Theo, fine. Truce. I just got advice from jirib@ to ask my provider about:

....
Show qemu/kvm args!

Ask provider what does he use, which qemu/KVM, which distro...

Try to define 2 sockets, each one core, I bet it will work.
.....

I will report back as soon as they do this. And include full dmesg output in my 
mail rather than outside providers. My apologies about that..

--
Bruno Delbono
| Cognitive Researcher - Human Behavioural Project
| Real Sociedad Española De Antropología
| ☎: +1 855 253 5436 ☎: +1 424 354 4700

________________________________________
From: Theo de Raadt <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, November 13, 2013 5:29 PM
To: Bruno Delbono
Cc: [email protected]; [email protected]
Subject: Re: QEMU CPU cores not showing up

> Sigh, Theo. Seriously I am asking for your help to find out the
> issue as its unique to OpenBSD.


> Stop ranting away on the demerits of disabling apm (and now pci - right! 
> wtf?!).

Then stop justifying your blind following of what you read  on the web.
It looks too much like incompetence.

> Like dude, have you never tried variations of anything except
> default bsd kernel? Why is tinkering (and not even permanent - just
> dmesg outputs) considered such an anathema?

Hey, stick a screw driver into your ear.  Does it help anything?  No.
And that is why it is discouraged.

Don't use boot -c thinking it will fix things for you.

It won't.  That is not what it is for.

boot -c is not a magic tool that solves bugs.  From time to time I
wonder if we should delete it.  It looks like it is only used by people
who read web pages.

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