Difference between revisions of "Xen Virtualization Essentials"

From Virtuatopia
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 94: Line 94:
 
#* [[Running and Connecting to VNC Servers on a Xen Guest (domainU) System|Configuring the Xen domainU Desktop Environment]]
 
#* [[Running and Connecting to VNC Servers on a Xen Guest (domainU) System|Configuring the Xen domainU Desktop Environment]]
 
#* [[Running and Connecting to VNC Servers on a Xen Guest (domainU) System|Closing Down a domainU VNC Desktop Session]]<br><br>
 
#* [[Running and Connecting to VNC Servers on a Xen Guest (domainU) System|Closing Down a domainU VNC Desktop Session]]<br><br>
 +
# [[Adding Disk, CDROM and DVD Devices to a Running Xen domainU Guest System]]
 
# [[Xen Monitoring Tools and Techniques]]
 
# [[Xen Monitoring Tools and Techniques]]
 
#* [[Xen Monitoring Tools and Techniques|Why Monitor a Xen Environment?]]
 
#* [[Xen Monitoring Tools and Techniques|Why Monitor a Xen Environment?]]

Revision as of 19:24, 2 May 2008

  1. Building a Xen Virtual Guest Filesystem on a Disk Image (Cloning Host System)
  2. Building a Xen Virtual Guest Filesystem on a Physical Disk Partition (Cloning Host System)
  3. Building a Xen Virtual Guest Filesystem using Logical Volume Management (LVM)
  4. Building a Xen Guest Root Filesystem using yum and rpm
  5. Building a Debian or Ubuntu Xen Guest Root Filesystem using debootstrap
  6. Building a Xen Guest Domain using Xen-Tools
  7. Using QEMU Disk Images for Xen DomainU Systems
  8. Creating and Booting a Xen Guest domainU using an NFS Mounted Root Filesystem
  9. Configuring a VNC based Graphical Console for a Xen Paravirtualized domainU Guest
  10. Running and Connecting to VNC Servers on a Xen Guest (domainU) System
  11. Adding Disk, CDROM and DVD Devices to a Running Xen domainU Guest System
  12. Xen Monitoring Tools and Techniques
  13. Solving Common Xen Boot Problems