Xen Dom0: Difference between revisions

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This guide will show you how to perform a Xen Dom0 install on a HDD, so you can have your Dom0. The first step is to perform a normal HDD install of Alpine Linux, which can be accomplished following the guide [[Install to disk]]. Once the install is finished, and you have rebooted into your new system, it's time to install the Xen packages:
This guide will show you how to perform a Xen Dom0 install on a HDD, so you can have your Dom0. The first step is to perform a normal HDD install of Alpine Linux, which can be accomplished following the guide [[Install to disk]]. Once the install is finished, and you have rebooted into your new system, it's time to install the Xen packages:


{{Cmd|apk add xen}}
<pre>
apk add xen
</pre>


This will install Xen Hypervisor and Tools (both xl and xend) and all the required packages. The next step is to modify your extlinux.cfg and add an entry to boot Xen:
This will install Xen Hypervisor and Tools (both xl and xend) and all the required packages. The next step is to modify your extlinux.cfg and add an entry to boot Xen:

Revision as of 11:47, 25 June 2012

This guide will show you how to perform a Xen Dom0 install on a HDD, so you can have your Dom0. The first step is to perform a normal HDD install of Alpine Linux, which can be accomplished following the guide Install to disk. Once the install is finished, and you have rebooted into your new system, it's time to install the Xen packages:

apk add xen

This will install Xen Hypervisor and Tools (both xl and xend) and all the required packages. The next step is to modify your extlinux.cfg and add an entry to boot Xen:

Normal boot:

LABEL xen
  KERNEL /boot/mboot.c32
  APPEND /boot/xen.gz --- /boot/grsec root=UUID=<YOUR-DISK-UUID> modules=ext4 --- /boot/grsec.gz

Serial console boot:

LABEL xen
  KERNEL /boot/mboot.c32
  APPEND /boot/xen.gz com1=115200,8n1 console=com1 --- /boot/grsec root=UUID=<YOUR-DISK-UUID> modules=ext4  --- /boot/grsec.gz
Note: remember to change <YOUR-DISK-UUID> with the UUID of your boot disk (you can copy it from the normal Alpine Linux boot entry)

It's also a good idea to check Xen Boot options and set dom0_mem, dom0_vcpus_pin and dom0_max_vcpus at least.

The next step is to load the necessary kernel modules for Xen, we will add them to /etc/modules, so they will be loaded automatically on boot:

# echo "xen_netback" >> /etc/modules
# echo "xen_blkback" >> /etc/modules
# echo "tun" >> /etc/modules

The last step is to configure startup services, we will need udev and xencommons at least to be started on boot:

# rc-update add udev sysinit
# rc-update add udev-postmount
# rc-update add xencommons

If you need the xm toolstack, also add xend to startup services:

# rc-update add xend

Ok, now you have a fully functional Xen install, it's time to boot into it.

# reboot

Also remember to configure at least one network bridge following the Howto_Configure_a_Network_Bridge guide.

See also