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    XCP-ng 8.3 public alpha πŸš€

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    • olivierlambertO Offline
      olivierlambert Vates πŸͺ Co-Founder CEO
      last edited by

      @Louis what's the issue with 8.2.1? It's an LTS, so it's normal to use mature versions of Xen and such. It's not a contest on getting latest versions, especially since XCP-ng is very stable. What do you want to achieve?

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
      • L Offline
        Louis @stormi
        last edited by

        @stormi

        The latest versions tend to have fixes, security updates and probably added features. For those reasons I always prefer to use the latest versions the more at the moment I start a new system.

        So, I am not saying 8.2 is bad / not ok, but on the other hand I am surprised to see that 8.2.1 is over a year old. And at the same time I note that there is a xen-server release november 2022.

        I assume that XCP-ng is based on xen-server. But on which version !??

        Of course there have been security updates, but never the less. But I have no idea what has changed since the original 8.2.1 release. As far as I am aware there is no change log.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • olivierlambertO Offline
          olivierlambert Vates πŸͺ Co-Founder CEO
          last edited by olivierlambert

          The latest versions tend to have fixes, security updates

          Not true. All security fixes are backported. Do you really think we'll leave an LTS version of XCP-ng without any security fix since 2020?

          Probably added features

          Which features in Xen 4.17 you need you don't have in 4.13?

          I am surprised to see that 8.2.1 is over a year old

          This is not a toy project but a serious distro meant to run in a stable fashion in datacenters, at scale. Especially as an LTS version, that is expect to be maintained between 5 and 10 years.

          I assume that XCP-ng is based on xen-server. But on which version !??

          It's XenServer. Take a guess, XCP-ng 8.2 is based on which XenServer edition?

          Of course there have been security updates, but never the less.

          Never the less? That's the most important thing, to backport the sec patches.

          As far as I am aware there is no change log.

          You should really look at the documentation. Each XCP-ng release is covered by a change log, and each update is also documented with at least a dedicated blog post. You can start here: https://docs.xcp-ng.org/releases/ (to read what's an LTS and why we don't add features in an LTS) and there: https://xcp-ng.org/blog/ for all the blog posts on our almost monthly updates.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
          • L Offline
            Louis @stormi
            last edited by

            @stormi

            Yep I agree that security fixes are the most important ones. And I know that security patches are provided (as I wrote in my mail).

            Since I am new to XCP-ng, and I did not study the changes related to 8.3, I do not know the improvements, but I assume there are!

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • olivierlambertO Offline
              olivierlambert Vates πŸͺ Co-Founder CEO
              last edited by olivierlambert

              As I said previously, you should really take a look at the doc and the blog...

              https://xcp-ng.org/blog/2022/11/18/xcp-ng-8-3-alpha/

              And posted very recently: https://xcp-ng.org/blog/2023/02/27/news-about-8-3-alpha/

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • L Offline
                Louis @stormi
                last edited by

                @stormi

                Olivier thanks for the links. But it only confirms my idea that I should go for the latest releases as far as possible!

                • IPV6 support is important to me (should work!)
                • all security fixes (not only the most important ones)
                • better hardware support ( I do have e.g. 2.5 g interfaces)
                • newer python
                • better update management
                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • olivierlambertO Offline
                  olivierlambert Vates πŸͺ Co-Founder CEO
                  last edited by olivierlambert

                  You should really start to work on 8.2 LTS first and see what you really need in real life. If it's not enterprise production, then go for 8.3.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • ajpri1998A Offline
                    ajpri1998
                    last edited by

                    @Louis
                    XCP-ng gets security updates about monthly. @Andrew also has custom isos that already have the 2.5GBe drivers included.

                    XCP-ng/XO are well maintained projects.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • R Offline
                      rRobbie
                      last edited by

                      Summary: upgrade from 8.3alpha to 8.3alpha2 broke my installation.

                      Yesterday I tried to upgrade my Intel NUC11 from the original 8.3alpha (very stable so far) to the 8.3alpha2.

                      The upgrade process concluded without errors, however upon restart while the host was accessible via SSH, all the rest disappeared (no XOALite, no VM and obviously no XOA).

                      I tried to list the vm with "xe vm-list" resulting in "Error: Connection refused (calling connect)". Then I tried to restart with "xe-toolstack-restart" but without success.

                      Right now using the installer I reverted to previous installation... indeed a useful function πŸ™‚

                      Your insights is welcome, I can make any test you might be interested in.

                      Thanks

                      olivierlambertO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • R Offline
                        RaHu @olivierlambert
                        last edited by

                        @olivierlambert

                        Hi There,
                        Just to mention, my personal hopes are for the future, that whatever kernel will be used, RPM packages will still be supported to install.

                        Usecase:
                        I am using Dell / Quest DR-Appliances for Backups. They've implemented RapidCIFS and RapidNFS in order to do kind of CBT enhancement on these protocols. So when backing up - only delta is copied.

                        However, as usual, they provide this driver officially only for Windows and RHEL. Therefore I could install the RPM on the XCP-Hosts, and benefit from this. It's running amazingliy smooth.

                        I would assume that there might be more of such use cases, and keeping support for RHEL packages could be wise in oder to keep a foot into the "enterprise door".

                        Thanks, for your work!

                        Regards,
                        RaHu

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • olivierlambertO Offline
                          olivierlambert Vates πŸͺ Co-Founder CEO
                          last edited by

                          Thanks for your feedback @RaHu

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • olivierlambertO Offline
                            olivierlambert Vates πŸͺ Co-Founder CEO @rRobbie
                            last edited by

                            @rRobbie I'm not sure it was even guarantee in the first place. Asking @stormi

                            R 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • R Offline
                              rRobbie @olivierlambert
                              last edited by rRobbie

                              @olivierlambert

                              Thank you, appreciated 😊

                              I followed - maybe bluntly - this reassuring sentence but I guess it meant from 8.2!

                              Screenshot from 2023-02-28 09-48-32.png

                              https://xcp-ng.org/blog/2022/11/18/xcp-ng-8-3-alpha/

                              stormiS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • stormiS Offline
                                stormi Vates πŸͺ XCP-ng Team @rRobbie
                                last edited by

                                @rRobbie Yes, it meant from 8.2 πŸ™‚

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                • stormiS Offline
                                  stormi Vates πŸͺ XCP-ng Team @gskger
                                  last edited by stormi

                                  @gskger Thanks! For shorter logs, could you run ./xtf-runner -aqq --host rather than ./xtf-runner -aq --host in the future? We don't need the full list of successful tests. Only skipped and failed ones.

                                  gskgerG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • gskgerG Offline
                                    gskger Top contributor @stormi
                                    last edited by

                                    @stormi Of course! Picked up that habit from other posts. Should I correct my post to improve readability?

                                    stormiS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • stormiS Offline
                                      stormi Vates πŸͺ XCP-ng Team @gskger
                                      last edited by

                                      @gskger No, only future ones πŸ™‚

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                      • theAeonT Offline
                                        theAeon
                                        last edited by theAeon

                                        root@lenovo150
                                        --------------
                                        OS: XCP-ng release 8.2.1 (xenenterprise) x86_64
                                        Host: ThinkServer TS150 70LUS00C00
                                        Kernel: 4.19.0+1
                                        Uptime: 7 mins
                                        Packages: 551 (rpm)
                                        Shell: bash 4.2.46
                                        Terminal: /dev/pts/13
                                        CPU: Intel Xeon E3-1275 v5 (8) @ 3.600GHz
                                        GPU: Intel HD Graphics P530
                                        Memory: 560MiB / 2498MiB
                                        

                                        note: only on 8.2.1 because I don't feel like even potentially breaking anything right now out of sheer laziness but its been rock solid so far

                                        [19:51 lenovo150 xtf]# ./xtf-runner selftest -q --host
                                        Combined test results:
                                        test-hvm32-selftest                      SUCCESS
                                        test-hvm32pae-selftest                   SUCCESS
                                        test-hvm32pse-selftest                   SUCCESS
                                        test-hvm64-selftest                      SUCCESS
                                        test-pv64-selftest                       SUCCESS
                                        

                                        and

                                        [19:52 lenovo150 xtf]# ./xtf-runner -aqq --host
                                        Combined test results:
                                        test-hvm32-umip                          SKIP
                                        test-hvm64-umip                          SKIP
                                        test-pv64-xsa-167                        SKIP
                                        test-pv64-xsa-182                        SKIP
                                        

                                        and of course

                                        [20:00 lenovo150 ~]# /usr/libexec/xen/bin/test-cpu-policy
                                        CPU Policy unit tests
                                        Testing CPU vendor identification:
                                        Testing CPUID serialise success:
                                        Testing CPUID deserialise failure:
                                        Testing CPUID out-of-range clearing:
                                        Testing MSR serialise success:
                                        Testing MSR deserialise failure:
                                        Testing policy compatibility success:
                                        Testing policy compatibility failure:
                                        
                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                        • ajpri1998A Offline
                                          ajpri1998
                                          last edited by

                                          I have a minor feature request…
                                          Can we get the xen-cmdline (/opt/xensource/libexec/xen-cmdline) added to the default PATH? I don’t use it too often but having it would save me a google remembering? I’ve also added to my bashrc with the name xcl.

                                          stormiS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • gskgerG Offline
                                            gskger Top contributor @stormi
                                            last edited by

                                            @stormi
                                            Probably more a fun test than a real world test. I installed XCP-ng 8.3 alpha2 run on a

                                            HP T620 PLUS Thin Client
                                            AMD GX-420CA @ 2GHz low power APU SoC (Jaguar)
                                            16 GB RAM

                                            According to Art of Server on Youtube, this Thin Client supports up to 32GB RAM. It idles around 14-17W with XCP-ng and one Debian VM running. It also features a low profile PCI-e slot that I use with a Intel Pro / 1000 PT quad port LP card.

                                            [21:58 xcp83 xtf]# ./xtf-runner selftest -q --host
                                            Combined test results:
                                            test-hvm32-selftest                      SUCCESS
                                            test-hvm32pae-selftest                   SUCCESS
                                            test-hvm32pse-selftest                   SUCCESS
                                            test-hvm64-selftest                      SUCCESS
                                            test-pv64-selftest                       SUCCESS
                                            
                                            
                                            [21:58 xcp83 xtf]# ./xtf-runner -aqq --host
                                            Combined test results:
                                            test-pv64-cpuid-faulting                 SKIP
                                            test-pv64-pv-fsgsbase                    SKIP
                                            test-hvm32-umip                          SKIP
                                            test-hvm64-umip                          SKIP
                                            test-pv64-xsa-167                        SKIP
                                            test-pv64-xsa-182                        SKIP
                                            [21:59 xcp83 xtf]# echo $?
                                            3
                                            
                                            
                                            [21:59 xcp83 xtf]# /usr/libexec/xen/bin/test-cpu-policy
                                            CPU Policy unit tests
                                            Testing CPU vendor identification:
                                            Testing CPUID serialise success:
                                            Testing CPUID deserialise failure:
                                            Testing CPUID out-of-range clearing:
                                            Testing MSR serialise success:
                                            Testing MSR deserialise failure:
                                            Testing policy compatibility success:
                                            Testing policy compatibility failure:
                                            Done: all ok
                                            [22:00 xcp83 xtf]# echo $?
                                            0
                                            
                                            
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