Oliver Paulus wrote:
As expected if you're not running an init (i.e. using the plain
initstyle). You'll have to use reboot -f to invoke vshelper which
would reboot the guest.
Can you explain that a little bit more in detail for me? How is it
possible to
use a simple reboot within vserver?
reboot alone won't work without an init, and by default guests don't
have one (see below). reboot -f just calls into the kernel and tells
it to reboot. This is caught by the patch and the kernel runs
vshelper, which does the rebooting/halting.
Thank you for your explanation.
Only if you're
Hello,
I am runnung VServer 2.0.2.1 with 2.6.17.13 kernel on a Debian Etch machine.
util-vserver in version 0.30.211. The guest (vserver) is running Etch too. I
have set CAP_SYS_BOOT in /etc/vservers/vservername/bcapabilities. Every time
I want to reboot from within the guest (vserver) I get the
Oliver Paulus wrote:
Hello,
I am runnung VServer 2.0.2.1 with 2.6.17.13 kernel on a Debian Etch machine.
util-vserver in version 0.30.211. The guest (vserver) is running Etch too. I
have set CAP_SYS_BOOT in /etc/vservers/vservername/bcapabilities. Every time
I want to reboot from within the
As expected if you're not running an init (i.e. using the plain
initstyle). You'll have to use reboot -f to invoke vshelper which
would reboot the guest.
Can you explain that a little bit more in detail for me? How is it possible to
use a simple reboot within vserver?
As expected if you're