I ran into this error on a different (CentOS 6 x86_64) system. Simply
executing "nslookup" would return the error "nslookup: parse of
/etc/resolv.conf failed". Upon close inspection of the contents nothing
was out of order. Permissions and ownership also looked good and I was
executing nslookup as
** Changed in: libvirt (Ubuntu)
Status: Incomplete => Invalid
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10.04 amd64 libvirt+qemu fails to install Win Server 08 x64 or Win7 x64
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/607884
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I figured out what was wrong in my case; The 1855 chassis doesn't have the
right cpu flags to operate as a fully virt hardware. Thanks for taking a look,
Matt
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10.04 amd64 libvirt+qemu fails to install Win Server 08 x64 or Win7 x64
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/607884
You received this bug n
If it matters the hardware I'm using is a Dell PowerEdge 1855 chassis
with ten 1855 blades. They're all configured the same:
m...@libvirt01:/$ uname -a
Linux libvirt01 2.6.32-23-server #37-Ubuntu SMP Fri Jun 11 09:11:11 UTC 2010
x86_64 GNU/Linux
m...@libvirt01:/$ free -m
total
Public bug reported:
This is on a fresh install of server 10.04 amd64. I selected VM host and
SSH upon install, added virt-manager, virt-viewer, xterm, and ubuntu-vm-
builder afterwards. I have changed networking to bridge eth0, and set
libvirtxml.tmpl to use br0 by default. Using virt-manager loc