1 | Installing a Scripts guest on a Xen host |
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2 | ---------------------------------------- |
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3 | |
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4 | You need to create the volumes to use: |
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5 | |
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6 | lvcreate -n $MACHINE-root --size 50.00G $HOST |
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7 | lvcreate -n $MACHINE-swap --size 10.00G $HOST |
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8 | lvcreate -n $MACHINE-cache --size 11.00G $HOST |
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9 | |
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10 | /-------------------------------------------------------------------\ |
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11 | Note: If you need to manually format the the swap and cache |
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12 | partitions (for example, you are migrating a host from 'migrate'), |
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13 | these commands should work. If in doubt, consult the kickstart. |
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14 | |
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15 | # Use fdisk to generate a DOS partition table, and a single |
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16 | # partition extending the entire volume. |
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17 | fdisk /dev/$HOST/$MACHINE-swap |
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18 | fdisk /dev/$HOST/$MACHINE-cache |
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19 | # Figure out what kpartx is going to make the devices as |
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20 | # (e.g. $SWAP_DEV and $CACHE_DEV) |
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21 | kpartx -l /dev/$HOST/$MACHINE-swap |
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22 | kpartx -l /dev/$HOST/$MACHINE-cache |
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23 | # Read out the partition tables |
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24 | kpartx -a /dev/$HOST/$MACHINE-swap |
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25 | kpartx -a /dev/$HOST/$MACHINE-cache |
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26 | |
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27 | # FORMAT! |
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28 | mkswap $SWAP_DEV |
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29 | mkfs.ext4 -O ^has_journal -m 0 -N 1000000 $CACHE_DEV |
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30 | |
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31 | # Remove the devices |
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32 | kpartx -d /dev/$HOST/$MACHINE-swap |
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33 | kpartx -d /dev/$HOST/$MACHINE-cache |
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34 | \-------------------------------------------------------------------/ |
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35 | |
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36 | Make sure that the console has an entry for this host: |
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37 | |
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38 | vim /etc/conserver/conserver.cf |
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39 | |
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40 | If it doesn't, add: |
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41 | |
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42 | console $MACHINE { |
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43 | master $HOST; |
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44 | include xen; |
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45 | } |
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46 | |
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47 | We use Kickstart to to initial Fedora configuration. Installing a new |
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48 | vanilla machine is as easy as: |
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49 | |
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50 | xm create scripts-server machine_name=$MACHINE install=fXX && console $MACHINE |
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51 | |
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52 | The only prompt (near the beginning of the install process) should be |
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53 | for the root password, and at the end, when it asks you to reboot. |
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54 | Say yes, and the machine will power down, and then restart without |
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55 | the install parameter: |
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56 | |
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57 | xm create scripts-server machine_name=$MACHINE && console $MACHINE |
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58 | |
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59 | Networking and Subversion |
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60 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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61 | |
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62 | Our Subversion repository lives at svn://scripts.mit.edu/. Our realservers bind |
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63 | to scripts.mit.edu on localhost. Unfortunately, this means that checking out |
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64 | the subversion repository on a new server while you're in the process of |
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65 | setting it up sometimes won't work. In particular, if the server is already |
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66 | binding the scripts.mit.edu IP address, but not yet serving svn, your attempt |
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67 | to do the checkout will connect to the local machine and fail. |
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68 | |
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69 | Any of the following should let you evade this issue: |
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70 | * Avoid doing any svn operations between your first reboot and when svn is |
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71 | working. The networking changes from the install won't take effect until you |
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72 | reboot. Ordinarily, you won't need to do any commits or updates between the |
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73 | reboot and when LDAP and svn:// serving are working. |
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74 | * Temporarily down lo:3 (the lo alias with the scripts.mit.edu IP address, |
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75 | 18.181.0.43) |
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76 | * Do your svn checkout from a current realserver, instead of scripts.mit.edu |
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77 | (for example, use svn://whole-enchilada.mit.edu/). Don't forget to svn switch |
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78 | --relocate to scripts.mit.edu once the server is set up. |
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