
Thanks Avi, From: "Avi Miller" <avi.miller@gmail.com>
On 4 Feb 2015, at 11:42 am, Peter Ross <Petros.Listig@fdrive.com.au> wrote:
I have after installation a lot of unused disk space I would like to export for "other use" via iSCSI target.
It is all looking as "borrowed" from RHEL 5 - so.. may an iSCSI target from there work?
Technically: yes. However, we strongly recommend you don't. However, if you absolutely really want to, I recommend using NFS instead of iSCSI to share the unused space.
Curious question: Why do you recommend this instead of iSCSI?
You should also be using Oracle VM 3.3 (which is the latest) which has an OL6 userspace, not OL5.
Yes, OL6. Sorry, got that wrong. BTW: Searching for possible iSCSI targets, I found this exotic one: http://rpmfind.net//linux/RPM/epel/6/i386/netbsd-iscsi-20080207-3.el6.i686.h...
Also, with OVM 3.3, the unused local space can now be used as a storage repository for local VMs.
Yes. But it is on ocfs2.. and local. So no fail-over, and backup/mirroring for cold stand-by is all very clunky, it seems.
Again, ensure you're running Oracle VM 3.3 which uses MySQL Enterprise by default. It's also a lot faster.
Yes, I have this, and noticed that it did not like my local MySQL install.
However, the initial startup of WebLogic can be pretty long as it runs all the discovery scripts to find and enumerate active OVM servers.
I think I should only start it when needed, as long as I have it on the local desktop.
Location-wise, what is the "right thing to do"? I am tempted to put it on a Oracle VM Server but that would not work well if I have a Server problem and no manager either... Well, I could put it on two servers??
Either run it in VirtualBox or install it on another server. We don't recommend running Oracle VM Manager as a guest of the server its managing for exactly that reason.
Yes.. At the moment my server setup is all a bit patch-work.. I have to "redesign" to make it nice and easy again. The exercise I am going through, satisfying proprietary software, is exactly a demonstration to show the benefits of open software because the later gives you the freedom of choice:-) Cheers Peter