Hi, Please check that the scheduler is running (mm_sched process), take a look at the scheduler log (/var/log/one/sched.log), and check that you have hosts with enough CPU and memory resources. More info here [1].
Note that you can always deploy manually your VMs with the 'onevm deploy' command. Regards. [1] http://wiki.opennebula.org/faq#my_machine_stays_in_pending_state_what_can_i_do -- Carlos Martín, MSc Project Engineer OpenNebula - The Open Source Toolkit for Data Center Virtualization www.OpenNebula.org | cmar...@opennebula.org | @OpenNebula<http://twitter.com/opennebula><cmar...@opennebula.org> On Mon, Dec 19, 2011 at 1:26 AM, cat fa <boost.subscrib...@gmail.com> wrote: > It was always PENDING even I set it to 0.1. > > > 2011/12/18 Giovanni Toraldo <m...@gionn.net> > >> 2011/12/18 cat fa <boost.subscrib...@gmail.com>: >> > I set a number in CPU capacity section in virtual machine template. >> After I >> > instantiate that virtual machine, the state of that virtual machine was >> > always PENGDING. It never entered the PROLOG stage. >> > What was the virtual machina waiting for? >> >> Check the scheduler log file, you probably set a too high CPU that is >> not satisfiable with any of your current active hosts. >> >> -- >> Giovanni Toraldo >> http://gionn.net/ >> _______________________________________________ >> Users mailing list >> Users@lists.opennebula.org >> http://lists.opennebula.org/listinfo.cgi/users-opennebula.org >> > > > _______________________________________________ > Users mailing list > Users@lists.opennebula.org > http://lists.opennebula.org/listinfo.cgi/users-opennebula.org > >
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