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>    On Sat, May 15, 2010 at 2:35 AM, Pasi Kärkkäinen <[4]
pasik@xxxxxx> wrote:
>
>      On Sat, May 15, 2010 at 02:00:10AM +0800, lei yang wrote:
>      >
>      >      I'm confused.. Are you trying to use the _same_ disk for the
>      guest as
>      >      you use for dom0?
>      >      You can't do that.
>      >
>      >
>      >    my dom0 use /dev/sda1, can I use domU with  second partition
>      /dev/sda2(may
>      >    be it correspond xvda2?)
>      >
>
>      Yes you can.
>
>      Or you can use a file in dom0 filesystem. Or you can create LVM
>      volumegroup
>      and create an LVM volume for the guest.
>      >    if I can't use the second partition, hown do I use "an image file"
>      , how
>      >    to produce a image file, and can I put it in /dev/sda1 to use
>      >
>
>      You can create an empty image file with "dd", for example, or with any
>      another
>      normal unix/linux tool.
>
>      Usually the tool you use to install the guest OS can make guest image
>      files for you.
>      >    Actually, I don't know what does mean by "disk =
>      ['phy:/dev/sda,xvda,w' ]"
>      >    can you explan it for me
>      >
>
>      It means use xen "phy:" driver for the guest virtual disk, which
>      requires you to
>      specify a 'physical' block device in dom0. The block device in question
>      is "/dev/sda",
>      and it's mapped to be "/dev/xvda" in the guest. "w" means it's in
>      read/write mode.
>
>      Another options is to use "file:" driver, which enables you to use image
>      files instead of block devices.
>      >    does virtual disk use the phy disk space in fact?
>      >
>
>      Depends how you set it up.
>
>      Also I recommend you to start the guest with "xm create -f
>      /etc/xen/<guest> -c",
>      which opens up the guest terminal immediately and allows you to see the
>      guest kernel boot process with all the messages.
>
>      -- Pasi
>      >    Thanks
>      >    Lei
>      >
>      >      You need to have another disk for the guest, or an image file, or
>      lvm
>      >      volume..
>      >      >    4. I create the device by
>      >      >    mknod /dev/xvda b 202 0
>      >      >    mknod /dev/xvda1 b 202 1
>      >      >    when I mount -t ext3 /dev/xvda /
>      >      >
>      >      >    [5]root@intel_5500_server:/> mount -t ext3 /dev/xvda /
>      >      >    mount: /dev/xvda is not a valid block device
>      >      >    does it mean my xvda device driver is not loaded
>      >      >
>      >
>      >      xvda is the device name in the *guest*, which means the guest
>      kernel
>      >      will see the virtual disk as /dev/xvda.
>      >      -- Pasi
>      >
>      >    --
>      >    "We learn from failure, not from success!"
>      >
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