> On 29 September 2011 21:01, Ian Campbell <
Ian.Campbell@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> wrote:
> On Thu, 2011-09-29 at 11:53 +0100, Joseph Glanville wrote:
> > +1 for Markdown.
> >
> > In terms of making Xen more accessible I think it might be a
> good idea
> > to update/cleanup the distro support page.
> >
http://wiki.xen.org/xenwiki/DistributionSupport
> >
> > I can probably do this.
>
>
> Excellent, it looks like it needs it...
>
> > Making it simple for people to get started with Xen on a
> distro they
> > are comfortable with is a good step forward.
>
>
> Agreed. In fact for many users this is probably the end goal,
> not just a
> step along the way.
>
> > I know distro specific guides could turn into a nightmare
> but I am
> > open to writing one for Debian 6 Squeeze,
>
>
> In cases such as this we should also consider updating the
> distro's wiki
> page. I'm not sure where the canonical guide should live
> (
wiki.xen.org
> or
wiki.debian.org) but they should certainly cross reference
> each
> other.
>
> Yeah that's a tricky one, I guess we can start at
wiki.xen.org and go
> from there.
> Seeing as Debian repackages Xen,
wiki.debian.org should probably be
> the final canonical location.
>
>
>
> > there are also a few that exist already for RHEL/CentOS on
> the wiki.
> > This should get easier as more distros update to 3.0+
> kernels that
> > support PVops out of the box...
> >
> > Next would be networking documentation as network-bridge
> script has
> > been deprecated.
> >
http://wiki.xensource.com/xenwiki/XenNetworking
> > Once again I think alot of the documentation is going to be
> distro
> > specific to be newbie friendly but atleast a simple ip/brctl
> guide
> > would help.
> >
> > IMO knowing where to start and setting up networking were
> the biggest
> > barriers when I was picking up Xen a few years back.
>
>
> We now have
>
http://wiki.xensource.com/xenwiki/HostConfiguration/Networking
> which
> could do with being made more discoverable.
>
> That is -much- better and as you said should be much easier to find..
>
>
> There is also
>
http://wiki.xensource.com/xenwiki/HostConfiguration but
> its looking pretty sad right now...
>
> I can think of some stuff to fill that up.
> eg. Howto enable live migration, local VM storage guide possibly
>
>
>
> >
> > I am also open to updating the blktap2 pages and README to
> reflect the
> > new tap-ctl userspace utilities and tips on driver
> development.
> >
> > <slightly off-topic but related>
> >
> > With
jailtime.org(stacklet) now charging for subscription
> there is
> > nowhere to download pre-built clean Xen compatible images
> free of
> > charge etc.
> > I have pvgrub/pygrub capable images of Ubuntu/Debian/CentOS
> that I am
> > considering hosting for free.
> > Generally new users are confused on how to build new
> paravirt VMs, I
> > think prebuilt images are suboptimal but a good place to
> start for
> > beginners.
>
>
> There was discussion of Debian providing such a thing on
> debian-deval
> back in late July, I should chase that up really.
>
> Cheers,
> Ian.
>
>
> >
> > Joseph.
> >
> > On 29 September 2011 00:00, Ian Campbell
> <
Ian.Campbell@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> > wrote:
> > On Wed, 2011-09-28 at 14:48 +0100, Konrad Rzeszutek
> Wilk
> > wrote:
> > > On Wed, Sep 28, 2011 at 02:26:31PM +0100, Ian
> Jackson wrote:
> > > > Ian Campbell writes ("Re: [Xen-devel] Xen
> document day
> > (Oct 12 or 26)"):
> > > > > Since the guest APIs are stable there should
> be
> > relatively little churn
> > > > > so perhaps a wiki page (or even series of
> pages) would
> > be appropriate
> > > > > for this sort of thing?
> > > >
> > > > I want this to be in-tree. If it's in-tree, we
> can refuse
> > patches
> > > > which do not update the documentation.
> > > >
> > > > > I think this would be good too and in fact
> even more
> > important than the
> > > > > interface documentation. Everyone needs to be
> able to
> > build Xen to hack
> > > > > on it but only a subset need to know any
> particular API.
> > > > >
> > > > > Also although we recommend that users consume
> Xen via
> > their distro where
> > > > > possible such a guide would also help any who
> would
> > rather build from
> > > > > scratch (e.g. because we've asked them to "try
> the
> > latest version" or to
> > > > > bisect a bug etc).
> > > >
> > > > This would be a good candidate for a wiki page,
> backed up
> > by revisions
> > > > of the in-tree README.
> > >
> > >
> > > Any recommendations on what would be a good format
> to write
> > these "interface"
> > > pages in?
> >
> >
> > For in-line (i.e. in xen/include/public/*.h) docs of
> APIs I
> > played a
> > little bit with integrating kernel-doc into the Xen
> build
> > system but it
> > is tied a little too closely to the kernel build
> > infrastructure.
> >
> > Doxygen seems like a plausible alternative with life
> outside
> > the kernel
> > etc. We actually appear to already have some doxygen
> stuff for
> > the
> > pytyhon stuff (judging from the Makefile, I've not
> actually
> > noticed the
> > structured code comments anywhere)
> >
> > For non-inline docs I think we decided that markdown
> would be
> > a good
> > answer.
> >
> > Ian.
> >
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________
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> >
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> >
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> >
> >
> >
> >
> > --
> > Founder | Director | VP Research
> >
> > Orion Virtualisation Solutions |
www.orionvm.com.au | Phone:
> 1300 56
> > 99 52 | Mobile: 0428 754 846
>
>
>
>
>
>
> --
> Founder | Director | VP Research
>
> Orion Virtualisation Solutions |
www.orionvm.com.au | Phone: 1300 56
> 99 52 | Mobile: 0428 754 846