From Fedora Project Wiki

(Create page)
 
(Whoops, pasted the wrong content!)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{QA/Test_Case


|description=
Suspend and Hibernate a VM. Verify it resumes as expected. For more details, see:
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Features/Virt_Guest_Suspend_Hibernate
|setup=
Nothing beyond the initial test day setup (basically a function F18 VM).
|actions=
== Initiating suspend/hibernate from inside the guest ==
# Start a VM, connect to the graphical console with virt-manager
# From inside the guest, as root, run:
      # pm-suspend
# Verify the state changes to 'suspended' in the main virt-manager window
# Click inside the black VM guest console, and press any key on the keyboard
# Verify the VM resumes right where it left off.
# From inside the guest, as root, run:
      # pm-hibernate
# Verify the guest appears to shutdown in the main virt-manager window
# Start the guest again
# Verify that the VM resumes right where it left off
== Initiating suspend/hibernate from the host ==
# Start a VM, connect to the graphical console with virt-manager
# From the host machine, as root, suspend the guest with virsh:
      # virsh dompmsuspend --target mem
# Watch virsh until the VM is listed as 'suspended':
      # virsh list --all
# Wake the guest up with virsh:
      # virsh dompmwakeup
# Using the graphical console, verify the guest appeared to resume correctly
# From the host machine, as root, hibernate the guest with virsh:
      # virsh dompmsuspend --target disk
# Watch virsh until the VM is listed as shutoff:
      # virsh list --all
# Wake the guest up with virsh:
      # virsh dompmwakeup
# Verify that the VM resumes right where it left off
|results=
No obvious errors encountered, guests seem to be functioning as normal after resuming.
}}
[[Category:Virtualization Test Cases]]

Revision as of 00:41, 30 October 2012