how to move VM from vmware workstation to hyper-V
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yes they are missing, i can't install them
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i tried to mount the xenserver tool iso but it looks like my centos version is not compatible with xenserver
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@IT-ADMIN said:
Now i have trouble with my VM, the IP is shown as unknown
, after doing some research i found out that i have to install xenserver tools, the bad news is i have to run CLI in both centos (for my freePBX VM) and freebsd (for my pfsense VM) to mount the iso located in my virtual DVD,
well i start with centos and do the following :
mkdir /mnt/DVD
in this stage the iso was mounted, isn't it ? i think yes because the directory contain the setup files for xenserver tool like this image show :
after that i launch the installer but i get a shitty message
i guess my centos version 6.5 is not supported, this is what a get
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@IT-ADMIN said:
yes they are missing, i can't install them
They are needed for that kind of functionality. It is the PV drivers that allow the guest to communicate with the host.
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@IT-ADMIN said:
i tried to mount the xenserver tool iso but it looks like my centos version is not compatible with xenserver
That does not sound right. What version of each are you running? We've used every modern version of CentOS on XenServer.
Ideally you install CentOS as PV, not as virtualized and then add PV drivers. CentOS is Linux and has a level of Xen support that exists in no other OS family.
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Oh, because you brought over from VMware Workstation (which is a different architecture) you broke the compatibility for Xen. I'm not sure how difficult it will be to convert now.
Just do a fresh install.
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@IT-ADMIN said:
i guess my centos version 6.5 is not supported, this is what a get
XenServer's own Dom0 is built on 6.5. It's the most compatible version. The issue is the P2V from VMware which can't do paravirtualization that is the problem.
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oh i see, so the next frech install i should do it from the begining PV right
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is there any differance btw virtualized and PV ??
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@IT-ADMIN said:
oh i see, so the next frech install i should do it from the begining PV right
Yes, a fresh install is quite important here for multiple reasons that you have encountered.
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@IT-ADMIN said:
is there any differance btw virtualized and PV ??
Yes, very different. That's why there are two names and why you are having problems here
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do you mean by PV driver ::: the xenserver tool ??
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@IT-ADMIN said:
do you mean by PV driver ::: the xenserver tool ??
that is the XenServer name for their PV drivers, yes.
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what about the PV driver of the guest, what we call them ???
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maybe front-end drivers
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@IT-ADMIN said:
what about the PV driver of the guest, what we call them ???
They are called PV Drivers, that is the only industry name for them and the only thing that would make sense.
Drivers only exists for the guest, there is no such concept as PV drivers for the host.
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it looks like XenServer was a bad choice for me, especially for my specific need which is hosting freePBX and pfSense, none of them existed in Xenserver template, this mean that they will be full viritualized and not taking benefit of paravirtularized unless you have deep knowledge in both Linux and freeBSD to make a custom kernel and some other scary staff that someone like me cannot do it,
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the key fearture of xenserver is PV and what make people to choose over other hypervisors is PV, so if i will be deprived from this powerful feature (because the VM i want to host cannot be PV easily and require deep knowledge which is not the case with me) then i have to change the hypervisor since i can't take benefit from it.
so what is the best hypervisor for these kind of distro like freePBX and pfsense ???
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@IT-ADMIN said:
it looks like XenServer was a bad choice for me, especially for my specific need which is hosting freePBX and pfSense, none of them existed in Xenserver template, this mean that they will be full viritualized and not taking benefit of paravirtularized unless you have deep knowledge in both Linux and freeBSD to make a custom kernel and some other scary staff that someone like me cannot do it,
That would not make XenServer a bad choice in any way. It would, at very worst, make it an equal choice. Equal is not bad. If you went with HyperV, you'd have this limitation always.