Quoting Parameswaran Sivatharman (<email address hidden>):
> The bios setting indicate that virtualization is enabled and cpuinfo is
> attached.
>
> qemu-img create x.img 1G
> kvm -hda x.img
>
> ceate the image successfully and brings up the kvm window.
But - to be sure - can you paste all output that shows up in the console
while kvm is starting up?
> But from the Virtual Machine Manager I am still getting the error.
>
>
> (These are the main installation steps before using the VMM
> 1. Install a fresh quantal (or an upgrade)
> 2. sudo apt-get install kvm
> 3. Install Virtual Machine Manager from the Software Center
Hm, I haven't tried from the software center. That should make
absolutely no difference, but perhaps it does. (I use 'apt-get
install qemu-kvm libvirt-bin virt-manager)
> 7. Then follow the steps in comment #6
To be sure, you are using the default (qemu:///system) connection in
virt-manager, right?
I'll do another fresh install this afternoon and try with the software
manager.
Quoting Parameswaran Sivatharman (<email address hidden>):
> The bios setting indicate that virtualization is enabled and cpuinfo is
> attached.
>
> qemu-img create x.img 1G
> kvm -hda x.img
>
> ceate the image successfully and brings up the kvm window.
But - to be sure - can you paste all output that shows up in the console
while kvm is starting up?
> But from the Virtual Machine Manager I am still getting the error.
>
>
> (These are the main installation steps before using the VMM
> 1. Install a fresh quantal (or an upgrade)
> 2. sudo apt-get install kvm
> 3. Install Virtual Machine Manager from the Software Center
Hm, I haven't tried from the software center. That should make
absolutely no difference, but perhaps it does. (I use 'apt-get
install qemu-kvm libvirt-bin virt-manager)
> 7. Then follow the steps in comment #6
To be sure, you are using the default (qemu:///system) connection in
virt-manager, right?
I'll do another fresh install this afternoon and try with the software
manager.