[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-users] Verification of CPU
Quoting Nico Kadel-Garcia <nkadel@xxxxxxxxx>: Age_M wrote:Hi again, jonr@xxxxxxxxxx schrieb:Uff, thanks Age, I have always liked Gigabyte and probably would have gone that way if not for your reply.Yes, me too. Always liked Gigabyte, but Tech-Support wasn't willing to help and for this really small fix, it's sort of a poor support :-/ But, it's not impossible. I finally archived to modify the BIOS and re-enabled the AMD-V support. Though, I don't understand why Gigabyte disabled it. I doubt that it is a stability issue, because the motherbord runs rock-solid here ;) I guess it's just a marketing thing. My M61P-S3 is a low cost board and maybe the +100$ motherboards have the Virtualisation-Feature available...? But it's just a guess...Greetz Age_MThis is why I hate so many commercial BIOS's, and hope hte LinuxBIOS project really takes off. So many of such features are concealed or mis-set by default, and it's very difficult to reset the system defaults. For example, even if you reset it in a BIOS with VT or HVM available, you will revert to the default if you fail reboot 3 times in a row, and you can't reset it without hands and eyes at the console. This sort of thing is why I prefer to stuff fake keyboard widgets onto the PS/2 port, rather than rely on BIOS resetting to allow the system to boot without a keyboard attached on so many server class systems. This is a good case for serial console access with a cyclades or some other type of serial access box. You then ssh into the cyclades and can then connect to the serial port and change your BIOS settings. Jon _______________________________________________ Xen-users mailing list Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-users
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