Hi Giuseppe and thanks for the response............ Heres some more info:
Here is my kickstart... maybe the "--bootloader" argument is wrong in some way? # Put this in pastebin or some other public url # Kickstart file automatically generated by anaconda. #version=DEVEL install cdrom lang en_US.UTF-8 keyboard us network --onboot yes --device eth0 --bootproto dhcp --noipv6 timezone --utc America/New_York rootpw --iscrypted $6$9bRPXTZZMy0FNl2A$lgY.MS3pZ.0PVg4o3AQeJOydPwGVphdKT07tHlJUmdoRTz4UQQ/L54ny0QHkdubMquqkr4jw37DxmM0FL5kRn1 selinux --enforcing authconfig --enableshadow --passalgo=sha512 firewall --service=ssh #Disable graphical stuff skipx #text # The following is the partition information you requested # Note that any partitions you deleted are not expressed # here so unless you clear all partitions first, this is # not guaranteed to work # Uncommented by j zerombr clearpart --all autopart #ip=192.168.122.99 network --bootproto=static --ip=192.168.122.100 --netmask=255.255.255.0 --gateway=192.168.122.1 --nameserver=192.168.122.1 bootloader --location=mbr --timeout=5 --append="rhgb quiet" .... %end Some more details: This is what my "df" output is Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on /dev/mapper/VolGroup-lv_root 26552588 2244364 22959412 9% / tmpfs 1978444 0 1978444 0% /dev/shm /dev/sda1 495844 33710 436534 8% /boot On Tue, Apr 22, 2014 at 4:02 AM, Giuseppe Scrivano <gscri...@redhat.com>wrote: > Jay Vyas <jayunit...@gmail.com> writes: > > > Hi virt, im stumped... any help would be appreciated. > > > > I normally create my VMs like this: > > > > base="http://mirror.pnl.gov/fedora/linux/releases/20/Fedora/x86_64/os/" > > > > sudo virt-install --hvm --name $vm_name$i --ram 4000 \ > > --disk path=/VirtualMachines/$vm_name$i,size=30 \ > > --location $base -x "ks=http://xxx.os21.ks$kx" > > > > HOWEVER... I'm finding that my VMs dont boot after i restart the Host. > > > > My question is: Where is virt-install writing the boot disk to? > > I don't see anything wrong in your command line and it should just work. > > How does your kickstart file look like? And your domain XML definition > (you can get it with "virsh dumpxml $vm_name$i")? > > Regards, > Giuseppe > -- Jay Vyas http://jayunit100.blogspot.com
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