Ce contenu n'est pas disponible dans la langue sélectionnée.
20.16.9.7. PCI passthrough
A PCI network device (specified by the
source
element) is directly assigned to the guest virtual machine using generic device passthrough, after first optionally setting the device's MAC address to the configured value, and associating the device with an 802.1Qbh capable switch using an optionally specified virtualport
element (see the examples of virtualport given above for type='direct' network devices). Note that - due to limitations in standard single-port PCI ethernet card driver design - only SR-IOV (Single Root I/O Virtualization) virtual function (VF) devices can be assigned in this manner; to assign a standard single-port PCI or PCIe ethernet card to a guest virtual machine, use the traditional hostdev
device definition
Note that this "intelligent passthrough" of network devices is very similar to the functionality of a standard
hostdev
device, the difference being that this method allows specifying a MAC address and virtualport
for the passed-through device. If these capabilities are not required, if you have a standard single-port PCI, PCIe, or USB network card that does not support SR-IOV (and hence would anyway lose the configured MAC address during reset after being assigned to the guest virtual machine domain), or if you are using a version of libvirt older than 0.9.11, you should use standard hostdev
to assign the device to the guest virtual machine instead of interface type='hostdev'/
.
... <devices> <interface type='hostdev'> <driver name='vfio'/> <source> <address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x00' slot='0x07' function='0x0'/> </source> <mac address='52:54:00:6d:90:02'> <virtualport type='802.1Qbh'> <parameters profileid='finance'/> </virtualport> </interface> </devices> ...
Figure 20.44. Devices - network interfaces- PCI passthrough