Let me first say, that it does work for Linux guest. It doesn’t work on Windows guest because there is a know bug (/issue) with the default hardware layout – made of i440FX BIOS. VirtManager would not allow us to replace the settings, so we need to create the VM ourselves using XML. You can export your XML settings (of an existing VM) using the command
virsh dumpxml > /tmp/VM_NAME.xml
There are relevant fields there which you might want to save for later, like MAC addresses, network settings, and so on.
You can use this XML file to build your VM anew. Note that you will want to modify the network settings, the name and the UUID. Also – you will need a newer QEMU command (through the package qemu-system-x86), you can find in the Centos updates repository, . It has been providing me with /usr/bin/qemu-system-x86_64 command, which I am using, instead of the default qemu command used by default by VirtManager.
My Windows VM XML file (as a reference you can copy and use) is provided below. Major modifications are required to the hardware settings of the Windows VM – moving from PCI to PCIE, changing from IDE to SATA or VirtIO – and the provided XML gives a good reference of how this file should look like. This was taken from a machine tested to allow USB hot-add/remove via the method provided in my previous post.
I’ve been to Hostopia today. The land of hosting servers. I’ve had an emergency job on one Linux server, due to a mistake I’ve made. It appears that the performance hindrance of using raid0 instead of raid1 (Centos/RH default raid setup is raid0 and not raid1, which led me to this mistake) for the root…
I have had an interesting experience with HPE servers, where the BIOS was defined to allow max performance (in contrast to ‘balanced’ mode), but still – the CPU was not at max all the time. While we generally, strive to a greener computing, when having low-latency workload, we expect a deterministic performance. We want our…
I have created an RPM package, and SRPM package, which I will share here, for smartmontools version 6.5 on RHEL 6. Note that the official version is 5.43 which is clueless with many modern SSD disks. I have yet to test it correctly, and in general – use at your own risk. smartmontools-6-5-1-el6-src Related posts:…
Every Linux admin is familiar with the long time running through a large directory tree (with hundred of thousands of files and more) can take. Most are aware that if you re-run the same run-through, it will be shorter. This is caused by a short-valid filesystem cache, where the memory is allocated to other tasks,…
I came across a Linux host (RHEL6.2) which I was not the one managing before, which required adding a node in Oracle 11.2 Grid Infrastructure. According the common documentations, as can be seen here, after cloning the host (or installing it correctly, according to Oracle requirements), you should run ‘cluvfy’ on the existing cluster node….
I have been extremely busy for the last few weeks and couldn’t find time to update my blog, so apologies are in place. I am sorry, and I will add later this week several tips and tricks about BASH scripting, which might save time and effort for those of you who use if for more…