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On the vSphere Client you select the host then configuration > firewall properties > gdbserver > select the checkbox > click ok. (this is really only for testing purposes) For production you would want to limit the ports to 5900-6000.; m6 M) }! a" s: h* L
; K2 U' @/ S$ N" U% y1 A, d& ^, @Nova.conf (My controller and compute node live on the same server, and this is configuration is for testing only)' C1 ?9 I! x* n
[default]
% @" I0 U' C& G2 @5 `( q# A. Nvncserver_proxyclient_address = IP of your Controller
# c/ l0 q, x: o) P( ]' a: X5 l) D, }( nvncserver_listen = 0.0.0.08 N2 i7 B& Q3 ~' e: m5 t9 U; I
vncserver_enabled = True
( {7 X/ \7 I6 u& qnovncproxy_host = 0.0.0.07 U0 q3 w- K3 n2 i$ K
novncproxy_port = 6080
: b4 K5 c7 z4 g1 U8 b2 h" Onovncproxy_base_url = http://mycontroller:6080/vnc_auto.html! s* ^' I' P0 O) D7 _$ i. m
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Make sure you have the nova-novncproxy and nova-consoleauth packages installed. If you have your firewall enabled on your controller I would disable it.1 q/ A( l# X& O$ |
" Y' w4 O! w) |. _: nI am having problems making SPICE protocol work with vSphere at the moment.
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