2010/1/26 Kenni Lund <kenni@xxxxxxx>: > 2010/1/26 Chris Wright <chrisw@xxxxxxxxxxxx>: >> >> Again, VT (or VT-x) isn't the same as VT-d. So to be sure, you can >> grep dmesg for DMAR and IOMMU to verify that the chipset actually has >> VT-d support, that it's enabled, and that it's not broken (there are >> quite a few broken BIOS out there that case the IOMMU to be unusable). > > dmesg | egrep (DMAR|IOMMU) > This information should _really_ be added to the wiki at > http://www.linux-kvm.org/page/How_to_assign_devices_with_VT-d_in_KVM > > Knowing this, it's quite easy for a user to determine if his system > has VT-d support, _before_ following the guide, compiling own kernel, > setting up qemu-kvm, unbinding and rebinding PCI devices, just to have > qemu-kvm 0.12.2 tell him that the system has no IOMMU (much better > than 0.12.1, agreed, but it's a bit late in the process to find out > :)) Doh, I didn't consider if the kernel compilation probably were needed to give any output - nevertheless, I still think this should be added to the wiki, even if it's the case. Perhaps a short text describing what you should look for. Best Regards Kenni Lund -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe kvm" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html