Hi,

Thanks Martin, for your comments.

On 12/28/2010 04:23 PM, Martin Zobel-Helas wrote:
> In general I support this. Those are changes worth mentioning. On the
> other hand your text reads more like a howto, which IMHO should be
> content for wiki.debian.org. Maybe have the release notes linking a wiki
> document instead?

I did accordingly.

I also added few things to the wiki (like what packages to apt-get
install if you run on 32 bits, plus few words on dtc-xen, a bit about
the antispoof=yes thing, and other stuff).

>> Could others please give me comments on this? Also, some correction for
>> my (poor) English would be welcome when/if you spot issues.
> 
> You are aware that we have debian-l10n-engl...@l.d.o for exactly that
> reason?

Yes, but maybe we shall make sure that we agree with the *content*
before we send it to them for correction, right? Your comments on the
tone (which should be neutral) and the fact that it shouldn't be a howto
was helpful.

> Also i spotted that some of your wording is quite negative
> ("Unfortunaly", "As a consequence", "Another thing that you have to take
> care about", ...). I would like to suggest we come up with at least a
> neutral wording here.

Right. Changed. Attached is the new text, please re-read and let me know
what you think.

Thomas
4.7.4. Upgrading with Xen installed, and Kernel enumeration order issue with Xen

In Lenny, using grub legacy, the default kernel that would start after 
installing Xen packages was the Xen hypervisor and the dom0 capable Linux 
kernel. But in Squeeze (and SID), when running with Grub2, this isn't what is 
happening. By default, the non-Xen kernel will boot. If you have Xen installed 
and expect to boot with it by default, you have to tweak grub2 configuration as 
explained at: http://wiki.debian.org/Xen#Installationandconfiguration

Also, when upgrading from Lenny, Xen isn't upgraded to the 4.0 version of 
Squeeze. So, after you finished the dist-upgrade, it is advised to check that 
Xen 4.0 and the corresponding dom0 kernel are installed with dpkg -l, and 
eventually, install them with aptitude install. See the same address (eg: 
http://wiki.debian.org/Xen#Installationandconfiguration) to see how to install 
the Xen hypervisor and the Xen dom0 kernel under Squeeze.

It is also important to notice that your domU wont be able to use HDD devices 
of the type sda1 (for example). This naming scheme has been removed from Xen 
because of a request from the mainline kernel maintainers. Instead, you should 
use xvda1 (as a corresponding example) instead.

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