How to detect virtualization 虚拟机检测

除了下面的方法外,mac地址也可以检测虚拟机。
Update: You may be interested in [[the perl module|perl-module-for-virtualization-detection]] implementing these tricks.

Frequently, our customers want to install our software in a virtual machine. This can be OK, but frequently they hit a CPU, memory, or IO limit caused by running in a constrained virtual environment. When this happens, we really like to know if they’re running under virtualization when we try to support them. Here’s some tricks to detect, from a shell, if the system is virtualized.

The first thing to check is dmesg. On a recently-booted system, checking the ‘dmesg’ command output may be sufficient. Otherwise, try “cat /var/log/dmesg” instead of “dmesg”

 

  • VMWare:
     # dmesg | grep -i virtual
     VMware vmxnet virtual NIC driver
       Vendor: VMware    Model: Virtual disk      Rev: 1.0
     hda: VMware Virtual IDE CDROM Drive, ATAPI CD/DVD-ROM drive
    
  • QEmu or KVM:If the “-cpu host” option has not been used, QEmu and KVM will identify themselves as:
     # dmesg | grep -i virtual
     CPU: AMD QEMU Virtual CPU version 0.9.1 stepping 03
    

    otherwise, the host’s CPU information will be used both in dmesg, or in /proc/cpuinfo.

    However, you should see something like:

     $ dmesg | grep -i virtual
     [    0.000000] Booting paravirtualized kernel on KVM
    

    on newer kernels that understand that they’re running under paravirtualization. (Thanks to René Pfeiffer for pointing this out)

  • Microsoft VirtualPC:
     # dmesg | grep -i virtual
     hda: Virtual HD, ATA DISK drive
     hdc: Virtual CD, ATAPI CD/DVD-ROM drive
    
  • Xen (thanks, wardi and others)
    # dmesg | grep -i xen
    Xen virtual console successfully installed as tty1
    
  • Virtuozzo
    # dmesg
    (returns no output)
    
    # cat /var/log/dmesg
    (returns no output)
    
    # ls -al /proc/vz
    veinfo  veinfo_redir  veredir  vestat  vzaquota  vzdata
    

On longer-running systems, you may need to grep /var/log/dmesg instead.

If that doesn’t produce anything useful, try using dmidecode to look at the BIOS information. Frequently, there will be at least one component identifying itself as virtualized:

  • VMWare:
     # dmidecode | egrep -i 'manufacturer|product'
     Manufacturer: VMware, Inc.
     Product Name: VMware Virtual Platform
    
  • Microsoft VirtualPC:
     # dmidecode | egrep -i 'manufacturer|product'
     Manufacturer: Microsoft Corporation
     Product Name: Virtual Machine
    
  • QEMU or KVM:
     # dmidecode | egrep -i 'vendor'
     Vendor: QEMU
    
  • Virtuozzo:
     # dmidecode
     /dev/mem: Permission denied
    
  • Xen:
     # dmidecode | grep -i domU
           Product Name: HVM domU
    

You should just examine the output of dmidecode directly rather than trying to grep as above, in case the output changes. QEMU, for example, doesn’t report the vendor in all versions.

Next, check disk devices for identification as virtualized:

  • VMWare:
    # cat /proc/ide/hd*/model
    VMware Virtual IDE CDROM Drive
    # cat /proc/scsi/scsi
    Attached devices:
    Host: scsi0 Channel: 00 Id: 00 Lun: 00
      Vendor: VMware   Model: Virtual disk     Rev: 1.0
      Type:   Direct-Access                    ANSI SCSI revision: 02
    
  • Microsoft VirtualPC:
    # cat /proc/ide/hd*/model
    Virtual HD
    Virtual CD
    
  • QEMU, KVM, or Xen:
    # cat /proc/ide/hd*/model
    QEMU HARDDISK
    QEMU DVD-ROM
    
  • Virtuozzo:
    # ls -al /dev/vzfs
    b-----x--- 1 root root 0, 19 2009-04-06 15:04 /dev/vzfs
    
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