ansible-libvirt-microos
xe-guest-utilities
ansible-libvirt-microos | xe-guest-utilities | |
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10 | 2 | |
5 | 55 | |
- | - | |
4.9 | 5.0 | |
3 months ago | 4 months ago | |
Shell | Go | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License |
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ansible-libvirt-microos
- OpenSUSE Leap 15.6 to Be the Last in Its Current Form
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K3s – Lightweight Kubernetes
I've been using a 3 nuc (actually Ryzen devices) k3s on SuSE MicroOS https://microos.opensuse.org/ for my homelab for a while, and I really like it. They made some really nice decisions on which parts of k8s to trim down and which Networking / LB / Ingress to use.
The option to use sqlite in place of etcd on an even lighter single node setup makes it super interesting for even lighter weight homelab container environment setups.
I even use it with Longhorn https://longhorn.io/ for shared block storage on the mini cluster.
If anyone uses it with MicroOS, just make sure you switch to kured https://kured.dev/ for the transactional-updates reboot method.
I'd love to compare it against Talos https://www.talos.dev/ but their lack of support for a persistent storage partition (only separate storage device) really hurts most small home / office usage I'd want to try.
- Opensuse microos and environment
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Project to make a custom linux desktop experience that benefits from group knowledge and experience (Part 1)
What are the advantages of your project over conceptually similar projects that already exist, like MicroOS (https://microos.opensuse.org/) ?
- Immutable openSUSE ?
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Is OpenSuse Leap safe to install now ?
I would suggest you to check either Leap Micro or MicroOS out.
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How to use Podman inside of a container
I use MicroOS (https://microos.opensuse.org/), to keep the base operating system clean you'd install helper tools for constructing containers in a container... so two levels of containers would be very helpful
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Why are you using Arch Linux?
Where OpenSuse is interesting, definitely, it's with the MicroOS concept of Immutable Installs + their strategy of btrfs snapshots - this looks absolutely great from a stability standpoint ; there are other possible strategies out there, but these people are building a truly unbreakable distro and that's fantastic.
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most updated distro
I'm currently running/testing openSUSE's new MicroOS which is really nice but still needs some work
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Ansible playbook for deploying a MicroOS machine on libvirt with a k3s node inside
Hi! I just wanted to drop by ansible-libvirt-microos ; since I'm using MicroOS already on a personal server, I decided to make better usage of it, by converting it into a VM host, and setting up another VM inside so that I can deploy more vms with extra steps containers via k3s.
xe-guest-utilities
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Why are you using Arch Linux?
However, one of the first links that pop up is this https://github.com/xenserver/xe-guest-utilities - from releases page: This release can be used for Linux Guests for Citrix Hypervisor 8.2.x LTSR release. I poked around a bit, a lot of executable files have a matching name. This might be the same software. And there are build instruction on the github.
- Where Is The Guest Tools Iso
What are some alternatives?
charts - Helm Charts
talos - Talos Linux is a modern Linux distribution built for Kubernetes.
cluster-api-k3s - Cluster API k3s
kind - Kubernetes IN Docker - local clusters for testing Kubernetes
k3sup - bootstrap K3s over SSH in < 60s 🚀
azure-k3s-cluster - An Azure template to deploy a lightweight Kubernetes cluster using k3s.io
rd - Container Management and Kubernetes on the Desktop
minikube - Run Kubernetes locally
k3s - Lightweight Kubernetes
deckhouse - Kubernetes platform from Flant
systemk - Systemk is a systemd backend for the virtual-kubelet. Instead of starting containers, you start systemd units.