OpenVZ Forum


Home » Mailing lists » Users » Building a custom container
Building a custom container [message #47457] Sat, 11 August 2012 15:41 Go to next message
Brad Alexander is currently offline  Brad Alexander
Messages: 11
Registered: October 2011
Junior Member
Hi,

I know this is a pretty basic question, but could someone point me in
the right direction to set up a custom container? I want to set up
OSSIM 4.0 as a virtual machine. As there are no OpenVZ VMs available
that I know of, I would like to set one up. I'm running Proxmox VE
2.0, but my hardware, while 64 bit, does not have the virtualization
extensions to allow me to run KVM, so I would like to set up an OpenVZ
container to run it. Would the best approach be to build it on
something like VirtualBox then convert it, or is there a more
straightforward way to go directly from the OSSIM iso image to a
container?

Thanks,
--b
Re: Building a custom container [message #47459 is a reply to message #47457] Sat, 11 August 2012 20:30 Go to previous message
dowdle is currently offline  dowdle
Messages: 261
Registered: December 2005
Location: Bozeman, Montana
Senior Member
Greetings,

----- Original Message -----
> I know this is a pretty basic question, but could someone point me in
> the right direction to set up a custom container? I want to set up
> OSSIM 4.0 as a virtual machine. As there are no OpenVZ VMs available
> that I know of, I would like to set one up. I'm running Proxmox VE
> 2.0, but my hardware, while 64 bit, does not have the virtualization
> extensions to allow me to run KVM, so I would like to set up an OpenVZ
> container to run it. Would the best approach be to build it on
> something like VirtualBox then convert it, or is there a more
> straightforward way to go directly from the OSSIM iso image to a
> container?


General advice for converting a physical machine (or HVM virtualized VM) to a container can be found here:

http://wiki.openvz.org/P2v

It appears that OSSIM is Debian Squeeze based... and it would be nice if they offered a repository of the OSSIM speciality packages... and then you could make a Debian container and install the OSSIM packages. Unfortunately their website doesn't container a lot of information... but I wonder if you just do an install and then examine their sources list to see if they indeed do have a custom repo to keep their software updated. You could also examine what default Debian packages they install... compare the packages to factory settings to figure out what files they have altered (usually only config files)... and armed with that knowledge, you could possibly simulate their package. Of course that assumes they properly package up as .deb files... the software they provide.

Good luck,
--
Scott Dowdle
704 Church Street
Belgrade, MT 59714
(406)388-0827 [home]
(406)994-3931 [work]


--
TYL, Scott Dowdle
Belgrade, Montana, USA
Previous Topic: Known Problems VM Ubuntu 12.04
Next Topic: Ploop Replication
Goto Forum:
  


Current Time: Sun Oct 13 21:42:27 GMT 2024

Total time taken to generate the page: 0.06059 seconds