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<body><div>Hi,</div><div>yes, they have the same permissions as other ISOs that are recognized (Centos for example).</div><div>I think there is something wrong with these iso not fully compliant with standards (joliet, udf and stuff like that, I don't really know much abouth this..)</div><div>Does ovirt make check on these specs? I know for sure that vmware don't check anything about ISOs, in fact it doesn't even have a dedicated storage for ISOs like ovirt.</div><div>Thanks</div><div class="-x-evo-paragraph -x-evo-top-signature-spacer"><br></div><div>Il giorno gio, 03/03/2016 alle 11.50 +0100, René Koch ha scritto:</div><blockquote type="cite">
Hi Stefano,<br>
<br>
Are these images readable for user vdsm (uid 36)?<br>
<br>
<br>
Regards,<br>
René<br>
<br>
<br>
<div class="moz-cite-prefix">On 03/03/2016 09:45 AM, Stefano
Cislaghi wrote:<br>
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<blockquote cite="mid:1456994753.2908.9.camel@gmail.com" type="cite">
<div><br>
</div>
<div>Hello
everyone,</div>
<div>I configured a test environment with 2 hosts (centos), hosted
engine and NFS storage for data domain and iso domain.</div>
<div>I noticed that windows 2012 ISOs are marked as "unknown" in
iso domain and therefore I can't attach them to virtual
machines.</div>
<div>Maybe something is wrong with my iso? I tried to do a fresh
download with same result. Centos, Fedora and Windows 10 iso are
working, so I think the iso domain is ok.</div>
<div>Did someone else noticed such behaviour? Any solution?</div>
<div>Thanks</div>
<div>Stefano</div>
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