$ remmina --connect /path/to/console.rdp
Container-native virtualization provides different virtual machine consoles that you can use to accomplish different product tasks. You can access these consoles through the web console and by using CLI commands.
You can connect to the VNC and serial consoles of a running virtual machine from the Consoles tab in the Virtual Machine Details screen of the web console.
There are two consoles available: the graphical VNC Console and the Serial Console. The VNC Console opens by default whenever you navigate to the Consoles tab. You can switch between the consoles using the VNC Console Serial Console list.
Console sessions remain active in the background unless they are disconnected. When the Disconnect before switching checkbox is active and you switch consoles, the current console session is disconnected and a new session with the selected console connects to the virtual machine. This ensures only one console session is open at a time.
The Send Key button lists key combinations to send to the virtual machine.
Use the Disconnect button to manually disconnect the Serial Console session from the virtual machine.
Use the Reconnect button to manually open a Serial Console session to the virtual machine.
You can connect to a virtual machine by using the web console.
Ensure you are in the correct project. If not, click the Project list and select the appropriate project.
Click Workloads → Virtual Machines to display the virtual machines in the project.
Select a virtual machine.
In the Overview tab, click the virt-launcher-<vm-name>
Pod.
Click the Terminal tab. If the terminal is blank, select the terminal and press any key to initiate connection.
Connect to the Serial Console of a running virtual machine from the Consoles tab in the Virtual Machine Details screen of the web console.
In the container-native virtualization console, click Workloads → Virtual Machines.
Select a virtual machine.
Click Consoles. The VNC console opens by default.
Click the VNC Console drop-down list and select Serial Console.
Connect to the VNC console of a running virtual machine from the Consoles tab in the Virtual Machine Details screen of the web console.
In the container-native virtualization console, click Workloads → Virtual Machines.
Select a virtual machine.
Click Consoles. The VNC console opens by default.
The desktop viewer console, which utilizes the Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP), provides a better console experience for connecting to Windows virtual machines.
To connect to a Windows virtual machine with RDP, download the console.rdp
file for the virtual machine from the Consoles tab in the
Virtual Machine Details screen of the web console and supply it to your
preferred RDP client.
A running Windows virtual machine with the QEMU guest agent installed. The
qemu-guest-agent
is included in the VirtIO drivers.
A layer-2 NIC attached to the virtual machine.
An RDP client installed on a machine on the same network as the Windows virtual machine.
In the container-native virtualization console, click Workloads → Virtual Machines.
Select a Windows virtual machine.
Click the Consoles tab.
Click the Consoles list and select Desktop Viewer.
In the Network Interface list, select the layer-2 NIC.
Click Launch Remote Desktop to download the console.rdp
file.
Open an RDP client and reference the console.rdp
file. For example, using
remmina:
$ remmina --connect /path/to/console.rdp
Enter the Administrator user name and password to connect to the Windows virtual machine.
You can use SSH to access a virtual machine after you expose port 22 on it.
The virtctl expose
command forwards a virtual machine instance port to a node
port and creates a service for enabled access. The following example creates
the fedora-vm-ssh
service that forwards port 22 of the <fedora-vm>
virtual
machine to a port on the node:
The virtual machine instance you want to access must be connected
to the default Pod network by using the masquerade
binding method.
The virtual machine instance you want to access must be running.
Install the OpenShift CLI (oc
).
Run the following command to create the fedora-vm-ssh
service:
$ virtctl expose vm <fedora-vm> --port=20022 --target-port=22 --name=fedora-vm-ssh --type=nodeport (1)
1 | <fedora-vm> is the name of the virtual machine that you run the
fedora-vm-ssh service on. |
Check the service to find out which port the service acquired:
$ oc get svc NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE fedora-vm-ssh nodeport 127.0.0.1 <none> 20022:32551/TCP 6s
In this example, the service acquired the 32551
port.
Log in to the virtual machine instance via SSH. Use the ipAddress
of the
node and the port that you found in the previous step:
$ ssh username@<node_IP_address> -p 32551
The virtctl console
command opens a serial console to the specified virtual
machine instance.
The virt-viewer
package must be installed.
The virtual machine instance you want to access must be running.
Connect to the serial console with virtctl
:
$ virtctl console <VMI>
The virtctl
client utility can use the remote-viewer
function to open a
graphical console to a running virtual machine instance. This capability is
included in the virt-viewer
package.
The virt-viewer
package must be installed.
The virtual machine instance you want to access must be running.
If you use |
Connect to the graphical interface with the virtctl
utility:
$ virtctl vnc <VMI>
If the command failed, try using the -v
flag to collect
troubleshooting information:
$ virtctl vnc <VMI> -v 4
The Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) provides a better console experience for connecting to Windows virtual machines.
To connect to a Windows virtual machine with RDP, specify the IP address of the attached L2 NIC to your RDP client.
A running Windows virtual machine with the QEMU guest agent installed. The
qemu-guest-agent
is included in the VirtIO drivers.
A layer 2 NIC attached to the virtual machine.
An RDP client installed on a machine on the same network as the Windows virtual machine.
Log in to the container-native virtualization cluster through the oc
CLI tool as a user with
an access token.
$ oc login -u <user> https://<cluster.example.com>:8443
Use oc describe vmi
to display the configuration of the running
Windows virtual machine.
$ oc describe vmi <windows-vmi-name>
...
spec:
networks:
- name: default
pod: {}
- multus:
networkName: cnv-bridge
name: bridge-net
...
status:
interfaces:
- interfaceName: eth0
ipAddress: 198.51.100.0/24
ipAddresses:
198.51.100.0/24
mac: a0:36:9f:0f:b1:70
name: default
- interfaceName: eth1
ipAddress: 192.0.2.0/24
ipAddresses:
192.0.2.0/24
2001:db8::/32
mac: 00:17:a4:77:77:25
name: bridge-net
...
Identify and copy the IP address of the layer 2 network interface. This is
192.0.2.0
in the above example, or 2001:db8::
if you prefer IPv6.
Open an RDP client and use the IP address copied in the previous step for the connection.
Enter the Administrator user name and password to connect to the Windows virtual machine.