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On 10/30/06, BB Mailing list <bb.mlist@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
 
Here is the output of lsmod:
Module                  Size  Used by    Not tainted
[...]
megaraid2              38376   5
aic7xxx               163120   0  (unused)
diskdumplib             5260   0  [megaraid2 aic7xxx]
sd_mod                 14128  10
scsi_mod              115496   4  [sg megaraid2 aic7xxx sd_mod]
 
 Ok, so you have to make sure those functionalities are either
compiled in the kernel or available as modules. Xen should put a
"config-<version>" file in the /boot directory with the compile time
kernel config used.
 
How do you install the base system? Can you do this using anaconda? (I'm not
a Redhat person, pity I have to run it ).
 I was using debootstrap on Unbuntu, which worked like a charm.
 
 You can reproduce any install using anaconda. Here's what I do:
 - produce kickstat files for the different profiles I need (you can
use a graphical tool to produce a kickstart file, start from scratch
or get one from /root just after an install)
 - setup a web server with the RPMs from the CDs
 - in the dom0 server, mount the partition that the domU will use
 - in the dom0, run:
 anaconda --text --headless \
   --rootpath="${installdir}" \
   --method="${baseurl}/${distribution}/i386/install" \
   --kickstart="${ksfile}"
 where "installdir" is the domU's partition mount point.
That's what I understood from the previous thread I had on the list, if I
can have multiple DomUs with 2.4 kernel running Redhat AS3, even if it's not
the standart Redhat kernel, I'll be very happy !!
 
 I don't think that's possible with Xen 3.
 
I am using Dell Poweredge 1850 with Xeon processors - no idea whether this
is VT compatible.
 
 I don't think that the Xeon CPUs in the 1850 are VT enabled (the
1950 are). Just to make sure, please to a:
 cat /proc/cpuinfo | grep flags
 and look for "vmx". If it's there, you have VT.
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