
On 09/01/2016 10:07 PM, William Park via talk wrote:
On Fri, Aug 26, 2016 at 09:33:50PM -0400, William Park via talk wrote:
- QEMU and VirtualBox. They both use KVM. Virtualbox does not use kvm. It will use vt-x if you have it. kvm requires it. Now you got me confused. I thought VirtualBox and QEMU are just "emulator" which use KVM kernel modules (ie. kvm, kvm-intel, kvm-amd) if
On Mon, Aug 29, 2016 at 10:07:03AM -0400, Lennart Sorensen via talk wrote: they are available, or do full software emulation if not available. And, VT-x is required for KVM kernel modules to work. Part of the problem is comparing a mixture of apples and oranges. you cannot run a virtual machine using KVM on its own. KVM is a set of kernel API's and modules that make use of the underlying CPU hardware.
Virtualbox is a complete product that contains its own API's and a bunch of tools to provide a user interface. Virtualbox is better compared with things like VMware or virtual-manager or proxmox. QEMU is a middle wear tool that has been forked by several products to provide hardware emulation but is generally not enough to provide all the features of something like virtualbox or virtual-manager. You can use QEMU to roll your own virtual systems but you then need to manage most of the scaffolding on your own. Its kind of like comparing gnome or KDE to the x-server. -- Alvin Starr || voice: (905)513-7688 Netvel Inc. || Cell: (416)806-0133 alvin@netvel.net ||