Hi Stewart, For each VM register the image (with driver and path) and make it persistent. Then create a template with your settings (CPU, MAC, etc.) and instantiate the VMs. That should do the trick.
-- André Monteiro On Sat, Dec 1, 2012 at 12:45 AM, Stuart Longland <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi all, > > Sorry if this has been asked already, I did look but didn't see anything. > > The situation is thus; in a hurry I needed to get a couple of virtual > machines going, we didn't have anything installed at the time beyond > plain QEMU/KVM, so I just used that, creating the following shell script > snippet: > > > exec kvm \ > > -uuid 2247a584-e95d-47f1-8756-9088c25b87eb \ > > -drive file=/path/to/hda.qcow2,if=virtio,media=disk \ > > -rtc base=localtime \ > > -vnc :0 \ > > -daemonize \ > > -usb \ > > -usbdevice tablet \ > > -m 512 \ > > -net nic,macaddr=52:54:00:12:34:59 \ > > -net tap \ > > "$@" > > The above VM runs Windows Server 2008R2 64-bit. > > In fact, I've got a few VMs like this. In the case of Linux VMs (using > serial console), the main difference is the use of -nographic in place > of -daemon and using `screen -dmS` to daemonise the KVM process instead. > > How does one go about importing such a VM into OpenNebula? I tried by > copying across the disk image and creating a 64-bit host. Despite being > careful to ensure things were identical, I always got a STOP error; > error 0x0000005d. > > Is there a known working procedure for importing such VMs? > > Regards, > -- > ## -,-''''-. ###### Stuart Longland, Software Engineer > ##. : ## : ## 38b Douglas Street -+*WE HAVE*+- > ## # ## -'` .#' Milton, QLD, 4034 --+*MOVED*+-- > '#' *' '-. *' http://www.vrt.com.au > S Y S T E M S T: 07 3535 9619 F: 07 3535 9699 > _______________________________________________ > Users mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.opennebula.org/listinfo.cgi/users-opennebula.org >
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