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What are the practical (or real) advantages of Intel VT and TxT technology (Q8200 vs Q9300) ?
In message Alphonse Q
Muthafuyer was claimed to have wrote: 2771 2771 On Wed, 18 Mar 2009 13:39:35 -0700, DevilsPGD wrote: In message Alphonse Q Muthafuyer was claimed to have wrote: On Tue, 17 Mar 2009 18:25:26 -0400, Yousuf Khan wrote: Virtualization will for example let you run Linux under Windows, or vice-versa. You might wanna review good descriptions of: 1.) Virtualization and VM's. 2.) Emulation. The problem is that most modern virtual machine solutions are a mix of virtualization and emulation, so the difference between the two concepts is less well defined in practice. That's certainly news to me. Can you substantiate? Yes. In the case of VMWare, it looks something like this: Emulated : * Video Card (VMware SVGA II) * Intel 440BX motherboard chipset * AMD PCNET Family Ethernet PCI card * CreativeSound Blaster Audio PCI Virtualized : * Processor * Memory * SCSI peripherals * IDE disk (more or less) |
#12
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What are the practical (or real) advantages of Intel VT and TxT technology (Q8200 vs Q9300) ?
DevilsPGD wrote:
In message Intel Guy was claimed to have wrote: What will I absolutely not be able to do with a Q8200 (and what will be a major or minor pain, but still possible to do) compared with having the Q9300? If you're missing VT you'll never be able to run Hyper-V (which is mainly a server technology anyway), and other virtualization software will perform more slowly although for the moment everything else still runs. VT also lets you run mismatched bittedness on VMWare workstation - ie a 32 bit guest on a 64 bit host OS, or vice versa. It's worth having for a developer box if you plan to use VMWare workstation. -- Nate Edel http://www.cubiclehermit.com/ preferred email | is "nate" at the | "I do have a cause, though. It's obscenity. I'm posting domain | for it." |
#13
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What are the practical (or real) advantages of Intel VT and TxTtechnology (Q8200 vs Q9300) ?
Intel Guy wrote:
Is it an absolute given that I *won't* be able to run *any* sort of virtualization if I don't have this VT? No. It definitely works without it. If I have 64-bit XP installed on this machine, and I want to run a virtual 32-bit XP session, or even a virtual win-98 session, I won't be able? The opposite (64-bit guest on 32-bit host) definitely will not work without VT. I'm not sure about the 32-bit guest on 64-bit host, but even if it works, VT will give a substantial performance boost. -- Nate Edel http://www.cubiclehermit.com/ preferred email | is "nate" at the | "I do have a cause, though. It's obscenity. I'm posting domain | for it." |
#14
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What are the practical (or real) advantages of Intel VT and TxT technology (Q8200 vs Q9300) ?
On Fri, 20 Mar 2009 00:34:57 -0700, DevilsPGD wrote:
The problem is that most modern virtual machine solutions are a mix of virtualization and emulation, so the difference between the two concepts is less well defined in practice. That's certainly news to me. Can you substantiate? Yes. In the case of VMWare, it looks something like this: Emulated : * Video Card (VMware SVGA II) * Intel 440BX motherboard chipset * AMD PCNET Family Ethernet PCI card * CreativeSound Blaster Audio PCI Which VMWare product? Does ESX Server running on "bare metal" with no "guests", do such emulation? Why 440BX? AQ "The monkey and the baboon was playing 7-up. The monkey won the money but he scared to pick it up. The monkey stumbled, mama. The baboon fell. The monkey grab the money and he run like hell!" - from "Dirty Motherfuyer", Roosevelt Sykes, around 1935 |
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What are the practical (or real) advantages of Intel VT and TxT technology (Q8200 vs Q9300) ?
In message Alphonse Q
Muthafuyer was claimed to have wrote: On Fri, 20 Mar 2009 00:34:57 -0700, DevilsPGD wrote: The problem is that most modern virtual machine solutions are a mix of virtualization and emulation, so the difference between the two concepts is less well defined in practice. That's certainly news to me. Can you substantiate? Yes. In the case of VMWare, it looks something like this: Emulated : * Video Card (VMware SVGA II) * Intel 440BX motherboard chipset * AMD PCNET Family Ethernet PCI card * CreativeSound Blaster Audio PCI Which VMWare product? As far as I know, all of them. The products are essentially the same from the guest's point of view, although things like sound and USB may not exist in all products. Does ESX Server running on "bare metal" with no "guests", do such emulation? With no guests? Without a guest OS ESX Server isn't particularly useful, but without any guest OS running then it wouldn't be emulating anything, no. Why 440BX? You'd have to ask VMWare, although I'd guess it's likely due to it's compatibility and relative ease of emulating it. Virtual PC emulates the same chipset. |
#16
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What are the practical (or real) advantages of Intel VT and TxT technology (Q8200 vs Q9300) ?
On Tue, 24 Mar 2009 16:29:25 -0700, DevilsPGD wrote:
In message Alphonse Q Muthafuyer was claimed to have wrote: On Fri, 20 Mar 2009 00:34:57 -0700, DevilsPGD wrote: The problem is that most modern virtual machine solutions are a mix of virtualization and emulation, so the difference between the two concepts is less well defined in practice. That's certainly news to me. Can you substantiate? Yes. In the case of VMWare, it looks something like this: Emulated : * Video Card (VMware SVGA II) * Intel 440BX motherboard chipset * AMD PCNET Family Ethernet PCI card * CreativeSound Blaster Audio PCI Which VMWare product? As far as I know, all of them. The products are essentially the same from the guest's point of view, although things like sound and USB may not exist in all products. Does ESX Server running on "bare metal" with no "guests", do such emulation? With no guests? Without a guest OS ESX Server isn't particularly useful, Except to define/config new VM's? I have no experience with VMWare. Are you a hands-on VMWare admin or in close contact with one? but without any guest OS running then it wouldn't be emulating anything, no. Why 440BX? You'd have to ask VMWare, although I'd guess it's likely due to it's compatibility and relative ease of emulating it. Virtual PC emulates the same chipset. I found it curious because 440BX proper (from late 90's) cannot support numerous newer devices/equipment. Please to reference: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VMware Excerpt: Core product design VMware software provides a completely virtualized set of hardware to the guest operating system. VMware software virtualizes the hardware for a video adapter, a network adapter, and hard disk adapters. The host provides pass- through drivers for guest USB, serial, and parallel devices 1.) Is this accurate? 2.) Is it 100% consistent with what you say re emulation? Thanks, AQ "The monkey and the baboon was playing 7-up. The monkey won the money but he scared to pick it up. The monkey stumbled, mama. The baboon fell. The monkey grab the money and he run like hell!" - from "Dirty Motherfuyer", Roosevelt Sykes, around 1935 |
#17
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What are the practical (or real) advantages of Intel VT and TxT technology (Q8200 vs Q9300) ?
In message Alphonse Q
Muthafuyer was claimed to have wrote: On Tue, 24 Mar 2009 16:29:25 -0700, DevilsPGD wrote: In message Alphonse Q Muthafuyer was claimed to have wrote: On Fri, 20 Mar 2009 00:34:57 -0700, DevilsPGD wrote: The problem is that most modern virtual machine solutions are a mix of virtualization and emulation, so the difference between the two concepts is less well defined in practice. That's certainly news to me. Can you substantiate? Yes. In the case of VMWare, it looks something like this: Emulated : * Video Card (VMware SVGA II) * Intel 440BX motherboard chipset * AMD PCNET Family Ethernet PCI card * CreativeSound Blaster Audio PCI Which VMWare product? As far as I know, all of them. The products are essentially the same from the guest's point of view, although things like sound and USB may not exist in all products. Does ESX Server running on "bare metal" with no "guests", do such emulation? With no guests? Without a guest OS ESX Server isn't particularly useful, Except to define/config new VM's? Right, in which case you wouldn't be running "no guests" anymore... So I'm not really sure if I've understood your question here. VMWare only virtualizes or emulates anything for the purposes of guests, even the so-called "bare metal" versions of virtualization products aren't, they just run on a light weight optimized version of their chosen kernel, that kernel still sees the real hardware. I have no experience with VMWare. Are you a hands-on VMWare admin or in close contact with one? I spend most of my day using VMWare workstation and Hyper-V for managing a variety of machines ranging from servers to QA test environments. I did run VMWare server prior to Hyper-V, but Hyper-V's performance won me over during the Hyper-V beta and I've moved 100% of my server virtualization over to Hyper-V at this time. That being said, I'm only running Hyper-V on two pieces of hardware, not a massive datacenter or anything like that. but without any guest OS running then it wouldn't be emulating anything, no. Why 440BX? You'd have to ask VMWare, although I'd guess it's likely due to it's compatibility and relative ease of emulating it. Virtual PC emulates the same chipset. I found it curious because 440BX proper (from late 90's) cannot support numerous newer devices/equipment. While true, such newer devices don't tend to be emulated within the virtual environment either. More importantly, switching chipsets is a *huge* undertaking and not something you'd want to be doing on a regular basis. Aside from being a ground up rewrite of some of the more difficult components, it would also cause the same issues the physical world has moving machines from one hardware platform to another, so it would make the whole concept of building a VMWare machine once and deploying it painful for those using the newer hardware. Please to reference: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VMware Excerpt: Core product design VMware software provides a completely virtualized set of hardware to the guest operating system. VMware software virtualizes the hardware for a video adapter, a network adapter, and hard disk adapters. The host provides pass- through drivers for guest USB, serial, and parallel devices 1.) Is this accurate? 2.) Is it 100% consistent with what you say re emulation? Things like disk adapters are one of the easiest examples to look at: The IDE/SCSI controller that exists in the guest environment doesn't exist in my physical PC, so by definition the adapter itself is emulated as there isn't a physical device to virtualize. Networking is entirely emulated by passing packets back and forth between host and guest, Hyper-V is the first (as far as I know, anyway) to change this model and they did it by "inventing" a new NIC, one that doesn't exist in the real world and only exists within Hyper-V guests (as well as offering a legacy NIC for non-supported OSes, and/or remote boot/install of supported OSes before Hyper-V's additions are installed) The line between emulation and virtualization is blurred and I'm not sure it's totally meaningful. |
#18
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What are the practical (or real) advantages of Intel VT and TxT technology (Q8200 vs Q9300) ?
On Fri, 27 Mar 2009 00:16:59 -0700, DevilsPGD wrote:
In message Alphonse Q Muthafuyer was claimed to have wrote: On Tue, 24 Mar 2009 16:29:25 -0700, DevilsPGD wrote: In message Alphonse Q Muthafuyer was claimed to have wrote: On Fri, 20 Mar 2009 00:34:57 -0700, DevilsPGD wrote: The problem is that most modern virtual machine solutions are a mix of virtualization and emulation, so the difference between the two concepts is less well defined in practice. That's certainly news to me. Can you substantiate? Yes. In the case of VMWare, it looks something like this: Emulated : * Video Card (VMware SVGA II) * Intel 440BX motherboard chipset * AMD PCNET Family Ethernet PCI card * CreativeSound Blaster Audio PCI Which VMWare product? As far as I know, all of them. The products are essentially the same from the guest's point of view, although things like sound and USB may not exist in all products. Does ESX Server running on "bare metal" with no "guests", do such emulation? With no guests? Without a guest OS ESX Server isn't particularly useful, Except to define/config new VM's? Right, in which case you wouldn't be running "no guests" anymore... So I'm not really sure if I've understood your question here. VMWare only virtualizes or emulates anything for the purposes of guests, even the so-called "bare metal" versions of virtualization products aren't, they just run on a light weight optimized version of their chosen kernel, that kernel still sees the real hardware. from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VMware_ESX_Server : VMware states that the ESX Server product runs on "bare metal".[3] In contrast to other VMware products, it does not run atop a third-party operating system[4], but instead includes its own kernel. Up through the current ESX version 3.5, a Linux kernel is started first[5] and is used to load a variety of specialized virtualization components, including VMware's 'vmkernel' component. This previously-booted Linux kernel then becomes the first running virtual machine and is called the service console. Thus, at normal run-time, the vmkernel is running on the bare computer and the Linux-based service console runs as the first virtual machine (and cannot be terminated or shutdown without shutting down the entire system I have no experience with VMWare. Are you a hands-on VMWare admin or in close contact with one? I spend most of my day using VMWare workstation and Hyper-V for managing a variety of machines ranging from servers to QA test environments. I did run VMWare server prior to Hyper-V, but Hyper-V's performance won me over during the Hyper-V beta and I've moved 100% of my server virtualization over to Hyper-V at this time. Interesting. Any notion why Hyper-V outperformed VMWare? That being said, I'm only running Hyper-V on two pieces of hardware, not a massive datacenter or anything like that. but without any guest OS running then it wouldn't be emulating anything, no. Why 440BX? You'd have to ask VMWare, although I'd guess it's likely due to it's compatibility and relative ease of emulating it. Virtual PC emulates the same chipset. Well, it's a famous, famous chipset, one of Intels most successful. I ran it (native, of course) for years on my desktop. Still have = 1 mobo in the basement ... I found it curious because 440BX proper (from late 90's) cannot support numerous newer devices/equipment. While true, such newer devices don't tend to be emulated within the virtual environment either. More importantly, switching chipsets is a *huge* undertaking and not something you'd want to be doing on a regular basis. Aside from being a ground up rewrite of some of the more difficult components, it would also cause the same issues the physical world has moving machines from one hardware platform to another, so it would make the whole concept of building a VMWare machine once and deploying it painful for those using the newer hardware. One difficulty I have with virtualization is that, when they move beyond the "simple case", the semantics can really get tricky. To run numerous VM's on one box is one thing. To be able to *move* VM's, say, from a newer box to the *newest* box can be quite another. I'm finding that some features of x86 virtualization are oriented to this type of thing (a new concept to me). Back to 440BX: http://www.intel.com/design/chipsets/440bx/index.htm Intel® 440BX AGPset Package Information Product Package 82443BX AGP Host Bridge Controller 492 Ball Grid Array (BGA) 82371AB PCI-ISA Bridge 324 Ball Grid Array (BGA) The 440BX 82443BX (North Bridge) Memory Controller is emulated by VMWare guests? Please to reference: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VMware Excerpt: Core product design VMware software provides a completely virtualized set of hardware to the guest operating system. VMware software virtualizes the hardware for a video adapter, a network adapter, and hard disk adapters. The host provides pass- through drivers for guest USB, serial, and parallel devices 1.) Is this accurate? 2.) Is it 100% consistent with what you say re emulation? Things like disk adapters are one of the easiest examples to look at: The IDE/SCSI controller that exists in the guest environment doesn't exist in my physical PC, so by definition the adapter itself is emulated as there isn't a physical device to virtualize. That's hard to follow if taken literally. The physical IDE/SCSI controllers *have* to exist on the hardware platform. Whether or not they can be virtualized for a guest OS is another issue. Networking is entirely emulated by passing packets back and forth between host and guest, Hyper-V is the first (as far as I know, anyway) to change this model and they did it by "inventing" a new NIC, one that doesn't exist in the real world and only exists within Hyper-V guests (as well as offering a legacy NIC for non-supported OSes, and/or remote boot/install of supported OSes before Hyper-V's additions are installed) Your Hyper-V runs under Win Server '08? Could you briefly describe the software build for such a box? The line between emulation and virtualization is blurred and I'm not sure it's totally meaningful. Until certain types of performance bottlenecks rear their ugly heads? Well, I gotta ask. To what extent do you think x86 virtualization (i.e. with VMWare) is all about: a.) Writing hypervisor drivers etc for native support of newer hardware. b.) Writing translation-drivers for guest OS's so the guest thinks it is running XX while the hypervisor is translating or interpreting it into YY? I might've been coding JCL back around '84 when a knowledgable person told me that my MVS was running as a guest under (IBM) VM. I have taken virtualization seriously ever since. :-) Not that I know that much about the nuts and bolts. Am now 9 years retired from the industry. Of course, it's the hottest thing on the bleeding edge. Virtualize the servers. Virtualize the desktops. Virtualize the net. Virtualize the storage. Add some stuff like iSCSI and Fiber Channel over 10GB Ethernet, and it's a Brave New World all over again. But, lordy me, the semantics! Or maybe I'm just reading the wrong stuff. Thanks, AQ "The monkey and the baboon was playing 7-up. The monkey won the money but he scared to pick it up. The monkey stumbled, mama. The baboon fell. The monkey grab the money and he run like hell!" - from "Dirty Motherfuyer", Roosevelt Sykes, around 1935 |
#19
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What are the practical (or real) advantages of Intel VT and TxTtechnology (Q8200 vs Q9300) ?
Intel Guy wrote:
With regard to, say, the following 2 processors: Q8200 and Q9300 The 8200 is listed as not having Intel "virtualization technology" nor Intel "Trusted execution technology". What are the implications of not having those two technologies for a desktop developer system running 64-bit XP-pro with 8gb ram? What will I absolutely not be able to do with a Q8200 (and what will be a major or minor pain, but still possible to do) compared with having the Q9300? Virtualization solves the problem of wanting to upgrade to a new OS version but knowing it still has some kinks, or running the latest version but keeping an old OS in a VM because it has something no longer supported but lacks the latest security features. I'm typing from a VM I use as my desktop, since I can move the image to any similar machine and run it there. At one time it was a 1998 version of Linux, running safely in a VM. I have XP and Win7 VMs as well, and a few small servers which can just be moved to another machine at will. |
#20
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What are the practical (or real) advantages of Intel VT and TxTtechnology (Q8200 vs Q9300) ?
On Aug 4, 6:32*pm, Bill Davidsen wrote:
Intel Guy wrote: With regard to, say, the following 2 processors: Q8200 and Q9300 The 8200 is listed as not having Intel "virtualization technology" nor Intel "Trusted execution technology". What are the implications of not having those two technologies for a desktop developer system running 64-bit XP-pro with 8gb ram? What will I absolutely not be able to do with a Q8200 (and what will be a major or minor pain, but still possible to do) compared with having the Q9300? Virtualization solves the problem of wanting to upgrade to a new OS version but knowing it still has some kinks, or running the latest version but keeping an old OS in a VM because it has something no longer supported but lacks the latest security features. I'm typing from a VM I use as my desktop, since I can move the image to any similar machine and run it there. At one time it was a 1998 version of Linux, running safely in a VM. I have XP and Win7 VMs as well, and a few small servers which can just be moved to another machine at will. I had a really hard time visualizing a VM until I actually used one. Now things are much more clear, and, while I still don't understand the virtue of running 100 Linux servers on a mainframe, I can see some definite advantages for me: I can run Linux as a guest on Windows and have access to both environments at the same time. I'm assuming that it's the VT-x technology that allows me to run the virtual Linux box with it's own IP address. My router sees two distinct computers, in spite of the fact that I have but one ethernet card. I can ssh into the guest Linux box from the host box and use sftp to move files back and forth between the two machines. I'm running the guest Linux on vmware player. All my devices are visible to the guest box, although I haven't tried using some of them. I've already used blank virtual machines as crash and burn boxes. I really like being able to do that. A couple of Intel documents have been helpful to me in understanding just what it is that VT-x can do http://www.intel.com/technology/itj/...ion-future.htm http://download.intel.com/technology...0-i3-art01.pdf and the advantages seem to be substantial. It also seems clear that you don't *need* it, as is obvious from your own history. I have esxi, but that's a different level I have yet to try. The possibility of running on nearly bare iron is pretty attractive. Robert. |
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