Guys thanks a lot for taking the time out to reply, Although adding the
$PATH & symbolic link methods both solved the "No hypervisor found" error
on virt-manager but when I try to create a VM using the wizard it says:
"No hypervisor options were found for this connection"
"This usually means that QEMU or KVM is not installed on your machine, or
the KVM modules are not loaded."
The QEMU I want to connect to libvirt has no KVM kernel drivers (DPDK
Qemu). There is a single binary "qemu-system-x86_64"
I am using virt-manager GUI to see whether qemu is being detected by
libvirt or not (is there a better/CLI method?)
On 5 March 2014 15:51, Daniel P. Berrange <berrange(a)redhat.com> wrote:
On Tue, Mar 04, 2014 at 02:09:19PM -0700, Eric Blake wrote:
> On 03/04/2014 05:12 AM, Asadullah Hussain wrote:
> > Hello I have manually compiled a customized qemu (1.4.0) which runs
fine on
> > its own (create VM etc) but I want to access this qemu through libvirt
> > (virt-manager, virsh etc).
> >
> > But the libvirt driver only looks into "/usr/bin" for qemu binaries,
how
> > can I tell libvirt to connect to my qemu which is placed at
> > "/home/user/qemu" directory.
>
> Libvirt only looks into precompiled locations (default to /usr/bin) if
> you fail to specify an explicit location; but you can force libvirt to
> use your version of qemu by specifying the <emulator> element under
> <devices> in your domain XML.
Actually we will search through $PATH for QEMU binaries, so if you
install somewhere unusual, just make sure libvirtd sees an updated
$PATH env variable including the new location.
Regards,
Daniel
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Asadullah Hussain