On 2020-06-29 8:51 a.m., Martin Sukany wrote:
Hi George,
did you solved the issue? I remember that I faces similar thing when I
installed headless ubuntu as a guest … My issue was related to the fact that I
used ‚boot cdrom‘ directive inside my configuration (seems that there is a bit
inconsistency between the man page and the real configuration).
This is is a relevant piece of my config:
vm "ubuntu" {
memory 2G
cdrom /data/vms/_iso/mini-serial.iso
disk /data/vms/ubuntu.raw
interface tap { switch "uplink" }
disable
}
I had bad experience with usage of qcow2 disk format for Linux based guests —
especially when you’re trying to do dozens of I/O operations — several disk
containers crashed before I migrated them to raw format.
if you have more than 4 vms, don’t forget to create another /dev/tap<X> device,
otherwise you could expect the unexpectable behaviour :)
M>
Hello Martin,
Thanks for the pointers. I abandoned my Linux efforts, too many issue
and things to learn no time now. My goals could be satisfied by an
OpenBSD VM and it is much better than most Linuxes ;). I have been
swimming against the current (read using things/software/apis/os/tools
etc. when people said it is not what is supposed to be done) but as of
late I find it more relaxing going with it ;).
Virtualization is such a ... mess which like everything else in our
lives nowadays is designed to cover another mess ... I want to run Linux
software on OpenBSD because I don't want to dedicate a machine to Linux
and want to upgrade or run the version I want until I want ... I should
be free to make that choice because of "I", sarcastic here, problem is
CPU vendors and OS developers have to jump some hoops and add some
features to make it happen ... and then things happen that the I does
not like.
Thanks for adding this info albeit to the wrong thread, I read it
because I like Alpine and was thinking of it myself, but they don't have
a ready console install version do they?
Cheers,
George
Hi guys,
I apologize if this maybe out of topic even though it is truly related
to VMM than Debian.
I am trying to setup a VMM Debian based guest but I'm not able to get it
to work. I found some description on the web about which settings to
edit in grub.cfg to enable the serial console and created a VM with 10.3
in qcow2 disk format in KVM. Now I am trying to start the same on
OpenBSD 6.7 but keep getting the connected message and then just
"Rebooting " after I hit some keyboard keys seems like baud rate issue
but not sure.
After messing with it for a while now I am getting a new error:
vmctl: could not open disk image(s)
even thought the disk is there and readable to the user I have setup in
vm.conf in fact I have another VM with the same configuration and disk
with the same permissions and in the same location that works (it is
OpenBSD based).
I would greatly appreciate it if someone has gone this path and can
share some config info with me.
Cheers and thanks in advance,
George