[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] Terminology for "guest" - Was: [PATCH] docs/sphinx: Introduction
On Thu, Aug 08, 2019 at 09:43:01AM +0100, Andrew Cooper wrote: > On 08/08/2019 07:22, Jan Beulich wrote: > > On 07.08.2019 21:41, Andrew Cooper wrote: > >> --- /dev/null > >> +++ b/docs/glossary.rst > >> @@ -0,0 +1,37 @@ > >> +Glossary > >> +======== > >> + > >> +.. Terms should appear in alphabetical order > >> + > >> +.. glossary:: > >> + > >> + control domain > >> + A :term:`domain`, commonly dom0, with the permission and > >> responsibility > >> + to create and manage other domains on the system. > >> + > >> + domain > >> + A domain is Xen's unit of resource ownership, and generally has > >> at the > >> + minimum some RAM and virtual CPUs. > >> + > >> + The terms :term:`domain` and :term:`guest` are commonly used > >> + interchangeably, but they mean subtly different things. > >> + > >> + A guest is a single virtual machine. > >> + > >> + Consider the case of live migration where, for a period of > >> time, one > >> + guest will be comprised of two domains, while it is in transit. > >> + > >> + domid > >> + The numeric identifier of a running :term:`domain`. It is > >> unique to a > >> + single instance of Xen, used as the identifier in various APIs, > >> and is > >> + typically allocated sequentially from 0. > >> + > >> + guest > >> + See :term:`domain` > > > > I think you want to mention the usual distinction here: Dom0 is, > > while a domain, commonly not considered a guest. > > To be honest, I had totally forgotten about that. I guess now is the > proper time to rehash it in public. > > I don't think the way it currently gets used has a clear or coherent set > of rules, because I can't think of any to describe how it does get used. > > Either there are a clear and coherent (and simple!) set of rules for > what we mean by "guest", at which point they can live here in the > glossary, or the fuzzy way it is current used should cease. I've always referred to dom0 as a privileged guest, but a guest after all. I think this is one of the differences of Xen vs KVM or other hosted hypervisors. Roger. _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.xenproject.org/mailman/listinfo/xen-devel
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