If I want to stick to debian, would the best way to do this be to just
download kvm60 source, compile the module and load it in, or does kernel
still require upgrading (I think latest on etch is .18 not .20)
 
Thanks,
Andrey

  _____  

From: Alexey Eremenko [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Wednesday, February 13, 2008 3:42 AM
To: Andrey Dmitriev; [email protected]
Subject: RE: [kvm-devel] stable distro for kvm?



-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Andrey
Dmitriev
Sent: Tue 2/12/2008 11:20 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [kvm-devel] stable distro for kvm?

>Any recommendations or link to plans for a stable KVM with any major
distro?

Latest KVM (KVM-60) is stable; Fedora7+/RHEL5+ have good support for
KVM. openSUSE/SLES 11.x will likely have good KVM support too.

>I've read somewhere that Ubuntu will support it soon (how soon?) but I
thought it was based on debian, and it doesn't seem to have it as part
of etch yet (if I switch to unstable, I seem to be able to get it)
 
Debian Etch (Stable) was feature-frozen before KVM was released. (Debian
Etch was released in 2007, but it was in feature-freeze since summer of
2006).
As with any Debian Stable, it takes time to insert features into it.
Those features need to be ready nearly year before insertion into Debian
Stable. Both Ubuntu 8.04 LTS and Debian Lenny will have good KVM
support.

openSUSE 10.3, Ubuntu 7.04, Ubuntu 7.10 have early KVM included, so they
have some bugs. (basic KVM support)
In any case, I would recommend you to install KVM-60, because it is more
stable.

-Alexey "Technologov, Qumranet QA Team Member. 


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