This sounds great, however I am hoping for updated wiki on how to create your 
own system vm(distro).

Maybe one day....

Sent from my iPhone

On Dec 5, 2012, at 5:04 PM, Chiradeep Vittal <chiradeep.vit...@citrix.com> 
wrote:

> The current system vm is getting long in the tooth. I (or Rohit Yadav)
> will looking into building a wheezy-based systemvm that includes hyper-v
> drivers.
> Hopefully network throughput should be better as well when used with
> multiple cores.
> 
> On 12/5/12 10:38 AM, "Jason Davis" <scr...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
>> TBH Hyper-V synthetic drivers(modules) is supported in the mainline
>> kernel.
>> 
>> So the argument that CentOS 6.x has better support is moot.
>> 
>> This assumes that the kernel version on the SSVM is at least 2.6.32. I ran
>> Ubuntu Server 11.x and Centos 6.x on Hyper-V natively and just needed to
>> load the kernel modules for the synthetic stuffs to work.
>> 
>> Ancient example of getting the Hyper-V modules built/working on Debian 6.0
>> http://virtualisationandmanagement.wordpress.com/2010/11/02/debian-on-hype
>> r-v-with-4-vcpu-support-and-syntetic-network/
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> On Wed, Dec 5, 2012 at 12:25 PM, Kelceydamage@bbits <kel...@bbits.ca>
>> wrote:
>> 
>>> I'm very interested in this.
>>> 
>>> Sent from my iPhone
>>> 
>>> On Dec 5, 2012, at 10:10 AM, Donal Lafferty <donal.laffe...@citrix.com>
>>> wrote:
>>> 
>>>> Has anyone looked into building a system VM that runs on a CentOS
>>> distro?
>>> 
> 

Reply via email to