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xen-users
RE: [Xen-users] Multi user/seat setup question
> -----Original Message-----
> From: xen-users-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> [mailto:xen-users-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of
> Ulrich Windl
> Sent: 13 December 2006 08:24
> To: xen-users
> Subject: Re: [Xen-users] Multi user/seat setup question
>
> On 12 Dec 2006 at 19:59, Alexander Thiem wrote:
>
> > Hi,
> >
> > I want to set up a new dual core machine capable of serving
> two users at
> > the same time.
>
> ;-) Just FYI: Back in '93 or so I had 15 users working on a
> 33MHz 486 PC with 10MB
> RAM. They were all using Emacs, and a compiler. Today you
> can't even install with
> 64MB RAM.
Of course you can - but only if you install an ANCIENT version of some
operating system - OS/2 1.x-3.x or Linux 2.2 for example would work...
Not that you can even BUY 64MB of RAM anymore (at least not from regular
retailers).
>
> > I have chosen a mainboard with onboard pcie graphic and another pcie
> > card in the slot (the board can use both)
> > One mouse/keyboard on ps/2 and one over usb.
> > Onboard sound + one pci sound.
> > One domU would be linux, the other windows xp...
As been said earlier - the PCIe bus may not allow both the builtin
graphics and the external one at the same time - even if you can set the
builtin one to take priority over the external one, doesn't mean that
BOTH will work at the same time. Check that BEFORE you buy the machine.
On the keyboard/mouse front, you'll need to give the entire USB device
to the guest OS - which in turn means that it's limited to using
Para-virtual Linux, since HVM doesn't support PCI passthrough now or in
the near foreseeable future. This means that you either have to have
more than one distinct USB device on the system, or you'll loose the USB
capability on the PS/2 keyboard side.
--
Mats
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