Yeah, you probably have to activate VT (virtualization technology) in your BIOS settings.
Andreas On 12/30/2010 07:07 PM, Graham Wooden wrote: > Sounds like your VM Host (the physical machine) doesn't have the VT bit (I > believe that is what it's called) set on the CPU's. VMWare needs this so it > can pass down x86_64 down to the guests. > > I know, it's very misleading as your CPUs may indeed be 64bit, but without > the VT bit, the guests will only see a 32bit CPU. > > -graham > > > On 12/30/10 11:58 AM, "Amit Nepal" <ami...@phoenixinternet.net> wrote: > >> I wanted to see how the sipce works and how it looks like , as Andreas >> suggested me to. But when i try to start the virtual machine i get the >> following error : >> This kernel requires an x86-64 CPU, but only detected an i686 CPU. >> Unable to boot - please use a kernel appropriate for your CPU >> >> I tried with both vmware and vbox image. I am trying to run the image on >> vmware infrastrcture running on dell dual xeon cpu. > > > > _______________________________________________ > SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list > sr-users@lists.sip-router.org > http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
_______________________________________________ SIP Express Router (SER) and Kamailio (OpenSER) - sr-users mailing list sr-users@lists.sip-router.org http://lists.sip-router.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sr-users