On 10/10/2012 04:47 PM, Shawn Furrow wrote: > I am using QEMU 1.1.0, the latest libvirt (from the git repo, but I've > also tried release 0.10.0). Host os is Ubuntu 10.04 and the VM os is > also 10.04. > > I am getting the qemu version from qemu-system-x86_64 --version so I > know its the one that is recognized from path. > Could you check 'virsh dumpxml guest0 | grep emulator' and check what's the qemu being ran by libvirt? Then take that path and run it with '<binary> -M ?' and check if the 'pc-1.1' is there. To fix your issue, try 'virsh edit guest0' and change the 'pc-1.1' to 'pc'. > As far as I know, no other versions have been installed on the host machine. > > Shawn > > On Wed, Oct 10, 2012 at 10:25 AM, Kashyap Chamarthy <kchamart@xxxxxxxxxx > <mailto:kchamart@xxxxxxxxxx>> wrote: > > On 10/10/2012 07:22 PM, Shawn Furrow wrote: > > Hi all, > > > > I have been using Libvirt for several months now and I have only > had minimal problems. I > > had a particular setup and was starting up multiple guests just > fine. However, with > > seemingly no changes I now get the following error when trying to > start a guest: > > > > virsh start guest0 > > error: Failed to start domain guest0 > > error: internal error Process exited while reading console log > output: Supported machines are: > > pc Standard PC (alias of pc-0.12) > > pc-0.12 Standard PC (default) > > pc-0.11 Standard PC, qemu 0.11 > > pc-0.10 Standard PC, qemu 0.10 > > isapc ISA-only PC > > > > Apparently, the machine argument settings were changed in recent > versions of Libvirt. Or > > at least that is what it seems. My guest's OS settings were: > > > > <os> > > <type arch='x86_64' machine='pc-1.1'>hvm</type> > > <boot dev='hd'/> > > </os> > > > > > > After getting this error I tried setting the machine argument to > one of the "supported" > > ones. Then I get this error: > > > > virsh start guest0 > > error: Failed to start domain guest0 > > error: Unable to read from monitor: Connection reset by peer > > > > Anyone have any ideas as to why this happened all of a sudden? I > was not having any > > problems before. > > A couple of questions: > - What libvirt version? > - What OS/version? > - What qemu-kvm version? > > Can you reproduce the same issue with latest libvirt and qemu-kvm ? > (that's what I have on > my F18 machine -- libvirt-0.10.2-3.fc18.x86_64, > qemu-kvm-1.2.0-11.fc18.x86_64) ? > > That's the machine type I have. > > # grep machine /etc/libvirt/qemu/f17jeos-3.xml > <type arch='x86_64' machine='pc-1.2'>hvm</type> > > >From the looks of it, I guess you have a fairly older versions of > qemu-kvm?(or whatever > your distro calls the binary as?) > > > > > Thanks, > > Shawn > > > > -- > > Virginia Tech > > Bradley Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering > > B.S. Electrical Engineering > > B.S. Computer Engineering > > > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > > libvirt-users mailing list > > libvirt-users@xxxxxxxxxx <mailto:libvirt-users@xxxxxxxxxx> > > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/libvirt-users > > > > > -- > /kashyap > > > > > -- > Virginia Tech > Bradley Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering > B.S. Electrical Engineering > B.S. Computer Engineering > > > > _______________________________________________ > libvirt-users mailing list > libvirt-users@xxxxxxxxxx > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/libvirt-users > _______________________________________________ libvirt-users mailing list libvirt-users@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/libvirt-users