01-14-2012
Yes IVM is a part of VIO when you install on a low end machine, usually you put the VIO DVD in the drive and turn the machine on. It should guide you from there. Hiwever as the machine has been used you'll need to reset it to factory defaults.
You do need a VIO enabled machine in order to do this. Its a separate licence that is referenced by the machines Serial Number.
Check the redbook that zxmaus gave you a link to, that should explain the process, 2.1 for the reset and 2.4 to set the VIO enabled code
Last edited by ross.mather; 01-14-2012 at 09:09 AM..
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LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
systemd-detect-virt
SYSTEMD-DETECT-VIRT(1) systemd-detect-virt SYSTEMD-DETECT-VIRT(1)
NAME
systemd-detect-virt - Detect execution in a virtualized environment
SYNOPSIS
systemd-detect-virt [OPTIONS...]
DESCRIPTION
systemd-detect-virt detects execution in a virtualized environment. It identifies the virtualization technology and can distinguish full VM
virtualization from container virtualization.
When executed without --quiet will print a short identifier for the detected virtualization technology. The following technologies are
currently identified: qemu, kvm, vmware, microsoft, oracle, xen, bochs, chroot, uml, openvz, lxc, lxc-libvirt, systemd-nspawn.
If multiple virtualization solutions are used, only the "innermost" is detected and identified. That means if both VM virtualization and
container virtualization are used in conjunction, only the latter will be identified (unless --vm is passed).
OPTIONS
The following options are understood:
-h, --help
Prints a short help text and exits.
--version
Prints a short version string and exits.
-c, --container
Only detects container virtualization (i.e. shared kernel virtualization).
-v, --vm
Only detects VM virtualization (i.e. full hardware virtualization).
-q, --quiet
Suppress output of the virtualization technology identifier.
EXIT STATUS
If a virtualization technology is detected, 0 is returned, a non-zero code otherwise.
SEE ALSO
systemd(1)
systemd 208 SYSTEMD-DETECT-VIRT(1)