The storage domain lists the type as "Local on Host". It's been a while since I
set it up, but I thought the engine deployment had an option for local storage.
The VM's reside in a directory under /opt on the Physical Host.
https://i.postimg.cc/z3mMNj3J/Capture.png
I forget which version I
When I did the VM this time, I did pre-allocate all of the space. The first
time, I was just curious if Windows would even run ok under oVirt and it does
appear it will.
Next.. I need to get a couple Solaris VMs actually working. I've seen some
'hacks' out there that others have reported
Yes - local as in 5400 RPM SATA - standard desktop, slow storage.. :)
It's still 'slow' being 5400 RPM SATA, but after setting the new VM to
'VirtIO-SCSI' and loading the driver, the performance is 'as expected'. I don't
notice with with the Linux VMs because they don't do anything that
Re-installation using the 'VirtIO-SCSI' interface along with the appropriate
driver installs took care of the issue! It's still a little bit slow - but what
I would expect for a 5400 RPM drive :)
The performance had improved greatly!
Thanks for the suggestions!
This is a simple one desktop setup I use at home for being a nerd :)
So it's a single host 'cluster' using local storage.
Host Info:
CentOS Linux 8 - 4.18.0-305.10.2.el8_4.x86_64 (I keep fairly well updated)
Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-7500 CPU @ 3.40GHz [Kaby Lake] {Skylake}, 14nm
The disk it's on
I recently installed a Windows 10 VM under oVirt 4.4.5.11-1.el8
Also installed the drivers using "virtio-win-1.9.16.iso" (Then re-installed
them after updates just in case it helped)
I found a similar complaint with VMWare
You are a saint and a scholar!
This 100% fixed it for me. (Connection to ovirt-imageio service has failed.
Ensure that ovirt-engine certificate is registered as a
valid CA in the browser).
oVirt version 4.4.5.11-1.el8 and using Firefox 78.9.0esr (64-bit)
I tried to import the cert file; that
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