 -0300 Subject: [PATCH] Adding the qemu.adoc --- _topic_map.yml | 5 ++- en-US/qemu.adoc | 117 +++++++++++------------------------------------- 2 files changed, 29 insertions(+), 93 deletions(-) diff --git a/_topic_map.yml b/_topic_map.yml index ef130fd..dab04ee 100644 --- a/_topic_map.yml +++ b/_topic_map.yml @@ -12,6 +12,8 @@ Topics: File: installing-java - Name: Installing Chromium or Google Chrome browsers File: installing-chromium-or-google-chrome-browsers + - Name: How to use qemu + File: qemu - Name: Getting started with virtualization File: getting-started-with-virtualization - Name: Using nested virtualization in KVM @@ -67,6 +69,7 @@ Topics: File: bumblebee - Name: Creating GPG Keys File: create-gpg-keys +<<<<<<< HEAD # - Name: (CHECK) GRUB 2 # File: grub2 # - Name: (FIX ME!) AutoUpdates @@ -105,8 +108,6 @@ Topics: # File: packagekit-not-found # - Name: (FIX ME!) PostgreSQL # File: postgresql -# - Name: (FIX ME!) How to use qemu -# File: qemu # - Name: (FIX ME!) Raspberry Pi # File: raspberry-pi # - Name: (FIX ME!) How to reset a root password diff --git a/en-US/qemu.adoc b/en-US/qemu.adoc index 5b25c34..c4b8d9c 100644 --- a/en-US/qemu.adoc +++ b/en-US/qemu.adoc @@ -1,83 +1,35 @@ = How to use qemu -''' - -[IMPORTANT] -====== - -This page was automatically converted from https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/How_to_use_qemu - -It is probably - -* Badly formatted -* Missing graphics and tables that do not convert well from mediawiki -* Out-of-date -* In need of other love - - -Pull requests accepted at https://pagure.io/fedora-docs/quick-docs - -Once you've fixed this page, remove this notice, and update -`_topic_map.yml`. - -Once the document is live, go to the original wiki page and replace its text -with the following macro: - -.... -{{#fedoradocs: https://docs.fedoraproject.org/whatever-the-of-this-new-page}} -.... - -====== - -''' - - [[how-to-use-qemu]] -How to use QEMU ---------------- +== How to use QEMU -QEMU is a very flexible virtualization technology however it is quite -slow and it is recommended that you understand and evaluate alternative -solutions before picking this one. Refer to -link:Getting_started_with_virtualization[Getting started with -virtualization] +QEMU is a very flexible virtualization technology however it is quite slow and it is recommended that you understand and evaluate alternative solutions before picking this one. +Refer to https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Getting_started_with_virtualization[Getting started with virtualization] [[qemu]] -Qemu -~~~~ +== Qemu -QEMU is a generic and open source processor emulator which achieves a -good emulation speed by using dynamic translation. +QEMU is a generic and open source processor emulator which achieves a good emulation speed by using dynamic translation. QEMU has two operating modes: -* Full system emulation. In this mode, QEMU emulates a full system (for -example a PC), including a processor and various peripherials. It can be -used to launch different Operating Systems without rebooting the PC or -to debug system code. -* User mode emulation (Linux host only). In this mode, QEMU can launch -Linux processes compiled for one CPU on another CPU. +* Full system emulation. +In this mode, QEMU emulates a full system (for example a PC), including a processor and various peripherials. +It can be used to launch different Operating Systems without rebooting the PC or to debug system code. +* User mode emulation (Linux host only). In this mode, QEMU can launch Linux processes compiled for one CPU on another CPU. [[download]] -Download -~~~~~~~~ +== Download -QEMU is available on Fedora repository. It can be installed by using -link:dnf[DNF]: +QEMU is available on Fedora repository. It can be installed by using https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/dnf[DNF]: .... $ su -c "dnf install qemu" .... -Or with YUM: - -.... -$ su -c "yum install qemu" -.... [[qemu-commands-since-f]] -Qemu commands since F?+ -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +== Qemu commands since F?+ To discover the qemu commands that are installed perform the following: @@ -85,8 +37,7 @@ To discover the qemu commands that are installed perform the following: $ ls /usr/bin/qemu-* .... -In the following examples where "qemu" is, substitute your command for -executing qemu. E.g. +In the following examples where "qemu" is, substitute your command for executing qemu. E.g. .... qemu-system-i386 @@ -101,8 +52,7 @@ qemu-i386 Of course, this does not apply to "qemu-img". [[qemu-virtual-machine-installation]] -Qemu virtual machine installation -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +== Qemu virtual machine installation Create the virtual image for the system: @@ -112,34 +62,27 @@ $ qemu-img create fedora.qcow 5G Of course you are not obliged to take 5GB. -Note: Even if you take 10GB this does NOT mean that the image does -really HAVE the size of 10GB. It just means that your new system is -limited up to 10GB - if the new system takes only 1,2 GB also the image -will only be at 1,2GB. +Note: Even if you take 10GB this does NOT mean that the image does really HAVE the size of 10GB. It just means that your new system is limited up to 10GB - if the new system takes only 1,2 GB also the image will only be at 1,2GB. -now let's install the OS. Put in the install CD and type into your -konsole (all in one line without break): +Now let's install the OS. Put in the install CD and type into your konsole (all in one line without break): .... $ qemu -cdrom /dev/cdrom -hda fedora.qcow -boot d -net nic -net user -m 196 -localtime .... -"-user -net" is important to have internet access within your new -system. "-m 196" is the Set virtual RAM size (megabytes), default is 128 -MB, I chose 196. +"-user -net" is important to have internet access within your new system. +"-m 196" is the Set virtual RAM size (megabytes), default is 128 MB, I chose 196. -The install may take some time. After the install, qemu will try to boot -the new OS itself. Maybe this may fail (was the case for me) - but don't -worry. If that happens: just close the qemu window and type the -following command into your konsole to launch your new OS: +The install may take some time. After the install, qemu will try to boot the new OS itself. +Maybe this may fail (was the case for me) - but don't worry. +If that happens: just close the qemu window and type the following command into your konsole to launch your new OS: .... $qemu fedora.qcow -boot c -net nic -net user -m 196 -localtime .... [[testing-iso-images]] -Testing ISO Images -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +== Testing ISO Images Type, in the proper directory @@ -148,20 +91,12 @@ $ qemu -m 512M -cdrom .iso .... [[debugging]] -Debugging -~~~~~~~~~ +== Debugging -To get kernel output dumped to a file outside the virtual system, add -e.g. "-serial file:/tmp/qemu-output.log" to the qemu command line. When -booting the virtual system, add "console=ttyS0" to the kernel boot -parameters. +To get kernel output dumped to a file outside the virtual system, add e.g. "-serial file:/tmp/qemu-output.log" to the qemu command line. +When booting the virtual system, add "console=ttyS0" to the kernel boot parameters. -This output is particularly helpful if you are having trouble booting -the system, in which case you may also wish to remove "rhgb" and "quiet" -from the kernel boot parameters. - -Category:How_to -''' +This output is particularly helpful if you are having trouble booting the system, in which case you may also wish to remove "rhgb" and "quiet" from the kernel boot parameters. See a typo, something missing or out of date, or anything else which can be improved? Edit this document at https://pagure.io/fedora-docs/quick-docs.