Nomad
Qemu Driver
Name: qemu
The qemu driver provides a generic virtual machine runner. Qemu can utilize
the KVM kernel module to utilize hardware virtualization features and provide
great performance. Currently the qemu driver can map a set of ports from the
host machine to the guest virtual machine, and provides configuration for
resource allocation.
The qemu driver can execute any regular qemu image (e.g. qcow, img,
iso), and is currently invoked with qemu-system-x86_64.
The driver requires the image to be accessible from the Nomad client via the
artifact downloader.
Task Configuration
task "webservice" {
  driver = "qemu"
  config {
    image_path        = "/path/to/my/linux.img"
    accelerator       = "kvm"
    graceful_shutdown = true
    args              = ["-nodefaults", "-nodefconfig"]
  }
}
The qemu driver supports the following configuration in the job spec:
- image_path- The path to the downloaded image. In most cases this will just be the name of the image. However, if the supplied artifact is an archive that contains the image in a subfolder, the path will need to be the relative path (- subdir/from_archive/my.img).
- accelerator- (Optional) The type of accelerator to use in the invocation. If the host machine has- qemuinstalled with KVM support, users can specify- kvmfor the- accelerator. Default is- tcg.
- graceful_shutdown- (bool: false)- Using the qemu monitor, send an ACPI shutdown signal to virtual machines rather than simply terminating them. This emulates a physical power button press, and gives instances a chance to shut down cleanly. If the VM is still running after- kill_timeout, it will be forcefully terminated. (Note that prior to qemu 2.10.1, the monitor socket path is limited to 108 characters. Graceful shutdown will be disabled if qemu is < 2.10.1 and the generated monitor path exceeds this length. You may encounter this issue if you set long data_dir or alloc_dir paths.) This feature is currently not supported on Windows.
- port_map- (Optional) A key-value map of port labels.- config { # Forward the host port with the label "db" to the guest VM's port 6539. port_map { db = 6539 } }
- args- (Optional) A list of strings that is passed to qemu as command line options.
Examples
A simple config block to run a qemu image:
task "virtual" {
  driver = "qemu"
 
  config {
    image_path  = "local/linux.img"
    accelerator = "kvm"
    args        = ["-nodefaults", "-nodefconfig"]
  }
 
  # Specifying an artifact is required with the "qemu"
  # driver. This is the # mechanism to ship the image to be run.
  artifact {
    source = "https://internal.file.server/linux.img"
 
    options {
      checksum = "md5:123445555555555"
    }
  }
Capabilities
The qemu driver implements the following capabilities.
| Feature | Implementation | 
|---|---|
| nomad alloc signal | false | 
| nomad alloc exec | false | 
| filesystem isolation | image | 
| network isolation | none | 
| volume mounting | none | 
Client Requirements
The qemu driver requires Qemu to be installed and in your system's $PATH.
The task must also specify at least one artifact to download, as this is the only
way to retrieve the image being run.
Client Attributes
The qemu driver will set the following client attributes:
- driver.qemu- Set to- 1if Qemu is found on the host node. Nomad determines this by executing- qemu-system-x86_64 -versionon the host and parsing the output
- driver.qemu.version- Version of- qemu-system-x86_64, ex:- 2.4.0
Here is an example of using these properties in a job file:
job "docs" {
  # Only run this job where the qemu version is higher than 1.2.3.
  constraint {
    attribute = "${driver.qemu.version}"
    operator  = ">"
    value     = "1.2.3"
  }
}
Plugin Options
plugin "qemu" {
  config {
    image_paths = ["/mnt/image/paths"]
  }
}
- image_paths(- []string:- []) - Specifies the host paths the Qemu driver is allowed to load images from.
Resource Isolation
Nomad uses Qemu to provide full software virtualization for virtual machine workloads. Nomad can use Qemu KVM's hardware-assisted virtualization to deliver better performance.
Virtualization provides the highest level of isolation for workloads that require additional security, and resource use is constrained by the Qemu hypervisor rather than the host kernel. VM network traffic still flows through the host's interface(s).