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| Van Chocstraw... |
Posted: Thu Oct 29, 2009 9:08 pm |
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Guest
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Installing the live cd in Virtualbox always hangs on auto configuration.
Tried several times, have to reset, still hangs. Delete the machine and
create a new one and same problem, hangs on auto configuration at various
levels of progress. |
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| Matthew Wild... |
Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 3:52 am |
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Guest
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Van Chocstraw wrote:
Quote: Installing the live cd in Virtualbox always hangs on auto configuration.
Tried several times, have to reset, still hangs. Delete the machine and
create a new one and same problem, hangs on auto configuration at various
levels of progress.
It worked OK for me.
Regards
Matthew |
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| houghi... |
Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 5:04 am |
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Matthew Wild wrote:
Quote: It worked OK for me.
Well, as it is still not a final version, best to file a bug report if
anything is wrong.
houghi
--
Filled with mingled cream and amber I will drain that glass again. Such
hilarious visions clamber Through the chambers of my brain -- Quaintest
thoughts -- queerest fancies Come to life and fade away; Who cares how
time advances? I am drinking ale today. -- Edgar Allan Poe |
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| Inge Svensson... |
Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 8:09 am |
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Guest
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Van Chocstraw skrev:
Quote: Installing the live cd in Virtualbox always hangs on auto configuration.
Tried several times, have to reset, still hangs. Delete the machine and
create a new one and same problem, hangs on auto configuration at various
levels of progress.
I guess you have a computer that allows Virtualbox to run a guest os in
64 bit. |
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| Van Chocstraw... |
Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 8:37 am |
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Guest
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Inge Svensson wrote:
Quote: Van Chocstraw skrev:
Installing the live cd in Virtualbox always hangs on auto
configuration.
Tried several times, have to reset, still hangs. Delete
the machine and
create a new one and same problem, hangs on auto
configuration at various
levels of progress.
I guess you have a computer that allows Virtualbox to run a
guest os in
64 bit.
Apparently not. The 32 bit version installed ok in Virtual
box.
It never complained on the 64 bit version, just hung on auto
configuration.
I have a 64 bit computer, Virtual box is 32/64 bit and has 64
bit installation options for linux. Must be a bug. |
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| Inge Svensson... |
Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 8:47 am |
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Guest
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Van Chocstraw skrev:
Quote: Inge Svensson wrote:
Van Chocstraw skrev:
Installing the live cd in Virtualbox always hangs on auto
configuration.
Tried several times, have to reset, still hangs. Delete
the machine and
create a new one and same problem, hangs on auto
configuration at various
levels of progress.
I guess you have a computer that allows Virtualbox to run a
guest os in
64 bit.
Apparently not. The 32 bit version installed ok in Virtual
box.
It never complained on the 64 bit version, just hung on auto
configuration.
I have a 64 bit computer, Virtual box is 32/64 bit and has 64
bit installation options for linux. Must be a bug.
http://www.virtualbox.org/manual/UserManual.html#intro-64bitguests
says: In particular, 64-bit guests are supported under the following
conditions:
1.
You need a 64-bit processor with hardware virtualization support
(see the section called “Software vs. hardware virtualization (VT-x and
AMD-V)”).
Inge Svensson |
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| Will Honea... |
Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 11:35 am |
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Guest
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Inge Svensson wrote:
Quote: Van Chocstraw skrev:
Inge Svensson wrote:
Van Chocstraw skrev:
Installing the live cd in Virtualbox always hangs on auto
configuration.
Tried several times, have to reset, still hangs. Delete
the machine and
create a new one and same problem, hangs on auto
configuration at various
levels of progress.
I guess you have a computer that allows Virtualbox to run a
guest os in
64 bit.
Apparently not. The 32 bit version installed ok in Virtual
box.
It never complained on the 64 bit version, just hung on auto
configuration.
I have a 64 bit computer, Virtual box is 32/64 bit and has 64
bit installation options for linux. Must be a bug.
http://www.virtualbox.org/manual/UserManual.html#intro-64bitguests
says: In particular, 64-bit guests are supported under the following
conditions:
1.
You need a 64-bit processor with hardware virtualization support
(see the section called “Software vs. hardware virtualization (VT-x and
AMD-V)”).
Inge Svensson
I'm running RC1 64-bit under VBox on an 11.1 64-bit host. Seems to do OK,
but there are some issues with RC1 that I'm going to have to look at in a
native install. One is a real PITA - the network setup in the virtual
session is clobbering my router when I configure the session to use bridged
mode. Takes a full re-load of the router configuration to get it. I
haven't had the time to try with the NAT configuration or the native
install to see just where the problem is but I'll get there....
--
Will Honea |
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| Van Chocstraw... |
Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 3:13 pm |
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Guest
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Inge Svensson wrote:
Quote: Van Chocstraw skrev:
Inge Svensson wrote:
Van Chocstraw skrev:
Installing the live cd in Virtualbox always hangs on auto
configuration.
Tried several times, have to reset, still hangs. Delete
the machine and
create a new one and same problem, hangs on auto
configuration at various
levels of progress.
I guess you have a computer that allows Virtualbox to run a
guest os in
64 bit.
Apparently not. The 32 bit version installed ok in Virtual
box.
It never complained on the 64 bit version, just hung on auto
configuration.
I have a 64 bit computer, Virtual box is 32/64 bit and has 64
bit installation options for linux. Must be a bug.
http://www.virtualbox.org/manual/UserManual.html#intro-64bitguests
says: In particular, 64-bit guests are supported under the following
conditions:
1.
You need a 64-bit processor with hardware virtualization support
(see the section called “Software vs. hardware virtualization (VT-x and
AMD-V)”).
Inge Svensson
As I understand it you don't need it, it just makes it better.
AMD Virtualization™ (AMD-V™) is a set of unique on-chip features that
help AMD processor-based servers and clients run multiple operating
systems and applications on a single machine by improving the efficiency
of virtualization software. AMD-V™ technology allows you to better
utilize your resources, which makes your client systems, servers, and
datacenters more effective.
It doesn't say you CAN'T virtualize without it. |
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| Chris Cox... |
Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 3:47 pm |
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Guest
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On Fri, 2009-10-30 at 17:13 -0400, Van Chocstraw wrote:
Quote: As I understand it you don't need it, it just makes it better.
AMD Virtualization™ (AMD-V™) is a set of unique on-chip features that
help AMD processor-based servers and clients run multiple operating
systems and applications on a single machine by improving the efficiency
of virtualization software. AMD-V™ technology allows you to better
utilize your resources, which makes your client systems, servers, and
datacenters more effective.
It doesn't say you CAN'T virtualize without it.
Depending on what you are doing, it may be required.
Some hypervisors can do a LOT of emulation allowing
for the hosting of unmodified OS's without the Intel or AMD
chip instructions, but in general, it's needed to run
an unmodified OS. |
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| Archimedes' Lever... |
Posted: Sat Oct 31, 2009 9:43 am |
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Guest
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On Fri, 30 Oct 2009 16:47:22 -0500, Chris Cox <chrisncoxn at (no spam) endlessnow.com>
wrote:
Quote: On Fri, 2009-10-30 at 17:13 -0400, Van Chocstraw wrote:
As I understand it you don't need it, it just makes it better.
AMD Virtualization (AMD-V) is a set of unique on-chip features that
help AMD processor-based servers and clients run multiple operating
systems and applications on a single machine by improving the efficiency
of virtualization software. AMD-V technology allows you to better
utilize your resources, which makes your client systems, servers, and
datacenters more effective.
It doesn't say you CAN'T virtualize without it.
Depending on what you are doing, it may be required.
Some hypervisors can do a LOT of emulation allowing
for the hosting of unmodified OS's without the Intel or AMD
chip instructions, but in general, it's needed to run
an unmodified OS.
How sad. |
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