[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] [Xen-users] Best way to get Xen into Ubuntu Natty/64bit
Hi, I had tried to run Xen on one system using the packages from a Xen PPA, that seemed to have anything I wanted. It came with Xen 4.1.2, so I added it, but I need something more "finished" and "working" When testing I found so many issues that I'm now uninstalling all of this again: ii libxen-dev 4.1.2~final-2ubuntu7 Public headers and libs for Xen ii libxenstore3.0 4.1.2~final-2ubuntu7 Xenstore communications library for Xen ii xen-docs-4.1 4.1.2~final-2ubuntu7 Documentation for Xen ii xen-hypervisor-4.1-amd64 4.1.2~final-2ubuntu7 Xen Hypervisor on AMD64 ii xen-utils-4.1 4.1.2~final-2ubuntu7 XEN administrative tools ii xen-utils-common 4.1.0~rc6-1ubuntu1 XEN administrative tools - common files ii xenstore-utils 4.1.2~final-2ubuntu7 Xenstore utilities for Xen It didn't even manage to make Xen the default boot option in the grub2 config :) Bringing up VMs was also more of a luck thing. What is the best choice if I want to be actually able to use the following things: - dom0_mem *must* work. It's totally idiotic if it doesnt work and i sit there watching dom0 balloon on each new VM boot, plus the OOM killer hit a few times during that. How a less than 1.4GB OS install can run out of Ram whilst ballooning from 96GB to 16GB, I do not know. >From what I understand this makes all early 3.0 kernels a bad choice and definitely matches what I was seeing when I tried to set dom0 mem.... - Xen NUMA needs to work since it is a 2socket Opteron - blktap2 - blkback - tmem - Ceph (this means a kernel where I can have very current btrfs and ceph, most probably not the stock kernel anyway), but this can also run inside a domU so this is not that important I guess I'll be going with xen-testing right away and I can also switch distros if anyone has a recommendation. (Oracle VM 2.2, 3.0.1 and 3.0.2 unfortunately didn't work on the system, otherwise I'd be running that instead of trying to run something. What are you using for Xen installs that are supposed to *work* on a larger scale box? Debian and a selfmade kernel? RHEL + GitCo? Alpine 2.2testing was the least of mess of all I tried but - they're just adding Xen support, so it's not done yet - only recognized 8 of 24 cpus. -- the purpose of libvirt is to provide an abstraction layer hiding all xen features added since 2006 until they were finally understood and copied by the kvm devs. _______________________________________________ Xen-users mailing list Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-users
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