diff options
author | Robby Workman <rworkman@slackbuilds.org> | 2012-10-02 13:32:56 -0500 |
---|---|---|
committer | dsomero <xgizzmo@slackbuilds.org> | 2012-10-07 09:18:01 -0400 |
commit | 66e00ebfd7c72e830fe29536604a045d8b3fb4ca (patch) | |
tree | 48b7ff42331abb4d9b759b042f9fc29523c6421c /system/xen/domU/README.domU | |
parent | 7bd3b03bf1a0e3a0f7162372c725618dd71b261c (diff) | |
download | slackbuilds-66e00ebfd7c72e830fe29536604a045d8b3fb4ca.tar.gz |
system/xen: Added (updated to version 4.2.0 from 13.37 repo)
This isn't quite ready yet, but it should at least mostly work.
Signed-off-by: Robby Workman <rworkman@slackbuilds.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'system/xen/domU/README.domU')
-rw-r--r-- | system/xen/domU/README.domU | 56 |
1 files changed, 56 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/system/xen/domU/README.domU b/system/xen/domU/README.domU new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..712a555f14 --- /dev/null +++ b/system/xen/domU/README.domU @@ -0,0 +1,56 @@ + HOW TO INSTALL A SLACKWARE domU XEN GUEST + +After the ordeal of installing and configuring LILO/GRUB, Xen, kernel-xen and +initrd, editing rc.local and rc.local_shutdown and finally booting on your +Slackware XenLinux, you might be wondering how are you to load you guest OS. +If you look around, you might find Xen domU (unprivileged) guest that you can +download from the Internet, but some of us might want to roll their own. This +MINI-HOWTO shows how to install a Slackware domU guest. The fastest way is to +mount your Slackware DVD on /media/SlackDVD, normally this is the mount point +chosen by HAL. +Then run the included domU.sh script: + +# ./domU.sh + +This will install Slackware onto an 8GB file called slackware.img and a 500MB +swap file called swap_file. By default, a typical server installation ensues. + +Have a good look at the "mydom" file as you need to fill in the full path to +the slackware.img and swap_file files. + +Then run the following command: + +# xl create -c mydom + +Your Slackware XenLinux domU should boot instantly. + +Since Xen domU support has been in mainline kernel for a while now, those that +wish to have the best performance can compile a seperate domU kernel based on a +stock Slackware kernel config. +This is what you have to select/unselect when building domU only kernel: + +--- +Processor type and features ---> + [*] Paravirtualized guest support ---> + [*] Xen guest support + +Bus options (PCI etc.) ---> + [ ] PCI support + +Device Drivers ---> + < > Serial ATA and Parallel ATA drivers ---> + SCSI device support ---> + < > SCSI device support +--- + +Disabling SCSI support frees up the /dev/sd* device names for use as Xen +virtual block devices. Basicly, this changes their names from /dev/sd* to a +Xen device name format /dev/xvd*. If this is left enabled, ocasionaly domU can +get stuck with this error: "XENBUS: Waiting for devices to initialise..." +Naturaly, to get the best performance you can disable everything that you +don't need in a domU kernel. + +Note that these files are not intended for a production environment. Users who +have particular requirements will need to set up their own methods, but these +files might provide a good starting point. Refer to the Xen manual and +http://xen.org for more details and options. |