Sorry for the late response.
2011/3/8 Jake Xu j...@demonwaremail.net:
On Tue, Mar 8, 2011 at 11:20 AM, Matthias Bolte
matthias.bo...@googlemail.com wrote:
2011/3/8 Jake Xu j...@demonwaremail.net:
Hi Cole,
Thanks for the wiki link. It would be so useful if the ESX driver
supported
On 03/07/2011 04:32 PM, Jake Xu wrote:
Hi all,
Recently, I have been using libvirt to create virtual machines on ESX
servers. It has been very well until to the point where I couldn't find any
way to disable/remove the virbr0 interface properly.
We use static configuration for VMs on ESX
Hi Cole,
Thanks for the wiki link. It would be so useful if the ESX driver supported
those commands. It seems like the ESX driver does not support most of the
network or interface configuration.
Regarding the eth1 interface, I am not sure why the autostart.xml could
affect bringing up eth1.
2011/3/7 Jake Xu j...@demonwaremail.net:
Hi all,
Recently, I have been using libvirt to create virtual machines on ESX
servers. It has been very well until to the point where I couldn't find any
way to disable/remove the virbr0 interface properly.
virbr0 is part of libvirt default virtual
2011/3/8 Jake Xu j...@demonwaremail.net:
Hi Cole,
Thanks for the wiki link. It would be so useful if the ESX driver supported
those commands. It seems like the ESX driver does not support most of the
network or interface configuration.
What do you mean by those commands?
The problem with
On Tue, Mar 8, 2011 at 11:20 AM, Matthias Bolte
matthias.bo...@googlemail.com wrote:
2011/3/8 Jake Xu j...@demonwaremail.net:
Hi Cole,
Thanks for the wiki link. It would be so useful if the ESX driver
supported
those commands. It seems like the ESX driver does not support most of the
Hi all,
Recently, I have been using libvirt to create virtual machines on ESX
servers. It has been very well until to the point where I couldn't find any
way to disable/remove the virbr0 interface properly.
We use static configuration for VMs on ESX so we do not need to use virbr0
interface and