On 27 October 2013 12:47, Larry Martell larry.martell@gmail.com wrote:
On Sat, Oct 26, 2013 at 3:07 PM, Earl Ramirez <earlaramirez@gmail.com
wrote:
On Sat, 2013-10-26 at 11:26 -0600, Larry Martell wrote:
On Fri, Oct 25, 2013 at 10:25 PM, Earl Ramirez <earlaramirez@gmail.com wrote:
On Sun, 2013-10-20 at 07:44 -0600, Larry Martell wrote:
On Sat, Oct 19, 2013 at 11:15 PM, Earl A Ramirez <
earlaramirez@gmail.com
wrote:
Sorry for top posting, this is the only option that the phone
allow.
If the host is running a X server you can use -X option with ssh.
$ ssh -X user@host And start virt-manager to manage the VMs.
I am running putty from Windows. I do have X11 forwarding enabled.
But I
still get 'could not open display' I though perhaps I needed to
install
Xming, but I don't have admin rights on the Windows box, so I
couldn't do
that.
Hello Larry,
Were you able to connect to the VM using VNC?
No, no one there could make it work on a VM. I switched to using a
physical
host.
I will be able to replicate your environment within a few days are you willing to give it another shot?
I appreciate your offer and it certainly would be nice to get this solved, but it not longer critical for me to do my job. Alao I will be super busy this coming week.
SilverTip257 had an interesting question with regards to how the network is setup.
I'm assuming that the host has a bridge nic compared to the bridge that is created by libvirtd "virbr0", which has the default network of 192.168.122.0/24.
Can you confirm my assumption and let me know if you are willing to continue to work on a resolution.
I don't know how to answer your question - I am a developer not an admin - but if you give me the commands needed I can execute them. I don't have access to the physical host - it's 2,000 miles away from where I am. I could try and ask an admin there, but they are super busy too and they've moved on to other things (We are really short staffed.)
Thanks! _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Good Day Larry,
I finally got the time to build the test environment
KVM Host Network Configuration:
eth4==|
|==bond0==br0
eth5==|
KVM Guest Network Configuration:
Host device bond0 (Bridge 'br0')
I have installed tiger VNC server and made the following changes in /etc/sysconfig/vncserver
VNCSERVERS="2:guest1"
VNCSERVERARGS[2]="-geometry 800x600"
The vncserver was stopped
/etc/init.d/vncserver stop
Configure authentication
vncserver :2 (I was prompt to create and verify the password)
From the remote computer I was able to connect to the CentOS 6.4 KVM Guest using tiger VNC vncviewer.
Vncviewer 192.168.1.31:2
netstat -atulp | grep vnc
tcp 0 0 *:5902 *:* LISTEN 28326/Xvnc
tcp 0 0 *:6002 *:* LISTEN 28326/Xvnc
tcp 0 0 192.168.1.31:5902 192.168.1.157:41034 ESTABLISHED 28326/Xvnc
tcp 0 0 *:6002 *:* LISTEN 28326/Xvnc
Seeing that you are able to connect to the server using SSH, I believe that it's save to assume that the setup is similar to what I created, if you are using a Bridge connection you will not have to close the KVM Guest neither will you have to change the display from VNC to spice.
Let me know if this helps.