Manually creating these partitions is no problem, this is what that xen config does but instead of mapping it to sda1, mapping in to xvda and putting xvda in your fstab instead of sda1. But how can you tell that to koan and put that in a kickstart file. I've read in another mail on this list that it is possible to create multiple devices, but how do you tell that those devices don't need partitioning but just formatting? Johan. On 9/5/07, Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Wed, Sep 05, 2007 at 11:18:49AM +0200, Kris Buytaert wrote: > > On Wed, 2007-09-05 at 04:28 +0100, Daniel P. Berrange wrote: > > > On Tue, Sep 04, 2007 at 01:55:53PM -0400, Michael DeHaan wrote: > > > > Johan Huysmans wrote: > > > > >well... it is possible ;) > > > > >because we are allready doing this for over a year. > > > > > > > > > > > > > The word on the street (from Dan Berrange) is that this feature is not > > > > guaranteed to work in future > > > > versions of Xen. > > > > > > To be a little more verbose.... > > > > > > Virtual machines are assigned virtual *disks*. ie hdN, sdN (for full virt) or > > > xvdN (for paravirt). Names like sda1 are partitions, and not disks. It makes > > > no conceptual sense to have a partition without an enclosing disk. If you want > > > to have a 1-1 mapping between the backing files & disks inside the guest, then > > > simply don't partition the disk inside the guest - format /dev/sda directly. > > > Xen paravirt only happens to allow you to map a file straight through as a > > > partition, and while it may currently work, I can make absolutely no guarentees > > > it will work in the future as the Xen paravirt kernel evolves - particularly > > > as Xen increasingly merges into LKML trees. NB with the LKML merge the ability > > > to hijack hdN and sdN in paravirt guests has been removed - paravirt can only > > > use xvdN devices now. I've not checked if hijacking partitions as described > > > below works, but I would not be surprised if it doesn't. Finally its also not > > > portable to Xen fullyvirt, or KVM, or QEMU, etc. Basically unsupportable in > > > the medium-to-long term. > > > > > > I think it is extremely important to continue to be able to use > > filesystems on LVM volumes in dom0 as filesystems in domU's. Using > > them as full disks with a partition on them would be fine. > > Yes, that is entirely possible. If you have /dev/VolGroup00/MyGuestFS > in the dom0, you can map that into the guest as /dev/xvda and simply > mount /dev/xvda itself - there is no need to pretend it is /dev/xvda1 > inside the guest. > > Dan. > -- > |=- Red Hat, Engineering, Emerging Technologies, Boston. +1 978 392 2496 -=| > |=- Perl modules: http://search.cpan.org/~danberr/ -=| > |=- Projects: http://freshmeat.net/~danielpb/ -=| > |=- GnuPG: 7D3B9505 F3C9 553F A1DA 4AC2 5648 23C1 B3DF F742 7D3B 9505 -=| > > _______________________________________________ > et-mgmt-tools mailing list > et-mgmt-tools@xxxxxxxxxx > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/et-mgmt-tools > _______________________________________________ et-mgmt-tools mailing list et-mgmt-tools@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/et-mgmt-tools