ipvtap is similar to macvtap, but works over wifi too, since it uses the same mac address as the wifi interface.
libvirt doesn't support ipvtap, so we have to configure everything manually. Important data we need before we start:
- the name of the wifi interface,
wlan0
in my case (it's already connected - use NM or networkd+iwd). - the mac address of the wifi interface (it must be the same in the guest too)
On the host:
sudo ip link add name ipvtap0 link wlan0 type ipvtap mode l2 bridge
sudo ip link set up ipvtap0
The network interface for the guest is configured via the following xml
using the mac address from wlan0/ipvtap0:
<interface type="ethernet">
<mac address="f8:d1:11:18:81:c3"/>
<target dev="ipvtap0" managed="no"/>
<model type="virtio"/>
<alias name="net0"/>
<address type="pci" domain="0x0000" bus="0x05" slot="0x00" function="0x0"/>
</interface>
⚠️ DHCP is a … bit complicated
Now, I can start the VM, but I can't ping from/to router to/from the VM, until I configure the guest address on the host ipvtap0 too:
sudo ip addr add dev ipvtap0 192.168.17.111/32
this might be fixable with some proxy-arp?
Host:
- Archlinux, 5.6.15-arch1-1
- libvirt 6.4.0-1
- qemu-headless 5.0.0-6
Guest:
- Archlinux testing, 5.7.0-zen1-1-zen
Thanks for this instruction. It helped me to get the wifi bridged network working without parprouted or over-complicated settings.
I guess it's better to remove this part
virt-manager didn't allow me to save the config because the "bus" had already been bound to another device.
So I just deleted the "address" line and virt-manager added the missing part itself with a free bus number. Same with the"alias" part.
Also, it's worth noting that the IP address needs to be manually set on a guest.