Hi.
I have a Supermicro 5018D-FN4T (Xeon D-1541 based SBC) that I use for
virtualization. I’m running Centos 7.3 on it (updated), with the
CentOS-QEMU-EV.repo repository as the source for virtualization packages.
I run an Ubuntu 16.04-2 guest VM on it, which is ordinary enough. What’s
Hi.
I have Centos 7 (updated) running as my host, and I’m using Qemu and KVM,
version 2.0.0 and 2.6.0.
I have a Trendnet TU-S9 USB serial dongle attached to the host, which uses the
Prolific 2303 chipset.
I blacklisted the pl2303 driver so the host doesn’t grab the device, and want
to expose
Hi.
I have a couple of Mac’s I use (a MBP 15” and a Mac mini), but I have a stack
of Linux KVM/Qemu hosts (Centos 7.5) running various VM’s (Ubuntu, Fedora,
Win7, Win10, etc).
Currently I ssh in with tunneling for X, and let the VNC client draw remotely
on XQuartz. It’s reasonably fast on my
Stuttgart
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> Am 07.07.2020 um 06:22 schrieb Philip Prindeville:
>> Hi all,
>>
>> I took a real Core 2 machine (T7200… whose motherboard was startin
Hi all,
I took a real Core 2 machine (T7200… whose motherboard was starting to die…)
running Fedora 29 and dd’d the SSD over to my KVM server, then created a VM
using “create from existing image”.
After some tweaking, including setting the disk type to “SATA” from “Virtio”, I
got it working.