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Introduction to User-Mode Linux

How to install, configure, and use Linux virtual machines

Carla Schroder (dworks@bratgrrl.com), Programmer and author, Freelance
Carla Schroder is a freelance PC tamer, administering Linux and Windows systems for small businesses. She writes how-tos for real people, loves computers and high tech, and thinks Linux/Open Source/Free Software is the best playground in the world. Carla discovered computers and high-tech in 1994, her first PC was an Apple II. She progressed through DOS/Windows, from 3.1 to XP. She discovered Linux in 1998. You can contact Carla at dworks@bratgrrl.com.

Summary:  This tutorial shows how to install, configure, and use Linux® virtual machines. With User-Mode Linux (UML), you can set up multiple virtual machines that are isolated from each other and from the hardware. This lets you test applications all the way to failure without breaking the host system -- or even requiring a reboot.

Date:  23 Jan 2003
Level:  Introductory PDF:  A4 and Letter (66 KB | 21 pages)Get Adobe® Reader®

Activity:  18094 views
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Before you start

About this tutorial

Ever wish you had a place to let your Linux applications play -- where they wouldn't hurt anything else? Do your killer apps spend too much time killing each other? Originally conceived as a kernel developer's tool, UML lets you set up multiple virtual machines that are isolated from each other and from the hardware. Now, you can test applications all the way to failure without breaking the host system -- or even requiring a reboot. Veteran administrator Carla Schroder shows you how.


Prerequisites

You should be at least an intermediate Linux user: comfortable with working from the command line and building software from source; familiar with the Linux filesystem structure; mounting devices and filesystems; managing user accounts.

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