On 01/09/2012 11:53 PM, Ademar de Souza Reis Jr. wrote:
On Thu, Jan 05, 2012 at 10:07:31AM -0700, Eric Blake wrote:
> On 01/05/2012 08:11 AM, Philip Rhoades wrote:
>> Rich,
>>
>>
>> On 2012-01-05 21:05, Richard W.M. Jones wrote:
>>> On Thu, Jan 05, 2012 at 10:27:29AM +0200, Dor Laor wrote:
>>>> On 01/03/2012 06:42 PM, Ian Pilcher wrote:
>>>>> On 01/02/2012 03:38 AM, Emanuel Rietveld wrote:
>>>>>> When you give qemu-kvm a partition to use as disk for a guest, it
does
>>>>>> exactly that. It uses the partition as a disk for the guest. So,
the
>>>>>> guest sees a *disk* while in the physical situation it's a
>>>> *partition*.
>>>>>> You may be able to do what you want by attaching a whole disk to
the
>>>>>> guest, instead of just the partition.
>>
>>
>> Not possible in my situation - I want to be able to dual boot OR run
>> Windows 7 as a guest using the same partition install.
>
> Won't work, in general, because your virtual machine will present
> different hardware to Windows than the native dual boot, and Windows is
> super-finicky about being booted on the same hardware every time.
Win7 is (relativelly) smart. It worked perfectly here a while ago using
VirtualBox - and I have fancy hardware (it's a gaming machine).
But you have to reactivate your windows everytime you switch,
which is a PITA.
>>
>>
>> So if I understand this correctly - it IS possible to (easily) do what I
>> want with Xen but NOT kvm?
>
> No. It's not possible to do what you want with either solution (at
> least, not possible while still being above the law with Microsoft
> product activation).
I fail to see why it's ilegal (you are alowed to switch your
machine keeping your win7 installation, you just can't have
Various versions of windows, especially client based are licensed to run
on physical but not virtual machines. A special license (or just the pro
version) is required to run them as virtual.
Disclaim - I'm not a lawyer and never read more than 5% of any EULA..
multiple installations). IANAL, though.
Cheers,
- Ademar