I've done everything stated in the various guidance to get a regular user to use virt-manager (graphical Virtual Machine Manager) under CentOS 5.4 with KVM. Placing the user in the kvm group and changing permissions on several files to include kvm has not worked...the user still needs to enter the root password to use the graphical VMM.
I thought of pressing sudo into service for this task. Anyone think this will work?
Anyone got a better way?
DaveM
Em 24-02-2010 00:22, David McGuffey escreveu:
I've done everything stated in the various guidance to get a regular user to use virt-manager (graphical Virtual Machine Manager) under CentOS 5.4 with KVM. Placing the user in the kvm group and changing permissions on several files to include kvm has not worked...the user still needs to enter the root password to use the graphical VMM.
I thought of pressing sudo into service for this task. Anyone think this will work?
Sure, should work.
Anyone got a better way?
Look at wireshark, use as an example :)
[rms@roque ~]$ cat /etc/pam.d/wireshark #%PAM-1.0 auth sufficient pam_rootok.so #auth sufficient pam_timestamp.so auth include system-auth account required pam_permit.so session required pam_permit.so session optional pam_xauth.so #session optional pam_timestamp.so