This course is using an outdated version of the technology and is now considered to be Legacy content. It will be removed from our catalog on June 28, 2024. Please be sure to complete your course and finish any remaining labs before that date. We recommend moving to version 9.2, which is the latest version currently available.
In this course, the main computer system used for hands-on learning activities is workstation.
Seven other machines are also used by students for these activities:
servera, serverb, serverc, serverd, servere, tower, and satellite.
All eight of these systems are in the lab.example.com DNS domain.
All student computer systems have a standard user account, student, which has the password student.
The root password on all student systems is redhat.
The admin user password for the Satellite and for the Ansible Tower is redhat.
Table 1. Classroom Machines
| Machine name | IP addresses | Role |
|---|---|---|
| workstation.lab.example.com | 172.25.250.254 | Graphical workstation used for system administration |
| servera.lab.example.com | 172.25.250.10 | Managed server "A" |
| serverb.lab.example.com | 172.25.250.11 | Managed server "B" |
| serverc.lab.example.com | 172.25.250.12 | Managed server "C" |
| serverd.lab.example.com | 172.25.250.13 | Managed server "D" |
| servere.lab.example.com | 172.25.250.16 | Managed server "E" |
| tower.lab.example.com | 172.25.250.14 | Ansible Tower server |
| satellite.lab.example.com | 172.25.250.15 | Red Hat Satellite 6 Server |
One additional function of workstation is that it acts as a router between the network that connects the student machines and the classroom network.
If workstation is down, other student machines will only be able to access systems on the student network.
Several systems in the classroom provide supporting services.
Two servers, content.example.com and materials.example.com, are sources for software and lab materials used in hands-on activities.
Information on how to use these servers is provided in the instructions for those activities.
Students are assigned remote computers in a Red Hat Online Learning classroom. They are accessed through a web application hosted at . Students should log in to this site using their Red Hat Customer Portal user credentials.
Controlling the Virtual Machines
The virtual machines in your classroom environment are controlled through a web page. The state of each virtual machine in the classroom is displayed on the page under the Online Lab tab.
Table 2. Machine States
| Virtual Machine State | Description |
|---|---|
| STARTING | The virtual machine is in the process of booting. |
| STARTED | The virtual machine is running and available (or, when booting, soon will be). |
| STOPPING | The virtual machine is in the process of shutting down. |
| STOPPED | The virtual machine is completely shut down. Upon starting, the virtual machine boots into the same state as when it was shut down (the disk will have been preserved). |
| PUBLISHING | The initial creation of the virtual machine is being performed. |
| WAITING_TO_START | The virtual machine is waiting for other virtual machines to start. |
Depending on the state of a machine, a selection of the following actions is available.
Table 3. Classroom/Machine Actions
| Button or Action | Description |
|---|---|
| Create the ROL classroom. Creates all of the virtual machines needed for the classroom and starts them. Can take several minutes to complete. | |
| Delete the ROL classroom. Destroys all virtual machines in the classroom. Caution: Any work generated on the disks is lost. | |
| Start all virtual machines in the classroom. | |
| Stop all virtual machines in the classroom. | |
Open a new tab in the browser and connect to the console of the virtual machine.
Students can log in directly to the virtual machine and run commands.
In most cases, students should log in to the workstation virtual machine and use ssh to connect to the other virtual machines.
| |
| → | Start (power on) the virtual machine. |
| → | Gracefully shut down the virtual machine, preserving the contents of its disk. |
| → | Forcefully shut down the virtual machine, preserving the contents of its disk. This is equivalent to removing the power from a physical machine. |
| → | Forcefully shut down the virtual machine and reset the disk to its initial state. Caution: Any work generated on the disk is lost. |
At the start of an exercise, if instructed to reset a single virtual machine node, click → for only the specific virtual machine.
At the start of an exercise, if instructed to reset all virtual machines, click →
If you want to return the classroom environment to its original state at the start of the course, you can click to remove the entire classroom environment. After the lab has been deleted, you can click to provision a new set of classroom systems.
The operation cannot be undone. Any work you have completed in the classroom environment up to that point will be lost.
The Autostop Timer
The Red Hat Online Learning enrollment entitles students to a certain amount of computer time. To help conserve allotted computer time, the ROL classroom has an associated countdown timer, which shuts down the classroom environment when the timer expires.
To adjust the timer, click to display the New Autostop Time dialog box. Set the number of hours and minutes until the classroom should automatically stop. Note that there is a maximum time of ten hours. Click to apply this change to the timer settings.