Objectives
Upon completion of this unit, you should be able to:
1) Define virtualization
2) Understand Xen terminology
3) Xen Tools
Virtualizaiton with Xen
1) Advantages of Virtualization
- Effective resource usage- Managability- Security
2) Key Concepts of Xen
- Small Hypervisor- First “Domain” manages the system- Supports full and para virtualization
Hardware Considerations
1) Minimum Requirements:
- Processor with PAE support- 256 MiB RAM per domain- 6 GiB hard drive per domain
2) Additionaly consideration
- CPU with VT/SVM for full virtualization- Shared storage for live migration- Actual Storage needs will vary by application
Preparing Domain-0
1) Install the Domain0 as normal
2) Boot the Xen hypervisor
3) Start the xend management daemon
Virtual Resources
1) CPU
- use VCPUs (virtual CPUs)- need not map directly to real CUPs
2) Storage
- Block devices- Simple files
3) Network Devices
- Bridged or routed to Domain0- By default mapped to xenbr0
Domain-U Configuration
1) Defined per Domain-U
2) Virtual Block Devices
3) CPUs
4) Networking
5)
/etc/xen/domain
Installing a new Domain-U
1) virt-manager
- Graphical frontend for managing domains- Provides a wizard for setting up a new domains- Command line alternative.xm
2) Define name of the domain
3) Select storage type and number of CUPs
4) Specify the location of the installer and optionally a kickstart file
Domain Management with xm
1) Command line managment tool
2) Controlling domains
- xm <create|destory>- xm <pause|unpause>- xm <save|restore> filename- xm <shutdown|reboot>
3) Monitoring
- xm list- xentop- xen console
Activating Domain on boot
1) xendomains Sys-V init script
2) Starts/Stops Domain_Us
3) must link domain config files to /etc/xen/auto
End of Unit 10
1) Questions and Answers
2) Summary
- Xen Terminology- xm command- xendomains
转载于:https://blog.51cto.com/jackiechen/203582