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 yet tested networking with containers or VM. I need to
> setup a real server for this with enough IPs.
> 
> Currently I did not yet understand how VM networking works in VZ7.
> Wasn't able to spin up a VM due to this. Still investigating.

I had a physical server for OpenVZ 7 until today when I retired it.  It was 
setup for learning and testing.  I felt fine with retiring it because I 
installed OpenVZ 7 as a KVM virtual machine (with nested KVM capabilities) on 
my Fedora 24 desktop system yesterday and it seems to work fine.  I'm not 
saying nested KVM is ready for production yet (I haven't tried it) but for 
learning and testing it seems good enough.

I also used the nested-KVM situation when testing the centos-7-to-openvz-7 
conversion process and that worked out well too.

So far as creating VMs in OpenVZ 7 goes, I found the current documentation very 
lacking... either that or I wasn't looking in the right place.  It only covers 
prlctl and doesn't mention virt-manager at all... but hey, virt-manager is 
covered elsewhere quite well, right. (RHEL and Fedora documentation)

Anyway, in the OpenVZ 7 docs it shows how to create a VM with prlctl.  It shows 
how to give it an ip address but states that only works once the OpenVZ VM 
guest tools are installed... so it won't work for installations.  And it has a 
section on how to configure VNC access.  It seems to neglect covering how to 
attach an iso file (found it in the man page), and boot the VM, connect to it 
via a VNC client... and how to determine the IP address it might get during the 
install from DHCP.  So what I did was use virt-manager... which entailed 
installing some GUI packages to support that.  Actually I added the EPEL 
repository on the host node, installed XFCE and x2goserver... and added a local 
user with sudo access.  virt-manager worked great.  Once the VM was installed 
(in this case CentOS 7) I attached the OpenVZ client tools iso and installed 
it... and then I was able to do a bunch of prlctl stuff on the VM just like 
with containers.  I wasn't really sure if there was a preferred!
  place to place .iso files but it doesn't seem to matter as long as you point 
to them wherever you put them.

I'm guessing their is a way to do all the VM installation with prlctl and VNC 
but so far I haven't figured it out either... and I'm already so used to 
virt-manager from KVM systems past.

I wonder if SPICE will become an option in OpenVZ 7 at some point?  SPICE may 
work fine but I haven't tried it... and I don't see it in the documentation.

TYL,
-- 
Scott Dowdle
704 Church Street
Belgrade, MT 59714
(406)388-0827 [home]
(406)994-3931 [work]

_______________________________________________
Users mailing list
Users@openvz.org
https://lists.openvz.org/mailman/listinfo/users

Reply via email to