> I am a novice like yourself ...
> Can it be that the guest OS is going to "hibernate" or "suspend" or so
automatically after a defined period of inactivity and you just
misinterpret this as kvm/qemu behavior?
> best ... Gunnar
In order to remove this possibility, I ran the following command in m
I am a novice using qemu to run LUbuntu in a Mac osx host. I used this guide
https://graspingtech.com/ubuntu-desktop-18.04-virtual-machine-macos-qemu/
Using this I can run the LUbuntu VM. However, if I minimize the qemu window
or simply not have it as the active window, the vm slows down to a halt
Trying to figure out how to reply to a thread
I think what they're observing, and I may be wrong, is that either their
desktop environment, or Qemu, or their OS, is de-prioritizing Qemu when it
loses foreground focus, and causing it to see timer events and processing time
at a much lower priority than when it is in the foreground.
Alternat
I am a novice like yourself ...
Can it be that the guest OS is going to "hibernate" or "suspend" or so
automatically after a defined period of inactivity and you just
misinterpret this as kvm/qemu behavior?
best ... Gunnar
On 20.01.21 08:20, Asad Ali wrote:
> I am a novice using qemu to run LUbu
I am a novice using qemu to run LUbuntu in a Mac osx host. I used this guide
https://graspingtech.com/ubuntu-desktop-18.04-virtual-machine-macos-qemu/
Using this I can run the LUbuntu VM. However, if I minimize the qemu window
or simply not have it as the active window, the vm slows down to a halt