aptalca Posted April 29, 2015 Share Posted April 29, 2015 That's just what I needed, thanks so much Quote Link to comment
jonp Posted April 29, 2015 Author Share Posted April 29, 2015 FYI, ignore any info about intel GPU. That does not work. Quote Link to comment
Fireball3 Posted April 29, 2015 Share Posted April 29, 2015 Many thanks for this post. Very well explained! Generally speaking, there isn't a ton of easy-to-digest information on the web about the KVM hypervisor, VFIO, and IOMMU, so I thought I'd write up a brief post on these technologies to educate those that are interested. This is just so true! IMHO, this is a general problem of linux stuff. >>Made by geeks for geeks<< Of course, in the recent decades, many efforts have been made through the different distributions available (Suse, RedHat, Ubuntu), nevertheless this image is still present. /IMHO Virtualization seems to be a nice option to provide computer access for a whole family without the need of having multiple computers. Could you please elaborate on the hardware needed to do so? Ideally there is a HDMI connection to the location where KVM (keyboard, video, mouse) is installed (terminal). In our case, and probably the most common installations, we have only CAT7 GBit-LAN. I fear throughput for high resolution video (gaming) is insufficient via GBit LAN. What options are available/recommended to connect those terminals in such a network and what usecase can be covered (office? gaming?) Perhaps you can write something similar to show how the average user can benefit from virtualization on the unRAID server? Quote Link to comment
jonp Posted April 30, 2015 Author Share Posted April 30, 2015 Many thanks for this post. Very well explained! You are most welcome! Perhaps you can write something similar to show how the average user can benefit from virtualization on the unRAID server? http://lime-technology.com/forum/index.php?topic=39612.0 I wrote a reply and realized it was better suited as a new post, so there yah go! Quote Link to comment
opentoe Posted July 13, 2015 Share Posted July 13, 2015 Don't mean to revive an old topic. I setup an Ubuntu desktop as a VM. I have been using UltraVNC/VNCViewer to connect to it and performance has been really nice. During the template setup under "Graphics Card" I saw VNC and I also the physical graphics card that is in the server. So I'm clear, the only reason why I would select the physical graphics card would be to somehow access that VM from the unRaid box itself? When I de-select VNC can't connect to it via VNC. Boggles me a little bit. Quote Link to comment
archedraft Posted July 13, 2015 Share Posted July 13, 2015 Don't mean to revive an old topic. I setup an Ubuntu desktop as a VM. I have been using UltraVNC/VNCViewer to connect to it and performance has been really nice. During the template setup under "Graphics Card" I saw VNC and I also the physical graphics card that is in the server. So I'm clear, the only reason why I would select the physical graphics card would be to somehow access that VM from the unRaid box itself? When I de-select VNC can't connect to it via VNC. Boggles me a little bit. If you selected a physical graphics and that graphics card was connected to a monitor and then you started the Ubuntu VM, the Ubuntu screen *should be* displayed on your monitor. It would be just like a normal desktop. You are correct that you could no longer access Ubuntu from vnc but you have a monitor displaying Ubuntu so you wouldn't need vnc. Hope that clears it up. Quote Link to comment
opentoe Posted July 13, 2015 Share Posted July 13, 2015 Don't mean to revive an old topic. I setup an Ubuntu desktop as a VM. I have been using UltraVNC/VNCViewer to connect to it and performance has been really nice. During the template setup under "Graphics Card" I saw VNC and I also the physical graphics card that is in the server. So I'm clear, the only reason why I would select the physical graphics card would be to somehow access that VM from the unRaid box itself? When I de-select VNC can't connect to it via VNC. Boggles me a little bit. If you selected a physical graphics and that graphics card was connected to a monitor and then you started the Ubuntu VM, the Ubuntu screen *should be* displayed on your monitor. It would be just like a normal desktop. You are correct that you could no longer access Ubuntu from vnc but you have a monitor displaying Ubuntu so you wouldn't need vnc. Hope that clears it up. A yes, clears up just what I was thinking. Is the current protocols limited to one display at a time? Example, if were to run multiple VM's graphics passthru. Even possible? Currently my unRaid server has a display connected since it was just built over the weekend. Most VM's I run will be using remotely and just SSH, but may as learn how it all works. Thanks. Quote Link to comment
BRiT Posted July 13, 2015 Share Posted July 13, 2015 Yes its possible with the right motherboard/cpu. You need a dedicated gpu per vm you want to passthrough. You can't share the same gpu across multiple vms. Some motherboards may group the pciexpress slots together so passing just 1 gpu through instead of all in the group might be tricky. Quote Link to comment
jonp Posted July 14, 2015 Author Share Posted July 14, 2015 Yes its possible with the right motherboard/cpu. You need a dedicated gpu per vm you want to passthrough. You can't share the same gpu across multiple vms. Only replying to clarify on this as this isn't entirely true. You need a dedicated GPU per concurrently running VM you wish to have. You can change what VM the GPU is assigned to, but a GPU can only be attached to one active VM at a time. So if you have a GPU for OpenELEC as a VM, then shut down that VM, you can now start up another VM with that GPU assigned. Quote Link to comment
devil Posted May 13, 2016 Share Posted May 13, 2016 I would like to ask a question here, as nowhere else seems appropriate: Can we clone our existing windows PC's windows to a VM running on unraid on that same PC. Like the this link https://www.google.co.in/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=3&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=0ahUKEwjI7sOArtfMAhVCQI8KHRspBbgQFggsMAI&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.labnol.org%2Fsoftware%2Fcreate-virtual-machine-of-existing-computer%2F10510%2F&usg=AFQjCNFCJbWBa26D34ol6HJPOmmb40Iy8w&sig2=uFiI4KB1_PUIoi7mF8Tsng&bvm=bv.122129774,d.c2I Quote Link to comment
chesh Posted May 13, 2016 Share Posted May 13, 2016 I would like to ask a question here, as nowhere else seems appropriate: Can we clone our existing windows PC's windows to a VM running on unraid on that same PC. Like the this link https://www.google.co.in/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=3&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=0ahUKEwjI7sOArtfMAhVCQI8KHRspBbgQFggsMAI&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.labnol.org%2Fsoftware%2Fcreate-virtual-machine-of-existing-computer%2F10510%2F&usg=AFQjCNFCJbWBa26D34ol6HJPOmmb40Iy8w&sig2=uFiI4KB1_PUIoi7mF8Tsng&bvm=bv.122129774,d.c2I Yes. You can use the tools in your link to create a VHD and then you would follow these steps: http://www.itfromallangles.com/2011/03/linux-kvm-migrating-hyper-v-vhd-images-to-kvm/ to convert it to a file that KVM could use. Then you copy the file up to your unRAID server and mount the VM. Another method would be to use some form of backup software (Acronis, Ghost, CloneZilla, etc) to make a backup and then you would configure your VM on unRAID and boot from recovery media for that backup software and just restore it into the VM environment you created. Quote Link to comment
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