

That’s weird with a beard. I’ve run games off a secondary drive in Bazzite with both ext4 and btrfs. Hope you figure it out.
He/Him. Formerly sgibson5150@kbin.social.
That’s weird with a beard. I’ve run games off a secondary drive in Bazzite with both ext4 and btrfs. Hope you figure it out.
Same here! I’ve been cheering on Zen for a while. Glad to finally be back aboard Team Red.
9800x3d gang say wooooo
Wife won’t let me pirate so I may see it on physical media if they ever release it that way. I’m done with Disney+.
The host browser process crashed, not the host OS.
It is kinda crazy. It occurred to me that I should try to reproduce this on a physical Windows machine before I report to the QEMU guys. Could be a Windows flaw.
It was reproducible. See post edit.
Good idea. Weirdly no errors in /var/log/libvirt/qemu/<box>.log or in journalctl for libvirtd. Maybe devs can advise on other places to look.
I’ve moved a dozen or so now doing them one at a time. No issues so far.
I haven’t thought about ISDN in ages. IIRC I had to get a serial expansion card with a faster UART to get the benefit, which was…eh, dubious. Twice nothing is still nothing LMAO.
Oh huh. Interesting. I guess my pie charts don’t make sense either based on when in the year I switched to Linux exclusively. 🤔
It’ll be 100% Linux next year for me. Windows running on physical hardware is no longer allowed in my house.
Forgot to include the boot/system volume. It’s a lovely time waster when you’re dealing with disk images that are hundreds of gigabytes in size that have to be copied over the network. 😆
I’ll add Disk2hvd screenshots when I get a sec.
Situation gets slightly more complicated if you had multiple drives in your system when you installed Windows, of course. Installer might put system volume on a different drive, so you’d have to image more than one drive to get a working system. Might get a little confusing as to which volumes should go in which image. There’s a tool called GWMI that might help with that since afaik the volume guids don’t show up in the Windows Disk Management snap-in.
Edit: The promised screenshot. In my case, I knew the volume labelled SYSTEM resided on the same disk as my C: drive. Probably don’t have to include the recovery partition, strictly speaking, but I did.
Well before today, I’d never heard of virtio-win, and I’d never used KVM/QEMU for virtualization on Linux, and despite an error on my part I had a running VM by close of business. Thanks for stopping by.
Oh wow! Thanks for this. I’m learning.
Oh huh. Is that a QEMU option? I’m new to all this.
Oh are you talking about Thunderbird, the email client?
Or a fix for accidentally closing something when scrolling vertically through open tabs. This still happens to me daily. Going on a year now. https://connect.mozilla.org/t5/ideas/option-to-disable-side-swipe-gesture-to-close-a-tab/idi-p/48053
Edit: Added link
Wow that IS subtle. Nice job figuring that out.
I’m used to using fstab too but in my new box build, I finally went through the exercise of figuring out how to mount via systemd for the first time. Seems to work fine and is slightly less arcane. Slightly.