[libvirt-users] F13-x86_64 - New version of qemu in raw virt repo breaks virsh and virt-manager?
Matthias Bolte
matthias.bolte at googlemail.com
Sun Aug 15 20:21:09 UTC 2010
2010/8/15 Mike Hinz <mike.hinz at yr20.com>:
> Without actually thoroughly thinking about it, I updated my system
> yesterday with the latest qemu-kvm. rpm -qa shows
>
> qemu-kvm-0.13.0-0.5.20100809git25fdf4a.fc13.x86_64
>
> See also:
>
> virsh # version
> Compiled against library: libvir 0.8.2
> Using library: libvir 0.8.2
> Using API: QEMU 0.8.2
> Running hypervisor: QEMU 0.13.50
>
> Now when I attempt to start a domain that was working perfectly well
> prior to this update, I get the following:
>
> virsh # start winxp1
> error: Failed to start domain winxp1
> error: internal error Process exited while reading console log output:
> Supported machines are:
> pc Standard PC (alias of pc-0.13)
> pc-0.13 Standard PC (default)
> pc-0.12 Standard PC
> pc-0.11 Standard PC, qemu 0.11
> pc-0.10 Standard PC, qemu 0.10
> isapc ISA-only PC
>
> Virt-Manager throws the same error when attempt to start an existing
> domain.
>
> I'm assuming that there's now some sort of compatibility issue between
> the current versions of libvirt/virt-manager and qemu-kvm?
I think this is a machine type compatibility issue between your
previous and current QEMU version.
See 'virsh dumpxml winxp1' for a line like this:
<os>
<type arch='i686' machine='pc'>hvm</type>
</os>
The machine attribute will probably have a value that your current
QEMU doesn't understand anymore. Therefore, it complains about the
machine type and list the ones it understands.
> Is there a way to get around this and somehow use my existing domains
> with this updated version of qemu-kvm?
You can try to 'virsh edit winxp1' and replace the value of the
machine attribute with something your current QEMU understands, e.g.
'pc-0.13'.
> Interestingly, just out of curiosity, I've started a new installation of
> a WinXP vm. This seems to be going perfectly well so far, so I assume
> that the issue is only with domains previously created with the older
> version of qemu??
If you define a new guest then libvirt (actually virt-install called
from virt-manager) will pick a machine type that your current QEMU
understands. Therefore, a newly defined guest works.
Matthias
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