Sunday, April 05
Support Above And Beyond
I mentioned on SoftLayer's forums that OpenVZ wasn't working with the new Nehalem server. SoftLayer don't support OpenVZ; it's a custom kernel that I downloaded and installed myself. If you need virtualisation and support, they offer Citrix XenServer, Virtuozzo, and Microsoft's Hyper-V.
Which is fine. I was hoping to do it myself with OpenVZ. I couldn't get it to work because OpenVZ doesn't support the new network controllers and needed support. SoftLayer don't support OpenVZ, so I asked them to sell me Virtuozzo.
What they did was deploy a test server with the same configuration as mine and assign an engineer to getting OpenVZ running. For free. That's awesome.
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I mentioned on SoftLayer's forums that OpenVZ wasn't working with the new Nehalem server. SoftLayer don't support OpenVZ; it's a custom kernel that I downloaded and installed myself. If you need virtualisation and support, they offer Citrix XenServer, Virtuozzo, and Microsoft's Hyper-V.
Which is fine. I was hoping to do it myself with OpenVZ. I couldn't get it to work because OpenVZ doesn't support the new network controllers and needed support. SoftLayer don't support OpenVZ, so I asked them to sell me Virtuozzo.
What they did was deploy a test server with the same configuration as mine and assign an engineer to getting OpenVZ running. For free. That's awesome.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
05:02 AM
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1
That's pretty amazing service.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at Sunday, April 05 2009 08:21 AM (+rSRq)
2
It is.
Turns out that Virtuozzo doesn't work either - same problem - so they have to find a solution anyway. But they didn't know that until they went trying to fix my problem for me.
Turns out that Virtuozzo doesn't work either - same problem - so they have to find a solution anyway. But they didn't know that until they went trying to fix my problem for me.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Sunday, April 05 2009 10:59 AM (PiXy!)
3
Hardly a surprise, Virtuozzo and OpenVZ are exactly the same thing.
I ran Ani-nouto on OpenVZ based on 2.6.26 and 2.6.27 for a while. There were issues with crashes, and Parallels dragged their feet on resolving them. It seems that the best course of action would be to take the driver from RHEL 5 and retrofit it into whatever 2.6.18 OVZ has.
I ran Ani-nouto on OpenVZ based on 2.6.26 and 2.6.27 for a while. There were issues with crashes, and Parallels dragged their feet on resolving them. It seems that the best course of action would be to take the driver from RHEL 5 and retrofit it into whatever 2.6.18 OVZ has.
Posted by: Pete Zaitcev at Sunday, April 05 2009 03:46 PM (/ppBw)
4
I think the best course of action for Pixy right now is to be patient and see what SoftLayer comes up with.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at Sunday, April 05 2009 04:26 PM (+rSRq)
5
Yep. I expect that's what SoftLayer are doing now.
I thought that maybe Virtuozzo would have a more recently updated kernel that mightn't have made it to OpenVZ just yet... But then, they'd have to release it, wouldn't they?
Oh well. Let's see what happens.
I thought that maybe Virtuozzo would have a more recently updated kernel that mightn't have made it to OpenVZ just yet... But then, they'd have to release it, wouldn't they?
Oh well. Let's see what happens.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Sunday, April 05 2009 04:28 PM (PiXy!)
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