Difference between revisions of "OpenNebula"

From Xen
(USING XEN PROJECT)
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== USING XEN PROJECT ==
 
== USING XEN PROJECT ==
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The configuration of the hypervisor for use with OpenNebula is unremarkable. OpenNebula does not make unusual demands on the hypervisor configuration. Items of note:
[http://docs.opennebula.org/4.8/administration/virtualization/xeng.html#configuration According to the release 4.8 documentation], OpenNebula uses the deprecated "xm" toolset.
 
   
[http://docs.opennebula.org/4.8/administration/virtualization/xeng.html#considerations-limitations According to the documentation], it is preferred to use SCSI devices on HVM to avoid limitations of the IDE support
+
* [http://docs.opennebula.org/4.8/administration/virtualization/xeng.html#configuration According to the release 4.8 documentation], OpenNebula uses the deprecated "xm" toolset.
  +
* [http://docs.opennebula.org/4.8/administration/virtualization/xeng.html#considerations-limitations According to the documentation], it is preferred to use SCSI devices on HVM to avoid limitations of the IDE support
   
 
== HOWTOs ==
 
== HOWTOs ==

Revision as of 20:54, 30 September 2014

From the OpenNebula documentation:

"OpenNebula offers a simple but feature-rich and flexible solution to build and manage enterprise clouds and virtualized data centers. OpenNebula is designed to be simple. Simple to install, update and operate by the admins, and simple to use by end users. Being focused on simplicity, we integrate with existing technologies whenever possible. You’ll see that OpenNebula works with MySQL, Ceph, LVM, GlusterFS, Open vSwitch, Ceph, LDAP... This allows us to deliver a light, flexible and robust cloud manager."

USING XEN PROJECT

The configuration of the hypervisor for use with OpenNebula is unremarkable. OpenNebula does not make unusual demands on the hypervisor configuration. Items of note:

HOWTOs

PRESENTATIONS

DOCUMENTATION