A new virtual disk can appear as an unformatted disk to the guest server if it does not have a partition table associated with it. You must initialize the device on the guest server just as you do for a blanked-out device on a physical server.
The primary virtual disk (the first disk you assign to the virtual machine) is automatically recognized when you install the guest operating system. After the install, use NSS tools to initialize additional blanked-out virtual devices where you plan to create NSS pools and volumes. On Linux, the NSS initialize function makes EVMS the volume manager of the device, and adds a NetWare Segment Manager.
You can initialize the disk by using the Section 10.6, Initializing a Disk.
function in NSSMU or in the Storage plug-in to iManager. For general instructions for initializing disks, seeTo initialize devices for the guest server:
On the host, use the virtualization management tool to create and allocate virtual devices for the virtual machine.
For information, see SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 10 SP2: Virtualization with Xen.
If the guest server is not running, boot the guest server now.
In iManager, click
Browse to locate and select the guest server to view a list of its devices.
The virtual server has a Server object in the Novell eDirectory database, just like a physical server.
In the
list, select the newly added virtual device to view its details.Verify that the device you selected is the new unformatted device, and not your system device or a formatted device.
WARNING:Do not initialize the system disk.
For example, for an unformatted device, the
size is reported as 0.00 Bytes.Click
.When the page refreshes, the device is initialized and available for further configuration with NSS pools and volumes.
Verify that the
is now reported properly.For example, after the device is initialized, the
is reported to be the same as .