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在OpenWrt上运行QEMU guests
介绍
It's possible to use OpenWrt as a QEMU host and run guests on it. If you want to run OpenWrt as a QEMU guest, see OpenWrt in QEMU.
OpenWrt provides QEMU packages for ARM and x86 platforms. This article focuses on the x86 target, the networking is done via qemu-bridge-helper.
Installing QEMU
You need the following packages on your device: kmod-tun, qemu-bridge-helper. Depending on the guest architecture, install qemu-x86_64-softmmu or qemu-arm-softmmu. If your hardware supports it, also install kmod-kvm-amd or kmod-kvm-intel for better performance.
Example for an Intel system and a x86_64 guest:
opkg install kmod-tun qemu-bridge-helper qemu-x86_64-softmmu kmod-kvm-intel
After the first installation, reboot your device.
运行一个guest
For the guest OS, use a distribution that comes with virtio drivers by default (Debian or Fedora for example).
The following QEMU command uses a physical disk, but you can use a disk image as well. Below are explanations of the networking options.
qemu-system-x86_64 -enable-kvm -cpu host -smp 2 -m 2G \ -drive file=/dev/sda,cache=none,if=virtio,format=raw \ -device virtio-net-pci,mac=E2:F2:6A:01:9D:C9,netdev=br0 \ -netdev bridge,br=br-lan,id=br0
Line 3 creates a virtio net device with a fixed MAC address that is told to use the network backend with id=br0
, which gets created in line 4. The network backend is of type bridge
and br=br-lan
tells QEMU to connect to the bridge network br-lan
of the OpenWrt host. For that qemu-bridge-helper
will automatically create the needed TUN/TAP interfaces.
If your guest uses DHCP it should now receive an address by the server running in br-lan
.
You can choose any other bridge interface available on your OpenWrt host as well. See Network basics on how to configure networking interfaces.
If you want to change which networks QEMU is allowed to connect to, you can do so via /etc/qemu/bridge.conf
.
Installing Debian as guest OS
If you don't have a prepared disk image, you can install a guest OS directly on your OpenWrt device. There are several guides available on how to install a Linux distribution on a QEMU image: Debian for example. A quick way is to install Debian using the kernel and initrd of a Debian netboot installer.
Create a disk image
qemu-img create -f qcow2 debian.img 4G
More details on disk images: https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/QEMU/Images
下载安装文件
wget http://ftp.debian.org/debian/dists/stable/main/installer-amd64/current/images/netboot/debian-installer/amd64/linux wget http://ftp.debian.org/debian/dists/stable/main/installer-amd64/current/images/netboot/debian-installer/amd64/initrd.gz
Both files can be savely removed after finishing the installation.
运行安装文件
The following command will launch the Debian installer inside QEMU, debian.img
will appear as /dev/vda
qemu-system-x86_64 -enable-kvm -cpu host -smp 2 -m 2G \ -initrd initrd.gz \ -kernel linux \ -append "root=/dev/ram console=ttyS0" \ -drive file=debian.img,if=virtio \ -device virtio-net-pci,mac=E2:F2:6A:01:9D:C9,netdev=br0 \ -netdev bridge,br=br-lan,id=br0 \ -nographic
Follow the installation instructions and install GRUB on /dev/vda
. It's also useful to install sshd (enabled by default).
运行新的guest
After finishing the installation, you can launch the new installation with QEMU:
qemu-system-x86_64 -enable-kvm -cpu host -smp 2 -m 2G \ -drive file=debian.img,if=virtio \ -device virtio-net-pci,mac=E2:F2:6A:01:9D:C9,netdev=br0 \ -netdev bridge,br=br-lan,id=br0 \ -nographic
You should now be able to reach the VM via SSH from within br-lan
.
If you want to control the VM using the command line, you have to enable a serial console. To do this, edit the GRUB entry during boot and add console=ttyS0
to the kernel command line. After the VM finished booting, edit /etc/default/grub
and add console=ttyS0
to GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT
as well. After that run update-grub
.
Init script
To automatically start the VM at boot and shut it down cleanly using QMP, create an init script like the one below.
Be careful with copying the heredoc part. This code block is left unindented on purpose to avoid problems with whitespaces. If you want, you can indent the lines with tabs and use <<-QMP
instead of <<QMP
, but since tabs are printed as whitespaces in dokuwiki code blocks, this example is used without indentation. You can read more about here documents in the advanced bash-scripting guide
- /etc/init.d/qemu
#!/bin/sh /etc/rc.common START=99 STOP=1 qemu_pidfile="/var/run/qemu.pid" start() { qemu-system-x86_64 -enable-kvm -cpu host -smp 2 -m 2G \ -drive file=/dev/sda,cache=none,if=virtio,format=raw \ -device virtio-net-pci,mac=E2:F2:6A:01:9D:C9,netdev=br0 \ -netdev bridge,br=br-lan,id=br0 \ -qmp tcp:127.0.0.1:4444,server,nowait \ -daemonize &> /var/log/qemu.log /usr/bin/pgrep qemu-system-x86_64 > $qemu_pidfile echo "QEMU: Started VM with PID $(cat $qemu_pidfile)." } stop() { echo "QEMU: Sending 'system_powerdown' to VM with PID $(cat $qemu_pidfile)." nc localhost 4444 <<QMP { "execute": "qmp_capabilities" } { "execute": "system_powerdown" } QMP if [ -e $qemu_pidfile ]; then if [ -e /proc/$(cat $qemu_pidfile) ]; then echo "QEMU: Waiting for VM shutdown." while [ -e /proc/$(cat $qemu_pidfile) ]; do sleep 1s; done echo "QEMU: VM Process $(cat $qemu_pidfile) finished." else echo "QEMU: Error: No VM with PID $(cat $qemu_pidfile) running." fi rm -f $qemu_pidfile else echo "QEMU: Error: $qemu_pidfile doesn't exist." fi }
Test the the script by running /etc/init.d/qemu start
and look for errors in /var/log/qemu.log
.
If the script works as desired, enable it for every boot: /etc/init.d/qemu enable