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VMs+Emulation

Revision as of 17:42, 18 April 2010 by Dgilloch (talk | contribs)

Title

Storage Performance By: Daniel Gilloch (dgilloch@learn.senecac.on.ca)

Introduction

The goal was to attempt to install a hypervisor on an already existing machine for our koji build farm and determine whether or not this would be a viable developement solution. Some issues taken into consideration:

  • Cost
  • Setup
  • Performance

Approach

Determining and comparing the cost of buying arm machines, vs utilizing already existing hardware.

Determining the process of setting up virtual machines and the setup of an arm machine.

A Performance benchmark using koji build as this is a real world example of the exact type of developement that will be done on the machines. Also taken into consideration is if other environmental effects on the machine could interfer with build times.


Process

Installation

Arm Emulation

The chosen hypervisor to run Fedora-ARM under Fedora was QEMU. QEMU was chosen over other hypervisors as it is a well known emulator that supports ARM platforms.

Libvert

Libvirt is a virtualization management framework and is full of useful tools. Libvirt provides tools such as “virsh” virtualization shell, as well as the “virt-manager” GUI tool that manipulates the command-line virtual machine management tools.

Installing and starting the virtualization software

yum groupinstall virtualization yum install qemu-system-arm service libvirtd start

Installing the ARM root filesystem and XML

cd /var/lib/libvirt/images wget http://ftp.linux.org.uk/pub/linux/arm/fedora/qemu/zImage-versatile-2.6.24-rc7.armv5tel \
http://cdot.senecac.on.ca/arm/arm1.xml \
http://cdot.senecac.on.ca/arm/arm1.img.gz
gunzip arm1.img.gz
restorecon *
virsh define arm1.xml


Booting the VM

Currently there seems to be an issue while running SELinux and Arm emulation under libvirt management. To bypass this problem, issue the command “setenforce 0”.

The virtual machine should now be bootable and can be accessed using the virt-manager tool located (Applications>System Tools>Virtual Machine Manager)

Or from the command line: virsh start arm1

Alternatively, you can access the graphical display using the virt-viewer command: virt-viewer arm1


Creating Additional ARM Virtual Machines

In order to create additional ARM virtual machines:

 Make a new copy of the arm1.img file under a different name in /var/lib/libvirt/images
 Edit the XML, making the following changes:

1. Change the UUID (you can use uuidgen to generate a new one)
2. Change the image filename (in the source tag in the devices section) to point to the new image file you just created.

Use virsh define nameOfXMLFile to define the new VM from the modified XML file.


Discovery

What did you discover and learn during the process -- about the technology, the open source process, the community, yourself and your abilities, collaboration?

Results