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1.7 KiB
1.7 KiB
This Pi-KVM cookbook has some undocumented recipes for your Pi-KVM
Take a HDMI screenshot via console on Pi-KVM
# curl --unix-socket /run/kvmd/ustreamer.sock http://localhost/snapshot -o screen.jpg
Get installed KVMD version via console
# pacman -Q | grep kvmd
Upload .ISO images manually
- Remount internal storage to rw (read-write):
# kvmd-helper-otgmsd-remount rw
- Upload the .ISO image(s) to
/var/lib/kvmd/msd/images
via scp or similar. - Create an empty file in
/var/lib/kvmd/msd/meta/
with the exact name (case sensitive!) of the uploaded image. This will indicate Pi-KVM that the uploaded image is okay and can be used. For example:/var/lib/kvmd/msd/meta/ubuntu-18.04.4-desktop-amd64.iso.complete
- Remount internal storage back to ro (read-only):
# kvmd-helper-otgmsd-remount ro
Enable serial console on Pi-KVM
- Edit
/etc/kvmd/override.yaml
(Remove{}
if this your first configuration entry) and add these lines:otg: acm: enabled: true
- Run the following command:
# echo ttyGS0 >> /etc/securetty
- Create the directory
/etc/systemd/system/getty@ttyGS0.service.d
and add a file file namedttyGS0.override
into it. Afterwards edit the file and copy this into it:[Service] TTYReset=no TTYVHangup=no TTYVTDisallocate=no
- Run these comands:
# systemctl enable getty@ttyGS0.service # reboot
- Once Pi-KVM is rebooted you will have access to a virtual serial port on the server that the USB is connected to. Use mingetty, screen, putty, or something like this to access the kvm from the server. The port is called
/dev/ttyAMA0
.