On 10/29/07, Abhishek Daga daga.abhishek@gmail.com wrote:
On 10/29/07, Dinesh Shah dineshah@gmail.com wrote:
Dear Terrence,
On 10/28/07, jtd <> wrote:
On Friday 26 October 2007 13:04, Dinesh Shah wrote:
Which stable VMs are available for running Linux as guest OS on Windows XP host?
You mean XP as guest on lnux host. Running XP as host is a bad idea.
Some times you have to use and support bad ideas. ;)
-- Rgds JTD
With regards,
--Dinesh Shah :-)
Finally decided to go with virtualbox. the version available through synaptic ( 6.06) has some issues though. dependency issues. I tried fixing those, but it kept saying "kernel complete failed" and virtual office will not start.
So followed another instruction set where i downloaded the dapper version from the virtualbox repository.. before dkpging this, i had to install the kernel source and then the virtualbox package and it all worked fine.
update: Installed virtualbox. Worked fine. Then tried win98SE as guest OS. failed miserably. just didnt go beyond setup. Then tried winxpsp2 and it installed ok.... Messed up my resolution even for ubuntu host. would not go beyond 640x480. Had to do a rebuild for xorg.conf and it restored the resolution. applications run fine. sound worked well. chose the OSS sound card. What has not worked yet is the LAN/internet through the guest OS.
I like the "work seamlessly" feature in virtualbox. Still there are issues with the resolutions and its a pain to fiddle around each time with the resolutions to get a true full screen. but speed wise, it was fine. Guest 10 GB with 256 MB. Host original was 512 MB.
Now trying to install QEMU on a 7.10 desktop edition AMD64.
On Wed, 2007-10-31 at 15:08 +0530, Abhishek Daga wrote:
Now trying to install QEMU on a 7.10 desktop edition AMD64.
Is your requirement strictly QEMU / VirtualBox? Are you open to Xen? Also, with QEMU ensure that you install kqemu mod. It makes a hell of a difference. If you're one of the puritans, then Xen is the only real alternative to the kqemu-mod.
Regards to your Win* installation experience, I think you'll have a better time with QEMU / Xen. I've installed Win / Lin hosts inside QEMU and they've actually acted as web / database servers. Work quite well. Network setup is a piece of cake. Xen is PITA for networking though :P