On Mon, Oct 2, 2017 at 8:52 AM, Simone Tiraboschi <stirabos@redhat.com> wrote:


On Mon, Oct 2, 2017 at 2:40 PM, Phillip Bailey <phbailey@redhat.com> wrote:
Yaniv,

The goal with the storage requirement is to verify connectivity of the storage information provided by the user, as the input is being gathered prior to running the setup process. The intent is to be able to provide warnings to the user during the data collection process.

Thanks for the CPU-related information. I was already pulling the CPU model from the Ansible setup module. I needed help with verifying that the model selected for the HE VM is compatible with the host's model. The link you provided had the list available there, which helps tremendously. The only issue I can see is that PPC models aren't included in that list.

The current hosted-engine-setup is a noarch rpm but currently we don't have any ppc engine-appliance to be deployed.

Ah, that makes more sense. Thanks! =) 
 

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Artyom,

That project looks awesome and is very helpful. Thank you!

-Phillip Bailey

On Thu, Sep 28, 2017 at 1:37 AM, Artyom Lukianov <alukiano@redhat.com> wrote:
Our infra team already deploy HE via ansible you can check their work under https://github.com/fusor/ansible-ovirt

Best Regards

On Wed, Sep 27, 2017 at 6:16 PM, Yaniv Kaul <ykaul@redhat.com> wrote:


On Wed, Sep 27, 2017 at 5:15 PM, Phillip Bailey <phbailey@redhat.com> wrote:
Hi all,

I'm working on the new Cockpit hosted engine wizard and could use some input from all of you. One goal of this project is to move away from reliance on the existing OTOPI-based tools and towards an ansible-based approach.

The items below are things we'd like to do using ansible, if possible. If any of you have existing plays or suggestions for the best way to use ansible to solve these problems, please let me know.

Thanks!
  1. Verify provided storage settings for all allowable storage types.

I'm not sure I understand the requirement here.
 
  1. Verify compatibility of selected CPU type for the engine VM with the host's CPU

This is easy. See [1] for a simple Python code. In bash:
virsh -r capabilities |grep -m 1 "<model>"

Y.

-Phillip Bailey

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