Thanks to everyone for the answers. That helps clarify some basics for
me. I prefer to try and implement ovirt-node for the reasons stated above
(small, defined OS with a smaller security/management footprint), but now I
debate using CentOS 6 or RHEL 6. I feel that oVirt-node is very important
to being able to get an environment up and running securely without too
much overhead, but perhaps I need to consider minimal OS installs + latest
gluster release + 3.5 oVirt at this time.
One thing I was curious about is gluster support in oVirt-node. What is
the current status as far as glusterfs version and saving settings, etc.?
Thanks again!
Chris
On Fri, Nov 14, 2014 at 6:30 AM, Fabian Deutsch <fdeutsch(a)redhat.com> wrote:
----- Original Message -----
> I sincerely hope that this is not answered elsewhere as I've done several
> searches and have yet to find a solid answer. I have three (what I
believe
> to be) basic questions (with perhaps some subs there):
>
> 1) What is the latest oVirt-node release and where would one download it
> (I appear to only see 3.4 -based releases of the ISO available)? It is
> 3.5-based and/or is there an upgrade path? Which glusterfs release is
> currently included with oVirt-node?
Hey,
there are some 3.5 pre-release isos available here:
http://resources.ovirt.org/pub/ovirt-3.5-pre/iso/
They are quite old. The reason why there is still no Node, is that we are
experiencing
installation problems after CentOS 6.6 got released.
That is why there is no Node for 3.5 yet, becuase we don't want to provide
a Node which is dead on arrival. This ain't fun for anyone.
> 2) As I understand it, newer releases of oVirt-node allow you to do an
> installation of the self-hosted engine at this time. Is that correct?
Yes, that will work. Due to problems mentioned above, we still need to do
some
fixes to the hosted-engine part of Node, but once they land, HE will work
on Node.
> 3) Is there any functionality that one would be losing out on by
deploying
> oVirt via oVirt-node vs. using full-OS installation? Which is the more
> recommended?
Yes, ovirt-node is not as customizable as a regular host.
I.e. you can not (easily) modify the boot process, or install custom rpms.
Sometimes this is seen as a restriction, other see this as a well defined
environment.
> Again, I apologize if these questions are covered somewhere, but I felt
> like asking them in a direct fashion so as to clear up my own
ignorance. I
> appreciate any feedback and information that you could share.
No, no worries. There weren't any Node updates (besides the weekly meeting
minutes)
for a while.
We still traget to release Node for oVirt 3.5 ASAP.
- fabian
> Thanks,
>
> Chris
>
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