On 09/12/15 23:36, Greg Freemyer wrote:
On Wed, Dec 9, 2015 at 5:06 PM, John Andersen <jsamyth@gmail.com> wrote:
On 12/09/2015 01:54 PM, Greg Freemyer wrote:
Mostly agreed, but:
- a lot of low-end PCs don't have the Intel CPU extension that makes virtual so fast (VT-x if I recall correctly). AMD has a similar extension I believe, but I mostly do Intel.
I haven't tried a VM without those extensions, but my impression is the performance is much worse.
Agreed.
But that's been standard for 10 years or more. Anything that can run a hyper-visor will be fine. AND lots of memory. Also More cores = better. But those things also seem to b standard these days. Here's one counter example (possibly extreme):
http://ark.intel.com/products/81712/Intel-Xeon-Processor-E5-2685-v3-30M-Cach...
It was released Q3 of last year, so a relatively new CPU.
It's $2K for the recommended price of just the CPU so this is the opposite of low-end, but it doesn't have VT-x included.
Why that exists, I don't know.
A more personal experience: My business partner bought a MS Surface 2 for $1,000 about 2 years ago. We didn't realize until later that it didn't have the VT-x extensions. That was in early 2014, so for whatever reason it was not universal that all decent machines had VT-x 24 months ago.
I don't know about now.
Greg
Greg Freemyer www.IntelligentAvatar.net On our machines, you have to upgrade the bios. That invalidates the warranty though.
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