Answered in other thread, please avoid crossposting as far as possible. Best,
-T -- OpenNebula - Flexible Enterprise Cloud Made Simple -- Constantino Vázquez Blanco, PhD, MSc Senior Infrastructure Architect at C12G Labs www.c12g.com | @C12G | es.linkedin.com/in/tinova -- Confidentiality Warning: The information contained in this e-mail and any accompanying documents, unless otherwise expressly indicated, is confidential and privileged, and is intended solely for the person and/or entity to whom it is addressed (i.e. those identified in the "To" and "cc" box). They are the property of C12G Labs S.L.. Unauthorized distribution, review, use, disclosure, or copying of this communication, or any part thereof, is strictly prohibited and may be unlawful. If you have received this e-mail in error, please notify us immediately by e-mail at [email protected] and delete the e-mail and attachments and any copy from your system. C12G thanks you for your cooperation. On Mon, Jan 13, 2014 at 8:12 AM, Qiubo Su (David Su) <[email protected]> wrote: > dear opennebula community, > > follow the process to create VMWARE ESXi5.0 VMs using OpenNebula, every > steps are working fine, e.g. get below return when run > "/srv/cloud/one/var/remotes/im/run_probes vmware 0 esxi01" > > HYPERVISOR=vmware TOTALCPU=400 FREECPU=400 CPUSPEED=3192 TOTALMEMORY=8106080 > FREEMEMORY=6484864 > > but when run "onehost create esxi01 im_vmware vmm_vmware tm_vmware dummy", > get below error: > > ******************************************** > Wrong number of arguments > The arguments should be: <hostname> > > ******************************************** > > this error is so strange. did some research, can't find a solution for this. > > it is much appreciated if anyone can help with this. > > by the way, the environment is that opennebula front end server is a VM > created in a physical machine and VMware ESXI 5.0 sever is installed in a > separate physical machine. > > kind regards, > q.s. > > On Fri, Jan 10, 2014 at 4:44 PM, Qiubo Su (David Su) <[email protected]> > wrote: >> >> Dear OpenNebula Community, >> >> In the "VMware Configuration" section of "VMware Drivers 3.8" in the page >> of http://archives.opennebula.org/documentation:archives:rel3.8:evmwareg, >> below information is for setting "The access via SSH needs to be >> passwordless": >> >> $ su - >> $ mkdir /etc/ssh/keys-oneadmin >> $ chmod 755 /etc/ssh/keys-oneadmin >> $ su - oneadmin >> $ vi /etc/ssh/keys-oneadmin/authorized_keys >> <paste here the contents of the oneadmin's front-end account public key >> (FE -> $HOME/.ssh/id_{rsa,dsa}.pub) and exit vi> >> $ chmod 600 /etc/ssh/keys-oneadmin/authorized_keys >> >> After the setup, can access via ESXI server from front end server through >> SSH without password, however when reboot the ESXI server, the setup is >> disappeared, i.e. the /keys-oneadmin/ folder and the authorized_keys file >> are disappeared after reboot the ESXI server. >> >> It is much appreciated if you can help with why the setup disappeared and >> how to resolve it? >> >> By the way, the front end server is with Ubuntu 12.04 OS and OpenNebula >> 3.8.1, the ESXI server is with CentOS 5.10 OS. >> >> Thanks kindly, >> Q.S. >> >> >> On Sun, Dec 15, 2013 at 11:57 AM, Qiubo Su (David Su) <[email protected]> >> wrote: >>> >>> Dear OpenNebula Community, >>> >>> I want to install VMware ESXI 5.5, 5.1 and 5.0 onto the PC with Asus >>> P5QPL-AM motherboard and Intel E6750 CPU, but got below error: >>> >>> No network adapters were detected. Either no network adapters are >>> physically connected to the system, or a suitable driver could not be >>> located. A third party driver may required. >>> >>> Ensure that there is at least one network adapter physically connected to >>> the system before attempting installation. If the problem persists, consult >>> the VMware Knowledge Base. >>> >>> The PC does have a network adapter, and the Linux OS installed can access >>> to Internet through the Ethernet card with no problem. >>> >>> This doesn't look like the compatibility issue, due to get the same error >>> when trying to install VMware ESXI 5.5, 5.1 and 5.0 onto the same PC. >>> >>> It is much appreciated if you can help with this. >>> >>> Moreover I have been using KVM as hypervisor, and it has been no issue, >>> so easy to use. >>> >>> Thanks kindly, >>> Q.S >> >> > > > > _______________________________________________ > Users mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.opennebula.org/listinfo.cgi/users-opennebula.org > _______________________________________________ Users mailing list [email protected] http://lists.opennebula.org/listinfo.cgi/users-opennebula.org
