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NAMElibvirtd - libvirt management daemonSYNOPSISlibvirtd [OPTION]...DESCRIPTIONThe libvirtd program is the server side daemon component of the libvirt virtualization management system.This daemon runs on host servers and performs required management tasks for virtualized guests. This includes activities such as starting, stopping and migrating guests between host servers, configuring and manipulating networking, and managing storage for use by guests. The libvirt client libraries and utilities connect to this daemon to issue tasks and collect information about the configuration and resources of the host system and guests. By default, the libvirtd daemon listens for requests on a local Unix domain socket. Using the -l | --listen command line option, the libvirtd daemon can be instructed to additionally listen on a TCP/IP socket. The TCP/IP socket to use is defined in the libvirtd configuration file. Restarting libvirtd does not impact running guests. Guests continue to operate and will be picked up automatically if their XML configuration has been defined. Any guests whose XML configuration has not been defined will be lost from the configuration. SYSTEM SOCKET ACTIVATIONThe libvirtd daemon is capable of starting in two modes.In the traditional mode, it will create and listen on UNIX sockets itself. If the --listen parameter is given, it will also listen on TCP/IP socket(s), according to the listen_tcp and listen_tls options in /etc/libvirt/libvirtd.conf In socket activation mode, it will rely on systemd to create and listen on the UNIX, and optionally TCP/IP, sockets and pass them as pre-opened file descriptors. In this mode, it is not permitted to pass the --listen parameter, and most of the socket related config options in /etc/libvirt/libvirtd.conf will no longer have any effect. To enable TCP or TLS sockets use either $ systemctl start libvirtd-tls.socket Or $ systemctl start libvirtd-tcp.socket Socket activation mode is generally the default when running on a host OS that uses systemd. To revert to the traditional mode, all the socket unit files must be masked: $ systemctl mask libvirtd.socket libvirtd-ro.socket \ libvirtd-admin.socket libvirtd-tls.socket libvirtd-tcp.socket OPTIONS-h, --helpDisplay command line help usage then exit. -d, --daemon Run as a daemon & write PID file. -f, --config *FILE* Use this configuration file, overriding the default value. -l, --listen Listen for TCP/IP connections. This should not be set if using systemd socket activation. Instead activate the libvirtd-tls.socket or libvirtd-tcp.socket unit files. -p, --pid-file *FILE* Use this name for the PID file, overriding the default value. -t, --timeout *SECONDS* Exit after timeout period (in seconds), provided there are neither any client connections nor any running domains. -v, --verbose Enable output of verbose messages. --version Display version information then exit. SIGNALSOn receipt of SIGHUP libvirtd will reload its configuration.FILESWhen run as root
The default configuration file used by libvirtd, unless overridden on the command line using the -f | --config option. Depending on what driver is installed, then the following files are also read:
These files contain various knobs and default values for virtual machines created within their respective drivers, and offer a way to override the built in defaults, for instance (but not limited to): paths to various supplementary binaries, TLS certificates location, graphical consoles configuration and others. Location of neither of these files can be overridden by any command line switch.
The sockets libvirtd will use.
The TLS Certificate Authority certificate libvirtd will use.
The TLS Server certificate libvirtd will use.
The TLS Server private key libvirtd will use.
The PID file to use, unless overridden by the -p | --pid-file option. When run as non-root
The default configuration file used by libvirtd, unless overridden on the command line using the -f``|--config`` option. If QEMU driver is installed, then the following file is also read:
If the file exists, it can contain various knobs and default values for virtual machines created within QEMU driver, and offers a way to override the built in defaults, for instance (but not limited to): paths to various supplementary binaries, TLS certificates location, graphical consoles configuration and others. Location of this file can't be overridden by any command line switch.
The socket libvirtd will use.
The TLS Certificate Authority certificate libvirtd will use.
The TLS Server certificate libvirtd will use.
The TLS Server private key libvirtd will use.
The PID file to use, unless overridden by the -p``|--pid-file`` option. If $XDG_CONFIG_HOME is not set in your environment, libvirtd will use $HOME/.config If $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR is not set in your environment, libvirtd will use $HOME/.cache EXAMPLESTo retrieve the version of libvirtd:# libvirtd --version libvirtd (libvirt) 8.1.0 To start libvirtd, instructing it to daemonize and create a PID file: # libvirtd -d # ls -la /var/run/libvirtd.pid -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 6 Jul 9 02:40 /var/run/libvirtd.pid BUGSPlease report all bugs you discover. This should be done via either:
Alternatively, you may report bugs to your software distributor / vendor. AUTHORSPlease refer to the AUTHORS file distributed with libvirt.COPYRIGHTCopyright (C) 2006-2012 Red Hat, Inc., and the authors listed in the libvirt AUTHORS file.LICENSElibvirtd is distributed under the terms of the GNU LGPL v2.1+. This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSESEE ALSOvirsh(1), virt-install(1), virt-xml-validate(1), virt-top(1), virt-df(1), https://www.libvirt.org/ Visit the GSP FreeBSD Man Page Interface. |