Thanks Tim, if that was the case it is fine IMHO.
I neither need nor want to overrule them - it is good to have the bug
thou as a document hopefully somebody will remember or a search engine
will find next time the question comes up.
Therefore setting to Won't Fix.
** Changed in: linux (Ubuntu)
Status: Confirmed => Invalid
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1657733
Title:
KVM module handling different per Architecture - s390x
Status in linux package in Ubuntu:
Invalid
Bug description:
Hi,
the Intel KVM module is build as a module, yet OTOH the s390 one is not.
I asked around and we discussed, quoting the core of the discussion that I'd
like to be continued here:
<xnox> cpaelzer, we want kvm to be available. on x86 there are two modules
depending on ones cpu features (amd vs intel vs whatever). thus cannot be
compiled in, as either/or are loaded.
...
<xnox> infinity, the problem on s390x was that unlike on x86 nothing would
autoload the module
<infinity> xnox: That sounds like a bug to take back to IBM and say "plz fix".
<xnox> and it was counter intuitive for millenials like me to do $ sudo
modprobe kvm; to get libvirt+qemu working
[...]
<cpaelzer> the place to autoload would be /usr/share/qemu/init/qemu-kvm-init
that is where the others do it
<infinity> cpaelzer: Yeah, that's a gross hack because there's no proper
autoloading.
<cpaelzer> true
<infinity> cpaelzer: Since that init job only exists if you install qemu,
modular everywhere would save a tiny bit of boot time on pure guests. So maybe
it's worth evaluating
[...]
<infinity> But I'm all for kernel configs being as normalized as possible
across arches.
I'm not saying we "should" change anything, but since I wondered about that
arch difference more people will do so as well.
So we should consciously evaluate, do we want to:
1. keep it built-in as it is now
2. change it to a module and rely on qemu-kvm to load it
3. change it to a module and let IBM upstream do autoload where it is
supported
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