279 lines
		
	
	
		
			7.9 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Groff
		
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			279 lines
		
	
	
		
			7.9 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Groff
		
	
	
	
| .\" Automatically generated by Pandoc 2.18
 | |
| .\"
 | |
| .\" Define V font for inline verbatim, using C font in formats
 | |
| .\" that render this, and otherwise B font.
 | |
| .ie "\f[CB]x\f[]"x" \{\
 | |
| . ftr V B
 | |
| . ftr VI BI
 | |
| . ftr VB B
 | |
| . ftr VBI BI
 | |
| .\}
 | |
| .el \{\
 | |
| . ftr V CR
 | |
| . ftr VI CI
 | |
| . ftr VB CB
 | |
| . ftr VBI CBI
 | |
| .\}
 | |
| .TH "QUICKEMU_CONF" "1" "August 1, 2022" "quickemu_conf" "Quickemu Configuration Manual"
 | |
| .hy
 | |
| .SH NAME
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| quickemu_conf - Options and parameters in the quickemu <vm>.conf
 | |
| .SH DESCRIPTION
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| \f[B]quickemu\f[R] will create and run highly optimised desktop virtual
 | |
| machines for Linux, macOS and Windows.
 | |
| It uses sensible defaults, but many configuration options can be
 | |
| overridden in the required configuration file, which will as a minimum
 | |
| specify the path to the installation ISO and QEMU disk for the installed
 | |
| VM
 | |
| .SH OPTIONS
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| These are the options and defaults for the <vm>.conf file
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| \f[C]
 | |
| # Lowercase variables are used in the VM config file only
 | |
| boot=\[dq]efi\[dq]
 | |
| bridge=\[dq]\[dq]
 | |
| cpu_cores=\[dq]\[dq]
 | |
| disk_img=\[dq]\[dq]
 | |
| disk_size=\[dq]\[dq]
 | |
| fixed_iso=\[dq]\[dq]
 | |
| floppy=\[dq]\[dq]
 | |
| guest_os=\[dq]linux\[dq]
 | |
| img=\[dq]\[dq]
 | |
| iso=\[dq]\[dq]
 | |
| macos_release=\[dq]\[dq]
 | |
| port_forwards=()
 | |
| preallocation=\[dq]off\[dq]
 | |
| ram=\[dq]\[dq]
 | |
| secureboot=\[dq]off\[dq]
 | |
| tpm=\[dq]off\[dq]
 | |
| usb_devices=()
 | |
| \f[R]
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| .SH EXAMPLES
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| \f[C]
 | |
| guest_os=\[dq]linux\[dq]
 | |
| disk_img=\[dq]debian-bullseye/disk.qcow2\[dq]
 | |
| iso=\[dq]debian-bullseye/firmware-11.0.0-amd64-DVD-1.iso\[dq]
 | |
| \f[R]
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| The default macOS configuration looks like this:
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| \f[C]
 | |
| guest_os=\[dq]macos\[dq]
 | |
| img=\[dq]macos-catalina/RecoveryImage.img\[dq]
 | |
| disk_img=\[dq]macos-catalina/disk.qcow2\[dq]
 | |
| macos_release=\[dq]catalina\[dq]
 | |
| \f[R]
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| .IP \[bu] 2
 | |
| \f[V]guest_os=\[dq]macos\[dq]\f[R] instructs Quickemu to optimise for
 | |
| macOS.
 | |
| .IP \[bu] 2
 | |
| \f[V]macos_release=\[dq]catalina\[dq]\f[R] instructs Quickemu to
 | |
| optimise for a particular macOS release.
 | |
| .RS 2
 | |
| .IP \[bu] 2
 | |
| For example VirtIO Network and Memory Ballooning are available in Big
 | |
| Sur and newer, but not previous releases.
 | |
| .IP \[bu] 2
 | |
| And VirtIO Block Media (disks) are supported/stable in Catalina and
 | |
| newer.
 | |
| .RE
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| The default Windows 11 configuration looks like this:
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| \f[C]
 | |
| guest_os=\[dq]windows\[dq]
 | |
| disk_img=\[dq]windows-11/disk.qcow2\[dq]
 | |
| iso=\[dq]windows-11/Win11_EnglishInternational_x64.iso\[dq]
 | |
| fixed_iso=\[dq]windows-11/virtio-win.iso\[dq]
 | |
| tpm=\[dq]on\[dq]
 | |
| \f[R]
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| .IP \[bu] 2
 | |
| \f[V]guest_os=\[dq]windows\[dq]\f[R] instructs \f[V]quickemu\f[R] to
 | |
| optimise for Windows.
 | |
| .IP \[bu] 2
 | |
| \f[V]fixed_iso=\f[R] specifies the ISO image that provides VirtIO
 | |
| drivers.
 | |
| .IP \[bu] 2
 | |
| \f[V]tpm=\[dq]on\[dq]\f[R] instructs \f[V]quickemu\f[R] to create a
 | |
| software emulated TPM device using \f[V]swtpm\f[R].
 | |
| .SH BIOS and EFI
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Since Quickemu 2.1.0 \f[V]efi\f[R] is the default boot option.
 | |
| If you want to override this behaviour then add the following line to
 | |
| you VM configuration to enable legacy BIOS.
 | |
| .IP \[bu] 2
 | |
| \f[V]boot=\[dq]legacy\[dq]\f[R] - Enable Legacy BIOS boot
 | |
| .SH Tuning CPU cores, RAM & disks
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| By default, Quickemu will calculate the number of CPUs cores and RAM to
 | |
| allocate to a VM based on the specifications of your host computer.
 | |
| You can override this default behaviour and tune the VM configuration to
 | |
| your liking.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Add additional lines to your virtual machine configuration:
 | |
| .IP \[bu] 2
 | |
| \f[V]cpu_cores=\[dq]4\[dq]\f[R] - Specify the number of CPU cores
 | |
| allocated to the VM
 | |
| .IP \[bu] 2
 | |
| \f[V]ram=\[dq]4G\[dq]\f[R] - Specify the amount of RAM to allocate to
 | |
| the VM
 | |
| .IP \[bu] 2
 | |
| \f[V]disk_size=\[dq]16G\[dq]\f[R] - Specify the size of the virtual disk
 | |
| allocated to the VM
 | |
| .SS Disk preallocation
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Preallocation mode (allowed values: \f[V]off\f[R] (default),
 | |
| \f[V]metadata\f[R], \f[V]falloc\f[R], \f[V]full\f[R]).
 | |
| An image with preallocated metadata is initially larger but can improve
 | |
| performance when the image needs to grow.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Specify what disk preallocation should be used, if any, when creating
 | |
| the system disk image by adding a line like this to your VM
 | |
| configuration.
 | |
| .IP \[bu] 2
 | |
| \f[V]preallocation=\[dq]metadata\[dq]\f[R]
 | |
| .SS CD-ROM disks
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| If you want to expose an ISO image from the host to guest add the
 | |
| following line to the VM configuration:
 | |
| .IP \[bu] 2
 | |
| \f[V]fixed_iso=\[dq]/path/to/image.iso\[dq]\f[R]
 | |
| .SS Floppy disks
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| If you\[cq]re like Alan Pope (https://popey.com) you\[cq]ll probably
 | |
| want to mount a floppy disk image in the guest.
 | |
| To do so add the following line to the VM configuration:
 | |
| .IP \[bu] 2
 | |
| \f[V]floppy=\[dq]/path/to/floppy.img\[dq]\f[R]
 | |
| .SH File Sharing
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| All File Sharing options will only expose \f[V]\[ti]/Public\f[R] (or
 | |
| localised variations) for the current user to the guest VMs.
 | |
| .SS Samba \[u1F427] \[u1F34F] \[u1FA9F]
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| If \f[V]smbd\f[R] is available on the host, Quickemu will automatically
 | |
| enable the built-in QEMU support for exposing a Samba share from the
 | |
| host to the guest.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| You can install the minimal Samba components on Ubuntu using:
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| \f[C]
 | |
| sudo apt install --no-install-recommends samba
 | |
| \f[R]
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| If everything is set up correctly, the \f[V]smbd\f[R] address will be
 | |
| printed when the virtual machine is started.
 | |
| For example:
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| \f[C]
 | |
|  - smbd:     On guest: smb://10.0.2.4/qemu
 | |
| \f[R]
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| If using a Windows guest, right-click on \[lq]This PC\[rq], click
 | |
| \[lq]Add a network location\[rq], and paste this address, removing
 | |
| \f[V]smb:\f[R] and replacing forward slashes with backslashes (in this
 | |
| example \f[V]\[rs]\[rs]10.0.2.4\[rs]qemu\f[R]).
 | |
| .SS SPICE WebDAV \[u1F427] \[u1FA9F]
 | |
| .IP \[bu] 2
 | |
| TBD
 | |
| .SS VirtIO-9P \[u1F427] \[u1F34F]
 | |
| .IP \[bu] 2
 | |
| TBD
 | |
| .SH Network port forwarding
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Add an additional line to your virtual machine configuration.
 | |
| For example:
 | |
| .IP \[bu] 2
 | |
| \f[V]port_forwards=(\[dq]8123:8123\[dq] \[dq]8888:80\[dq])\f[R]
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| In the example above:
 | |
| .IP \[bu] 2
 | |
| Port 8123 on the host is forwarded to port 8123 on the guest.
 | |
| .IP \[bu] 2
 | |
| Port 8888 on the host is forwarded to port 80 on the guest.
 | |
| .SH Bridged networking
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Connect your virtual machine to a preconfigured network bridge.
 | |
| Add an additional line to your virtual machine configuration
 | |
| .IP \[bu] 2
 | |
| \f[V]bridge=\[dq]br0\[dq]\f[R]
 | |
| .SH USB redirection
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Quickemu supports USB redirection via SPICE pass-through and host
 | |
| pass-through.
 | |
| .SS SPICE redirection (recommended)
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Using SPICE for USB pass-through is easiest as it doesn\[cq]t require
 | |
| any elevated permission, start Quickemu with \f[V]--display spice\f[R]
 | |
| and then select \f[V]Input\f[R] ->
 | |
| \f[V]Select USB Device for redirection\f[R] from the menu to choose
 | |
| which device(s) you want to attach to the guest.
 | |
| .SS Host redirection \f[B]NOT Recommended\f[R]
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| \f[B]USB host redirection is not recommended\f[R], it is provided purely
 | |
| for backwards compatibility to older versions of Quickemu.
 | |
| Using SPICE is preferred, see above.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Add an additional line to your virtual machine configuration.
 | |
| For example:
 | |
| .IP \[bu] 2
 | |
| \f[V]usb_devices=(\[dq]046d:082d\[dq] \[dq]046d:085e\[dq])\f[R]
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| In the example above:
 | |
| .IP \[bu] 2
 | |
| The USB device with vendor_id 046d and product_id 082d will be exposed
 | |
| to the guest.
 | |
| .IP \[bu] 2
 | |
| The USB device with vendor_id 046d and product_id 085e will be exposed
 | |
| to the guest.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| If the USB devices are not writable, \f[V]quickemu\f[R] will display the
 | |
| appropriate commands to modify the USB device(s) access permissions,
 | |
| like this:
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| \f[C]
 | |
|  - USB:      Host pass-through requested:
 | |
|               - Sennheiser Communications EPOS GTW 270 on bus 001 device 005 needs permission changes:
 | |
|                 sudo chown -v root:user /dev/bus/usb/001/005
 | |
|                 ERROR! USB permission changes are required \[u1F446]
 | |
| \f[R]
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| .SH TPM
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Since Quickemu 2.2.0 a software emulated TPM device can be added to
 | |
| guest virtual machines.
 | |
| Just add \f[V]tpm=\[dq]on\[dq]\f[R] to your VM configuration.
 | |
| \f[V]quickget\f[R] will automatically add this line to Windows 11
 | |
| virtual machines.
 | |
| .SH AUTHORS
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Written by Martin Wimpress.
 | |
| .SH BUGS
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Submit bug reports online at:
 | |
| <https://github.com/quickemu-project/quickemu/issues>
 | |
| .SH SEE ALSO
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Full sources at: <https://github.com/quickemu-project/quickemu>
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| quickget(1), quickemu(1), quickgui(1)
 | |
| .SH AUTHORS
 | |
| Martin Wimpress.
 |