Greetings,

----- Original Message -----
> Thanks Nux, but now I'm fighting with the network settings...
> There is some tutorial for this?,
> How do you create centos template, can you give me some steps for
> this...
> Thanks in Advance
> Pablo
> 
> On Tue, Jul 15, 2014 at 2:32 PM, Nux! < n...@li.nux.ro > wrote:
> Hi,
> I've got an old image here: http://li.nux.ro/download/LXC/
> Use at your own risk etc :-)
> --
> ----- Original Message -----
> > From: "Pablo Silva" < psil...@gmail.com >
> > To: centos-virt@centos.org
> > Sent: Tuesday, 15 July, 2014 3:53:45 PM
> > Subject: [CentOS-virt] Fwd: About Centos 7 + Virt-manager
> > 
> > Dear Colleagues:
> > 
> > I'm trying to use virt-manager to create a container with lxc, as the
> > picture I attached, I indicated that I must point to a directory where the
> > template is to manage it with virt-manager.
> > 
> > I tried to use a template of
> > http://wiki.openvz.org/Download/template/precreated , but not
> > working, being on the console option displays a black screen with nothing.
> > 
> > I wonder, where can I get a template to work with virt-manager, or what
> > are the steps to follow so you can create a template with Centos Minimal,
> > do not know if the template must be the same version of Centos 7 or can be
> > a template with Centos 6.5
> > 
> > In advance, thank you very much.
> > -Pablo
> > 
> > http://picpaste.com/Captura_de_pantalla_2014-07-15_a_las_10.47.26-DHi28gtt.png
> > http://picpaste.com/Captura_de_pantalla_2014-07-15_a_las_10.49.02-y4TkGxLY.png

While virt-manager has had an lxc option for some time, and yes, I've actually 
seen a few tutorials by adventurous Fedorians on Fedora Planet over the last 
couple of years... to the best of my knowledge, almost no one is using 
virt-manager with containers.  Red Hat only sees containers for applications 
and they are favoring strongly Docker.

Among the many guides released with RHEL7 was one entitled, "Resource 
Management and Linux Containers" 
(https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-US/Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux/7/html-single/Resource_Management_and_Linux_Containers_Guide/index.html).
  It does have a section on LXC containers but they really don't go into it too 
much.

Canonical is the main lead on LXC containers... so maybe they have some 
documentation?

If you want to containerize applications, then Docker might be the way to go.  
If you want a full-blown container (complete distro with independent accounts, 
networking, services, etc) then OpenVZ is the way to go.  OpenVZ is a 
third-party patch to the kernel that will never get into the mainline kernel so 
you have to use an OpenVZ-provided kernel (their stable branches are based on 
RHEL-kernels) and utils.  They have EL5 and EL6-based kernels... and are 
working on an EL7-based one but no date on when that will be released.

I'm a big OpenVZ user (since 2005) so if you have questions, feel free to email 
me directly if desired... or find me in #openvz on freenode during MST business 
hours.

TYL,
-- 
Scott Dowdle
704 Church Street
Belgrade, MT 59714
(406)388-0827 [home]
(406)994-3931 [work]
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