Le 17/06/2011 10:45, Aldo Saavedra a écrit :

One of the RPMs installs/enabled virtualisation. Once installed the system itself becomes the first virtual machine (VM) on bootup without actually configuring any VMs.

According to google searches the max RAM you can assign a VM is 32GB.

Hi Aldo,

This seems to me a little bit weird. I am myself using KVM, but with less than 32 GB on the host, and I am not aware that the system itself (the host) becomes the first VM. I think it is doubtful, perhaps it would stand better for Xen ? For a VM host, the more Ram you have, the better it is, so I don't see why it would be limited to 32 GB.

I am neither aware of a limit of 32 GB per guest (64 bits). I even found a document from OpenSuse stating a (tested) limit of 512 GB :
http://doc.opensuse.org/products/draft/SLES/SLES-kvm_draft/cha.kvm.limits.html

Alain

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Alain Péan - LPP/CNRS
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