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Hypervisor on local machine?
Let me formulate the question more precisely. We need an implementation of a bare hypervisor that can display one of the virtual machines immediately on the screen when it boots. The process should be approximately the following. I'm running a clean hypervisor on the laptop. Remotely (or not) I deploy a virtual machine on this hypervisor from a laptop !!!!! I can work with her. That is, it turns out from the hypervisor itself. I have never met such features before. Therefore, I ask a question. It is not necessary to be clever about Linux which to castrate, leave something there and use this action. We are interested in implementations from different manufacturers on bare hypervisors.
note. you can display not a virtual machine on the screen, but launch a client to work with the hypervisor from under the hypervisor itself.
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I wonder what exactly is considered a "naked hypervisor"?
I now have Win8.1 along with Hyper-V. How naked is that?
And yes, when the laptop starts, the virtual machine starts. I just click on RDP and voila - I'm in the VM.
You can read about forwarding devices from a virtual machine. Usually they forward video cards and USB devices. There are success stories, but this was done on desktops using discrete graphics (usually ATI). There is nothing about laptops.
There are certain hardware requirements to do this.
Judging by the question, we are talking about some kind of perversion :-) Comrade, you would describe what specifically you want to achieve in this way. You see, the community would offer some less perverse solution :-)
athacker
I think it's about being able to quickly deploy an image on any machine. And installing a Linux distribution is too long a procedure.
On the merits of the question:
I don’t know such distributions, but I would try to make it using kickstart. And put it on a flash drive. This is how I create virtual machines. The disk is broken, the network settings are written, the necessary repositories are installed, etc. It turns out quite quickly and conveniently.
You can also pull up from the network or download virtual machine images from a USB flash drive and configure VNC to full screen.
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