[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-users] New to ZEN: Wrong Logical Volume mounted to "/"
I resolved the problem by setting fstab and the network config scripts.Is there a document that outlines what config files should be manually addressed for a guest? It's a little confusing because you set file systems and network configurations in the xm create config file and it's difficult to see what is being handled by that and what needs to be addressed manually. Matt. Henning Sprang wrote: On 2/14/07, Matthew Dougherty <mdougher@xxxxxxxx> wrote:I resolved it. I found a doc on the net somewhere. It was reading a copyof the Domain0 fstab.I don't understand what you mean here . A doc on the web that is reading a copy of the domain0 fstab? That makes no sense to me, sorry.Is there a xensource document that outlines disabling/setting fstab,Again: fstab is NOT disabled. You only need the correct entries, in case you create your own - depenending on distribution and installation you use, it is generated for you. And it differs depending on guest OS you use and probably kernel, and disks you configured. Generating a little fstab is a very basic admin skill. Sorry to say, but, if you have major problems doing this(and that you talk about "disabling" fstab gives me some evidence this is so), you will to learn a lot until having fun with Xen, as it often requires much more than basic Linux Admin skills.ifcfg-eth0, etc.? For some reason I didn't catch that anywhere and had torely on an untrusted source.The "official" Xen manual does not deal a lot with the steps to do when installing a guest, as far as detailed config files inside the guest are concerned. The howtos mentioned in the wiki should help there. Be sure to select one matching your Domain 0 Distribution and version, adn fpor the right guest system. I know it can become confusing - be prepared to invest quite some time. Still, as with the fstab, if your at a very basic Linux level, and don't know how to manually create a network config file, Xen might become hard for you, at least as it's state of today is. You will need to learn a lot. I don't want to say, you should go away here, and don't ask questions. But you should defintely pick up one and another advanced Linux administration books - mostly the things you asked here are not really Xen specific, but intermediate/advanced Linux administration. And be prepared that you also get answers here saying "this isn't a Xen question, but basic Linux Admin stuff". Hope this helps, and doesn't scare you away :) Henning _______________________________________________ Xen-users mailing list Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-users _______________________________________________ Xen-users mailing list Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-users
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