10 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. Red Hat
Hey guys, I've reached the point of setting up VM's on XEN but the net installations seem to be failing when I am in the netinstall on the actual VM, so this leads me to believe that the networking on the host machine is not set up correctly. I am running CentOS 5.9 along with XEN and was just... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: mccabec123
0 Replies
3. Red Hat
hi,
i am try to install a package in centos 6.2 x86-64 but unable to find any package in centos media iso.
In RHEL we have a product folder which contain all the list of rpm but in centos i cant found that.
I have use yum command but it also cant work show me the message no module named yum.... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: zeeshan047
1 Replies
4. Linux
I am not able to find any references related to installing centOS in i686 machine ?
Is it supported or not ?
This does not list it at all, so a little bit confused CentOS - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
No luck with google also ! Appreciate if somebody can help. Thanks. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: thegeek
1 Replies
5. Red Hat
i configured XEN to use port 5902 and it worked. I installed vncserver on the host machine. Now when i connect to 5902 it redirects me to the centos machine not to the XEN guest. (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: mrjoli021
0 Replies
6. UNIX and Linux Applications
Hi every body
I am facing problem installing spamassassin on my CentOS - Direct Admin VPS
The installation ended with the following error
REQUIRED module out of date: Archive::Tar
optional module missing: Digest::SHA
optional module missing: Mail::SPF
optional module missing: IP::Country... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: rizwan65
0 Replies
7. Virtualization and Cloud Computing
Hi,
I have installed VirtualBox, downloaded CentOS 5.5 and created a VirtualMachine where i have installed the 'server' versión of CentOS 5.5
As I installed Virtual Box a new network device appeared '192.16.1.250' in my 'real' machine. I was unable to reach my webserver so i istalled CentOS once... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: motoko
5 Replies
8. Red Hat
Hi,
I am trying to install phyton on my centos.
When I write:
yum install phyton
I get the message that it doesn't find the package.
How should I fix it? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: programAngel
4 Replies
9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi,
I need to install CVS on Centos 5.3. There is a RPM that yum detects and it installs it. But when I type CVS at the command line I get nothing. What do I have to do to configure CVS? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: mojoman
2 Replies
10. Linux
Guys does anyone have a good plan or structured tutorial on how to install Psybnc on CentOS platform, ive gave it a try and im on my 4th hour now , i just cant seem to get it working.
Thanks in advance (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: wmccull
0 Replies
XPCI(4) BSD/xen Kernel Interfaces Manual XPCI(4)
NAME
xpci -- Xen frontend paravirtualized PCI pass-through driver
SYNOPSIS
xpci* at xenbus?
pci* at xpci?
DESCRIPTION
The xpci driver is the frontend part of the PCI pass-through functionality that can be used by Xen guest domains to communicate with PCI
devices.
From a guest point of view, xpci is similar to a pci(4) bus, except that the guest talks with the PCI backend driver instead of the real
physical device directly.
When the host domain is NetBSD, the xpci driver is backed by a pciback(4) driver within the dom0.
SEE ALSO
pci(4), pciback(4), xenbus(4)
HISTORY
The xpci driver first appeared in NetBSD 5.1.
AUTHORS
The xpci driver was written by Manuel Bouyer <bouyer@NetBSD.org>.
SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS
As PCI passthrough offers the possibility for guest domains to send arbitrary PCI commands to a physical device, this has direct impact on
the overall stability and security of the system. For example, in case of erroneous or malicious commands, the device could overwrite physi-
cal memory portions, via DMA.
BSD
January 8, 2011 BSD