basti writes:
Am 28.11.24 um 13:01 schrieb basti:
I have move a Win10 KVM guest to new hardware and than upgrade this guest to
Windows 11.
[..]
4x qemu64 CPU (1 Socket/ 4 Core/ 1 Threads)
8GB RAM
No graphic tablet
No Ballon driver
When I copy a big file (~8GB) from Network to local I get
On Tuesday, 03-12-2024 at 22:26 Nate Bargmann wrote:
> * On 2024 03 Dec 02:33 -0600, Michael Kjörling wrote:
> > On 3 Dec 2024 00:11 +, from p...@hbsys.plus.com (Peter Hillier-Brook):
> > > Once upon a time I had Windows XP, Windows 7 and Windows 10 VMs running
> &g
George at Clug writes:
I would also recommend the free version of VMware Workstation. While not FOSS, it is an excellent
product, while it is made available for personal use.
Don't want to spread fear but it's worth reminding that relying on software owned by Oracle, even
when distributed fo
On 03/12/2024 00:11, Peter Hillier-Brook wrote:
Once upon a time I had Windows XP, Windows 7 and Windows 10 VMs running
under VirtualBox on Debian 10 or earlier. Now I need one for some
primitive, but essential program I cannot remember how I created the VMs
(Gene's disease, 88 come S
* On 2024 03 Dec 02:33 -0600, Michael Kjörling wrote:
> On 3 Dec 2024 00:11 +, from p...@hbsys.plus.com (Peter Hillier-Brook):
> > Once upon a time I had Windows XP, Windows 7 and Windows 10 VMs running
> > under VirtualBox on Debian 10 or earlier. Now I need one for some pri
>
>
> No it's not! VMware Workstation is a buggy as hell on Windows and nearly
> unusable on Debian.
>
> I know. I've just spent a year in a virtualisation course using VMWare
> Workstation to virtualise many different hosts and networks and
> applications.
&g
On 3/12/24 16:49, George at Clug wrote:
I would also recommend the free version of VMware Workstation. While not
FOSS, it is an excellent product, while it is made available for
personal use
No it's not! VMware Workstation is a buggy as hell on Windows and nearly
unusable on Debian
On Tuesday, 03-12-2024 at 11:11 Peter Hillier-Brook wrote:
> Once upon a time I had Windows XP, Windows 7 and Windows 10 VMs running
> under VirtualBox on Debian 10 or earlier. Now I need one for some
> primitive, but essential program I cannot remember how I created the VMs
On 3 Dec 2024 00:11 +, from p...@hbsys.plus.com (Peter Hillier-Brook):
> Once upon a time I had Windows XP, Windows 7 and Windows 10 VMs running
> under VirtualBox on Debian 10 or earlier. Now I need one for some primitive,
> but essential program I cannot remember how I create
On 3/12/24 10:11, jeremy ardley wrote:
The sources are all licensed products on CD-ROMs and VirtualBox seems to
expect ISO inputs which is, of course a non-starter
With the ISO images. you can create a .iso from a CDROM by
sudo dd if=/dev/cdrom of=cdrom.iso bs=4M
You can also map a physi
On 3/12/24 08:11, Peter Hillier-Brook wrote:
Once upon a time I had Windows XP, Windows 7 and Windows 10 VMs running
under VirtualBox on Debian 10 or earlier. Now I need one for some
primitive, but essential program I cannot remember how I created the VMs
(Gene's disease, 88 come S
On Tue, Dec 3, 2024 at 5:49 AM Peter Hillier-Brook wrote:
>
> The sources are all licensed products on CD-ROMs and VirtualBox seems to
> expect ISO inputs which is, of course a non-starter.
>
If you have the cd's making iso's from them is easy. You can use the
dd command from the terminal to creat
Once upon a time I had Windows XP, Windows 7 and Windows 10 VMs running
under VirtualBox on Debian 10 or earlier. Now I need one for some
primitive, but essential program I cannot remember how I created the VMs
(Gene's disease, 88 come Sunday) and would welcome any reminders.
The source
The disk use Virtio driver with no buffer and unmap.
Am 28.11.24 um 13:01 schrieb basti:
Hello,
I have move a Win10 KVM guest to new hardware and than upgrade this
guest to Windows 11.
KVM Host Hardware is:
- 2x Xeon E5-2697A v4
- 128GB RAM
- 4x SAMSUNG MZ7LM1T9HCJM as raid 10
KVM Guest
Hello,
I have move a Win10 KVM guest to new hardware and than upgrade this
guest to Windows 11.
KVM Host Hardware is:
- 2x Xeon E5-2697A v4
- 128GB RAM
- 4x SAMSUNG MZ7LM1T9HCJM as raid 10
KVM Guest:
4x qemu64 CPU (1 Socket/ 4 Core/ 1 Threads)
8GB RAM
No graphic tablet
No Ballon driver
On 11/24/24 12:06, Hans wrote:
Hello Alexander,
thank you very much for your response.
Short answer: Not usable.
Hmm, that is a pity.
Long answer:
As a rule of thumb, never trust AliExpress product descriptions.
+100 or more.
I bought a voron trident, $1300 + ship, 3 years ago? Carton a
On 24.11.2024 22:05, Hans wrote:
Long answer:
As a rule of thumb, never trust AliExpress product descriptions.
You have to always look up _specifications_ on Intel official website or
websites of other vendors.Seller claims this device has N100 CPU [1],
but in Characteristics section it is actual
> I am frustrated that I cannot perceive any performance improvements in
> CPUs since the 4th Gen i7s. This is likely due to the software I use
> does not gain any perceptible improvement from running on
> a faster CPU?
Not really, it's simply that, since the end of [Dennard
scaling](https://en.wi
On Monday, 25-11-2024 at 03:39 Stefan Monnier wrote:
> > a CPU that is less than the performance of an i5.
>
> Side note: such a description is not very useful because a 10 year old
> i7 can be significantly less powerful than a recent i3.
While ymmv is valid, I favour i7 CPUs (and Ryzen 7) ov
On Monday, 25-11-2024 at 04:29 rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> Thanks to all who replied. With only 4 GB, I'm not interested in that
> laptop,
> but I was maybe most concerned about S-mode (in Windows).
Me too. There are many Windows programs I like to install that I do not wa
On Sun, Nov 24, 2024 at 12:52 PM wrote:
>
> Ahh, ok, thanks -- that's pretty clear that there is no memory slot, and, even
> though I wouldn't use the laptop for much -- to demo some software "on the
> road", 4 MB is very limiting.
The SSD might be soldered onto the motherboard, too. I found that
You're mostly right, I'm not terribly sorry, but I don't use it on every email
or post I make -- on debian-user typically only the first post in a thread I
might start or possibly in the first comment I make to a thread.
I've fixed the sig separator.
But let me ask you, do you complain to those
On Sun, Nov 24, 2024 at 12:34:17PM -0500, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> But let me ask you, do you complain to those that quote all or most of the
> previous posts in a thread when they have no relevant comment about most of
> what they've quoted?
Now and then, yes. Though it often doesn't have m
Thanks to all who replied. With only 4 GB, I'm not interested in that laptop,
but I was maybe most concerned about S-mode (in Windows).
I assume that would not keep me from installing Linux, I mean, presumably I
can still get into the BIOS (or the newer (to me) style of BIOS) and load
Hello Alexander,
thank you very much for your response.
> Short answer: Not usable.
Hmm, that is a pity.
> Long answer:
> As a rule of thumb, never trust AliExpress product descriptions.
> You have to always look up _specifications_ on Intel official website or
> websites of other vendors.Sel
> a CPU that is less than the performance of an i5.
Side note: such a description is not very useful because a 10 year old
i7 can be significantly less powerful than a recent i3.
Stefan
Hans wrote:
> I discovered some small laptops (10 inch and 7 inch), with an Intel N100
> processor, up to 16 GB RAM and ump to 1 TB disk. But shipped with windows.
>
> 2 questions:
>
> 1. Does one have any experience, if the N100 cpu is usable for fluently work?
> Thes
Ahh, ok, thanks -- that's pretty clear that there is no memory slot, and, even
though I wouldn't use the laptop for much -- to demo some software "on the
road", 4 MB is very limiting.
On Saturday, November 23, 2024 06:39:12 PM George at Clug wrote:
> The link you provided about the Laptop states
On 24.11.2024 14:21, Hans wrote:
Following the discussion here, iI would like to ask something.
I discovered some small laptops (10 inch and 7 inch), with an Intel N100
processor, up to 16 GB RAM and ump to 1 TB disk. But shipped with windows.
2 questions:
1. Does one have any experience, if
Following the discussion here, iI would like to ask something.
I discovered some small laptops (10 inch and 7 inch), with an Intel N100
processor, up to 16 GB RAM and ump to 1 TB disk. But shipped with windows.
2 questions:
1. Does one have any experience, if the N100 cpu is usable for
ndable if your budget is low.
This Asus thing is a honeytrap. It'll trap you into Windows, and it'll
trap you into a box you'll have to throw away once the next Windows
version comes out. At least that is what Asus gets from Microsoft for
doing this -- but I'd guess they get some
On Sat, Nov 23, 2024 at 10:07:57PM +, Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:
> On Sat, Nov 23, 2024 at 03:38:56PM -0500, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> > I see an attractive deal on a laptop that is shipped with Windows 11 in
> > S-mode
> >
> > I assume (I know), but am not sure
Oops, failed to send to the list -- resending.
On Saturday, November 23, 2024 06:15:45 PM George at Clug wrote:
> On Sunday, 24-11-2024 at 07:44 rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> > Ahh, with respect to RAM, there is an empty SODIMM slot and at least one
> > site has installed an 8 GB stick there for a t
Hi,
The link you provided about the Laptop states: "Memory Slot (Available)
0", indicating you would not be able to upgrade the memory.
I believe you can put in an M.2 NVMe and then install Linux to that NVMe, that
way you can still boot Windows as well as Linux?
I would be
/N82E16834236521?Item=N82E16834236521]
> > [ASUS 15.6" Vivobook Go Laptop, FHD, Intel Pentium N6000 Quad Core, 4GB
> > RAM, 64GB SSD, Windows 11 in S Mode, Star Black, L510KA-NB21]]
>
>
On Sat, Nov 23, 2024 at 03:38:56PM -0500, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> I see an attractive deal on a laptop that is shipped with Windows 11 in
> S-mode
> (link below).
>
> I assume (I know), but am not sure that I will be able to load Linux on that
> laptop -- can anyon
On Sat, 23 Nov 2024 15:38:56 -0500
rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> 64GB SSD
Sorry, I can't tell you for sure if Linux will load on one of these, not
having done the experiment.
I can tell you that I would not plan on dual booting. I have Windows 11
on two of my machines here, and have sh
On Sat, Nov 23, 2024 at 03:38:56PM -0500, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
>
> Rh Kramer
>
> --
> rhk
>
> | Sorry about the sig -- some people think it is too long -- it is my soapbox.
No, you aren't, and you know you aren't. So drop the fake apology. Over
40 lines of sig on an approx 20 line email! At
Go Laptop, FHD, Intel Pentium N6000 Quad Core, 4GB
> RAM, 64GB SSD, Windows 11 in S Mode, Star Black, L510KA-NB21]]
I see an attractive deal on a laptop that is shipped with Windows 11 in S-mode
(link below).
I assume (I know), but am not sure that I will be able to load Linux on that
laptop -- can anyone tell me for sure?
PS: I'd also want to expand the RAM and I have to find out if I can do that.
c
Henrik Ahlgren writes:
> Perhaps try Magic-Wormhole:
>
> https://magic-wormhole.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
>
> apt install magic-wormhole
Very interesting, thank you. Maybe not that great for LAN use but I
might have have a use for it.
On Mon, Nov 18, 2024 at 5:08 PM Anssi Saari
wrote:
> Christian Britz writes:
> > Am 16.11.24 um 05:42 schrieb Greg Wooledge:
> >
> >> If your Windows machine can run an ssh daemon that you can log into,
> >> then you could use it as your SOCKS proxy, though I hav
Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Sun, Nov 17, 2024 at 09:34:00 +, debian-u...@howorth.org.uk
> wrote:
> > "Russell L. Harris" wrote:
> > > On Sat, Nov 16, 2024 at 01:03:34PM -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> > > >I've been thinking about this some more, and I'd like to try to
> > > >list all the way
Christian Britz writes:
> Am 16.11.24 um 05:42 schrieb Greg Wooledge:
>
>> If your Windows machine can run an ssh daemon that you can log into,
>> then you could use it as your SOCKS proxy, though I have no idea how
>> you'd go about setting up an sshd on Windows.
&g
page is fingerprinting for the sake
of protection against web scrapping or DDoS. Missed hardware graphics
acceleration might add some score to classify your profile (new and thus
unknown to trackers) as a bot.
Can you access the site from Windows immediately after getting 429 from
Linux? It may
On Sun, Nov 17, 2024 at 08:33:25PM -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote:
https://www.iplocation.net/ip-lookup reports a location of Texas for
this address, so server-side Geo IP blocking seems unlikely.
A rural area a little south of Austin. My ISP is RTA (rtatel.com).
If no browser extensions have b
On Mon, Nov 18, 2024 at 04:20:27 +, Russell L. Harris wrote:
> On Mon, Nov 18, 2024 at 10:30:06AM +0700, Max Nikulin wrote:
> > On 18/11/2024 09:47, Russell L. Harris wrote:
> > > On Mon, Nov 18, 2024 at 09:18:27AM +0700, Max Nikulin wrote:
> > > > You may try to open Web Developer Tools (under
On Mon, Nov 18, 2024 at 01:16:57 +, Russell L. Harris wrote:
> With the approx server, reinstallation is quick, and this being a
> spare machine, there is no need to install a bunch of packages and set
> up the desktop. Anyway, the installation is complete, and now I have
> a pristine installa
On Mon, Nov 18, 2024 at 10:30:06AM +0700, Max Nikulin wrote:
On 18/11/2024 09:47, Russell L. Harris wrote:
On Mon, Nov 18, 2024 at 09:18:27AM +0700, Max Nikulin wrote:
You may try to open Web Developer Tools (under "More tools" in the
hamburger menu, [F12] or [Ctrl+Shift+I]).
Are there any er
On 18/11/2024 09:47, Russell L. Harris wrote:
On Mon, Nov 18, 2024 at 09:18:27AM +0700, Max Nikulin wrote:
You may try to open Web Developer Tools (under "More tools" in the
hamburger menu, [F12] or [Ctrl+Shift+I]).
Are there any errors in Console ([Ctrl+Shift+K])?
A bunch. Too many for me
On Sun, Nov 17, 2024 at 09:28:14PM -0500, Timothy M Butterworth wrote:
I tested https://www.chewy.com/ on a clean install of FireFox ESR with no
plugins and the site works fine.
Try purging Firefox and reinstalling.
sudo apt purge firefox-esr
sudo apt install firefox-esr
Google Chrome also wo
On Mon, Nov 18, 2024 at 02:47:32 +, Russell L. Harris wrote:
> On Mon, Nov 18, 2024 at 09:18:27AM +0700, Max Nikulin wrote:
> > Hope, you did *not* log in into a Firefox account to sync bookmarks,
> > add-ons, and some preferences.
>
> No, I did not.
>
>
> > You may try to open Web Developer
On Mon, Nov 18, 2024 at 09:18:27AM +0700, Max Nikulin wrote:
Hope, you did *not* log in into a Firefox account to sync bookmarks,
add-ons, and some preferences.
No, I did not.
You may try to open Web Developer Tools (under "More tools" in the
hamburger menu, [F12] or [Ctrl+Shift+I]).
Are t
On Mon, Nov 18, 2024 at 02:21:20 +, Russell L. Harris wrote:
> On Sun, Nov 17, 2024 at 08:33:25PM -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> > https://www.iplocation.net/ip-lookup reports a location of Texas for
> > this address, so server-side Geo IP blocking seems unlikely.
>
> A rural area a little sout
I tested https://www.chewy.com/ on a clean install of FireFox ESR with no
plugins and the site works fine.
Try purging Firefox and reinstalling.
sudo apt purge firefox-esr
sudo apt install firefox-esr
Google Chrome also works fine with no issues as well.
--
⢀⣴⠾⠻⢶⣦⠀
⣾⠁⢠⠒⠀⣿⡁ Debian - The univer
On Mon, Nov 18, 2024 at 01:16:57 +, Russell L. Harris wrote:
The only customization I made was to install xfce rather than gnome.
I am using the browser (Firefox ESR) which was installed automatically
with the desktop (xfce).
Hope, you did *not* log in into a Firefox account to sync bookma
On Sun, Nov 17, 2024 at 02:06:12PM -0700, Charles Curley wrote:
On Sun, 17 Nov 2024 17:39:36 +
"Russell L. Harris" wrote:
I have here a spare machine. In the hope of resolving the matter in
the company of experts, I propose to do another installation of
Debian, using netinst with the "exp
On Sun, Nov 17, 2024 at 02:41:24PM +, Andy Smith wrote:
Anyway, as I think we all mostly agree, there is some misconfiguration
going on here that is causing OP's web browsing experience on Debian to
be compromised.
I have here a spare machine. In the hope of resolving the matter in
the com
On Sun, 17 Nov 2024 17:39:36 +
"Russell L. Harris" wrote:
> I have here a spare machine. In the hope of resolving the matter in
> the company of experts, I propose to do another installation of
> Debian, using netinst with the "expert" option.
Possibly this is overkill. Try shutting down yo
On Sunday 17 November 2024 12:11:37 pm Joe wrote:
> On Sun, 17 Nov 2024 09:47:20 -0600
> John Hasler wrote:
>
> > Joe writes:
> > > Yep, if a web designer can't put a single character on a screen
> > > without using JS, the rest of his offering is not likely to be worth
> > > making an effort to
On Sun, Nov 17, 2024 at 05:39:36PM +, Russell L. Harris wrote:
> On Sun, Nov 17, 2024 at 02:41:24PM +, Andy Smith wrote:
> > Anyway, as I think we all mostly agree, there is some misconfiguration
> > going on here that is causing OP's web browsing experience on Debian to
> > be compromised.
Joe writes:
> Yep, if a web designer can't put a single character on a screen
> without using JS, the rest of his offering is not likely to be worth
> making an effort to look at.
They don't use JS. They use "website builders" that produce unreadable
masses of HTML and JS that pull in chunks of J
Hi,
On Sun, Nov 17, 2024 at 03:24:55PM +, Joe wrote:
> On Sun, 17 Nov 2024 09:30:20 -0500
> Greg Wooledge wrote:
> > Except the OP in this thread claims he has never disabled Javascript
> > (didn't even know what that *meant*), and in fact does not yet know
> > what's causing the problem.
>
.
So, if OP is using things like pihole or adblockers that can happen. If
there is some reason why their Debian machine can't reach some hosts
that their Windows one can then that can happen.
It is likely that the debug console of Firefox (for example) would list
remote assets that have been blo
On Sun, Nov 17, 2024 at 09:34:00 +, debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote:
> "Russell L. Harris" wrote:
> > On Sat, Nov 16, 2024 at 01:03:34PM -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> > >I've been thinking about this some more, and I'd like to try to list
> > >all the ways the OP might have caused this to fai
On Sun, 17 Nov 2024, debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote:
"Roy J. Tellason, Sr." wrote:
... if a web site wants to be *that* obnoxious I'll often decide that
they're not worth the trouble of bothering with. :-)
+1
My +1 as well, Roger
"Roy J. Tellason, Sr." wrote:
> I routinely get that "blank white page" result in firefox here, and
> find that fiddling with the settings in the noscript plugin often
> fixes it. OTOH, if a web site wants to be *that* obnoxious I'll
> often decide that they're not worth the trouble of bothe
"Russell L. Harris" wrote:
> On Sat, Nov 16, 2024 at 01:03:34PM -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> >I've been thinking about this some more, and I'd like to try to list
> >all the ways the OP might have caused this to fail.
> >
> >We start by observing that nobody else has been able to reproduce the
>
Am 16.11.24 um 05:42 schrieb Greg Wooledge:
> If your Windows machine can run an ssh daemon that you can log into,
> then you could use it as your SOCKS proxy, though I have no idea how
> you'd go about setting up an sshd on Windows.
Should not be to hard using Windows' bu
you go to any web site that reports your IP address (for example,
<http://wooledge.org/myip.cgi>), do you get the same address from
the Debian system and from the Windows system?
Same address: 38.100.76.16
I am familiar with blacklists.
I plan to install noscript this evening.
RLH
ple edit their /etc/hosts files to prevent
> connections to various hosts, and then they often forget they've
> done this. The OP might want to check whether their /etc/hosts file
> has been modified. Or, if the Debian system is running its own
> nameserver, the nameserver
ether based on the client's IP address or
user agent or cookies or any other data, the web server might be
rejecting this client's requests specifically.
If you go to any web site that reports your IP address (for example,
<http://wooledge.org/myip.cgi>), do you get the same address from
the Debian system and from the Windows system?
what did I do to disallow javascript?
It may well be that you have permissions like javascript and cross-site
cookies tightened up so far on Linux that some sites don't work. You
then perhaps go to a Windows machine with no such protections in order
to make that work.
I have installe
t to check whether their /etc/hosts file
has been modified.
Pristine Debian-12 installation.
Or, if the Debian system is running its own
nameserver, the nameserver's configuration should be checked (or
temporarily switch the local nameserver to the one used by the
Windows systems).
A
On 11/16/24 13:18, Russell L. Harris wrote:
On Sat, Nov 16, 2024 at 01:15:17PM +, Andy Smith wrote:
With javascript disabled for chewy,com I get a blank white page with
Debian 12 and Firefox. Allowing javascript seems to result in a fully
functional site.
I know nothing about javascript; h
system is running its own
nameserver, the nameserver's configuration should be checked (or
temporarily switch the local nameserver to the one used by the
Windows systems).
Anything else?
On Sat, 2024-11-16 at 12:30 +0200, Anssi Saari wrote:
> > Is there an easy way to send the message (or just the URL) to the
> > Window$ machine?
>
> Use a pastebin? Setup mail in Windows? Connect to the Windows machine
> via remote desktop and remotely use the browser the
On Sat, 16 Nov 2024 01:33:21 -0500
Timothy M Butterworth wrote:
> I get to the Chewy website with no issues using: Trixie, KDE and
> Google Chrome browser. If you are getting a plain white screen on
> Firefox then it is likely a firefox issue and not a debian issue. Try
> installing Google Chrome
that you have permissions like javascript and cross-site
cookies tightened up so far on Linux that some sites don't work. You
then perhaps go to a Windows machine with no such protections in order
to make that work.
Long term I would suggest that isn't ideal and maybe relaxing some
securit
le to Debian.
>
> Is there an easy way to send the message (or just the URL) to the
> Window$ machine?
My Linux machine always has an open SSH port. The windows command
line box (aka console) is preposterous (what is not, in Windows?),
but better than in older versions. And they have an S
the response link typically is a URL consisting of dozens of
> characters, and it is the URL of a chewy.com web site or another web
> site which is hostile to Debian.
>
> Is there an easy way to send the message (or just the URL) to the
> Window$ machine?
Use a pastebin? Setup mail
ping). Life is too short to mess around
> with things which can be avoided.
>
Would running remmina (or something similar) on you Linux systems
allow you to access the Windows box? I do this so I can run some
Epson scanner software on a windows 10 systme with control from my
Debian (xfce in
On Fri, Nov 15, 2024 at 11:31 PM Russell L. Harris
wrote:
> Debian machines are on the 192.168.1.xxx network. I keep a W10
> machine on the 192.168.2.x network, primarily to access the chewy.com
> web site which, since about June, serves my Debian machines a blank
> white page.
I get to the Ch
On Fri, Nov 15, 2024 at 11:42:24PM -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote:
Most importantly, though, I'd try to figure out why your browser on
Debian is having problems. If you create a brand new user account,
and run the browser with no add-ons, does it also have problems with
this web site? Maybe it's so
Debian machines are on the 192.168.1.xxx network. I keep a W10
machine on the 192.168.2.x network, primarily to access the chewy.com
web site which, since about June, serves my Debian machines a blank
white page. Only one of the Debian machines is set up for mail.
Now and then a mail message co
it involves running
"ssh -D ..." on the client (Debian) system, logging into another
system (could be a VPS or something) which can reach the web server
without problems. Then you'd point the web browser at the proxy.
If your Windows machine can run an ssh daemon that you can log into
On 10/4/24 15:56, Gary Dale wrote:
Thanks everyone. The exact solution was provided by Detlef - change the
machine type to pc-i440fx-2.0.
Just FYI: I just had to change it to pc-i440fx-2.11.
I'm on Sid and some libvirt/qemu upgrade seems to have removed
pc-i440fx-2.0.
This will probably hit
On Saturday, 05-10-2024 at 13:56 Max Nikulin wrote:
> On 04/10/2024 20:56, Gary Dale wrote:
> > I found another issue on one of the machines - spice was no longer
> > supported either
>
> I still use spice (remote-viewer from virt-viewer) for Linux guests on
> bookworm, but I start qemu direc
On 04/10/2024 20:56, Gary Dale wrote:
I found another issue on one of the machines - spice was no longer
supported either
I still use spice (remote-viewer from virt-viewer) for Linux guests on
bookworm, but I start qemu directly with "-display spice-app,gl=on". I
have seen notices that it is
On 2024-10-02 20:14, Gary Dale wrote:
I'm running Debian/Stable on an AMD64 system. I have a number of
kvm/qemu virtual machines running on it, including Home Assistant and
a Samba DC, along with multiple Windows VMs. Most of them are working
fine.
However I found a need to fire up a
On 10/3/24 06:35, Alexander V. Makartsev wrote:
And change it to:
hvm
I'm using 'pc-i440fx-2.0' on Sid/Trixie and XP runs w/o problems.
For Win7 when I did the change it wanted a new activation, but XP
was fine with the change...
Detlef
On 03.10.2024 13:27, Timothy M Butterworth wrote:
On Thu, Oct 3, 2024 at 4:18 AM Alexander V. Makartsev
wrote:
...
hvm
My machines in Trixie are: machine="pc-q35-9.0">hvm
When dealing with legacy OS like WinXP I prefer to be on a safe side and
choose older module, which emulates a
On Thu, Oct 3, 2024 at 4:18 AM Alexander V. Makartsev
wrote:
> On 03.10.2024 05:14, Gary Dale wrote:
>
> I'm running Debian/Stable on an AMD64 system. I have a number of kvm/qemu
> virtual machines running on it, including Home Assistant and a Samba DC,
> along with multiple
On Thursday, 03-10-2024 at 10:14 Gary Dale wrote:
> I'm running Debian/Stable on an AMD64 system. I have a number of
> kvm/qemu virtual machines running on it, including Home Assistant and a
> Samba DC, along with multiple Windows VMs. Most of them are working fine.
>
&g
On 03.10.2024 05:14, Gary Dale wrote:
I'm running Debian/Stable on an AMD64 system. I have a number of
kvm/qemu virtual machines running on it, including Home Assistant and
a Samba DC, along with multiple Windows VMs. Most of them are working
fine.
However I found a need to fire up a
On 3/10/24 12:41, Max Nikulin wrote:
On 03/10/2024 07:14, Gary Dale wrote:
host does not support domain type kvm with machine "pc-0.12' for
virtualization type 'hvm' with architecture 'x86_64'
[...]
I haven't tried using the Windows XP VMs in years,
I
On 03/10/2024 07:14, Gary Dale wrote:
host does not support domain type kvm with machine "pc-0.12' for
virtualization type 'hvm' with architecture 'x86_64'
[...]
I haven't tried using the Windows XP VMs in years,
I have never tried virt-manager, so
On 3/10/24 08:14, Gary Dale wrote:
I haven't tried using the Windows XP VMs in years, so I have no idea
when the problem originated. I do know at one point they worked.
Any ideas on what's going wrong and how to fix it?
I fired up an XP VM on a recent windows machine using
I'm running Debian/Stable on an AMD64 system. I have a number of
kvm/qemu virtual machines running on it, including Home Assistant and a
Samba DC, along with multiple Windows VMs. Most of them are working fine.
However I found a need to fire up an old Windows XP VM but I can't get
i
Hi,
I noticed the below issue today.
I think it only affects certain configuration of dual booting so not
too many people should be affected.
Does anyone know of people who have been affected?
https://www.theverge.com/2024/8/21/24225108/microsoft-security-update-windows-linux-dual-boot
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