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<table border="0" cellspacing="0" width="100%">
<tr>
<td width="20%">[[Adding USB Devices to a Xen HVM domainU Guest|Previous]]<td align="center">[[Xen Virtualization Essentials|Table of Contents]]<td width="20%" align="right">[[Building a Xen Virtual Guest Filesystem on a Physical Disk Partition (Cloning Host System)|Next]]</td>
<tr>
<td width="20%">Adding USB Devices to a Xen HVM domainU Guest<td align="center"><td width="20%" align="right">Building a Xen Virtual Guest Filesystem on a Physical Disk Partition (Cloning Host System)</td>
</table>
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In the chapter of [[Xen Virtualization Essentials]] we will look at the steps involved in configuring Xen to boot a guest operating system from a disk image file. The approach taken in this chapter involves cloning the root filesystem of the host operating system. This is just one of a number of ways of building a root filesystem for a Xen guest. Other methods are covered in later chapters.
* [[Xen CentOS/Fedora/Red Hat Guest OS Hangs During Boot]]
* [[Xen domainU Boot Fails with Invalid kernel / ERROR: Not a Xen-ELF image Message]]
 
 
<hr>
<table border="0" cellspacing="0" width="100%">
<tr>
<td width="20%">[[Adding USB Devices to a Xen HVM domainU Guest|Previous]]<td align="center">[[Xen Virtualization Essentials|Table of Contents]]<td width="20%" align="right">[[Building a Xen Virtual Guest Filesystem on a Physical Disk Partition (Cloning Host System)|Next]]</td>
<tr>
<td width="20%">Adding USB Devices to a Xen HVM domainU Guest<td align="center"><td width="20%" align="right">Building a Xen Virtual Guest Filesystem on a Physical Disk Partition (Cloning Host System)</td>
</table>
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