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What are VServers
The [http://linux-vserver.org Linux VServer Project] provides multiple Linux environments running inside a single Linux kernel.
You can think of it as a bit like running a new system inside a chroot, but with a different host name and IP address, a de-fanged root user, and configurable resource management. This is a similar feature to jails on FreeBSD and containers on Solaris 10+.
VServers are a different approach to the popular [http://www.xen-source.com XEN] Hypervisor; with XEN you end up with a kernel for each virtual server; VServers do not. So, with VServer you have less (virtually no) overhead, on the other hand you also have fewer features - it is currently impossible to have a VServer with a different time set to the host system, for instance. However it is possible to run a different time zone, as that is a purely user-space feature. The design of UNIX in general mean that for the vast majority of applications, this virtualisation technique is perfectly adequate.
Note that Xen and VServer are orthogonal approaches - that is, it is perfectly possible and sometimes even sensible to run Xen virtual machines on a Linux system, then Linux VServers within those Xen machines.
Installation
Installation is quite simple - you need:
- Kernel with VServer patch
- util-vserver
- vserver-debiantools
You can install these packages if you add the following lines to your sources.list:
dapper
deb http://ubuntu.uni-klu.ac.at/ubuntu.uniklu/ dapper uniklu-vserver #deb-src http://ubuntu.uni-klu.ac.at/ubuntu.uniklu/ dapper uniklu-vserver
The uniklu archives are signed - if you want get rid of apt-get warnings: {{{$ wget http://ubuntu.uni-klu.ac.at/uniklu-debuild.pub $ sudo apt-key add uniklu-debuild.pub }}}
To install the VServer Kernel and utils enter:
dapper
# apt-get install linux-image-2.6.15-(dapper_abi+1)-686 # apt-get install util-vserver vserver-debiantools
You should get the following revisions
- dapper
kernel
-(dapper_abi+1)-2.6.15-(dapper_abi+1).(dapper_release)vs
util-vserver
>= 0.30.210-0uk
vserver-debiantools
>= 0.2.6
The vserver-debiantools do not work 100% but should help you setting your first vserver quickly - see [http://support.uni-klu.ac.at/VServer Uniklu VServer Info]
The Kernel is the standard Ubuntu Kernel with the Vserver patch applied.
dapper: Vserver patch >= 2.0.2-rc13 for kernel-2.6.15
The Kernel and binaries are available for i386 and amd64
It is possible and supported to run 32bit i386 VServers on an amd64 VServer Kernel.
Distributed Remote Block Device (DRBD)
[http://www.drbd.org DRBD] can be used with VServer to build simple robust and cheap HA solutions with disaster failover capabilty to a remote location.
Simply put your VServers on a DRBD and let heartbeat in another building takeover the DRBD and start your VServers.
DRBD utils and kernel modules for the VServer enabled kernels are available in the above archive:
apt-get install drbd0.7-module-2.6.15-(dapper_abi+1)-arch drbd0.7-utils
Build Yourself
I've created a tgz of the diffs and build script i'm using for building the kernel debs.
{{{$ wget http://ubuntu.uni-klu.ac.at/ubuntu.uniklu/dists/dapper/uniklu-vserver/vserver-image-build.tgz $ tar -xzf vserver-image-build.tgz $ cd linux-vserver-2.6.15 $ ./kbuild.sh }}}
Links
[http://linux-vserver.org Linux VServer Project]
[http://support.uni-klu.ac.at/VServer Uniklu VServer info]
[http://www.howtoforge.com/linux_vserver_debian Linux VServer on Debian Sarge]
[http://linux-vserver.org/Vserver+DRBD VServer and DRBD info]