Hi,
I've created a pull request to add Xenserver into the list of supported OS
families for Foreman: https://github.com/theforeman/foreman/pull/3331
I haven't contributed before, so I apologize ahead of time if I'm not
following procedure correctly. I've been following along
here: Foreman :: Contribute. The change extends work done
by mmoll, after I chatted with him in IRC a couple months back.
I didn't add additional PXE or provision templates, but I can if that's
desirable. Since XenServer requires additional files in its PXE config, I
considered adding a separate PXE template, rather than editing the existing
PXELinux_default.erb.
Relevant issues:
http://projects.theforeman.org/issues/12992
http://projects.theforeman.org/issues/12962
If you're not, then that's a fault of our docs rather than you - do let us
know where you find problems with them, and thanks for contributing!
That page is a good start point, but Foreman :: Contribute is
worth knowing about too.
Cheers!
Greg
···
On 15 March 2016 at 23:08, Kyle Flavin wrote:
Hi,
I’ve created a pull request to add Xenserver into the list of supported OS
families for Foreman: https://github.com/theforeman/foreman/pull/3331
I haven’t contributed before, so I apologize ahead of time if I’m not
following procedure correctly. I’ve been following along here:
Foreman :: Contribute.
Thanks Greg, I'll give that a read.
···
On Wednesday, March 16, 2016 at 7:35:00 AM UTC-7, Greg Sutcliffe wrote:
>
> On 15 March 2016 at 23:08, Kyle Flavin <kyle....@gmail.com > > wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>> I've created a pull request to add Xenserver into the list of supported
>> OS families for Foreman: https://github.com/theforeman/foreman/pull/3331
>>
>> I haven't contributed before, so I apologize ahead of time if I'm not
>> following procedure correctly. I've been following along here:
>> http://theforeman.org/contribute.html.
>>
>
> If you're not, then that's a fault of our docs rather than you - do let us
> know where you find problems with them, and thanks for contributing!
>
> That page is a good start point, but http://theforeman.org/handbook.html
> is worth knowing about too.
>
> Cheers!
> Greg
>