Hm, I had it listed as “Other (64bit)”, since the list does not have rhel
6.5 (64bit), perhaps I need to select “RHEL 6.4(64bit)” ?
Yiping
On 7/11/14, 12:15 PM, "Bret Mette" <bret.mette@dbihosting.com> wrote:
>When you upload or edit the template iso using the GUI it brings up a
>drop down for operating system. Which did you select ?
>
>
>
>> On Jul 11, 2014, at 12:10 PM, Yiping Zhang <yzhang@marketo.com> wrote:
>>
>> What do you mean by ³profile² ?
>>
>> I am just doing interactive installation from ISO, using a 64 bit RHEL
>>6.5
>> server iso which I just uploaded.
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> Yiping
>>
>>> On 7/11/14, 12:02 PM, "Nux!" <nux@li.nux.ro> wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> What profile did you choose for the ISO? It should be CentOS/RHEL, that
>>> should give you virtio devices (vda).
>>>
>>> HTH
>>> Lucian
>>>
>>> --
>>> Sent from the Delta quadrant using Borg technology!
>>>
>>> Nux!
>>> www.nux.ro
>>>
>>>
>>> ----- Original Message -----
>>>> From: "Yiping Zhang" <yzhang@marketo.com>
>>>> To: users@cloudstack.apache.org
>>>> Sent: Friday, 11 July, 2014 6:57:09 PM
>>>> Subject: how to create guest with /dev/vda ROOT volume?
>>>>
>>>> Hi, All:
>>>>
>>>> My CloudStack environment is 4.3.0 running on rhel 6.5 and kvm
>>>> hypervisor
>>>> also running rhel 6.5.
>>>>
>>>> When I create my first VM from an imported rhel 6.5 ISO image, the
>>>> root
>>>> volume is identified as /dev/sda. Is there a way to force the root
>>>> volume
>>>> to be identified as /dev/vda device ? How do you create guest VM with
>>>> /dev/vda root volume?
>>>>
>>>> Thanks
>>>>
>>>> Yiping
>>
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