Kimchi2

Kimchi

Kimchi isn’t trying to manage your cloud. It’s not here to scale. What it does is strip virtualization down to something fast, usable, and self-contained. One host, one interface, and just enough control to get the job done.

OS : Windows, Linux, macOS
Size : 6, MB
Version : 3.0.0
🡣: 3211

Kimchi — Simple KVM Management, Served with a Web UI and Zero Apologies

There are days when full-scale virtualization platforms like oVirt or OpenStack are overkill. Not every team needs HA clusters, shared storage orchestration, or live migrations across ten hypervisors. Sometimes the job is simpler: one or two physical servers, a few VMs, a lightweight way to manage them.

That’s where Kimchi fits. It’s a clean, browser-based interface for managing KVM on a single host. No dashboards full of graphs. No YAML. No agents. Just one package, one web UI, and a clear view into what’s running.

Kimchi isn’t ambitious — and that’s exactly why it works.

What It Actually Does (and What It Doesn’t Pretend to Do)

Feature What It Means Day-to-Day
Web-Based VM Control Create, start, stop, delete, and configure virtual machines from a browser.
Backed by libvirt Uses the standard KVM stack — no magic, no abstraction layers.
HTML5 Console Access No plugins or Java junk — consoles run straight in the browser.
ISO Uploads via UI Upload and attach install media through drag-and-drop — no SCP required.
Storage Pool Management Create, manage, and assign storage to VMs with a couple of clicks.
Network Bridge Setup Basic network configuration without dropping into `virsh`.
User Authentication Local account support with simple permission control.
Runs on a Single Host Designed for small-scale use — not clusters, not HA.
Built with clarity Clean layout, fast loading, minimal distractions.
Open Source, Actively Forked Original project stalled, but community forks are keeping it alive.

When It Makes Sense

Kimchi is what gets installed when:
– A sysadmin just needs to bring up a few VMs on a dev server without diving into `virsh` syntax.
– There’s no appetite for a heavy GUI stack like oVirt or Proxmox.
– A standalone server needs to host some services, but without full-blown infrastructure.
– Web-based console access is needed, but everything else should stay simple.
– Someone wants to hand off basic VM operations to a junior without handing over SSH keys.

It’s not a tool for data centers. But for standalone hypervisors and lab servers? It works surprisingly well.

How to Set It Up (No Cloud, No Scripts, Just Packages)

*Recommended distro: CentOS 7, Fedora, or any RHEL-like system with KVM and libvirt enabled.*

  1. Install Required Packages

dnf install -y kimchi libvirt python3-psutil python3-cherrypy3 sos python3-pyparted
systemctl enable –now libvirtd

  1. Start the Kimchi Service

systemctl enable –now kimchi

  1. Access the Web Interface

https://<server-ip>:8001

Login with local credentials (or create them if running for the first time).

  1. Create a VM

Upload an ISO, pick the storage pool, define CPU/RAM, and hit launch. That’s about it.

  1. Optional: Adjust Permissions

Add or limit users directly from the interface — useful when handing it off to less-privileged users.

Final Thoughts

Kimchi isn’t trying to manage your cloud. It’s not here to scale. What it does is strip virtualization down to something fast, usable, and self-contained. One host, one interface, and just enough control to get the job done.

If the goal is to run VMs without setting up a whole platform — and without making the terminal the only way in — Kimchi gets there with minimal fuss.

It’s small, it’s not pretty, and it doesn’t pretend to be a solution for everyone. But for what it is, it’s clean, honest, and oddly refreshing.

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