Dearest Casey DeLorme,
Thank you very very much for your kind feedback and
input. I would also like to thank Mr. Tobias Geiger,
again, for providing his suggestion on exposing the
fourth memory region in
tools/firmware/hvmloader/acpi/dsdt.asl.
In any case,
either exposing the first 3 memory regions only or
exposing all the 4 memory regions does not work.
Sadly, Tobias Geiger is unable to help me further.
I have asked Jean David Techer, what about the 4th PCI
memory region? Why only expose the first 3 PCI memory
regions? I don't understand, of course. Jean David
Techer did not reply to my question.
I have decided to post your prompt reply to the
xen-users and xen-devel mailing lists, in case people
think that I am finding fault with Jean David Techer, or
trying to irritate him, or trying to make him angry, or
trying to aggravate him. Jean David Techer replied me
with an email saying that I
spent too much time
and
too bent on solving the yellow exclamation
mark glitch for my NVIDIA Geforce 8400GS in Device
Manager in Windows 8 Consumer Preview and Windows XP
Home Edition, and that I sent
stupid
requests. Stupid requests? Did he read my emails
carefully, word by word?
Casey DeLorme, please, can I confirm with you again that
you are getting the following errors after applying Jean
David Techer's Xen 4.2-unstable VGA Passthrough patches:
(1) Yellow exclamation mark besides your NVIDIA
GTX 460 in Device Manager
(2) Windows has stopped this device because it has
reported problems. (Code 43)
(3) This device isn't using any resources because it
has a problem.
Jean David Techer insists that our technical issues are
due to a NVIDIA driver problem. He insists that you have
to install NVIDIA driver versions 275.33 WHQL and 275.50
BETA. Any other NVIDIA driver versions (above 280.XX)
will not work, according to Jean David Techer.
However,
I have tried installing NVIDIA driver versions
275.33 and 275.50 from www.softpedia.com,
as he suggested, but it caused my Windows XP Home
Edition HVM virtual machine to be
destroyed/terminated/crash after a few minutes and
my dom0 to crash as well. NVIDIA driver
versions 275.33 and 275.50 for Windows XP 32-bit is not
available from the official NVIDIA website.
So it is definitely not a NVIDIA driver problem. I
suspect that the technical issue has to do with
MMIO
BARs pBAR:vBAR 1:1 matching. I don't think
there is any problem with vgabios-pt.bin extracted out
from our NVIDIA VGA cards, because I have performed a
"hexdump -C" on my extracted VGA BIOS EEPROM, or
Electrically Erasable Programmable Read Only Memory.
Secondly, it does seem strange that Jean David Techer
was able to attain
100%, ie.
perfect
success with Xen 4.2-unstable VGA
Passthrough to his Windows XP 32-bit and 64-bit HVM
domU. Have you watched his Youtube video? It is only 4
minutes. Please do watch Jean David Techer's Youtube
video at the following URL:
Jean David Techer's Xen 4.2-unstable VGA Passthrough to
Windows XP x64 HVM domU Youtube video link:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3SaYO0ERW44
I am
appalled and
baffled
that he has attained
100% success while
both of us have only attained
partial success
(
i.e. less than 100%) on Xen 4.2-unstable
VGA Passthrough to Windows 8 Consumer Preview and
Windows XP.
Solving the yellow exclamation mark issue is
important because we would not be able to run 3D
graphics benchmarks and play 3D games without
solving it. I am not sending silly emails about some
yellow marks, as Jean David Techer suggested. I
can't even run Unigine Heaven DX11, and 3dmark11 3D
display benchmarks, because of the yellow
exclamation mark for NVIDIA Geforce 8400 GS in
Device Manager.
Casey DeLorme, with your report on relatively easy
success with ATI VGA cards, I think I would go the ATI
way, but I would have to spend a few hundred dollars
compared to my cheap SGD$44 NVIDIA Geforce 8400 GS card.
And while deciding to go the ATI way, I would also like
to continue troubleshooting with the NVIDIA problem,
because I consider it to be a technical challenge.
In essence, Jean David Techner is considered to be a
"boss", or business owner, or proprietor, or
technopreneur, or entrepreneur, or technical support
officer, or customer support officer, or IT helpdesk
engineer, providing services like his forward-ported Xen
4.2-unstable VGA Passthrough patches and the
documentation on his blog. I repost Jean David Techer's
official website here:
Jean David Techer's Xen 4.2-unstable VGA Passthrough
blog:
http://www.davidgis.fr/blog/index.php?2011/12/07/860-xen-42unstable-patches-for-vga-pass-through
Jean David Techer's official website is his business
venture.
Basically, I am Jean David Techer's
"customer",
trying to obtain technical support from him. Of course,
he is
not obliged to provide technical
support to me since he is providing
free
services. It is, after all, an open source software
project. Nobody is obliged to provide anybody with
technical support.
To do Jean David Techer
justice, he replied most of my questions while
avoiding some of my questions.
Finally, I have also failed to obtain technical support
from Xen developers like Ian Campbell from
Citrix
Corporation and Konrad Wilk from
Oracle
Corporation.
I have always
provided all the steps which I have taken, the
configuration files and necessary documentation, and
kernel messages and error logs to xen-users
and xen-devel mailing lists, but they keep insisting I
did not provide the information they required. I
wondered why. I think they did not read my emails
carefully. They told me they would not reply to me any
more if I do not provide the information they requested.
But the problem is that I have always provided
information they requested! I think they
missed some of my emails, or did not read my emails
carefully enough. I am an
ardent supporter
and
SERIOUS software tester for open
source Xen virtualization/hypervisor but they treated me
lightly.
I always read my emails WORD BY WORD.
I have even went to the point of making a video on the
BUG
and uploading my video to Youtube. The video is only
THREE minutes.
As everybody says, a picture is worth a thousand
words. A video is worth a BILLION words!
I have also failed to obtain technical support from Xen
developers regarding Xen 4.2-unstable VGA Passthrough.
I am hoping Xen 4.2 would have official support for Xen
VGA Passthrough for both NVIDIA and ATI cards.
Casey DeLorme, thank you very much once again. I will be
making changes to my Xen, Linux Kernel and Xen VGA
Passthrough Documentation and will be releasing Version
1.7 shortly. Jean David Techer's documentation assumes
some level of advanced Linux technical knowledge, so I
am writing documentation on my own so that everybody,
not just advanced Linux and Xen users, can follow. I
have made references to Jean David Techer's
documentation in my own documentation.
I would be very happy if people would use my
documentation. Of course, it satisfies my ego and my
vanity. Haha.
I have been un-employed for nearly three years now, and
I would hesitate to spend a few hundred dollars on an
ATI VGA card. I quit my job as an IT engineer 3 years
ago because my father suffered from lacunar infarct, or
more commonly known as stroke. My NVIDIA Geforce 8400 GS
costs only S$44. Please understand why I hesitate to buy
an ATI VGA card. The cheapest one costs SGD$279.
I have a diploma in Mechanical+Electronics engineering
from Singapore Polytechnic and a Bachelor's degree in
Mechanical Engineering from the National University of
Singapore. But I do not have qualifications in Computer
Science or Information Technology. I have worked as an
Information Technology engineer in Defense Science and
Technology Agency, Ministry of Defense, Singapore,
National Computer Systems Pte Ltd, Asiasoft Online Pte
Ltd, and Ishinemax Singapore Pte Ltd.
Google search terms: Frenchman Jean David Techer,
Singaporean Teo En Ming's Xen, Linux Kernel and Xen VGA
Passthrough Documentation, Xen 4.2-unstable VGA
Passthrough to Windows 8 Consumer Preview and Windows XP
HVM Virtual Machines
Thank you very much for reading my lengthy email. I am
always courteous, saying "Please help me. Please.
Please. Please." and "Thank you very much for your kind
assistance" in my emails.
Thank you very much.