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Re: [Qemu-devel] "Using Python to investigate EFI and ACPI"
From: |
Laszlo Ersek |
Subject: |
Re: [Qemu-devel] "Using Python to investigate EFI and ACPI" |
Date: |
Fri, 4 Sep 2015 01:21:57 +0200 |
User-agent: |
Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:38.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/38.2.0 |
On 09/03/15 23:25, address@hidden wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 03, 2015 at 07:19:40PM +0200, Laszlo Ersek wrote:
>> In any case, if what you need resembles a "general virtio filesystem",
>> then please just use that -- a virtio-block or virtio-scsi disk, with a
>> normal filesystem on it. The protocol is industry standard and the
>> performance of the QEMU (and kernel) implementation is splendid.
>
> Not at all what I'm looking for; I'm looking for a *filesystem*, like
> virtio-9p, but with significantly better performance. I agree that
> starting from fw_cfg for that is probably a bad idea; it's more that if
> a high-performance virtio filesystem existed, it might also work for
> fw_cfg. :)
Thanks for mentioning "virtio-9p", now I remember what to point at
instead of it. I recommend Stefan's slides from this year's KVM forum.
https://kvmforum2015.sched.org/event/bca50b64e0fbea734b855498f25d0753
http://blog.vmsplice.net/2015/08/virtio-vsock-zero-configuration.html
Thanks
Laszlo
- Re: [Qemu-devel] "Using Python to investigate EFI and ACPI", (continued)
- Re: [Qemu-devel] "Using Python to investigate EFI and ACPI", Josh Triplett, 2015/09/03
- Re: [Qemu-devel] "Using Python to investigate EFI and ACPI", josh, 2015/09/03
- Re: [Qemu-devel] "Using Python to investigate EFI and ACPI", Laszlo Ersek, 2015/09/03
- Re: [Qemu-devel] "Using Python to investigate EFI and ACPI", josh, 2015/09/03
- Re: [Qemu-devel] "Using Python to investigate EFI and ACPI",
Laszlo Ersek <=
- Re: [Qemu-devel] "Using Python to investigate EFI and ACPI", josh, 2015/09/04