m (1 revision(s)) |
m (mark as old) |
||
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{old}} <!-- last update on the old wiki was 2007-11-22 --> | |||
This page isn't a firm commitment to actually do any of these items. Rather it is a list of things we think are important/useful to virtualization in Fedora going forward. Individual items may graduate to become official 'Features' against specific Fedora releases as they're fleshed out, others are too minor to designate as 'Features'. | This page isn't a firm commitment to actually do any of these items. Rather it is a list of things we think are important/useful to virtualization in Fedora going forward. Individual items may graduate to become official 'Features' against specific Fedora releases as they're fleshed out, others are too minor to designate as 'Features'. | ||
Line 58: | Line 60: | ||
We don't have any real solution for V2V or V2P. | We don't have any real solution for V2V or V2P. | ||
[[Category:Virtualization]] |
Latest revision as of 08:18, 22 January 2009
This page isn't a firm commitment to actually do any of these items. Rather it is a list of things we think are important/useful to virtualization in Fedora going forward. Individual items may graduate to become official 'Features' against specific Fedora releases as they're fleshed out, others are too minor to designate as 'Features'.
Add stuff at will - though preferably with some rationale for why its important/relevant to Fedora...
libvirt
- serial console support for KVM - useful for debugging boot problems
- USB hotplug/unplug for KVM & Xen drivers - nice for desktop integration to assign USB devs to guests
- Kerberos / SASL authentication - helps integration into existing infrastructure & provides single-sign on Fedora 9 Proposed Feature
- PolicyKit integration - console-helper must die Fedora 9 Proposed Feature
- Secure migration - postponed from Fedora 8 features
- Expand the types of virtualisation supported by virDomainBlockStats etc., add support for QEMU.
- Ability to manage storage (LVM, files, disks, partitions, iSCSI) via libvirt APIs Fedora 9 Proposed Feature
Xen
- Kill the network bridge script by default - doesn't play nicely with network manager
- Stop XenD messing with network devices at startup - it should only touch devices it owns
- Put xenstored TDB on tmpfs - cuts I/O overhead of xenstore & thus should improve performance
KVM
NetworkManager
- Option to put physical devices into a bridge - lets KVM and Xen guests easily bridge into physical network instead of NATing
QEMU
- IPv6 support - QEMU is one of few remaining ipv4 only apps in Fedora. Rest of virt stack is IPv6 enabled
virt-manager
See also http://virt-manager.org/roadmap.html
- UI for USB hotplug/unplug - nice for desktop integration
- PolicyKit integration - console-helper must die & shouldn't run as root Fedora 9 Proposed Feature
- Migration - can view multiple hosts, so should be able to move VMs between them
- Disk import - create a guest based off a pre-installed disk image
- Diskless guests - create a guest which is always network booted - helps LTSP project
Monitoring
See also http://hg.et.redhat.com/virt/applications/virt-top--devel?f=7b521a21b07a;file=TODO.virt-top
- Monitor resources used by dom0 on behalf of the guests.
- How much memory is a guest actually using?
Nagios
- Enhance Nagios to support virt setup (http://et.redhat.com/~rjones/nagios-virt/)
P2V, V2V, V2P
virt-p2v exists already. Discussing some ideas about how to enhance it. And it needs more testing.
We don't have any real solution for V2V or V2P.