Thanks! I get it! Thanks again for your help!
2012/3/8 Eric Blake <ebl...@redhat.com> > On 03/08/2012 02:04 AM, Osier Yang wrote: > > On 03/08/2012 11:47 AM, suyi wang wrote: > >> > >> Hi all: > >> My OS is now Fedora16 , and the spice server is installed on it > >> by rpms. Then I run 'qemu-kvm -hda /root/vaddsoft.img -m 512 -vga qxl > >> -spice port=5930,disable-ticketing' , I want to find out where is the > >> libvirt.xml for the command . Well , I mean that the libvirt.xml is > >> genrated automatically, not by myself manually. > >> Wish your help! Thanks a lot! > > > > If you start a guest with qemu command line directly, there > > is no libvirt XML for it, libvirt doesn't try to manage > > guest which is not created through libvirt API. > > However, you _can_ teach libvirt about certain guests started directly > by qemu; the 'virsh qemu-attach' command can attach to guests that were > properly started with a socket monitor. > > > > > For a guest created through libvirt, and it's persistent, > > the persistent XML is stored in /etc/libvirt/qemu/, and > > the running state XML is in /var/run/libvirt/qemu/, and > > Note that these files are to be treated as read-only. If you want to > modify the guest, you must not edit these files, but instead should use > commands like 'virsh edit' for the persistent definition, and hotplug > actions like 'virsh add-device' for the live definition. > > > you would see the generated qemu command line by libvirt > > either by > > > > # ps -ef | grep qemu > > > > # cat /var/log/libvirt/qemu/$guest.log > > -- > Eric Blake ebl...@redhat.com +1-919-301-3266 > Libvirt virtualization library http://libvirt.org > > -- Yours. suyi
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