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-rw-r--r-- | files/xen/Debian/lenny/xend-config.sxp | 228 |
1 files changed, 228 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/files/xen/Debian/lenny/xend-config.sxp b/files/xen/Debian/lenny/xend-config.sxp new file mode 100644 index 0000000..1f9d4ad --- /dev/null +++ b/files/xen/Debian/lenny/xend-config.sxp @@ -0,0 +1,228 @@ +# -*- sh -*- + +# +# Xend configuration file. +# + +# This example configuration is appropriate for an installation that +# utilizes a bridged network configuration. Access to xend via http +# is disabled. + +# Commented out entries show the default for that entry, unless otherwise +# specified. + +#(logfile /var/log/xen/xend.log) +#(loglevel DEBUG) + + +# The Xen-API server configuration. (Please note that this server is +# available as an UNSUPPORTED PREVIEW in Xen 3.0.4, and should not be relied +# upon). +# +# This value configures the ports, interfaces, and access controls for the +# Xen-API server. Each entry in the list starts with either unix, a port +# number, or an address:port pair. If this is "unix", then a UDP socket is +# opened, and this entry applies to that. If it is a port, then Xend will +# listen on all interfaces on that TCP port, and if it is an address:port +# pair, then Xend will listen on the specified port, using the interface with +# the specified address. +# +# The subsequent string configures the user-based access control for the +# listener in question. This can be one of "none" or "pam", indicating either +# that users should be allowed access unconditionally, or that the local +# Pluggable Authentication Modules configuration should be used. If this +# string is missing or empty, then "pam" is used. +# +# The final string gives the host-based access control for that listener. If +# this is missing or empty, then all connections are accepted. Otherwise, +# this should be a space-separated sequence of regular expressions; any host +# with a fully-qualified domain name or an IP address that matches one of +# these regular expressions will be accepted. +# +# Example: listen on TCP port 9363 on all interfaces, accepting connections +# only from machines in example.com or localhost, and allow access through +# the unix domain socket unconditionally: +# +# (xen-api-server ((9363 pam '^localhost$ example\\.com$') +# (unix none))) +# +# Optionally, the TCP Xen-API server can use SSL by specifying the private +# key and certificate location: +# +# (9367 pam '' /etc/xen/xen-api.key /etc/xen/xen-api.crt) +# +# Default: +# (xen-api-server ((unix))) + + +#(xend-http-server no) +#(xend-unix-server no) +#(xend-tcp-xmlrpc-server no) +#(xend-unix-xmlrpc-server yes) +#(xend-relocation-server no) + +#(xend-unix-path /var/lib/xend/xend-socket) + + +# Address and port xend should use for the legacy TCP XMLRPC interface, +# if xen-tcp-xmlrpc-server is set. +#(xen-tcp-xmlrpc-server-address 'localhost') +#(xen-tcp-xmlrpc-server-port 8006) + +# SSL key and certificate to use for the legacy TCP XMLRPC interface. +# Setting these will mean that this port serves only SSL connections as +# opposed to plaintext ones. +#(xend-tcp-xmlrpc-server-ssl-key-file /etc/xen/xmlrpc.key) +#(xend-tcp-xmlrpc-server-ssl-cert-file /etc/xen/xmlrpc.crt) + + +# Port xend should use for the HTTP interface, if xend-http-server is set. +#(xend-port 8000) + +# Port xend should use for the relocation interface, if xend-relocation-server +# is set. +#(xend-relocation-port 8002) + +# Address xend should listen on for HTTP connections, if xend-http-server is +# set. +# Specifying 'localhost' prevents remote connections. +# Specifying the empty string '' (the default) allows all connections. +#(xend-address '') +#(xend-address localhost) + +# Address xend should listen on for relocation-socket connections, if +# xend-relocation-server is set. +# Meaning and default as for xend-address above. +#(xend-relocation-address '') + +# The hosts allowed to talk to the relocation port. If this is empty (the +# default), then all connections are allowed (assuming that the connection +# arrives on a port and interface on which we are listening; see +# xend-relocation-port and xend-relocation-address above). Otherwise, this +# should be a space-separated sequence of regular expressions. Any host with +# a fully-qualified domain name or an IP address that matches one of these +# regular expressions will be accepted. +# +# For example: +# (xend-relocation-hosts-allow '^localhost$ ^.*\\.example\\.org$') +# +#(xend-relocation-hosts-allow '') + +# The limit (in kilobytes) on the size of the console buffer +#(console-limit 1024) + +## +# To bridge network traffic, like this: +# +# dom0: ----------------- bridge -> real eth0 -> the network +# | +# domU: fake eth0 -> vifN.0 -+ +# +# use +# +# (network-script network-bridge) +# +# Your default ethernet device is used as the outgoing interface, by default. +# To use a different one (e.g. eth1) use +# +# (network-script 'network-bridge netdev=eth1') +# +# The bridge is named xenbr0, by default. To rename the bridge, use +# +# (network-script 'network-bridge bridge=<name>') +# +# It is possible to use the network-bridge script in more complicated +# scenarios, such as having two outgoing interfaces, with two bridges, and +# two fake interfaces per guest domain. To do things like this, write +# yourself a wrapper script, and call network-bridge from it, as appropriate. +# +(network-script network-dummy) + +# The script used to control virtual interfaces. This can be overridden on a +# per-vif basis when creating a domain or a configuring a new vif. The +# vif-bridge script is designed for use with the network-bridge script, or +# similar configurations. +# +# If you have overridden the bridge name using +# (network-script 'network-bridge bridge=<name>') then you may wish to do the +# same here. The bridge name can also be set when creating a domain or +# configuring a new vif, but a value specified here would act as a default. +# +# If you are using only one bridge, the vif-bridge script will discover that, +# so there is no need to specify it explicitly. +# +(vif-script vif-bridge) + + +## Use the following if network traffic is routed, as an alternative to the +# settings for bridged networking given above. +#(network-script network-route) +#(vif-script vif-route) + + +## Use the following if network traffic is routed with NAT, as an alternative +# to the settings for bridged networking given above. +#(network-script network-nat) +#(vif-script vif-nat) + + +# Dom0 will balloon out when needed to free memory for domU. +# dom0-min-mem is the lowest memory level (in MB) dom0 will get down to. +# If dom0-min-mem=0, dom0 will never balloon out. +(dom0-min-mem 196) + +# In SMP system, dom0 will use dom0-cpus # of CPUS +# If dom0-cpus = 0, dom0 will take all cpus available +(dom0-cpus 0) + +# Whether to enable core-dumps when domains crash. +#(enable-dump no) + +# The tool used for initiating virtual TPM migration +#(external-migration-tool '') + +# The interface for VNC servers to listen on. Defaults +# to 127.0.0.1 To restore old 'listen everywhere' behaviour +# set this to 0.0.0.0 +#(vnc-listen '127.0.0.1') + +# The default password for VNC console on HVM domain. +# Empty string is no authentication. +(vncpasswd '') + +# The VNC server can be told to negotiate a TLS session +# to encryption all traffic, and provide x509 cert to +# clients enalbing them to verify server identity. The +# GTK-VNC widget, virt-viewer, virt-manager and VeNCrypt +# all support the VNC extension for TLS used in QEMU. The +# TightVNC/RealVNC/UltraVNC clients do not. +# +# To enable this create x509 certificates / keys in the +# directory /etc/xen/vnc +# +# ca-cert.pem - The CA certificate +# server-cert.pem - The Server certificate signed by the CA +# server-key.pem - The server private key +# +# and then uncomment this next line +# (vnc-tls 1) + +# The certificate dir can be pointed elsewhere.. +# +# (vnc-x509-cert-dir /etc/xen/vnc) + +# The server can be told to request & validate an x509 +# certificate from the client. Only clients with a cert +# signed by the trusted CA will be able to connect. This +# is more secure the password auth alone. Passwd auth can +# used at the same time if desired. To enable client cert +# checking uncomment this: +# +# (vnc-x509-verify 1) + +# The default keymap to use for the VM's virtual keyboard +# when not specififed in VM's configuration +#(keymap 'en-us') + +# Script to run when the label of a resource has changed. +#(resource-label-change-script '') |