@purpleidea
And virt-manager.
The only time I ever edited XML was when I wanted to convert a Windows 10 VM to a Windows 11 one, which required that I changed the bios firmware to UEFI, and *that* required that I changed the system from PCI-based to PCIe.
No way could I have done that without virt-manager helping me making sure the XML is correct:
https://grep.be/blog/en/computer/Upgrading_a_Windows_10_VM_to_Windows_11/
@cks
And virt-manager.
The only time I ever edited XML was when I wanted to convert a Windows 10 VM to a Windows 11 one, which required that I changed the bios firmware to UEFI, and *that* required that I changed the system from PCI-based to PCIe.
No way could I have done that without virt-manager helping me making sure the XML is correct:
https://grep.be/blog/en/computer/Upgrading_a_Windows_10_VM_to_Windows_11/
@cks
@purpleidea
You can use it client side to manage systems over ssh, too. My laptop's configuration has four connections: one to the local system libvirt, one to my home server, one to my hosted server, and one to a VM on my hosted server that does nested virtualization.
Has the functionality of virt-install built in, and so much more...
@cks
You can use it client side to manage systems over ssh, too. My laptop's configuration has four connections: one to the local system libvirt, one to my home server, one to my hosted server, and one to a VM on my hosted server that does nested virtualization.
Has the functionality of virt-install built in, and so much more...
@cks
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@cks
Oh.
I see now that you mention 'the GUI', which I assume is virt-manager.
Sorry, missed that 🤦♂️
@purpleidea
Oh.
I see now that you mention 'the GUI', which I assume is virt-manager.
Sorry, missed that 🤦♂️
@purpleidea