On 01/12/2011 06:46 AM, Mark Knecht stated:
> On Tue, Jan 11, 2011 at 11:04 PM, Valmor de Almeida
> <val.gen...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> Hello,
>>
>> I am trying to build a windows 7 guest using virtualbox-ose-3.1.8. When
>> starting the virtual machine to install the OS, I get the warning:
>>
>> "VT-x/AMD-V hardware acceleration has been enabled, but is not
>> operational. Your 64-bit guest will fail to detect a 64-bit CPU and will
>> not be able to boot.
>>
>> Please ensure that you have enabled VT-x/AMD-V properly in the BIOS of
>> your host computer."
>>
>> I have enabled the following in the BIOS:
>>
>>  Intel(R) Virtualization Technology
>>
>>  Intel(R) VT-d Feature
>>
>> I have not created a KVM module in the kernel (using
>> gentoo-sources-2.6.34-r12). Is this needed?
>>
>> Inputs appreciated.
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> --
>> Valmor
> 
> Not sure about the KVM issue.
> 
> I am running an i7-980X Extreme Edition using Gentoo 64-bit, mostly
> stable. Kernel is 2.6.36-gentoo-r6, Virtualbox-4.0.0. I run both
> 32-bit Win XP and 64-bit Win 7 Professional here with no problems.
> Typically I have 3 or 4 VMs running at the same time.
> 
> Others have suggested BIOS. I didn't have to set anything specific there.
> 
> If not BIOS then I'd look at kernel config next.

I have CONFIG_VIRTUALIZATION turned on (=Y). None of the selections
below that are selected in my kernels. They run 64-bit VMs fine, but I
don't have VBox > 3.

Your host kernel should NOT have CONFIG_PARAVIRT_GUEST but your guest
kernels should.

That's the consensus my machines have yielded, both AMD/Intel and 32/64
bits, but there are probably other options.

Reply via email to