Hello happy people, I'm back from a two day goose-chase where I was wondering very much why my VMs don't boot.
https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvirt-users/2012-February/msg00106.html In that process I upgraded my entire stack (libvirt, qemu, seabios) but found that the boot hung at SeaBIOS trying to boot from ROM. After stepping through all the arguments libvirt supplied to I found that my <memory>2048</memory> the qemu argument -m 2 (megs) -- which wasn't quite enough. (Similarly, my previously supplied <memory>20480</memory> weren't too much they too were too little to boot a Linux kernel). I've already talked to the libvirt folks, and they'll try to get in a feature to supply a <memory unit="M"> or similar. Now I'd like to ask you guys if you could print the amount of RAM available -- like most other BIOSes out there already do - it would be extremely helpful to aid troubleshooting. Thank you very much in advance. So long, i -- Igor Galić Tel: +43 (0) 664 886 22 883 Mail: [email protected] URL: http://brainsware.org/ GPG: 6880 4155 74BD FD7C B515 2EA5 4B1D 9E08 A097 C9AE _______________________________________________ SeaBIOS mailing list [email protected] http://www.seabios.org/mailman/listinfo/seabios
