Unsure what xen you are on.
But I was using the stock version supplied by Centos and found that
latest 3.4.1 rpms found at the gitco repo ( http://www.gitco.de/
repo/ ) fixed a lot of my problems.
Centos/RHEL use 3.1.2 which blowz.
On Sep 26, 2009, at 8:21 PM, Devraj Mukherjee wrote:
> Than
I have absolutely no clue why this is.
Have you tried taking that img file and its config to another dom0 to
see what happens?
Try to have 2 xen dom0s set aside for testing, one at current
production level and what at bleeding edge.
This way you can test exsisitng domUs on both to see what h
Am Sonntag, den 27.09.2009, 05:16 +0200 schrieb aurfal...@gmail.com:
> Ok, this is what I did in the exact same situation (solution below
> gotten from the xen list).
>
> I use it religiously.
>
> Lucky I'm on both forums.
>
>
> **
>
> First make sure you
o, i didn't see your post in the xen lists.
On Sep 26, 2009, at 8:21 PM, Devraj Mukherjee wrote:
> Thanks a lot for that, I will give it a go. I am trying to get another
> machine with CentOS 5.3 so I can use that to perform the rescue
> operations.
>
> Did you see my post on the virtualisation l
Well, I would build a new system with no LVMs at all, just set
everything as / and ext3.
This way you can rescue img files all day long without potential
VolGroup00 clashes.
I build all my Xen dom0 and domUs w/o LVMs.
Why?
Cuz I found a bug (I guess, or its just lame) that wen your snapshot
Thanks a lot for that, I will give it a go. I am trying to get another
machine with CentOS 5.3 so I can use that to perform the rescue
operations.
Did you see my post on the virtualisation list?
If so do you have any thoughts on that post?
On Sun, Sep 27, 2009 at 1:16 PM, wrote:
> Ok, this is
Ok, this is what I did in the exact same situation (solution below
gotten from the xen list).
I use it religiously.
Lucky I'm on both forums.
**
First make sure your guest isn't running unless you want to trash its
file systems.
losetup -f /var/
Hi aurf,
On Sun, Sep 27, 2009 at 1:09 PM, wrote:
> Is your local host using LVMs and if so, is your volume group
> something like VolGroup00?
>
Yes it uses LVM and has VolGroup00
> Is your image file also of a VolGroup00?
>
> - aurf
Yes this is true as well.
--
"The secret impresses no-one,
Is your local host using LVMs and if so, is your volume group
something like VolGroup00?
Is your image file also of a VolGroup00?
- aurf
On Sep 26, 2009, at 7:56 PM, Devraj Mukherjee wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I am trying to mount images that I previously created with dd and the
> images have two pa
Devraj Mukherjee wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I am trying to mount images that I previously created with dd and the
> images have two partitions (swap and LVM). I use these images to house
> data for my Xen Guests.
>
You'll probably need at least kpartx to mount the partitions out of the
image. Maybe
Hi all,
I am trying to mount images that I previously created with dd and the
images have two partitions (swap and LVM). I use these images to house
data for my Xen Guests.
For some reason (possibly Kernel conflicts for paravirtualized
domains) I am unable to boot my Guest images. Failing which I
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