Citrix Systems 6.1.0 Welcome, About This Document, Introducing XenServer, Administering XenServer

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Chapter 1. Welcome

1.1. About This Document

This document is an installation guide for Citrix XenServer®, the complete server virtualization platform from Citrix®. It contains procedures to guide you through the installation, configuration, and initial operation of XenServer. This document also contains information about troubleshooting problems that might occur during installation and points you to additional resources.

This document is primarily aimed at system administrators who wish to set up XenServer hosts on physical servers.

1.2. Introducing XenServer

Citrix XenServer® is the complete server virtualization platform from Citrix®. The XenServer package contains all you need to create and manage a deployment of virtual x86 computers running on Xen®, the open-source paravirtualizing hypervisor with near-native performance. XenServer is optimized for both Windows and Linux virtual servers.

XenServer runs directly on server hardware without requiring an underlying operating system, which results in an efficient and scalable system. XenServer works by abstracting elements from the physical machine (such as hard drives, resources and ports) and allocating them to the virtual machines running on it.

A virtual machine (VM) is a computer composed entirely of software that can run its own operating system and applications as if it were a physical computer. A VM behaves exactly like a physical computer and contains its own virtual (software-based) CPU, RAM, hard disk and network interface card (NIC).

XenServer lets you create VMs, take VM disk snapshots and manage VM workloads. For a comprehensive list of major XenServer features and editions, visit www.citrix.com/xenserver.

1.2.1. Benefits of Using XenServer

Using XenServer reduces costs by:

Consolidating multiple VMs onto physical servers

Reducing the number of separate disk images that need to be managed

Allowing for easy integration with existing networking and storage infrastructures

Using XenServer increases flexibility by:

Allowing you to schedule zero downtime maintenance by using XenMotion to live migrate VMs between XenServer hosts

Increasing availability of VMs by using High Availability to configure policies that restart VMs on another XenServer host if one fails

Increasing portability of VM images, as one VM image will work on a range of deployment infrastructures

1.2.2. Administering XenServer

There are two methods by which to administer XenServer: XenCenter and the XenServer Command-Line Interface (CLI).

XenCenter is a graphical, Windows-based user interface. XenCenter allows you to manage XenServer hosts, pools and shared storage, and to deploy, manage and monitor VMs from your Windows desktop machine.

The XenCenter Help is a great resource for getting started with XenCenter.

The XenServer Command-line Interface (CLI) allows you to administer XenServer using the Linux-based xe commands.

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Contents Citrix XenServer 6.1.0 Installation Guide Trademarks Contents Using Scvmm and Scom with XenServer Boot From SAN Environments Welcome Benefits of Using XenServerAdministering XenServer About This DocumentNew Features in XenServer XenServer EditionsXenServer Documentation Guest EnhancementsReferences System Requirements System RequirementsXenServer Host System Requirements XenCenter System Requirements Supported Guest Operating SystemsInstalling XenServer and XenCenter Installation Media and MethodsInstalling the XenServer Host To install or upgrade the XenServer hostPage Installing XenCenter To install XenCenterHost Partition Format Connecting XenCenter to the XenServer Host To connect XenCenter to the XenServer hostXenServer Hosts with Local Storage Installation and Deployment ScenariosHigh-level procedure Basic hardware requirementsPools of XenServer Hosts with Shared Storage XenServer Hosts with Shared NFS StorageConfiguring your iSCSI storage XenServer Hosts with Shared iSCSI StorageConfiguring an iSCSI IQN for each XenServer host Xe pool-param-set uuid=pooluuid default-SR=iscsisharedsruuid Enabling on Host Installation XenServer and IntelliCacheIntelliCache Deployment To enable local caching, enter the following commands Converting an Existing Host to Use Thin ProvisioningVM Boot Behavior Implementation Details and TroubleshootingXe sr-list params=local-cache-sr,uuid,name-label Using Scvmm and Scom with XenServer How to install the Integration Suite Supplemental PackIntegration Requirements for Scvmm Integration Requirements for Scom Rolling Pool Upgrades Upgrading XenServerPage Before You Upgrade Upgrading XenServer Hosts Using the xe CLI Before you begin your rolling pool upgradeTo upgrade a pool of XenServer hosts using the xe CLI Upgrading a Single XenServer Host Using the xe CLI Before You Upgrade a Single XenServer HostUpgrading a Single XenServer Host Using the xe CLI To empty the CD/DVD drive of a VM using the xe CLITo upgrade a single XenServer host using the xe CLI Page Upgrading LVM-based SRs using the xe CLI Upgrading LVM Storage from XenServer 5.0 or EarlierApplying Updates and Hotfixes to XenServer Before You Apply an Update or HotfixBefore you begin updating To update individual hosts using XenCenter To update individual hosts using the xe CLIUpdating Individual XenServer Hosts To update a pool of hosts using XenCenter Updating a Pool of XenServer HostsTo update a pool of XenServer hosts using the xe CLI Licensing XenServer Activating a Free XenServer ProductTo activate a free XenServer product Licensing XenServer Editions To license XenServer Advanced editions and higherTo configure licensing for XenServer hosts using XenCenter To configure licensing for XenServer hosts using the xe CLIAdditional Licensing Information Grace Period Appendix A. Troubleshooting To capture and save the log fileAppendix B. Boot From SAN Environments Appendix C. PXE Boot Installations Configuring your PXE Environment for XenServer InstallationTo configure your Tftp server Creating an answer file for unattended PXE installation Preparing the destination systemElement Description Required? Element Description Required? Element Proto dhcp or static