On 10/06/2019 12:46, Daniel P. Berrangé wrote:
> On Mon, Jun 10, 2019 at 12:28:02PM +0100, lejeczek wrote:
>> hi guys
>>
>> in my qutest I have this:
>>
>> ...
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> ...
>>
>> and on the host /home/* are user home dirs which are automounted off a
>> glusterf
On Mon, Jun 10, 2019 at 12:28:02PM +0100, lejeczek wrote:
> hi guys
>
> in my qutest I have this:
>
> ...
>
>
>
>
>
>
> ...
>
> and on the host /home/* are user home dirs which are automounted off a
> glusterfs volume.
>
> The guest starts okey, I can see dirs under /h
hi guys
in my qutest I have this:
...
...
and on the host /home/* are user home dirs which are automounted off a
glusterfs volume.
The guest starts okey, I can see dirs under /home but if I go to
/home/userA I get:
ls: cannot access /home/userA/: Too many levels of sy
On Sat, Jun 08, 2019 at 23:03:50 +0300, Vasiliy Tolstov wrote:
> чт, 6 июн. 2019 г. в 14:19, Sukrit Bhatnagar :
> >
> > Hi,
> >
> > I have been selected for GSoC'19 under qemu and was
> > trying out migration of the pvrdma device.
> > For my current task, I need to perform a "null" migration
> > i.
Yes, even though libvirt is remotely accessible, it is node-centric, that is it
manages the whole node (server) for you, but nothing else (well, it can
migrate). If you want to have a "cloud" or anything involving more servers you
probably want something on top of libvirt as well (oVirt, OpenStac