I am in the same position and I suspect that others are as well.
Who would be interested in participating in a virtual meeting to walk
through the installation together to find out where the instructions are
wrong?
It seems to be a known problem that if you follow the instructions
exactly as they are written, you end up with a non-functional system.
This seems to be partly caused by an installation procedure that is
supposed to be all things to all people and tries to support too many
configuration options.
I would like to see if I could get a simple, single cpu up and running
with CentOS 6.4 (could live with 6.3 but wonder why not the latest), one
network card sitting in a 192.168.n.x network that can be reached by
anyone on the same 192.168.n.x network.
Creating 1 guest Centos 6.4 VM on that machine would at least let me
know that CloudStack works.
Reaching a port open on the Guest VM from a front-end would be my
ultimate goal. I just want to have a publicly accessible Apache HTTP
server on another server attached to Tomcat running on the guest VM. If
I can get this working the rest of the universe of CloudStack nirvana
should be achievable.
Adding additional machines should be possible from that point.
Adding network cards and storage devices should also be possible.
Anyone interested?
Ron
On 29/08/2013 11:55 AM, Marty Sweet wrote:
Hi Taylor,
No problem, just reply back to the mailing list with your issues and logs
(if necessary) and someone will help you out!
Marty
On Thu, Aug 29, 2013 at 4:17 PM, Taylor Schneider <tschnei...@live.com>wrote:
Hello,
I have been trying to get cloudstack installed for several weeks now but
keep running into issues.I was wondering if someone was available to talk
about some things and high level and possibly take a look at my configs /
logs to help troubleshoot?
Thanks
--
Ron Wheeler
President
Artifact Software Inc
email: rwhee...@artifact-software.com
skype: ronaldmwheeler
phone: 866-970-2435, ext 102