[[meta copyright="Copyright © 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc."]] [[meta license="""[[toggle id="license" text="GFDL 1.2+"]][[toggleable id="license" text="Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled [[GNU_Free_Documentation_License|/fdl]]."]]"""]] [[toc]] ## Xen dom0, PAE-disabled hypervisor /!\ Since GNU Mach doesn't handle PAE yet, you'll need a PAE-disabled hypervisor. On Debian Lenny, for example, you can install xen-hypervisor-3.2-1-i386-nonpae. This also means that you'll currently need a PAE-disabled `dom0`. [[Stefan_Siegl|stesie]] is providing a PAE-disabled Linux kernel image at . You can either get binaries at or build them yourself. - Copy `gnumach-xen` and `hurd-modules` to your dom0 /boot. - Copy `hurd` into `/etc/xen`, edit it for fixing access to your hurd / and swap ## GNU/Hurd system /!\ You need an already installed GNU/Hurd system. If you have a free partition, you can fdisk to type 0x83, create a filesystem using: sudo mke2fs -b 4096 -I 128 -o hurd /dev/sda4 Replace /dev/sda4 with your partition. Install and use crosshurd to setup a GNU/Hurd system on this partition. ## /etc/xen/hurd configuration Here is a sample /etc/xen/hurd configuration kernel = "/boot/gnumach-xen" memory = 256 disk = ['phy:sda4,hda,w'] extra = "root=device:hd0" vif = [ '' ] ramdisk = "/boot/hurd-modules" Suggestions about [[networking_configuration]] are available. If you need stable MAC addresses, use a syntax like `vif = [ 'mac=00:16:3e:XX:XX:XX, bridge=br0' ]`. ## Running Hurd with Xen To run Hurd with Xen, use: xm create -c hurd and gnumach should get started. Proceed with native-install. export TERM=mach ./native-install - If `xm` complains about networking (`vif could not be connected`), it's Xen scripts' fault, see Xen documentation for how to configure the network. The simplest way is network-bridge with fixed IPs (note that you need the bridge-utils package for this). You can also just disable networking by commenting the vif line in the config. - If `xm` complains `Error: (2, 'Invalid kernel', 'xc_dom_compat_check: guest type xen-3.0-x86_32 not supported by xen kernel, sorry\n')`, you most probably have a PAE-enabled hypervisor, and you just need to install and boot non-PAE hypervisor and kernel. ## Building from sources If you want to generate these images, first get the `gnumach-1-branch-Xen-branch` branch from gnumach CVS. Then look for "Ugly" in `kern/bootstrap.c`, how to generate `hurd-modules` is explained there, and you'll have to fix `EXT2FS_SIZE` and `LD_SO_SIZE` by hand. Then use ./configure --enable-platform=xen make The current `hurd-modules` was built from the debian packages `hurd 20070606-2` and `libc0.3 2.6.1-1`. /!\ This means that when using this image, your GNU/Hurd system also needs to be a glibc version 2.6-based one! --- [[Internals]]. [[GNU_Savannah_task 5468]], [[GNU_Savannah_task 6584]].