On 2011-11-06 14:06, Pekka Enberg wrote: > Sure. I think it's mostly people that are interested in non-Linux > virtualization that think the KVM tool is a pointless project. > However, some people (including myself) think the KVM tool is a more > usable and hackable tool than QEMU for Linux virtualization. "Hackable" is relative. I'm surly not saying QEMU has nicer code than kvm-tool, rather the contrary. But if it were that bad, we would not have hundreds of contributors, just in the very recent history. "Usable" - I've tried kvm-tool several times and still (today) fail to get a standard SUSE image (with a kernel I have to compile and provide separately...) up and running *). Likely a user mistake, but none that is very obvious. At least to me. In contrast, you can throw arbitrary Linux distros in various forms at QEMU, and it will catch and run them. For me, already this is more usable. Jan *) kvm run -m 1000 -d OpenSuse11-4_64.img arch/x86/boot/bzImage \ -p root=/dev/vda2 ... [ 1.772791] mousedev: PS/2 mouse device common for all mice [ 1.774603] cpuidle: using governor ladder [ 1.775490] cpuidle: using governor menu [ 1.776865] input: AT Raw Set 2 keyboard as /devices/platform/i8042/serio0/input/input0 [ 1.778609] TCP cubic registered [ 1.779456] Installing 9P2000 support [ 1.782390] Registering the dns_resolver key type [ 1.794323] registered taskstats version 1 ...and here the boot just stops, guest apparently waits for something
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