qemu-kvm 0.14.0+noroms-0ubuntu4 (armel binary) in ubuntu natty
Using KVM, one can run multiple virtual PCs, each running unmodified Linux or
Windows images. Each virtual machine has private virtualized hardware: a
network card, disk, graphics adapter, etc.
.
KVM (for Kernel-based Virtual Machine) is a full virtualization solution for
Linux hosts on x86 (32 and 64-bit) hardware.
.
KVM is intended for systems where the processor has hardware support for
virtualization, see below for details. All combinations of 32-bit and 64-bit
host and guest systems are supported, except 64-bit guests on 32-bit hosts.
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KVM requires your system to support hardware virtualization, provided by AMD's
SVM capability or Intel's VT. To find out if your processor has the necessary
support:
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egrep "flags.
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If it prints anything, the processor provides hardware virtualization
support and is suitable for use with KVM. Without hardware support, you can
use qemu emulation instead.
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KVM consists of two loadable kernel modules (kvm.ko and either kvm-amd.ko or
kvm-intel.ko) and a userspace component. This package contains the userspace
component, and you can get the kernel modules from the standard kernel images.
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This package contains support for running virtualized and emulated x86 and
x86-64 machines only. Support for other architectures is provided by the
qemu-linaro source package.
Details
- Package version:
- 0.14.0+noroms-0ubuntu4
- Status:
- Obsolete
- Component:
- main
- Priority:
- Optional
Downloadable files
Package relationships
- Depends on:
- bridge-utils
- iproute
- libaio1
- libasound2 (>> 1.0.24.1)
- libc6 (>= 2.11)
- libcurl3-gnutls (>= 7.16.2-1)
- libgnutls26 (>= 2.7.14-0)
- libncurses5 (>= 5.5-5~)
- libpng12-0 (>= 1.2.13-4)
- libpulse0 (>= 0.9.16)
- libsasl2-2
- libsdl1.2debian (>= 1.2.10-1)
- libuuid1 (>= 2.16)
- libx11-6
- python
- qemu-common (>= 0.14.0+noroms-0ubuntu4)
- upstart-job
- zlib1g (>= 1:1.1.4)
- Replaces:
- Pre-Depends on:
- Breaks: