On Thu, 24 Feb 2011 11:43:33 -0600 C Anthony Risinger <anthony@extof.me> wrote:
On Thu, Feb 24, 2011 at 11:23 AM, Jelle van der Waa <jelle@vdwaa.nl> wrote:
On Thu, 2011-02-24 at 11:07 -0600, C Anthony Risinger wrote:
hmm, soo qemu doesn't actually use the VT extensions? wtf is the point then? QEMU is an emulator -> so for ARM for example this is what i don't understand; if qemu supports KVM via the `-enable-kvm` switch why does it suck so much -- it seems just as slow to me as no KVM support at all.
Here it's not, are you using qemu-kvm or some selfcompiled version?
qemu-kvm is always fast. qemu is never fast -- libvirt uses `-enable-kvm` when i tell it to, ie. for either package. i've tried recompiling the regular `qemu` package with explicit KVM support, and the speed is still absolutely abysmal.
I have a server that runs several KVM/libvirt instances (windows being one of them purely for ... i dont even know) so i'm pretty familiar with it all, but i'm just trying to get solid info why there is such a huge performance gap when the both "use KVM". i thought KVM itself did all the VT handling.
Another tip for kvm usage is installing your OS on virtio [1]
already do :-) i use all the virtio drivers -- when i say perf is bad i mean it's like KVM isnt even working. i haven't `lsof` yet to make sure qemu (not qemu-kvm!!) is actually opening the /dev/kvm device.
i read thru the packages of both. i tried symlinking `/usr/bin/qemu-kvm -> qemu-system-x86_64` (this is what qemu-kvm package does) ... no difference.
so my real question is, is anyone using the upstream package `qemu`, with KVM, and getting proper results? are good results expected? what am i missing here.
C Anthony This is quite strange, I use qemu-system-x86_64 --enable-kvm regulary, and I get near native speed in the vm. [oh@Alice][~]% pacman -Q qemu qemu 0.14.0-1