On 11/16/2016 06:16 PM, Yaniv Dary wrote:
On Tue, Nov 15, 2016 at 9:08 PM, John Nguyen <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

    Sorry I'm quite new to this

    Thank you Yaniv,


    I'm running CentOS 7.2, with kernel 3.10.0-327.28.3 on both my guest
    vm and ovirt host

    both the QXL driver and the spice-vdagent are installed on my guest vm.
    xorg-x11-drv-qxl version 0.1.1 18.el7
    spice-vdagent-0.14.0-10.el7

    I'm running ovirt 4.0.4.4

    John



    On Tue, Nov 15, 2016 at 11:50 AM, Yaniv Dary <[email protected]
    <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

        Missing information on:
        - What OS is running on the guest ?
        - Is the QXL driver installed on the guest ?
        - Is spice-vdagent installed and is running on the guest ?

        Thanks

        Yaniv Dary Technical Product Manager Red Hat Israel

        On Fri, Nov 4, 2016 at 3:40 AM, John Nguyen wrote:
            Hello,

            I'm very sorry if this question has been covered before.
            I've recently deployed the Ovirt 4 release on a CentOS 7.2
            host.  I'm delighted with the dashboard improvements over
            the 3.6 release. However I'm experiencing an issue with
            trying to resize my spice console pass 1024x768 resolution.
            The vm to shows an "Unknown Display".

            Any guidance would be greatly appreciated.

            Yours,
            John N



Hello John,

This seems to be unrelated to Spice, and also happens with VNC
and without QXL device.

I suppose you are trying to change the resolution from within
the guest using system Settings -> Displays.

Please try the following methods:
1. Simply enlarge the "console" window with your mouse
   on the client side. With Spice (and vdagent running),
   that should adjust your guest resolution (although
   may not be exactly 1024x768). Or

2. In your guest, try to adjust resolution using xrandr:
   open a gnome-terminal and run
   xrandr | grep Virtual  ( make sure "Virtual-0" is the name to use)
   xrandr | grep '*'      ( see the resolution before/after the change)
   xrandr --output Virtual-0 --mode 1024x768  (set the resolution)

Hope that helps,
    Uri.

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