More 'color' ;-)
proxmox iso's do, and they also include zfs on root as an option,
but they require gui bits to install from what I can tell.
https://www.proxmox.com/en/downloads
Penned by Carlos Cardenas on 20180823 8:45.44, we have:
| On Thu, Aug 23, 2018 at 12:43:17PM +02
On Thu, Aug 23, 2018 at 12:43:17PM +0200, Martijn van Duren wrote:
> Hello Ales,
>
> I ran into the same problem and found that the Debian installer doesn't
> include the virtio drivers and thus can't use the cdrom or the disk.
>
> I worked around this by bootstrapping the disk via the qemu port
On Aug 23, 2018 2:34 AM, Stefan Sperling wrote:
>
> On Wed, Aug 22, 2018 at 06:38:11PM -0700, Chris Bennett wrote:
> > Well, there are probably additional reasons too, but my father happily
> > runs OpenBSD. Of course, he needs to be able to turn the computer off.
>
> I would recommend using doa
Martijn van Duren wrote:
> (…)
> I worked around this by bootstrapping the disk via the qemu port and
> booting the disk from vmm once it's finally done. Qemu is significantly
> slower than vmm, so do get another cup of $BEVERAGE.
> (…)
Another option is to grab
https://cdimage.debian.org/cdimage
Hello Ales,
I ran into the same problem and found that the Debian installer doesn't
include the virtio drivers and thus can't use the cdrom or the disk.
I worked around this by bootstrapping the disk via the qemu port and
booting the disk from vmm once it's finally done. Qemu is significantly
slo
Hello!
I have a lenovo T470 running current on which i would like to use vmd
to run debian for some work specific stuff.
I'm having trouble installing debian though because the installer
doesn't seem to find cdrom.
My vm.conf is pretty basic:
switch "local" {
interface bridge0
}
vm "work"
Hello,
I'm running a diskless Soekris net4526 (i386 architecture) and I have
encountered a problem when using dhcp setting on my hostname.sis0 file.
The booting process stops at 'Starting network'.
If I set the interface's hostname.sis0 to static IP, everything works
OK.
If I bring up the interfa
Hi,
openBGPd is running at an internet exchange, two openBSD route servers
(rs3 on openBSD 6.3 and rs4 on openBSD 6.2, both virtual machines on
different hypervisors in different locations) connect with peering
customers.
We've experienced crashes in openBGPd twice in the past two weeks. Both
tim
On Wed, Aug 22, 2018 at 06:38:11PM -0700, Chris Bennett wrote:
> Well, there are probably additional reasons too, but my father happily
> runs OpenBSD. Of course, he needs to be able to turn the computer off.
I would recommend using doas(1) to grant 'shutdown' to a particular user.
You don't want
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