[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] [Xen-devel] [PATCH] PV-GRUB: add sample config file
PV-GRUB: add sample config file Signed-off-by: Samuel Thibault <samuel.thibault@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> diff -r c619bc4d7712 tools/examples/xmexample.pv-grub --- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 +++ b/tools/examples/xmexample.pv-grub Mon Aug 04 16:40:41 2008 +0100 @@ -0,0 +1,212 @@ +# -*- mode: python; -*- +#============================================================================ +# Python configuration setup for 'xm create'. +# This script sets the parameters used when a domain is created using 'xm create'. +# You use a separate script for each domain you want to create, or +# you can set the parameters for the domain on the xm command line. +#============================================================================ + +#---------------------------------------------------------------------------- +# PV GRUB image file. +kernel = "/usr/lib/xen/boot/pv-grub.gz" + +# Optional provided menu.lst. +#ramdisk = "/boot/guests/menu.lst" + +# Sets path to menu.lst +extra = "(hd0,0)/boot/grub/menu.lst" +# can be a TFTP-served path (DHCP will automatically be run) +# extra = "(nd)/netboot/menu.lst" +# can be configured automatically by GRUB's DHCP option 150 (see grub manual) +# extra = "" + +# Initial memory allocation (in megabytes) for the new domain. +# +# WARNING: Creating a domain with insufficient memory may cause out of +# memory errors. The domain needs enough memory to boot kernel +# and modules. Allocating less than 32MBs is not recommended. +memory = 64 + +# A name for your domain. All domains must have different names. +name = "ExampleDomain" + +# 128-bit UUID for the domain. The default behavior is to generate a new UUID +# on each call to 'xm create'. +#uuid = "06ed00fe-1162-4fc4-b5d8-11993ee4a8b9" + +# List of which CPUS this domain is allowed to use, default Xen picks +#cpus = "" # leave to Xen to pick +#cpus = "0" # all vcpus run on CPU0 +#cpus = "0-3,5,^1" # all vcpus run on cpus 0,2,3,5 +#cpus = ["2", "3"] # VCPU0 runs on CPU2, VCPU1 runs on CPU3 + +# Number of Virtual CPUS to use, default is 1 +#vcpus = 1 + +#---------------------------------------------------------------------------- +# Define network interfaces. + +# By default, no network interfaces are configured. You may have one created +# with sensible defaults using an empty vif clause: +# +# vif = [ '' ] +# +# or optionally override backend, bridge, ip, mac, script, type, or vifname: +# +# vif = [ 'mac=00:16:3e:00:00:11, bridge=xenbr0' ] +# +# or more than one interface may be configured: +# +# vif = [ '', 'bridge=xenbr1' ] + +vif = [ '' ] + +#---------------------------------------------------------------------------- +# Define the disk devices you want the domain to have access to, and +# what you want them accessible as. +# Each disk entry is of the form phy:UNAME,DEV,MODE +# where UNAME is the device, DEV is the device name the domain will see, +# and MODE is r for read-only, w for read-write. + +disk = [ 'phy:hda1,hda1,w' ] + +#---------------------------------------------------------------------------- +# Define frame buffer device. +# +# By default, no frame buffer device is configured. +# +# To create one using the SDL backend and sensible defaults: +# +# vfb = [ 'type=sdl' ] +# +# This uses environment variables XAUTHORITY and DISPLAY. You +# can override that: +# +# vfb = [ 'type=sdl,xauthority=/home/bozo/.Xauthority,display=:1' ] +# +# To create one using the VNC backend and sensible defaults: +# +# vfb = [ 'type=vnc' ] +# +# The backend listens on 127.0.0.1 port 5900+N by default, where N is +# the domain ID. You can override both address and N: +# +# vfb = [ 'type=vnc,vnclisten=127.0.0.1,vncdisplay=1' ] +# +# Or you can bind the first unused port above 5900: +# +# vfb = [ 'type=vnc,vnclisten=0.0.0.0,vncunused=1' ] +# +# You can override the password: +# +# vfb = [ 'type=vnc,vncpasswd=MYPASSWD' ] +# +# Empty password disables authentication. Defaults to the vncpasswd +# configured in xend-config.sxp. + +#---------------------------------------------------------------------------- +# Define to which TPM instance the user domain should communicate. +# The vtpm entry is of the form 'instance=INSTANCE,backend=DOM' +# where INSTANCE indicates the instance number of the TPM the VM +# should be talking to and DOM provides the domain where the backend +# is located. +# Note that no two virtual machines should try to connect to the same +# TPM instance. The handling of all TPM instances does require +# some management effort in so far that VM configration files (and thus +# a VM) should be associated with a TPM instance throughout the lifetime +# of the VM / VM configuration file. The instance number must be +# greater or equal to 1. +#vtpm = [ 'instance=1,backend=0' ] + +#---------------------------------------------------------------------------- +# Set the kernel command line for the new domain. +# You only need to define the IP parameters and hostname if the domain's +# IP config doesn't, e.g. in ifcfg-eth0 or via DHCP. +# You can use 'extra' to set the runlevel and custom environment +# variables used by custom rc scripts (e.g. VMID=, usr= ). + +# Set if you want dhcp to allocate the IP address. +#dhcp="dhcp" +# Set netmask. +#netmask= +# Set default gateway. +#gateway= +# Set the hostname. +#hostname= "vm%d" % vmid + +# Set root device. +root = "/dev/hda1 ro" + +# Root device for nfs. +#root = "/dev/nfs" +# The nfs server. +#nfs_server = '192.0.2.1' +# Root directory on the nfs server. +#nfs_root = '/full/path/to/root/directory' + +#---------------------------------------------------------------------------- +# Configure the behaviour when a domain exits. There are three 'reasons' +# for a domain to stop: poweroff, reboot, and crash. For each of these you +# may specify: +# +# "destroy", meaning that the domain is cleaned up as normal; +# "restart", meaning that a new domain is started in place of the old +# one; +# "preserve", meaning that no clean-up is done until the domain is +# manually destroyed (using xm destroy, for example); or +# "rename-restart", meaning that the old domain is not cleaned up, but is +# renamed and a new domain started in its place. +# +# In the event a domain stops due to a crash, you have the additional options: +# +# "coredump-destroy", meaning dump the crashed domain's core and then destroy; +# "coredump-restart', meaning dump the crashed domain's core and the restart. +# +# The default is +# +# on_poweroff = 'destroy' +# on_reboot = 'restart' +# on_crash = 'restart' +# +# For backwards compatibility we also support the deprecated option restart +# +# restart = 'onreboot' means on_poweroff = 'destroy' +# on_reboot = 'restart' +# on_crash = 'destroy' +# +# restart = 'always' means on_poweroff = 'restart' +# on_reboot = 'restart' +# on_crash = 'restart' +# +# restart = 'never' means on_poweroff = 'destroy' +# on_reboot = 'destroy' +# on_crash = 'destroy' + +#on_poweroff = 'destroy' +#on_reboot = 'restart' +#on_crash = 'restart' + +#----------------------------------------------------------------------------- +# Configure PVSCSI devices: +# +#vscsi=[ 'PDEV, VDEV' ] +# +# PDEV gives physical SCSI device to be attached to specified guest +# domain by one of the following identifier format. +# - XX:XX:XX:XX (4-tuples with decimal notation which shows +# "host:channel:target:lun") +# - /dev/sdxx or sdx +# - /dev/stxx or stx +# - /dev/sgxx or sgx +# - result of 'scsi_id -gu -s'. +# ex. # scsi_id -gu -s /block/sdb +# 36000b5d0006a0000006a0257004c0000 +# +# VDEV gives virtual SCSI device by 4-tuples (XX:XX:XX:XX) as +# which the specified guest domain recognize. +# + +#vscsi = [ '/dev/sdx, 0:0:0:0' ] + +#============================================================================ + _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-devel
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