Rudi Ahlers wrote: > Ross S. W. Walker wrote: > > That shouldn't be, the list acts like any other CentOS list, maybe > > you entered your email address incorrectly, got spam filtered, or > > is just temporarily broken, but it should send you an email upon > > subscribing to confirm your subscription. > > > Really? Maybe I subscribed to the wrong list then, but this > is the reply > I got: > > Your mail to 'CentOS-virt' with the subject > > subscribe centos-virt > > Is being held until the list moderator can review it for approval. > > The reason it is being held: > > Message may contain administrivia Try subscribing through the mailman web site: http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo > > Did you verify that selinux is indeed disabled by looking in > > /etc/selinux/config that the line SELINUX=disabled is in there? > > > > > Yep: > > # This file controls the state of SELinux on the system. > # SELINUX= can take one of these three values: > # enforcing - SELinux security policy is enforced. > # permissive - SELinux prints warnings instead of enforcing. > # disabled - SELinux is fully disabled. > SELINUX=disabled > # SELINUXTYPE= type of policy in use. Possible values are: > # targeted - Only targeted network daemons are protected. > # strict - Full SELinux protection. > SELINUXTYPE=targeted Good, just some users use setenforce 0 and think that's it done and then reboot and wonder why things are still not working properly. > > What was the actual contents of your domU's config file? > > > > > This is what I changed: > > # Dom0 will balloon out when needed to free memory for domU. > # dom0-min-mem is the lowest memory level (in MB) dom0 will > get down to. > # If dom0-min-mem=0, dom0 will never balloon out. > (dom0-min-mem 512) > > It was: > (dom0-min-mem 256) Misunderstanding, I was hoping to see the config file of the domU you were trying to create. > > Also is this a workstation with Xen domU's for testing/development > > or a full blown Xen server for running production VMs? > > > > -Ross > > > > This will be a full blown Xen server for production purposes. It will > run max 8 Xen guests with cPanel on each one. In that case if you don't want to shell out the $ for Xen Enterprise I would do these steps for setting up a Xen server: - for each server, minimal install, no X to reduce any possible dom0 issues, and to allow you to minimize dom0 memory usage, you can then run in 256MB with no X windows! - use the Xen 3.2 packages off of xen.org, compiled 64-bit, compile on separate 64-bit platform as the compilation will pull in a lot of other development packages and X. These packages use the Xen kernel from CentOS for the kernel image, and that package comes with the 3.1 Xen image so you'll need to edit the grub.conf to make sure the Xen 3.2 image is used instead of the 3.1 image every time you upgrade the kernel. These packages provide the latest features and fixes as well as the more capable management tools and API which will become a necessity when you manage from the command line and/or have more then 1 server which eventually you will for scalability, redundancy, etc. - Start seriously thinking about implementing an iSCSI SAN, your storage requirements will balloon crazy until your virtualization environment stabilizes, and SANs allows for better storage utilization, scalability and also allows for VM migration from one host to another and are a bitch to migrate to after the fact. - Build your Xen config files by hand, it's the only way to assure they are setup properly and the way you want. Since a Xen environment will be sensitive to change, maybe not as much as a LAMP environment, but still probably second to, you may want to manage your Xen build yourself, at least for the servers, as Redhat's Xen implementation is still evolving. I would use Redhat's Xen environments once they have a pure Xen 3.2 build, as their current Frankenstein environment is really aimed at workstation deployments, especially their hoaky X tool. -Ross ______________________________________________________________________ This e-mail, and any attachments thereto, is intended only for use by the addressee(s) named herein and may contain legally privileged and/or confidential information. If you are not the intended recipient of this e-mail, you are hereby notified that any dissemination, distribution or copying of this e-mail, and any attachments thereto, is strictly prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error, please immediately notify the sender and permanently delete the original and any copy or printout thereof.