@brian To be honest, until and unless it becomes a problem for me, not really. KVM has the host CPU executing the VM instructions so timing on CPU instructions should product identical results. I have the VM setup as CPU and GPU pass through.
@brian To be honest, until and unless it becomes a problem for me, not really. KVM has the host CPU executing the VM instructions so timing on CPU instructions should product identical results. I have the VM setup as CPU and GPU pass through.
@Ptsf Haven’t played any of those. Anyway, there is a way to edit your xml to fake the machine id.
@PlasticPaperplane I’ve never been banned, but ok.
It seems like it would be pretty complex since I guess you need to disable the linux host from using the GPU, and do PCI passthrough in a VM that has Windows installed.@blobjim @shapis
This is all addressed by the Linux kernel and xml code specifying it for the VM.
And there’s still the problem of the graphics needing to move around the system in order to get to the display instead of the display being directly connected to the GPU.
Again handled by the kernel and qemu, just requires a bit of XML code in the vm description. Not a big deal.
@lord_ryvan Interesting, haven’t played that game so no experience with it. VirtualBox does do some things a bit differently, I was not able to get flyff to run it well, it runs but at about 3fps, where as it runs normally in kvm/qemu.
@halfapage Anti-cheats don’t generally care if they’re running in a vm as long as they can insert kernel drivers.
@thingsiplay Ok well I’ve been doing this for as long as Grub has been a thing (since retiring lilo) without an issue, so not sure why it is a problem for someone you know but I’m going to stick with probably operator error.
@thingsiplay Again, I’ve been doing this for many years without problems. If it’s interfering it’s most likely operator error.
@halfapage I’m saying from experience, nothing I could not get to run in a VM that ran in a physical machine.
@thingsiplay @metaStatic Normally I use grub on one drive to launch all of the OS’s from a boot menu.
@variants @shapis Not true, a root-kit will break it in wine because wine is just translating windows sys calls into Linux sys calls, but a vm is actually running a windows kernel, then the root kit anti-cheat works fine. With GPU pass through, I have found no games that work under Windows won’t also work within the VM.
@KazuchijouNo Well again as I stated, I haven’t had an issue since going to UEFI in 2012, that’s 12 years so problems, and I also had a VM because it allowed me to move between Linux and Windows more easily but Ubuntu broke the vm uefi bios in 24.04, I do have a Manjaro machine which works (based on Arch) so am going to steal the bios off of it to get it working again.
@YaBoyMax I’ve heard differently from a Microsoft insider, but since I don’t know if it was told to me in confidence or not, I am not going to name names.
@metaStatic @datavoid @KazuchijouNo @dsilverz As I previously stated, I have NEVER had to do this with UEFI bios. Early versions of Windows 10 had a tendency to create a new EFI partition instead of using the existing one and that could be problematic but even that is no longer an issue.
@walthervonstolzing @shapis I personally use kvm/qemu but whatever works for you.
@shapis It’s complicated to setup but once done works wonderfully, you can share one GPU between OS’s in real time, even have one windows window up along with Linux at the same time. So I’m temporarily fuxored but I already have a plan for a fix and that is simply to steal the UEFI vm bios from Manjaro which does work and use it on Ubuntu.
@brian Ok, just for kicks tell me where I can get this.