Hi I was wondering how effective the vunify is? It looks like I have saved a very small percentage when I unify a vserver. In my previous post I thought that it might not have worked as the command ran so quickly.
Looking in more details at the files with lsattr, the unified vserver has had the flags changed for the files. For example ----i----------t- testunify/bin/mount ----i----------t- testunify/bin/umount ----i----------t- testunify/bin/ps ----i----------t- testunify/bin/kill ----i----------t- testunify/bin/sed ----i----------t- testunify/bin/date ----i----------t- testunify/bin/echo Does this look ok? How do you measure the benefit, would du <vserver> do the job? All the best Dan > -----Original Message----- > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of > Dan Winfield > Sent: 22 February 2004 16:42 > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: RE: [Vserver] Vunify error util-vserver-0.29.192 > > > Hi Enrico, > > > > > > | # vserver foo build -m skeleton --hostname foo --netdev eth0 > > | --interface 10.1.2.3/20 --context 42 > > Managed to create a vserver using this command. Used debootstrap. > > This put all config into /usr/local/etc/vservers and not > /etc/vservers as mentioned in the doc. > > I followed the setting up of the reference server, adapting > the paths for /usr/local/etc/vservers > > > When I run >vserver testunify unify > > Nothing happens the command returns immediately and there is > no feedback! > > Also, I get lots of errors when stopping the vserver relating > to mounts. Never had this before! > > Sending all processes the TERM signal... done. > Sending all processes the KILL signal... done. > Saving random seed... done. > Unmounting remote filesystems... done. > Deconfiguring network interfaces: done. > umount2: Operation not permitted > umount: none: not found > umount: /tmp: Illegal seek > Deactivating swap... done. > Unmounting local filesystems... umount2: Operation not permitted > umount: none: not found > umount: /dev/pts: Illegal seek > umount2: Operation not permitted > umount: none: not found > umount: /tmp: must be superuser to umount > umount2: Invalid argument > umount: /dev/hdv1: not found > umount: /: not mounted > done. > mount: permission denied > Rebooting... ifdown: shutdown eth0: Permission denied > > Anything you can help with? > > Dan > > _______________________________________________ > Vserver mailing list > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > http://list.linux-> vserver.org/mailman/listinfo/vserver > _______________________________________________ Vserver mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://list.linux-vserver.org/mailman/listinfo/vserver
