Hi Mark,
Yes, https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/VCL/Base+Image+Creation
On the top level wiki page it would be under the User Documentation,
Documentation for VCL Administrators section.
Aaron
On Thu, Aug 4, 2011 at 4:50 PM, Mark Gardner m...@vt.edu wrote:
Are the notes from the
The first one means you have to have computer nodes and the exsi host
added to the vcl database.
The vcld --setup tool pulls the target node and esxi host information
from the database.
Aaron
On Fri, Aug 5, 2011 at 8:38 AM, Mark Gardner m...@vt.edu wrote:
Thanks. I was aware of that page. I am
Thanks Aaron.
On Fri, Aug 5, 2011 at 9:59 AM, Aaron Peeler aaron_pee...@ncsu.edu wrote:
The first one means you have to have computer nodes and the exsi host
added to the vcl database.
I think I have the ESXi host added to the database (through the web GUI). I
also added a VM. They show up
Yes Is this what your looking for:
https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/VCL/Create+a+Linux+Base+Image
Also I see vm-1 is in maintenance mode -
go to your Virtual Hosts tool on the VCL portal,
select the host - click the configure host
add vm-1 to esxi-host-1
The image capture process
It depends. I don't recall if the image capture request out right
fails and gets removed when vm-1 is in maintenance mode or not.
To check you can use mysql and run
select * from request;
If there is a request listed in maintenance state (statid=10) then you
could change the stateid back to image
OK next problem: I selected VMware ESX - local network storage
originally for the VM host profile as that is what we used during the
bootcamp but the paths are wrong (e.g., /vmfs/volumes/local-datastore vs
/vmfs/volumes/datastore1). I can edit the profile but in reality it should
be VMware ESX -
You'll need to use mysql or phpmyadmin to change an active host's vmprofile.
The profile is assigned in the vmhost
Get the id from the vmprofile table - the VMware ESX - local storage
profile is id 4
The update the vmhost table for that host.
This query assumes that you only have one vmhost in