Gastón Keller writes ("Re: Xen Documentation"): > _The Fedora team has followed the Xensource model and begun to store > all VM configuration details in a database, referred to as xenstore._ > Source: http://enterpriselinuxlog.blogs.techtarget.com/2007/06/07/fedora-7-xen-first-look/ I wouldn't believe everything you read on the internet :-). Open Source Xen doesn't store configuration details in a database. It uses plain text configuration files in /etc. To a limited amount information about xend-managed domains is stored in /var in what is arguably a kind of database, but not in xenstore. Xenstore is not a database containing configuration details; it is cleared out at reboot. The name is misleading; the earlier name `xenbus' is clearer: xenstore is used as an inter-component communication mechanism, for communicating between the various non-hypervisor components of a running system, and particularly for advertising devices to paravirtualised guests. As I understand it, the proprietary XenSource XenServer product does indeed keep much in a database but that database is not xenstore. (But I don't really work on the proprietary side so I may be wrong.) I don't know what, if anything, is changing in Fedora. It's difficult to tell from that blog posting. Perhaps some of the Fedora guys here on this list can enlighten us; otherwise ask on fedora-xen ? Ian. -- Fedora-xen mailing list Fedora-xen@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-xen