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==== Licensed to jclouds, Inc. (jclouds) under one or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership. jclouds licenses this file to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License. ==== The libvirt library is used to interface with different virtualization technologies (http://libvirt.org/) libvirt supports: The Xen hypervisor on Linux and Solaris hosts. The QEMU emulator The KVM Linux hypervisor The LXC Linux container system The OpenVZ Linux container system The User Mode Linux paravirtualized kernel The VirtualBox hypervisor The VMware ESX and GSX hypervisors Storage on IDE/SCSI/USB disks, FibreChannel, LVM, iSCSI, NFS and filesystems Getting Started Guide for jclouds-libvirt install libvirt on your os * if os/x, see http://github.com/justinclift/libvirt * if you are using Linux, let's suppose you want to use KVM: - install libvirt and KVM (http://www.linux-kvm.org/page/Main_Page). Remember to run egrep '(vmx|svm)' /proc/cpuinfo If nothing is printed, it means that your cpu does not support hardware virtualization. Verify Installation $ virsh -c qemu:///system list Id Name State ---------------------------------- (for Ubuntu users: look also at this good turorial https://help.ubuntu.com/community/KVM) Create your first guest - download, for example, an ubuntu 10.04 LTS ISO - create a libvirt domain by using: virt-manager: a GUI tool at http://virt-manager.et.redhat.com/ virt-install, a python script developed by Red Hat (sudo apt-get install python-virtinst) ubuntu-vm-builder, developed by Canonical. (sudo apt-get install ubuntu-vm-builder) NB: use Javascript tool that generates the parameters for ubuntu-vm-builder: http://people.ubuntu.com/~kirkland/ubuntu-vm-builder.html Now that you have a libvirt domain, your workstation is ready to use jclouds-libvirt. You can now download jclouds-libvirt and give a try by running ComputeServiceContext context = null; try { context = new ComputeServiceContextFactory() .createContext(new StandaloneComputeServiceContextSpec<Domain, Domain, Image, Datacenter>("libvirt", endpoint, apiversion, identity, credential, new LibvirtComputeServiceContextModule(), ImmutableSet .<Module> of())); Template defaultTemplate = context.getComputeService().templateBuilder() .hardwareId("c7ff2039-a9f1-a659-7f91-e0f82f59d52e").imageId("1").build(); context.getComputeService().runNodesWithTag(domainName, 1, defaultTemplate); } catch (RunNodesException e) { e.printStackTrace(); } finally { if (context != null) context.close(); } where identity=your_name, endpoint=qemu:///system and domainName equals to the name chosen during the creation of libvirt domain NB: apiversion, credential can be null