2009/11/16 Glenn Bailey <gbailey@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>: > Howdy, > > I was taking a look at libvirt for controlling a couple of vCenter clusters and noticed it will only let you login directly to an ESX host and not the vCenter server itself. You can pass the "vcenter=" command but this seems to just tell what vcenter server to use and doesn't directly access it. If you do a "list" it still just lists the devices on the given ESX host. For a quick test I modified the esx_driver.c and added the following (I am no c programmer BTW): > > if (STRCASEEQ(conn->uri->scheme, "esx")) { > if (priv->host->productVersion != esxVI_ProductVersion_VPX25 && > priv->host->productVersion != esxVI_ProductVersion_VPX40 && > priv->host->productVersion != esxVI_ProductVersion_ESX35 && > priv->host->productVersion != esxVI_ProductVersion_ESX40) { > > Which would then let me connect directly to the vCenter server and list all the vm's on it. Am I missing something? I'm new to libvirt, but all management of a ESX cluster is always done through vCenter, and not the host. Sorry if this message is redundant as I didn't see anything blaring in the archives ;-) > > glenn > terremark > Well, the ESX driver was not designed to work that way. The current design assumes virtual machines run on ESX hosts and a vCenter is some higher management instance that is necessary for migration. But from an API point-of-view a vCenter is like an ESX host, a compute resource with virtual machines attached to it. So there is basically no problem in handling a vCenter like a single ESX server. It'll need some tweaks in the ESX driver, but most of its functions should work without changes. I would like to introduce a vpx:// scheme beside esx:// and gsx:// to refer to a vCenter. I'll take care of this after I've finished some other pending patches for the ESX driver. Adding support for this doesn't seem to be very complicated, so stay tuned :-) Matthias -- Libvir-list mailing list Libvir-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/libvir-list