2010/11/17 Scott Dowdle dowdle@montanalinux.org
Greetings,
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If you want just to see SPICE in action it is not hard. You need qemu with SPICE support on server and SPICE client on client.
You need to start qemu on server with additional options: -spice port=<port>,disable-ticketing - use this one if you do not need password protection OR -spice port=<port>,password=<secret> - if you need to protect connection
After it you can connect from client using spicec -h <host> -p <port>
That isn't quite all there is to it.
What about installing the xorg-x11-drv-qxl package in the guest VM and configuring it in xorg.conf? How exactly is that done? Also I believe spice-server needs to be running on the VM host. I'm kinda going by Fedora 14's SPICE feature page (http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Features/Spice) as well as a CentOS related one (http://www.geekgoth.de/tag/centos/).
Are all the packages one needs to get SPICE going on the VM host included in CentOS 5.5? What packages are those? Are there any steps required for inside of the VM?
Simply having the right qemu-kvm and starting up the VM with the -spice flag isn't all there is to it. What many of us need are step by step instructions.
TYL,
Scott Dowdle 704 Church Street Belgrade, MT 59714 (406)388-0827 [home] (406)994-3931 [work]
Hello Scott.
The description above is enough to start SPICE and see it in action on Fedora 14. You have (a) Fedora host with KVM, qemu, spice-server, (b) VM with any OS (Fedora / CentOS / Windows - at your choice) on this host and (c) Fedora client with spice-client.
You launch on host the VM using qemu directly as described above. After it you can connect from Fedora client as described above. That's it. Everything just works.
qxl drivers on VM are nice to have but not mandatory - you can see SPICE in action without it. For details you can refer to http://spice-space.org/docs/spice_user_manual.pdf
Cheers, Alexey