peter_sm Posted September 17, 2014 Author Share Posted September 17, 2014 Vfio-bind should be built into /usr/local/sbin. You don't need to recreate the script file. We included this in an earlier beta. Great, then I will remove my script and using built in, thanks Jonp! //Peter Quote Link to comment
Dmtalon Posted September 17, 2014 Share Posted September 17, 2014 I asked above, but not sure if anyone saw it... is there a way to see what you bound already (aka whats live?) I was troubleshooting / trying lots of things and am not 100% sure where I ended up <sigh> you can't cat that new_id file, is there a way to recall that info with a command? Thanks! Quote Link to comment
jonp Posted September 18, 2014 Share Posted September 18, 2014 I asked above, but not sure if anyone saw it... is there a way to see what you bound already (aka whats live?) I was troubleshooting / trying lots of things and am not 100% sure where I ended up <sigh> you can't cat that new_id file, is there a way to recall that info with a command? Thanks! lspci -k is the command to see PCI devices and the driver they are currently bound to. If it says "vfio-pci", there yah go... Quote Link to comment
Dmtalon Posted September 18, 2014 Share Posted September 18, 2014 Oh... Cool I guess I should have looked at the man page! Thanks Quote Link to comment
indy5 Posted September 18, 2014 Share Posted September 18, 2014 This is great info! Is there a way to "unbind" a connection, without rebooting the system using the vfio-bind script? I asked above, but not sure if anyone saw it... is there a way to see what you bound already (aka whats live?) I was troubleshooting / trying lots of things and am not 100% sure where I ended up <sigh> you can't cat that new_id file, is there a way to recall that info with a command? Thanks! lspci -k is the command to see PCI devices and the driver they are currently bound to. If it says "vfio-pci", there yah go... Quote Link to comment
jonp Posted September 19, 2014 Share Posted September 19, 2014 This is great info! Is there a way to "unbind" a connection, without rebooting the system using the vfio-bind script? I asked above, but not sure if anyone saw it... is there a way to see what you bound already (aka whats live?) I was troubleshooting / trying lots of things and am not 100% sure where I ended up <sigh> you can't cat that new_id file, is there a way to recall that info with a command? Thanks! lspci -k is the command to see PCI devices and the driver they are currently bound to. If it says "vfio-pci", there yah go... Not in the current beta. Can't see a reason why you would need that though to be honest. Quote Link to comment
indy5 Posted September 19, 2014 Share Posted September 19, 2014 I made a mistake when following a guide, and included a USB controller. I only meant to bind the video card. Quote Link to comment
jonp Posted September 19, 2014 Share Posted September 19, 2014 I made a mistake when following a guide, and included a USB controller. I only meant to bind the video card. I'm guessing the USB controller you passed through then was the card that your boot device was attached to, yes? If so, you need to reboot. And yes, you will have an unclean shutdown detected. Be careful! Quote Link to comment
reluctantflux Posted October 9, 2014 Share Posted October 9, 2014 Hi again, after following the whole steps (including what I posted before) This is what I get: root@Tower2:/mnt/btrfs/VM# virsh create w81kvm1.xml error: failed to connect to the hypervisor error: no valid connection error: Failed to connect socket to '/var/run/libvirt/libvirt-sock': No such file or directory I'm stuck here. Did you figure out how to get past this part? I'm on 6b10a. This is my first unraid install, but I've created a cache drive, an array, setup Plex Media Server on docker. I mounted and copied files from my NTFS drives to the array. I converted my vdi to qcow2, and created the xml file, but can't seem to get virsh to work. Everything I find online is talking about where code was compiled, of which I haven't messed with on this setup, so it should be stock. Thanks for any help. Quote Link to comment
wewantrice Posted October 9, 2014 Share Posted October 9, 2014 I'm stuck here. Did you figure out how to get past this part? I'm on 6b10a. This is my first unraid install, but I've created a cache drive, an array, setup Plex Media Server on docker. I mounted and copied files from my NTFS drives to the array. I converted my vdi to qcow2, and created the xml file, but can't seem to get virsh to work. Everything I find online is talking about where code was compiled, of which I haven't messed with on this setup, so it should be stock. Did you install the plugins listed here? I believe those are necessary with the latest beta. http://lime-technology.com/forum/index.php?topic=35136.0 Quote Link to comment
reluctantflux Posted October 10, 2014 Share Posted October 10, 2014 Gah! I was getting the error at the WebVirtMan, so I didn't continue to install the following plugin. Thanks! All good now! Quote Link to comment
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