How to enable nested virtualization
Note:
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Disclaimer:
Nested virtualization is enabled by default on Ubuntu. If you are using Ubuntu, it’s unlikely that you will need to manually enable the feature. If you check (using the steps below) and discover that nested virtualization is enabled, then you will not need to do anything further.
There may be use cases where you need to enable nested virtualization so that you can deploy instances inside other instances. The sections below explain how to check if nested virtualization is enabled/available and how to enable it if that is not the case. Bear in mind that currently nested virtualization is only supported in Ubuntu on x86
machine architecture.
Check if nested virtualization is enabled
Check if the required kernel module for your CPU is already loaded. Hosts with Intel CPUs require the kvm_intel
module while AMD hosts require kvm_amd
instead:
$ lsmod | grep -i kvm
kvm_intel 204800 0
kvm 1347584 1 kvm_intel
If the module is loaded
If the module is already loaded, you can check if nested virtualization is enabled by running the following command:
cat /sys/module/<module>/parameters/nested
As an example for AMD hosts:
$ cat /sys/module/kvm_amd/parameters/nested
1
If the output is either 1
or Y
then nested virtualization is enabled and you will not need to manually enable the feature (this should be the case for Ubuntu users).
If the module is not loaded
If the module your host requires is not loaded you can load it using modprobe
and add the property nested=1
to enable nested virtualization as shown below for Intel hosts:
modprobe kvm-intel nested=1
Or as follows for AMD hosts:
modprobe kvm-amd nested=1
Enable nested virtualization
If the above checks indicate that nested virtualization is not enabled, you can follow the below steps to enable it.
-
Create a file in
/etc/modprobe.d
-e.g.,/etc/modprobe.d/kvm.conf
- and add the lineoptions kvm-intel nested=1
to that file (replacekvm-intel
withkvm-amd
for AMD hosts). -
Reload the kernel module to apply the changes:
sudo modprobe -r <module>
Example for Intel hosts:
sudo modprobe -r kvm-intel
- You should now be able to see nested virtualization enabled:
Example for Intel hosts:
$ cat /sys/module/kvm_intel/parameters/nested
Y
Check and enable nested virtualization inside an instance
Once the host is ready to use nested virtualization it is time to check if the guest instance where the other instance(s) are going to run is able to host these nested VMs.
To determine if an instance can host another instance on top, run the below command within the instance:
egrep "svm|vmx" /proc/cpuinfo
If any of these are present in the output (depending on whether the host is AMD or Intel respectively), then virtualization is available in that instance. If this is not the case you will need to edit the instance CPU settings:
-
Shut down the instance
-
Edit the instance XML definition file executing:
virsh edit <instance>
-
Search the
cpu mode
parameter in and set its value to eitherhost-model
orhost-passthrough
(details about these modes can be found here).Sample
cpu mode
parameter in XML with nested virtualization:<cpu mode='host-model' check='partial'/>
-
Save the modifications and start the instance
Limitations of nested virtualization
Nested virtualization has some key limitations you’d need to consider. Namely, not all KVM features will be available for instances running nested VMs and actions such as migrating or saving the parent instance will not be possible until the nested instance is stopped.