| VMD(8) | System Manager's Manual | VMD(8) |
vmd — virtual
machine daemon
vmd |
[-dnv] [-D
macro=value]
[-f file] |
vmd is a daemon responsible for the
execution of virtual machines (VMs) on a host. vmd
is typically started at boot time and is controlled via
vmctl(8).
To have vmd enabled at boot time, use
“rcctl enable vmd”, which sets
vmd_flags=""in rc.conf.local(8).
vmd interfaces with the virtual machine
monitor (VMM) built into the kernel. One instance of
vmd will be spawned for each VM running on the host,
plus extra instances for control operations. Each child
vmd will in turn create one or more VCPU (virtual
CPU) threads responsible for driving the VM's operations using
vmm(4).
vmd is also responsible for proxying
various other commands/requests from vmctl(8), such as
stopping VMs, and retrieving information from vmm(4) about
running VMs.
When the host machine is shut down, vmd
sends each running VM a shutdown request via the vmmci(4)
device. If the VMs are vmmci-aware, this provides each VM the chance to shut
down cleanly in anticipation of host shutdown. During shutdown,
vmd waits 30 seconds for the VMs to terminate
cleanly before forcibly stopping them. This 30 second default can be changed
by “rcctl set vmd timeout n”, where 'n' is the desired timeout
in seconds.
The options are as follows:
-D
macro=value-d-f
file-n-v-v options increase the
verbosity.The vmd command first appeared in
OpenBSD 5.9.
Mike Larkin <mlarkin@openbsd.org> and Reyk Floeter <reyk@openbsd.org>.
| September 24, 2024 | Debian |