* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player @ 2006-06-17 15:46 Mattia Gentilini (QD) 0 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Mattia Gentilini (QD) @ 2006-06-17 15:46 UTC (permalink / raw) To: qemu-devel Tim Walker wrote: >> The FLOZ project >> http://www.oszoo.org/wiki/index.php/Free_Live_OS_Zoo > This really is too cool ;) Thanks ;-) > What hardware is it running on? Currently we use a dual xeon 2.8 GHz with hyperthreading and 2 GB physical RAM. -- MG55: Mattia Gentilini & 55 Virtual Machines ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player
@ 2006-06-17 6:15 Mattia Gentilini (QD)
2006-06-17 7:25 ` Tim Walker
0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread
From: Mattia Gentilini (QD) @ 2006-06-17 6:15 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: qemu-devel
Tim Walker wrote:
> That may not be true - I'm not sure but I think something reasonable
> could be done in Java. There is certainly a Java VNC client available
> which could play a part.
The FLOZ project
http://www.oszoo.org/wiki/index.php/Free_Live_OS_Zoo
Uses the tightVNC Java applet to connect to QEMU instance.
QEMU on the server is CVS, but lacks the last vnc.c patch (I'll put it
on when I have some time).
--
MG55: Mattia Gentilini & 55 Virtual Machines
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-17 6:15 Mattia Gentilini (QD) @ 2006-06-17 7:25 ` Tim Walker 0 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Tim Walker @ 2006-06-17 7:25 UTC (permalink / raw) To: qemu-devel Mattia Gentilini (QD) wrote: > Tim Walker wrote: > >> That may not be true - I'm not sure but I think something reasonable >> could be done in Java. There is certainly a Java VNC client available >> which could play a part. >> > The FLOZ project > http://www.oszoo.org/wiki/index.php/Free_Live_OS_Zoo > > Uses the tightVNC Java applet to connect to QEMU instance. > QEMU on the server is CVS, but lacks the last vnc.c patch (I'll put it > on when I have some time). > > This really is too cool ;) What hardware is it running on? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* [Qemu-devel] VMware Player @ 2006-06-14 14:55 Joe Lee 2006-06-14 15:01 ` Paul Brook 0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Joe Lee @ 2006-06-14 14:55 UTC (permalink / raw) To: qemu-devel I was wondering if there's the capability to have a "vmware player" type functionality to qemu. This is just to allow playing or running images with out needing to create virtual machines. May this could be a separate product. What's everyones thought to this? Joe ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-14 14:55 Joe Lee @ 2006-06-14 15:01 ` Paul Brook 2006-06-14 15:53 ` Joe Lee 0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Paul Brook @ 2006-06-14 15:01 UTC (permalink / raw) To: qemu-devel, joelee724 On Wednesday 14 June 2006 15:55, Joe Lee wrote: > I was wondering if there's the capability to have a "vmware player" type > functionality to qemu. This is just to allow playing or running images > with out needing to create virtual machines. May this could be a > separate product. What's everyones thought to this? Why on earth would we want to make a crippled version of qemu? AFAIK "Creating" a VMware virtual machine is just making a config file. qemu doesn't have config files, so your question makes no sense. Paul ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-14 15:01 ` Paul Brook @ 2006-06-14 15:53 ` Joe Lee 2006-06-14 16:02 ` Paul Brook ` (3 more replies) 0 siblings, 4 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Joe Lee @ 2006-06-14 15:53 UTC (permalink / raw) To: qemu-devel > > Why on earth would we want to make a crippled version of qemu? > > AFAIK "Creating" a VMware virtual machine is just making a config file. > qemu doesn't have config files, so your question makes no sense. Well, I was not thinking or suggesting of a crippled qemu version. I asked the question because there are some software appliances which are pre-built and pre-configured apps that are built on a LAMP stack and packaged as a single image type file. This image file can be downloaded and run on a product similar to VMware Player. This is used for quick demo purposes of an application with out the need to have a full virtual machine. I am totally new to VM technologies but have played around with VMware and the player as well. So, my question was just an inquiry to see if that capability would make sense on a qemu based product that is open source. However, thanks and appreciated your comments/feedback! joe Paul Brook wrote: > On Wednesday 14 June 2006 15:55, Joe Lee wrote: > >> I was wondering if there's the capability to have a "vmware player" type >> functionality to qemu. This is just to allow playing or running images >> with out needing to create virtual machines. May this could be a >> separate product. What's everyones thought to this? >> > > Why on earth would we want to make a crippled version of qemu? > > AFAIK "Creating" a VMware virtual machine is just making a config file. > qemu doesn't have config files, so your question makes no sense. > > Paul > > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-14 15:53 ` Joe Lee @ 2006-06-14 16:02 ` Paul Brook 2006-06-14 16:12 ` Joe Lee 2006-06-14 16:10 ` Oliver Gerlich ` (2 subsequent siblings) 3 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Paul Brook @ 2006-06-14 16:02 UTC (permalink / raw) To: qemu-devel, joelee724 On Wednesday 14 June 2006 16:53, Joe Lee wrote: > > Why on earth would we want to make a crippled version of qemu? > > > > AFAIK "Creating" a VMware virtual machine is just making a config file. > > qemu doesn't have config files, so your question makes no sense. > > Well, I was not thinking or suggesting of a crippled qemu version. I > asked the question because there are some software > appliances which are pre-built and pre-configured apps that are built on > a LAMP stack and packaged as a single image > type file. This image file can be downloaded and run on a product > similar to VMware Player. This is used for quick demo > purposes of an application with out the need to have a full virtual > machine. My impression was that these "appliances" are full virtual machines. It's just an OS install that's been stripped down and configured to run a single application on startup. Paul ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-14 16:02 ` Paul Brook @ 2006-06-14 16:12 ` Joe Lee 2006-06-14 16:21 ` Daniel P. Berrange 0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Joe Lee @ 2006-06-14 16:12 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Paul Brook; +Cc: qemu-devel You are right, and the idea is that the person have full interaction with the application environment including the underlying LAMP/WAMP stack that has been packaged. Users that want to quickly run and test-drive the appliance may not really need a full VM type application. Just something that could quickly run the image (appliance). Joe Paul Brook wrote: > On Wednesday 14 June 2006 16:53, Joe Lee wrote: > >>> Why on earth would we want to make a crippled version of qemu? >>> >>> AFAIK "Creating" a VMware virtual machine is just making a config file. >>> qemu doesn't have config files, so your question makes no sense. >>> >> Well, I was not thinking or suggesting of a crippled qemu version. I >> asked the question because there are some software >> appliances which are pre-built and pre-configured apps that are built on >> a LAMP stack and packaged as a single image >> type file. This image file can be downloaded and run on a product >> similar to VMware Player. This is used for quick demo >> purposes of an application with out the need to have a full virtual >> machine. >> > > My impression was that these "appliances" are full virtual machines. It's just > an OS install that's been stripped down and configured to run a single > application on startup. > > Paul > > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-14 16:12 ` Joe Lee @ 2006-06-14 16:21 ` Daniel P. Berrange 2006-06-14 16:39 ` Jan Marten Simons 0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Daniel P. Berrange @ 2006-06-14 16:21 UTC (permalink / raw) To: joelee724, qemu-devel; +Cc: Paul Brook On Wed, Jun 14, 2006 at 12:12:43PM -0400, Joe Lee wrote: > You are right, and the idea is that the person have full interaction > with the application environment including the underlying LAMP/WAMP > stack that has been packaged. Users that want to quickly run and > test-drive the appliance may not really need a full VM type application. > Just something that could quickly run the image (appliance). An VMWare player "appliance" is really just a disk image & config file. Running a disk image in QEMU is just a matter of executing qemu -hda /path/to/image Perhaps adding "-m XXX" to set increased RAM. This is no harder to do than using VMWare player vmplayer /path/to/appliance Since QEMU already understands VMWare disk images, there's even a good chance that QEMU can run a VMWare "appliance" image itself. So it looks to me that QEMU is already on a par with VMWare player in terms of being able to quickly & simply test 'appliance' images. Dan. > > Joe > > Paul Brook wrote: > >On Wednesday 14 June 2006 16:53, Joe Lee wrote: > > > >>>Why on earth would we want to make a crippled version of qemu? > >>> > >>>AFAIK "Creating" a VMware virtual machine is just making a config file. > >>>qemu doesn't have config files, so your question makes no sense. > >>> > >>Well, I was not thinking or suggesting of a crippled qemu version. I > >>asked the question because there are some software > >>appliances which are pre-built and pre-configured apps that are built on > >>a LAMP stack and packaged as a single image > >>type file. This image file can be downloaded and run on a product > >>similar to VMware Player. This is used for quick demo > >>purposes of an application with out the need to have a full virtual > >>machine. > >> > > > >My impression was that these "appliances" are full virtual machines. It's > >just an OS install that's been stripped down and configured to run a > >single application on startup. > > > >Paul > > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Qemu-devel mailing list > Qemu-devel@nongnu.org > http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/qemu-devel -- |=- Red Hat, Engineering, Emerging Technologies, Boston. +1 978 392 2496 -=| |=- Perl modules: http://search.cpan.org/~danberr/ -=| |=- Projects: http://freshmeat.net/~danielpb/ -=| |=- GnuPG: 7D3B9505 F3C9 553F A1DA 4AC2 5648 23C1 B3DF F742 7D3B 9505 -=| ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-14 16:21 ` Daniel P. Berrange @ 2006-06-14 16:39 ` Jan Marten Simons 2006-06-14 17:42 ` Joe Lee 0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Jan Marten Simons @ 2006-06-14 16:39 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Daniel P. Berrange, qemu-devel Am Mittwoch, 14. Juni 2006 18:21 schrieb Daniel P. Berrange: > An VMWare player "appliance" is really just a disk image & config file. > Running a disk image in QEMU is just a matter of executing > > qemu -hda /path/to/image > > Perhaps adding "-m XXX" to set increased RAM. > > This is no harder to do than using VMWare player > > vmplayer /path/to/appliance > > Since QEMU already understands VMWare disk images, there's even a good > chance that QEMU can run a VMWare "appliance" image itself. So it looks > to me that QEMU is already on a par with VMWare player in terms of being > able to quickly & simply test 'appliance' images. > > Dan. To add to this and my previous mail, I'd like to point to ReactOS, which is distributed in various forms for simple testing, including a version bundled with qemu: http://www.reactos.org/xhtml/en/download.html With regards, Jan PS: As qemu is really small compared to VMware Player, it poses only very little overhead to bundle it with the image (one could even hack some sort of selfextracting executable qemu+imagefile) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-14 16:39 ` Jan Marten Simons @ 2006-06-14 17:42 ` Joe Lee 0 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Joe Lee @ 2006-06-14 17:42 UTC (permalink / raw) To: qemu-devel Thanks for the comments below, It seems that QEMU can easily be used to run images. I will start to look into the availabe GUI front-ends for QEMU. - joe Jan Marten Simons wrote: > Am Mittwoch, 14. Juni 2006 18:21 schrieb Daniel P. Berrange: > >> An VMWare player "appliance" is really just a disk image & config file. >> Running a disk image in QEMU is just a matter of executing >> >> qemu -hda /path/to/image >> >> Perhaps adding "-m XXX" to set increased RAM. >> >> This is no harder to do than using VMWare player >> >> vmplayer /path/to/appliance >> >> Since QEMU already understands VMWare disk images, there's even a good >> chance that QEMU can run a VMWare "appliance" image itself. So it looks >> to me that QEMU is already on a par with VMWare player in terms of being >> able to quickly & simply test 'appliance' images. >> >> Dan. >> > > To add to this and my previous mail, I'd like to point to ReactOS, which is > distributed in various forms for simple testing, including a version bundled > with qemu: http://www.reactos.org/xhtml/en/download.html > > With regards, > Jan > > PS: As qemu is really small compared to VMware Player, it poses only very > little overhead to bundle it with the image (one could even hack some sort of > selfextracting executable qemu+imagefile) > > > _______________________________________________ > Qemu-devel mailing list > Qemu-devel@nongnu.org > http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/qemu-devel > > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-14 15:53 ` Joe Lee 2006-06-14 16:02 ` Paul Brook @ 2006-06-14 16:10 ` Oliver Gerlich 2006-06-15 7:47 ` kadil 2006-06-14 16:22 ` Jan Marten Simons 2006-06-14 16:27 ` Larry Brigman 3 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Oliver Gerlich @ 2006-06-14 16:10 UTC (permalink / raw) To: joelee724, qemu-devel Joe Lee wrote: >> >> Why on earth would we want to make a crippled version of qemu? >> >> AFAIK "Creating" a VMware virtual machine is just making a config file. >> qemu doesn't have config files, so your question makes no sense. > > Well, I was not thinking or suggesting of a crippled qemu version. I > asked the question because there are some software > appliances which are pre-built and pre-configured apps that are built on > a LAMP stack and packaged as a single image > type file. This image file can be downloaded and run on a product > similar to VMware Player. This is used for quick demo > purposes of an application with out the need to have a full virtual > machine. What exactly do you mean / what is the actual "use case" for your idea? Maybe you mean something like this: http://www.damnsmalllinux.org/usb-qemu.html Btw. regarding your earlier question about a Qemu GUI similar to VMware: AFAIK at least two people have posted GUI patches for Qemu (look in the mailing list archive); so far there has been little response to that, and I suppose that these patches "just" need testing and some feedback (as they seem to be pretty intrusive, with changing the video output and the input handling stuff). Regards, Oliver ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-14 16:10 ` Oliver Gerlich @ 2006-06-15 7:47 ` kadil 2006-06-15 13:18 ` WaxDragon 0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: kadil @ 2006-06-15 7:47 UTC (permalink / raw) To: qemu-devel On Wed, 2006-06-14 at 18:10 +0200, Oliver Gerlich wrote: > Btw. regarding your earlier question about a Qemu GUI similar to VMware: > AFAIK at least two people have posted GUI patches for Qemu (look in the > mailing list archive); so far there has been little response to that, > and I suppose that these patches "just" need testing and some feedback > (as they seem to be pretty intrusive, with changing the video output and > the input handling stuff). > Real world, gui's are just so easy & desirable, especially if the gui is consistent across os's, and part of the original distro. I think take-up would be huge (well huge-er, current takeup is huge) Kim ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-15 7:47 ` kadil @ 2006-06-15 13:18 ` WaxDragon 2006-06-15 13:43 ` Julian Seward 2006-06-15 14:18 ` Joe Lee 0 siblings, 2 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: WaxDragon @ 2006-06-15 13:18 UTC (permalink / raw) To: ksadil, qemu-devel On 6/15/06, kadil <ksadil@bigpond.net.au> wrote: > On Wed, 2006-06-14 at 18:10 +0200, Oliver Gerlich wrote: > Real world, gui's are just so easy & desirable, especially if the gui is > consistent across os's, and part of the original distro. I think > take-up would be huge (well huge-er, current takeup is huge) > > Kim > Some of us appriciate the fact that qemu has no "GUI" per se. ;0) -- <GedMurphy> why does the size matter? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-15 13:18 ` WaxDragon @ 2006-06-15 13:43 ` Julian Seward 2006-06-15 13:50 ` Johannes Schindelin 2006-06-15 14:18 ` Joe Lee 1 sibling, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Julian Seward @ 2006-06-15 13:43 UTC (permalink / raw) To: qemu-devel On Thursday 15 June 2006 14:18, WaxDragon wrote: > On 6/15/06, kadil <ksadil@bigpond.net.au> wrote: > > On Wed, 2006-06-14 at 18:10 +0200, Oliver Gerlich wrote: > > Real world, gui's are just so easy & desirable, especially if the gui is > > consistent across os's, and part of the original distro. I think > > take-up would be huge (well huge-er, current takeup is huge) > > > > Kim > > Some of us appriciate the fact that qemu has no "GUI" per se. ;0) Sure. But to 'sell' the project to wider audience, which may be helpful for its longer term development, a GUI is necessary. Usability engineering isn't as much fun as hacking the JIT, or whatever, but in the end usability counts. A lot. J ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-15 13:43 ` Julian Seward @ 2006-06-15 13:50 ` Johannes Schindelin 0 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Johannes Schindelin @ 2006-06-15 13:50 UTC (permalink / raw) To: qemu-devel Hi, On Thu, 15 Jun 2006, Julian Seward wrote: > On Thursday 15 June 2006 14:18, WaxDragon wrote: > > On 6/15/06, kadil <ksadil@bigpond.net.au> wrote: > > > On Wed, 2006-06-14 at 18:10 +0200, Oliver Gerlich wrote: > > > Real world, gui's are just so easy & desirable, especially if the gui is > > > consistent across os's, and part of the original distro. I think > > > take-up would be huge (well huge-er, current takeup is huge) > > > > > > Kim > > > > Some of us appriciate the fact that qemu has no "GUI" per se. ;0) > > Sure. But to 'sell' the project to wider audience, which may be > helpful for its longer term development, a GUI is necessary. > Usability engineering isn't as much fun as hacking the JIT, ... which is why most GUIs seem to be cobbled together, are badly designed and implemented: either the developer is bored to death, or it is a bad (or inexperienced) developer to begin with ... > or whatever, but in the end usability counts. A lot. Which is exactly why I like to wrap up things in a really small Tcl/Tk wrapper. And usually after that, the discussions with the employer revolve around what color this and that button should have. Sigh. Ciao, Dscho ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-15 13:18 ` WaxDragon 2006-06-15 13:43 ` Julian Seward @ 2006-06-15 14:18 ` Joe Lee 2006-06-15 14:43 ` Johannes Schindelin ` (2 more replies) 1 sibling, 3 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Joe Lee @ 2006-06-15 14:18 UTC (permalink / raw) To: qemu-devel > Some of us appriciate the fact that qemu has no "GUI" per se. ;0) Your right! the keyword is "some" but not all. I think if QEMU is to be adopted by the masses it will need to come up with a quality GUI-Frontend. However the CLI can always be in place for those who want and prefer to use it. Otherwise, I think most users will prefer to stay with VMware and especially that there VMware player AND VMware server edition is now FREE. I appreciate the effort that some are making to develop a GUI for QEMU - There's a few project I see that trying to achieve this. But, I wish they all could come together and work together to develop a nice GUI. I would like to see a sub-project exist in the QEMU site so all can come and contribute to that effort. joe WaxDragon wrote: > On 6/15/06, kadil <ksadil@bigpond.net.au> wrote: >> On Wed, 2006-06-14 at 18:10 +0200, Oliver Gerlich wrote: >> Real world, gui's are just so easy & desirable, especially if the gui is >> consistent across os's, and part of the original distro. I think >> take-up would be huge (well huge-er, current takeup is huge) >> >> Kim >> > > Some of us appriciate the fact that qemu has no "GUI" per se. ;0) > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-15 14:18 ` Joe Lee @ 2006-06-15 14:43 ` Johannes Schindelin 2006-06-15 19:42 ` Joe Lee 2006-06-15 20:34 ` Joe Lee 2006-06-15 15:25 ` Oliver Gerlich 2006-06-15 21:17 ` John Morris 2 siblings, 2 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Johannes Schindelin @ 2006-06-15 14:43 UTC (permalink / raw) To: joelee724, qemu-devel Hi, On Thu, 15 Jun 2006, Joe Lee wrote: > > Some of us appriciate the fact that qemu has no "GUI" per se. ;0) > Your right! the keyword is "some" but not all. I think if QEMU is to be > adopted by the masses it will need to come up with a quality GUI-Frontend. You're right! However, as Julian pointed out: it is less than fascinating to work on a GUI, _especially_ if it is for the masses who tend to criticize without contributing*Footnote 1*. So, unless the people who want a GUI so badly do it themselves, I think they will have to hire somebody to do it for them. Remember: since it is free, there is customer, and therefore no customer can be lost! Ciao, Dscho [1] I remember we had a great discussion on this list, where somebody thought it would be such a good idea to _demand_ features. And since it is Open Source, the good developers should work for free. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-15 14:43 ` Johannes Schindelin @ 2006-06-15 19:42 ` Joe Lee 2006-06-15 20:55 ` Johannes Schindelin 2006-06-15 20:34 ` Joe Lee 1 sibling, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Joe Lee @ 2006-06-15 19:42 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Johannes Schindelin; +Cc: qemu-devel > > You're right! However, as Julian pointed out: it is less than fascinating > to work on a GUI, _especially_ if it is for the masses who tend to > criticize without contributing*Footnote 1*. I am not sure I agree if that thought. It really depends on the mission or goal of the project. In the case for QEMU, I am not sure what its goal/mission is. Is the project just to scratch an itch to server a few people who needs it? Is it to fill a void over what exist in commercial software? Or, is the intent to develop something FREE and then offer some support service around the product? As far as users criticizing, that always going to be the case in Open Source - Show me a project where users don't criticize. As far as contribution goes, not everyone has the talent and ability to contribute - Like me. The way I see it, criticizing (when done in a constructive way) is not a bad thing. It is what drives the project when others share there views on features/functionality good or bad! -joe Johannes Schindelin wrote: > Hi, > > On Thu, 15 Jun 2006, Joe Lee wrote: > > >>> Some of us appriciate the fact that qemu has no "GUI" per se. ;0) >>> >> Your right! the keyword is "some" but not all. I think if QEMU is to be >> adopted by the masses it will need to come up with a quality GUI-Frontend. >> > > You're right! However, as Julian pointed out: it is less than fascinating > to work on a GUI, _especially_ if it is for the masses who tend to > criticize without contributing*Footnote 1*. > > So, unless the people who want a GUI so badly do it themselves, I think > they will have to hire somebody to do it for them. Remember: since it is > free, there is customer, and therefore no customer can be lost! > > Ciao, > Dscho > > [1] I remember we had a great discussion on this list, where somebody > thought it would be such a good idea to _demand_ features. And since it is > Open Source, the good developers should work for free. > > > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-15 19:42 ` Joe Lee @ 2006-06-15 20:55 ` Johannes Schindelin 2006-06-15 21:04 ` Joe Lee 0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Johannes Schindelin @ 2006-06-15 20:55 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Joe Lee; +Cc: qemu-devel Hi, On Thu, 15 Jun 2006, Joe Lee wrote: > > > > You're right! However, as Julian pointed out: it is less than fascinating to > > work on a GUI, _especially_ if it is for the masses who tend to criticize > > without contributing*Footnote 1*. > > I am not sure I agree if that thought. It really depends on the mission or > goal of the project. In the case for QEMU, I am not sure what its goal/mission > is. Is the project just to scratch an itch to server a few people who needs > it? Is it to fill a void over what exist in commercial software? Or, is the > intent to develop something FREE and then offer some support service around > the product? As far as I know: Fabrice started the project because he had this idea that translation should be faster than interpreting, and not much more difficult. He proved his point. And many people actually use QEmu, which is all the better. > As far as users criticizing, that always going to be the case in Open > Source - Show me a project where users don't criticize. Yes. And developers will always complain about those who profit and don't contribute. > As far as contribution goes, not everyone has the talent and ability to > contribute - Like me. I doubt that. You _can_ contribute. You actually do it right now. > The way I see it, criticizing (when done in a constructive way) is not a > bad thing. It is what drives the project when others share there views > on features/functionality good or bad! This is a contribution! By telling what is important to you, you contribute to the future value of the project (note that I say "project", not "product"...) There is a subtle point-of-no-return though. The story I was referring to, was where a person did not contribute, but instead called people names if they did not do what she wanted, which was effectively to work hard and for free. Which is just not fair. Ciao, Dscho P.S.: Actually, it was a "he", but I say "she" here, because he was a real pussy, and I am very happy he left the list. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-15 20:55 ` Johannes Schindelin @ 2006-06-15 21:04 ` Joe Lee 0 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Joe Lee @ 2006-06-15 21:04 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Johannes Schindelin; +Cc: qemu-devel Johannes Schindelin wrote: > Hi, > > On Thu, 15 Jun 2006, Joe Lee wrote: > > >>> You're right! However, as Julian pointed out: it is less than fascinating to >>> work on a GUI, _especially_ if it is for the masses who tend to criticize >>> without contributing*Footnote 1*. >>> >> I am not sure I agree if that thought. It really depends on the mission or >> goal of the project. In the case for QEMU, I am not sure what its goal/mission >> is. Is the project just to scratch an itch to server a few people who needs >> it? Is it to fill a void over what exist in commercial software? Or, is the >> intent to develop something FREE and then offer some support service around >> the product? >> > > As far as I know: Fabrice started the project because he had this idea > that translation should be faster than interpreting, and not much more > difficult. > > He proved his point. And many people actually use QEmu, which is all the > better. > > >> As far as users criticizing, that always going to be the case in Open >> Source - Show me a project where users don't criticize. >> > > Yes. And developers will always complain about those who profit and don't > contribute. > > >> As far as contribution goes, not everyone has the talent and ability to >> contribute - Like me. >> > > I doubt that. You _can_ contribute. You actually do it right now. > > >> The way I see it, criticizing (when done in a constructive way) is not a >> bad thing. It is what drives the project when others share there views >> on features/functionality good or bad! >> > > This is a contribution! By telling what is important to you, you > contribute to the future value of the project (note that I say "project", > not "product"...) > > There is a subtle point-of-no-return though. The story I was referring to, > was where a person did not contribute, but instead called people names if > they did not do what she wanted, which was effectively to work hard and > for free. Which is just not fair. > > Ciao, > Dscho > > P.S.: Actually, it was a "he", but I say "she" here, because he was a real > pussy, and I am very happy he left the list. > I share your view. Complaining and bitching in the wrong way is not a good thing. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-15 14:43 ` Johannes Schindelin 2006-06-15 19:42 ` Joe Lee @ 2006-06-15 20:34 ` Joe Lee 2006-06-15 20:56 ` Johannes Schindelin 2006-06-16 9:34 ` kadil 1 sibling, 2 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Joe Lee @ 2006-06-15 20:34 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Johannes Schindelin; +Cc: qemu-devel Johannes Schindelin wrote: > Hi, > > On Thu, 15 Jun 2006, Joe Lee wrote: > > >>> Some of us appriciate the fact that qemu has no "GUI" per se. ;0) >>> >> Your right! the keyword is "some" but not all. I think if QEMU is to be >> adopted by the masses it will need to come up with a quality GUI-Frontend. >> > > You're right! However, as Julian pointed out: it is less than fascinating > to work on a GUI, _especially_ if it is for the masses who tend to > criticize without contributing*Footnote 1*. > > So, unless the people who want a GUI so badly do it themselves, I think > they will have to hire somebody to do it for them. Remember: since it is > free, there is customer, and therefore no customer can be lost! > > Ciao, > Dscho > > [1] I remember we had a great discussion on this list, where somebody > thought it would be such a good idea to _demand_ features. And since it is > Open Source, the good developers should work for free. > > > BTW, I am curious to know how much would it cost to develop a good GUI-Frontend for QEMU that would be comparable to VMware. How much man hours would this likely take? Joe ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-15 20:34 ` Joe Lee @ 2006-06-15 20:56 ` Johannes Schindelin 2006-06-15 21:03 ` Joe Lee 2006-06-15 22:29 ` Oliver Gerlich 2006-06-16 9:34 ` kadil 1 sibling, 2 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Johannes Schindelin @ 2006-06-15 20:56 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Joe Lee; +Cc: qemu-devel Hi, On Thu, 15 Jun 2006, Joe Lee wrote: > BTW, I am curious to know how much would it cost to develop a good > GUI-Frontend for QEMU that would be comparable to VMware. How much man > hours would this likely take? I do not know VMware. Anybody? I would be interested, too, to know how complicated that frontend is... Should not be too difficult to reproduce it in Tcl/Tk (with a proper Tcl script as config format). Ciao, Dscho ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-15 20:56 ` Johannes Schindelin @ 2006-06-15 21:03 ` Joe Lee 2006-06-16 3:39 ` Rick Vernam 2006-06-15 22:29 ` Oliver Gerlich 1 sibling, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Joe Lee @ 2006-06-15 21:03 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Johannes Schindelin; +Cc: qemu-devel Johannes Schindelin wrote: > Hi, > > On Thu, 15 Jun 2006, Joe Lee wrote: > > >> BTW, I am curious to know how much would it cost to develop a good >> GUI-Frontend for QEMU that would be comparable to VMware. How much man >> hours would this likely take? >> > > I do not know VMware. Anybody? I would be interested, too, to know how > complicated that frontend is... Should not be too difficult to reproduce > it in Tcl/Tk (with a proper Tcl script as config format). > > Ciao, > Dscho > I am hoping some experience developers would comment on this! Joe ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-15 21:03 ` Joe Lee @ 2006-06-16 3:39 ` Rick Vernam 2006-06-16 4:31 ` Joe Lee 0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Rick Vernam @ 2006-06-16 3:39 UTC (permalink / raw) To: joelee724, qemu-devel QEMU leaves me with very few 'itches to be scratched' ... The basic tasks that a QUI should confine itself to, IMO, are already pretty darn easy - define/manage a VM (via a shell script for me), start it, stop it, pause it...etc.. Even so, I've been thinking about this for some time - months probably... What I'd develop, if I were to undertake such a task, is a very simple app that can start qemu according to some configuration, and simply hook into the monitor to issue such commands as sendkey, stop, cont ...etc ... I do not imagine a need to have this app embed the qemu VM in itself, only start it & hook into the monitor. Besides, I don't want to loose precious real estate - I like the window that a running VM is in just how it is - no changes. I've used VMWare in the past a lot. I found the toolbars & menus to be nothing more than clutter & annoyance. The majority of the work I do with a VM has everything to do with the VM, and nothing to do with things that can be done with an additional GUI, however it would be nice to have one for simplifying those extra tasks... Specifically, I imagine something sitting in my Sys. Tray. This Sys. Tray icon menu thing would have options to invoke qemu's monitor commands for easy access ...or a list of all VMs, each with a sub-menu (I'm thinking stop, cont, loadvm, savevm, commit, usb stuff, change device x). Also, I can use the Sys. Tray Icon to bring up it's window with all the niceties to create a new VM, manage existing VMs...etc. Right now, I have a shell script that has the 'configuration' of my VM - changing of that 'configuration' would need to go in the GUI. I also use the monitor thing for stop, cont, loadvm, startvm, commit, usb stuff & change device x - that would need to go in the GUI. Beyond that, what does more bling really bring to the table? On Thursday 15 June 2006 16:03, Joe Lee wrote: > Johannes Schindelin wrote: > > Hi, > > > > On Thu, 15 Jun 2006, Joe Lee wrote: > >> BTW, I am curious to know how much would it cost to develop a good > >> GUI-Frontend for QEMU that would be comparable to VMware. How much man > >> hours would this likely take? > > > > I do not know VMware. Anybody? I would be interested, too, to know how > > complicated that frontend is... Should not be too difficult to reproduce > > it in Tcl/Tk (with a proper Tcl script as config format). > > > > Ciao, > > Dscho > > I am hoping some experience developers would comment on this! > Joe > > > _______________________________________________ > Qemu-devel mailing list > Qemu-devel@nongnu.org > http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/qemu-devel ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-16 3:39 ` Rick Vernam @ 2006-06-16 4:31 ` Joe Lee 2006-06-16 5:20 ` Rick Vernam 0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Joe Lee @ 2006-06-16 4:31 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Rick Vernam; +Cc: qemu-devel Rick Vernam wrote: > QEMU leaves me with very few 'itches to be scratched' ... > > The basic tasks that a QUI should confine itself to, IMO, are already pretty > darn easy - define/manage a VM (via a shell script for me), start it, stop > it, pause it...etc.. > > Even so, I've been thinking about this for some time - months probably... > What I'd develop, if I were to undertake such a task, is a very simple app > that can start qemu according to some configuration, and simply hook into the > monitor to issue such commands as sendkey, stop, cont ...etc ... > > I do not imagine a need to have this app embed the qemu VM in itself, only > start it & hook into the monitor. Besides, I don't want to loose precious > real estate - I like the window that a running VM is in just how it is - no > changes. > I've used VMWare in the past a lot. I found the toolbars & menus to be > nothing more than clutter & annoyance. The majority of the work I do with a > VM has everything to do with the VM, and nothing to do with things that can > be done with an additional GUI, however it would be nice to have one for > simplifying those extra tasks... > > Specifically, I imagine something sitting in my Sys. Tray. This Sys. Tray > icon menu thing would have options to invoke qemu's monitor commands for easy > access ...or a list of all VMs, each with a sub-menu (I'm thinking stop, > cont, loadvm, savevm, commit, usb stuff, change device x). > Also, I can use the Sys. Tray Icon to bring up it's window with all the > niceties to create a new VM, manage existing VMs...etc. > > Right now, I have a shell script that has the 'configuration' of my VM - > changing of that 'configuration' would need to go in the GUI. > > I also use the monitor thing for stop, cont, loadvm, startvm, commit, usb > stuff & change device x - that would need to go in the GUI. > > Beyond that, what does more bling really bring to the table? > > On Thursday 15 June 2006 16:03, Joe Lee wrote: > >> Johannes Schindelin wrote: >> >>> Hi, >>> >>> On Thu, 15 Jun 2006, Joe Lee wrote: >>> >>>> BTW, I am curious to know how much would it cost to develop a good >>>> GUI-Frontend for QEMU that would be comparable to VMware. How much man >>>> hours would this likely take? >>>> >>> I do not know VMware. Anybody? I would be interested, too, to know how >>> complicated that frontend is... Should not be too difficult to reproduce >>> it in Tcl/Tk (with a proper Tcl script as config format). >>> >>> Ciao, >>> Dscho >>> >> I am hoping some experience developers would comment on this! >> Joe >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Qemu-devel mailing list >> Qemu-devel@nongnu.org >> http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/qemu-devel >> > > I glad to see many people sharing comments and making suggestions since this thread topic started. I seems there enough interest to have a GUI-Frontend for QEMU. I am hopeful this can lead to getting something started. I'd like to see a poll from people who would be willing to participate and contribute to getting something started. -joe ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-16 4:31 ` Joe Lee @ 2006-06-16 5:20 ` Rick Vernam 0 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Rick Vernam @ 2006-06-16 5:20 UTC (permalink / raw) To: qemu-devel On Thursday 15 June 2006 23:31, Joe Lee wrote: > I glad to see many people sharing comments and making suggestions since > this thread topic started. I seems there enough interest to have a > GUI-Frontend for QEMU. I am hopeful this can lead to getting something > started. > > I'd like to see a poll from people who would be willing to participate > and contribute to getting something started. > > -joe I'd absolutely love to. Although I have no experience with Qt, GTk, Tcl/Tk ...etc (only win32 GUI stuff, which I haven't done in years). Nor do I know anything about qemu internals... :-) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-15 20:56 ` Johannes Schindelin 2006-06-15 21:03 ` Joe Lee @ 2006-06-15 22:29 ` Oliver Gerlich 2006-06-15 23:03 ` Johannes Schindelin 1 sibling, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Oliver Gerlich @ 2006-06-15 22:29 UTC (permalink / raw) To: qemu-devel -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Johannes Schindelin schrieb: > Hi, > > On Thu, 15 Jun 2006, Joe Lee wrote: > > >>BTW, I am curious to know how much would it cost to develop a good >>GUI-Frontend for QEMU that would be comparable to VMware. How much man >>hours would this likely take? > > > I do not know VMware. Anybody? I would be interested, too, to know how > complicated that frontend is... There are some screenshots of "VMware Workstation" at http://www.vmware.com (see Products menu). Didn't find screenshots of "VMware Player" there, but Google image search shows a few for "VMplayer". > Should not be too difficult to reproduce > it in Tcl/Tk (with a proper Tcl script as config format). If you are familiar with Tcl/Tk, maybe you could give some hints on how to embed the Qemu window into such an app? I think there are only two ways for making a GUI: - - embed the Qemu SDL window into another application (there seem to be various hacks that do this under X11; not sure about Win32) - - replace Qemu's SDL part with some GUI toolkit (GTK, Tcl/Tk...) I guess the second way is quite a lot of work. The first way is a bit "hackish", as eg. events have to propagated from the GUI app to the Qemu window... how would this work with Tcl/Tk? Probably with the second way it would also be difficult to display real-time status info in the GUI (eg. guest CPU load, guest HDD accesses, network accesses). Regards, Oliver -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.3 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQFEkd9lTFOM6DcNJ6cRArqJAKC5wiG3lsVMA5TmNp7EdqRa1cDbrQCeNGI2 8oVTKgDXpLo2QJN0NxQQP/U= =IACV -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-15 22:29 ` Oliver Gerlich @ 2006-06-15 23:03 ` Johannes Schindelin 2006-06-15 23:38 ` Oliver Gerlich 0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Johannes Schindelin @ 2006-06-15 23:03 UTC (permalink / raw) To: qemu-devel Hi, On Fri, 16 Jun 2006, Oliver Gerlich wrote: > Johannes Schindelin schrieb: > > > > On Thu, 15 Jun 2006, Joe Lee wrote: > > > >>BTW, I am curious to know how much would it cost to develop a good > >>GUI-Frontend for QEMU that would be comparable to VMware. How much man > >>hours would this likely take? > > > > I do not know VMware. Anybody? I would be interested, too, to know how > > complicated that frontend is... > > There are some screenshots of "VMware Workstation" at > http://www.vmware.com (see Products menu). Didn't find screenshots of > "VMware Player" there, but Google image search shows a few for "VMplayer". Thanks. But I would like to know if there is a developer who has experience with the GUI. It is one thing to see the GUI, another to work with it. > > Should not be too difficult to reproduce > > it in Tcl/Tk (with a proper Tcl script as config format). > > If you are familiar with Tcl/Tk, maybe you could give some hints on how > to embed the Qemu window into such an app? I would go the easy way: just before starting QEmu, hide the Tk window... no need for embedding. Yes, I know this is a lame answer. But I am quite certain that most users would be happy about it. They do not *need* to do something fancy. They run the virtual machine, shut it down, and that's it. Ciao, Dscho ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-15 23:03 ` Johannes Schindelin @ 2006-06-15 23:38 ` Oliver Gerlich 0 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Oliver Gerlich @ 2006-06-15 23:38 UTC (permalink / raw) To: qemu-devel -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Johannes Schindelin schrieb: > Hi, > > On Fri, 16 Jun 2006, Oliver Gerlich wrote: > > >>Johannes Schindelin schrieb: >> >>>On Thu, 15 Jun 2006, Joe Lee wrote: >>> >>> >>>>BTW, I am curious to know how much would it cost to develop a good >>>>GUI-Frontend for QEMU that would be comparable to VMware. How much man >>>>hours would this likely take? >>> >>>I do not know VMware. Anybody? I would be interested, too, to know how >>>complicated that frontend is... >> >>There are some screenshots of "VMware Workstation" at >>http://www.vmware.com (see Products menu). Didn't find screenshots of >>"VMware Player" there, but Google image search shows a few for "VMplayer". > > > Thanks. But I would like to know if there is a developer who has > experience with the GUI. It is one thing to see the GUI, another to work > with it. > > >>>Should not be too difficult to reproduce >>>it in Tcl/Tk (with a proper Tcl script as config format). >> >>If you are familiar with Tcl/Tk, maybe you could give some hints on how >>to embed the Qemu window into such an app? > > > I would go the easy way: just before starting QEmu, hide the Tk window... > no need for embedding. > > Yes, I know this is a lame answer. But I am quite certain that most users > would be happy about it. They do not *need* to do something fancy. They > run the virtual machine, shut it down, and that's it. Heh :) that's what the current Qemu GUIs do already (many of which are mainly configuration GUIs). Thinking about it, at this point maybe an "official" configuration file format would be useful for all frontends and would really help unifying the GUIs (there has been a lot of talk about this already anyway). Regards, Oliver -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.3 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQFEke9mTFOM6DcNJ6cRAkLIAKDkkPPgGVR6OHyQ6sD5h71OYO5zYgCgkb6I KzNbrMmbEBuYzPgQ5fck5BA= =e/PC -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-15 20:34 ` Joe Lee 2006-06-15 20:56 ` Johannes Schindelin @ 2006-06-16 9:34 ` kadil 1 sibling, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: kadil @ 2006-06-16 9:34 UTC (permalink / raw) To: joelee724, qemu-devel On Thu, 2006-06-15 at 16:34 -0400, Joe Lee wrote: > > BTW, I am curious to know how much would it cost to develop a good > GUI-Frontend for QEMU that would be comparable to VMware. How much man > hours would this likely take? > > Joe Firstly, we do not have to start from scratch. There are some excellent examples of gui's as separate projects. We just need a benevolent dictator to "select" one as a concept, so the project will focus on a main branch. I will put forward my vote in advance for gtk. Cross platform, always free, no strings attached. I am not a very good programmer. I could do a simple gui is one day, a comprehensive one may be a solid month. But the quality of my code would not be as good as the existing options. I tried qemu-launcher. Loved it, then upgraded qemu and it no longer works. Hence I would like the gui to be in the main project, so they stay synchronised. Fortunately a lot of the work has already been started in the separate projects. It would be better to select one and build on it, than starting over. I would never advocate taking away the text based interface. That in the MS domain. But an installer + default gui will go far. Kim ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-15 14:18 ` Joe Lee 2006-06-15 14:43 ` Johannes Schindelin @ 2006-06-15 15:25 ` Oliver Gerlich 2006-06-15 21:17 ` John Morris 2 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Oliver Gerlich @ 2006-06-15 15:25 UTC (permalink / raw) To: joelee724, qemu-devel Joe Lee wrote: >> Some of us appriciate the fact that qemu has no "GUI" per se. ;0) > > Your right! the keyword is "some" but not all. I think if QEMU is to be > adopted by the masses it will need to come up with a quality > GUI-Frontend. However the CLI can always be in place for those who want > and prefer to use it. Otherwise, I think most users will prefer to stay > with VMware and especially that there VMware player AND VMware server > edition is now FREE. > > I appreciate the effort that some are making to develop a GUI for QEMU - > There's a few project I see that trying to achieve this. But, I wish > they all could come together and work together to develop a nice GUI. I > would like to see a sub-project exist in the QEMU site so all can come > and contribute to that effort. IIRC Fabrice has (quite some time ago) stated that he'd like to see a Qemu GUI that is integrated into the app (ie. not an external application that only captures the Qemu window), and also that the GUI should be done in GTK (though I'm not sure about the exact wording, so I might be spreading false rumours here ;) This would mean that the next steps for a GUI would be to "migrate" input event handling and graphics output from SDL to a GUI toolkit like GTK. Incidentally, that is more or less what the patches do which are floating around on the mailing list. I guess the reason why they were not integrated in CVS is that they are quite big and intrusive, and that Fabrice waits for some more feedback and testing of the patches. So, in the end, testing is probably something that anyone can do who has enough spare time and wants to put that time into developing a GUI for Qemu :) Regards, Oliver ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-15 14:18 ` Joe Lee 2006-06-15 14:43 ` Johannes Schindelin 2006-06-15 15:25 ` Oliver Gerlich @ 2006-06-15 21:17 ` John Morris 2006-06-16 6:51 ` Tim Walker 2006-06-16 7:21 ` Kevin F. Quinn 2 siblings, 2 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: John Morris @ 2006-06-15 21:17 UTC (permalink / raw) To: qemu-devel On Thu, 2006-06-15 at 09:18, Joe Lee wrote: > I appreciate the effort that some are making to develop a GUI for QEMU - > There's a few project I see that trying to achieve this. But, I wish > they all could come together and work together to develop a nice GUI. I > would like to see a sub-project exist in the QEMU site so all can come > and contribute to that effort. Geez, why not ask for world peace while you are at it. One GUI? So which toolkit? Pick Gtk and watch the K folk whine. Ok, so KDE it is. Oops, now the Gnomes are all over ya. And of course since I suspect a non-trivial percentage of QEMU users are on Windows, Solaris, etc. they ain't gonna like either of those choices much. Face it, putting a GUI on something like QEMU is going to require at least a one per desktop/platform effort. And that can best be kept with the GNOME/KDE/etc software repositories because they require constant updating on the schedule of the rest of the desktop environment to stay current. Think of it like mkisofs/cdrecord/growisofs/cdrdao vs the abundance of graphical front ends that all make use of them. Nobody has to totally reinvent the wheel because those solid CLI only parts can be reused by each project and each graphical environment gets a totally native (ok, several) GUI CD/DVD authoring/burning program instead of one crappy ported program. -- John M. http://www.beau.org/~jmorris This post is 100% M$Free! Geekcode 3.1:GCS C+++ UL++++$ P++ L+++ W++ w--- Y++ b++ 5+++ R tv- e* r ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-15 21:17 ` John Morris @ 2006-06-16 6:51 ` Tim Walker 2006-06-16 7:21 ` Kevin F. Quinn 1 sibling, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Tim Walker @ 2006-06-16 6:51 UTC (permalink / raw) To: qemu-devel [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/html, Size: 1973 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-15 21:17 ` John Morris 2006-06-16 6:51 ` Tim Walker @ 2006-06-16 7:21 ` Kevin F. Quinn 2006-06-16 12:45 ` Stuart Brady 2006-06-16 14:18 ` Joe Lee 1 sibling, 2 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Kevin F. Quinn @ 2006-06-16 7:21 UTC (permalink / raw) To: qemu-devel [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1847 bytes --] On Thu, 15 Jun 2006 16:17:09 -0500 John Morris <jmorris@beau.org> wrote: > On Thu, 2006-06-15 at 09:18, Joe Lee wrote: > > > I appreciate the effort that some are making to develop a GUI for > > QEMU - There's a few project I see that trying to achieve this. > > But, I wish they all could come together and work together to > > develop a nice GUI. I would like to see a sub-project exist in the > > QEMU site so all can come and contribute to that effort. > > Geez, why not ask for world peace while you are at it. One GUI? So > which toolkit? Pick Gtk and watch the K folk whine. Ok, so KDE it > is. Oops, now the Gnomes are all over ya. And of course since I > suspect a non-trivial percentage of QEMU users are on Windows, > Solaris, etc. they ain't gonna like either of those choices much. WxWidgets (www.wxwidgets.org) provides a nice way out of this - provides a uniform API for the application developer, and local look-and-feel for each platform. WxWidgets can sit on gtk, motif, x11, win32, mac, cocoa (doesn't appear to be a qt backend yet, but no reason there couldn't be). > Face it, putting a GUI on something like QEMU is going to require at > least a one per desktop/platform effort. And that can best be kept > with the GNOME/KDE/etc software repositories because they require > constant updating on the schedule of the rest of the desktop > environment to stay current. > > Think of it like mkisofs/cdrecord/growisofs/cdrdao vs the abundance of > graphical front ends that all make use of them. Nobody has to totally > reinvent the wheel because those solid CLI only parts can be reused by > each project and each graphical environment gets a totally native (ok, > several) GUI CD/DVD authoring/burning program instead of one crappy > ported program. > -- Kevin F. Quinn [-- Attachment #2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 191 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-16 7:21 ` Kevin F. Quinn @ 2006-06-16 12:45 ` Stuart Brady 2006-06-16 15:02 ` Kevin F. Quinn 2006-06-16 14:18 ` Joe Lee 1 sibling, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Stuart Brady @ 2006-06-16 12:45 UTC (permalink / raw) To: qemu-devel On Fri, Jun 16, 2006 at 09:21:46AM +0200, Kevin F. Quinn wrote: > WxWidgets (www.wxwidgets.org) provides a nice way out of this - provides > a uniform API for the application developer, and local look-and-feel for > each platform. WxWidgets can sit on gtk, motif, x11, win32, mac, cocoa > (doesn't appear to be a qt backend yet, but no reason there couldn't > be). Yes, there should be abstraction between the UI and the VM, but I think that the approach taken by xine, gstreamer, cdrecord, cdparanoia, etc. is much cleaner. You could still write a frontend with WxWidgets... I think it would be best if QEMU didn't depend on any particular toolkit, and that includes WxWidgets. -- Stuart Brady ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-16 12:45 ` Stuart Brady @ 2006-06-16 15:02 ` Kevin F. Quinn 2006-06-16 15:07 ` Christian MICHON 0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Kevin F. Quinn @ 2006-06-16 15:02 UTC (permalink / raw) To: qemu-devel On Fri, 16 Jun 2006 13:45:24 +0100 Stuart Brady <sdbrady@ntlworld.com> wrote: > On Fri, Jun 16, 2006 at 09:21:46AM +0200, Kevin F. Quinn wrote: > > > WxWidgets (www.wxwidgets.org) provides a nice way out of this - > > provides a uniform API for the application developer, and local > > look-and-feel for each platform. WxWidgets can sit on gtk, motif, > > x11, win32, mac, cocoa (doesn't appear to be a qt backend yet, but > > no reason there couldn't be). > > Yes, there should be abstraction between the UI and the VM, but I > think that the approach taken by xine, gstreamer, cdrecord, > cdparanoia, etc. is much cleaner. You could still write a frontend > with WxWidgets... > > I think it would be best if QEMU didn't depend on any particular > toolkit, and that includes WxWidgets. I was suggesting WxWidgets as a way to avoid writing separate gui frontends for each platform (that's what WxWidgets is for). I wasn't suggesting WxWidgets be embedded into Qemu (or the other way around for that matter). If you want a pretty controller app and you want to avoid cross-platform issues WxWidgets does a lot of the work for you (much more than just gtk for example). In particular I was responding to the statement > Face it, putting a GUI on something like QEMU is going to require at > least a one per desktop/platform effort. I don't see any reason to hack up qemu just to put a pretty face on it. VNC support already provides an easy way to place the guest screen wherever you want if you don't like the SDL window (although I think SDL remains the best choice for the guest screen). http://code.technoplaza.net/wx-sdl/ talks about combining WxWidgets and SDL, although I don't know if that's useful. -- Kevin F. Quinn ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-16 15:02 ` Kevin F. Quinn @ 2006-06-16 15:07 ` Christian MICHON 2006-06-16 15:35 ` Oliver Gerlich 2006-06-16 17:18 ` Kevin F. Quinn 0 siblings, 2 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Christian MICHON @ 2006-06-16 15:07 UTC (permalink / raw) To: qemu-devel you're putting c++ inside the qemu source tree when it is not needed (yet). if SDL is common to most guest screens: I agree with you that the gui/toolkit should overlay the SDL. Yet Fabrice mentionned months ago this was not his intention, so we should respect it and (hopefully) close this long thread. On 6/16/06, Kevin F. Quinn <ml@kevquinn.com> wrote: > On Fri, 16 Jun 2006 13:45:24 +0100 > Stuart Brady <sdbrady@ntlworld.com> wrote: > > > On Fri, Jun 16, 2006 at 09:21:46AM +0200, Kevin F. Quinn wrote: > > > > > WxWidgets (www.wxwidgets.org) provides a nice way out of this - > > > provides a uniform API for the application developer, and local > > > look-and-feel for each platform. WxWidgets can sit on gtk, motif, > > > x11, win32, mac, cocoa (doesn't appear to be a qt backend yet, but > > > no reason there couldn't be). > > > > Yes, there should be abstraction between the UI and the VM, but I > > think that the approach taken by xine, gstreamer, cdrecord, > > cdparanoia, etc. is much cleaner. You could still write a frontend > > with WxWidgets... > > > > I think it would be best if QEMU didn't depend on any particular > > toolkit, and that includes WxWidgets. > > I was suggesting WxWidgets as a way to avoid writing separate gui > frontends for each platform (that's what WxWidgets is for). I wasn't > suggesting WxWidgets be embedded into Qemu (or the other way around for > that matter). If you want a pretty controller app and you want to > avoid cross-platform issues WxWidgets does a lot of the work for you > (much more than just gtk for example). In particular I was responding > to the statement > > > Face it, putting a GUI on something like QEMU is going to require at > > least a one per desktop/platform effort. > > I don't see any reason to hack up qemu just to put a pretty face on > it. VNC support already provides an easy way to place the guest screen > wherever you want if you don't like the SDL window (although I think > SDL remains the best choice for the guest screen). > http://code.technoplaza.net/wx-sdl/ talks about combining WxWidgets and > SDL, although I don't know if that's useful. > > -- > Kevin F. Quinn > > > _______________________________________________ > Qemu-devel mailing list > Qemu-devel@nongnu.org > http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/qemu-devel > -- Christian ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-16 15:07 ` Christian MICHON @ 2006-06-16 15:35 ` Oliver Gerlich 2006-06-16 17:18 ` Kevin F. Quinn 1 sibling, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Oliver Gerlich @ 2006-06-16 15:35 UTC (permalink / raw) To: qemu-devel Christian MICHON wrote: > you're putting c++ inside the qemu source tree when it is not > needed (yet). > > if SDL is common to most guest screens: I agree with you > that the gui/toolkit should overlay the SDL. > > Yet Fabrice mentionned months ago this was not his > intention, so we should respect it and (hopefully) close > this long thread. Close the thread? Please not - I think it's good that many people posted their ideas about a GUI, and maybe there will finally come some agreement about the techniques and libraries that should be used. And if Fabrice doesn't want C++ in the tree (seems a bit reasonable), then there's still GTK. And if it is too difficult to install and run a GTK GUI under Windows, then a native Windows GUI is still possible (after all, the Mac OS X version uses a native GUI toolkit as well, so why not do the same under Windows, and use the GTK frontend under all other platforms). Btw. it would be interesting to know what features would be required to get a GUI into the Qemu tree, and what would be a total showstopper... Maybe the people with commit permission could comment on this :) Regards, Oliver ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-16 15:07 ` Christian MICHON 2006-06-16 15:35 ` Oliver Gerlich @ 2006-06-16 17:18 ` Kevin F. Quinn 1 sibling, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Kevin F. Quinn @ 2006-06-16 17:18 UTC (permalink / raw) To: qemu-devel [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 3187 bytes --] On Fri, 16 Jun 2006 17:07:32 +0200 "Christian MICHON" <christian.michon@gmail.com> wrote: > you're putting c++ inside the qemu source tree when it is not > needed (yet). Perhaps I'm still not making myself clear. I did _not_ suggest that a WxWidgets GUI be integrated into QEMU. I assumed we were all talking about an independent controller app to provide a pretty clicky-button way to start/stop qemu instances, provide console and serial i/o terminals, that sort of thing. The only thing that may be worth thinking about is a way to redirect the SDL output from QEMU, if VNC proves too slow. Even that would only be if you want the QEMU screen to be embedded in the frontend, and to be honest I see no need for that. > if SDL is common to most guest screens: I agree with you > that the gui/toolkit should overlay the SDL. > > Yet Fabrice mentionned months ago this was not his > intention, so we should respect it and (hopefully) close > this long thread. > > On 6/16/06, Kevin F. Quinn <ml@kevquinn.com> wrote: > > On Fri, 16 Jun 2006 13:45:24 +0100 > > Stuart Brady <sdbrady@ntlworld.com> wrote: > > > > > On Fri, Jun 16, 2006 at 09:21:46AM +0200, Kevin F. Quinn wrote: > > > > > > > WxWidgets (www.wxwidgets.org) provides a nice way out of this - > > > > provides a uniform API for the application developer, and local > > > > look-and-feel for each platform. WxWidgets can sit on gtk, > > > > motif, x11, win32, mac, cocoa (doesn't appear to be a qt > > > > backend yet, but no reason there couldn't be). > > > > > > Yes, there should be abstraction between the UI and the VM, but I > > > think that the approach taken by xine, gstreamer, cdrecord, > > > cdparanoia, etc. is much cleaner. You could still write a > > > frontend with WxWidgets... > > > > > > I think it would be best if QEMU didn't depend on any particular > > > toolkit, and that includes WxWidgets. > > > > I was suggesting WxWidgets as a way to avoid writing separate gui > > frontends for each platform (that's what WxWidgets is for). I wasn't > > suggesting WxWidgets be embedded into Qemu (or the other way around > > for that matter). If you want a pretty controller app and you want > > to avoid cross-platform issues WxWidgets does a lot of the work for > > you (much more than just gtk for example). In particular I was > > responding to the statement > > > > > Face it, putting a GUI on something like QEMU is going to require > > > at least a one per desktop/platform effort. > > > > I don't see any reason to hack up qemu just to put a pretty face on > > it. VNC support already provides an easy way to place the guest > > screen wherever you want if you don't like the SDL window (although > > I think SDL remains the best choice for the guest screen). > > http://code.technoplaza.net/wx-sdl/ talks about combining WxWidgets > > and SDL, although I don't know if that's useful. > > > > -- > > Kevin F. Quinn > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > > Qemu-devel mailing list > > Qemu-devel@nongnu.org > > http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/qemu-devel > > > > -- Kevin F. Quinn [-- Attachment #2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 191 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-16 7:21 ` Kevin F. Quinn 2006-06-16 12:45 ` Stuart Brady @ 2006-06-16 14:18 ` Joe Lee 2006-06-16 14:26 ` Johannes Schindelin 1 sibling, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Joe Lee @ 2006-06-16 14:18 UTC (permalink / raw) To: qemu-devel I thought I share this with you all. I have been looking into XEN lately and someone has developed a GUI-Frontend for it. Here's the link below showing images for the GUI interface to manage xen. A similar type GUI interface could be done for QEMU. I wonder want programming tool used for it. http://sourceforge.net/projects/xenman/ http://sourceforge.net/project/screenshots.php?group_id=168929 http://sourceforge.net/project/screenshots.php?group_id=168929&ssid=35194 http://sourceforge.net/project/screenshots.php?group_id=168929&ssid=35193 http://sourceforge.net/project/screenshots.php?group_id=168929&ssid=35191 http://sourceforge.net/project/screenshots.php?group_id=168929&ssid=35190 Kevin F. Quinn wrote: > On Thu, 15 Jun 2006 16:17:09 -0500 > John Morris <jmorris@beau.org> wrote: > > >> On Thu, 2006-06-15 at 09:18, Joe Lee wrote: >> >> >>> I appreciate the effort that some are making to develop a GUI for >>> QEMU - There's a few project I see that trying to achieve this. >>> But, I wish they all could come together and work together to >>> develop a nice GUI. I would like to see a sub-project exist in the >>> QEMU site so all can come and contribute to that effort. >>> >> Geez, why not ask for world peace while you are at it. One GUI? So >> which toolkit? Pick Gtk and watch the K folk whine. Ok, so KDE it >> is. Oops, now the Gnomes are all over ya. And of course since I >> suspect a non-trivial percentage of QEMU users are on Windows, >> Solaris, etc. they ain't gonna like either of those choices much. >> > > WxWidgets (www.wxwidgets.org) provides a nice way out of this - provides > a uniform API for the application developer, and local look-and-feel for > each platform. WxWidgets can sit on gtk, motif, x11, win32, mac, cocoa > (doesn't appear to be a qt backend yet, but no reason there couldn't > be). > > >> Face it, putting a GUI on something like QEMU is going to require at >> least a one per desktop/platform effort. And that can best be kept >> with the GNOME/KDE/etc software repositories because they require >> constant updating on the schedule of the rest of the desktop >> environment to stay current. >> >> Think of it like mkisofs/cdrecord/growisofs/cdrdao vs the abundance of >> graphical front ends that all make use of them. Nobody has to totally >> reinvent the wheel because those solid CLI only parts can be reused by >> each project and each graphical environment gets a totally native (ok, >> several) GUI CD/DVD authoring/burning program instead of one crappy >> ported program. >> >> > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > _______________________________________________ > Qemu-devel mailing list > Qemu-devel@nongnu.org > http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/qemu-devel > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-16 14:18 ` Joe Lee @ 2006-06-16 14:26 ` Johannes Schindelin 0 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Johannes Schindelin @ 2006-06-16 14:26 UTC (permalink / raw) To: joelee724, qemu-devel Hi, On Fri, 16 Jun 2006, Joe Lee wrote: > I thought I share this with you all. I have been looking into XEN lately and > someone has developed a GUI-Frontend for it. Here's the link below showing > images for the GUI interface to manage xen. A similar type GUI interface could > be done for QEMU. > I wonder want programming tool used for it. GTK. Since XEN is already limited in scope to a Linux host, it makes (sort of) sense. Hth, Dscho ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-14 15:53 ` Joe Lee 2006-06-14 16:02 ` Paul Brook 2006-06-14 16:10 ` Oliver Gerlich @ 2006-06-14 16:22 ` Jan Marten Simons 2006-06-14 17:15 ` Mattia Gentilini 2006-06-14 16:27 ` Larry Brigman 3 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Jan Marten Simons @ 2006-06-14 16:22 UTC (permalink / raw) To: joelee724, qemu-devel Am Mittwoch, 14. Juni 2006 17:53 schrieb Joe Lee: > Well, I was not thinking or suggesting of a crippled qemu version. I > asked the question because there are some software > appliances which are pre-built and pre-configured apps that are built on > a LAMP stack and packaged as a single image > type file. This image file can be downloaded and run on a product > similar to VMware Player. Have a look at: http://www.oszoo.org/ > This is used for quick demo > purposes of an application with out the need to have a full virtual > machine. Well, VMware Palyer is the complete VM with some (GUI-)features removed. Regards, Jan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-14 16:22 ` Jan Marten Simons @ 2006-06-14 17:15 ` Mattia Gentilini 0 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Mattia Gentilini @ 2006-06-14 17:15 UTC (permalink / raw) To: qemu-devel Jan Marten Simons wrote: > Have a look at: http://www.oszoo.org/ I wanted to suggest this too. Also check the Free Live OS Zoo, which I'm currently developing: http://www.oszoo.org/wiki/index.php/Free_Live_OS_Zoo -- |\/|55: Mattia Gentilini e 55 mila euri al mese |/_| 3-Year Degree in Computer Science | www.getfirefox.com |\/| University of Bologna, Italy | www.getthunderbird.com * Using Linux 2.6.16.16 powered by Galvatron (i686) * ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMware Player 2006-06-14 15:53 ` Joe Lee ` (2 preceding siblings ...) 2006-06-14 16:22 ` Jan Marten Simons @ 2006-06-14 16:27 ` Larry Brigman 3 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Larry Brigman @ 2006-06-14 16:27 UTC (permalink / raw) To: joelee724, qemu-devel On 6/14/06, Joe Lee <joelee724@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > Why on earth would we want to make a crippled version of qemu? > > > > AFAIK "Creating" a VMware virtual machine is just making a config file. > > qemu doesn't have config files, so your question makes no sense. > Well, I was not thinking or suggesting of a crippled qemu version. I > asked the question because there are some software > appliances which are pre-built and pre-configured apps that are built on > a LAMP stack and packaged as a single image > type file. This image file can be downloaded and run on a product > similar to VMware Player. This is used for quick demo > purposes of an application with out the need to have a full virtual machine. > > I am totally new to VM technologies but have played around with VMware > and the player as well. So, my question was just > an inquiry to see if that capability would make sense on a qemu based > product that is open source. > > However, thanks and appreciated your comments/feedback! > >...(removed additional quoted material) If you are looking at something like rpath/rbuilder then qemu will run those images that are packaged as raw HDD. If you set the options right the running image has network access also. I am trying to figure out how to get the network access options working for the windows version of Qemu. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* [Qemu-devel] VMWare player @ 2005-10-21 19:29 John R. Hogerhuis 2005-10-21 20:22 ` Mike Swanson 2005-10-22 14:34 ` Jim C. Brown 0 siblings, 2 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: John R. Hogerhuis @ 2005-10-21 19:29 UTC (permalink / raw) To: qemu-devel Barely on-topic, but since VmWare interop crops up from time to time: http://www.vmware.com/products/player/ I doubt this is targeted at QEMU, but rather at competing with Microsoft and VirtualPC. That or they are leaving the low-end market for server consolidation. This may in fact be as much VmWare as most people would need. Countdown has started for the first person to create a system image solely from freeware "VmWare Player" ;-) -- John. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMWare player 2005-10-21 19:29 [Qemu-devel] VMWare player John R. Hogerhuis @ 2005-10-21 20:22 ` Mike Swanson 2005-10-21 21:37 ` John R. Hogerhuis 2005-10-22 14:34 ` Jim C. Brown 1 sibling, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread From: Mike Swanson @ 2005-10-21 20:22 UTC (permalink / raw) To: jhoger, qemu-devel Yeah, it barely on topic. But the .vmx files are extremely simple text files, and qemu-img creates vmdk disk images. Yes, it's possible to install operating systems solely withing VMware (this is the correct spelling, btw) Player, but you cannot install VMware Tools, even with the appropriate (windows|linux|freebsd|netware).iso file. On 10/21/05, John R. Hogerhuis <jhoger@pobox.com> wrote: > Barely on-topic, but since VmWare interop crops up from time to time: > > http://www.vmware.com/products/player/ > > I doubt this is targeted at QEMU, but rather at competing with Microsoft > and VirtualPC. That or they are leaving the low-end market for server > consolidation. > > This may in fact be as much VmWare as most people would need. Countdown > has started for the first person to create a system image solely from > freeware "VmWare Player" ;-) > > -- John. -- Mike ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMWare player 2005-10-21 20:22 ` Mike Swanson @ 2005-10-21 21:37 ` John R. Hogerhuis 0 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: John R. Hogerhuis @ 2005-10-21 21:37 UTC (permalink / raw) To: qemu-devel, Mike Swanson On Fri, 2005-10-21 at 13:22 -0700, Mike Swanson wrote: > Yeah, it barely on topic. But the .vmx files are extremely simple text > files, and qemu-img creates vmdk disk images. That was my first thought when I saw this as well. > Yes, it's possible to > install operating systems solely withing VMware (this is the correct > spelling, btw) Player, but you cannot install VMware Tools, even with > the appropriate (windows|linux|freebsd|netware).iso file. > I figured as much. I understand some of what VMware tools has in it. Is it necessary? QEMU is quite usable without special guest-side utilities. Or perhaps the issue is that VMWare player will not run anything that does not have VMware tools installed? -- John. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VMWare player 2005-10-21 19:29 [Qemu-devel] VMWare player John R. Hogerhuis 2005-10-21 20:22 ` Mike Swanson @ 2005-10-22 14:34 ` Jim C. Brown 1 sibling, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread From: Jim C. Brown @ 2005-10-22 14:34 UTC (permalink / raw) To: qemu-devel On Fri, Oct 21, 2005 at 12:29:45PM -0700, John R. Hogerhuis wrote: > I doubt this is targeted at QEMU, I agree. It seems it can do 3 things that qemu currently can't: Use certain types of host hardware (such as DVD or USB), copy & paste between host and guest, and support drag & drop. None of these is a major issue (and copy and paste over qemu machines which are networked is possible). On the other hand, qemu supports using multiple snapshots, networking virtual machines together, and its user-net/slirp network support is better than the host only support that VMware Player has. (qemu also have a primitive video capture ability via the monitor 'snapshot' command, which captures video stills of the guest into png files.) > but rather at competing with Microsoft > and VirtualPC. That or they are leaving the low-end market for server > consolidation. Personally, I'd say that the latter is more likely. VMware gets most of the big bucks from businesses which want to run hundreds of virtual machines. > > This may in fact be as much VMware as most people would need. Countdown > has started for the first person to create a system image solely from > freeware "VMware Player" ;-) Based on the comparison sheet they give, I doubt it is possible. VMware Player isn't able to create virtual machines. Of course, if you can save changes to the virtual disk and boot from something other than the hard disk, it might be possible to use qemu-img to get around this. -- Infinite complexity begets infinite beauty. Infinite precision begets infinite perfection. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2006-06-17 15:46 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 49+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2006-06-17 15:46 [Qemu-devel] VMware Player Mattia Gentilini (QD) -- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below -- 2006-06-17 6:15 Mattia Gentilini (QD) 2006-06-17 7:25 ` Tim Walker 2006-06-14 14:55 Joe Lee 2006-06-14 15:01 ` Paul Brook 2006-06-14 15:53 ` Joe Lee 2006-06-14 16:02 ` Paul Brook 2006-06-14 16:12 ` Joe Lee 2006-06-14 16:21 ` Daniel P. Berrange 2006-06-14 16:39 ` Jan Marten Simons 2006-06-14 17:42 ` Joe Lee 2006-06-14 16:10 ` Oliver Gerlich 2006-06-15 7:47 ` kadil 2006-06-15 13:18 ` WaxDragon 2006-06-15 13:43 ` Julian Seward 2006-06-15 13:50 ` Johannes Schindelin 2006-06-15 14:18 ` Joe Lee 2006-06-15 14:43 ` Johannes Schindelin 2006-06-15 19:42 ` Joe Lee 2006-06-15 20:55 ` Johannes Schindelin 2006-06-15 21:04 ` Joe Lee 2006-06-15 20:34 ` Joe Lee 2006-06-15 20:56 ` Johannes Schindelin 2006-06-15 21:03 ` Joe Lee 2006-06-16 3:39 ` Rick Vernam 2006-06-16 4:31 ` Joe Lee 2006-06-16 5:20 ` Rick Vernam 2006-06-15 22:29 ` Oliver Gerlich 2006-06-15 23:03 ` Johannes Schindelin 2006-06-15 23:38 ` Oliver Gerlich 2006-06-16 9:34 ` kadil 2006-06-15 15:25 ` Oliver Gerlich 2006-06-15 21:17 ` John Morris 2006-06-16 6:51 ` Tim Walker 2006-06-16 7:21 ` Kevin F. Quinn 2006-06-16 12:45 ` Stuart Brady 2006-06-16 15:02 ` Kevin F. Quinn 2006-06-16 15:07 ` Christian MICHON 2006-06-16 15:35 ` Oliver Gerlich 2006-06-16 17:18 ` Kevin F. Quinn 2006-06-16 14:18 ` Joe Lee 2006-06-16 14:26 ` Johannes Schindelin 2006-06-14 16:22 ` Jan Marten Simons 2006-06-14 17:15 ` Mattia Gentilini 2006-06-14 16:27 ` Larry Brigman 2005-10-21 19:29 [Qemu-devel] VMWare player John R. Hogerhuis 2005-10-21 20:22 ` Mike Swanson 2005-10-21 21:37 ` John R. Hogerhuis 2005-10-22 14:34 ` Jim C. Brown
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