Suppose the testing VM is named GUEST_X and it has 4 VCPUs.
Method A:
If you are using libvirt to manage VMs.
You can type:
sudo grep pid /var/run/libvirt/qemu/GUEST_X.xml
Then, you will see VCPUs' PID like this:
<domstatus state='running' reason='booted' pid='6556' >
<vcpu pid='6558'/ >
<vcpu pid='6559'/ >
<vcpu pid='6560'/ >
<vcpu pid='6561'/ >
Method B:
Alternatively, you can find the guest's main PID in user space by typing this:
ps aux | grep GUEST_XYou will see something like this:
root 6556 0.1 0.0 136560 3472 ? Sl 20:49 0:02 /usr/bin/kvm ...GUEST_X....(a long list of parameters)Then, you can use ls to check the directories in
/proc/6556/task/You will see directories like this
/proc/6556/task/6556/where 6558~6561 are PIDs of this guest's VCPUs.
/proc/6556/task/6558/
/proc/6556/task/6559/
/proc/6556/task/6560/
/proc/6556/task/6561/
Ending picture today:
Niagara Falls view [courtesy of my dear wife - Claire Huang]
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