2 multiseat howto (with some multihead coverage)
3 ==============================================
8 First you must compile qemu with a user interface supporting
9 multihead/multiseat and input event routing. Right now this
10 list includes sdl2 and gtk (both 2+3):
12 ./configure --enable-sdl --with-sdlabi=2.0
16 ./configure --enable-gtk
19 Next put together the qemu command line:
21 qemu -enable-kvm -usb $memory $disk $whatever \
22 -display [ sdl | gtk ] \
26 That is it for the first head, which will use the standard vga, the
27 standard ps/2 keyboard (implicitly there) and the usb-tablet. Now the
28 additional switches for the second head:
30 -device pci-bridge,addr=12.0,chassis_nr=2,id=head.2 \
31 -device secondary-vga,bus=head.2,addr=02.0,id=video.2 \
32 -device nec-usb-xhci,bus=head.2,addr=0f.0,id=usb.2 \
33 -device usb-kbd,bus=usb.2.0,port=1,display=video.2 \
34 -device usb-tablet,bus=usb.2.0,port=2,display=video.2
36 This places a pci bridge in slot 12, connects a display adapter and
37 xhci (usb) controller to the bridge. Then it adds a usb keyboard and
38 usb mouse, both connected to the xhci and linked to the display.
40 The "display=video2" sets up the input routing. Any input coming from
41 the window which belongs to the video.2 display adapter will be routed
42 to these input devices.
44 The sdl2 ui will start up with two windows, one for each display
45 device. The gtk ui will start with a single window and each display
46 in a separate tab. You can either simply switch tabs to switch heads,
47 or use the "View / Detach tab" menu item to move one of the displays
48 to its own window so you can see both display devices side-by-side.
50 Note on spice: Spice handles multihead just fine. But it can't do
51 multiseat. For tablet events the event source is sent to the spice
52 agent. But qemu can't figure it, so it can't do input routing.
53 Fixing this needs a new or extended input interface between
54 libspice-server and qemu. For keyboard events it is even worse: The
55 event source isn't included in the spice protocol, so the wire
56 protocol must be extended to support this.
62 You need a pretty recent linux guest. systemd with loginctl. kernel
63 3.14+ with CONFIG_DRM_BOCHS enabled. Fedora 20 will do. Must be
64 fully updated for the new kernel though, i.e. the live iso doesn't cut
67 Now we'll have to configure the guest. Boot and login. "lspci -vt"
68 should list the pci bridge with the display adapter and usb controller:
70 [root@fedora ~]# lspci -vt
71 -[0000:00]-+-00.0 Intel Corporation 440FX - 82441FX PMC [Natoma]
73 \-12.0-[01]--+-02.0 Device 1234:1111
74 \-0f.0 NEC Corporation USB 3.0 Host Controller
76 Good. Now lets tell the system that the pci bridge and all devices
77 below it belong to a separate seat by dropping a file into
80 [root@fedora ~]# cat /etc/udev/rules.d/70-qemu-autoseat.rules
81 SUBSYSTEMS=="pci", DEVPATH=="*/0000:00:12.0", TAG+="seat", ENV{ID_AUTOSEAT}="1"
83 Reboot. System should come up with two seats. With loginctl you can
84 check the configuration:
86 [root@fedora ~]# loginctl list-seats
89 seat-pci-pci-0000_00_12_0
93 You can use "loginctl seat-status seat-pci-pci-0000_00_12_0" to list
94 the devices attached to the seat.
96 Background info is here:
97 http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/multiseat/
102 Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>