On 7/30/21 20:25, yami...@cock.li wrote:
<snip>
Currently I'm between Xen and Qemu, but I'm open to other options.
Which would be the best option in this case, and is this even a good idea?

I've been running KVM/QEMU/Virt-Manager on Devuan for many years with 3-4 VMs 
and haven't had any issues directly related to Devuan. It's not my intent to 
bash systemd but it's worth mentioning that I've had many other issues with 
Debian based hypervisors over the past few years (50+ VMs across several 
hypervisors) that involve systemd when reviewing logs post-mortem. Hypervisors 
will sometimes not reboot. Even when trying to un-stick with Magic SysRq. The 
console will just show systemd errors instead. Likewise, when systems do 
reboot, sometimes they inexplicably stop booting and need to have the power 
button hit. Another time, OpenSSH would not work due to /var/run/sshd missing 
during boot. Another issue involved systemd and a LUKS encrypted partition. 
Another time was missing LVM devices. This happens across systems of varying 
age so hardware issues are kind of ruled out. The issues keep getting more 
frequent and odd as months go by. It's like these systems have regressed to 
what L
inux was in 1995.

I would strongly suggest running your virtualization on Devuan. The simplicity 
and stability is currently unmatched in my experience.

PCI Passthrough gets tricky. I recently used it for a network card jacked into 
a SPAN port. It seems to be working OK. I've tried doing it in the past with my 
graphics card (for OpenGL support in the VM) and could not get it working. 
Maybe that has changed in the past couple years though, or I was doing 
something wrong. It wasn't quick-and-easy at the time.
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