#################################
- __ __ _____ _____
- \ \/ /___ _ __ |___ / |___ /
- \ // _ \ '_ \ |_ \ |_ \
- / \ __/ | | | ___) | ___) |
- /_/\_\___|_| |_| |____(_)____/
+ __ __ _____ _ _
+ \ \/ /___ _ __ |___ /| || |
+ \ // _ \ '_ \ |_ \| || |_
+ / \ __/ | | | ___) |__ _|
+ /_/\_\___|_| |_| |____(_) |_|
#################################
by the original Xen development team to build enterprise products
around Xen.
-The 3.3 release offers excellent performance, hardware support and
+The 3.4 release offers excellent performance, hardware support and
enterprise-grade features such as x86_32-PAE, x86_64, SMP guests and
live relocation of VMs. Ports to Linux 2.6, Linux 2.4, NetBSD, FreeBSD
and Solaris are available from the community.
/boot/grub/menu.lst: edit this file to include an entry like the
following:
- title Xen 3.3 / XenLinux 2.6
- kernel /boot/xen-3.3.gz console=vga
+ title Xen 3.4 / XenLinux 2.6
+ kernel /boot/xen-3.4.gz console=vga
module /boot/vmlinuz-2.6-xen root=<root-dev> ro console=tty0
module /boot/initrd-2.6-xen.img
32MB memory for internal use, which is not available for allocation
to virtual machines.
-3. Reboot your system and select the "Xen 3.3 / XenLinux 2.6" menu
+3. Reboot your system and select the "Xen 3.4 / XenLinux 2.6" menu
option. After booting Xen, Linux will start and your initialisation
scripts should execute in the usual way.