Hi Stackers,
I just looked into the VMware Vcenter Driver, seems it manages a vcenter
cluster as a single compute node, even it contains more than 1 physical
servers. It's not very connivence to know what's the real resource I had in
my cluster.
Is there any reason why we don't identify every
Sorry, I forget to modify the subject.
Best Regards
-- Ray
On Wed, Dec 18, 2013 at 2:21 PM, Ray Sun xiaoq...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Stackers,
I just looked into the VMware Vcenter Driver, seems it manages a vcenter
cluster as a single compute node, even it contains more than 1 physical
.
It would probably help if you described your use case and specify why you
want to identify every ESXi host.
--
Best regards,
Oleg Gelbukh
Mirantis Inc.
On Wed, Dec 18, 2013 at 10:21 AM, Ray Sun xiaoq...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Stackers,
I just looked into the VMware Vcenter Driver, seems
Stackers,
I tried to create a new VM using the driver VMwareVCDriver, but I found
it's very slow when I try to create a new VM, for example, 7GB Windows
Image spent 3 hours.
Then I tried to use curl to upload a iso to vcenter directly.
curl -H Expect: -v --insecure --upload-file
process described above
Thanks
Gary
From: Ray Sun xiaoq...@gmail.com
Reply-To: OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)
openstack-dev@lists.openstack.org
Date: Wednesday, January 8, 2014 4:30 AM
To: OpenStack Dev openstack-dev@lists.openstack.org
Subject: [openstack
, Jan 9, 2014 at 1:09 AM, Rick Jones rick.jon...@hp.com wrote:
On 01/07/2014 06:30 PM, Ray Sun wrote:
Stackers,
I tried to create a new VM using the driver VMwareVCDriver, but I found
it's very slow when I try to create a new VM, for example, 7GB Windows
Image spent 3 hours.
Then I tried to use