Documentation/Networking
Setting up networking in QEMU requires configuring a networking backend and choosing a virtual network card to emulate. This section deals with configuring a networking backend. In most cases, if you don't have any specific networking requirements other than to be able to access to a web page from your guest, slirp is a good choice. However, if you are looking to run any kind of network service or have your guest participate in a network in any meaningful way, tap is usually the best choice.
Choosing which networking backend to use
Slirp (user networking)
The slirp networking backend implements a full TCP/IP stack within QEMU and uses that stack to implement a virtual NAT'd networked. This is the default networking backend and generally is the easiest to use. It has the following limitations:
- there is a lot of overhead so the performance is poor
- ICMP traffic does not work (you cannot use ping within a guest)
- the guest is not directly accessible from the host or the external network
Tap
The tap networking backend makes use of a tap networking device in the host. It offers very good performance and can be configured to create virtually any type of network topology. Unfortunately, it requires configuration of that network topology in the host which tends to be different depending on the operating system you are using. Generally speaking, it also requires that you invoke QEMU as root.
VDE
The VDE networking backend uses the Virtual Distribute Ethernet infrastructure to network guests. Unless you specifically know that you want to use VDE, it is probably not the best backend to use.
Socket
The socket networking backend, together with QEMU VLANs, allow you to create a network of guests that can see each other. It's primarily useful in extending the network created by Documentation/Networking/Slirp to multiple virtual machines. In general, if you want to have multiple guests communicate, tap is a better choice unless you do not have root access to the host environment.
How do I...
- Use tap to let guests be visible on the host network
- Use tap with a wireless adapter on the host
- Forward ports with slirp