The following patchset allows an incomplete compilation of libvirt under
Windows using Cygwin. Current limitations are:
(1) Xen driver does not work. This is not an important limitation
because Windows cannot act as dom0 in a Xen hypervisor anyway (or if it
can, it's not a very common configuration).
(2) QEMU driver / libvirtd cannot be compiled. It's probably not too
hard to fix this. The major area of concern is networking, in
particular the very Linux-specific code in src/bridge.c.
(2b) I have assumed for the purposes of (2) above that ./configure
--without-qemu also disables libvirtd (server) support. QEMU and
libvirtd are too entangled at the moment.
(3) Cygwin is required. In other words, there is no true native
compilation using VC++ or anything like that. However you still get
*.exe files, so maybe this isn't an important limitation.
Attached is a screenshot showing virsh being used to list QEMU instances
over a TLS-encrypted remote connection.
To compile this yourself:
(a) Set up a Windows machine with plenty of free disk space (10GB+).
(b) Install Cygwin (
http://www.cygwin.com/). Cygwin has an obscure,
unusable packaging system. The trick is to click the "recycling symbol"
next to "All". This will download and install everything. You may if
you prefer install just the packages you need, but the list of
dependencies is long and currently undocumented.
(c) Check out libvirt from CVS, apply these patches.
(d) rm qemud/remote_protocol.[ch] qemud/remote_dispatch_*.h
(e) ./configure --without-xen --without-qemu
(f) make -C qemud remote_protocol.c
(g) make
(h) make install
Rich.
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