[forwarding back to the list, in case this helps anyone else] On 01/04/2011 10:24 AM, Eric Blake wrote: > On 01/04/2011 10:13 AM, Daniel Huhardeaux wrote: >> My problem was that I wanted to do it with virt-manager which only >> connect using URI qemu+ssh://r...@remote/system :-( > > virt-manager lets you add a new connection and specify the username. On > virt-manager-0.8.5-1.fc14 (fedora 14 box), I just tried File->add > connection; hypervisor qemu/kvm, check the box for remote host, method > ssh, and then you can specify both username and host, at which point it > displays a generated URI of qemu+ssh://u...@remote/system. > >> >> I face a strange behavior: I added my user in libvirt group and modify >> libvirtd.conf to start with group libvirt. I restart libvirt-bin and: >> >> virsh -c qemu+ssh:///system >> d...@localhost's password: > > so you are authenticating as yourself and not as root. > >> virsh >> Welcome to virsh, the virtualization interactive terminal. > > And here, no authentication was even attempted (which means you really > connected to qemu:///session). Try instead to use: > > virsh -c qemu:///system > > to see the difference (system and session maintain independent lists of > running domains, which is why your use of virsh without -c saw no > domains because it connected to session instead of system). >
-- Eric Blake ebl...@redhat.com +1-801-349-2682 Libvirt virtualization library http://libvirt.org
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