virt-manager/virtman-help.diff
Charles Arnold b6d3df316d - virtinst-storage-ocfs2.diff (Xin Wei Hu)
* add ocfs2 to  pool of dir (Filesystem Directory) type in libvirt

OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Virtualization/virt-manager?expand=0&rev=16
2010-02-26 18:34:04 +00:00

226 lines
11 KiB
Diff

Index: virt-manager-0.8.3/help/virt-manager/C/virt-manager.xml
===================================================================
--- virt-manager-0.8.3.orig/help/virt-manager/C/virt-manager.xml
+++ virt-manager-0.8.3/help/virt-manager/C/virt-manager.xml
@@ -821,218 +821,9 @@
<title>The Create Wizard</title>
<para>The Create Wizard helps you gather the information necessary to create
new virtual machines. All the information in each screen is retained and can
- be backed-up-to and modified until you click <guibutton>Finish</guibutton>
+ be backed-up-to and modified until you click <guibutton>OK</guibutton>
on the last screen.</para>
- <sect2 id="virt-manager-system-name">
- <title>The System Name screen</title>
- <para>Choose a name for your virtual system. The name must be non-blank,
- alphanumeric (plus underscores), contain at least one letter, and be less
- than 50 characters.</para>
- </sect2>
-
- <sect2 id="virt-manager-virt-method">
- <title>The Virtualization Method screen</title>
- <para>Choose a virtualization method for your new system. The choices
- are:</para>
- <variablelist>
- <varlistentry><term>Paravirtualized</term> <listitem><para>A
- paravirtualized system typically performs better than a fully virtualized
- system because certain operations &mdash; disk and network access, for
- example &mdash; have direct access to the hardware. However a
- paravirtualized VM requires a specially modified kernel. If you
- choose paravirtualized, you must make sure this specially modified kernel
- is available for the operating system you wish to install.</para>
- </listitem>
- </varlistentry>
- <varlistentry><term>Fully Virtualized</term>
- <listitem>
- <para>A fully virtualized system simulates all the hardware for the VM,
- permitting no direct access. It allows for a greater range of operating
- systems, but generally will not perform as well as a paravirtualized
- system. Note that for some hypervisor types, full virtualization requires
- hardware support. In addition if your hardware allows it, you can
- enable hardware acceleration for your fully virtualized guest (this
- item will be grayed out unless your hardware is acceleration-capable).</para>
- </listitem>
- </varlistentry>
- </variablelist>
- </sect2>
-
- <sect2 id="virt-manager-installation-media">
- <title>The Installation Media screens</title>
- <para>The Installation Media screens let you specify where the physical or
- virtual install media for your VM are located, so that the installer can
- find them. There are two screens, one for each type of virtual
- machine.</para>
- <sect3 id="virt-manager-installation-media-paravirt">
- <title>Paravirtualized installation media</title>
- <figure id="virt-manager-FIG-paravirt-media">
- <title>Choose Install Media for Paravirtualized VMs</title>
- <screenshot>
- <mediaobject>
- <imageobject>
- <imagedata fileref="figures/vm-paravirt-media.png" format="PNG"/>
- </imageobject>
- <textobject> <phrase>Shows the paravirtualized VM media choice window.</phrase>
- </textobject>
- </mediaobject>
- </screenshot>
- </figure>
- <para>A paravirtualized VM requires an install tree that follows the
- pattern of the Fedora install tree (e.g. <ulink type="http"
- url="http://download.fedora.redhat.com/pub/fedora/linux/core/6/i386/os/">
- this tree</ulink>). The <guilabel>Install Media URL</guilabel> box lets
- you enter a URL for a tree like this. When you then go to install the
- guest, the installer will check to see if the URL you entered is
- readable, and if so download the paravirtualized install kernel and
- initrd that it will need to start the install. You can use the following
- URL types:</para>
- <variablelist>
- <varlistentry><term>http:</term>
- <listitem><para>e.g. <userinput>http://download.fedora.redhat.com/pub/fedora/linux/core/6/i386/os/</userinput></para>
- </listitem>
- </varlistentry>
- <varlistentry><term>ftp:</term>
- <listitem><para>e.g. <userinput>ftp://download.fedora.redhat.com/pub/fedora/linux/core/6/i386/os/</userinput></para>
- </listitem>
- </varlistentry>
- <varlistentry><term>nfs:</term>
- <listitem><para>e.g. <userinput>nfs:myfileserver:/images/linux/core/6/i386/os/</userinput></para>
- </listitem>
- </varlistentry>
- <varlistentry><term>local file:</term>
- <listitem><para>e.g. <userinput>/tmp/paravirttrees/fedora/os</userinput>
- </para>
- </listitem>
- </varlistentry>
- </variablelist>
- <para>You can specify a kickstart URL for your paravirtualized VM in
- exactly the same way as the install tree described
- above. <application>&app;</application> will remember the last 5 URLs you
- enter in these windows, so if you are installing multiple VMs you will
- not have to type the URLs more than once.
- </para>
- </sect3>
- <sect3 id="virt-manager-installation-media-full-virt">
- <title>Fully Virtualized Installation Media</title>
- <figure id="virt-manager-FIG-full-virt-media">
- <title>Choose Install Media for Fully Virtualized VMs</title>
- <screenshot>
- <mediaobject>
- <imageobject>
- <imagedata fileref="figures/vm-full-virt-media.png" format="PNG"/>
- </imageobject>
- <textobject> <phrase>Shows the fully virtualized VM media choice window.</phrase>
- </textobject>
- </mediaobject>
- </screenshot>
- </figure>
- <para>A fully virtualized VM requires the standard installation media that
- the same non-virtualized OS would require: either an actual CD or DVD, or
- a corresponding ISO image. On the Installation Media screen for a fully
- virtualized VM, you can therefore choose the path to your CD or DVD from
- the pull-down list, or you can enter or browse to the path of the ISO
- image you have saved in your local filesystem.</para>
- <para>For fully virtualized VMs, <application>&app;</application> also
- asks for the operating system type and variant you are installing. The
- installer uses this to set the <parameter>acpi</parameter> and
- <parameter>apic</parameter> flags according to the OS type (other
- parameters may be added to this list in the future).</para>
- </sect3>
- </sect2>
-
- <sect2 id="virt-manager-storage-space">
- <title>Assigning Storage Space</title>
- <figure id="virt-manager-FIG-assign-storage">
- <title>Assign Storage</title>
- <screenshot>
- <mediaobject>
- <imageobject>
- <imagedata fileref="figures/vm-assign-storage.png" format="PNG"/>
- </imageobject>
- <textobject> <phrase>Shows the Assigning Storage window.</phrase>
- </textobject>
- </mediaobject>
- </screenshot>
- </figure>
-
- <para>Designate the primary storage device for your VM. You may choose an
- existing physical or LVM partition in the <guilabel>Partition</guilabel>
- box; or, you may choose to use a file on the local filesystem. If you
- choose to use a file that does not already exist, you may specify the size
- of the file in megabytes. If you choose an existing file, that file's size
- will not change. If you use a file for your primary storage device, you
- may also choose whether to allocate the entire file
- at creation time, or whether to allow it to grow to its maximum over
- time.</para>
- <warning>
- <title>Sparse files can be dangerous</title>
- <para>You may be tempted not to allocate your entire file when your VM is
- created; filling a 5- to 10-GB file with 0s can take quite a while, and
- you will avoid this wait by not allocating the entire file and instead using a
- "sparse" file. However, be aware that this will slow down your VM's disk
- performance significantly, as the underlying OS must keep allocating more
- storage space as your VM runs. In addition, if the disk your sparse file
- is on runs out of space, your VM may crash and lose data. You may
- therefore only want to use a sparse file when testing, where guest
- creation speed could be at a premium.</para>
- </warning>
- </sect2>
-
- <sect2 id="virt-manager-memory-and-cpu">
- <title>Allocate Memory And CPU</title>
- <figure id="virt-manager-FIG-mem-cpu">
- <title>Set Memory and CPU</title>
- <screenshot>
- <mediaobject>
- <imageobject>
- <imagedata fileref="figures/vm-create-mem-cpu.png" format="PNG"/>
- </imageobject>
- <textobject> <phrase>Shows the VM Memory and CPU choice window.</phrase>
- </textobject>
- </mediaobject>
- </screenshot>
- </figure>
- <para>The <guilabel>Memory</guilabel> section of this screen lets you set
- two parameters, <guilabel>VM Max Memory</guilabel> and <guilabel>VM
- Startup Memory</guilabel>. These settings work as follows:</para>
- <variablelist>
- <varlistentry><term>VM Max Memory</term> <listitem><para><guilabel>VM Max
- Memory</guilabel> sets the maximum memory your VM can have unless you
- reboot it with a higher setting. For paravirtualized VMs, the maximum
- memory is a boot-time kernel setting; for fully virtualized VMs, the
- maximum memory appears to the VM to be the amount of physical memory
- available.</para>
- </listitem>
- </varlistentry>
- <varlistentry><term>VM Startup Memory</term>
- <listitem><para>For paravirtualized VMs, <guilabel>VM Startup
- Memory</guilabel> sets the amount of memory to start the VM with. The
- VM's available memory can then be changed from <application>&app;</application>
- while the VM is running. For fully virtualized guests, this setting has
- no effect.</para>
- </listitem>
- </varlistentry>
- </variablelist>
- <para>The virtual CPU section of this screen lets you set the number of
- vCPUs your VM starts up with. For paravirtualized guests, this number can
- be changed while the guest is running (although never to more than the VM
- started with). For fully virtualized guests, this number can only be
- changed while the guest is not running.</para>
- </sect2>
-
- <sect2 id="virt-manager-validation">
- <title>Validation</title>
- <para>The Validation screen lets you verify the setup for your new
- system. If you need to, you can back up and
- make changes. Clicking &quot;Finish&quot; will begin creating your virtual
- machine. If you have the <application>&app;</application> preferences set
- to automatically open consoles, a <link
- linkend="virt-manager-console-window">Console window</link> will pop up
- as soon as the installer has downloaded the necessary images and booted
- the VM's installer.
- </para>
- </sect2>
+ <para>For further details, see documentation for &quot;vm-install&quot;.</para>
</sect1>
</article>