Hi All, I am newbie to Xen. I installed xen-3.1.0-13.fc8 on fc8 and configured two fedora guest domains, one with virt-manager and the other with virt-installer. Both the virtual servers are up and i can boot them successfully, but both the installation didn''t create the guest configuration file in /etc/xen directory(docs says configuration file will be created here). Can anybody please help me to find out those files?? Thanks in advance. AKL --------------------------------- Looking for last minute shopping deals? Find them fast with Yahoo! Search.
Aaron Clark
2008-Feb-28 18:07 UTC
Re: [Fedora-xen] no guest configuration file in /etc/xen
Akl Spec wrote:> Hi All, > > I am newbie to Xen. I installed xen-3.1.0-13.fc8 on fc8 and configured > two fedora guest domains, one with virt-manager and the other with > virt-installer. Both the virtual servers are up and i can boot them > successfully, but both the installation didn''t create the guest > configuration file in /etc/xen directory(docs says configuration file > will be created here). > > Can anybody please help me to find out those files?? > > Thanks in advance. > > AKLI believe in 3.1 the configuration files were moved into an internal configuration database instead. There should be something regarding this in the release notes on xen.org. HTH, Aaron
Richard W.M. Jones
2008-Mar-04 11:52 UTC
Re: [Fedora-xen] no guest configuration file in /etc/xen
On Thu, Feb 28, 2008 at 10:00:29AM -0800, Akl Spec wrote:> Hi All, > > I am newbie to Xen. I installed xen-3.1.0-13.fc8 on fc8 and configured two fedora guest domains, one with virt-manager and the other with virt-installer. Both the virtual servers are up and i can boot them successfully, but both the installation didn''t create the guest configuration file in /etc/xen directory(docs says configuration file will be created here). > > Can anybody please help me to find out those files??Do: virsh dumpxml domainname > domainname.xml Edit the XML file then load it back by doing: virsh start domainname.xml Rich. -- Richard Jones, Emerging Technologies, Red Hat http://et.redhat.com/~rjones virt-p2v converts physical machines to virtual machines. Boot with a live CD or over the network (PXE) and turn machines into Xen guests. http://et.redhat.com/~rjones/virt-p2v