From: libvir-list-boun...@redhat.com [mailto:libvir-list-
boun...@redhat.com] On Behalf Of David Lutterkort
...
In particular, if you are part of the management system, you have a
much
better idea (on the node) what it means to have a working network
configuration, and can recover from
On Tue, Feb 24, 2009 at 11:06:02PM +, David Lutterkort wrote:
On Tue, 2009-02-24 at 18:24 +0200, Dan Kenigsberg wrote:
I know I'm arriving very late to this discussion and should have read
it all before posting, but...
The project I'm working on wanted to be able to setup network
On Fri, 2009-02-27 at 10:07 +0200, Dan Kenigsberg wrote:
The real issue is, that in this stage, management may have lost
connectivity to the node.
What exactly is the scenario here ? Are you trying to manage any old
node as long as it has libvirt installed ? As soon as you need any sort
of
On Fri, 2009-02-13 at 09:12 +, Mark McLoughlin wrote:
Hi David,
Nice work ...
A thought as I update this Fedora feature page[1], given that the goal
of the feature could be described as fixing things so that the shared
physical device section of libvirt's Networking wiki page[2] isn't
On Thu, 2009-02-26 at 12:40 -0500, Dan Williams wrote:
On Fri, 2009-02-13 at 09:12 +, Mark McLoughlin wrote:
Hi David,
Nice work ...
A thought as I update this Fedora feature page[1], given that the goal
of the feature could be described as fixing things so that the shared
I know I'm arriving very late to this discussion and should have read
it all before posting, but...
The project I'm working on wanted to be able to setup network
configuration without making persistant changes to configuration files.
This would allow testing if everything works well, and reboot
On Tue, 2009-02-24 at 18:24 +0200, Dan Kenigsberg wrote:
I know I'm arriving very late to this discussion and should have read
it all before posting, but...
The project I'm working on wanted to be able to setup network
configuration without making persistant changes to configuration files.