Hey again
May I ask again, where I can get the sources of the OpenVZ Kernel _DEB_
archive (I don't mean the kernel sources themselves).
Thanks,
Roman
On Fri, 2014-07-11 at 09:44 +0200, Roman Haefeli wrote:
On Fri, 2014-07-11 at 11:01 +0400, Pavel Odintsov wrote:
You could extract patch
Dear Colleagues, I would like to know your experience using openvz, my boss
tells me that if we use openvz, when you upgrade from Centos 6.x, we lose
the openvz kernel and leave offline multiple virtual machines. Exists this
risk?, As you have faced, or is a valid opinion but that has not happened
On Thu, Jul 17, 2014 at 11:05 AM, Pablo Silva psil...@gmail.com wrote:
Dear Colleagues, I would like to know your experience using openvz, my boss
tells me that if we use openvz, when you upgrade from Centos 6.x, we lose
the openvz kernel and leave offline multiple virtual machines. Exists this
There is no problem to run OpenVZ on Centos 6 based system, both userspace
and kernel are supported well.
On Thu, Jul 17, 2014 at 7:05 PM, Pablo Silva psil...@gmail.com wrote:
Dear Colleagues, I would like to know your experience using openvz, my
boss tells me that if we use openvz, when you
I'm a a bit confused with your questions, why standard packages
AMD64 (x86_64, EM64T) File Date Size
linux-image-2.6.32-openvz-042stab092.2-amd64_1_amd64.deb
http://download.openvz.org/kernel/branches/rhel6-2.6.32/042stab092.2/linux-image-2.6.32-openvz-042stab092.2-amd64_1_amd64.deb
2014-07-09
Thanks CoolCold, but my question is about the risk, has you know openvz
need a special kernel, you must to install and therefore update as
necessary, my boos said: that if we use openvz, when you upgrade from
Centos 6.x, we lose the openvz kernel and leave offline multiple virtual
machines, exist
I'm not sure I understand what you take under the risk term here.
Is the problem in, installing appropriate kernel for Centos 6 via yum,
install updates for it via yum or what?
On Thu, Jul 17, 2014 at 8:42 PM, Pablo Silva psil...@gmail.com wrote:
Thanks CoolCold, but my question is about the
The openvz install takes care of the kernel dependencies. No worries about
overwriting the openvz kernel with a non-vz-aware kernel with a yum update.
Also, the openvz kernel is maintained and kept up to date, incorporating
upstream security patches quickly. I haven't seen any problem with updates
Hi CoolCold!
Risk is: for example, I'm upgrading a 6.x server centos having a openvz
kernel, for some reason when I do yum update shows me an update of the
native kernel centos 6.x + openvz kernel update, my question is : who wins,
if he wins the upgrade kernel centos 6.x then could eventually
Greetings,
- Original Message -
Thanks CoolCold, but my question is about the risk, has you know
openvz need a special kernel, you must to install and therefore
update as necessary, my boos said: that if we use openvz, when you
upgrade from Centos 6.x, we lose the openvz kernel and
Thanks Keith, my question was about kernel update in centos 6.x ...
-Pablo
On Thu, Jul 17, 2014 at 1:33 PM, Keith Keller
kkel...@wombat.san-francisco.ca.us wrote:
On 2014-07-17, Pablo Silva psil...@gmail.com wrote:
Dear Colleagues, I would like to know your experience using openvz, my
On 07/17/2014 09:44 AM, Paul Sheer wrote:
Hi there!
Thanks for the excellent wiki on openvz.org.
We would like to move an application to a container that is currently
running on bare metal.
The ethernet card we are running is a Broadcom NetXstreme II with 10
I/O channels. Each I/O
Hi Scott!
Thanks for your reply, my question is update not upgrade..., if we choose
centos 6.x, install openvz, and for any reason some people run yum update,
we don't get offline all vm hosting there..., doubt my boss goes through
the kernel update ... the interprets it as a risk, and you are
13 matches
Mail list logo