What You Need to Know About XenServer
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@wirestyle22 in truth, you can just create an LVM volume with a filesystem upon it, store the ISOs there and mount it as a SR. The real issue is that at the reboot XS7 will stop doing consistency check of LVM. That's totally repeatable.
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That sound really overcomplicated to serve just some ISOs. I wonder if I won't offer a "public" NFS in read only with most popular ISO, a kind of ISO as a service
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@olivier I think that the right way to provide a "templatized" VM is to customize a cloud OS image via libguestfs or similar tools, going through the whole installation process is just nonsense for VMs. Poor windows usersβ¦
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@Francesco-Provino Solution is creating a template with CloudInit process, then Xen Orchestra can do the rest. See https://xen-orchestra.com/blog/full-cloudinit-power-in-xenserver/
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My new take on XS is to not touch XS. It's like Fight Club.
The easy way for ISOs I found was...
a) set up a new Linux Mint VM
b) set up an anonymous share
c) add ISOs
d) doneWindows works, but it;s hard to do anonymous shares, I've always found. You could create a user, which I did initially, but I've since moved to a small Mint instance and haven't looked back.
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@olivier or via cloudinit, exactly, I just forgot to add it.
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@Francesco-Provino said in What You Need to Know About XenServer:
@olivier or via cloudinit, exactly, I just forgot to add it.
The thing is we already have CloudInit support, so it would be a shame to not using it
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@BRRABill said in What You Need to Know About XenServer:
My new take on XS is to not touch XS. It's like Fight Club.
The easy way for ISOs I found was...
a) set up a new Linux Mint VM
b) set up an anonymous share
c) add ISOs
d) doneWindows works, but it;s hard to do anonymous shares, I've always found. You could create a user, which I did initially, but I've since moved to a small Mint instance and haven't looked back.
That's a way to do it also yes. In general, I've got always a physical machine (eg for backup) with enough space to do that. Doesn't require much bandwidth and power to simply share ISOs.
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Thoughts @scottalanmiller ?
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@olivier said
That's a way to do it also yes. In general, I've got always a physical machine (eg for backup) with enough space to do that. Doesn't require much bandwidth and power to simply share ISOs.
Yeah, just giving options.
There are many.
Anything that can share files would work. I just find sharing files anonymously through Windows maddening.
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@BRRABill said in What You Need to Know About XenServer:
@olivier said
That's a way to do it also yes. In general, I've got always a physical machine (eg for backup) with enough space to do that. Doesn't require much bandwidth and power to simply share ISOs.
Yeah, just giving options.
There are many.
Anything that can share files would work. I just find sharing files anonymously through Windows maddening.
I have no idea, last time I tried it was 10 years ago.
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@olivier said
I have no idea, last time I tried it was 10 years ago.
It's probably why you moved on!
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If I shared my SSD on my desktop how would I handle the permissions for mounting in XS? I did attempt this but it failed. Granted I had to leave immediately after and didnt get the chance to troubleshoot it.
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@wirestyle22 said in What You Need to Know About XenServer:
If I shared my SSD on my desktop how would I handle the permissions for mounting? I did attempt this but it failed. Granted I had to leave immediately after and didnt get the chance to troubleshoot it.
You could create a local account on your machine, give it access to the shared directory, and use that when you mount from XS.
That's what I did initially.
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@BRRABill said in What You Need to Know About XenServer:
@wirestyle22 said in What You Need to Know About XenServer:
If I shared my SSD on my desktop how would I handle the permissions for mounting? I did attempt this but it failed. Granted I had to leave immediately after and didnt get the chance to troubleshoot it.
You could create a local account on your machine, give it access to the shared directory, and use that when you mount from XS.
That's what I did initially.
I'll give this all a go when I get home and report back. Thanks everyone!
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Extremely easy install. Everything up and running. Reading/Testing more tonight. How are you guys determining the need for virtual/physical cores per server etc?
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@wirestyle22 said in What You Need to Know About XenServer:
Extremely easy install. Everything up and running. Reading/Testing more tonight. How are you guys determining the need for virtual/physical cores per server etc?
I think the general consensus is to start with one core and add more if performance sucks.
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@dafyre said in What You Need to Know About XenServer:
@wirestyle22 said in What You Need to Know About XenServer:
Extremely easy install. Everything up and running. Reading/Testing more tonight. How are you guys determining the need for virtual/physical cores per server etc?
I think the general consensus is to start with one core and add more if performance sucks.
Virtual?
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@wirestyle22 said in What You Need to Know About XenServer:
@dafyre said in What You Need to Know About XenServer:
@wirestyle22 said in What You Need to Know About XenServer:
Extremely easy install. Everything up and running. Reading/Testing more tonight. How are you guys determining the need for virtual/physical cores per server etc?
I think the general consensus is to start with one core and add more if performance sucks.
Virtual?
Always! You should have a reason to be physical otherwise virtual.
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@wirestyle22 Sorry, yeah.
Unless you're running a lot of heavily used VMs, a dual or quadcore CPU would be fine. My box at home runs a quad core cpu and has 5 or 6 VMs on it with no issues.