This guide shows how to test Fedora Cloud images using virt-install
(which is a part of virt-manager).
Setup
- Install
virt-install
:sudo dnf install virt-install
- If you just installed the whole libvirt virtualization stack (you didn't have it before), it's recommended that you reboot your machine.
- Download the preferred Fedora Cloud image that you want to test. It's recommended to pick the qcow2 image (raw.xz works too, if you prefer it, just make sure you don't forget to decompress it).
- Create a file named
cloudinit-user-data.yaml
and populate it with the following content:#cloud-config password: 'CLOUDPASSWORD' chpasswd: { expire: False }
Replace
CLOUDPASSWORD
with the password you want to authenticate with into the Cloud VM.
Create the virtual machine
- Create the VM using the following command:
virt-install --name localcloud1 --memory 2000 --disk=size=10,backing_store="/path/to/Cloud.qcow2" --cloud-init user-data="/path/to/cloudinit-user-data.yaml" --noreboot --os-variant detect=on,name=fedora-unknown
You can of course adjust all the values. Be sure to replace
/path/to/Cloud.qcow2
with an absolute path to your downloaded Fedora Cloud image, and/path/to/cloudinit-user-data.yaml
with a path to the config file you created in the Setup section. - When a login prompt appears, log in as user
fedora
and the password you specified in the config file. - Do whatever is needed in the VM (your current user can invoke
sudo
if you need to perform some administrative commands). - You can either power the machine down using
sudo poweroff
, or just disconnect from the serial console using Ctrl+].
Connect to the virtual machine later
- If you want to connect to an existing
localcloud1
VM later, first make sure it is started:virsh start localcloud1
and then connect to the serial console:
virsh console localcloud1
(hit ↵ Enter to see the command/login prompt)
- You can also control and connect to the VM from
virt-manager
.
Clean up the virtual machine
- You can easily remove your VM together with the overlay disk drive. Fist make sure the VM is shut down:
virsh destroy localcloud1
and then remove the VM and its disk:
virsh undefine --remove-all-storage localcloud1
- You can also remove your VM from
virt-manager
.