On Sun, Sep 07, 2008 at 11:56:21PM +0300, Rakotomandimby Mihamina wrote:
Cole Robinson wrote:
You can't just change the domain type, you also have to change
the emulator tag. My guess is, this new 'kvm' command is still
using the plain qemu emulator and not '/usr/bin/kvm'
Given that, how
Hi all,
I use ubuntu hardy but I dont think the problem is specific to the
distribution I use.
I installed KVM and libvirt as described here:
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/KVM
Following that method, created a domain, which dumps like this:
domain type='qemu' id='1'
namexp1/name
Rakotomandimby Mihamina wrote:
Hi all,
I use ubuntu hardy but I dont think the problem is specific to the
distribution I use.
I installed KVM and libvirt as described here:
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/KVM
Following that method, created a domain, which dumps like this:
domain
On Sun, Sep 07, 2008 at 09:10:54PM +0300, Rakotomandimby Mihamina wrote:
Hi all,
I use ubuntu hardy but I dont think the problem is specific to the
distribution I use.
I installed KVM and libvirt as described here:
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/KVM
Following that method, created a
Cole Robinson wrote:
You can't just change the domain type, you also have to change
the emulator tag. My guess is, this new 'kvm' command is still
using the plain qemu emulator and not '/usr/bin/kvm'
Given that, how will I choose if I want to launch a 32bit or a 64bit VM
guest?
--
Huile
Rakotomandimby Mihamina wrote:
Cole Robinson wrote:
You can't just change the domain type, you also have to change
the emulator tag. My guess is, this new 'kvm' command is still
using the plain qemu emulator and not '/usr/bin/kvm'
Given that, how will I choose if I want to launch a 32bit or