[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] Virtualization project idea
On 08/27/2010 03:30 PM, Pasi Kärkkäinen wrote: Ok Pasi, I know what you mean. I was talking about physical machines since Dhananjay compared this to physical machines. I know sharing between VMs is possible using specific paths like the xenbus one.On Fri, Aug 27, 2010 at 03:17:39PM +0200, Michal Novotny wrote:On 08/27/2010 03:08 PM, Pasi Kärkkäinen wrote:On Fri, Aug 27, 2010 at 06:33:35PM +0530, Dhananjay Goel wrote:Yes, exactly. So, we wanted to know if it is possible to *share USB* across VMs.I don't think USB protocol has been designed for *sharing*. I'm pretty certain only one computer/device/VM can use USB device at a time. -- PasiPasi, I agree. I think the think here is that Dhananjay confused the USB device sharing with the file system sharing. I guess the USB protocol was not designed for sharing nevertheless sharing the filesystem on a USB stick is a completely different think. Dhananajay, you need to plug in the USB stick onto one computer (and it's impossible to plug it into multiple computer at one time, of course) and then setup the sharing. Everybody here is talking about the hardware abstraction and virtualization and what you wrote is a completely different thing - it's software-related and this has nothing to do with the hardware emulation/abstraction what-so-ever. Considering the NFS and all the sharing protocols there was something why it doesn't corrupt the data. I'm no expert on this subject but I think this is because they run in the server-client mode. All the clients are talking to the server and the server itself is one computer that's having the just one operating system working with this particular device - no matter what the underlaying device is - it may be everything - USB stick, IDE/SCSI/SAS drive or just a relay workstation to save all the data into one remote media (e.g. for replication). What I mean is that the basic thing is that it's running on only one operating system (because of it's connected to this one machine *only*) so it takes care of everything and it's aware of the write-cache and data operations being done to this media.Yep. If you want to share files from the hypervisor-host (from USB stick or from actual disk) to the VMs you *can* do it today over-the-network (nfs,cifs,webdav,ftp) using the standard client-server tools that have been used for over 20 years. If you don't want to do it over-the-network, but somehow 'through' the hypervisor, then you'd need to build some kind of special filesystem protocol that is able to do the client-server communication over the hypervisor specific paths (xenbus etc). And have drivers for it in the hypervisor-host, and in the VMs. -- Pasi Michal -- Michal Novotny<minovotn@xxxxxxxxxx>, RHCE Virtualization Team (xen userspace), Red Hat _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-devel
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