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^Thank you very much Krisbee, appreciated. Few of those I knew, but it is always good to know stuff which worked for others. Thanks again.
Left this one of yesterdays' list:
https://scottlinux.com/2016/08/28/gpu-p … ian-linux/
It may not be entirely current, but it provides a starting point.
Doing this is not something of interest to me, but I believe this now extends to Intergrated graphic Passthrough on supported hardware.
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Here's part 1 of a ?-part series on using KVM.
@BLizgreat!: How is accessing peripherals on the host from the client under KVM?
I've pretty much used VirtualBox up to now (Windows 8 VM), but am considering other options. Using peripherals connected to the host from the client always seems problematic under VirtualBox; e.g. doesn't work. Last week I attempted to install a customized Windows disk & partition utitity on a USB thumb drive and was unable to do so because I just could never get VirtualBox to even see the drive.
Last edited by KrunchTime (2017-05-25 01:54:12)
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Haven't really tried much Krunch but virt-manager is really easy to use overall imo. So if you've got the time would try it out and see. I like the fact that it's supposed to be so well integrated into gnu/Linux, so should be well supported now and in future.
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Part 2 of a 2-part series on using KVM.
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Haven't really tried much Krunch but virt-manager is really easy to use overall imo. So if you've got the time would try it out and see. I like the fact that it's supposed to be so well integrated into gnu/Linux, so should be well supported now and in future.
virt-manager is mentioned as one of the packages to download in part 1 of the tute.
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When I was a UNIX system administrator, "kvm" referred to a keyboard/video/mouse switch for headless server hosts.
Tim
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Another similar article
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