9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Red Hat
Hey guys, I've been straddling with this issue for quite some time now and I'm getting absolutely nowhere with it. It took me a long time to get XEN up and running on my server. We only use SSH to manipulate our servers, but we finally got it up and running. Now I'm at the point of actually... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mccabec123
1 Replies
2. Solaris
Hi Al,
In course of understanding networking in Solaris, I have these doubts on Interfaces. Please clarify me. I have done fair research in this site and others but could not be clarified.
1. In the "ifconfig -a" command, I see many interfaces and their configurations. But I see many... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: satish51392111
1 Replies
3. SuSE
Good morning,
Server:HP ProLiant DL165 G7 diskless with Disc on Storage
OS:SLES11 SP1 and xen-3.3.1_18546_12-3.1
iSCSI:INTEL Gigabit ET Dual Port Server Adapter 825768
When I start SLES11 with Xen in boot-loader menu, then the boot will stop because linux could'nt find the iscsi interface... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: hiddenshadow
0 Replies
4. Red Hat
Hi guys.
I read that RHEL will not support XEN in version 6 and it will support KVM. Does this mean we can't install XEN from RHEL repositories? Should we install it from source code? (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: majid.merkava
8 Replies
5. Debian
helo can anynody help me?
i'm using xen in debian lenny 2.6.26
if i'm booting in the xen kernel the xend can't start like this
Starting XEN control daemon: xend suspend: event channel 21
SMP alternatives: switching to UP code "
And then stop.
any idea?..thanks before (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: demhyt
0 Replies
6. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
was looking for some help /tutorials on xen ..im a beginner on virtualisation ..so any help would be greatly appreciated ...p.s. whats the basic difference between para and full virtualisation (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: tarunicon
2 Replies
7. Virtualization and Cloud Computing
Quick question-
When installing a VM with xen on Opensolaris to get paravirtualizion you need an install tree and I can't seem to use an .iso. What what is exactly an intsall tree in this contex? (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Lespaul20
0 Replies
8. Virtualization and Cloud Computing
How do I know the relationship between vm name and its disk on the filesystem?
If I have a vm called "test", how do I know what (and where) is its disk on the filesystem?
I'm trying to extract from "xm" command but I really don't find the right option...
:( (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: untamed
1 Replies
9. Red Hat
Hi,
I would like ask question about preparing xen templates. Here is the detail below of hardware.
I have a server having two 80 GB hard-drive, currently no operating system on it, having 2GB of RAM, pls could you tell me what partition scheme i will follow so i will use those partition... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: learnbash
0 Replies
XEN-RESIZE-GUEST(8) Perl Programmers Reference Guide XEN-RESIZE-GUEST(8)
NAME
xen-resize-guest - Resize a loopback or LVM based xen guest.
SYNOPSIS
xen-resize-guest [options]
Help Options:
--help Show help information.
--manual Read the manual for this script.
--version Show the version information and exit.
--verbose Show diagnostic output.
General Options:
--add Specify the amount of space to add, e.g. --add=1gb
--dir Specify the path to the loopback image root.
--force Force the resize to happen without a last-chance delay.
--hostname Specify the hostname of the guest to resize.
OPTIONS
--add Specify the amount of storage to add to the primary disk.
--dir Specify the directory where the loopback files are based.
--force Don't pause for 10 seconds prior to commencing.
--help Show help information.
--hostname Specify the hostname to delete.
--lvm Specify the volume group to use.
--manual Read the manual for this script.
--version Show the version number and exit.
DESCRIPTION
This tool will ease the resizing of Xen guests, whether they are based
upon loopback files or LVM partitions.
Whilst the process of resizing a guest is pretty simple it can be fiddly
to do the steps correctly in the right order:
1. Shutdown the guest. 2. Unmount the volume, if it is mounted. 3. Add to the space. 4. Check the filesystem. 5. Resize the
filesystem. 6. Restart the guest.
More than once I've heard of users making mistakes and breaking their
filesystems; hence this tool.
AUTHORS
Steve Kemp, http://www.steve.org.uk/
Axel Beckert, http://noone.org/abe/
LICENSE
Copyright (c) 2005-2009 by Steve Kemp, (c) 2010 by The Xen-Tools Development Team. All rights reserved.
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. The LICENSE file contains the
full text of the license.
4.3.1 2012-06-30 XEN-RESIZE-GUEST(8)