Last I tried screwing around with #zfs, #KVM and #qemu on #slackware I had a bunch of fun with scripts from sbo and dependency hell – since neither is an official slack package.
How does this fare in 2024 if I were to try to get a headless host for my stuff (qubes-like but I like pain)?
Can any #IT folk (particularly in Australia, for local prices) recommend a reasonably priced network accessible #KVM? Not after 4K support -- literally 1920x1080 is more than sufficient for my needs, but ideally should support at least 4 connections. #AskFedi
"'"This RFC series proposes a new virtualization framework built upon the #KVM hypervisor that does not require hardware-assisted virtualization techniques.
So the over-arching goals of PVM are to 1) enable nested virtualization within any IaaS clouds […] 2) avoid costly exits to the host hypervisor […]"'"
I deleted my toot about Broadcom abandoning VMware ESXi last month as I got fed up of reply guys explaining to me it couldn’t possibly happen.. but anyway, it has happened. https://kb.vmware.com/s/article/2107518?lang=en_US
So, @darth got me thinking... I have an old Phenom II X4 965 Black lying around. And I do have an old AM3 socket mobo, I also have an old case that is missing some screws. I might dig through my junk pile and build something. Use what I already have and only buy the parts I absolutely need.
I'm imagining maybe a #Slackware#linux server that is basically a hypervisor using #KVM and #Qemu that will run #BSD, #Arch, #RockyLinux, etc. basically all the POISX OSs I want to play around with.
Does anyone happen to know a program that would allow an ip based #kvm between #linux and #android (Think Apple universal control)
Barrier doesn't work on wayland or android, so this is out.