Book Image

Mastering KVM Virtualization

Book Image

Mastering KVM Virtualization

Overview of this book

A robust datacenter is essential for any organization – but you don’t want to waste resources. With KVM you can virtualize your datacenter, transforming a Linux operating system into a powerful hypervisor that allows you to manage multiple OS with minimal fuss. This book doesn’t just show you how to virtualize with KVM – it shows you how to do it well. Written to make you an expert on KVM, you’ll learn to manage the three essential pillars of scalability, performance and security – as well as some useful integrations with cloud services such as OpenStack. From the fundamentals of setting up a standalone KVM virtualization platform, and the best tools to harness it effectively, including virt-manager, and kimchi-project, everything you do is built around making KVM work for you in the real-world, helping you to interact and customize it as you need it. With further guidance on performance optimization for Microsoft Windows and RHEL virtual machines, as well as proven strategies for backup and disaster recovery, you’ll can be confident that your virtualized data center is working for your organization – not hampering it. Finally, the book will empower you to unlock the full potential of cloud through KVM. Migrating your physical machines to the cloud can be challenging, but once you’ve mastered KVM, it’s a little easie.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
Mastering KVM Virtualization
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Setting up Kimchi server


Kimchi is now available in Fedora 22 stable repository; so to install it, as root, you just have to execute the # dnf install kimchi command and this will install Kimchi and all of its dependencies. You can always use sudo if you don't want to login as a root user but still execute the command with root privileges.

Note

Although Kimchi is now available in Fedora 22 stable repository, the version is not the latest. If you want to use the latest version head to Kimchi's community website at http://kimchi-project.github.io/kimchi/.

They provide the latest version packages for Fedora, openSUSE, Ubuntu, and RHEL. You can download the rpm from http://kimchi-project.github.io/kimchi/downloads/ and then install it using the following commands:

$yum localinstall <local rpm path> or
$yum localinstall http://kimchi-project.github.io/kimchi/downloads/kimchi-1.5.0-0.fc22.noarch.rpm

If you wish to use Ginger, an open source host management plug-in for Kimchi, it needs to be...