Yufang Zhang
2010-Apr-22 15:07 UTC
[Libguestfs] virtio is enabled by default in libguestfs?
Hi all, Could I ask if and from which version that virtio is enabled by default in libguestfs? It seems that it is enabled by default in fedora-12, on which the latest version of libguestfs is 1.0.85. But for fedora-11(the latest version of libguestfs is 1.0.72), I could enable virtio only when I set it explicitly via config command. Thus it is not enabled by default on fedora-11. So I'd like to know on which situation virtio will be enabled automatically by libguestfs? Thanks. --Yufang
Richard W.M. Jones
2010-Apr-22 16:02 UTC
[Libguestfs] virtio is enabled by default in libguestfs?
On Thu, Apr 22, 2010 at 11:07:17AM -0400, Yufang Zhang wrote:> Could I ask if and from which version that virtio is enabled by > default in libguestfs? It seems that it is enabled by default in > fedora-12, on which the latest version of libguestfs is 1.0.85.Assuming you mean virtio block devices (not network), then the default was changed from ide to virtio in this commit: http://git.annexia.org/?p=libguestfs.git;a=commitdiff;h=6c97a65ce768b357a1481cde0533d4cf0b8b931c The first release containing this change was 1.0.84. However, it's a little bit more complicated than that. Packagers can choose whether or not to enable virtio at configure time: ./configure --with-drive-if=(ide|virtio|scsi) So it's possible that a particular RPM with version >= 1.0.84 might still be using IDE. In fact it's even a bit more complicated than that. It's also possible to override this *at runtime*. I believe for some reason virt-v2v does this, forcing the IDE driver always. The only way to find out what block device is really being used is to run verbose (LIBGUESTFS_DEBUG=1) and look at the parameters passed to qemu, eg: [...] /usr/bin/qemu-kvm \ -drive file=/tmp/test,cache=off,if=virtio \ [...] ^^^^^^ means using virtio-blk BTW it *should* make no difference which driver is being used, although in reality different bugs in QEMU and the kernel can end up biting you in different ways.> But > for fedora-11(the latest version of libguestfs is 1.0.72), I could > enable virtio only when I set it explicitly via config command. Thus > it is not enabled by default on fedora-11. So I'd like to know on > which situation virtio will be enabled automatically by libguestfs?Don't use Fedora 11 or libguestfs 1.0.72. Those versions are ancient :-) Rich. -- Richard Jones, Virtualization Group, Red Hat http://people.redhat.com/~rjones Read my programming blog: http://rwmj.wordpress.com Fedora now supports 80 OCaml packages (the OPEN alternative to F#) http://cocan.org/getting_started_with_ocaml_on_red_hat_and_fedora
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