1bccb135eSPaolo BonziniDisk image file formats
2bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
4bccb135eSPaolo BonziniQEMU supports many image file formats that can be used with VMs as well as with
5bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniany of the tools (like ``qemu-img``). This includes the preferred formats
6bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniraw and qcow2 as well as formats that are supported for compatibility with
7bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniolder QEMU versions or other hypervisors.
8bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
9bccb135eSPaolo BonziniDepending on the image format, different options can be passed to
10bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini``qemu-img create`` and ``qemu-img convert`` using the ``-o`` option.
11bccb135eSPaolo BonziniThis section describes each format and the options that are supported for it.
12bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
13bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. program:: image-formats
14bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. option:: raw
15bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
16bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  Raw disk image format. This format has the advantage of
17bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  being simple and easily exportable to all other emulators. If your
18bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  file system supports *holes* (for example in ext2 or ext3 on
19bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  Linux or NTFS on Windows), then only the written sectors will reserve
20bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  space. Use ``qemu-img info`` to know the real size used by the
21bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  image or ``ls -ls`` on Unix/Linux.
22bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
23bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  Supported options:
24bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
25bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. program:: raw
26bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: preallocation
27bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
28bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Preallocation mode (allowed values: ``off``, ``falloc``,
29bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    ``full``). ``falloc`` mode preallocates space for image by
30bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    calling ``posix_fallocate()``. ``full`` mode preallocates space
31bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    for image by writing data to underlying storage. This data may or
32bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    may not be zero, depending on the storage location.
33bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
34bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. program:: image-formats
35bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. option:: qcow2
36bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
37bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  QEMU image format, the most versatile format. Use it to have smaller
38bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  images (useful if your filesystem does not supports holes, for example
39bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  on Windows), zlib based compression and support of multiple VM
40bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  snapshots.
41bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
42bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  Supported options:
43bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
44bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. program:: qcow2
45bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: compat
46bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
47bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Determines the qcow2 version to use. ``compat=0.10`` uses the
48bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    traditional image format that can be read by any QEMU since 0.10.
49bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    ``compat=1.1`` enables image format extensions that only QEMU 1.1 and
50bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    newer understand (this is the default). Amongst others, this includes
51bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    zero clusters, which allow efficient copy-on-read for sparse images.
52bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
53bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: backing_file
54bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
55bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    File name of a base image (see ``create`` subcommand)
56bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
57bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: backing_fmt
58bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
59bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Image format of the base image
60bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
61bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: encryption
62bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
63bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    This option is deprecated and equivalent to ``encrypt.format=aes``
64bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
65bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: encrypt.format
66bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
67bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    If this is set to ``luks``, it requests that the qcow2 payload (not
68bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    qcow2 header) be encrypted using the LUKS format. The passphrase to
69bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    use to unlock the LUKS key slot is given by the ``encrypt.key-secret``
70bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    parameter. LUKS encryption parameters can be tuned with the other
71bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    ``encrypt.*`` parameters.
72bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
73bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    If this is set to ``aes``, the image is encrypted with 128-bit AES-CBC.
74bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    The encryption key is given by the ``encrypt.key-secret`` parameter.
75bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    This encryption format is considered to be flawed by modern cryptography
76bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    standards, suffering from a number of design problems:
77bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
78bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    - The AES-CBC cipher is used with predictable initialization vectors based
79bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini      on the sector number. This makes it vulnerable to chosen plaintext attacks
80bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini      which can reveal the existence of encrypted data.
81bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    - The user passphrase is directly used as the encryption key. A poorly
82bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini      chosen or short passphrase will compromise the security of the encryption.
83bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    - In the event of the passphrase being compromised there is no way to
84bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini      change the passphrase to protect data in any qcow images. The files must
85bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini      be cloned, using a different encryption passphrase in the new file. The
86bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini      original file must then be securely erased using a program like shred,
87bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini      though even this is ineffective with many modern storage technologies.
88bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
89bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    The use of this is no longer supported in system emulators. Support only
90bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    remains in the command line utilities, for the purposes of data liberation
91bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    and interoperability with old versions of QEMU. The ``luks`` format
92bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    should be used instead.
93bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
94bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: encrypt.key-secret
95bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
96bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Provides the ID of a ``secret`` object that contains the passphrase
97bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    (``encrypt.format=luks``) or encryption key (``encrypt.format=aes``).
98bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
99bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: encrypt.cipher-alg
100bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
101bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Name of the cipher algorithm and key length. Currently defaults
102bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    to ``aes-256``. Only used when ``encrypt.format=luks``.
103bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
104bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: encrypt.cipher-mode
105bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
106bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Name of the encryption mode to use. Currently defaults to ``xts``.
107bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Only used when ``encrypt.format=luks``.
108bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
109bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: encrypt.ivgen-alg
110bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
111bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Name of the initialization vector generator algorithm. Currently defaults
112bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    to ``plain64``. Only used when ``encrypt.format=luks``.
113bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
114bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: encrypt.ivgen-hash-alg
115bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
116bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Name of the hash algorithm to use with the initialization vector generator
117bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    (if required). Defaults to ``sha256``. Only used when ``encrypt.format=luks``.
118bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
119bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: encrypt.hash-alg
120bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
121bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Name of the hash algorithm to use for PBKDF algorithm
122bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Defaults to ``sha256``. Only used when ``encrypt.format=luks``.
123bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
124bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: encrypt.iter-time
125bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
126bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Amount of time, in milliseconds, to use for PBKDF algorithm per key slot.
127bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Defaults to ``2000``. Only used when ``encrypt.format=luks``.
128bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
129bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: cluster_size
130bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
131bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Changes the qcow2 cluster size (must be between 512 and 2M). Smaller cluster
132bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    sizes can improve the image file size whereas larger cluster sizes generally
133bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    provide better performance.
134bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
135bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: preallocation
136bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
137bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Preallocation mode (allowed values: ``off``, ``metadata``, ``falloc``,
138bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    ``full``). An image with preallocated metadata is initially larger but can
139bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    improve performance when the image needs to grow. ``falloc`` and ``full``
140bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    preallocations are like the same options of ``raw`` format, but sets up
141bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    metadata also.
142bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
143bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: lazy_refcounts
144bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
145bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    If this option is set to ``on``, reference count updates are postponed with
146bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    the goal of avoiding metadata I/O and improving performance. This is
147bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    particularly interesting with :option:`cache=writethrough` which doesn't batch
148bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    metadata updates. The tradeoff is that after a host crash, the reference count
149bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    tables must be rebuilt, i.e. on the next open an (automatic) ``qemu-img
150bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    check -r all`` is required, which may take some time.
151bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
152bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    This option can only be enabled if ``compat=1.1`` is specified.
153bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
154bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: nocow
155bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
156bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    If this option is set to ``on``, it will turn off COW of the file. It's only
157bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    valid on btrfs, no effect on other file systems.
158bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
159bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Btrfs has low performance when hosting a VM image file, even more
160bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    when the guest on the VM also using btrfs as file system. Turning off
161bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    COW is a way to mitigate this bad performance. Generally there are two
162bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    ways to turn off COW on btrfs:
163bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
164bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    - Disable it by mounting with nodatacow, then all newly created files
165bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini      will be NOCOW.
166bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    - For an empty file, add the NOCOW file attribute. That's what this
167bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini      option does.
168bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
169bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Note: this option is only valid to new or empty files. If there is
170bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    an existing file which is COW and has data blocks already, it couldn't
171bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    be changed to NOCOW by setting ``nocow=on``. One can issue ``lsattr
172bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    filename`` to check if the NOCOW flag is set or not (Capital 'C' is
173bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    NOCOW flag).
174bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
175bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. program:: image-formats
176bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. option:: qed
177bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
178bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini   Old QEMU image format with support for backing files and compact image files
179bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini   (when your filesystem or transport medium does not support holes).
180bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
181bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini   When converting QED images to qcow2, you might want to consider using the
182bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini   ``lazy_refcounts=on`` option to get a more QED-like behaviour.
183bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
184bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini   Supported options:
185bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
186bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini   .. program:: qed
187bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini   .. option:: backing_file
188bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
189bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini      File name of a base image (see ``create`` subcommand).
190bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
191bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini   .. option:: backing_fmt
192bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
193bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini     Image file format of backing file (optional).  Useful if the format cannot be
194bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini     autodetected because it has no header, like some vhd/vpc files.
195bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
196bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini   .. option:: cluster_size
197bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
198bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini     Changes the cluster size (must be power-of-2 between 4K and 64K). Smaller
199bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini     cluster sizes can improve the image file size whereas larger cluster sizes
200bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini     generally provide better performance.
201bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
202bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini   .. option:: table_size
203bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
204bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini     Changes the number of clusters per L1/L2 table (must be
205bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini     power-of-2 between 1 and 16).  There is normally no need to
206bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini     change this value but this option can between used for
207bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini     performance benchmarking.
208bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
209bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. program:: image-formats
210bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. option:: qcow
211bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
212bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  Old QEMU image format with support for backing files, compact image files,
213bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  encryption and compression.
214bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
215bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  Supported options:
216bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
217bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini   .. program:: qcow
218bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini   .. option:: backing_file
219bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
220bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini     File name of a base image (see ``create`` subcommand)
221bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
222bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini   .. option:: encryption
223bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
224bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini     This option is deprecated and equivalent to ``encrypt.format=aes``
225bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
226bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini   .. option:: encrypt.format
227bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
228bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini     If this is set to ``aes``, the image is encrypted with 128-bit AES-CBC.
229bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini     The encryption key is given by the ``encrypt.key-secret`` parameter.
230bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini     This encryption format is considered to be flawed by modern cryptography
231bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini     standards, suffering from a number of design problems enumerated previously
232bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini     against the ``qcow2`` image format.
233bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
234bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini     The use of this is no longer supported in system emulators. Support only
235bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini     remains in the command line utilities, for the purposes of data liberation
236bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini     and interoperability with old versions of QEMU.
237bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
238bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini     Users requiring native encryption should use the ``qcow2`` format
239bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini     instead with ``encrypt.format=luks``.
240bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
241bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini   .. option:: encrypt.key-secret
242bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
243bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini     Provides the ID of a ``secret`` object that contains the encryption
244bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini     key (``encrypt.format=aes``).
245bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
246bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. program:: image-formats
247bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. option:: luks
248bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
249bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  LUKS v1 encryption format, compatible with Linux dm-crypt/cryptsetup
250bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
251bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  Supported options:
252bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
253bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. program:: luks
254bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: key-secret
255bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
256bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Provides the ID of a ``secret`` object that contains the passphrase.
257bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
258bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: cipher-alg
259bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
260bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Name of the cipher algorithm and key length. Currently defaults
261bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    to ``aes-256``.
262bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
263bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: cipher-mode
264bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
265bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Name of the encryption mode to use. Currently defaults to ``xts``.
266bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
267bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: ivgen-alg
268bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
269bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Name of the initialization vector generator algorithm. Currently defaults
270bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    to ``plain64``.
271bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
272bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: ivgen-hash-alg
273bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
274bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Name of the hash algorithm to use with the initialization vector generator
275bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    (if required). Defaults to ``sha256``.
276bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
277bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: hash-alg
278bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
279bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Name of the hash algorithm to use for PBKDF algorithm
280bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Defaults to ``sha256``.
281bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
282bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: iter-time
283bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
284bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Amount of time, in milliseconds, to use for PBKDF algorithm per key slot.
285bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Defaults to ``2000``.
286bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
287bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. program:: image-formats
288bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. option:: vdi
289bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
290bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  VirtualBox 1.1 compatible image format.
291bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
292bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  Supported options:
293bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
294bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. program:: vdi
295bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: static
296bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
297bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    If this option is set to ``on``, the image is created with metadata
298bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    preallocation.
299bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
300bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. program:: image-formats
301bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. option:: vmdk
302bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
303bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  VMware 3 and 4 compatible image format.
304bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
305bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  Supported options:
306bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
307bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. program: vmdk
308bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: backing_file
309bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
310bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    File name of a base image (see ``create`` subcommand).
311bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
312bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: compat6
313bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
314bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Create a VMDK version 6 image (instead of version 4)
315bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
316bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: hwversion
317bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
318bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Specify vmdk virtual hardware version. Compat6 flag cannot be enabled
319bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    if hwversion is specified.
320bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
321bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: subformat
322bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
323bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Specifies which VMDK subformat to use. Valid options are
324bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    ``monolithicSparse`` (default),
325bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    ``monolithicFlat``,
326bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    ``twoGbMaxExtentSparse``,
327bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    ``twoGbMaxExtentFlat`` and
328bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    ``streamOptimized``.
329bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
330bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. program:: image-formats
331bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. option:: vpc
332bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
333bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  VirtualPC compatible image format (VHD).
334bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
335bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  Supported options:
336bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
337bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. program:: vpc
338bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: subformat
339bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
340bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Specifies which VHD subformat to use. Valid options are
341bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    ``dynamic`` (default) and ``fixed``.
342bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
343bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. program:: image-formats
344bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. option:: VHDX
345bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
346bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  Hyper-V compatible image format (VHDX).
347bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
348bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  Supported options:
349bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
350bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. program:: VHDX
351bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  .. option:: subformat
352bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
353bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    Specifies which VHDX subformat to use. Valid options are
354bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    ``dynamic`` (default) and ``fixed``.
355bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
356bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    .. option:: block_state_zero
357bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
358bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini      Force use of payload blocks of type 'ZERO'.  Can be set to ``on`` (default)
359bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini      or ``off``.  When set to ``off``, new blocks will be created as
360bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini      ``PAYLOAD_BLOCK_NOT_PRESENT``, which means parsers are free to return
361bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini      arbitrary data for those blocks.  Do not set to ``off`` when using
362bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini      ``qemu-img convert`` with ``subformat=dynamic``.
363bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
364bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    .. option:: block_size
365bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
366bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini      Block size; min 1 MB, max 256 MB.  0 means auto-calculate based on
367bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini      image size.
368bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
369bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    .. option:: log_size
370bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
371bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini      Log size; min 1 MB.
372bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
373bccb135eSPaolo BonziniRead-only formats
374bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
375bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
376bccb135eSPaolo BonziniMore disk image file formats are supported in a read-only mode.
377bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
378bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. program:: image-formats
379bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. option:: bochs
380bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
381bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  Bochs images of ``growing`` type.
382bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
383bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. program:: image-formats
384bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. option:: cloop
385bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
386bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  Linux Compressed Loop image, useful only to reuse directly compressed
387bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  CD-ROM images present for example in the Knoppix CD-ROMs.
388bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
389bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. program:: image-formats
390bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. option:: dmg
391bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
392bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  Apple disk image.
393bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
394bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. program:: image-formats
395bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. option:: parallels
396bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
397bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  Parallels disk image format.
398bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
399bccb135eSPaolo BonziniUsing host drives
400bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
401bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
402bccb135eSPaolo BonziniIn addition to disk image files, QEMU can directly access host
403bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinidevices. We describe here the usage for QEMU version >= 0.8.3.
404bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
405bccb135eSPaolo BonziniLinux
406bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini^^^^^
407bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
408bccb135eSPaolo BonziniOn Linux, you can directly use the host device filename instead of a
409bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinidisk image filename provided you have enough privileges to access
410bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniit. For example, use ``/dev/cdrom`` to access to the CDROM.
411bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
412bccb135eSPaolo BonziniCD
413bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  You can specify a CDROM device even if no CDROM is loaded. QEMU has
414bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  specific code to detect CDROM insertion or removal. CDROM ejection by
415bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  the guest OS is supported. Currently only data CDs are supported.
416bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
417bccb135eSPaolo BonziniFloppy
418bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  You can specify a floppy device even if no floppy is loaded. Floppy
419bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  removal is currently not detected accurately (if you change floppy
420bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  without doing floppy access while the floppy is not loaded, the guest
421bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  OS will think that the same floppy is loaded).
422bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  Use of the host's floppy device is deprecated, and support for it will
423bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  be removed in a future release.
424bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
425bccb135eSPaolo BonziniHard disks
426bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  Hard disks can be used. Normally you must specify the whole disk
427bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  (``/dev/hdb`` instead of ``/dev/hdb1``) so that the guest OS can
428bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  see it as a partitioned disk. WARNING: unless you know what you do, it
429bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  is better to only make READ-ONLY accesses to the hard disk otherwise
430bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  you may corrupt your host data (use the ``-snapshot`` command
431bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  line option or modify the device permissions accordingly).
432bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
433*90fd9746SSam LiZoned block devices
434*90fd9746SSam Li  Zoned block devices can be passed through to the guest if the emulated storage
435*90fd9746SSam Li  controller supports zoned storage. Use ``--blockdev host_device,
436*90fd9746SSam Li  node-name=drive0,filename=/dev/nullb0,cache.direct=on`` to pass through
437*90fd9746SSam Li  ``/dev/nullb0`` as ``drive0``.
438*90fd9746SSam Li
439bccb135eSPaolo BonziniWindows
440bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini^^^^^^^
441bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
442bccb135eSPaolo BonziniCD
443bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  The preferred syntax is the drive letter (e.g. ``d:``). The
444bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  alternate syntax ``\\.\d:`` is supported. ``/dev/cdrom`` is
445bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  supported as an alias to the first CDROM drive.
446bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
447bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  Currently there is no specific code to handle removable media, so it
448bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  is better to use the ``change`` or ``eject`` monitor commands to
449bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  change or eject media.
450bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
451bccb135eSPaolo BonziniHard disks
452bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  Hard disks can be used with the syntax: ``\\.\PhysicalDriveN``
453bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  where *N* is the drive number (0 is the first hard disk).
454bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
455bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  WARNING: unless you know what you do, it is better to only make
456bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  READ-ONLY accesses to the hard disk otherwise you may corrupt your
457bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  host data (use the ``-snapshot`` command line so that the
458bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  modifications are written in a temporary file).
459bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
460bccb135eSPaolo BonziniMac OS X
461bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini^^^^^^^^
462bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
463bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini``/dev/cdrom`` is an alias to the first CDROM.
464bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
465bccb135eSPaolo BonziniCurrently there is no specific code to handle removable media, so it
466bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniis better to use the ``change`` or ``eject`` monitor commands to
467bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinichange or eject media.
468bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
469bccb135eSPaolo BonziniVirtual FAT disk images
470bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
471bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
472bccb135eSPaolo BonziniQEMU can automatically create a virtual FAT disk image from a
473bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinidirectory tree. In order to use it, just type:
474bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
475bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. parsed-literal::
476bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
477bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  |qemu_system| linux.img -hdb fat:/my_directory
478bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
479bccb135eSPaolo BonziniThen you access access to all the files in the ``/my_directory``
480bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinidirectory without having to copy them in a disk image or to export
481bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinithem via SAMBA or NFS. The default access is *read-only*.
482bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
483bccb135eSPaolo BonziniFloppies can be emulated with the ``:floppy:`` option:
484bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
485bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. parsed-literal::
486bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
487bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  |qemu_system| linux.img -fda fat:floppy:/my_directory
488bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
489bccb135eSPaolo BonziniA read/write support is available for testing (beta stage) with the
490bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini``:rw:`` option:
491bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
492bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. parsed-literal::
493bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
494bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  |qemu_system| linux.img -fda fat:floppy:rw:/my_directory
495bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
496bccb135eSPaolo BonziniWhat you should *never* do:
497bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
498bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini- use non-ASCII filenames
499bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini- use "-snapshot" together with ":rw:"
500bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini- expect it to work when loadvm'ing
501bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini- write to the FAT directory on the host system while accessing it with the guest system
502bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
503bccb135eSPaolo BonziniNBD access
504bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini~~~~~~~~~~
505bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
506bccb135eSPaolo BonziniQEMU can access directly to block device exported using the Network Block Device
507bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniprotocol.
508bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
509bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. parsed-literal::
510bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
511bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  |qemu_system| linux.img -hdb nbd://my_nbd_server.mydomain.org:1024/
512bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
513bccb135eSPaolo BonziniIf the NBD server is located on the same host, you can use an unix socket instead
514bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniof an inet socket:
515bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
516bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. parsed-literal::
517bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
518bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  |qemu_system| linux.img -hdb nbd+unix://?socket=/tmp/my_socket
519bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
520c5ba6219SPhilippe Mathieu-DaudéIn this case, the block device must be exported using ``qemu-nbd``:
521bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
522bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. parsed-literal::
523bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
524bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  qemu-nbd --socket=/tmp/my_socket my_disk.qcow2
525bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
526c5ba6219SPhilippe Mathieu-DaudéThe use of ``qemu-nbd`` allows sharing of a disk between several guests:
527bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
528bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. parsed-literal::
529bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
530bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  qemu-nbd --socket=/tmp/my_socket --share=2 my_disk.qcow2
531bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
532bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniand then you can use it with two guests:
533bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
534bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. parsed-literal::
535bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
536bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  |qemu_system| linux1.img -hdb nbd+unix://?socket=/tmp/my_socket
537bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  |qemu_system| linux2.img -hdb nbd+unix://?socket=/tmp/my_socket
538bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
539c5ba6219SPhilippe Mathieu-DaudéIf the ``nbd-server`` uses named exports (supported since NBD 2.9.18, or with QEMU's
540bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniown embedded NBD server), you must specify an export name in the URI:
541bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
542bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. parsed-literal::
543bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
544bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  |qemu_system| -cdrom nbd://localhost/debian-500-ppc-netinst
545bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  |qemu_system| -cdrom nbd://localhost/openSUSE-11.1-ppc-netinst
546bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
547bccb135eSPaolo BonziniThe URI syntax for NBD is supported since QEMU 1.3.  An alternative syntax is
548bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinialso available.  Here are some example of the older syntax:
549bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
550bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. parsed-literal::
551bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
552bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  |qemu_system| linux.img -hdb nbd:my_nbd_server.mydomain.org:1024
553bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  |qemu_system| linux2.img -hdb nbd:unix:/tmp/my_socket
554bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  |qemu_system| -cdrom nbd:localhost:10809:exportname=debian-500-ppc-netinst
555bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
556bccb135eSPaolo BonziniiSCSI LUNs
557bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini~~~~~~~~~~
558bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
559bccb135eSPaolo BonziniiSCSI is a popular protocol used to access SCSI devices across a computer
560bccb135eSPaolo Bonzininetwork.
561bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
562bccb135eSPaolo BonziniThere are two different ways iSCSI devices can be used by QEMU.
563bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
564bccb135eSPaolo BonziniThe first method is to mount the iSCSI LUN on the host, and make it appear as
565bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniany other ordinary SCSI device on the host and then to access this device as a
566bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini/dev/sd device from QEMU. How to do this differs between host OSes.
567bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
568bccb135eSPaolo BonziniThe second method involves using the iSCSI initiator that is built into
569bccb135eSPaolo BonziniQEMU. This provides a mechanism that works the same way regardless of which
570bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinihost OS you are running QEMU on. This section will describe this second method
571bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniof using iSCSI together with QEMU.
572bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
573bccb135eSPaolo BonziniIn QEMU, iSCSI devices are described using special iSCSI URLs. URL syntax:
574bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
575bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini::
576bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
577bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  iscsi://[<username>[%<password>]@]<host>[:<port>]/<target-iqn-name>/<lun>
578bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
579bccb135eSPaolo BonziniUsername and password are optional and only used if your target is set up
580bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniusing CHAP authentication for access control.
581bccb135eSPaolo BonziniAlternatively the username and password can also be set via environment
582bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinivariables to have these not show up in the process list:
583bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
584bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini::
585bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
586bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  export LIBISCSI_CHAP_USERNAME=<username>
587bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  export LIBISCSI_CHAP_PASSWORD=<password>
588bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  iscsi://<host>/<target-iqn-name>/<lun>
589bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
590bccb135eSPaolo BonziniVarious session related parameters can be set via special options, either
591bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniin a configuration file provided via '-readconfig' or directly on the
592bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinicommand line.
593bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
594bccb135eSPaolo BonziniIf the initiator-name is not specified qemu will use a default name
595bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniof 'iqn.2008-11.org.linux-kvm[:<uuid>'] where <uuid> is the UUID of the
596bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinivirtual machine. If the UUID is not specified qemu will use
597bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini'iqn.2008-11.org.linux-kvm[:<name>'] where <name> is the name of the
598bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinivirtual machine.
599bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
600bccb135eSPaolo BonziniSetting a specific initiator name to use when logging in to the target:
601bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
602bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini::
603bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
604bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  -iscsi initiator-name=iqn.qemu.test:my-initiator
605bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
606bccb135eSPaolo BonziniControlling which type of header digest to negotiate with the target:
607bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
608bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini::
609bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
610bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  -iscsi header-digest=CRC32C|CRC32C-NONE|NONE-CRC32C|NONE
611bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
612bccb135eSPaolo BonziniThese can also be set via a configuration file:
613bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
614bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini::
615bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
616bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  [iscsi]
617bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    user = "CHAP username"
618bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    password = "CHAP password"
619bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    initiator-name = "iqn.qemu.test:my-initiator"
620bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    # header digest is one of CRC32C|CRC32C-NONE|NONE-CRC32C|NONE
621bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    header-digest = "CRC32C"
622bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
623bccb135eSPaolo BonziniSetting the target name allows different options for different targets:
624bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
625bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini::
626bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
627bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  [iscsi "iqn.target.name"]
628bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    user = "CHAP username"
629bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    password = "CHAP password"
630bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    initiator-name = "iqn.qemu.test:my-initiator"
631bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    # header digest is one of CRC32C|CRC32C-NONE|NONE-CRC32C|NONE
632bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    header-digest = "CRC32C"
633bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
634bccb135eSPaolo BonziniHow to use a configuration file to set iSCSI configuration options:
635bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
636bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. parsed-literal::
637bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
638bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  cat >iscsi.conf <<EOF
639bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  [iscsi]
640bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    user = "me"
641bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    password = "my password"
642bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    initiator-name = "iqn.qemu.test:my-initiator"
643bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    header-digest = "CRC32C"
644bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  EOF
645bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
646bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  |qemu_system| -drive file=iscsi://127.0.0.1/iqn.qemu.test/1 \\
647bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    -readconfig iscsi.conf
648bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
649bccb135eSPaolo BonziniHow to set up a simple iSCSI target on loopback and access it via QEMU:
650bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinithis example shows how to set up an iSCSI target with one CDROM and one DISK
651bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniusing the Linux STGT software target. This target is available on Red Hat based
652bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinisystems as the package 'scsi-target-utils'.
653bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
654bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. parsed-literal::
655bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
656bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  tgtd --iscsi portal=127.0.0.1:3260
657bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  tgtadm --lld iscsi --op new --mode target --tid 1 -T iqn.qemu.test
658bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  tgtadm --lld iscsi --mode logicalunit --op new --tid 1 --lun 1 \\
659bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini      -b /IMAGES/disk.img --device-type=disk
660bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  tgtadm --lld iscsi --mode logicalunit --op new --tid 1 --lun 2 \\
661bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini      -b /IMAGES/cd.iso --device-type=cd
662bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  tgtadm --lld iscsi --op bind --mode target --tid 1 -I ALL
663bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
664bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  |qemu_system| -iscsi initiator-name=iqn.qemu.test:my-initiator \\
665bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    -boot d -drive file=iscsi://127.0.0.1/iqn.qemu.test/1 \\
666bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini    -cdrom iscsi://127.0.0.1/iqn.qemu.test/2
667bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
668bccb135eSPaolo BonziniGlusterFS disk images
669bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
670bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
671bccb135eSPaolo BonziniGlusterFS is a user space distributed file system.
672bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
673bccb135eSPaolo BonziniYou can boot from the GlusterFS disk image with the command:
674bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
675bccb135eSPaolo BonziniURI:
676bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
677bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. parsed-literal::
678bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
679bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  |qemu_system| -drive file=gluster[+TYPE]://[HOST}[:PORT]]/VOLUME/PATH
680bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini                               [?socket=...][,file.debug=9][,file.logfile=...]
681bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
682bccb135eSPaolo BonziniJSON:
683bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
684bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. parsed-literal::
685bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
686bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  |qemu_system| 'json:{"driver":"qcow2",
687bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini                           "file":{"driver":"gluster",
688bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini                                    "volume":"testvol","path":"a.img","debug":9,"logfile":"...",
689bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini                                    "server":[{"type":"tcp","host":"...","port":"..."},
690bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini                                              {"type":"unix","socket":"..."}]}}'
691bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
692bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini*gluster* is the protocol.
693bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
694bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini*TYPE* specifies the transport type used to connect to gluster
695bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinimanagement daemon (glusterd). Valid transport types are
696bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinitcp and unix. In the URI form, if a transport type isn't specified,
697bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinithen tcp type is assumed.
698bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
699bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini*HOST* specifies the server where the volume file specification for
700bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinithe given volume resides. This can be either a hostname or an ipv4 address.
701bccb135eSPaolo BonziniIf transport type is unix, then *HOST* field should not be specified.
702bccb135eSPaolo BonziniInstead *socket* field needs to be populated with the path to unix domain
703bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinisocket.
704bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
705bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini*PORT* is the port number on which glusterd is listening. This is optional
706bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniand if not specified, it defaults to port 24007. If the transport type is unix,
707bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinithen *PORT* should not be specified.
708bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
709bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini*VOLUME* is the name of the gluster volume which contains the disk image.
710bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
711bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini*PATH* is the path to the actual disk image that resides on gluster volume.
712bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
713bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini*debug* is the logging level of the gluster protocol driver. Debug levels
714bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniare 0-9, with 9 being the most verbose, and 0 representing no debugging output.
715bccb135eSPaolo BonziniThe default level is 4. The current logging levels defined in the gluster source
716bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniare 0 - None, 1 - Emergency, 2 - Alert, 3 - Critical, 4 - Error, 5 - Warning,
717bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini6 - Notice, 7 - Info, 8 - Debug, 9 - Trace
718bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
719bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini*logfile* is a commandline option to mention log file path which helps in
720bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinilogging to the specified file and also help in persisting the gfapi logs. The
721bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinidefault is stderr.
722bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
723bccb135eSPaolo BonziniYou can create a GlusterFS disk image with the command:
724bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
725bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. parsed-literal::
726bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
727bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  qemu-img create gluster://HOST/VOLUME/PATH SIZE
728bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
729bccb135eSPaolo BonziniExamples
730bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
731bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. parsed-literal::
732bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
733bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  |qemu_system| -drive file=gluster://1.2.3.4/testvol/a.img
734bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  |qemu_system| -drive file=gluster+tcp://1.2.3.4/testvol/a.img
735bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  |qemu_system| -drive file=gluster+tcp://1.2.3.4:24007/testvol/dir/a.img
736bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  |qemu_system| -drive file=gluster+tcp://[1:2:3:4:5:6:7:8]/testvol/dir/a.img
737bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  |qemu_system| -drive file=gluster+tcp://[1:2:3:4:5:6:7:8]:24007/testvol/dir/a.img
738bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  |qemu_system| -drive file=gluster+tcp://server.domain.com:24007/testvol/dir/a.img
739bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  |qemu_system| -drive file=gluster+unix:///testvol/dir/a.img?socket=/tmp/glusterd.socket
740bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  |qemu_system| -drive file=gluster://1.2.3.4/testvol/a.img,file.debug=9,file.logfile=/var/log/qemu-gluster.log
741bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  |qemu_system| 'json:{"driver":"qcow2",
742bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini                           "file":{"driver":"gluster",
743bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini                                    "volume":"testvol","path":"a.img",
744bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini                                    "debug":9,"logfile":"/var/log/qemu-gluster.log",
745bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini                                    "server":[{"type":"tcp","host":"1.2.3.4","port":24007},
746bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini                                              {"type":"unix","socket":"/var/run/glusterd.socket"}]}}'
747bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  |qemu_system| -drive driver=qcow2,file.driver=gluster,file.volume=testvol,file.path=/path/a.img,
748bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini                                       file.debug=9,file.logfile=/var/log/qemu-gluster.log,
749bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini                                       file.server.0.type=tcp,file.server.0.host=1.2.3.4,file.server.0.port=24007,
750bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini                                       file.server.1.type=unix,file.server.1.socket=/var/run/glusterd.socket
751bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
752bccb135eSPaolo BonziniSecure Shell (ssh) disk images
753bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
754bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
755bccb135eSPaolo BonziniYou can access disk images located on a remote ssh server
756bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniby using the ssh protocol:
757bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
758bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. parsed-literal::
759bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
760bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  |qemu_system| -drive file=ssh://[USER@]SERVER[:PORT]/PATH[?host_key_check=HOST_KEY_CHECK]
761bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
762bccb135eSPaolo BonziniAlternative syntax using properties:
763bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
764bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. parsed-literal::
765bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
766bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  |qemu_system| -drive file.driver=ssh[,file.user=USER],file.host=SERVER[,file.port=PORT],file.path=PATH[,file.host_key_check=HOST_KEY_CHECK]
767bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
768bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini*ssh* is the protocol.
769bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
770bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini*USER* is the remote user.  If not specified, then the local
771bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniusername is tried.
772bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
773bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini*SERVER* specifies the remote ssh server.  Any ssh server can be
774bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniused, but it must implement the sftp-server protocol.  Most Unix/Linux
775bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinisystems should work without requiring any extra configuration.
776bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
777bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini*PORT* is the port number on which sshd is listening.  By default
778bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinithe standard ssh port (22) is used.
779bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
780bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini*PATH* is the path to the disk image.
781bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
782bccb135eSPaolo BonziniThe optional *HOST_KEY_CHECK* parameter controls how the remote
783bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinihost's key is checked.  The default is ``yes`` which means to use
784bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinithe local ``.ssh/known_hosts`` file.  Setting this to ``no``
785bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniturns off known-hosts checking.  Or you can check that the host key
786ab458750SDaniel P. Berrangématches a specific fingerprint. The fingerprint can be provided in
787ab458750SDaniel P. Berrangé``md5``, ``sha1``, or ``sha256`` format, however, it is strongly
788ab458750SDaniel P. Berrangérecommended to only use ``sha256``, since the other options are
789ab458750SDaniel P. Berrangéconsidered insecure by modern standards. The fingerprint value
790ab458750SDaniel P. Berrangémust be given as a hex encoded string::
791ab458750SDaniel P. Berrangé
792ab458750SDaniel P. Berrangé  host_key_check=sha256:04ce2ae89ff4295a6b9c4111640bdcb3297858ee55cb434d9dd88796e93aa795
793ab458750SDaniel P. Berrangé
794ab458750SDaniel P. BerrangéThe key string may optionally contain ":" separators between
795ab458750SDaniel P. Berrangéeach pair of hex digits.
796ab458750SDaniel P. Berrangé
797ab458750SDaniel P. BerrangéThe ``$HOME/.ssh/known_hosts`` file contains the base64 encoded
798ab458750SDaniel P. Berrangéhost keys. These can be converted into the format needed for
799ab458750SDaniel P. BerrangéQEMU using a command such as::
800ab458750SDaniel P. Berrangé
801ab458750SDaniel P. Berrangé   $ for key in `grep 10.33.8.112 known_hosts | awk '{print $3}'`
802ab458750SDaniel P. Berrangé     do
803ab458750SDaniel P. Berrangé       echo $key | base64 -d | sha256sum
804ab458750SDaniel P. Berrangé     done
805ab458750SDaniel P. Berrangé     6c3aa525beda9dc83eadfbd7e5ba7d976ecb59575d1633c87cd06ed2ed6e366f  -
806ab458750SDaniel P. Berrangé     12214fd9ea5b408086f98ecccd9958609bd9ac7c0ea316734006bc7818b45dc8  -
807ab458750SDaniel P. Berrangé     d36420137bcbd101209ef70c3b15dc07362fbe0fa53c5b135eba6e6afa82f0ce  -
808ab458750SDaniel P. Berrangé
809ab458750SDaniel P. BerrangéNote that there can be multiple keys present per host, each with
810ab458750SDaniel P. Berrangédifferent key ciphers. Care is needed to pick the key fingerprint
811ab458750SDaniel P. Berrangéthat matches the cipher QEMU will negotiate with the remote server.
812bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
813bccb135eSPaolo BonziniCurrently authentication must be done using ssh-agent.  Other
814bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniauthentication methods may be supported in future.
815bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
816bccb135eSPaolo BonziniNote: Many ssh servers do not support an ``fsync``-style operation.
817bccb135eSPaolo BonziniThe ssh driver cannot guarantee that disk flush requests are
818bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniobeyed, and this causes a risk of disk corruption if the remote
819bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniserver or network goes down during writes.  The driver will
820bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniprint a warning when ``fsync`` is not supported:
821bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
822bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini::
823bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
824bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  warning: ssh server ssh.example.com:22 does not support fsync
825bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
826bccb135eSPaolo BonziniWith sufficiently new versions of libssh and OpenSSH, ``fsync`` is
827bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinisupported.
828bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
829bccb135eSPaolo BonziniNVMe disk images
830bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
831bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
832bccb135eSPaolo BonziniNVM Express (NVMe) storage controllers can be accessed directly by a userspace
833bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinidriver in QEMU.  This bypasses the host kernel file system and block layers
834bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniwhile retaining QEMU block layer functionalities, such as block jobs, I/O
835bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinithrottling, image formats, etc.  Disk I/O performance is typically higher than
836bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniwith ``-drive file=/dev/sda`` using either thread pool or linux-aio.
837bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
838bccb135eSPaolo BonziniThe controller will be exclusively used by the QEMU process once started. To be
839bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniable to share storage between multiple VMs and other applications on the host,
840bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniplease use the file based protocols.
841bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
842bccb135eSPaolo BonziniBefore starting QEMU, bind the host NVMe controller to the host vfio-pci
843bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinidriver.  For example:
844bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
845bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. parsed-literal::
846bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
847bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  # modprobe vfio-pci
848bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  # lspci -n -s 0000:06:0d.0
849bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  06:0d.0 0401: 1102:0002 (rev 08)
850bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  # echo 0000:06:0d.0 > /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000:06:0d.0/driver/unbind
851bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  # echo 1102 0002 > /sys/bus/pci/drivers/vfio-pci/new_id
852bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
853bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  # |qemu_system| -drive file=nvme://HOST:BUS:SLOT.FUNC/NAMESPACE
854bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
855bccb135eSPaolo BonziniAlternative syntax using properties:
856bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
857bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini.. parsed-literal::
858bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
859bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  |qemu_system| -drive file.driver=nvme,file.device=HOST:BUS:SLOT.FUNC,file.namespace=NAMESPACE
860bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
861bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini*HOST*:*BUS*:*SLOT*.\ *FUNC* is the NVMe controller's PCI device
862bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniaddress on the host.
863bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
864bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini*NAMESPACE* is the NVMe namespace number, starting from 1.
865bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
866bccb135eSPaolo BonziniDisk image file locking
867bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
868bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
869bccb135eSPaolo BonziniBy default, QEMU tries to protect image files from unexpected concurrent
870bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniaccess, as long as it's supported by the block protocol driver and host
871bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinioperating system. If multiple QEMU processes (including QEMU emulators and
872bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniutilities) try to open the same image with conflicting accessing modes, all but
873bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinithe first one will get an error.
874bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
875bccb135eSPaolo BonziniThis feature is currently supported by the file protocol on Linux with the Open
876bccb135eSPaolo BonziniFile Descriptor (OFD) locking API, and can be configured to fall back to POSIX
877bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinilocking if the POSIX host doesn't support Linux OFD locking.
878bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
879bccb135eSPaolo BonziniTo explicitly enable image locking, specify "locking=on" in the file protocol
880bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinidriver options. If OFD locking is not possible, a warning will be printed and
881bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinithe POSIX locking API will be used. In this case there is a risk that the lock
882bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniwill get silently lost when doing hot plugging and block jobs, due to the
883bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinishortcomings of the POSIX locking API.
884bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
885bccb135eSPaolo BonziniQEMU transparently handles lock handover during shared storage migration.  For
886bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinishared virtual disk images between multiple VMs, the "share-rw" device option
887bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinishould be used.
888bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
889bccb135eSPaolo BonziniBy default, the guest has exclusive write access to its disk image. If the
890bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniguest can safely share the disk image with other writers the
891bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini``-device ...,share-rw=on`` parameter can be used.  This is only safe if
892bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinithe guest is running software, such as a cluster file system, that
893bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinicoordinates disk accesses to avoid corruption.
894bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
895bccb135eSPaolo BonziniNote that share-rw=on only declares the guest's ability to share the disk.
896bccb135eSPaolo BonziniSome QEMU features, such as image file formats, require exclusive write access
897bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinito the disk image and this is unaffected by the share-rw=on option.
898bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
899bccb135eSPaolo BonziniAlternatively, locking can be fully disabled by "locking=off" block device
900bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinioption. In the command line, the option is usually in the form of
901bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini"file.locking=off" as the protocol driver is normally placed as a "file" child
902bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniunder a format driver. For example:
903bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
904bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini::
905bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
906bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini  -blockdev driver=qcow2,file.filename=/path/to/image,file.locking=off,file.driver=file
907bccb135eSPaolo Bonzini
908bccb135eSPaolo BonziniTo check if image locking is active, check the output of the "lslocks" command
909bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinion host and see if there are locks held by the QEMU process on the image file.
910bccb135eSPaolo BonziniMore than one byte could be locked by the QEMU instance, each byte of which
911bccb135eSPaolo Bonzinireflects a particular permission that is acquired or protected by the running
912bccb135eSPaolo Bonziniblock driver.
91333fa2222SVladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy
91433fa2222SVladimir Sementsov-OgievskiyFilter drivers
91533fa2222SVladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
91633fa2222SVladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy
91733fa2222SVladimir Sementsov-OgievskiyQEMU supports several filter drivers, which don't store any data, but perform
91833fa2222SVladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiysome additional tasks, hooking io requests.
91933fa2222SVladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy
92033fa2222SVladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy.. program:: filter-drivers
92133fa2222SVladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy.. option:: preallocate
92233fa2222SVladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy
92333fa2222SVladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy  The preallocate filter driver is intended to be inserted between format
92433fa2222SVladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy  and protocol nodes and preallocates some additional space
92533fa2222SVladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy  (expanding the protocol file) when writing past the file’s end. This can be
92633fa2222SVladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy  useful for file-systems with slow allocation.
92733fa2222SVladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy
92833fa2222SVladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy  Supported options:
92933fa2222SVladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy
93033fa2222SVladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy  .. program:: preallocate
93133fa2222SVladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy  .. option:: prealloc-align
93233fa2222SVladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy
93333fa2222SVladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy    On preallocation, align the file length to this value (in bytes), default 1M.
93433fa2222SVladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy
93533fa2222SVladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy  .. program:: preallocate
93633fa2222SVladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy  .. option:: prealloc-size
93733fa2222SVladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy
93833fa2222SVladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy    How much to preallocate (in bytes), default 128M.
939