Greetings,
- Original Message -
> As far as I understand - Virtuozzo 7 kernel DOES NOT contain latest
> NVMe driver and RHEL 7 kernel has some speed problerms with NVMe.
>
> Are there any official recomendations or suggestions from Openvz
> team?
Something to note is that RHEL 7.3 beta
https://itpeernetwork.intel.com/nvm-express-linux-driver-support-decoded/
"Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL):
NVMe SSDs have been supported since RHEL 6.5. With the introduction of kernel 3.10 in RHEL 7, support for booting from NVMe was added. RHEL 7.1 becomes even more capable with hot
plug
Greetings,
- Original Message -
> I did not find a br0 on the Virtuozzo 7 bare metal installation.
> There is a virtbr0 and a veth0 device, but they are not configured
> via /etc/systemctl/network-scripts.
>
> These devices exist on my C7 -> VZ7 test installation, too.
>
> I have not
Hi Nick,
i'm not sure i fully understand which exact latest changes in NVMe driver your are
talking about =>
assuming you are right and RedHat has not backported some changes yet that you
need.
As well i don't know what performance issues you are taking about.
Brief googling brought me to
Greetings,
- Original Message -
> it took me some time to figure this out and I hope to help when
> sharing the tutorial.
>
> Please note: you should not enable factory.repo entries as I wrote in
> the tutorial. Set enabled=0 for all entries in this file. For
> production hosts you don't
Hi Scott,
I did not find a br0 on the Virtuozzo 7 bare metal installation. There is a
virtbr0 and a veth0 device, but they are not configured via
/etc/systemctl/network-scripts.
These devices exist on my C7 -> VZ7 test installation, too.
I have not yet tested networking with containers or VM.
Hello,
the QEMU group is installed as dependency of - I assume - Virtuozzo Containers.
I checked this after the last step.
Regards
Volker
> Am 26.08.2016 um 11:13 schrieb Pavel Vokhmyanin :
>
> Hello,
>
> Good job on making this work!
> As I can see you’re
Hi,
it took me some time to figure this out and I hope to help when sharing the
tutorial.
Please note: you should not enable factory.repo entries as I wrote in the
tutorial. Set enabled=0 for all entries in this file. For production hosts you
don't want this.
Regards
Volker
> Am
Greetings,
- Original Message -
> As I can see you’re not installing QEMU group as I suggested earlier.
> Did it prove to be an excessive step?
Now, one has to wonder exactly what packages part of the QEMU group. Anything
look critical?
- - - - -
# yum groupinfo QEMU
Group: QEMU
> Subscription completed unsuccessfully
That must be it…
You may try calling it again manually:
# vzlicupdate -a trial
It’s a part of vzdeploy script
Wonder how it works not when you’ve got Virtuozzo packages installed.
Best Regards,
--
Pavel Vokhmyanin
Virtualization Maintenance
Virtuozzo
Hello,
I get this with Virtuozzo 7 / OpenVZ 7.
[root@c7vz ~]# vzsubscribe info=== Summary ===
This system is not yet registered. Try 'subscription-manager register --help'
for more information.
Regards
Volker
> Am 26.08.2016 um 11:18 schrieb Pavel Vokhmyanin :
Also, regarding the license. If you’ve been checking it with “vzlicview” –
that’s wrong approach. By the moment you’ve been installing the trial license
there was just “virtuozzo linux”, not “virtuozzo 7” product – it just couldn’t
install the trial license for virtuozzo itself. It installs
Hello,
Good job on making this work!
As I can see you’re not installing QEMU group as I suggested earlier. Did it
prove to be an excessive step?
Best Regards,
--
Pavel Vokhmyanin
Virtualization Maintenance
Virtuozzo
From: users-boun...@openvz.org [mailto:users-boun...@openvz.org] On Behalf Of
Hi Volker,
Thank you very much! I appreciate your help!
With kind regards,
Jurijs
On Thu, Aug 25, 2016 at 11:14 PM, Volker Janzen wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I was now able to reproduce and document the steps needed to go from
> CentOS 7 -> Virtuozzo Linux 7 -> Virtuozzo 7.
>
> You need
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