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 Re: [Xen-users] performance monitoring of VMs
 
To: xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxFrom: "Jia Rao" <rickenrao@xxxxxxxxx>Date: Thu, 3 Apr 2008 14:43:50 -0400Delivery-date: Thu, 03 Apr 2008 11:44:22 -0700Domainkey-signature: a=rsa-sha1; c=nofws; d=gmail.com; s=beta;	h=message-id:date:from:to:subject:in-reply-to:mime-version:content-type:references;	b=b5nBV/9yAlDr4wGueFAY2dJ/i4kQu0x8wQl8XNvGGeaAcX+QnOkMGpYMffHVk+2npbDnoKnFNfKGV86DwU96fCLF9pzyNWftPeSTM7X0YdKA50uYxzoQzed2WYDzIATXgb5BIzhQoJl17KLi9TGs0ms6Z0E+7nxx6dBxKiugUCI=List-id: Xen user discussion <xen-users.lists.xensource.com> Any suggestions?
 
 
 
 
 On Wed, Apr 2, 2008 at 10:12 AM, Jia Rao <rickenrao@xxxxxxxxx > wrote: 
Hi,
 I tried to use libvirt, however the xen and the kernel were compiled from source. If I want to install libvirt from yum (CentOS 5.0) the dependencies need to install xen and xen-kernel. The source compiled xen seems to have some compatibility issues in the links of the scripts with the yum installed xen (whenever I yum install something related to xen, xm crashes).
 
 What I need is a sar (sysstat) like detailed performance monitoring tool down to the hypervisor level (treat each VM as a process) and report the most detailed execution info for each VM (e.g. the real page fault rate of each VM).
 
 Any ideas?
 
 Thanks,
 Jia.
 
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