being a lot like using a poor wireless mouse.
My thanks to everyone who took time to help me.
by the way anyone know WHY BIOS is over control of that CPU feature?
It is quite scary to know that my FreeBSD system isn't really under
FreeBSD control.
_
On 07/15/2012 02:39, Mike Meyer wrote:
> On Sat, 14 Jul 2012 13:29:59 -0700
> Doug Barton wrote:
>
>> For the OP, make sure you have the latest BIOS. I had a similar problem
>> with vt-x and it was solved by a later BIOS upgrade.
>
> And *that* solved the problem. The performance is much better,
On Sat, 14 Jul 2012 13:29:59 -0700
Doug Barton wrote:
> For the OP, make sure you have the latest BIOS. I had a similar problem
> with vt-x and it was solved by a later BIOS upgrade.
And *that* solved the problem. The performance is much better, now
being a lot like using a poor wireless mouse.
On Sa., 14. Jul. 2012 12:11:41 CEST, Mike Meyer wrote:
> I just set up a system designed to handle lots of VBox VM's: a 6-core
> SandyBridge processor with 32GB of ram on a FreeBSD 8.3-STABLE host.
>
> Unfortunately, once I got it set up, I found that VBox guest
> performance simply sucks. The *
i would rather bet on linux addon kernel modules you have to install.
Are you talking about the guest additions? They're already installed
(on a VM that was running on an older Core 2 CPU). Performance sucks.
something must be wrong with linux interacting with virtualbox.
Won't help you as i
On Sat, 14 Jul 2012, Warren Block wrote:
In a VM with stock settings (Linux 64-bit), Ubuntu 12.04 LTS Desktop Live CD
works okay, installed also seems to work okay. The mouse is a little draggy
but usable, like using a wireless mouse. kern.hz is set to 100 on the host
(9-stable, er 9.1-BETA1
For the OP, make sure you have the latest BIOS. I had a similar problem
with vt-x and it was solved by a later BIOS upgrade.
hth,
Doug
--
Change is hard.
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On Sat, Jul 14, 2012 at 2:27 PM, Mike Meyer wrote:
>
> 64-bit Ubuntu LTS 12.04. I moved a VM from the previous system, where
> it worked fine (same build of FreeBSD, same build of VirtualBox). The
> OS seems to be irrelevant. Windows XP and 7 and mumble all have this
> problem, *if* I have VT-X en
On Sat, 14 Jul 2012, Mike Meyer wrote:
On Sat, 14 Jul 2012 13:13:50 -0600 (MDT)
Warren Block wrote:
On Sat, 14 Jul 2012, Mike Meyer wrote:
Can you give a specific Linux version that has problems? I'm willing to
download and test it on this i5/9-stable/amd64 system. Haven't noticed
any proble
On Sat, 14 Jul 2012 13:13:50 -0600 (MDT)
Warren Block wrote:
> On Sat, 14 Jul 2012, Mike Meyer wrote:
> Can you give a specific Linux version that has problems? I'm willing to
> download and test it on this i5/9-stable/amd64 system. Haven't noticed
> any problems, but I only occasionally boot
On Sat, 14 Jul 2012, Mike Meyer wrote:
I just set up a system designed to handle lots of VBox VM's: a 6-core
SandyBridge processor with 32GB of ram on a FreeBSD 8.3-STABLE host.
Unfortunately, once I got it set up, I found that VBox guest
performance simply sucks. The *mouse* isn't responsive.
On Sat, 14 Jul 2012 20:27:11 +0200 (CEST)
Wojciech Puchar wrote:
> > would have asked about that. My problem is sucky virtualbox
> > performance, on any guest that has VT-X emulation enabled (which means
> > all 64 bit guests).
> i would rather bet on linux addon kernel modules you have to install
Wojciech Puchar wrote:
CPU: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E31220 @ 3.10GHz (3100.03-MHz K8-class CPU)
If that the one normally listed as E3-1220? If so, it's a Sandy Bridge
yes.
processor. If not, then I have not idea what it is.
so it is. it have working AES-NI.
I am such a kind of person that
On Sat, Jul 14, 2012 at 06:11:41AM -0400, Mike Meyer wrote:
> I just set up a system designed to handle lots of VBox VM's: a 6-core
> SandyBridge processor with 32GB of ram on a FreeBSD 8.3-STABLE host.
>
> Unfortunately, once I got it set up, I found that VBox guest
> performance simply sucks.
On Sat, 14 Jul 2012 19:56:22 +0200 (CEST)
Wojciech Puchar wrote:
> CPU: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E31220 @ 3.10GHz (3100.03-MHz K8-class CPU)
If that the one normally listed as E3-1220? If so, it's a Sandy Bridge
processor. If not, then I have not idea what it is.
> > Unfortunately, once I got it se
SandyBridge processor with 32GB of ram on a FreeBSD 8.3-STABLE host.
i am using virtualbox but no linux guest, only windows.
the newest CPU i have is
CPU: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E31220 @ 3.10GHz (3100.03-MHz K8-class CPU)
Unfortunately, once I got it set up, I found that VBox guest
performance
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