The Xm Command - Novell LINUX ENTERPRISE SERVER 10 SP2 - VIRTUALIZATION WITH XEN Manual

Virtualization with xen
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(memory 384)
(uuid 4fbcb943-871c-9a51-3a48-3ad99d933841)
(bootloader_args '- -entry=xvda2:/boot/vmlinuz-xen,/boot/initrd-xen')
(name SLES10SP1withOES2)
(on_reboot restart)
(on_poweroff destroy)
(vcpus 1)
(bootloader /usr/lib/xen/boot/domUloader.py)
(shadow_memory 0)
(cpu_weight 256)
(cpu_cap 0)
(features )
(on_xend_start ignore)
(on_xend_stop ignore)
(start_time 1178219902.47)
(cpu_time 4574.26779201)
(online_vcpus 1)
(image
(linux
(kernel /var/lib/xen/tmp/kernel.Bg0o6h)
(ramdisk /var/lib/xen/tmp/ramdisk.Bch8YM)
(args 'TERM=xterm ')
)
)
(status 2)
....
3 Delete the existing configuration from xenstore with the command xm del
vm_name
4 Enter xm new -F filename to import the virtual machine's new settings
into xend.
5 Enter xm start vm_name to start the virtual machine with its new settings.
You should repeat the entire process of exporting the file each time you want to
make changes to a virtual machine's settings.

4.4 The xm Command

The xm command provides a command line interface for managing virtual machines.
It can be used to create, pause, and shut down virtual machines. It can also be used to
(maxmem 512)
Managing a Virtualization Environment
31

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