Jodi Curtis píše v St 21. 11. 2012 v 17:22 +0000: > Hi > > > The file doesn't exist on the host You should _create_ the file in the _guest_. > and I had already written off Ubuntu 12.x, the host is command line > only, I moved to Xubuntu, which offers better performance, That's actually no surprise, spice does noticeably worse with compositing managers in guest OSs. > I am hoping I can improve it by using the guest source provided by > spice, the Ubuntu guest was partially crashing (launcher I think). > > I've not decided whether to stick with Xubuntu yet. > > > I also have a problem with en-gb map not mapping some keys despite > being configured in spice and on the guest os (#~ not working at all, > @' mapping to ¬` and ¬` not working at all) > > It is only a problem through spice, but three (four when programming) > of these are quite important. > > It's not the US map as " would be @, so I am about to Google for it, > to see how I can edit it, and which bit is the problem Let's see what developers could say in the separate thread. I've never seen keyboard problems like this linux clients and I alternate between Czech and English/US layouts in both clients and guests regularly. David > > On Fri, Nov 16, 2012 at 11:00 AM, David Jaša <djasa@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > In addition to what Christophe writes, you can try to disable > surfaces > in the guest driver: > > # cat /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/qxl.conf > Section "Device" > Identifier "qxl" > Driver "qxl" > #Option "DPI" "96 x 96" > #Option "ENABLE_IMAGE_CACHE" "True" > #Option "ENABLE_FALLBACK_CACHE" "False" > Option "ENABLE_SURFACES" "False" > EndSection > > they are known pain point in linux guests. > > David > > > Christophe Fergeau píše v Pá 16. 11. 2012 v 11:52 +0100: > > Hey, > > > > On Fri, Nov 16, 2012 at 01:14:39AM +0000, Jodi Curtis wrote: > > > Having fought my way through getting used to KVM, I have > installed a > > > development desktop along side some servers, and the > performance is > > > unusable. > > > > > > The Ubuntu GUI seems very slow and not very responsive. It > was not as bad > > > as VGA but it is still unusable, all I need is to work in > a development gui > > > and do the things developers do, but if I can't even get > text entered in at > > > normal speed, and have menu's responsive enough to use, > it's not much good > > > to me. > > > > Have you tried other desktop environments than Ubuntu GUI? > (I assume this is > > Unity3d?) The 3d rendering has to be done in software, and > I'm not sure > > how Unity behaves in such setups, so worth checking with > another desktop > > environment not relying on 3d. > > > > Christophe > > > _______________________________________________ > > Spice-devel mailing list > > Spice-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > > http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/spice-devel > > -- > > David Jaša, RHCE > > SPICE QE based in Brno > GPG Key: 22C33E24 > Fingerprint: 513A 060B D1B4 2A72 7F0D 0278 B125 CD00 22C3 3E24 > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Spice-devel mailing list > Spice-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/spice-devel -- David Jaša, RHCE SPICE QE based in Brno GPG Key: 22C33E24 Fingerprint: 513A 060B D1B4 2A72 7F0D 0278 B125 CD00 22C3 3E24 _______________________________________________ Spice-devel mailing list Spice-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/spice-devel