d870f0e26e
guests operating systems on a single machine. Guest OSes (also called "domains") require a modified kernel which supports Xen hypercalls in replacement to access to the physical hardware. At boot, the xen kernel is loaded along with the guest kernel for the first domain (called domain0). domain0 has privileges to access the physical hardware (PCI and ISA devices), administrate other domains and provide virtual devices (disks and network) to other domains. xenkernel45 and xentools45 contains the kernel and tools from the Xen 4.5.x branch
28 lines
720 B
Groff
28 lines
720 B
Groff
$NetBSD: patch-.._docs_man_xlcpupool.cfg.pod.5,v 1.1 2015/01/20 16:42:13 bouyer Exp $
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--- ../docs/man/xlcpupool.cfg.pod.5.orig 2015-01-12 17:53:24.000000000 +0100
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+++ ../docs/man/xlcpupool.cfg.pod.5 2015-01-19 13:16:17.000000000 +0100
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@@ -4,12 +4,12 @@
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=head1 SYNOPSIS
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- /etc/xen/xlcpupool
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+ @XENDCONFDIR@/xlcpupool
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=head1 DESCRIPTION
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To create a Cpupool with xl requires the provision of a cpupool config
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-file. Typically these live in `/etc/xen/CPUPOOL.cfg` where CPUPOOL is
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+file. Typically these live in `@XENDCONFDIR@/CPUPOOL.cfg` where CPUPOOL is
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the name of the cpupool.
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=head1 SYNTAX
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@@ -101,7 +101,7 @@
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=head1 FILES
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-F</etc/xen/CPUPOOL.cfg>
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+F<@XENDCONFDIR@/CPUPOOL.cfg>
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=head1 BUGS
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