Published at LXer:
In this HowTo I will describe how to prepare a Debian Wheezy server for OpenVZ. With OpenVZ you can create multiple Virtual Private Servers (VPS) on the same hardware, similar to Xen and the Linux Vserver project. OpenVZ is the open-source branch of Virtuozzo, a commercial virtualization solution used by many providers that offer virtual servers.
I'm running Debian Wheezy and my default Display Manager is gdm3, and I would like to replace it with lxdm the problem is that I'm trying to run # apt-get install lxde and it's not working, what I'm doing wrong?
My /etc/apt/sources.list is:
deb cdrom:[Debian GNU/Linux testing _Wheezy_ - Official Snapshot i386 DVD Binar$
deb http://ftp.br.debian.org/debian wheezy main
deb-src http://ftp.br.debia
I had a hard time installing the wireless driver for my debian. My debian was Sqeeze but soon after I realized Wheezy was the one to support my wireless adapter, realtek 8188CE,I upgraded to wheezy.
There are basically 2 ways of running debian testing a.k.a. wheezy (or unstable a.k.a. sid) with crunchbang goodies:1) you can either install #! (based on debian stable a.k.a.
WheezyWith Linux 3.0 on its way, the Debian developers have decided to move the Debian Wheezy development from Linux 2.6 to Linux 3.0.Debian Wheezy is the successor to Debian Squeeze, which was was released earlier this year. Currently it is in development and is available from Sid.As I have mentioned in the earlier article, Linux 3.0 brings no changes to the API or the ABI.
As you can see from the image above, the Debian Linux developers announced the exact date for the release of the highly anticipated Debian 7.0 (Wheezy) operating system. It appears that Debian 7.0 will add the EXT4 filesystem by default for new installations, replacing the old EXT3 one from previous versions.Systemd will be available as an option, as SysVinit will be the default for Debian 7.0.
So i've been searching the past couple days trying to figure out the best way to achieve this but still can't get it figured out.
I have a debian server setup running Proxmox to host OpenVZ and Qemu virtual machines. I've been assigned two subnets from my provider on the same uplink port. My ultimate goal is to have the Qemu bridged to eth1 and OpenVZ routed to eth1.
How to install OpenVZ on CentOS 6.3 This complete tutorial will describe how to install OpenVz on CentOS 6.3 Linux. Using OpenVZ we can easily create multiple Virtual Private Servers (VPS) on the same machine. OpenVZ is similar to Xen and the Linux Vserver project. OpenVZ was built based on Virtuozzo, but its free and open [...]
Recently Debian Linux version 7.0 ("Wheezy") released. This version shipped with many new features - improvements to multimedia support, improved security through hardening flags and the OpenStack suite and the Xen Cloud Platform to name a few. How do I upgrades from Debian Linux version 6.x.x (squeeze) to the latest version 7.0.0 wheezy using command line options?