Todd Deshane wrote:
>
> Consider the book "Running Xen" - http://runningxen.com
>
Thanks, I've bookmarked that site.
>
> This depends. There are some trade-offs. Performance vs. flexibility.
>
> Image files giving the most flexibility, but with somewhat less
performance.
> Partitions/LVM/RAID more performance, but less flexibility.
>
> You can mix and match based on your needs and there is a lot of
> questions and analysis on the list about this
> search xen.markmail.org <http://xen.markmail.org> for more info and/or
> asked more specific questions.
>
Excellent. Thank you.
>
> No, you can passthrough PCI devices directly to a domU. Doing this
> securely requires an IOMMU (Intel VT-d) or
> a very recent AMD IOMMU. IOMMU is a chipset feature, it and VT-d have
> also been heavily discussed on this list.
> There are some limitations without an IOMMU such as lack of support for
> a HVM/Full virt (i.e. Windows) guest to get
> a PCI device passed to it
>
I'll watch out for that in my reading.
>
> The latest version of Xen support memory over commit, CPU over commit
> has been available for a long time.
>
By "over commit" do you mean temporary bursting?
>
> Xen is an open source project and sometimes the documentation is not the
> greatest. There is quite a bit of effort going into this, but it will be
> some time before it is considered good.
>
> That being said, Xen is being used by a lot of people all over the world
> in production, companies, universities, researchers, etc. There is a lot
> of information on the
> web (howtos, wiki information, etc. etc.) and quite a few books as well.
>
> Hope that helps to get you started.
>
> Cheers,
> Todd
>
> --
> Todd Deshane
> http://todddeshane.net
> http://runningxen.com
Thank you Todd. I feel like I am prepared and pointed in the correct
direction.
-Charles
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