[Fedora-xen] [fedora-virt] Dom0 xen support in Fedora 15?

Boris Derzhavets bderzhavets at yahoo.com
Tue Nov 9 18:40:10 UTC 2010


> And I would hope that the installer would be clever enough to see if KVM 
> is supported and offer xen if not. Doesn't need to be default, available 
> is fine.

What if i don't want KVM install no matter of hardware ?
I will want Xen on icore7 + ASUS P6TDT+ 16 GB RAM , Dell PowerEdge and so on ... 

Boris

--- On Tue, 11/9/10, Bill Davidsen <davidsen at tmr.com> wrote:

From: Bill Davidsen <davidsen at tmr.com>
Subject: Re: [fedora-virt] [Fedora-xen]  Dom0 xen support in Fedora 15?
To: "Daniel P. Berrange" <berrange at redhat.com>
Cc: xen at lists.fedoraproject.org, virt at lists.fedoraproject.org
Date: Tuesday, November 9, 2010, 11:21 AM

Daniel P. Berrange wrote:
> On Mon, Nov 08, 2010 at 11:52:08AM -0500, Bill Davidsen wrote:
>    
>> Dor Laor wrote:
>>      
>>> On 11/08/2010 04:55 AM, M A Young wrote:
>>>        
>>>> What do others think about this? For example is it achievable as a
>>>> feature, is it too early and better to wait for F16, and what else should
>>>> we aim to do to make xen usable in Fedora?
>>>>
>>>>          
>>> Have you consider kvm? it's upstream since 2.6.20 and now its more ready
>>> than ever.
>>>
>>>        
>> There are some good tutorials which should explain the difference
>> between xen and kvm, particularly the performance and hardware
>> requirements of each.
>>      
> In any case, the question of whether KVM or Xen is best, is not really
> relevant to whether Xen Dom0 has a place in F15. Fedora will welcome any
> software that meets the packaging&  licensing guidelines, and has someone
> who is willing to maintain it. So if people want to maintain Xen as an
> alternative virtualization option in Fedora, they're welcome todo so.
> KVM will of course remain the default virt host setup offered in the
> installer
>    

Fine. The point I was making is that a non-trivial user base has 
hardware which does not support KVM, both legacy and recent low end CPUs 
like ATOM (and Celeron, I believe). And there is a fair amount of old 
hardware which does support KVM, but not all that well, like Q6600, 
which benefit from using xen. So while KVM may be a choice for recent 
hardware, there is a user base which would benefit from having xen.

And I would hope that the installer would be clever enough to see if KVM 
is supported and offer xen if not. Doesn't need to be default, available 
is fine.

-- 
Bill Davidsen<davidsen at tmr.com>
   "We can't solve today's problems by using the same thinking we
    used in creating them." - Einstein

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