On Thursday, September 24, 2015 12:29 PM, Jonathan Rurka <jon.rurka(a)yahoo.com>
wrote:
Yes the "which libvirtd" and "sudo virt-host-validate" commands return
correct values However, I am having a new problem now; "UEFI" is not selectable
under firmware:
http://i.imgur.com/O4ypOTX.png I do have VT-d enabled in my bios, my
processor supports VT-d, and I am booting ubuntu in UEFI mode. The yellow triangle says
"Libvirt did not detect any UEFI/OVMF firmware image installed on the host.".
Another person instructed me to set the nvram opeion in /etc/libvirt/qemu.conf to where I
have my OVMF placed (which I downloaded from
https://www.kraxel.org/repos/jenkins/edk2/),
however it hasn't helped. it is set to:
nvram = [
"/usr/share/edk2.git/ovmf-x64/OVMF_pure-efi.fd:/usr/share/edk2.git/ovmf-x64/OVMF_VARS-pure-efi.fd"
]
On Thursday, September 24, 2015 3:29 AM, Kashyap Chamarthy <kchamart(a)redhat.com>
wrote:
On Thu, Sep 24, 2015 at 06:47:43AM +0200, Martin Kletzander wrote:
On Wed, Sep 23, 2015 at 11:00:34PM +0000, Jonathan Rurka wrote:
>Hello, I'm new to using libvirt. After a few days of installing and
>removing libvirt, virt-manager and a few others to get VT-d working
>with a virtual machine, I finally got the latest virt-manager and
>libvirt installed from source to get the most recent
>versions. However, when I start up virt-manager I get a popup saying
>"Unable to connect to libvirt; Verify that the 'libvirtd' deamon is
>running.". When running "service libvirtd start", I get an error
>saying libvirtd.service cannot be found. I can, however, use libvirtd
>from the command line. The service file does not exist
>in /lib/systemd/system/.
>
Did you probably forget to specify the prefix to install it into? you
can do "which libvirtd" to see that you probably installed it into
/usr/local/sbin. Specifying the prefix should help.
Getting to your "to get VT-d working", you should check whether
everything is enabled in BIOS. That's usually the case if it's not
working for you.
[A small addendum to what Martin says.]
Jon, you can use `virt-host-validate` to check the above, if everything
is setup correctly, it should look like that:
$ sudo virt-host-validate
QEMU: Checking for hardware virtualization : PASS
QEMU: Checking for device /dev/kvm : PASS
QEMU: Checking for device /dev/vhost-net : PASS
QEMU: Checking for device /dev/net/tun : PASS
LXC: Checking for Linux >= 2.6.26 : PASS
[. . .]
--
/kashyap