XenServer 7 has launched!
- 
 @Kelly said in XenServer 7 has launched!: Summary: [root@[server] ]# cat /etc/redhat-release XenServer release 7.0.0-125380c (xenenterprise) [root@[server] ]# cat /etc/centos-release XenServer release 7.0.0-125380c (xenenterprise) [root@[server] ]# yum version Installed: 7-2.1511.el7.centos.2.10/x86_64Is that after updating the yum.conf variable? 
- 
 @scottalanmiller said in XenServer 7 has launched!: @Kelly said in XenServer 7 has launched!: Summary: [root@[server] ]# cat /etc/redhat-release XenServer release 7.0.0-125380c (xenenterprise) [root@[server] ]# cat /etc/centos-release XenServer release 7.0.0-125380c (xenenterprise) [root@[server] ]# yum version Installed: 7-2.1511.el7.centos.2.10/x86_64Is that after updating the yum.conf variable? That is after setting it back to the default of distroverpkg=centos-release. 
- 
 @Kelly said in XenServer 7 has launched!: @scottalanmiller said in XenServer 7 has launched!: @Kelly said in XenServer 7 has launched!: Summary: [root@[server] ]# cat /etc/redhat-release XenServer release 7.0.0-125380c (xenenterprise) [root@[server] ]# cat /etc/centos-release XenServer release 7.0.0-125380c (xenenterprise) [root@[server] ]# yum version Installed: 7-2.1511.el7.centos.2.10/x86_64Is that after updating the yum.conf variable? That is after setting it back to the default of distroverpkg=centos-release. Okay, that's what I thought. And yum still isn't working? Might have to just put in the manual repo updates then. 
- 
 It looks like /etc/centos-release isn't where that value is being pulled from. I edited the file and it didn't change the output of yum version. 
- 
 Well, I just went in and replaced every $releasever with 7 in the .repo files. I can now access yum. Now to figure out how to get my hands on drbd... 
- 
 @olivier said in XenServer 7 has launched!: Using XO VM replication between 2 XS 7 hosts, initial copy of a 61GB VM in 8 minutes:  This is on a classic GB link. Clearly, previous bottlenecks weren't in XO. I have not seen anything like this on importing and exporting yet. I am still getting super slow speeds. Once I get all the VMs set up on the same machine, I will do some official testing. 
- 
 So you'll have to find the super slow bottleneck  My lab is pretty simple, if you need more info on how I achieved those speeds, tell me  
- 
 @olivier said My lab is pretty simple, if you need more info on how I achieved those speeds, tell me  Well, in theory if I have two machines on a 1GB link, I should see speeds similar to yours, right? 
- 
 There is no magic: you need to have enough write speed on the target and read speed on the source. 
- 
 @olivier said There is no magic: you need to have enough write speed on the target and read speed on the source. Yeah, I'll set up some tests once I am done getting everything set back up. Right now it's clipping along at 5MB/s so it's taking forever..... 
- 
 @olivier said in XenServer 7 has launched!: There is no magic: you need to have enough write speed on the target and read speed on the source. What is the sustained write speed on a SATA drive? I'm guessing it must be a lot lower than 120 MB/s?? 
- 
 Depends of the drive, roughly between 40 and 60 MiB/s edit: for a HDD 
- 
 @BRRABill said in XenServer 7 has launched!: @olivier said There is no magic: you need to have enough write speed on the target and read speed on the source. Yeah, I'll set up some tests once I am done getting everything set back up. Right now it's clipping along at 5MB/s so it's taking forever..... Something is wrong with that picture. Even older SATA drives can hit 100MB/s. 100MB network connection could be topping out at that. 
- 
 For me, this is SSD going to SSD. Granted, this current import is from my 100mbps desktop connection, but still, 40mbps is slow. 
- 
 I'm importing a 40GB VM, and it's already been almost 2 hours, which is about what 40GB takes to transfer at 5MB/s. 
- 
 @BRRABill said in XenServer 7 has launched!: For me, this is SSD going to SSD. Granted, this current import is from my 100mbps desktop connection, but still, 40mbps is slow. That's within reason for a 100Mb network connection. The best I've seen out of a 100Mb network is 9MB/sec, that's on a network with zero other traffic. 
- 
 @BRRABill 1Gb networks are much nicer, and not any more expensive anymore. For future consideration. 
- 
 @travisdh1 said That's within reason for a 100Mb network connection. The best I've seen out of a 100Mb network is 9MB/sec, that's on a network with zero other traffic. Yeah, I am really just chatting at this point. I'll set up two VMs on separate segments and test straight throughput and then the export/copy ... everything else. 
- 
 @travisdh1 said in XenServer 7 has launched!: @BRRABill 1Gb networks are much nicer, and not any more expensive anymore. For future consideration. Yeah, it's a long story.  The servers are all connected via 1GB, though. 
- 
 @BRRABill said in XenServer 7 has launched!: @travisdh1 said in XenServer 7 has launched!: @BRRABill 1Gb networks are much nicer, and not any more expensive anymore. For future consideration. Yeah, it's a long story.  The servers are all connected via 1GB, though. Assuming we both make it to Mangocon, maybe we can trade war stories  



