Nelson, Thank you for testing this.
I elected to install 2020.10 to use as a base for learning how to update the system without reinstalling if that is possible. I *think* the network menu bar icon is supposed to start /usr/lib/nwam-manager. I get a dialog popup using 2020.10 that asks for authorization to run that as root. However, I've had mixed results using it. At one point the Z840 was not connecting. Refresh seemed to do nothing, so I created a copy of the Automatic profile. That seemed to run when selected, but then Automatic ran. I just tried using it to create a static IP address for the Z840. That set it to "NoNet" which "ifconfig -a" confirms. I only recently started using DHCP at all and have no useful experience with nwam. If I try to examine the "User" profile I created I can't see any information at all. I was after some fiddle able to get it to connect. I can ping my router and do an nslookup of google.com, but Firefox can't do the DNS lookup. Nslookup uses my router as a DNS proxy. Not much help I'm afraid. Perhaps someone who knows more about nwam will post. Reg On Monday, April 26, 2021, 12:21:44 PM CDT, Nelson H. F. Beebe <be...@math.utah.edu> wrote: This report follows earlier ones under the subject "The kiss of death" that supplied installation reports for virt-manager/QEMU on CentOS 7 and Ubuntu 20.04, and VirtualBox on another Ubuntu 20.04 system. This one is fairly positive, so I felt it deserved a new subject line. Today, I successfully installed OpenIndiana Hipster from http://dlc.openindiana.org/isos/hipster/test/OI-hipster-gui-20210405.iso on OVirt/QEMU running on CentOS Linux release 7.6.1810 (Core). As I noted in an earlier report, this virtualization system has the advantage of live VM migration, at a cost of considerably more complex VM creation and management. However, once a VM has been successfully installed, the platform has been rock solid, and we routinely use the VM migration feature to move VMs off one server to another, run system updates on the first, reboot, and move back its VMs, without the VMs even noticing their two moves. I took both OVirt snapshots and ZFS snapshots during the installation steps, with multiple reboots, and have now successfully copied over /var/opt, /opt/csw, and $prefix/texlive/2021 trees from other systems. No boot problems have been observed this time. However, there are a few other problems with OpenIndiana Hipster on OVirt: (1) Ovirt offers three console types: QXL (default), VGA, and CIRRUS. With QXL, the GUI desktop is too high to fit on the screen. Moving the mouse near the bottom edge slides up the display to make the bottom task bar visible. Moving the mouse near the top edge makes the top menu bar only partly visible. However, in neither case can the mouse select icons. I shut down the system, changed to VGA, and found the same behavior as with QXL. I again shut down the system, changed to CIRRUS, rebooted, logged in, and now the screen is fully visible, but the mouse cannot select actions from the menu bar or tool bar. Curiously, moving the mouse over a toolbar item, such as the network icon, produces a yellow popup window that describes the button. One just cannot select it. With all three video types, there are generally two mouse cursors on the screen, but with CIRRUS, they remain within 5mm of each other. Those mouse problems make the desktop almost unusable. With the mouse in the central region of the screen, I can get a popup menu from which I can start a terminal. However, the Applications / Places / System / Network / ... menu bar items are unusable. Unlike VirtManager and VirtualBox, which have menu buttons to send Ctl-Alt-Fn and Ctl-Alt-DELete input to the VM, the OVirt button can only send Ctl-Alt-DELete, so there is no way to select alternate consoles that are supported by most operating systems. With another VM installed on virt-manager/QEMU on Ubuntu 20.04, there were no such icon selection problems, and I was able to reconfigure that system for static IPv4 addressing. If someone knows what program is started by clicking on the network menubar icon, please report it; I've never had much success with manual changes to files in the /etc/ tree on Solaris family systems to switch between DHCP-assigned and static IP addresses. (2) During the installation, I selected Denver, CO, USA, from the world map, and it definitely showed that choice in the text bar under the map. However, when the system rebooted, the timezone was still UTC, the clock was off by hours, and /etc/localtime did not exist. The OVirt control panel shows the clock should be a hardware clock set to "(GMT-00:00) GMT Standard Time". I fixed that problem by # ln -s /usr/share/lib/zoneinfo/America/Denver /etc/localtime # ntpdate time1.google.com After fixing those issues, creating users accounts (more snapshots), I ran # pkg install build-essential # pkg update # sync # sync # poweroff I made another OVirt snapshot, powered on, and the system is now ready for use. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- - Nelson H. F. Beebe Tel: +1 801 581 5254 - - University of Utah FAX: +1 801 581 4148 - - Department of Mathematics, 110 LCB Internet e-mail: be...@math.utah.edu - - 155 S 1400 E RM 233 be...@acm.org be...@computer.org - - Salt Lake City, UT 84112-0090, USA URL: http://www.math.utah.edu/~beebe/ - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- _______________________________________________ openindiana-discuss mailing list openindiana-discuss@openindiana.org https://openindiana.org/mailman/listinfo/openindiana-discuss _______________________________________________ openindiana-discuss mailing list openindiana-discuss@openindiana.org https://openindiana.org/mailman/listinfo/openindiana-discuss