Hi Jeff, Sorry, forgot to mention that KVM is used through libvirt in OpenNebula, so that is the driver you want to try out.
Regards, -Tino -- Constantino Vázquez Blanco | dsa-research.org/tinova Virtualization Technology Engineer / Researcher OpenNebula Toolkit | opennebula.org On Wed, Aug 11, 2010 at 5:31 PM, Jeff Williams <[email protected]> wrote: > > On 05/08/2010, at 7:31 PM, Tino Vazquez wrote: > > 2) I'm not familiar with the Xen Cloud Platform, but if you can install > > libvirt on it, it should work. Maybe somebody who knows more can clarify > > this. > > XCP goes beyond the hypervisor and effectively offers much more > (storage, network, etc). We have evaluated its integration, while that > doesn't happen using libvirt on top of XCP is a nice choice to manage > it from OpenNebula. We haven't tried it though, and would be delighted > to receive some feedback on this. > > > > Well, I finally got around to trying this out. I added the host using: > /onehost create xcp im_xen vmm_xen tm_ssh > But one doesn't seem to get any information from the host: > onead...@opennebula:~$ onehost show xcp > HOST 2 INFORMATION > ID : 2 > NAME : xcp > CLUSTER : default > STATE : MONITORED > IM_MAD : im_xen > VM_MAD : vmm_xen > TM_MAD : tm_ssh > HOST SHARES > MAX MEM : 0 > USED MEM (REAL) : 0 > USED MEM (ALLOCATED) : 0 > MAX CPU : 0 > USED CPU (REAL) : 0 > USED CPU (ALLOCATED) : 0 > RUNNING VMS : 0 > MONITORING INFORMATION > ARCH=i686 > HOSTNAME=server-bsehsenk > MODELNAME=Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU 3040 @ 1.86GHz > Should I be using another driver? I assumed the xen one would be the right > one, however I see in the xen notes that it requires /etc/init.d/xend and > uses xm, both of which XCP doesn't appear to have. > Any ideas? > > Regards, > Jeff > > _______________________________________________ Users mailing list [email protected] http://lists.opennebula.org/listinfo.cgi/users-opennebula.org
