qvm-prefs.rst 8.4 KB

123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230231232233234235236237238239
  1. .. program:: qvm-prefs
  2. :program:`qvm-prefs` -- List/set various per-VM properties
  3. ==========================================================
  4. Synopsis
  5. --------
  6. :command:`qvm-prefs` qvm-prefs [-h] [--verbose] [--quiet] [--force-root] [--help-properties] *VMNAME* [*PROPERTY* [*VALUE* \| --delete \| --default ]]
  7. Options
  8. -------
  9. .. option:: --help, -h
  10. Show help message and exit.
  11. .. option:: --help-properties
  12. List available properties with short descriptions and exit.
  13. .. option:: --verbose, -v
  14. Increase verbosity.
  15. .. option:: --quiet, -q
  16. Decrease verbosity.
  17. .. option:: --force-root
  18. Force to run as root.
  19. .. option:: --unset, --default, --delete, -D
  20. Unset the property. If is has default value, it will be used instead.
  21. Common properties
  22. =================
  23. This list is non-exhaustive. For authoritative listing, see
  24. :option:`--help-properties` and documentation of the source code.
  25. .. warning::
  26. This list is from the core2. It is wrong in many cases, some of them obvious,
  27. some of them not.
  28. include_in_backups
  29. Accepted values: ``True``, ``False``
  30. Control whenever this VM will be included in backups by default (for now
  31. works only in qubes-manager). You can always manually select or
  32. deselect any VM for backup.
  33. pcidevs
  34. PCI devices assigned to the VM. Should be edited using qvm-pci tool.
  35. pci_strictreset
  36. Accepted values: ``True``, ``False``
  37. Control whether prevent assigning to VM a device which does not support any
  38. reset method. Generally such devices should not be assigned to any VM,
  39. because there will be no way to reset device state after VM shutdown, so
  40. the device could attack next VM to which it will be assigned. But in some
  41. cases it could make sense - for example when the VM to which it is assigned
  42. is trusted one, or is running all the time.
  43. pci_e820_host
  44. Accepted values: ``True``, ``False``
  45. Give VM with PCI devices a memory map (e820) of the host. This is
  46. required for some devices to properly resolve conflicts in address space.
  47. This option is enabled by default for VMs with PCI devices and have no
  48. effect for VMs without devices.
  49. label
  50. Accepted values: ``red``, ``orange``, ``yellow``, ``green``, ``gray``,
  51. ``blue``, ``purple``, ``black``
  52. Color of VM label (icon, appmenus, windows border). If VM is running,
  53. change will be applied at first VM restart.
  54. netvm
  55. Accepted values: netvm name, ``default``, ``none``
  56. To which NetVM connect. Setting to ``default`` will follow system-global
  57. default NetVM (managed by qubes-prefs). Setting to ``none`` will disable
  58. networking in this VM.
  59. dispvm_netvm
  60. Accepted values: netvm name, ``default``, ``none``
  61. Which NetVM should be used for Disposable VMs started by this one.
  62. ``default`` is to use the same NetVM as the VM itself.
  63. maxmem
  64. Accepted values: memory size in MB
  65. Maximum memory size available for this VM. Dynamic memory management (aka
  66. qmemman) will not be able to balloon over this limit. For VMs with
  67. qmemman disabled, this will be overridden by *memory* property (at VM
  68. startup).
  69. memory
  70. Accepted values: memory size in MB
  71. Initial memory size for VM. This should be large enough to allow VM startup
  72. - before qmemman starts managing memory for this VM. For VM with qmemman
  73. disabled, this is static memory size.
  74. kernel
  75. Accepted values: kernel version, ``default``, ``none``
  76. Kernel version to use (only for PV VMs). Available kernel versions will be
  77. listed when no value given (there are in /var/lib/qubes/vm-kernels).
  78. Setting to ``default`` will follow system-global default kernel (managed
  79. via qubes-prefs). Setting to ``none`` will use "kernels" subdir in
  80. VM directory - this allows having VM-specific kernel; also this the only
  81. case when /lib/modules is writable from within VM.
  82. template
  83. Accepted values: TemplateVM name
  84. TemplateVM on which VM base. It can be changed only when VM isn't running.
  85. vcpus
  86. Accepted values: no of CPUs
  87. Number of CPU (cores) available to VM. Some VM types (eg DispVM) will not
  88. work properly with more than one CPU.
  89. kernelopts
  90. Accepted values: string, ``default``
  91. VM kernel parameters (available only for PV VMs). This can be used to
  92. workaround some hardware specific problems (eg for NetVM). Setting to
  93. ``default`` will use some reasonable defaults (currently different for VMs
  94. with PCI devices and without). For VM without PCI devices
  95. ``default`` option means inherit this value from the VM template (if any).
  96. Some helpful options (for debugging purposes): ``earlyprintk=xen``,
  97. ``init=/bin/bash``
  98. name
  99. Accepted values: alphanumerical name
  100. Name of the VM. Can be only changed when VM isn't running.
  101. drive
  102. Accepted values: [hd:\|cdrom:][backend-vm:]path
  103. Additional drive for the VM (available only for HVMs). This can be used to
  104. attach installation image. ``path`` can be file or physical device (eg.
  105. :file:`/dev/sr0`). The same syntax can be used in
  106. :option:`qvm-start --drive` - to attach drive only temporarily.
  107. mac
  108. Accepted values: MAC address, ``auto``
  109. Can be used to force specific of virtual ethernet card in the VM. Setting
  110. to ``auto`` will use automatic-generated MAC - based on VM id. Especially
  111. useful when licensing requires a static MAC address.
  112. For template-based HVM ``auto`` mode means to clone template MAC.
  113. default_user
  114. Accepted values: username
  115. Default user used by :manpage:`qvm-run(1)`. Note that it make sense only on
  116. non-standard template, as the standard one always have "user" account.
  117. debug
  118. Accepted values: ``on``, ``off``
  119. Enables debug mode for VM. This can be used to turn on/off verbose logging
  120. in many Qubes components at once (gui virtualization, VM kernel, some other
  121. services).
  122. For template-based HVM, enabling debug mode also disables automatic reset
  123. :file:`root.img` (actually :file:`volatile.img`) before each VM startup, so
  124. changes made to root filesystem stays intact. To force reset
  125. :file:`root.img` when debug mode enabled, either change something in the
  126. template (simple start+stop will do, even touch its :file:`root.img` is
  127. enough), or remove VM's :file:`volatile.img` (check the path with
  128. :manpage:`qvm-prefs(1)`).
  129. qrexec_installed
  130. Accepted values: ``True``, ``False``
  131. This HVM have qrexec agent installed. When VM have qrexec agent installed,
  132. one can use qvm-run to start VM process, VM will benefit from Qubes RPC
  133. services (like file copy, or inter-vm clipboard). This option will be
  134. automatically turned on during Qubes Windows Tools installation, but if you
  135. install qrexec agent in some other OS, you need to turn this option on
  136. manually.
  137. guiagent_installed
  138. Accepted values: ``True``, ``False``
  139. This HVM have gui agent installed. This option disables full screen GUI
  140. virtualization and enables per-window seemless GUI mode. This option will
  141. be automatically turned on during Qubes Windows Tools installation, but if
  142. you install Qubes gui agent in some other OS, you need to turn this option
  143. on manually. You can turn this option off to troubleshoot some early HVM OS
  144. boot problems (enter safe mode etc), but the option will be automatically
  145. enabled at first VM normal startup (and will take effect from the next
  146. startup).
  147. .. note::
  148. when Windows GUI agent is installed in the VM, SVGA device (used to
  149. full screen video) is disabled, so even if you disable this option, you
  150. will not get functional full desktop access (on normal VM startup). Use
  151. some other means for that (VNC, RDP or so).
  152. autostart
  153. Accepted values: ``True``, ``False``
  154. Start the VM during system startup. The default netvm is autostarted
  155. regardless of this setting.
  156. timezone
  157. Accepted values: ``localtime``, time offset in seconds
  158. Set emulated HVM clock timezone. Use ``localtime`` (the default) to use the
  159. same time as dom0 have. Note that HVM will get only clock value, not the
  160. timezone itself, so if you use ``localtime`` setting, OS inside of HVM
  161. should also be configured to treat hardware clock as local time (and have
  162. proper timezone set).
  163. Authors
  164. -------
  165. | Joanna Rutkowska <joanna at invisiblethingslab dot com>
  166. | Rafal Wojtczuk <rafal at invisiblethingslab dot com>
  167. | Marek Marczykowski <marmarek at invisiblethingslab dot com>
  168. | Wojtek Porczyk <woju at invisiblethingslab dot com>
  169. .. vim: ts=3 sw=3 et tw=80