Re: More vzyum problems [message #4685 is a reply to message #4678] |
Fri, 21 July 2006 16:30 |
rollinw
Messages: 25 Registered: June 2006 Location: Santa Barbara, California
|
Junior Member |
|
|
By the time of my 2nd post, I had a VE based on centos-4-x86_64-default.tar.gz and the CentOS4.3 x86_64 smp version.
The bottom line is that I still do NOT have vzyum working on the hardware node for my VEs, which are all 64-bit systems. Rather I gave up on metadata processing and built my VEs from existing templated systems. Besides the CentOS VE, I also have Suse and Debian VEs. I just put the xxx.tar.gz version into /vz/template/cache/ and ran the vzctl create routine. I am using mostly the Suse 9.3 VEs.
When you genereate a VE from a basic default template, what you get is a system that tends to be pretty lean (i.e., a lot of handy things missing). That's one reason vzyum is very useful. In my case, it was difficult even to edit files, since vim was missing. So I proceeded as follows:
1. Made sure the network in the VE was working.
2. Started the sshd in the VE.
3. Found a good repository for Suse RPMs.
4. Downloaded vim and wget rpms to my PC.
5. Uploaded the 2 rpms from my PC to the VE using ssh relative,
scp.
A while back I discovered that wget is a really good friend. After I installed vim and wget, I used wget from the VE to bring in rpms for bzip2, mm, and python. From then on, anything that was missing, I could pull in with wget. On the CentOS VE, I also brought in all the rpms needed for yum. This allowed me to completely bypass vzyum. Though, as you say, I don't have the capability of processing metadata for templates. So far I have managed to get by without it.
Hopefully vzyum for 64-bit systems will be fixed. In the meantime, maybe you can proceed somewhat like I did to get your virtualizations working OK without it.
Regards,
rollinw
|
|
|