On 06/07/2009 10:53 PM, sean darcy wrote:
Robert L Cochran wrote:
I don't understand the distinction you are making between the
"Server" and the "laptop". Are these separate physical machines? Can
you explain this more -- what is this "Server" and how does it
function? I'm wondering if I'm missing something important in my own
virtualization work.
How did you get libvirt 0.6.4? I only have 0.6.2:
[rlc@deafeng3 ~]$ rpm -q libvirt
libvirt-0.6.2-11.fc11.x86_64
Perhaps you got it through updates-testing?
Thanks
Bob
On 06/07/2009 05:21 PM, sean darcy wrote:
Just starting out with an XP guest on Fedora 11 kvm. I'm using
virt-manager to connect from a laptop.
Server:
kernel-2.6.29.4-167.fc11.x86_64
qemu-*-0.10.50-6.kvm86.fc11.x86_64
libvirt-0.6.4-2.fc11.x86_64
On the laptop:
virt-manager-0.7.0-5.fc11.i586
libvirt-0.6.2-11.fc11.i586
The console comes, and XP runs fine. But, screen is scaled too large
vertically for my laptop screen which is 1280x800. Only with
fullscreen can I see the bottom menu bar. I would have assumed I
could change the size of the screen (even if not the aspect ratio),
but I can't.
Am I doing something wrong, or is this just The Way Things Are?
sean
The server is a desktop server that runs qemu-kvm and libvirt. I
connect to that server from my laptop using virt-manager.
For newer spins, koji is your friend. Try
http://koji.fedoraproject.org/koji/buildinfo?buildID=104926, get the
src.rpm and rebuild.
BTW, top-posting makes posts hard to read,
sean
--
Libvir-list mailing list
Libvir-list@xxxxxxxxxx
https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/libvir-list
Thank you Sean, I just never thought about a separate virtualization
server. Makes perfect sense. And I've learned something new.
Bob
--
Libvir-list mailing list
Libvir-list@xxxxxxxxxx
https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/libvir-list