Hi Chris,
> I''m new to virtualization and this list. I have started
investigating
> Xen for what may be an unusual application.
>
> We have a single-user, dual-monitor product that runs under Solaris 10
> x86 that would like to have r/w-access to a file created by an
> application running under Windows XP. XP and its app are hidden to
> the user, and require access to a USB port.
>
> Can Xen support this configuration?
"Sort of" ;-)
> I''m assuming I would need to run
> both Solaris and Windows as guests.
Probably. You can, in principle, run Solaris as dom0, in which case
it''d have
direct access to the video hardware, which might be useful to you. I''m
not
an expert at Solaris on xen so I couldn''t say that much more... I
don''t know
if USB passthrough would work on Solaris, which could be a problem.
The other alternative would be to run Linux as dom0 and run both Solaris and
windows as domUs. That''d probably get you lower display performance
since
you''d be running through the virtual framebuffer, though it really
depends
what exactly you''re trying to do!
The Qemu device model used by Xen supports USB device passthrough to guests
such as Windows in principle, although I''ve heard varying reports of
success
with this in the past. What kind of devices do you need to pass through the
USB port?
> I realize that this is a very
> general question, but I''m trying to get a handle on whether there
are
> any obvious roadblocks to the approach as I dig deeper. For example,
> with some preliminary searching of this list I notice there may be
> problems with sharing folders between guests.
Sharing folders would best be done using something like CIFS / Samba, since
there''s not a safe way of directly sharing disk accesses between
Windows and
Solaris (not commonly available or free, anyhow!). You could restrict this
sharing to a totally internal virtual network on the system if you wanted.
Possibly worth noting that other virtualisation platforms could also handle
something like the setup you describe, and they may also offer different
tradeoffs regarding CPU performance, graphics performance, ease of sharing
folders, etc.
Cheers,
Mark
--
Push Me Pull You - Distributed SCM tool (http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~maw48/pmpu/)
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