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<table border="0" cellspacing="0" width="100%">
<tr>
<td width="20%">[[Building a Xen Guest Root Filesystem using yum and rpm|Previous]]<td align="center">[[Xen Virtualization Essentials|Table of Contents]]<td width="20%" align="right">[[Building a Xen Guest Domain using Xen-Tools|Next]]</td>
<tr>
<td width="20%">Building a Xen Guest Root Filesystem using yum and rpm<td align="center"><td width="20%" align="right"><Building a Xen Guest Domain using Xen-Tools/td>
</table>
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In earlier chapters of this book we looked at populating the root filesystem of a Xen domU guest system by copying the root filesystem from the host operating system. While this is a workable approach it has the draw back that it provides little or no control over which packages get installed in the guest system. It is also possible that the operating system required to run in the guest domain is a different Linux distribution to that running on the host.
* [[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%">[[Building a Xen Guest Root Filesystem using yum and rpm|Previous]]<td align="center">[[Xen Virtualization Essentials|Table of Contents]]<td width="20%" align="right">[[Building a Xen Guest Domain using Xen-Tools|Next]]</td>
<tr>
<td width="20%">Building a Xen Guest Root Filesystem using yum and rpm<td align="center"><td width="20%" align="right"><Building a Xen Guest Domain using Xen-Tools/td>
</table>
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