XenServer - CentOS7 with GUI
-
I'm going to keep asking... what version of XenServer and are you installing PV or full virt?
-
And... what console app are you using?
-
@scottalanmiller said:
I'm going to keep asking... what version of XenServer and are you installing PV or full virt?
Doh, sorry. XenServer 6.5 How do I know if I am using PV or full virt?
-
@scottalanmiller Just the XenCenter Console.
-
@anonymous said:
Doh, sorry. XenServer 6.5 How do I know if I am using PV or full virt?
Easiest way is from the templates chosen. What templates are you using for these installs?
-
-
@anonymous said:
@scottalanmiller said:
What templates are you using for these installs?
Other Media.
Oh, try using the ones made for these That's likely the issue.
-
What made you choose to use non-optimized settings for Linux?
-
@scottalanmiller said:
What made you choose to use non-optimized settings for Linux?
The suggestion of the community?
-
@anonymous said:
The suggestion of the community?
THIS community? What reason did people give for not using the optimized settings? They are there for a reason, to make sure that you have the right drivers, best performance, most stability, etc. There are cases where you need to not use them, but it means you have to worry about the drivers and such yourself. I bet you will find using XenServer as designed that you will get good stability and performance.
CentOS and Fedora will use the same template. Ubuntu and Mint will both use Ubuntu. Mint is Ubuntu 14.04.
-
@scottalanmiller said:
@anonymous said:
The suggestion of the community?
THIS community? What reason did people give for not using the optimized settings? They are there for a reason, to make sure that you have the right drivers, best performance, most stability, etc. There are cases where you need to not use them, but it means you have to worry about the drivers and such yourself. I bet you will find using XenServer as designed that you will get good stability and performance.
CentOS and Fedora will use the same template. Ubuntu and Mint will both use Ubuntu. Mint is Ubuntu 14.04.
You said that you use it?
-
@anonymous said:
That's a Gnome 3 error. How much RAM is assigned to this VM?
-
@johnhooks said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@anonymous said:
The suggestion of the community?
THIS community? What reason did people give for not using the optimized settings? They are there for a reason, to make sure that you have the right drivers, best performance, most stability, etc. There are cases where you need to not use them, but it means you have to worry about the drivers and such yourself. I bet you will find using XenServer as designed that you will get good stability and performance.
CentOS and Fedora will use the same template. Ubuntu and Mint will both use Ubuntu. Mint is Ubuntu 14.04.
You said that you use it?
That's a lot different than recommending it. I use it for specific things. What was the context around that, though? What was I saying that I use the other media for?
-
@scottalanmiller said:
@johnhooks said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@anonymous said:
The suggestion of the community?
THIS community? What reason did people give for not using the optimized settings? They are there for a reason, to make sure that you have the right drivers, best performance, most stability, etc. There are cases where you need to not use them, but it means you have to worry about the drivers and such yourself. I bet you will find using XenServer as designed that you will get good stability and performance.
CentOS and Fedora will use the same template. Ubuntu and Mint will both use Ubuntu. Mint is Ubuntu 14.04.
You said that you use it?
That's a lot different than recommending it. I use it for specific things. What was the context around that, though? What was I saying that I use the other media for?
It was this post
http://mangolassi.it/topic/7487/xenserver-memory-management/2
-
Just, just found it from Google. I certainly wasn't recommending anything. The reason that I was mentioning it is because we often install 512MB systems (always text based.) And often OSes that are not supported by XenServer officially as well. So there is a reason for it. But if running a stock CentOS 7, I would normally look at at least starting with the templates. At very least, worth testing them here.
-
-
@johnhooks 2GB
-
@scottalanmiller said:
Just, just found it from Google. I certainly wasn't recommending anything. The reason that I was mentioning it is because we often install 512MB systems (always text based.) And often OSes that are not supported by XenServer officially as well. So there is a reason for it. But if running a stock CentOS 7, I would normally look at at least starting with the templates. At very least, worth testing them here.
I use it a lot because of the same reason. The template I think gives 2 GiB by default, which is a lot for what I'm normally building.
So here's another question according to their documentation:
The Linux templates create Pure Virtual (PV) guests, as opposed to the HVM guests created by the Windows and Other Install Media templates. Other Install Media template Linux installations are not supported.
So does installing XenTools give you PV also, or do you have to use a template?
-
@anonymous said:
@johnhooks 2GB
Should be plenty, I doubt that it is a memory issue. Most likely a driver one.
-
@johnhooks said:
So does installing XenTools give you PV also, or do you have to use a template?
You need to the template. Drives cannot make something PV. PV is unique to Xen and the Xentools only exist for when you are not PV.
If you are doing a non-templated install, then you need the XenTools installed separately.