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Closes #1064 Closes #1061
409 lines
12 KiB
ReStructuredText
409 lines
12 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _installing:
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Installation
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############
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.. _libvirt:
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libvirt/QEMU configuration
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--------------------------
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This article assumes you already have a fully functional libvirt domain with
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PCI passthrough working.
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If you use virt-manager, this guide also applies to you, since virt-manager uses
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libvirt as its back-end.
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.. _libvirt_ivshmem:
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IVSHMEM
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^^^^^^^
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Configuration
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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.. note::
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If your host GPU is either AMD or Intel it is better to set this up using the
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KVMFR kernel module as this will allow you to make use of DMA transfers to
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offload some of the memory transfers to the GPU.
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See `VM->host` in :ref:`kernel_module`.
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Add the following to your libvirt machine configuration inside the
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'devices' section by running ``virsh edit <VM>`` where ``<VM>`` is the name of
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your virtual machine.
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.. code:: xml
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<shmem name='looking-glass'>
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<model type='ivshmem-plain'/>
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<size unit='M'>32</size>
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</shmem>
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.. note::
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If you are using QEMU directly without libvirt the following arguments are
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required instead.
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Add the following to the commands to your QEMU command line, adjusting
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the ``bus`` parameter to suit your particular configuration:
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.. code:: bash
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-device ivshmem-plain,memdev=ivshmem,bus=pcie.0 \
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-object memory-backend-file,id=ivshmem,share=on,mem-path=/dev/shm/looking-glass,size=32M
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The memory size (show as 32 in the example above) may need to be
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adjusted as per the :ref:`Determining memory <libvirt_determining_memory>`
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section.
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.. warning::
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If you change the size of this after starting your virtual machine you may
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need to remove the file `/dev/shm/looking-glass` to allow QEMU to re-create
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it with the correct size. If you do this the permissions of the file may be
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incorrect for your user to be able to access it and you will need to correct
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this. See :ref:`libvirt_shmfile_permissions`
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.. _libvirt_determining_memory:
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Determining memory
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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You will need to adjust the memory size to be suitable for your desired maximum
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resolution, with the following formula:
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.. code:: text
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width x height x pixel size x 2 = frame bytes
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frame bytes / 1024 / 1024 = frame megabytes
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frame megabytes + 10 MiB = total megabytes
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Where `pixel size` is 4 for 32-bit RGB (SDR) or 8 for 64-bit
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(HDR :ref:`* <libvirt_determining_memory_hdr>`).
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Failure to do so will cause Looking Glass to truncate the bottom of the screen
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and will trigger a message popup to inform you of the size you need to increase
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the value to.
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For example, for a resolution of 1920x1080 (1080p):
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.. code:: text
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1920 x 1080 x 4 x 2 = 16,588,800 bytes
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16,588,800 / 1024 / 1024 = 15.82 MiB
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15.82 MiB + 10 MiB = 25.82 MiB
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You must round this value up to the nearest power of two, which for the
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provided example is 32 MiB.
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.. note::
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Increasing this value beyond what you need does not yield any performance
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improvements, it simply will block access to that RAM making it unusable by
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your system.
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.. list-table:: Common Values
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:widths: 50 25 25
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:header-rows: 1
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* - Resolution
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- Standard Dynamic Range
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- High Dynamic Range (HDR) :ref:`* <libvirt_determining_memory_hdr>`
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* - 1920x1080 (1080p)
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- 32
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- 64
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* - 1920x1200 (1200p)
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- 32
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- 64
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* - 2560x1440 (1440p)
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- 64
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- 128
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* - 3840x2160 (2160p/4K)
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- 128
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- 256
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.. _libvirt_determining_memory_hdr:
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.. warning::
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While Looking Glass can capture and display HDR, at the time of writing
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neither Xorg or Wayland can make use of it and it will be converted by the
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GPU drivers/hardware to SDR. Additionally using HDR doubles the amount of
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memory, bandwidth, and CPU load and should generally not be used unless you
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have a special reason to do so.
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.. _libvirt_shmfile_permissions:
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Permissions
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~~~~~~~~~~~
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The shared memory file used by IVSHMEM is found in ``/dev/shm/looking-glass``.
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By default, it is owned by QEMU, and does not give read/write permissions to
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your user, which are required for Looking Glass to run properly.
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You can use ``systemd-tmpfiles`` to create the file before running your VM,
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granting the necessary permissions which allow Looking Glass to use the file
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properly.
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Create a new file ``/etc/tmpfiles.d/10-looking-glass.conf``, and populate it
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with the following::
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# Type Path Mode UID GID Age Argument
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f /dev/shm/looking-glass 0660 user kvm -
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Change ``UID`` to the user name you will run Looking Glass with, usually your
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own.
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.. _libvirt_spice_server:
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Keyboard/mouse/display/audio
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Looking Glass makes use of the SPICE protocol to provide keyboard and mouse
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input, audio input and output, and display fallback.
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.. note::
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The default configuration that libvirt uses is not optimal and must be
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adjusted. Failure to perform these changes will cause input issues along
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with failure to support 5 button mice.
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If you would like to use SPICE to give you keyboard and mouse input
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along with clipboard sync support, make sure you have a
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``<graphics type='spice'>`` device, then:
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- Find your ``<video>`` device, and set ``<model type='vga'/>``
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- If you can't find it, make sure you have a ``<graphics>``
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device, save and edit again.
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- Remove the ``<input type='tablet'/>`` device, if you have one.
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- Create an ``<input type='mouse' bus='virtio'/>`` device, if you don't
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already have one.
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- Create an ``<input type='keyboard' bus='virtio'/>`` device to improve
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keyboard usage.
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.. note::
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Be sure to install the the *vioinput* driver from
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`virtio-win <https://fedorapeople.org/groups/virt/virtio-win/direct-downloads/stable-virtio/>`_
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in the guest
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To enable audio support add a standard Intel HDA audio device to your
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configuration as per below:
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.. code:: xml
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<sound model='ich9'>
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<audio id='1'/>
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</sound>
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<audio id='1' type='spice'/>
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If you also want clipboard synchronization please see
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:ref:`libvirt_clipboard_synchronization`
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.. _libvirt_clipboard_synchronization:
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Clipboard synchronization
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Looking Glass can synchronize the clipboard between the host and guest using
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the SPICE guest agent.
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1. Install the SPICE guest tools from
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https://www.spice-space.org/download.html#windows-binaries.
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2. Configure your VM to enable the SPICE guest agent:
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- QEMU
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.. code:: bash
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-device virtio-serial-pci \
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-chardev spicevmc,id=vdagent,name=vdagent \
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-device virtserialport,chardev=vdagent,name=com.redhat.spice.0
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- libvirt
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.. code:: xml
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<channel type="spicevmc">
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<target type="virtio" name="com.redhat.spice.0"/>
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<address type="virtio-serial" controller="0" bus="0" port="1"/>
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</channel>
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<!-- No need to add a VirtIO Serial device, it will be added automatically -->
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.. _libvirt_apparmor:
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AppArmor
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^^^^^^^^
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For libvirt versions before **5.10.0**, if you are using AppArmor, you
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need to add permissions for QEMU to access the shared memory file. This
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can be done by adding the following to
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``/etc/apparmor.d/local/abstractions/libvirt-qemu``::
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/dev/shm/looking-glass rw,
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then, restart AppArmor.
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.. code:: bash
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sudo systemctl restart apparmor
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.. _libvirt_memballoon_tweak:
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Memballoon
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^^^^^^^^^^
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The VirtIO memballoon device enables the host to dynamically reclaim memory
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from your VM by growing the balloon inside the guest, reserving reclaimed
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memory. Libvirt adds this device to guests by default.
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However, this device causes major performance issues with VFIO passthrough
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setups, and should be disabled.
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Find the ``<memballoon>`` tag and set its type to ``none``:
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.. code:: xml
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<memballoon model="none"/>
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.. _host_install:
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Additional tuning
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Looking Glass is latency sensitive and as such it may suffer microstutters if
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you have not properly tuned your virtual machine. The physical display output
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of your GPU will usually not show such issues due to the nature of the hardware
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but be sure that if you are experiencing issues the following tuning is
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required to obtain optimal performance.
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1. Do not assign all your CPU cores to your guest VM, you must at minimum
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reserve two CPU cores (4 threads) for your host system to use. For example,
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if you have a 6 core CPU, only assign 4 cores (8 threads) to the guest.
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2. Ensure you correctly pin your VMs vCPU threads to the correct cores for your
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CPU architecture.
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3. If you are on a NUMA architecture (dual CPU, or early Threadripper) be sure
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that you pin the vCPU threads to the physical CPU/die attached to your GPU.
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4. Just because your GPU is in a slot that is physically x16 in size, does not
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mean your GPU is running at x16, this is dependent on how your motherboard
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is physically wired and the physical slot may be limited to x4 or x8.
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5. Be sure to set your CPU model type to `host-passthrough` so that your guest
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operating system is aware of the acceleration features of your CPU and can
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make full use of them.
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6. AMD users be sure that you have the CPU feature flag `topoext` enabled or
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your guest operating system will not be aware of which CPU cores are
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hyper-thread pairs.
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7. NVIDIA users may want to enable NvFBC as an alternative capture API in the
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guest. Note that NvFBC is officially available on professional cards only
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and methods to enable NvFBC on non-supported GPUs is against the NVIDIA
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Capture API SDK License Agreement even though GeForce Experience and
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Steam make use of it on any NVIDIA GPU.
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How to perform these changes is left as an exercise to the reader.
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Host application
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----------------
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The Looking Glass Host application captures frames from the guest OS using a
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capture API, and sends them to the
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:ref:`client <client_install>`—be it on the host OS (hypervisor) or another
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Virtual Machine—through a low-latency transfer protocol over shared memory.
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You can get the host program in two ways:
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- Download a pre-built binary from https://looking-glass.io/downloads
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(**recommended**)
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- Download the source code as described in :ref:`building`, then
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:ref:`build the host <host_building>`.
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.. _host_install_linux:
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For Linux
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^^^^^^^^^
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While the host application can be compiled and is somewhat functional for Linux
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it is currently considered incomplete and not ready for usage. As such use at
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your own risk and do not ask for support.
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.. _host_install_osx:
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For OSX
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^^^^^^^
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Currently there is no support or plans for support for OSX due to technical
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limitations.
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.. _host_install_windows:
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For Windows
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^^^^^^^^^^^
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To begin, you must first run the Windows VM with the changes noted above in
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either the :ref:`libvirt` section.
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.. _installing_the_ivshmem_driver:
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Installing the IVSHMEM driver
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Since B6 the host installer available on the official Looking Glass website
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comes with the IVSHMEM driver and will install this for you. If you are running
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an older version of Looking Glass please refer to the documentation for your
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version.
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.. _host_install_service:
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Installing the Looking Glass service
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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After installing your IVSHMEM driver, we can now install the Looking Glass Host
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onto our Windows Virtual Machine.
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1. First, run ``looking-glass-host-setup.exe`` as an administrator
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(:ref:`Why? <faq_host_admin_privs>`)
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2. You will be greeted by an intro screen. Press ``Next`` to continue.
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3. You are presented with the |license| license. Please read and agree to the
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license by pressing ``Agree``.
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4. You can change the install path if you wish, otherwise press ``Next`` to
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continue.
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5. You may enable or disable options on this screen to configure the
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installation. The default values are recommended for most users.
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Press ``Install`` to begin installation.
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6. After a few moments, installation will complete, and you will have a
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running instance of Looking Glass. If you experience failures, you can
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see them in the install log appearing in the middle of the window.
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7. Press ``Close`` to exit the installer.
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Command line users can run ``looking-glass-host-setup.exe /S`` to execute a
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silent install with default options selected. Further configuration from the
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command line can be done with flags. You can list all available flags by
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running ``looking-glass-host-setup.exe /?``.
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.. _client_install:
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Client application
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------------------
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The Looking Glass client receives frames from the :ref:`host <host_install>` to
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display on your screen. It also handles input, and can optionally share the
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system clipboard with your guest OS through SPICE.
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First you must build the client from source, see :ref:`building`. Once you have
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built the client, you can install it. Run the following as root::
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make install
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To install for the local user only, run::
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cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=~/.local .. && make install
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