On 06/03/2010 11:25 PM, Phil Meyer wrote:
> You can also 'trick' it by using the system-administration-display and
> setting the display type to generic LCD at whatever resolution is
> smaller that your actual display.
Thank you for the hint! I got higher resolution but with a performance
that is
On 06/03/2010 11:29 PM, Christoph A. wrote:
> Traceback (most recent call last):
> File "/usr/share/virt-manager/virtManager/engine.py", line 799, in
> run_domain
> vm.startup()
> File "/usr/share/virt-manager/virtManager/domain.py", line 1256, in startup
> self._backend.create()
> File "/usr/lib64
On 06/03/2010 10:50 PM, Gilboa Davara wrote:
> On Thu, 2010-06-03 at 18:51 +0200, Christoph A. wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> I'm running a kvm guest (F13) on a F13 host but didn't managed to get a
>> reasonable screen resolution in the guest OS. I used cirrus and vga but
>> was not able to get a resolution h
On 06/03/2010 10:51 AM, Christoph A. wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm running a kvm guest (F13) on a F13 host but didn't managed to get a
> reasonable screen resolution in the guest OS. I used cirrus and vga but
> was not able to get a resolution higher then 800x600.
> I tried also to manually add some resolut
On Thu, 2010-06-03 at 18:51 +0200, Christoph A. wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm running a kvm guest (F13) on a F13 host but didn't managed to get a
> reasonable screen resolution in the guest OS. I used cirrus and vga but
> was not able to get a resolution higher then 800x600.
> I tried also to manually ad
On Thu, 03 Jun 2010 18:51:44 +0200
Christoph A. wrote:
> Would be great if I could get at least a resolution of 1280x960.
> Is someone using kvm-qemu with decent resolutions?
I basically don't use the native KVM console display at all. I
create a VNC server and connect to it with a vnc client. Yo