USB as a Main Storage device
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I'm lost - what the heck is a virtual drive in this instance? is that what XenServer calls the datastore (ESXi speak)?
What is the Dell AutoInstall in the UEFI? Are you saying there is installer code in the UEFI itself to help you install OSs?
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@Dashrender said:
I'm lost - what the heck is a virtual drive in this instance? is that what XenServer calls the datastore (ESXi speak)?
What is the Dell AutoInstall in the UEFI? Are you saying there is installer code in the UEFI itself to help you install OSs?
Yeah, that is catching me too. I have no idea what that term is supposed to mean here. It is not a useful term and isn't the right technical term for what is going on. It's not what XenServer calls a datastore, that would just be a datastore. It's a reference to something odd.
And I wasn't aware of this AutoInstaller product either. Not sure what that does.
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I think that the next step is trying this with a normal desktop first. Get that working then take the USB stick to the server. Just do the install as if you were going to do it on the server, on a desktop.
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Considering that UEFI is a full out OS just embedded in the hardware, I wouldn't be surprised if it could/did/does include Dell's OS install media to make it easier to install all the drivers, etc.
But I still don't know what it means by Virtual Drive.
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@Mike-Ralston, when you get this error in XenServer, are you booting from the XenServer install media?
Can you grab a picture with your cell?
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@Dashrender said:
@Mike-Ralston, when you get this error in XenServer, are you booting from the XenServer install media?
Can you grab a picture with your cell?
That might help.
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@Dashrender said:
Considering that UEFI is a full out OS just embedded in the hardware, I wouldn't be surprised if it could/did/does include Dell's OS install media to make it easier to install all the drivers, etc.
But I still don't know what it means by Virtual Drive.
That would wreak havoc with an unexpected OS, though.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
Considering that UEFI is a full out OS just embedded in the hardware, I wouldn't be surprised if it could/did/does include Dell's OS install media to make it easier to install all the drivers, etc.
But I still don't know what it means by Virtual Drive.
That would wreak havoc with an unexpected OS, though.
It would only be invoked if you called for it - otherwise it just lies dormant.
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@Dashrender sure, I Just meant that as he called it for XenServer, it might have had problems just from that. It was probably expecting Windows.
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@Dashrender Virtual Drive - Using a USB as a Storage device. AKA, using not just as a 1-time boot media, but using it to effectively replace the HardDrive. @scottalanmiller Can I just toss in a HardDrive from a dead NTG machine? An 80gb will do fine if an 8gb USB will.
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@Mike-Ralston said:
@Dashrender Virtual Drive - Using a USB as a Storage device. AKA, using not just as a 1-time boot media, but using it to effectively replace the HardDrive. @scottalanmiller Can I just toss in a HardDrive from a dead NTG machine? An 80gb will do fine if an 8gb USB will.
If you can physically do so, then yes. Do you have a drive sled for that?
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@scottalanmiller Nope, will just use a lower slot.
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@Mike-Ralston said:
@Dashrender Virtual Drive - Using a USB as a Storage device. AKA, using not just as a 1-time boot media, but using it to effectively replace the HardDrive. @scottalanmiller Can I just toss in a HardDrive from a dead NTG machine? An 80gb will do fine if an 8gb USB will.
If an 80 gig drive works, then it seems like XenServer simply doesn't support installing to USB drives.
Question - where were you planning on installing XenServer too?
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@Dashrender said:
If an 80 gig drive works, then it seems like XenServer simply doesn't support installing to USB drives.
Question - where were you planning on installing XenServer too?
It does, this is a different issue.
http://beaukey.blogspot.com/2012/05/running-xenserver-from-usb-stick.html
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
If an 80 gig drive works, then it seems like XenServer simply doesn't support installing to USB drives.
Question - where were you planning on installing XenServer too?
It does, this is a different issue.
http://beaukey.blogspot.com/2012/05/running-xenserver-from-usb-stick.html
I mistyped - I meant it means XenServer probably doesn't support datastores on USB drives.
But really - it doesn't sound like he's even that far - @Mike-Ralston Is XenServer fully installed somewhere? or is the install itself what's failing?
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@Dashrender said:
I mistyped - I meant it means XenServer probably doesn't support datastores on USB drives.
We aren't talking about datastores yet. This is just the base install. No one officially supports a datastore on USB. That could work, in theory, but would be a disaster in any real use case.
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@Dashrender said:
But really - it doesn't sound like he's even that far - @Mike-Ralston Is XenServer fully installed somewhere? or is the install itself what's failing?
This is the installation. He's just trying to kick off the install and it can't even start - it gives that error before beginning.
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@Dashrender The install itself is failing. And it still is, even with the hard-drive. That's to be expected, though, I loaded a harddrive into what's electrically either the 3rd or 9th slot. I can't get into the BIOS to change the RAID configuration, though.
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@Mike-Ralston said:
@Dashrender The install itself is failing. And it still is, even with the hard-drive. That's to be expected, though, I loaded a harddrive into what's electrically either the 3rd or 9th slot. I can't get into the BIOS to change the RAID configuration, though.
The BIOS is still hosed? We can't move forward if the BIOS is bad.
The slot that is used isn't a factor, but that you can't set up the RAID to put that drive online, is. Until it is setup in the RAID configuration, that drive is not exposed to any OS being installed. It simply doesn't exist as far as the system is concerned.