Book Image

Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 Essentials

By : Neil Smyth
1 (1)
Book Image

Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 Essentials

1 (1)
By: Neil Smyth

Overview of this book

Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 is one of the most secure and dependable operating systems available. For this reason, the ambitious system or network engineer will find a working knowledge of Red Hat Enterprise 8 to be an invaluable advantage in their respective fields. This book, now updated for RHEL 8.1, begins with a history of Red Enterprise Linux and its installation. You will be virtually perform remote system administration tasks with cockpit web interface and write shell scripts to maintain server-based systems without desktop installation. Then, you will set up a firewall system using a secure shell and enable remote access to Gnome desktop environment with virtual network computing (VNC). You’ll share files between the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 (RHEL 8) and Windows System using Samba client and NFS. You will also run multiple guest operating systems using virtualization and Linux containers, and host websites using RHEL 8 by installing an Apache web server. Finally, you will create logical disks using logical volume management and implement swap space to maintain the performance of a RHEL 8 system. By the end of this book, you will be armed with the skills and knowledge to install the RHEL 8 operating system and use it expertly.
Table of Contents (32 chapters)
32
Index

22.2 An Example RHEL 8 virt-install Command

With reference to the above command-line argument list, we can now look at an example command-line construct using the virt-install tool.

Note that in order to be able to display the virtual machine and complete the installation, a virt-viewer instance will need to be connected to the virtual machine after it is started by the virt-install utility. By default, virt-install will attempt to launch virt-viewer automatically once the virtual machine starts running. If virt-viewer is not available, virt-install will wait until a virt-viewer connection is established. The virt-viewer session may be running locally on the host system if it has a graphical desktop, or a connection may be established from a remote client as outlined in the chapter entitled “Creating KVM Virtual Machines using Cockpit and virt-manager”.

The following command creates a new KVM virtual machine configured to run Fedora 29 using KVM para-virtualization...