Hi all
I finally got kvm up and running with Debian 9 installed. Per Bob Weber,
I seem to have missed one of about 5 must have packages. Once up, I had
the problem of getting my network printer to work. Cups must be
installed and to get the proper drivers for my printer, I needed to
install h
On 8/18/17 4:08 PM, Gary Roach wrote:
> I really appreciate all of you quick responses.
>
> For some unknown reason, when I searched the Debian database virt came up
> empty. This time it didn't. So, at this point, its go RTFM.
>
> The manual will probably clear it up but When trying to run virt-m
On 18-08-17, Gary Roach wrote:
> I really appreciate all of you quick responses.
>
> For some unknown reason, when I searched the Debian database virt came up
> empty. This time it didn't. So, at this point, its go RTFM.
>
> The manual will probably clear it up but When trying to run virt-manage
I really appreciate all of you quick responses.
For some unknown reason, when I searched the Debian database virt came
up empty. This time it didn't. So, at this point, its go RTFM.
The manual will probably clear it up but When trying to run
virt-manager, I did get the following error:
una
On 17-08-17, Gary Roach wrote:
> Sorry bob but the debian 9 archives doesn't include libvirtd or anything
> equivalent. I have been trying to use virt-manager but have gotten a bit
> confused. The screen shot is attached. I have two hard drives. One is a 160
> Gb boot drive called bootdisk and ano
On 8/17/17, Gary Roach wrote:
> On 08/17/2017 10:50 AM, Bob Weber wrote:
>>
>> Most debian installs work easily with a 20 or 20 GB virtual drive. You
>> create
>> the file necessary with a command like this:
>>
>> qemu-img create -f qcow2 /home/img/Mymachine/drive.img 30G
>>
>> This assumes that
On 18/08/17 13:12, Gary Roach wrote:
> On 08/17/2017 10:50 AM, Bob Weber wrote:
>> Looks like the packages
>> to get you started are libvirt-daemon-system and virt-manager.
>>
>> Hope this helps.
>>
>> ...bob
>>
>>
>>
> Sorry bob but the debian 9 archives doesn't include libvirtd or
> anything equ
On Thu, 2017-08-17 at 18:12 -0700, Gary Roach wrote:
> On 08/17/2017 10:50 AM, Bob Weber wrote:
> > On 8/17/17 1:06 PM, Gary Roach wrote:
> > Usually the qemu vm runs from a file (created by qemu-img) set up as a disk
> > drive by qemu. I use Virtual Machine Manager (along with libvirtd) which
> >
On 08/17/2017 10:50 AM, Bob Weber wrote:
On 8/17/17 1:06 PM, Gary Roach wrote:
Usually the qemu vm runs from a file (created by qemu-img) set up as a disk
drive by qemu. I use Virtual Machine Manager (along with libvirtd) which can do
all the hard stuff for you. I usually make my own virtual
Have you passed the appropriate options to QEMU? You *must* use “-drive
file=...”. For example “-drive file=/dev/sda”. Read the QEMU manual for
details. QEMU does not gives the the guest is access to host devices by
default; that would be a very high security risk.
On 17/08/17 12:06, Gary Roach wr
On 8/17/17 1:06 PM, Gary Roach wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> Debian 9 (Stretch) system
> KDE Desktop
> MSI970A-G43 motherboard
> AMD FX 4350 processor - not overclocked
>
> Ive been trying to get a virtual machine set up and have run into problems
> with both virtualbox and kvm/qemu packages. I have a very
On 17-08-17, Gary Roach wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> Debian 9 (Stretch) system
> KDE Desktop
> MSI970A-G43 motherboard
> AMD FX 4350 processor - not overclocked
>
> Ive been trying to get a virtual machine set up and have run into problems
> with both virtualbox and kvm/qemu packages. I have a very messy
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