On Tue, 2019-01-29 at 10:39 +0000, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
>  So, maybe, try disabling libvirt.service on any guests which may have it 
> enabled and
> > reboot *everything* to see if your problem persists.
> 
> Interesting, though I wouldn't expect a difference between Gnome and
> KDE guests. Note that my guest is Fedora Server, with no DE installed.
> 
> HOWEVER, (hold the front page!)
> 
> Last night I rebooted everything and fired up *only* the Windows guest,
> and it is working perfectly. Recall that I've always had two guests
> running, so either a) the Fedora guest is screwing things up somehow,
> possibly in the way you suggest, or b) libvirt is confused by having
> two guests. If it's either of those things then something must have
> changed recently, because this is exactly the setup I've been using for
> months with no issues, and (I stress again) I have changed nothing in
> my configuration other than regular dnf updates.
> 
> I'll do some more tests and report back.

OK, first of all the Fedora guest doesn't have libvirt.service enabled,
maybe because it was installed with no DE.

Secondly, I did the following:

1) Verified that the Windows guest was still working.
2) Started the Fedora guest.
3) Both guests worked for a few minutes, then both failed.
4) Shut down the Fedora guest. Windows guest still failing.
5) Rebooted the Windows guest (from the virt-manager menu). Still
failing.
6) Shut down the Windows guest and restarted it. It's now working.

I think this is a strong indication that the problem is with libvirt
itself.

poc
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