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Creating KVM Virtual Machines on RHEL 8 with virt-install and virshManaging KVM on RHEL 8 using the virsh Command-Line Tool


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By default, the KVM virtualization environment on RHEL 8 only creates a virtual network to which virtual machines may connect. The goal of this chapter is to cover the steps involved in creating a network bridge on RHEL 8 enabling guest systems to share one or more of the host system’s physical network connections.

Network bridges may be configured on RHEL 8 either by manually using the NetworkManager command-line tool, or via the Cockpit web interface.


Contents


Virtual Networks and Network Bridges

A KVM virtual machine running on RHEL 8 has two options in terms of networking connectivity.

One option is for it to be connected to a virtual network running within the operating system of the host computer. In this configuration any virtual machines on the virtual network can see each other but access to the external network is provided by NAT). When using the virtual network and NAT, each virtual machine is represented on the external network (the network to which the host is connected) using the IP address of the host system. This is the default behavior for KVM virtualization and generally requires no additional configuration. Typically, a single virtual network is created by default, represented by the name default and the device virbr0.

In order for guests to appear as individual and independent systems on the external network (i.e. with their own IP addresses), they must be configured to share a physical network interface on the host. This is achieved by configuring a network bridge interface on the host system to which the guests can connect. In the remainder of this chapter we will cover the steps necessary to configure a RHEL 8 network bridge for use by KVM-based guest operating systems.

Getting the Current Network Settings

A network bridge can be created using the NetworkManager command-line interface tool (nmcli). The NetworkManager is installed and enabled by default on RHEL 8 systems and is responsible for detecting and connecting to network devices in addition to providing an interface for managing networking configurations.

A list of current network connections on the host system can be displayed as follows:

# nmcli con show
NAME         UUID                                  TYPE      DEVICE 
eno1         99d40009-6bb1-4182-baad-a103941c90ff  ethernet  eno1   
virbr0       7cb1265e-ffb9-4cb3-aaad-2a6fe5880d38  bridge    virbr0 

In the above output we can see that the host has an Ethernet network connection established via a device named eno1 and the default bridge interface named virbr0 provides access to the NAT-based virtual network to which KVM guest systems are connected by default.

Similarly, the following command can be used to identify the devices (both virtual and physical) that are currently configured on the system:

# nmcli device show
GENERAL.DEVICE:                         eno1
GENERAL.TYPE:                           ethernet
GENERAL.HWADDR:                         AC:16:2D:11:16:73
GENERAL.MTU:                            1500
GENERAL.STATE:                          100 (connected)
GENERAL.CONNECTION:                     bridge-slave-eno1
GENERAL.CON-PATH:                       /org/freedesktop/NetworkManager/ActiveConnection/8
WIRED-PROPERTIES.CARRIER:               on
IP4.GATEWAY:                            --
IP6.GATEWAY:                            --
IP6.ROUTE[1]:                           dst = ff00::/8, nh = ::, mt = 256, table=255
 
GENERAL.DEVICE:                         wlp0s20u4
GENERAL.TYPE:                           wifi
GENERAL.HWADDR:                         76:7F:AB:8A:AB:75
GENERAL.MTU:                            1500
GENERAL.STATE:                          30 (disconnected)
GENERAL.CONNECTION:                     --
GENERAL.CON-PATH:                       --
 
GENERAL.DEVICE:                         virbr0
GENERAL.TYPE:                           bridge
GENERAL.HWADDR:                         52:54:00:59:30:22
GENERAL.MTU:                            1500
GENERAL.STATE:                          100 (connected)
GENERAL.CONNECTION:                     virbr0
GENERAL.CON-PATH:                       /org/freedesktop/NetworkManager/ActiveConnection/2
IP4.ADDRESS[1]:                         192.168.122.1/24
IP4.GATEWAY:                            --
IP4.ROUTE[1]:                           dst = 192.168.122.0/24, nh = 0.0.0.0, mt = 0
IP6.GATEWAY:                            --
.
.

The above partial output indicates that the host system on which the command was executed contains a physical Ethernet device (eno1), a physical Wi-Fi device (wlp0s20u4) and the virtual bridge (virbr0).

The virsh command may also be used to list the virtual networks currently configured on the system:

# virsh net-list --all
Name                 State      Autostart 
-----------------------------------------
default              active     yes

At this point, the only virtual network present is the default network provided by virbr0. Now that some basic information about the current network configuration has been obtained, the next step is to create a network bridge connected to the physical network device (in this case the device named eno1).


Creating a Network Bridge from the Command-Line

The first step in creating the network bridge is to add a new connection to the network configuration. This can be achieved using the nmcli tool, specifying that the connection is to be a bridge and providing names for both the connection and the interface:

# nmcli con add ifname br0 type bridge con-name br0

Once the connection has been added, a bridge slave interface needs to be established between physical device eno1 (the slave) and the bridge connection br0 (the master) as follows:

# nmcli con add type bridge-slave ifname eno1 master br0

At this point, the NetworkManager connection list should read as follows:

# nmcli con show
NAME               UUID                                  TYPE      DEVICE 
br0                c2fa30cb-b1a1-4107-80dd-b1765878ab4f  bridge    br0    
bridge-slave-eno1  21e8c945-cb94-4c09-99b0-17af9b5a7319  ethernet  eno1   
virbr0             a877302e-ea02-42fe-a3c1-483440aae774  bridge    virbr0 

The next step is to start up the bridge interface. If the steps to configure the bridge are being performed over a network connection (i.e. via SSH) this step can be problematic because the current eno1 connection must be closed down before the bridge connection can be brought up. This means that the current connection will be lost before the bridge connection can be enabled to replace it, potentially leaving the remote host unreachable.

If you are accessing the host system remotely this problem can be avoided by creating a shell script to perform the network changes. This will ensure that the bridge interface is enabled after the eno1 interface is brought down, allowing you to reconnect to the host after the changes are complete. Begin by creating a shell script file named bridge.sh containing the following commands:

#!/bin/bash
nmcli con down eno1
nmcli con up br0

Once the script has been created, execute it as follows:

# sh ./bridge.sh

When the script executes, the connection will be lost when the eno1 connection is brought down. After waiting a few seconds, however, it should be possible to reconnect to the host once the br0 connection has been activated.

If you are working locally on the host, the two nmcli command can be run within a terminal window without any risk of losing connectivity:

# nmcli con down eno1
# nmcli con up br0

Once the bridge is up and running, the connection list should now include both the bridge and the bridge-slave connections:

# nmcli con show
NAME               UUID                                  TYPE      DEVICE 
br0                c2fa30cb-b1a1-4107-80dd-b1765878ab4f  bridge    br0    
bridge-slave-eno1  21e8c945-cb94-4c09-99b0-17af9b5a7319  ethernet  eno1   
virbr0             a877302e-ea02-42fe-a3c1-483440aae774  bridge    virbr0 
eno1               375d3453-742e-4fef-913e-ec8d0f734706  ethernet  --    

Note that the eno1 connection is still listed but is actually no longer active. To exclude inactive connections from the list, simply use the --active flag when requesting the list:

# nmcli con show --active
NAME               UUID                                  TYPE      DEVICE 
br0                c2fa30cb-b1a1-4107-80dd-b1765878ab4f  bridge    br0    
bridge-slave-eno1  21e8c945-cb94-4c09-99b0-17af9b5a7319  ethernet  eno1   
virbr0             a877302e-ea02-42fe-a3c1-483440aae774  bridge    virbr0

Declaring the KVM Bridged Network

At this point, the bridge connection is present on the system but is not visible to the KVM environment. Running the virsh command should still list the default network as being the only available network option:

# virsh net-list --all
 Name                 State      Autostart     Persistent
----------------------------------------------------------
 default              active     yes           yes

Before the bridge can be used by a virtual machine it must be declared and added to the KVM network configuration. This involves the creation of a definition file and, once again, the use of the virsh command-line tool.

Begin by creating a definition file for the bridge network named bridge.xml that reads as follows:

<network>
  <name>br0</name>
  <forward mode="bridge"/>
  <bridge name="br0" />
</network>

Next, use the file to define the new network:

# virsh net-define /tmp/bridge.xml

Once the network has been defined, start it and, if required, configure it to autostart each time the system reboots:

# virsh net-start br0
# virsh net-autostart br0

Once again list the networks to verify that the bridge network is now accessible within the KVM environment:

# virsh net-list --all
 Name                 State      Autostart     Persistent
----------------------------------------------------------
 br0                  active     yes           yes
 default              active     yes           yes

Using a Bridge Network in a Virtual Machine

To create a virtual machine that makes use of the bridge network, use the virt-install --network option and specify the br0 bridge name. For example:

virt-install --name MyFedora --memory 1024 --disk path=/tmp/myFedora.img,size=10 --network network=br0 --os-variant fedora29 --cdrom /home/nas/Downloads/Fedora-Server-dvd-x86_64-29-1.2.iso 

When the guest operating system is running it will appear on the same physical network as the host system and will no longer be on the NAT-based virtual network.

To modify an existing virtual machine so that it uses the bridge, use the virsh edit command. This command loads the XML definition file into an editor where changes can be made and saved:

# virsh edit GuestName

By default, the file will be loaded into the vi editor. To use a different editor, simply change the $EDITOR environment variable, for example:

# export EDITOR=gedit

To change from the default virtual network, locate the <interface> section of the file which will read as follows:

<interface type='network'>
      <mac address='52:54:00:3e:fd:08'/>
      <source network='default'/>
      <model type='virtio'/>
      <address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x01' slot='0x00' function='0x0'/>
</interface>

Change the source network property from default to br0 then save the file:

<interface type='network'>
      <mac address='52:54:00:3e:fd:08'/>
      <source network='br0'/>
      <model type='virtio'/>
      <address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x01' slot='0x00' function='0x0'/>
</interface>

If the virtual machine is already running, the change will not take effect until it is restarted.

Creating a Bridge Network using nm-connection-editor

If either local or remote desktop access is available on the host system, much of the bridge configuration process can be performed using the nm-connection-editor graphical tool. To use this tool, open a Terminal window within the desktop and enter the following command:

# nm-connection-editor

When the tool has loaded, the window shown in Figure 23-1 will appear listing the currently configured network connections (essentially the same output as that generated by the nmcli con show command):


Rhel 8 nm connection editor home.png


Figure 23-1

To create a new connection, click on the ‘+’ button located in the bottom left-hand corner of the window. From the resulting dialog (Figure 23-2) select the Bridge option from the menu:


Rhel 8 connection editor new bridge.png


Figure 23-2

With the bridge option selected, click on the Create... button to proceed to the bridge configuration screen. Begin by changing both the connection and interface name fields to br0 before clicking on the Add button located to the right of the Bridge connections list as highlighted in Figure 23-3:


Rhel 8 nm connection editor bridge config.png


Figure 23-3

From the connection type dialog (Figure 23-4) change the menu setting to Ethernet before clicking on the Create... button:


Rhel 8 nm connection manager bridge type.png


Figure 23-4

Another dialog will now appear in which the bridge slave connection needs to be configured. Within this dialog, select the physical network to which the bridge is to connect (for example eno1) from the Device menu:


Rhel 8 nm connection editor slave device.png


Figure 23-5

Click on the Save button to apply the changes and return to the Editing br0 dialog (as illustrated in Figure 23-3 above). Within this dialog, click on the Save button to create the bridge. On returning to the main window, the new bridge and slave connections should now be listed:


Rhel 8 nm connection editor bridge listed.png


Figure 23-6

All that remains is to bring down the original eno1 connection and bring up the br0 connection using the steps outlined in the previous chapter (remembering to perform these steps in a shell script if the host is being accessed remotely):

# nmcli con down eno1
# nmcli con up br0

It will also be necessary, as it was when creating the bridge using the command-line tool, to add this bridge to the KVM network configuration. To do so, simply repeat the steps outlined in the section above entitled “Declaring the KVM Bridged Network”. Once this step has been taken, the bridge is ready to be used by guest virtual machines.

Summary

By default, KVM virtual machines are connected to a virtual network that uses NAT to provide access to the network to which the host system is connected. If the guests are required to appear on the network with their own IP addresses, the guests need to be configured to share the physical network interface of the host system. As outlined in this chapter, this can be achieved using either the nmcli or nm-connection-editor tools to create a networked bridge interface.


You are reading a sample chapter from the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 (RHEL 8) Essentials book.

Purchase a full copy of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 (RHEL 8) Essentials in eBook ($9.99) or Print ($36.99) format

Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 Essentials Print and eBook (ePub/PDF/Kindle) editions contain 31 chapters and over 250 pages

Buy Print Preview Book



PreviousTable of ContentsNext
Creating KVM Virtual Machines on RHEL 8 with virt-install and virshManaging KVM on RHEL 8 using the virsh Command-Line Tool