Hugo Mills wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 13, 2008 at 09:24:02PM +0000, Simon Capstick wrote:
>> Hugo Mills wrote:
>>> On Thu, Mar 13, 2008 at 08:22:16PM +0000, Simon Capstick wrote:
>>>> It looks like my VIA C7 just doesn't have the oomph for kqemu to run 
>>>> Windows XP fast enough to be useful.  A faster Intel/AMD processor with 
>>>> virtualisation extensions looks necessary for this.  I guess I will be 
>>>> powering up a noisy XP box occasionally instead.
>>>   You can run qemu-based systems (qemu,kqemu,kvm) on a remote server
>>> and connect to them over VNC, if that helps.
>>>
>>>> Am I right in presuming I can't run KQEMU or KVM on a (noisy but remote) 
>>>> server running the Xen hypervisor?
>>>   kqemu *may* work, but I wouldn't guarantee it. KVM almost certainly
>>> won't work.
>> That's what I thought, thanks for confirming this.  For the time being I 
>> have managed to speed up KQEMU a bit by disabling ACPI [1] in the 
>> Windows XP VM.  The trouble is the qcow2 image is on a LUKS encrypted 
>> external disk thus crippling my performance further.
> 
>    This may be of interest to you:
> 
> http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.emulators.kvm.devel/14393
> 
> That mail says it's not ready yet, but worth keeping an eye on.
> 
>    I got a rough 2x performance increase on a kernel compile using
> virtio for a Linux guest -- you'll find my mail on how I did it in
> last months' HantsLUG list archives, and here[1].
> 
>    Hugo.
> 
> [1] http://www.carfax.org.uk/docs/qemu-virtio/
> 
> 
All very interesting, thanks Hugo.  Since I'm having problems even 
getting tun/tap working with kqemu, probably due to my weird desktop 
set-up, I'll postpone further experimentation until I dig out a 
dedicated and faster box to happily play on without risk.
Thanks,
Simon