Any idea how I can disable this message? It stops me from booting up the virt-p2v iso.
o/s is Fedora 33 WS.
Probing EDD (edd=off to disable)... ok
________________________________
From: Femi Adegoke <femi(a)awedio.com>
Sent: Tuesday, November 3, 2020 2:14 AM
To: ptoscano(a)redhat.com <ptoscano(a)redhat.com>; libguestfs(a)redhat.com
<libguestfs(a)redhat.com>
Subject: Re: virt-p2v NVMe disks
This is the original output.
I will send the virt-p2v version as soon as I can solve this (see below). It did this
earlier but booted after a few re-tries.
o/s is Fedora 33 WS.
Probing EDD (edd=off to disable)... ok
[femi@x9da7-fateknollogee-com ~]$ lsblk
NAME MAJ:MIN RM SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINT
loop0 7:0 0 93.8M 1 loop /var/lib/snapd/snap/core/8935
loop1 7:1 0 62.1M 1 loop /var/lib/snapd/snap/gtk-common-themes/1506
loop2 7:2 0 193M 1 loop /var/lib/snapd/snap/mailspring/440
loop3 7:3 0 193M 1 loop /var/lib/snapd/snap/mailspring/468
loop4 7:4 0 54.9M 1 loop /var/lib/snapd/snap/core18/1705
loop5 7:5 0 93.9M 1 loop /var/lib/snapd/snap/core/9066
loop6 7:6 0 48.3M 1 loop /var/lib/snapd/snap/gtk-common-themes/1474
loop7 7:7 0 54.9M 1 loop /var/lib/snapd/snap/core18/1754
zram0 252:0 0 4G 0 disk [SWAP]
nvme1n1 259:0 0 931.5G 0 disk
nvme0n1 259:1 0 931.5G 0 disk
├─nvme0n1p1 259:2 0 200M 0 part /boot/efi
├─nvme0n1p2 259:3 0 2G 0 part /boot
├─nvme0n1p3 259:4 0 382G 0 part
│ ├─fedora_x9da7-root
│ │ 253:0 0 75G 0 lvm /
│ ├─fedora_x9da7-swap
│ │ 253:1 0 32G 0 lvm [SWAP]
│ └─fedora_x9da7-home
│ 253:2 0 300G 0 lvm /home
└─nvme0n1p4 259:5 0 25G 0 part
└─fedora_x9da7-root
253:0 0 75G 0 lvm /
________________________________
From: Richard W.M. Jones <rjones(a)redhat.com>
Sent: Tuesday, November 3, 2020 12:01 AM
To: Femi Adegoke <femi(a)awedio.com>; ptoscano(a)redhat.com <ptoscano(a)redhat.com>;
libguestfs(a)redhat.com <libguestfs(a)redhat.com>
Subject: Re: virt-p2v NVMe disks
On Mon, Nov 02, 2020 at 11:15:18PM +0000, Femi Adegoke wrote:
Hello Mr. Jones,
Trying to convert a Fedora WS desktop to virtual.
The WS is installed on a Samsung 1TB m2 NVMe drive .
No local disk shows up so I can’t execute conversion.
Does virt-p2v support NVMe?
TBH I'm not sure. If you get a shell inside virt-p2v
(press the "XTerm" button, or use the F-keys to get
to a console), try running:
lsblk
and send us the output.
Actually I suspect we need to modify virt-p2v to recognize
/dev/nvme* as a block device name.
Rich.
--
Richard Jones, Virtualization Group, Red Hat
http://people.redhat.com/~rjones
Read my programming and virtualization blog:
http://rwmj.wordpress.com
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