On Mon, Apr 07, 2008 at 04:03:25PM +0100, Henri Cook wrote: > On a different tack - Please don't use 'Reply-To' for unrelated topic this breaks threading on intelligent mail clients. > what about making some Wiki pages, or the pages on > the main site wiki-integrated? I would love to add more info for KVM > users to the XML format page, there were a lot of things i had to trial > and error figure out myself when importing a) DomUs from a past Xen > Install and b) DomUs from kvm command-line only setups My previous experience hosting a Wiki on xmlsoft.org (a.k.a. libvirt.org) has been rather painful, admitedly that was a few years ago ... I'm not sure what's the best way, hosting yet another wiki or reusing an existing one. I have a slight bias against Wiki for the following reasons: - you usually can't get the history - you can't ship the Wiki content with the releases (and I think packaging the information and the code together is fairly important) I understand that posting the data on the list for later integration in the docs may be a bit heavy, it introduces some kind of inertia against adding or updating, but the resulting information is more generally useful. That said I'm not against a Wiki, just a bit reluctant to maintaining it <grin/> > P.S. Do we say DomU in the libvirt/KVM world? :-) I have tried to set up the terminology initially at the very beginning of the project see http://libvirt.org/intro.html the term is 'Hypervisor' it should be present though all docs and functions comments. Daniel -- Red Hat Virtualization group http://redhat.com/virtualization/ Daniel Veillard | virtualization library http://libvirt.org/ veillard@xxxxxxxxxx | libxml GNOME XML XSLT toolkit http://xmlsoft.org/ http://veillard.com/ | Rpmfind RPM search engine http://rpmfind.net/ -- Libvir-list mailing list Libvir-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/libvir-list