est OS. At least, this is what it would
>> appear to be (it might be simply swapping, but that slows down guest
>> execution speed by orders of magnitude, so it is effectively frozen)
>>
>>
>> B.
>>
>> *From: *Berillions
>> *Sent: *Friday, 7 October
wn guest
>> execution speed by orders of magnitude, so it is effectively frozen)
>>
>>
>> B.
>>
>> From: Berillions
>> Sent: Friday, 7 October 2016 20:00
>> To: Jayme Howard
>> Cc: mar...@schrodt.org; vfio-users
>> Subject: Re: [vfio-users] Wi
gt; *Sent: *Friday, 7 October 2016 20:00
> *To: *Jayme Howard
> *Cc: *mar...@schrodt.org; vfio-users
> *Subject: *Re: [vfio-users] Win10 Guest, stability is horrible and freeze
> quickly
>
> Very very very things. If i set more than 2GB Memory Ram in Virt-Manager
> for the Guest,
Perhaps you have something eating into RAM of the host. I had my host freezing when I forgot to limit memory utilization in the ZFS. It does not matter what eats into your host RAM - since qemu is just a regular u
Very very very things. If i set more than 2GB Memory Ram in Virt-Manager
for the Guest, i have artefacts and freeze. If I set 2GB like actually, the
guest works perfectly.
So i don't know if it will be good for gaming even if i set Windows swap to
10GB ...
2016-10-07 19:43 GMT+02:00 Jayme Howard
Put the 960 into the one that goes 4x if you're that worried about it, but
it shouldn't be a huge deal. I don't know if the 960 can even saturate a
4x. It might be able to, but since it's a lower performance card anyway,
it shouldn't really matter.
On Fri, Oct 7, 2016 at 12:36 PM, Berillions wr
I have two PCI-E 3.0 16x slot,
The first with the 960 and the second for the 970. if the second slot is
used, his bandwidth will not be 16x but 4x.
The others slots are only PCI-E 3.0 1x ...
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Ok,
I will follow this procedure :
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/PCI_passthrough_via_
OVMF#Plugging_your_guest_GPU_in_an_unisolated_CPU-based_PCIe_slot
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Hey,
On 10/07/2016 06:51 PM, Berillions wrote:
> My PC Configuration :
> - Debian Jessie 64-bits
> - Proc : Intel i7-6700
> - MB : MSI B150 PC MATE
> - 32G Memory RAM
>
> IOMMU-Groups :
>
> /sys/kernel/iommu_groups/1/devices/:01:00.0 ---> Nvidia GTX960
> /sys/kernel/iommu_groups/1/devices/00
My PC Configuration :
- Debian Jessie 64-bits
- Proc : Intel i7-6700
- MB : MSI B150 PC MATE
- 32G Memory RAM
IOMMU-Groups :
/sys/kernel/iommu_groups/0/devices/:00:00.0
/sys/kernel/iommu_groups/1/devices/:00:01.0
/sys/kernel/iommu_groups/1/devices/:01:00.0 ---> Nvidia GTX960
/sys/kern
Hey,
> I have a big problem (still the same) with my Win10 guest.
> Linux use is own Nvidia graphic card (Gtx960) and the Guest a Nvidia Gtx970.
> I use Debian Jessie with Qemu 2.5, libvirt 1.0.1 and virt-manager 1.4.0
What CPU and motherboard?
Could you list the IOMMU-groups your host and gues G
Hi guys,
I have a big problem (still the same) with my Win10 guest.
Linux use is own Nvidia graphic card (Gtx960) and the Guest a Nvidia Gtx970.
I use Debian Jessie with Qemu 2.5, libvirt 1.0.1 and virt-manager 1.4.0
1- I add to /etc/default/grub to "GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT"
intel_iommu=on def
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