XenServer on two Dell R510's
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CentOS 6 is a relabeling of RHEL 6 (Red Hat Enterprise Linux.) XenCenter has a template option for installing CentOS 6 so that you don't have to go through the complete process like you would with a "random" operating system. When you select the "create new VM" option in XenCenter, look for the RHEL 6 64bit template option. This will set a bunch of the settings for you. Most importantly it will enable full paravirtualization for better performance and stability with less overhead. Otherwise full PV will be disabled.
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@coliver said:
ISO on a share that either XenServer can see?
He does, there is a permanently mounted CIFS share called ISO that holds the install media.
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@coliver said:
Do you have a CentOS 6 (Why not 7?)
Because it is a lab and he's learning how to build VMs. There is a template for CentOS 6 but not for CentOS 7.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@coliver said:
Do you have a CentOS 6 (Why not 7?)
Because it is a lab and he's learning how to build VMs. There is a template for CentOS 6 but not for CentOS 7.
Got it.
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@scottalanmiller said:
When you select the "create new VM" option in XenCenter, look for the RHEL 6 64bit template option.
Why not just use the already existing CentOS 6 template?
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@Mike-Ralston said:
@scottalanmiller said:
When you select the "create new VM" option in XenCenter, look for the RHEL 6 64bit template option.
Why not just use the already existing CentOS 6 template?
That one I don't know, I've always used the CentOS template for this but there may be a reason to use the RHEL template.
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@Mike-Ralston said:
Why not just use the already existing CentOS 6 template?
Is there both? They would be identical. That's very silly that there are two. The two products are literally the same thing.
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@scottalanmiller Well, shall I use the one purposed for CentOS?
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@Mike-Ralston said:
@scottalanmiller Well, shall I use the one purposed for CentOS?
Sure, that's fine too.
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@scottalanmiller I selected the template for CentOS 6 64-Bit, what next?
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Follow the wizard. Ask when you get stuck.
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I have no memory of this place...
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You'll only need a single virtual NIC for the VM.
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@scottalanmiller said:
You'll only need a single virtual NIC for the VM.
One last question, how much storage do I assign to it?
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@Mike-Ralston said:
One last question, how much storage do I assign to it?
My rule of thumb is 12GB for a stock Linux OS.
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why is that your rule of thumb?
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Plenty of space for a full OS, overhead for logging and normal apps. Mostly just experience.
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@scottalanmiller So, it turns out the issue I was having getting the OS installed, was that the default file path was pulling from an empty folder. I found the actual ISO's, and got two installs. One that the interns did, on CentOS 7, and one that I did, on CentOS 6.