On Thu, Jul 20, 2006 at 11:44:54AM -0400, Juan Walker wrote:
Hi,
I have a question regarding the XML format that libvir uses for domain configuration.
I was wondering if there is a way to use the configuration format that xm uses
or if a tool exists to convert to XML. I'm writing an app to help users manage
their Xen domains but I'm hoping to be able to use any .sxp files that the user
already has.
I don't know of any tool which will convert between the config files and
the libvirt XML. If the domain is currently running though, you can use
the command 'virsh dumpxml mydomain' to get an XML dump of the current
live configuration for that domai. You can later feed that XML back into
'virsh create' or the virDomainCreateLinux() method.
I suspect I missed something in the documentation about why the XML
format
is better, but if there is no such tool maybe I should volunteer to write one?
The configuration files used by 'xm' in /etc/xen/ are really just a snippet
of python code - they're not a formal configuration file format. So you get
crazy stuff like this in the 'config' files:
import os, re
arch = os.uname()[4]
if re.search('64', arch):
arch_libdir = 'lib64'
else:
arch_libdir = 'lib'
kernel = "/usr/lib/xen/boot/hvmloader"
This is fine if your application is a python app, but if you're writing
an app in C or Java, etc you really don't want the config file to be
containing python code. XML be contrast is a very clearly defined format,
so by creating a DTD for expressing a VM config in XML we get very good
interoperability between applications, not matter what language they're
written in.
Regards,
Dan.
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