Course Description

Virtualization–the ability for a single system to act as multiple systems–is becoming a key technology in the data center. Virtualization permits more efficient allocation of hardware resources, keeping costs in control while maintaining the security that comes with placing key applications in separate computer silos.

The RH184 Red Hat Enterprise Linux Virtualization course teaches system administrators how to deploy virtualized versions of Red Hat Enterprise Linux, thus taking greater advantage of hardware and other resources.

Prerequisites:

One of the following:

  1. Has system administration knowledge under Red Hat Enterprise Linux equivalent to RH131, RH133, or RHCT certification. This knowledge includes: installation, service management (using service and chkconfig, for example), basic system monitoring (using ps and top, and perhaps meminfo and the /proc filesystem), filesystem management (using fdisk and mkfs), and basic troubleshooting (including managing log files, understanding dmesg, and perhaps the use of hardware probing tools such as ethtool and lspci); or:

  2. Has taken RH131 or RH133; or:

  3. Holds a current RHCT certification;

Goal:

A Red Hat Enterprise Linux system administrator who can install, configure, and manage virtual hosts on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.

 

Audience:

Linux system administrators who understand how to install and configure a Red Hat Enterprise Linux system and who wish to learn to install, configure, and manage Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 in a virtualized environment.

 

Course content

Introduction

  • Red Hat Enterprise Linux

  • Classroom Network

  • Course Objectives

  • Audience and Prerequisites

  • Caveats

Unit 1: Introduction to Virtualization

  • What is virtualization?

  • Why is virtualization important?

  • Types of virtualization

  • Basic architecture of Xen virtualization

Unit 2: Basic Paravirtualized Domain Installation

  • Preparing for domain installation

  • Basic installs using virt-manager

  • Configuring domains to automatically start at boot

Unit 3: Virtual Machine Management

  • Using generic libvirt-based utilities

  • Using native Xen utilities

Unit 4: Advanced Installation and Configuration

  • Syntax of Xen domain configuration files

  • Virtual Block Devices and types of block storage

  • Xen and bridged networking

  • Manual and command-line domain installation

Unit 5: Live Migration

  • Live migration of Xen paravirtualized domains

  • Advanced configuration of xend

  • Live migration issues

Unit 6: Troubleshooting

  • Differences from a standard environment

  • Viewing hypervisor log messages and log files

  • Accessing domain virtual block devices

  • Common issues

Unit 7: Hardware-assisted Virtualization

  • Fully-virtualized vs. paravirtualized domains

  • Installing unmodified OSes

Duration : 2 Days / 18 Hrs