Now I need to decide whether to install qemu or kvm, and whether to
install it in Ubuntu or in Debian, and then reorganize my partitions
accordingly.

QEMU would be the way to go. It seems most people here who run Plan 9 in a VM do it on QEMU on Linux; you'll have a better chance of getting answers if something goes wrong. I believe there won't be any need for changing your partition table as long as you don't want QEMU read/write from/to a "raw" partition.

--On Wednesday, April 15, 2009 9:05 PM +0800 Jim Habegger <jimhabeg...@gmail.com> wrote:

On Wed, Apr 15, 2009 at 4:26 PM, Eris Discordia
<eris.discor...@gmail.com> wrote:
Plan 9 is not intended for home or home office.

Yes, I understood that from the responses to my questions. As soon as
I read them, I gave up the idea of trying to switch to Plan 9. Now
it's more about enriching my knowledge and experience. It might be
good experience for me to see how far I can stretch Plan 9 for home
computing.

learning about
computers is for me only a pleasant aside to actual use of computers

It's more the other way around with me. Using them is only a pleasant
aside to learning about them!

Now I need to decide whether to install qemu or kvm, and whether to
install it in Ubuntu or in Debian, and then reorganize my partitions
accordingly.






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