Oops it seems that my sentence was misleading. I do edit the definition
file through "virsh edit", I don't edit directly the file stored in
/etc/libvirt/...
I've just performed the modification the way you described it and
restarted the domain. Back to "normal", that is :
vcpucount
maximum
On Thu, Mar 20, 2014 at 11:34:09AM +0100, Sdkfz262 wrote:
> Hi Guido,
>
> And thanks for that quick feedback. From what you wrote and the post you
> linked Yesterday I understand that's not a bug, or at least not a Debian
> bug, but something which requires (as of now) more configuration than a
>
Hi Guido,
And thanks for that quick feedback. From what you wrote and the post you
linked Yesterday I understand that's not a bug, or at least not a Debian
bug, but something which requires (as of now) more configuration than a
simple "setvcpus" while the guest is running.
I gave a try to yo
Hi,
> While on the guest side a cat /proc/cpuinfo still gives back two cpu
> available.
This needs support from qemu and (at least last time I checked) a
running guest agent. This isn't available in wheezy so you should see
the updated CPUs after reboot only. See. e.g.:
http://lost-and-found
Package: libvirt-bin
Version: 0.9.12.3-1
Severity: normal
Hi,
I faced an issue while attempting to decrease the number of vcpus one of my
guest runs on, from 2 to only 1.
vcpu definition in my definition file: 2
Although the following command (in virsh environnment):
"setvcpus 1"
issues t
5 matches
Mail list logo