disclaimer: not a member of the ovirt project

It's probably because CentOS and Fedora are both under the Red Hat umbrella of operating systems the same way that Kubuntu and Lubuntu and others are under the Ubuntu umbrella.

Regards,
Logan Kuhn


On Fri, Dec 2, 2016 at 2:21 PM, Beckman, Daniel <Daniel.Beckman@ingramcontent.com> wrote:

 

When you edit the “operating system” type of a VM under the General section, there are a plethora of operating systems listed, including FreeBSD, Debian, SUSE, and older variants of Ubuntu. But there are two glaring exceptions: CentOS and Fedora. Is this by design?

 

It’s worth noting that plain KVM, vSphere, and just about every other VM platform supports these (Red Hat sponsored) operating systems. But not oVirt. Why?

 

Sincerely confused,

Daniel


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