xl - Xen management tool, based on LibXenlight



  • NAME
        XL - Xen management tool, based on LibXenlight
    
    SYNOPSIS
        xl subcommand [args]
    
    DESCRIPTION
        The xl program is the new tool for managing Xen guest domains. The program
        can be used to create, pause, and shutdown domains. It can also be used to
        list current domains, enable or pin VCPUs, and attach or detach virtual
        block devices.
    
        The basic structure of every xl command is almost always:
    
          xl subcommand [OPTIONS] domain-id
    
        Where subcommand is one of the subcommands listed below, domain-id is the
        numeric domain id, or the domain name (which will be internally translated
        to domain id), and OPTIONS are subcommand specific options. There are a
        few exceptions to this rule in the cases where the subcommand in question
        acts on all domains, the entire machine, or directly on the Xen
        hypervisor. Those exceptions will be clear for each of those subcommands.
    
    NOTES
        start the script /etc/init.d/xencommons at boot time
            Most xl operations rely upon xenstored and xenconsoled: make sure you
            start the script /etc/init.d/xencommons at boot time to initialize all
            the daemons needed by xl.
    
        setup a xenbr0 bridge in dom0
            In the most common network configuration, you need to setup a bridge
            in dom0 named xenbr0 in order to have a working network in the guest
            domains. Please refer to the documentation of your Linux distribution
            to know how to setup the bridge.
    
        autoballoon
            If you specify the amount of memory dom0 has, passing dom0_mem to Xen,
            it is highly recommended to disable autoballoon. Edit
            /etc/xen/xl.conf and set it to 0.
    
        run xl as root
            Most xl commands require root privileges to run due to the
            communications channels used to talk to the hypervisor. Running as non
            root will return an error.
    
    GLOBAL OPTIONS
        Some global options are always available:
    
        -v  Verbose.
    
        -N  Dry run: do not actually execute the command.
    
        -f  Force execution: xl will refuse to run some commands if it detects
            that xend is also running, this option will force the execution of
            those commands, even though it is unsafe.
    
        -t  Always use carriage-return-based overwriting for printing progress
            messages without scrolling the screen. Without -t, this is done only
            if stderr is a tty.
    
    DOMAIN SUBCOMMANDS
        The following subcommands manipulate domains directly. As stated
        previously, most commands take domain-id as the first parameter.
    
        button-press domain-id button
            This command is deprecated. Please use "xl trigger" in preference
    
            Indicate an ACPI button press to the domain. button is may be 'power'
            or 'sleep'. This command is only available for HVM domains.
    
        create [configfile] [OPTIONS]
            The create subcommand takes a config file as first argument: see
            xl.cfg for full details of that file format and possible options. If
            configfile is missing XL creates the domain starting from the default
            value for every option.
    
            configfile has to be an absolute path to a file.
    
            Create will return as soon as the domain is started. This does not
            mean the guest OS in the domain has actually booted, or is available
            for input.
    
            If the -F option is specified, create will start the domain and not
            return until its death.
    
            OPTIONS
    
            -q, --quiet
                No console output.
    
            -f=FILE, --defconfig=FILE
                Use the given configuration file.
    
            -p  Leave the domain paused after it is created.
    
            -F  Run in foreground until death of the domain.
    
            -V, --vncviewer
                Attach to domain's VNC server, forking a vncviewer process.
    
            -A, --vncviewer-autopass
                Pass VNC password to vncviewer via stdin.
    
            -c  Attach console to the domain as soon as it has started. This is
                useful for determining issues with crashing domains and just as a
                general convenience since you often want to watch the domain boot.
    
            key=value
                It is possible to pass key=value pairs on the command line to
                provide options as if they were written in the configuration file;
                these override whatever is in the configfile.
    
                NB: Many config options require characters such as quotes or
                brackets which are interpreted by the shell (and often discarded)
                before being passed to xl, resulting in xl being unable to parse
                the value correctly. A simple work-around is to put all extra
                options within a single set of quotes, separated by semicolons.
                (See below for an example.)
    
            EXAMPLES
    
            with config file
                  xl create DebianLenny
    
                This creates a domain with the file /etc/xen/DebianLenny, and
                returns as soon as it is run.
    
            with extra parameters
                  xl create hvm.cfg 'cpus="0-3"; pci=["01:05.1","01:05.2"]'
    
                This creates a domain with the file hvm.cfg, but additionally pins
                it to cpus 0-3, and passes through two PCI devices.
    
        config-update domid [configfile] [OPTIONS]
            Update the saved configuration for a running domain. This has no
            immediate effect but will be applied when the guest is next restarted.
            This command is useful to ensure that runtime modifications made to
            the guest will be preserved when the guest is restarted.
    
            Since Xen 4.5 xl has improved capabilities to handle dynamic domain
            configuration changes and will preserve any changes made a runtime
            when necessary. Therefore it should not normally be necessary to use
            this command any more.
    
            configfile has to be an absolute path to a file.
    
            OPTIONS
    
            -f=FILE, --defconfig=FILE
                Use the given configuration file.
    
            key=value
                It is possible to pass key=value pairs on the command line to
                provide options as if they were written in the configuration file;
                these override whatever is in the configfile. Please see the note
                under create on handling special characters when passing
                key=value pairs on the command line.
    
        console [OPTIONS] domain-id
            Attach to domain domain-id's console. If you've set up your domains to
            have a traditional log in console this will look much like a normal
            text log in screen.
    
            Use the key combination Ctrl+] to detach the domain console.
    
            OPTIONS
    
            -t [pv|serial]
                Connect to a PV console or connect to an emulated serial console.
                PV consoles are the only consoles available for PV domains while
                HVM domains can have both. If this option is not specified it
                defaults to emulated serial for HVM guests and PV console for PV
                guests.
    
            -n NUM
                Connect to console number NUM. Console numbers start from 0.
    
        destroy [OPTIONS] domain-id
            Immediately terminate the domain domain-id. This doesn't give the
            domain OS any chance to react, and is the equivalent of ripping the
            power cord out on a physical machine. In most cases you will want to
            use the shutdown command instead.
    
            OPTIONS
    
            -f  Allow domain 0 to be destroyed. Because domain cannot destroy
                itself, this is only possible when using a disaggregated
                toolstack, and is most useful when using a hardware domain
                separated from domain 0.
    
        domid domain-name
            Converts a domain name to a domain id.
    
        domname domain-id
            Converts a domain id to a domain name.
    
        rename domain-id new-name
            Change the domain name of domain-id to new-name.
    
        dump-core domain-id [filename]
            Dumps the virtual machine's memory for the specified domain to the
            filename specified, without pausing the domain. The dump file will be
            written to a distribution specific directory for dump files. Such as:
            @XEN_DUMP_DIR@/dump.
    
        help [--long]
            Displays the short help message (i.e. common commands).
    
            The --long option prints out the complete set of xl subcommands,
            grouped by function.
    
        list [OPTIONS] [domain-id ...]
            Prints information about one or more domains. If no domains are
            specified it prints out information about all domains.
    
            OPTIONS
    
            -l, --long
                The output for xl list is not the table view shown below, but
                instead presents the data in as a JSON data structure.
    
            -Z, --context Also prints the security labels.
            -v, --verbose
                Also prints the domain UUIDs, the shutdown reason and security
                labels.
    
            -c, <--cpupool>
                Also prints the cpupool the domain belong to.
    
            -n, <--numa>
                Also prints the domain NUMA node affinity.
    
            EXAMPLE
    
            An example format for the list is as follows:
    
                Name                                        ID   Mem VCPUs      State   Time(s)
                Domain-0                                     0   750     4     r-----   11794.3
                win                                          1  1019     1     r-----       0.3
                linux                                        2  2048     2     r-----    5624.2
    
            Name is the name of the domain. ID the numeric domain id. Mem is the
            desired amount of memory to allocate to the domain (although it may
            not be the currently allocated amount). VCPUs is the number of virtual
            CPUs allocated to the domain. State is the run state (see below). Time
            is the total run time of the domain as accounted for by Xen.
    
            STATES
    
            The State field lists 6 states for a Xen domain, and which ones the
            current domain is in.
    
            r - running
                The domain is currently running on a CPU.
    
            b - blocked
                The domain is blocked, and not running or runnable. This can be
                caused because the domain is waiting on IO (a traditional wait
                state) or has gone to sleep because there was nothing else for it
                to do.
    
            p - paused
                The domain has been paused, usually occurring through the
                administrator running xl pause. When in a paused state the domain
                will still consume allocated resources like memory, but will not
                be eligible for scheduling by the Xen hypervisor.
    
            s - shutdown
                The guest OS has shut down (SCHEDOP_shutdown has been called) but
                the domain is not dying yet.
    
            c - crashed
                The domain has crashed, which is always a violent ending. Usually
                this state can only occur if the domain has been configured not to
                restart on crash. See xl.cfg(5) for more info.
    
            d - dying
                The domain is in process of dying, but hasn't completely shutdown
                or crashed.
    
            NOTES
    
                The Time column is deceptive. Virtual IO (network and block
                devices) used by domains requires coordination by Domain0, which
                means that Domain0 is actually charged for much of the time that a
                DomainU is doing IO. Use of this time value to determine relative
                utilizations by domains is thus very suspect, as a high IO
                workload may show as less utilized than a high CPU workload.
                Consider yourself warned.
    
        mem-max domain-id mem
            Specify the maximum amount of memory the domain is able to use,
            appending 't' for terabytes, 'g' for gigabytes, 'm' for megabytes, 'k'
            for kilobytes and 'b' for bytes.
    
            The mem-max value may not correspond to the actual memory used in the
            domain, as it may balloon down its memory to give more back to the OS.
    
            The value given just sets the memory amount the domain is allowed to
            allocate in the hypervisor. It can't be set lower than the current
            reservation, but it is allowed to be higher than the configured
            maximum memory size of the domain (maxmem parameter in the domain's
            configuration). Using xl mem-max to set the maximum memory above the
            initial maxmem value will not allow the additional memory to be used
            via xl mem-set. The initial maxmem value is still used as an upper
            limit for xl mem-set.
    
            The domain is not receiving any signal regarding the changed memory
            limit.
    
        mem-set domain-id mem
            Set the domain's used memory using the balloon driver; append 't' for
            terabytes, 'g' for gigabytes, 'm' for megabytes, 'k' for kilobytes and
            'b' for bytes.
    
            Because this operation requires cooperation from the domain operating
            system, there is no guarantee that it will succeed. This command will
            definitely not work unless the domain has the required paravirt
            driver.
    
            Warning: There is no good way to know in advance how small of a
            mem-set will make a domain unstable and cause it to crash. Be very
            careful when using this command on running domains.
    
        migrate [OPTIONS] domain-id host
            Migrate a domain to another host machine. By default xl relies on ssh
            as a transport mechanism between the two hosts.
    
            OPTIONS
    
            -s sshcommand
                Use <sshcommand> instead of ssh. String will be passed to sh. If
                empty, run <host> instead of ssh <host> xl migrate-receive [-d
                -e].
    
            -e  On the new host, do not wait in the background (on <host>) for the
                death of the domain. See the corresponding option of the
                create subcommand.
    
            -C config
                Send <config> instead of config file from creation.
    
            --debug
                Print huge (!) amount of debug during the migration process.
    
            -p  Leave the domain on the receive side paused after migration.
    
        remus [OPTIONS] domain-id host
            Enable Remus HA or COLO HA for domain. By default xl relies on ssh as
            a transport mechanism between the two hosts.
    
            NOTES
    
                Remus support in xl is still in experimental (proof-of-concept)
                phase. Disk replication support is limited to DRBD disks.
    
                COLO support in xl is still in experimental (proof-of-concept)
                phase. All options are subject to change in the future.
    
            COLO disk configuration looks like:
    
              disk = ['...,colo,colo-host=xxx,colo-port=xxx,colo-export=xxx,active-disk=xxx,hidden-disk=xxx...']
    
            The supported options are:
    
            colo-host :Secondary host's ip address.
            colo-port :Secondary host's port, we will run a nbd server on
            secondary host, and the nbd server will listen this port.
            colo-export :Nbd server's disk export name of secondary host.
            active-disk :Secondary's guest write will be buffered in this disk,
            and it's used by secondary.
            hidden-disk :Primary's modified contents will be buffered in this
            disk, and it's used by secondary.
    
            COLO network configuration looks like:
    
              vif = [ '...,forwarddev=xxx,...']
    
            The supported options are:
    
            forwarddev :Forward devices for primary and secondary, they are
            directly connected.
    
            OPTIONS
    
            -i MS
                Checkpoint domain memory every MS milliseconds (default 200ms).
    
            -u  Disable memory checkpoint compression.
    
            -s sshcommand
                Use <sshcommand> instead of ssh. String will be passed to sh. If
                empty, run <host> instead of ssh <host> xl migrate-receive -r
                [-e].
    
            -e  On the new host, do not wait in the background (on <host>) for the
                death of the domain. See the corresponding option of the
                create subcommand.
    
            -N netbufscript
                Use <netbufscript> to setup network buffering instead of the
                default script (/etc/xen/scripts/remus-netbuf-setup).
    
            -F  Run Remus in unsafe mode. Use this option with caution as failover
                may not work as intended.
    
            -b  Replicate memory checkpoints to /dev/null (blackhole). Generally
                useful for debugging. Requires enabling unsafe mode.
    
            -n  Disable network output buffering. Requires enabling unsafe mode.
    
            -d  Disable disk replication. Requires enabling unsafe mode.
    
            -c  Enable COLO HA. This conflicts with -i and -b, and memory
                checkpoint compression must be disabled.
    
            -p  Use userspace COLO Proxy. This option must be used in conjunction
                with -c.
    
        pause domain-id
            Pause a domain. When in a paused state the domain will still consume
            allocated resources such as memory, but will not be eligible for
            scheduling by the Xen hypervisor.
    
        reboot [OPTIONS] domain-id
            Reboot a domain. This acts just as if the domain had the reboot
            command run from the console. The command returns as soon as it has
            executed the reboot action, which may be significantly before the
            domain actually reboots.
    
            For HVM domains this requires PV drivers to be installed in your guest
            OS. If PV drivers are not present but you have configured the guest OS
            to behave appropriately you may be able to use the -F option trigger a
            reset button press.
    
            The behavior of what happens to a domain when it reboots is set by the
            on_reboot parameter of the domain configuration file when the domain
            was created.
    
            OPTIONS
    
            -F  If the guest does not support PV reboot control then fallback to
                sending an ACPI power event (equivalent to the reset option to
                trigger.
    
                You should ensure that the guest is configured to behave as
                expected in response to this event.
    
        restore [OPTIONS] [ConfigFile]
        CheckpointFile
            Build a domain from an xl save state file. See save for more info.
    
            OPTIONS
    
            -p  Do not unpause domain after restoring it.
    
            -e  Do not wait in the background for the death of the domain on the
                new host. See the corresponding option of the create subcommand.
    
            -d  Enable debug messages.
    
            -V, --vncviewer
                Attach to domain's VNC server, forking a vncviewer process.
    
            -A, --vncviewer-autopass
                Pass VNC password to vncviewer via stdin.
    
        save [OPTIONS] domain-id CheckpointFile
        [ConfigFile]
            Saves a running domain to a state file so that it can be restored
            later. Once saved, the domain will no longer be running on the system,
            unless the -c or -p options are used. xl restore restores from this
            checkpoint file. Passing a config file argument allows the user to
            manually select the VM config file used to create the domain.
    
            -c  Leave domain running after creating the snapshot.
    
            -p  Leave domain paused after creating the snapshot.
    
        sharing [domain-id]
            List count of shared pages.
    
            OPTIONS
    
            domain_id
                List specifically for that domain. Otherwise, list for all
                domains.
    
        shutdown [OPTIONS] -a|domain-id
            Gracefully shuts down a domain. This coordinates with the domain OS to
            perform graceful shutdown, so there is no guarantee that it will
            succeed, and may take a variable length of time depending on what
            services must be shutdown in the domain.
    
            For HVM domains this requires PV drivers to be installed in your guest
            OS. If PV drivers are not present but you have configured the guest OS
            to behave appropriately you may be able to use the -F option trigger a
            power button press.
    
            The command returns immediately after signally the domain unless that
            -w flag is used.
    
            The behavior of what happens to a domain when it reboots is set by the
            on_shutdown parameter of the domain configuration file when the domain
            was created.
    
            OPTIONS
    
            -a, --all
                Shutdown all guest domains. Often used when doing a complete
                shutdown of a Xen system.
    
            -w, --wait
                Wait for the domain to complete shutdown before returning.
    
            -F  If the guest does not support PV shutdown control then fallback to
                sending an ACPI power event (equivalent to the power option to
                trigger.
    
                You should ensure that the guest is configured to behave as
                expected in response to this event.
    
        sysrq domain-id letter
            Send a <Magic System Request> to the domain, each type of request is
            represented by a different letter. It can be used to send SysRq
            requests to Linux guests, see sysrq.txt in your Linux Kernel sources
            for more information. It requires PV drivers to be installed in your
            guest OS.
    
        trigger domain-id nmi|reset|init|power|sleep|s3resume
        [VCPU]
            Send a trigger to a domain, where the trigger can be: nmi, reset,
            init, power or sleep. Optionally a specific vcpu number can be passed
            as an argument. This command is only available for HVM domains.
    
        unpause domain-id
            Moves a domain out of the paused state. This will allow a previously
            paused domain to now be eligible for scheduling by the Xen hypervisor.
    
        vcpu-set domain-id vcpu-count
            Enables the vcpu-count virtual CPUs for the domain in question. Like
            mem-set, this command can only allocate up to the maximum virtual CPU
            count configured at boot for the domain.
    
            If the vcpu-count is smaller than the current number of active VCPUs,
            the highest number VCPUs will be hotplug removed. This may be
            important for pinning purposes.
    
            Attempting to set the VCPUs to a number larger than the initially
            configured VCPU count is an error. Trying to set VCPUs to < 1 will be
            quietly ignored.
    
            Some guests may need to actually bring the newly added CPU online
            after vcpu-set, go to SEE ALSO section for information.
    
        vcpu-list [domain-id]
            Lists VCPU information for a specific domain. If no domain is
            specified, VCPU information for all domains will be provided.
    
        vcpu-pin [-f|--force] domain-id vcpu cpus hard cpus
        soft
            Set hard and soft affinity for a vcpu of <domain-id>. Normally VCPUs
            can float between available CPUs whenever Xen deems a different run
            state is appropriate.
    
            Hard affinity can be used to restrict this, by ensuring certain VCPUs
            can only run on certain physical CPUs. Soft affinity specifies a
            preferred set of CPUs. Soft affinity needs special support in the
            scheduler, which is only provided in credit1.
    
            The keyword all can be used to apply the hard and soft affinity masks
            to all the VCPUs in the domain. The symbol '-' can be used to leave
            either hard or soft affinity alone.
    
            For example:
    
             xl vcpu-pin 0 3 - 6-9
    
            will set soft affinity for vCPU 3 of domain 0 to pCPUs 6,7,8 and 9,
            leaving its hard affinity untouched. On the othe hand:
    
             xl vcpu-pin 0 3 3,4 6-9
    
            will set both hard and soft affinity, the former to pCPUs 3 and 4, the
            latter to pCPUs 6,7,8, and 9.
    
            Specifying -f or --force will remove a temporary pinning done by the
            operating system (normally this should be done by the operating
            system). In case a temporary pinning is active for a vcpu the affinity
            of this vcpu can't be changed without this option.
    
        vm-list
            Prints information about guests. This list excludes information about
            service or auxiliary domains such as dom0 and stubdoms.
    
            EXAMPLE
    
            An example format for the list is as follows:
    
                UUID                                  ID    name
                59e1cf6c-6ab9-4879-90e7-adc8d1c63bf5  2    win
                50bc8f75-81d0-4d53-b2e6-95cb44e2682e  3    linux
    
        vncviewer [OPTIONS] domain-id
            Attach to domain's VNC server, forking a vncviewer process.
    
            OPTIONS
    
            --autopass
                Pass VNC password to vncviewer via stdin.
    
    XEN HOST SUBCOMMANDS
        debug-keys keys
            Send debug keys to Xen. It is the same as pressing the Xen "conswitch"
            (Ctrl-A by default) three times and then pressing "keys".
    
        dmesg [-c]
            Reads the Xen message buffer, similar to dmesg on a Linux system. The
            buffer contains informational, warning, and error messages created
            during Xen's boot process. If you are having problems with Xen, this
            is one of the first places to look as part of problem determination.
    
            OPTIONS
    
            -c, --clear
                Clears Xen's message buffer.
    
        info [-n, --numa]
            Print information about the Xen host in name : value format. When
            reporting a Xen bug, please provide this information as part of the
            bug report. See http://wiki.xen.org/xenwiki/ReportingBugs on how to
            report Xen bugs.
    
            Sample output looks as follows:
    
             host                   : scarlett
             release                : 3.1.0-rc4+
             version                : #1001 SMP Wed Oct 19 11:09:54 UTC 2011
             machine                : x86_64
             nr_cpus                : 4
             nr_nodes               : 1
             cores_per_socket       : 4
             threads_per_core       : 1
             cpu_mhz                : 2266
             hw_caps                : bfebfbff:28100800:00000000:00003b40:009ce3bd:00000000:00000001:00000000
             virt_caps              : hvm hvm_directio
             total_memory           : 6141
             free_memory            : 4274
             free_cpus              : 0
             outstanding_claims     : 0
             xen_major              : 4
             xen_minor              : 2
             xen_extra              : -unstable
             xen_caps               : xen-3.0-x86_64 xen-3.0-x86_32p hvm-3.0-x86_32 hvm-3.0-x86_32p hvm-3.0-x86_64 
             xen_scheduler          : credit
             xen_pagesize           : 4096
             platform_params        : virt_start=0xffff800000000000
             xen_changeset          : Wed Nov 02 17:09:09 2011 +0000 24066:54a5e994a241
             xen_commandline        : com1=115200,8n1 guest_loglvl=all dom0_mem=750M console=com1 
             cc_compiler            : gcc version 4.4.5 (Debian 4.4.5-8) 
             cc_compile_by          : sstabellini
             cc_compile_domain      : uk.xensource.com
             cc_compile_date        : Tue Nov  8 12:03:05 UTC 2011
             xend_config_format     : 4
    
            FIELDS
    
            Not all fields will be explained here, but some of the less obvious
            ones deserve explanation:
    
            hw_caps
                A vector showing what hardware capabilities are supported by your
                processor. This is equivalent to, though more cryptic, the flags
                field in /proc/cpuinfo on a normal Linux machine: they both derive
                from the feature bits returned by the cpuid command on x86
                platforms.
    
            free_memory
                Available memory (in MB) not allocated to Xen, or any other
                domains, or claimed for domains.
    
            outstanding_claims
                When a claim call is done (see xl.conf) a reservation for a
                specific amount of pages is set and also a global value is
                incremented. This global value (outstanding_claims) is then
                reduced as the domain's memory is populated and eventually reaches
                zero. Most of the time the value will be zero, but if you are
                launching multiple guests, and claim_mode is enabled, this value
                can increase/decrease. Note that the value also affects the
                free_memory - as it will reflect the free memory in the hypervisor
                minus the outstanding pages claimed for guests. See xl info
                claims parameter for detailed listing.
    
            xen_caps
                The Xen version and architecture. Architecture values can be one
                of: x86_32, x86_32p (i.e. PAE enabled), x86_64, ia64.
    
            xen_changeset
                The Xen mercurial changeset id. Very useful for determining
                exactly what version of code your Xen system was built from.
    
            OPTIONS
    
            -n, --numa
                List host NUMA topology information
    
        top Executes the xentop command, which provides real time monitoring of
            domains. Xentop is a curses interface, and reasonably self
            explanatory.
    
        uptime
            Prints the current uptime of the domains running.
    
        claims
            Prints information about outstanding claims by the guests. This
            provides the outstanding claims and currently populated memory count
            for the guests. These values added up reflect the global outstanding
            claim value, which is provided via the info argument,
            outstanding_claims value. The Mem column has the cumulative value of
            outstanding claims and the total amount of memory that has been right
            now allocated to the guest.
    
            EXAMPLE
    
            An example format for the list is as follows:
    
             Name                                        ID   Mem VCPUs      State   Time(s)  Claimed
             Domain-0                                     0  2047     4     r-----      19.7     0
             OL5                                          2  2048     1     --p---       0.0   847
             OL6                                          3  1024     4     r-----       5.9     0
             Windows_XP                                   4  2047     1     --p---       0.0  1989
    
            In which it can be seen that the OL5 guest still has 847MB of claimed
            memory (out of the total 2048MB where 1191MB has been allocated to the
            guest).
    
    SCHEDULER SUBCOMMANDS
        Xen ships with a number of domain schedulers, which can be set at boot
        time with the sched= parameter on the Xen command line. By default
        credit is used for scheduling.
    
        sched-credit [OPTIONS]
            Set or get credit scheduler parameters. The credit scheduler is a
            proportional fair share CPU scheduler built from the ground up to be
            work conserving on SMP hosts.
    
            Each domain (including Domain0) is assigned a weight and a cap.
    
            OPTIONS
    
            -d DOMAIN, --domain=DOMAIN
                Specify domain for which scheduler parameters are to be modified
                or retrieved. Mandatory for modifying scheduler parameters.
    
            -w WEIGHT, --weight=WEIGHT
                A domain with a weight of 512 will get twice as much CPU as a
                domain with a weight of 256 on a contended host. Legal weights
                range from 1 to 65535 and the default is 256.
    
            -c CAP, --cap=CAP
                The cap optionally fixes the maximum amount of CPU a domain will
                be able to consume, even if the host system has idle CPU cycles.
                The cap is expressed in percentage of one physical CPU: 100 is 1
                physical CPU, 50 is half a CPU, 400 is 4 CPUs, etc. The default,
                0, means there is no upper cap.
    
                NB: Many systems have features that will scale down the computing
                power of a cpu that is not 100% utilized. This can be in the
                operating system, but can also sometimes be below the operating
                system in the BIOS. If you set a cap such that individual cores
                are running at less than 100%, this may have an impact on the
                performance of your workload over and above the impact of the cap.
                For example, if your processor runs at 2GHz, and you cap a vm at
                50%, the power management system may also reduce the clock speed
                to 1GHz; the effect will be that your VM gets 25% of the available
                power (50% of 1GHz) rather than 50% (50% of 2GHz). If you are not
                getting the performance you expect, look at performance and
                cpufreq options in your operating system and your BIOS.
    
            -p CPUPOOL, --cpupool=CPUPOOL
                Restrict output to domains in the specified cpupool.
    
            -s, --schedparam
                Specify to list or set pool-wide scheduler parameters.
    
            -t TSLICE, --tslice_ms=TSLICE
                Timeslice tells the scheduler how long to allow VMs to run before
                pre-empting. The default is 30ms. Valid ranges are 1ms to 1000ms.
                The length of the timeslice (in ms) must be higher than the length
                of the ratelimit (see below).
    
            -r RLIMIT, --ratelimit_us=RLIMIT
                Ratelimit attempts to limit the number of schedules per second. It
                sets a minimum amount of time (in microseconds) a VM must run
                before we will allow a higher-priority VM to pre-empt it. The
                default value is 1000 microseconds (1ms). Valid range is 100 to
                500000 (500ms). The ratelimit length must be lower than the
                timeslice length.
    
            COMBINATION
    
            The following is the effect of combining the above options:
    
            <nothing> : List all domain params and sched params from all
            pools
            -d [domid] : List domain params for domain [domid]
            -d [domid] [params] : Set domain params for domain [domid]
            -p [pool] : list all domains and sched params for [pool]
            -s : List sched params for poolid 0
            -s [params] : Set sched params for poolid 0
            -p [pool] -s : List sched params for [pool]
            -p [pool] -s [params] : Set sched params for [pool]
            -p [pool] -d... : Illegal
    
        sched-credit2 [OPTIONS]
            Set or get credit2 scheduler parameters. The credit2 scheduler is a
            proportional fair share CPU scheduler built from the ground up to be
            work conserving on SMP hosts.
    
            Each domain (including Domain0) is assigned a weight.
    
            OPTIONS
    
            -d DOMAIN, --domain=DOMAIN
                Specify domain for which scheduler parameters are to be modified
                or retrieved. Mandatory for modifying scheduler parameters.
    
            -w WEIGHT, --weight=WEIGHT
                A domain with a weight of 512 will get twice as much CPU as a
                domain with a weight of 256 on a contended host. Legal weights
                range from 1 to 65535 and the default is 256.
    
            -p CPUPOOL, --cpupool=CPUPOOL
                Restrict output to domains in the specified cpupool.
    
            -s, --schedparam
                Specify to list or set pool-wide scheduler parameters.
    
            -r RLIMIT, --ratelimit_us=RLIMIT
                Attempts to limit the rate of context switching. It is basically
                the same as --ratelimit_us in sched-credit
    
        sched-rtds [OPTIONS]
            Set or get rtds (Real Time Deferrable Server) scheduler parameters.
            This rt scheduler applies Preemptive Global Earliest Deadline First
            real-time scheduling algorithm to schedule VCPUs in the system. Each
            VCPU has a dedicated period and budget. VCPUs in the same domain have
            the same period and budget. While scheduled, a VCPU burns its budget.
            A VCPU has its budget replenished at the beginning of each period;
            Unused budget is discarded at the end of each period.
    
            OPTIONS
    
            -d DOMAIN, --domain=DOMAIN
                Specify domain for which scheduler parameters are to be modified
                or retrieved. Mandatory for modifying scheduler parameters.
    
            -v VCPUID/all, --vcpuid=VCPUID/all
                Specify vcpu for which scheduler parameters are to be modified or
                retrieved.
    
            -p PERIOD, --period=PERIOD
                Period of time, in microseconds, over which to replenish the
                budget.
    
            -b BUDGET, --budget=BUDGET
                Amount of time, in microseconds, that the VCPU will be allowed to
                run every period.
    
            -c CPUPOOL, --cpupool=CPUPOOL
                Restrict output to domains in the specified cpupool.
    
            EXAMPLE
    
                1) Use -v all to see the budget and period of all the VCPUs of all
                the domains:
    
                    xl sched-rtds -v all
                    Cpupool Pool-0: sched=RTDS
                    Name                        ID VCPU    Period    Budget
                    Domain-0                     0    0     10000      4000
                    vm1                          1    0       300       150
                    vm1                          1    1       400       200
                    vm1                          1    2     10000      4000
                    vm1                          1    3      1000       500
                    vm2                          2    0     10000      4000
                    vm2                          2    1     10000      4000
    
                Without any arguments, it will output the default scheduing
                parameters for each domain:
    
                    xl sched-rtds
                    Cpupool Pool-0: sched=RTDS
                    Name                        ID    Period    Budget
                    Domain-0                     0     10000      4000
                    vm1                          1     10000      4000
                    vm2                          2     10000      4000
    
                2) Use, for instance -d vm1, -v all to see the budget and period
                of all VCPUs of a specific domain (vm1):
    
                    xl sched-rtds -d vm1 -v all
                    Name                        ID VCPU    Period    Budget
                    vm1                          1    0       300       150
                    vm1                          1    1       400       200
                    vm1                          1    2     10000      4000
                    vm1                          1    3      1000       500
    
                To see the parameters of a subset of the VCPUs of a domain, use:
    
                    xl sched-rtds -d vm1 -v 0 -v 3
                    Name                        ID VCPU    Period    Budget
                    vm1                          1    0       300       150
                    vm1                          1    3      1000       500
    
                If no -v is speficified, the default scheduling parameter for the
                domain are shown:
    
                    xl sched-rtds -d vm1
                    Name                        ID    Period    Budget
                    vm1                          1     10000      4000
    
                3) Users can set the budget and period of multiple VCPUs of a
                specific domain with only one command, e.g., "xl sched-rtds -d vm1
                -v 0 -p 100 -b 50 -v 3 -p 300 -b 150".
    
                To change the parameters of all the VCPUs of a domain, use -v all,
                e.g., "xl sched-rtds -d vm1 -v all -p 500 -b 250".
    
    CPUPOOLS COMMANDS
        Xen can group the physical cpus of a server in cpu-pools. Each physical
        CPU is assigned at most to one cpu-pool. Domains are each restricted to a
        single cpu-pool. Scheduling does not cross cpu-pool boundaries, so each
        cpu-pool has an own scheduler. Physical cpus and domains can be moved from
        one cpu-pool to another only by an explicit command. Cpu-pools can be
        specified either by name or by id.
    
        cpupool-create [OPTIONS] [ConfigFile] [Variable=Value
        ...]
            Create a cpu pool based an config from a ConfigFile or command-line
            parameters. Variable settings from the ConfigFile may be altered by
            specifying new or additional assignments on the command line.
    
            See the xlcpupool.cfg(5) manpage for more information.
    
            OPTIONS
    
            -f=FILE, --defconfig=FILE
                Use the given configuration file.
    
        cpupool-list [-c|--cpus] [cpu-pool]
            List CPU pools on the host. If -c is specified, xl prints a list of
            CPUs used by cpu-pool.
    
        cpupool-destroy cpu-pool
            Deactivates a cpu pool. This is possible only if no domain is active
            in the cpu-pool.
    
        cpupool-rename cpu-pool <newname>
            Renames a cpu-pool to newname.
    
        cpupool-cpu-add cpu-pool cpus|node:nodes
            Adds one or more CPUs or NUMA nodes to cpu-pool. CPUs and NUMA nodes
            can be specified as single CPU/node IDs or as ranges.
    
            For example:
    
             (a) xl cpupool-cpu-add mypool 4
             (b) xl cpupool-cpu-add mypool 1,5,10-16,^13
             (c) xl cpupool-cpu-add mypool node:0,nodes:2-3,^10-12,8
    
            means adding CPU 4 to mypool, in (a); adding CPUs 1,5,10,11,12,14,15
            and 16, in (b); and adding all the CPUs of NUMA nodes 0, 2 and 3, plus
            CPU 8, but keeping out CPUs 10,11,12, in (c).
    
            All the specified CPUs that can be added to the cpupool will be added
            to it. If some CPU can't (e.g., because they're already part of
            another cpupool), an error is reported about each one of them.
    
        cpupool-cpu-remove cpus|node:nodes
            Removes one or more CPUs or NUMA nodes from cpu-pool. CPUs and NUMA
            nodes can be specified as single CPU/node IDs or as ranges, using the
            exact same syntax as in cpupool-cpu-add above.
    
        cpupool-migrate domain cpu-pool
            Moves a domain specified by domain-id or domain-name into a cpu-pool.
            Domain-0 can't be moved to another cpu-pool.
    
        cpupool-numa-split
            Splits up the machine into one cpu-pool per numa node.
    
    VIRTUAL DEVICE COMMANDS
        Most virtual devices can be added and removed while guests are running,
        assuming that the necessary support exists in the guest. The effect to the
        guest OS is much the same as any hotplug event.
    
      BLOCK DEVICES
        block-attach domain-id disc-spec-component(s) ...
            Create a new virtual block device. This will trigger a hotplug event
            for the guest.
    
            Note that only PV block devices are supported by block-attach.
            Requests to attach emulated devices (eg, vdev=hdc) will result in only
            the PV view being available to the guest.
    
            OPTIONS
    
            domain-id
                The domain id of the guest domain that the device will be attached
                to.
    
            disc-spec-component
                A disc specification in the same format used for the disk variable
                in the domain config file. See xl-disk-configuration(5).
    
        block-detach domain-id devid [--force]
            Detach a domain's virtual block device. devid may be the symbolic name
            or the numeric device id given to the device by domain 0. You will
            need to run xl block-list to determine that number.
    
            Detaching the device requires the cooperation of the domain. If the
            domain fails to release the device (perhaps because the domain is hung
            or is still using the device), the detach will fail. The --force
            parameter will forcefully detach the device, but may cause IO errors
            in the domain.
    
        block-list domain-id
            List virtual block devices for a domain.
    
        cd-insert domain-id VirtualDevice target
            Insert a cdrom into a guest domain's existing virtial cd drive. The
            virtual drive must already exist but can be current empty.
    
            Only works with HVM domains.
    
            OPTIONS
    
            VirtualDevice
                How the device should be presented to the guest domain; for
                example "hdc".
    
            target
                the target path in the backend domain (usually domain 0) to be
                exported; Can be a block device or a file etc. See target in
                xl-disk-configuration(5).
    
        cd-eject domain-id VirtualDevice
            Eject a cdrom from a guest's virtual cd drive. Only works with HVM
            domains.
    
            OPTIONS
    
            VirtualDevice
                How the device should be presented to the guest domain; for
                example "hdc".
    
      NETWORK DEVICES
        network-attach domain-id network-device
            Creates a new network device in the domain specified by domain-id.
            network-device describes the device to attach, using the same format
            as the vif string in the domain config file. See xl.cfg and
            xl-network-configuration(5) for more informations.
    
            Note that only attaching PV network interface is supported.
    
        network-detach domain-id devid|mac
            Removes the network device from the domain specified by domain-id.
            devid is the virtual interface device number within the domain (i.e.
            the 3 in vif22.3). Alternatively the mac address can be used to select
            the virtual interface to detach.
    
        network-list domain-id
            List virtual network interfaces for a domain.
    
      CHANNEL DEVICES
        channel-list domain-id
            List virtual channel interfaces for a domain.
    
      VTPM DEVICES
        vtpm-attach domain-id vtpm-device
            Creates a new vtpm device in the domain specified by domain-id.
            vtpm-device describes the device to attach, using the same format as
            the vtpm string in the domain config file. See xl.cfg for more
            information.
    
        vtpm-detach domain-id devid|uuid
            Removes the vtpm device from the domain specified by domain-id.
            devid is the numeric device id given to the virtual trusted platform
            module device. You will need to run xl vtpm-list to determine that
            number. Alternatively the uuid of the vtpm can be used to select the
            virtual device to detach.
    
        vtpm-list domain-id
            List virtual trusted platform modules for a domain.
    
    PCI PASS-THROUGH
        pci-assignable-list
            List all the assignable PCI devices. These are devices in the system
            which are configured to be available for passthrough and are bound to
            a suitable PCI backend driver in domain 0 rather than a real driver.
    
        pci-assignable-add BDF
            Make the device at PCI Bus/Device/Function BDF assignable to guests.
            This will bind the device to the pciback driver. If it is already
            bound to a driver, it will first be unbound, and the original driver
            stored so that it can be re-bound to the same driver later if desired.
            If the device is already bound, it will return success.
    
            CAUTION: This will make the device unusable by Domain 0 until it is
            returned with pci-assignable-remove. Care should therefore be taken
            not to do this on a device critical to domain 0's operation, such as
            storage controllers, network interfaces, or GPUs that are currently
            being used.
    
        pci-assignable-remove [-r] BDF
            Make the device at PCI Bus/Device/Function BDF assignable to guests.
            This will at least unbind the device from pciback. If the -r option is
            specified, it will also attempt to re-bind the device to its original
            driver, making it usable by Domain 0 again. If the device is not bound
            to pciback, it will return success.
    
        pci-attach domain-id BDF
            Hot-plug a new pass-through pci device to the specified domain. BDF is
            the PCI Bus/Device/Function of the physical device to pass-through.
    
        pci-detach [-f] domain-id BDF
            Hot-unplug a previously assigned pci device from a domain. BDF is the
            PCI Bus/Device/Function of the physical device to be removed from the
            guest domain.
    
            If -f is specified, xl is going to forcefully remove the device even
            without guest's collaboration.
    
        pci-list domain-id
            List pass-through pci devices for a domain.
    
    USB PASS-THROUGH
        usbctrl-attach domain-id usbctrl-device
            Create a new USB controller in the domain specified by domain-id,
            usbctrl-device describes the device to attach, using form "KEY=VALUE
            KEY=VALUE ..." where KEY=VALUE has the same meaning as the usbctrl
            description in the domain config file. See xl.cfg for more
            information.
    
        usbctrl-detach domain-id devid
            Destroy a USB controller from the specified domain. devid is devid of
            the USB controller.
    
        usbdev-attach domain-id usbdev-device
            Hot-plug a new pass-through USB device to the domain specified by
            domain-id, usbdev-device describes the device to attach, using form
            "KEY=VALUE KEY=VALUE ..." where KEY=VALUE has the same meaning as the
            usbdev description in the domain config file. See xl.cfg for more
            information.
    
        usbdev-detach domain-id controller=devid
        port=number
            Hot-unplug a previously assigned USB device from a domain.
            controller=devid and port=number is USB controller:port in guest where
            the USB device is attached to.
    
        usb-list domain-id
            List pass-through usb devices for a domain.
    
    DEVICE-MODEL CONTROL
        qemu-monitor-command domain-id command
            Issue a monitor command to the device model of the domain specified by
            domain-id. command can be any valid command qemu understands. This can
            be e.g. used to add non-standard devices or devices with non-standard
            parameters to a domain. The output of the command is printed to
            stdout.
    
            Warning: This qemu monitor access is provided for convenience when
            debugging, troubleshooting, and experimenting. Its use is not
            supported by the Xen Project.
    
            Specifically, not all information printed by the qemu monitor will
            necessarily be accurate or complete, because in a Xen system qemu does
            not have a complete view of the guest.
    
            Furthermore, modifying the guest's setup via the qemu monitor may
            conflict with the Xen toolstack's assumptions. Resulting problems may
            include, but are not limited to: guest crashes; toolstack error
            messages; inability to migrate the guest; and security vulnerabilities
            which are not covered by the Xen Project security response policy.
    
            EXAMPLE
    
            Obtain information of USB devices connected as such via the device
            model (only!) to a domain:
    
             xl qemu-monitor-command vm1 'info usb'
              Device 0.2, Port 5, Speed 480 Mb/s, Product Mass Storage
    
    TMEM
        tmem-list I[<-l>] domain-id
            List tmem pools. If -l is specified, also list tmem stats.
    
        tmem-freeze domain-id
            Freeze tmem pools.
    
        tmem-thaw domain-id
            Thaw tmem pools.
    
        tmem-set domain-id [OPTIONS]
            Change tmem settings.
    
            OPTIONS
    
            -w WEIGHT
                Weight (int)
    
            -p COMPRESS
                Compress (int)
    
        tmem-shared-auth domain-id [OPTIONS]
            De/authenticate shared tmem pool.
    
            OPTIONS
    
            -u UUID
                Specify uuid (abcdef01-2345-6789-1234-567890abcdef)
    
            -a AUTH
                0=auth,1=deauth
    
        tmem-freeable
            Get information about how much freeable memory (MB) is in-use by tmem.
    
    FLASK
        FLASK is a security framework that defines a mandatory access control
        policy providing fine-grained controls over Xen domains, allowing the
        policy writer to define what interactions between domains, devices, and
        the hypervisor are permitted. Some example of what you can do using
        XSM/FLASK: - Prevent two domains from communicating via event channels or
        grants - Control which domains can use device passthrough (and which
        devices) - Restrict or audit operations performed by privileged domains -
        Prevent a privileged domain from arbitrarily mapping pages from other
        domains.
    
        You can find more details on how to use FLASK and an example security
        policy here: <http://xenbits.xen.org/docs/unstable/misc/xsm-flask.txt>
    
        getenforce
            Determine if the FLASK security module is loaded and enforcing its
            policy.
    
        setenforce 1|0|Enforcing|Permissive
            Enable or disable enforcing of the FLASK access controls. The default
            is permissive, but this can be changed to enforcing by specifying
            "flask=enforcing" or "flask=late" on the hypervisor's command line.
    
        loadpolicy policy-file
            Load FLASK policy from the given policy file. The initial policy is
            provided to the hypervisor as a multiboot module; this command allows
            runtime updates to the policy. Loading new security policy will reset
            runtime changes to device labels.
    
    PLATFORM SHARED RESOURCE MONITORING/CONTROL
        Intel Haswell and later server platforms offer shared resource monitoring
        and control technologies. The availability of these technologies and the
        hardware capabilities can be shown with psr-hwinfo.
    
        See <http://xenbits.xen.org/docs/unstable/misc/xl-psr.html> for more
        information.
    
        psr-hwinfo [OPTIONS]
            Show Platform Shared Resource (PSR) hardware information.
    
            OPTIONS
    
            -m, --cmt
                Show Cache Monitoring Technology (CMT) hardware information.
    
            -a, --cat
                Show Cache Allocation Technology (CAT) hardware information.
    
      CACHE MONITORING TECHNOLOGY
        Intel Haswell and later server platforms offer monitoring capability in
        each logical processor to measure specific platform shared resource
        metric, for example, L3 cache occupancy. In the Xen implementation, the
        monitoring granularity is domain level. To monitor a specific domain, just
        attach the domain id with the monitoring service. When the domain doesn't
        need to be monitored any more, detach the domain id from the monitoring
        service.
    
        Intel Broadwell and later server platforms also offer total/local memory
        bandwidth monitoring. Xen supports per-domain monitoring for these two
        additional monitoring types. Both memory bandwidth monitoring and L3 cache
        occupancy monitoring share the same set of underlying monitoring service.
        Once a domain is attached to the monitoring service, monitoring data can
        be shown for any of these monitoring types.
    
        psr-cmt-attach [domain-id]
            attach: Attach the platform shared resource monitoring service to a
            domain.
    
        psr-cmt-detach [domain-id]
            detach: Detach the platform shared resource monitoring service from a
            domain.
    
        psr-cmt-show [psr-monitor-type] [domain-id]
            Show monitoring data for a certain domain or all domains. Current
            supported monitor types are: - "cache-occupancy": showing the L3 cache
            occupancy(KB). - "total-mem-bandwidth": showing the total memory
            bandwidth(KB/s). - "local-mem-bandwidth": showing the local memory
            bandwidth(KB/s).
    
      CACHE ALLOCATION TECHNOLOGY
        Intel Broadwell and later server platforms offer capabilities to configure
        and make use of the Cache Allocation Technology (CAT) mechanisms, which
        enable more cache resources (i.e. L3 cache) to be made available for high
        priority applications. In the Xen implementation, CAT is used to control
        cache allocation on VM basis. To enforce cache on a specific domain, just
        set capacity bitmasks (CBM) for the domain.
    
        Intel Broadwell and later server platforms also offer Code/Data
        Prioritization (CDP) for cache allocations, which support specifying code
        or data cache for applications. CDP is used on a per VM basis in the Xen
        implementation. To specify code or data CBM for the domain, CDP feature
        must be enabled and CBM type options need to be specified when setting
        CBM, and the type options (code and data) are mutually exclusive.
    
        psr-cat-cbm-set [OPTIONS] domain-id cbm
            Set cache capacity bitmasks(CBM) for a domain. For how to specify
            cbm please refer to
            <http://xenbits.xen.org/docs/unstable/misc/xl-psr.html>.
    
            OPTIONS
    
            -s SOCKET, --socket=SOCKET
                Specify the socket to process, otherwise all sockets are
                processed.
    
            -c, --code
                Set code CBM when CDP is enabled.
    
            -d, --data
                Set data CBM when CDP is enabled.
    
        psr-cat-show [domain-id]
            Show CAT settings for a certain domain or all domains.
    
    IGNORED FOR COMPATIBILITY WITH XM
        xl is mostly command-line compatible with the old xm utility used with the
        old Python xend. For compatibility, the following options are ignored:
    
        xl migrate --live
    
    TO BE DOCUMENTED
        We need better documentation for:
    
        tmem
            Transcendent Memory.
    
    SEE ALSO
        The following man pages:
    
        xl.cfg(5), xlcpupool.cfg(5), xentop(1), xl-disk-configuration(5)
        xl-network-configuration(5)
    
        And the following documents on the xen.org website:
    
        <http://xenbits.xen.org/docs/unstable/misc/xsm-flask.txt>
        <http://xenbits.xen.org/docs/unstable/misc/xl-psr.html>
    
        For systems that don't automatically bring CPU online:
    
        <http://wiki.xen.org/wiki/Paravirt_Linux_CPU_Hotplug>
    
    BUGS
        Send bugs to [email protected], see
        http://wiki.xen.org/xenwiki/ReportingBugs on how to send bug reports.
    

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