Matthew,
What kind of issues are you
running into? As far as I know running Xen on a laptop is ok (I used to do it,
but I ran into disk I/O problems that would make my system sluggish if I was
doing any work in my windows domU).
The steps I took were:
1.
Install
your favourite distro (Fedora/Ubuntu/RHEL)
a.
I
prefer Fedora but Ubuntu is good as well, CentOS or RHEL on a laptop isn’t so
great
2.
Install
XEN packages or compile from source
3.
Install
any drivers that aren’t there (main culprit for me was the display driver)
Keep in mind that you may as
well install the distro’s xen package as it usually configures your kernel and
drivers for you.
Best of luck,
-T
From:
xen-users-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:xen-users-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Matthew
Ollerenshaw
Sent: Monday, December 22, 2008 7:09 PM
To: 'xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx'
Subject: [Xen-users] Installing Xen on a Toshiba A200
Hey Everyone,
Has any successfully installed this on a
Toshiba A200? Any feedback would be great.
Kind Regards
Matthew Ollerenshaw
Network Engineer
( +612 1300 887 959 | Ê +612
9890 8349 | + mollerenshaw@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
| www.visinet.com.au
Diploma
(Network Engineering) | Microsoft Certified Professional ( MS Vista)
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