Yeah, never quite figured out why VT is off by default, but maybe those security concerns explain it. It's one of the first things I enable since I need to run Xen + HVM.
As far as the pv_ops kernels go, it seems like you still have to run those instead an HVM, and it just uses more PV code in the HVM. I haven't been able to get a pv_ops kernel to boot as a PV domU.
-Nick
>>> On 2009/06/09 at 07:35, "Fajar A. Nugraha" <fajar@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Tue, Jun 9, 2009 at 7:30 PM, Nick Couchman<Nick.Couchman@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > I think you're talking about two different technologies, here. The CPU > support for Virtualization Technology (VT) should be turned on and left on. > There's absolutely no reason to turn it off
Some vendors seem to think otherwise, and ship servers with VT disabled by default. Probably due to something like http://www.securityfocus.com/columnists/451 , even if no real threat currently exist.
> A guest can either > run a PV kernel or a standard kernel. If it runs a PV kernel, it is a PV > domU, if it runs a standard kernel, it must be run inside an HVM domU.
Yeah, but the limit gets blurred with pv_ops kernel, where the same kernel can be used for both :)
-- Fajar
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