From: Manuel Wolfshant, Tuesday, April 21, 2009 6:36 PM
No GUI is needed on the server. One only needs to make sure that
virt-viewer can be used (which happens if your remote workstation has an
X server + you install xorg-x11-xauth on the the server running Xen. ssh
X forwarding takes care of
On Wed, Apr 22, 2009 at 8:48 AM, Ed Heron e...@heron-ent.com wrote:
From: Manuel Wolfshant, Tuesday, April 21, 2009 6:36 PM
No GUI is needed on the server. One only needs to make sure that
virt-viewer can be used (which happens if your remote workstation has an
X server + you install
On 04/21/2009 08:04 PM, Ed Heron wrote:
From: Manuel Wolfshant wo...@nobugconsulting.ro
Sent: Sunday, April 19, 2009 11:09 AM
...
I have not used any other doc but the manual (
On 04/18/2009 12:22 AM, R P Herrold wrote:
On Thu, 16 Apr 2009, Ed Heron wrote:
I don't see a How To, on this wiki, specifically designed to address the
task of creating a Microsoft Windows XP virtual machine as a Xen guest under
CentOS 5. Many of the concepts are covered in
On Thu, 2009-04-16 at 16:49 -0600, Ed Heron wrote:
I don't see a How To, on this wiki, specifically designed to address the
task of creating a Microsoft Windows XP virtual machine as a Xen guest under
CentOS 5. Many of the concepts are covered in
On Fri, Apr 17, 2009 at 5:52 PM, JohnS jse...@gmail.com wrote:
On Thu, 2009-04-16 at 16:49 -0600, Ed Heron wrote:
I don't see a How To, on this wiki, specifically designed to address the
task of creating a Microsoft Windows XP virtual machine as a Xen guest under
CentOS 5. Many of the
I don't see a How To, on this wiki, specifically designed to address the
task of creating a Microsoft Windows XP virtual machine as a Xen guest under
CentOS 5. Many of the concepts are covered in
http://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/Xen/InstallingHVMDomU, but it appears to leave
some things to the