On Mon, Jan 26, 2009 at 06:03:15PM +0100, Dominik 'Rathann' Mierzejewski wrote: > On Monday, 26 January 2009 at 17:31, Robert Scheck wrote: > > On Mon, 26 Jan 2009, Kevin Kofler wrote: > > > supported, and there are setups where the kernel cannot be upgraded at all > > > (e.g. Virtuozzo/OpenVZ VPSes or kernels with custom patches which have not > > > been ported to the latest version yet). > > > > Since when do we care about third party? We have KVM, > > Does KVM work on CPUs that don't support hardware virtualization? According > to its wiki, it doesn't, so users of older CPUs (for example, me) can't use > it. Do you have any alternatives for me in Fedora? KVM isn't really a substitute for OpenVZ anyway. Longer term, bits of the kernel are being changed to support containers (with support from OpenVZ and others), and libvirt supports this too. Rich. -- Richard Jones, Emerging Technologies, Red Hat http://et.redhat.com/~rjones virt-p2v converts physical machines to virtual machines. Boot with a live CD or over the network (PXE) and turn machines into Xen guests. http://et.redhat.com/~rjones/virt-p2v -- fedora-devel-list mailing list fedora-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-devel-list