Was able to solve this one as well Thanks for the kind and fast answers :) On Wed, May 13, 2020 at 3:32 PM Dana Elfassy <delfa...@redhat.com> wrote:
> Thanks, > I discovered I had wrong permissions for /var/lib/libvirt/qemu/, after > setting them to drwxr-x--x. qemu qemu and executing daemon-reload > libvirtd.service exists now on my vms :) > However - I'm not able to get it to run. In the journal I see the message > libvirtd[6800]: Unable to import CA certificate list > /etc/pki/vdsm/certs/cacert.pem > I have verified its permissions and that it's not empty. > I also executed update-ca-trust, but still not able to start the service, > any suggestions on this one? > Dana > > On Wed, May 13, 2020 at 2:07 PM Michal Privoznik <mpriv...@redhat.com> > wrote: > >> On 5/13/20 12:59 PM, Dana Elfassy wrote: >> > Thanks, Michal, >> > On my laptop I do have libguestfs and libvirt-daemon-qemu. both >> > libvirtd.service and libvirtd.socket are running ok on my laptop >> > I just realized I haven't mentioned - my vms intend to serve as hosts >> > themselves, and that's why they, too, need to have libvirtd.service >> > running on them. >> > up to recently I didn't have such a problem when I installed a vm on my >> > laptop - libvirtd.service was found on it. I don't know exactly what >> > caused this to change. Maybe it has something to do with >> configurations/ >> > permissions of libvirt/ kvm? >> > Earlier, I'm not sure how, I managed to have libvirtd.service on a vm I >> > created. it wasn't running, but at least it was there. I'm not sure >> what >> > I have changed, but now I'm getting the message that the service could >> > not be found again >> >> >> That sounds like a kickstart/distro problem. Libvirt itself does not >> guarantee it is installed by default on a distribution. Either you need >> to specify the correct group to install, or install packages yourself >> after the installation is done. Configuring what SW is installed inside >> guest is out of libvirt's scope, sorry. >> >> Michal >> >>