ken wrote:
It sounds like you and I want to do the same thing: run XP and Linux under Xen on a laptop.
I don't remember all the web pages I went to. But a good place to start reading is wikipedia. Go there and search for "xen". That page has a good explanation of the technology and its capabilities and good links to other web pages. Eventually you'll get to
... I think that's the website. The wikipedia link in the first paragraph below is good too. hth, ken
On 09/27/2007 12:56 PM David C. Rankin wrote:
Ladislav Slezak wrote:
Basil Chupin wrote:
ken wrote:
There's a couple reasons for running xen, but the major one for me is to be able to run XP without having to reboot into it. From reading some docs though, it seems that I'd need a different CPU from what I have (an Intel Pentium M processor, basically a Pentium 6 with mobility technology). So does this suck? Or is it okay? No, this processor doesn't have the virtualization support, see e.g. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intel_Virtualization_Technology for more information.
Secondly (if I get past the first hurdle, above), as is typical, XP was installed when I bought the machine and I got no install CD. Do I need an install CD/DVD for XP to make it a domU? The easiest way is to install it using CD/DVD. For moving an existing installation you need a p2v (physical to virtual) tool. AFAIK there are only commercial tools, but some of them have a free trial version.
The docs say that ACPI doesn't yet work on xen (meaning my battery's going to drain faster), but that this should be fixed in future. Has this future come yet? (Yeah, docs can go out-of-date.)
I'm due for an upgrade, would like to upgrade into xen, but I'm pessimistic it'll work. Does anyone have any firsthand experience with any of this or otherwise have authoritative info?
Much appreciated. Doesn't answer your questions, but this may be of interest when you are considering using Xen - a quote from the description of Xen in the Yast2 Software Management:
"A port of Windows XP was developed for an earlier version of Xen, but is not available for release due to license restrictions." This is about paravirtualized system, in a fully virtualizated guest you don't need any modification to the guest OS (so in theory you can run any OS in a Xen guest) but you need virtualization support in the CPU.
Ladislav
Where can I read more about what Zen requires. I'm dual-booting 10.2 and XP on my laptop at present and I would like to install XP into a virtual machine within 10.2. I have a P4 duo-core processor. Where can I get more info to see if Zen will work or whether I will have to try a closed source vmware-Workstation.
Excellent Ken! If we have gotten to the point where XP has been reduced to a virtualized app running under a Linux oss virtual machine - oh, the coup de ta that will be! -- David C. Rankin, J.D., P.E. Rankin Law Firm, PLLC 510 Ochiltree Street Nacogdoches, Texas 75961 (936) 715-9333 (936) 715-9339 fax www.rankinlawfirm.com -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org