KVM Installation and VM Creation on Fedora 25
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@Tim_G said in KVM Installation and VM Creation on Fedora 25:
@stacksofplates said in KVM Installation and VM Creation on Fedora 25:
@scottalanmiller said in KVM Installation and VM Creation on Fedora 25:
@stacksofplates said in KVM Installation and VM Creation on Fedora 25:
Also, maybe it's just me, but I think it's a ton easier if you don't use any caps for
VMnames.FTFY. It's a Windows-ism that is best left behind. Hostnames, filenames, whatever... caps are generally best avoided.
Ya. And I don't get the capitalization of cmdlets. I know you don't have to type it that way but seems weird they go through the trouble of that.
Functionally, with Microsoft it doesn't make a difference in just about every case... which is how I think it should be. If I capitalize something, it should not change how it functions... but that's just my quick opinion.
I prefer accuracy and not the "soft" approach. I like to know that I have to get it right, not close. It works, but it's weird to me. Having certain ASCII pairs turn into the same thing to the filesystem feels really hokey and weird to me. If I mean X I'd type X, not x.
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I find it even stranger that it preserves case, but doesn't honour it. So it is storing the full ASCII set, then processing it to compress it to a smaller set of characters. But it is not consistent, it uses caps sometimes, and not others. And it is very confusing when it interfaces with other systems and so things like the filename it trains you to "type anything" but you go to use a URL and caps matter.
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@scottalanmiller said in KVM Installation and VM Creation on Fedora 25:
I find it even stranger that it preserves case, but doesn't honour it. So it is storing the full ASCII set, then processing it to compress it to a smaller set of characters. But it is not consistent, it uses caps sometimes, and not others. And it is very confusing when it interfaces with other systems and so things like the filename it trains you to "type anything" but you go to use a URL and caps matter.
That depends on the web host.
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@Tim_G said in KVM Installation and VM Creation on Fedora 25:
@scottalanmiller said in KVM Installation and VM Creation on Fedora 25:
I find it even stranger that it preserves case, but doesn't honour it. So it is storing the full ASCII set, then processing it to compress it to a smaller set of characters. But it is not consistent, it uses caps sometimes, and not others. And it is very confusing when it interfaces with other systems and so things like the filename it trains you to "type anything" but you go to use a URL and caps matter.
That depends on the web host.
I know, but it's confusing for end users to have some things be case sensitive and some not. Windows users are especially prone to not knowing the difference between different interface locations and Windows 10 makes this worse by making the file search field also kick of a web search.
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@scottalanmiller said in KVM Installation and VM Creation on Fedora 25:
@Tim_G said in KVM Installation and VM Creation on Fedora 25:
@scottalanmiller said in KVM Installation and VM Creation on Fedora 25:
I find it even stranger that it preserves case, but doesn't honour it. So it is storing the full ASCII set, then processing it to compress it to a smaller set of characters. But it is not consistent, it uses caps sometimes, and not others. And it is very confusing when it interfaces with other systems and so things like the filename it trains you to "type anything" but you go to use a URL and caps matter.
That depends on the web host.
I know, but it's confusing for end users to have some things be case sensitive and some not. Windows users are especially prone to not knowing the difference between different interface locations and Windows 10 makes this worse by making the file search field also kick of a web search.
Yeah, I still think capitalization just shouldn't matter anywhere... at least it shouldn't functionally. It should just be for readability.
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Can you guys point me in the right direction as to how I would go about doing X11 forwarding from a Linux server to a remote Windows workstation?
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@wirestyle22 said in KVM Installation and VM Creation on Fedora 25:
Can you guys point me in the right direction as to how I would go about doing X11 forwarding from a Linux server to a remote Windows workstation?
Just use MobaXterm and it's already set up (as long as the dependencies are installed on the server).
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@stacksofplates said in KVM Installation and VM Creation on Fedora 25:
@wirestyle22 said in KVM Installation and VM Creation on Fedora 25:
Can you guys point me in the right direction as to how I would go about doing X11 forwarding from a Linux server to a remote Windows workstation?
Just use MobaXterm and it's already set up (as long as the dependencies are installed on the server).
This entire process is for me to ultimately take my RHCE. From what the Exam book says there will be no access to the internet for the entirety of the test so I want to learn how to manually do everything before I learn how to make it easier for myself. This will be naturally easier just because everything will be running Linux but I have to work with what I've got right now.
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@wirestyle22 said in KVM Installation and VM Creation on Fedora 25:
@stacksofplates said in KVM Installation and VM Creation on Fedora 25:
@wirestyle22 said in KVM Installation and VM Creation on Fedora 25:
Can you guys point me in the right direction as to how I would go about doing X11 forwarding from a Linux server to a remote Windows workstation?
Just use MobaXterm and it's already set up (as long as the dependencies are installed on the server).
This entire process is for me to ultimately take my RHCE. From what the Exam book says there will be no access to the internet for the entirety of the test so I want to learn how to manually do everything before I learn how to make it easier for myself. This will be naturally easier just because everything will be running Linux but I have to work with what I've got right now.
Just spin up a RHEL Workstation VM. Don't even bring Windows into it.
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@stacksofplates said in KVM Installation and VM Creation on Fedora 25:
@wirestyle22 said in KVM Installation and VM Creation on Fedora 25:
@stacksofplates said in KVM Installation and VM Creation on Fedora 25:
@wirestyle22 said in KVM Installation and VM Creation on Fedora 25:
Can you guys point me in the right direction as to how I would go about doing X11 forwarding from a Linux server to a remote Windows workstation?
Just use MobaXterm and it's already set up (as long as the dependencies are installed on the server).
This entire process is for me to ultimately take my RHCE. From what the Exam book says there will be no access to the internet for the entirety of the test so I want to learn how to manually do everything before I learn how to make it easier for myself. This will be naturally easier just because everything will be running Linux but I have to work with what I've got right now.
Just spin up a RHEL Workstation VM. Don't even bring Windows into it.
That's true.
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@wirestyle22 Do you have your RHCSA?
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I did an article about a year ago about setting up KVM/QEMU on Ubuntu 16.04, it might be of some use: https://www.ramblingbiped.com/build-a-kvm-qemu-hypervisor-on-ubuntu-16-04-server/
I also wrote a short blurb on automating VM creation using a pre-built VM template, virt-clone, and virt-sysprep: https://www.ramblingbiped.com/automate-centos-7-minimal-virtual-machine-creation-with-kvm/
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@RamblingBiped said in KVM Installation and VM Creation on Fedora 25:
@wirestyle22 Do you have your RHCSA?
No, but the cert book is for both
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@RamblingBiped said in KVM Installation and VM Creation on Fedora 25:
I did an article about a year ago about setting up KVM/QEMU on Ubuntu 16.04, it might be of some use: https://www.ramblingbiped.com/build-a-kvm-qemu-hypervisor-on-ubuntu-16-04-server/
I also wrote a short blurb on automating VM creation using a pre-built VM template, virt-clone, and virt-sysprep: https://www.ramblingbiped.com/build-a-kvm-qemu-hypervisor-on-ubuntu-16-04-server/
That is very helpful. Thank you.