On 1.6.2011 19.52, Robert Heller wrote:
I have a CentOS 5.6 system with a AMD Sempron(tm) Processor LE-1300 (which does not provide hardware virtualization support, so I can't use the --cdrom option) and I am *trying* to install FC15 as a guest O/S using a local FC15 DVD-ROM image. Everything work until the installer *insists* on firing up the network to get the repo data, etc. I have a *dial-up* Internet connection and this is a *desktop* machine and is thus pretty much anchored where it is. I have googled this, but it seems no one uses local DVD images. (Of cource *everyone* in the world, except for rural America, has broadband.)
I was able to install FC15 on a old IDE disk connected via a USB port after booting a burned copy of the DVD. *Everything* needed to install the *minimual* system I want to install is there on the DVD, but I can't seem to get the FC15 installer to believe that. I *don't* want or need the updates at this time (maybe later).
Oh, and the virt-viewer is chopping off the right third of the graphical display. Is there any way to fix that? It would let me resize the viewer window and does not provide scroll bars, etc. Or is the FC15 installer having a stupid idea of the virtual machine virtual monitor size? Can *that* be changed (the virtual machine's virtual monitor size)?
The command line I am using is:
sudo virt-install --name=fc15guest --ram=1024 --os-type=linux \ --os-variant=fedora12 \ --location=/distrocds/Fedora/Fedora-15-x86_64-DVD.iso \ --disk="path=/dev/sauron/fc15guest"
I never could do a virt-install using only optical media, and I tried many times (couple of months ago). Also I could not get the --connect clause to work for me.
This kind of procedure did work:
# first, mount the DVD: mount -o loop /root/centos56_64.iso /mnt/centos56
# then... virt-install --name mail \ --os-variant rhel5.4 --ram 1024 \ --vcpus 2 --accelerate \ --nographics -v \ --location /mnt/centos56/ --network bridge:br0 \ --disk path=/kvmail/mail.img,size=290 \ --extra-args "console=ttyS0";
# and when the installer asks, select "http" and a repo
You can create a local http repo on the host itself and give that to the installer, for example http://127.0.0.1/centos/etc...
Maybe you could build a local repo using the materials on the DVD. I think I did not try that.
Http install with the CentOS 4 installer was *very* strict and quirky about slashes in the http repo address. Not sure about FC. Check this thread:
http://forum.nginx.org/read.php?24,193648,194173#msg-194173
- Jussi