> On Jan 26, 2016, at 11:09, Will Marler <w...@wmarler.com> wrote:
>
> Found this on the Arch wiki, but setting the kvm option didn't change
> anything:
> https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/PCI_passthrough_via_OVMF#Make_Nvidia.27s_GeForce_Experience_work
Hi Will,
That ignore MSRS config is just to ignore the guest's request on CPU frequency
scaling as it is not relevant. Some games need this config and I'm pretty sure
it's safe. I had mine ignored also.
> And I'm not sure what the unintended consequences might be that the Wiki
> warns about, so I'll be setting that back. Pretty sure I can optimize
> manually.
The NVIDIA GeForce Experience optimization is basically auto set the most
descent performance/picture quality based on presets available on NVIDIA's
database and your hardware combination. It doesn't do any optimization magic
actually.
> And yea ... I did notice that shutting down the VM and powering it back on
> was not the same as a reboot, according to the Windows 10 system. I had
> changed the hostname, powered off, powered on ... Windows said "the name will
> be changed when the computer reboots." O.o
I noticed that reboots are often slower than power off and power on again in
Windows 10. Also I had this CPU recognize issue also in both my physical and
virtual machine. On physical machiine I had to do a couple of reboots/cold
power off to force Windows 10 to rescan the underlying CPU, other alternative
is to use DDU (Display Driver Uninstaller) to completely uninstall the graphics
and reinstall it again fresh, which I did that on my guest.
Best regards,
Okky Hendriansyah
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