I wanna share /mnt so I can download stuff to my hard drives

    • wildbus8979@sh.itjust.works
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      2 months ago

      Thats the best answer. The other option is to use Spice, which will require installing the qemu guest agent on the guest OS.

  • thingsiplay@beehaw.org
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    2 months ago

    Sharing a folder in virt-manager was a something. This is for Linux on Linux only. Didn’t use a virtual manager for a while now, but I have notes how to do it. I think there are two ways, one with virtiofs and the other way with virtio-9p if the guest doesn’t support virtiofs? I honestly forgot the details, so you might need to research a bit again. I’m relatively new to Virt-Manager and Qemu+Kvm, and don’t understand every detail. It was a challenge to figure out all of this. My notes:

    Host

    First create a directory on your host system (the real machine outside of virtual machine). This folder will be shared:

    mkdir /home/tuncay/Public/vm_share/
    chmod 777 /home/tuncay/Public/vm_share/
    

    In the Virt-Manager for your Linux guest, set following settings first.

    either

    virtiofs:

    
        Virt-Manager:
        Add Hardware > Filesystem
            - Driver: virtiofs
            - Source: /home/tuncay/Public/vm_share
            - Target: share
    

    or

    virtio-9p:

        Virt-Manager:
        Add Hardware > Filesystem
            - Driver: virtio-9p
            - Source: /home/tuncay/Public/vm_share
            - Target: /share
    

    Then go and start the guest virtual machine. In the guest execute following commands, depending on which previous settings you have. Just create a folder in the virtual machine and mount it with virtiofs. Here this means “share” is the target (we set previously under - Target: /share) and “home/tuncay/Public” is the folder you want to use IN THE guest. The “share” name will then be connected to Virt-Manager, which in previous settings resolves to - Source: /home/tuncay/Public/vm_share on your real machine.

    virtiofs:

    Either mount the drive every time you start the guest, or you can just mount it in /etc/fstab automatically, like in bottom example.

        Guest:
        mkdir /home/tuncay/Public/
        sudo mount -t virtiofs share /home/tuncay/Public
    
        ... or Guest /etc/fstab:
        share   /home/tuncay/Public       virtiofs        defaults        0       0
    

    or use virtio-9p, but this one does not work with fstab and the command is slightly more complicated. You can write a script and save it in the guest. Either autorun the script or just when you need it by demand.

    virtio-9p:

        Guest:
        mkdir /home/tuncay/Public/
        sudo mount -t 9p -otrans=virtio,rw,version=9p2000.L /share /home/tuncay/Public