The disk controller over on the KVM side is virtIO - is that supported on VBox?
On Thu, Jun 2, 2016 at 6:24 PM, Alexey Eromenko <[email protected]> wrote: > theoretically it should boot (but not necessarily recognize all the virtual > hardware, because it is different). > At least the guest's bootloader should work. > > Try to start your VDI image with KVM, or use an image both virtualizers > support, like VMDK. > > On VirtualBox side, you need to create a new VM, and attach disk image to > it. Make sure the disk controller is the same as on KVM (can be > IDE/SATA/SCSI), and boot order is correct. > > -Technologov > > 2 Июн 2016 г. 23:55 пользователь "Larry Martell" <[email protected]> > написал: >> >> I have a centos VM created on a linux system with KVM. I exported the >> VM in VDI format and brought it over to a Mac and opened it with VB. >> It says it's started but I just get a black window. Was this not the >> proper way to bring the VM over? How can I debug this? ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ What NetFlow Analyzer can do for you? Monitors network bandwidth and traffic patterns at an interface-level. Reveals which users, apps, and protocols are consuming the most bandwidth. Provides multi-vendor support for NetFlow, J-Flow, sFlow and other flows. Make informed decisions using capacity planning reports. https://ad.doubleclick.net/ddm/clk/305295220;132659582;e _______________________________________________ VBox-users-community mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/vbox-users-community _______________________________________________ Unsubscribe: mailto:[email protected]?subject=unsubscribe
