IIRC, there is no need to manually specify the context ID ...
Christian Knauber wrote:
Did you change the context id of the new vserver ? It is defined in the file /etc/vservers/new/context. Have a nice day, Christian ----- Original Message ----- From: Odile Bénassy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: vserver@list.linux-vserver.org Sent: Tuesday, June 27, 2006 9:18:27 AM GMT+0100 Subject: [Vserver] Cloning a vserver Hello, I hope not to disturb with a low-level question, I still hope will be useful to others. I'm very happy with my vservers in general, I must say, and the users too, of course. I want to copy a vserver into a second one, because the second one will run the same software. So I had an IP .xxx and a name "old" And I want a new IP .yyy and a new name "new" 1) I copied all the /vservers/old to /vservers/new 2) I copied all the /etc/vservers/old to /etc/vservers/new and also /etc/vservers/old.conf to /etc/vservers/new.conf 3) I went into /etc/vservers/new.conf, into /etc/vservers/new, into /vservers/new/etc and change there every string .xxx into .yyy, and "old" into "new" 4) I fixed the /etc/vservers/new symlink Now both vservers can start and stop. I can ping both IPs. But if I enter "new" I am in "old". What do I have left behind?
_______________________________________________ Vserver mailing list Vserver@list.linux-vserver.org http://list.linux-vserver.org/mailman/listinfo/vserver