awesome thanks!
On Thu, Apr 10, 2014 at 8:30 AM, Jorick Astrego <[email protected]> wrote: > On Thu, 2014-04-10 at 08:02 -0500, Jeremiah Jahn wrote: > > On Thu, Apr 10, 2014 at 5:46 AM, Fabian Deutsch <[email protected]> wrote: >> Am Donnerstag, den 10.04.2014, 09:19 +0300 schrieb Itamar Heim: >>> On 04/09/2014 11:01 PM, Jeremiah Jahn wrote: >>> > I'm assuming the answer is no. But for some reason I seem to be >>> >>> the answer is yes actually. if you want a host you can change, use plain >>> fedora/rhel/centos as the host. >>> Fabian can reply to the rest. >> >> Yep. Node has a read-only root filesystem, which has some overlays to >> allow limited changes. > > And yet I've been able to edit the /etc/hosts file before this > problem? Does it go readonly after a while? > > Actually /etc is mounted in tmpfs so not persistent: > > cat /proc/mounts |grep etc > none /etc tmpfs > rw,rootcontext=system_u:object_r:var_lib_t:s0,seclabel,relatime 0 0 > > So if you want to change things you have to change it in "/config/etc/" > > >>> the answer is yes actually. if you want a host you can change, use plain > >>> fedora/rhel/centos as the host. >>> Fabian can reply to the rest. > > You can just as easily do a "mount -o rw,remount /" to edit things if you > want but you have to do this on every node and again after upgrading to a > newer version of node. > > I see it's there in the wiki: > > http://www.ovirt.org/Node_Troubleshooting#Making_changes_on_the_host > > > Kind regards, > > Jorick Astrego > Netbulae B.V. > _______________________________________________ Users mailing list [email protected] http://lists.ovirt.org/mailman/listinfo/users

