01-23-2013
Good to know. Thanks for updating us.
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Red Hat
Hello,
I have a KVM system running on RHEL 5.4. It hosts 4 guest VMs. One of the guest host fails to get back the mounted filesystems after the system reboots. Does anyone have any idea what the issue could be?
Regards,
Mahive. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mahive
1 Replies
2. Virtualization and Cloud Computing
Howdy
I am using Fedora12 with KVM, with XP64pro as a guest. Everything seems to be working just fine, BUT I can't Save. When I do instruction KVM to save, I get a continuing Saving display, but it continues for a long time until I finally terminate it due to boredom :) I have let it run for... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: TJMan
0 Replies
3. Red Hat
Hi All,
I have RHEL 5u4 physical system with 2 Qlogic fc cards. It hosts 2 KVM virtual machines which are also running RHEL 5u4 OS. After all these I have created a virutal HBA (refered in google) successfully on the base OS. But the same is not visible to guest OS.
My question here is,
... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Vichu
1 Replies
4. Red Hat
Hi experts
I can't find a redhat's rootfs image for guest, where can find it
Lei (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: yanglei_fage
2 Replies
5. Red Hat
Hello,
I have installed Red Hat 6.2 version & KVM installed, file system limited is only 40GB, how do i create more than 40 GB ( I need to install more than 100 GB file system ) Could you please me.
Thanks... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Inamadugu
2 Replies
6. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi,
I have an problem with ACLs over NFS3. The Problem is, when i mount a nfsshare from an KVMguest, the UnixACLs were not mapped too. I don't know why. But this is only when i have the NFSshares on an virtulamachine. When i do the same with ein real machine, ACLs work well.
You can see that:... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: darktux
4 Replies
7. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Im looking for the commands that can be executed to fetch the OS Version of the VMs running on the below Hypervisors.
Xen (Not the citrix Xen server, but the Xen Sever hosted on a ubuntu Machine)
KVM (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: ranvirsingh
0 Replies
8. Red Hat
Background : - Need to create addition 40G storage for VM guest.
1. I have created new KVM - VM guest on RHEL 5.8 server hosting server.
2. Hosting server has occupied all size with LV and there is not space to create new LV.
3. I tried to achieve this requirement by creating 40G file size and... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Nats
1 Replies
9. Red Hat
Hi All,
I am new to the KVM virtualization. I have deployed and configured KVM in one of my server. I am using RHEL 6.5. Also I created the guest VM successfully and installed OS on it. Its up and running without any issues.
Is there any way I can export the VM and import it in... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: kalpeer
2 Replies
10. Red Hat
So we have a RHEL 7.6 workstation with 128 gigs of ram. The OS sees all the ram and 80 cors (40 HT)
We have 1 guest with 8 CPUs and 32gigs of ram running RHEL 7.6 workstation as well. We are trying to create another guest with 64 CPUs and 80 gigs of ram. We setup the system using... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: joeg1484
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
gv-update-userconfig
GV(1) User Commands GV(1)
NAME
gv-update-userconfig - update ~/.gv config file
SYNOPSIS
gv-update-userconfig [filename]
DESCRIPTION
gv-update-userconfig is a simple script to update an .gv config file to the current version of gv(1).
You can specify a file which is used instead of .gv by using the optional filename argument. This is useful if the environment variable
XUSERSEARCHPATH is used.
This is done by removing all entries known to cause problems with the current version of GNU gv (i.e. the one the version of this program
belongs to) and updating the version information in that file. This resets all problematic items back to the default values.
-h, --help, --usage
displays a short help message
-r removes all resources from ~/.gv that equal the default resources being shipped with GNU gv (ignoring whitespaces).
-n switches to alternative navigation by adding resp. updating navigation resources to ~/.gv, i. e. after each page switch (except if
selected by the page number) the page is scrolled to top (if switching forward) resp. to the bottom (if switching backward).
-N switches to standard navigation by adding resp. updating navigation resources to ~/.gv.
-s removes navigation resources from ~/.gv and therefore enables standard navigation.
-i updates translation file. Using the optional filename parameter is strongly recommended for using this option. This option cannot be
used together with any of the other options.
BACKGROUND
The $(HOME)/.gv file is written by GNU gv when activating the Save button in one of the configuration dialogs.
The values in there are used, if there is no display-specific resource value (loaded from $(HOME)/.Xresources at login time or manually
xrdb(1)).
Sometimes older values miss things needed by the new GNU gv to work properly. This GNU gv will notice old (or missing) version information
in this file and refuse to start until fixed.
SEE ALSO
gv(1), xrdb(1).
COPYRIGHT
This manpage is Copyright (C) 2008 Bernhard R. Link and can be used, copied, distributed and/or modified without restrictions.
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICU-
LAR PURPOSE.
gv 2008-07-31 GV(1)