What You Need to Know About XenServer
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@DustinB3403 said in What You Need to Know About XenServer:
The reason being that LOCAL repo's aren't supported, is that it literally takes nothing to share out a drive from a windows desktop and connect to it via XenCenter (or XO).
It's a 5 minute process.
And why should I be required to have a separate piece of hardware just to hold ISO files for the various VM's I wish to mount?
I can use shared storage with Hyper-V (and I assume VMWare, never tried), but local storage is is always going to be faster.
You also do not modify the contents of the ISO repository often. You load up the various ISO files once and never touch it again unless you get a new shiny thing. At that point updating that repo is no different than updating said shared storage.
It is a huge oversight to not have the capability.
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@JaredBusch XenServer wasn't designed for home usage, but for companies which already have plenty of shares (NFS/SMB). It explains why it's not meant like this "in a easy way".
But it will work with a local ISO storage, it's just not really user friendly.
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@olivier said in What You Need to Know About XenServer:
I'm currently writing a complete guide/blog post on Xen tools.
I'm not being a smart ass, but what is there to guide?
Install ISO, run setup.
Am I missing something?
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@BRRABill A lot of XS noobs seems lost with that, and the official doc is not very great.
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@olivier said in What You Need to Know About XenServer:
@BRRABill A lot of XS noobs seems lost with that, and the official doc is not very great.
It would be nice to know what you have with and without. I think that would explain why it is needed.
I think they confused things a bit with XC7 by including the "windows updates" thing. Are you going to touch on that? (I bet you'd get a lot of Google hits on that one.)
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@JaredBusch said in What You Need to Know About XenServer:
@DustinB3403 said in What You Need to Know About XenServer:
The reason being that LOCAL repo's aren't supported, is that it literally takes nothing to share out a drive from a windows desktop and connect to it via XenCenter (or XO).
It's a 5 minute process.
And why should I be required to have a separate piece of hardware just to hold ISO files for the various VM's I wish to mount?
I can use shared storage with Hyper-V (and I assume VMWare, never tried), but local storage is is always going to be faster.
You also do not modify the contents of the ISO repository often. You load up the various ISO files once and never touch it again unless you get a new shiny thing. At that point updating that repo is no different than updating said shared storage.
It is a huge oversight to not have the capability.
Oh I don't disagree, but it's not a deal breaker for something so trivial to setup.
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@BRRABill The thing is, I'm not a Windows expert. I'll take a look at this.
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@olivier said in What You Need to Know About XenServer:
@BRRABill The thing is, I'm not a Windows expert. I'll take a look at this.
I think it is a paid feature, perhaps. But it looks odd to see something as "not installed", even though in our installation it is fine.
http://discussions.citrix.com/topic/378399-upgraded-to-xenserver-70/
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@olivier said in What You Need to Know About XenServer:
@BRRABill The thing is, I'm not a Windows expert. I'll take a look at this.
From that thread I posted, the bottom line is this:
"Bottom line: Must be a newly created Windows VM under XS 7.0 that supports the Windows update manager. Nothing else currently will work. It must also be an Enterprise licensed version of XenServer."And it seems like most will just update the tools manually.
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Brilliant Read, I've used Esxi and Hyper-V, good products, but I do have a inner love for Xencenter..