116 lines
3.6 KiB
Markdown
116 lines
3.6 KiB
Markdown
# `qemush` - An Unix philosophy respecting QEMU wrapper written in shell
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## How does it work
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`qemush` allows to run commands as Unix user `qemu` to manage virtual
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machines and their disks associated.
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## Why
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`qemush` is **daemonless** : no bloaty long running process is needed for
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`qemush` to work.
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`qemush` is **lightweight** : it only consists in a shell script to
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automate repeated tasks and force good practices.
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`qemush` needs **few dependencies** : see section
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[Dependencies](#dependencies) for details.
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`qemush` is **hackable** : you can [write your own launching
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scripts](#write-a-launching-script) to make it work as intended.
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`qemush` is **easy to setup** : you can make it work in a few steps, see
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section [Installation instructions](#installation-instructions).
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## Good practices?
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Here is a list of good practices forced by `qemush`.
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- **Processes running as user `qemu`**: members of group `qemu` can manage
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the same virtual machines
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- **Modularization**: `qemush` launching scripts are intended to be
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stackable to reuse common `qemu` parameters in all virtual machines
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needing them
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- **Process supervision**: `qemush` uses `screen` to supervise processes
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and keep track of them
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- **Copy-on-write**: images are formatted using `qcow2` to use less space
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on disk
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## Dependencies
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All dependencies are common packages for a distribution, you'll be able to
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grab them from your packages sources.
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- `qemu` - this is literally a QEMU wrapper so there's a chance you'll
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need it
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- `bash` - the `qemush` interpreter
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- `coreutils` - used for basic OS operations
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- `sudo` - execute commands as `qemu`
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- `screen` - for process supervision
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- `source-highlight` - for syntax highlighting when displaying launching
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scripts
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- any text editor - used for builting function to edit launching scripts
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## Installation instructions
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### QEMU user and group
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`qemush` acts as Unix user `qemu` to manage virtual machines. You need to
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create a system user `qemu` that cannot login, with any home directory,
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in an Unix group of the same name. Example :
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```sh
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# Example if the qemu user doesn't exist
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# Make sure /etc/shells contains /bin/nologin
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useradd -r -s /bin/nologin qemu
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```
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For ease of use, you need to grant every user in the `qemu` group via
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`sudo` the right to execute commands as `qemu`. You can find an example
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`sudoers` rule in this repo's `etc/sudoers.d` folder.
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### Add `qemush` in the `PATH`
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Use your preferred way to add the `qemush` script to a folder of `PATH`.
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Recommended : copy the script in `/usr/local/bin` to make it effortlessly
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system wide.
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### Extra: add `first-free-port` in `PATH`
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`first-free-port` is a small C program designed accordingly to the Unix
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philosophy to show in `stdout` the first free (not listening) TCP port
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after `argv[1]`, or `argv[1]` if it is free. You can compile it and add
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it to your `PATH` if you need to allocate ports to protocols like SPICE in
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your launching scripts (example in `qemu/bin/*-spice`). Its source is in
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`src` folder of this repository.
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## Usage
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### Writing a launching script
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The default text editor used by `qemush` is `nvim`, but it can be
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overriden by the `EDITOR` environment variable.
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Run the following command to start editing a launching script by the name
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of your choice :
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```sh
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qemush edit "$name"
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```
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Example scripts are available in this repo's `qemu/bin` folder.
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### Launching a virtual machine
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Virtual machines are identified by the name of their launching scripts.
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You can launch any machine with the following command :
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```sh
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qemush start "$name"
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```
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You can also list all available virtual machines by running this command :
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```sh
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qemush ls
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```
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