9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi Guys,
I m using redhat 6, I have installed root partition as non-LVM .
Is there any way i can convert it to LVM? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: pinga123
1 Replies
2. 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
3. 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
4. UNIX and Linux Applications
has anyone deployed openQRM-4.6 with XEN... On the site they don't have good documention for XEN..
I am testing it for last 2 month but still no luck with XEN. Please help me with this.
:mad:
Thanks
Prashant (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: prashant_ohol
0 Replies
5. HP-UX
Hi,
I'm new to HP-UX.
I have LVM on /var with 92Gig. I would like to reduce it to create another LVM for Oracle client with 800 meg or so. How to do it. I'm running 11.iv3
Thanks (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: lamoul
4 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-DELETE-IMAGE(8) Perl Programmers Reference Guide XEN-DELETE-IMAGE(8)
NAME
xen-delete-image - Delete previously created Xen instances.
SYNOPSIS
xen-delete-image [options] [--hostname=]imageName1 [--hostname=]imageName2
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:
--dir Specify the output directory where images were previously saved.
--evms Specify the EVMS container to use.
--lvm Specify the LVM volume to use.
Specifying hosts:
--hostname Specify the image name to delete.
Testing options:
--test Don't complain if we're not invoked by root.
OPTIONS
--dir Specify the output directory where images were previously saved.
--evms Specify the EVMS container where images were previously saved.
--help Show help information.
--hostname Specify the hostname to delete.
--lvm Specify the LVM volume group where images were previously saved.
--manual Read the manual for this script.
--test Do not complain, or exit, if the script is not executed by the root user.
--version Show the version number and exit.
DESCRIPTION
xen-delete-image is a simple script which allows you to delete
Xen instances which have previously been created by xen-create-image.
You must be root to run this script as it removes the Xen configuration
file from /etc/xen and potentially removes LVM and EVMS volumes.
(When invoked with the '--test' flag the script will continue running,
but will fail to remove anything which the user does not have permission
to delete.)
LOOPBACK EXAMPLE
Assuming that you have three images 'foo', 'bar', and 'baz', stored
beneath /home/xen the first two may be deleted via:
xen-delete-image --dir=/home/xen foo bar
You may also delete them by running:
xen-delete-image --dir=/home/xen --hostname=foo --hostname=bar
(The matching Xen configuration files beneath /etc/xen will also be
removed.)
LVM EXAMPLE
Assuming that you have the volume group 'skx-vol' containing three
Xen instances 'foo', 'bar', and 'baz' the first two may be deleted via:
xen-delete-image --lvm=skx-vol foo bar
This will remove the volumes 'foo-disk', 'foo-swap', 'bar-disk',
and 'bar-swap'.
Note that if the images were created with "--noswap" then the swap
volumes will not be present, so will not need to be deleted.
The Xen configuration files will also be removed from beneath /etc/xen.
EVMS EXAMPLE
Assuming that you have the container 'mycontainer' containing three
Xen instances 'foo', 'bar', and 'baz' the first two may be deleted via:
xen-delete-image --evms=lvm2/mycontainer --hostname=foo --hostname=bar
This will remove the volumes 'foo-disk', 'foo-swap', 'bar-disk',
and 'bar-swap'.
Note that if the images were created with "--noswap" then the swap
volumes will not be present, so will not need to be deleted.
The Xen configuration files will also be removed.
AUTHORS
Steve Kemp, http://www.steve.org.uk/
Axel Beckert, http://noone.org/abe/
StA~Xphane Jourdois
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-DELETE-IMAGE(8)