XCP-ng 8.2.0 beta now available!
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@stormi The new iso worked as usual on a Ubuntu 20.04 VM.
README text formatting looks fine, updating guest tools using the install.sh worked.
When done it still asks the user to reboot the VM though.
Without a working XCP-ng center I'm not sure how to test the guest tools features. -
@demanzke with the preferred client for XCP-ng: Xen Orchestra You'll have Ubuntu logo and VM IP address
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The new implementation of UEFI support for VMs just landed through the last update to the beta.
yum update
will installuefistored-0.2.1-1.xcpng8.2.x86_64
, then a simplexe-toolstack-restart
will take it into account.Dedicated thread for tests, feedback, debug and discussion: https://xcp-ng.org/forum/post/32335
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Upgrade finally done, works flawlessly. Citrix Hypervisor 8.2 -> XCP-ng 8.2 beta.
Iam using Ubuntu 20.04 Server VMs and a single Windows 10 VM (uefi). NFS Storage is used for Backups and SMB ISO Library.
- Patches got applied successful
- Several Host restarts successful
- Create VM successful
- USB Passthrough to Ubuntu 20.04 with APC-1400 USV successful
- Dynamic Memory settings successful
You make me happy
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Upgraded a three host homelab from XCP-ng 8.1 fully patched to XCP-ng 8.2 beta.
Things done/tested successfully:- Upgrade process (via ISO)
- Copy/Move of VMs (even cross pool)
- Create/Change VMs (Linux, Windows (but not UEFI))
- Add/remove server to XO from source
- Create/Change networks
- Fresh install process (via ISO)
- Basic storage benchmark on dom0 and Debian VM using
fio
- Add, Remove, Re-add NFS shares (ISO and storage)
This weekend I try to do some backup/restore (if time permits).
Nice work XCP-ng rocks[edit: some more tests]
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@stormi said in XCP-ng 8.2.0 beta now available!:
Guest tools ISO: Citrix doesn't provide a guest tools ISO anymore in Citrix Hypervisor. They replaced it with downloads from their internet website. We chose to retain the feature and still provide a guest tools ISO that you can mount to your VMs. Many thanks to the XAPI developers who have kept the related source code for us in the XAPI project, rather than delete it.
I think that the best solution would be to have them packaged by distros. It will also make installs much easier.
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I agree here. Package xcp-ng tools for the main distros out there. Fedora, Centos, Ubuntu, Debian, OpenSuse, FreeBSD etc.. Not sure about Windows though. Perhaps an ISO is easiest way to distribute the tools?
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The tools are packaged already for many of the distros you mentioned. However this is work that takes time and depends on the willingness of contributors from each distro, so a guest tools ISO remains useful in my view.
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To everyone: don't forget to update your XCP-ng 8.2 beta hosts from time to time (
yum update
).Recent updates include Xen and Linux kernel security updates, the latest
uefistored
that fixes UEFI support for Windows Server 2016's installer, updated Intele1000e
drivers in order to support more devices, updated ZFS packages to version 0.8.5, updatedzstd
to 1.4.5. -
Updates done in my home lab and everything is working great so far
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@stormi said in XCP-ng 8.2.0 beta now available!:
updated Intel
e1000e
drivers in order to support more devicesCan anyone point me on where to find more details on this. Can't find anything about it in the latest commit of the kernel rpm repo. Probably I am looking in the wrong place.
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By the way, this thread is now superseded by the RC thread: https://xcp-ng.org/forum/topic/3769/xcp-ng-8-2-0-rc-now-available
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@jmccoy555 Could I pursuade you to make a post, describing your setup and summarizing any findings ?
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@hoerup Hi, I can't remember too much to be honest.
I created a Debian 10 VM with 20GB disk, set up all the stuff that needed to be common for the Ceph pool pretty much following the Ceph documentation using the cephadm method - so Docker etc. This would be my 'Ceph admin VM'
Once that was all sorted I cloned the VM 3 times, for my actual Ceph pool and changed the hostname and static IP etc. I've got 3 hosts with Supermicro boards that have two SATA controllers on board, so on each one I passed though one of the controllers to the Ceph VM and then just deployed Ceph and followed the documentation. The only issues I ran into and any other tips are in the other post I linked to. Now Ceph is all containerised it all seams a bit too easy! Hope they're not my famous last words!! It does like a lot of RAM, so I've reduced the OSD limits down a bit and its fine for me.
Cheers.