eric wrote
---
That's not my understanding. I watched someone else follow the procedure
here:
http://www.howtoforge.com/virtualization-with-kvm-on-a-centos-6.0-server
and I believe he started with the minimal installation on the host.
-
---
thought I missed
On 10/26/2011 04:48 PM, Bob Hoffman wrote:
eric wrote
-
That's not my understanding. I watched someone else follow the procedure
here:
http://www.howtoforge.com/virtualization-with-kvm-on-a-centos-6.0-server
and I believe he started with the minimal installation on the
You can do virt-manager remotely. Either connect to libvirt remotely
through a locally running instance of virt-manager or via X11 forwarding. I
do the 2nd method with no GUI installed on the server. See here for minimal
packages needed...
On 10/26/2011 04:56 PM, Bob Hoffman wrote:
eric wrote
---
That's not my understanding. I watched someone else follow the procedure
here:
http://www.howtoforge.com/virtualization-with-kvm-on-a-centos-6.0-server
and I believe he started with the minimal installation on the
On 10/26/2011 07:14 PM, Bob Hoffman wrote:
trey wrote
--
You can do virt-manager remotely. Either connect to libvirt remotely
through a locally running instance of virt-manager or via X11 forwarding. I
do the 2nd method with no GUI installed on the server. See
Eric is right. You can connect remotely without even installing
virt-manager on the server. Only needs to have libvird running.
I did a minimal install of CentOS 6 with the 4 virtual package groups. My
system as no startx or run level 5. In my case I have to use X11 forwarding
but that doesnt
Trey Dockendorf wrote
--
Eric is right. You can connect remotely without even installing
virt-manager on the server. Only needs to have libvird running.
I did a minimal install of CentOS 6 with the 4 virtual package groups. My
system as no startx or run level