On Wed, Aug 24, 2022 at 04:12:04PM +0200, Laszlo Ersek wrote:
I've started looking into RHBZ 1590721 for virt-p2v.
For p2v development, quick local testing is helpful. "make
run-virt-p2v-directly" seems to be working great; however, the VM-based
test methods seem to have developed problems, since I last looked.
Namely:
- "make run-virt-p2v-in-a-vm" boots quickly, but the GUI does not come up.
- "make run-virt-p2v-in-an-nvme-vm" boots *incredibly slowly*. I
checked, and the host CPU utilization during guest boot was around 20%
(and KVM was enabled). I don't understand how or why, but exposing the
"physical machine" disk over NVMe slows guest boot to a crawl -- it
looks strangely "IO-bound". I don't recall this from the time I added
this Makefile target!
Do these symptoms look familiar?
Yes I had noticed this. I did look at it briefly but couldn't work
out what was going wrong.
Rich.
(For RHBZ 1590721, I think run-virt-p2v-directly will suffice; just
wanted to record the above somewhere.)
Thanks
Laszlo
--
Richard Jones, Virtualization Group, Red Hat
http://people.redhat.com/~rjones
Read my programming and virtualization blog:
http://rwmj.wordpress.com
virt-p2v converts physical machines to virtual machines. Boot with a
live CD or over the network (PXE) and turn machines into KVM guests.
http://libguestfs.org/virt-v2v