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I also doubt that btrfs is worth the effort under Parallels
Since a Linux VM running under Parallels is not doing actual hardware I/O is it worth the extra cpu to run btrfs or even ext4? It seems to me that...
Does anyone know if and how Parallels handles the 16k page size of apple silicon when running linux VMs with 4k pages? Does it pack pages in or is...
I should have said Parallels 26 ..
Running Debian 13 with Parallels 20. I noticed in syslog that KASLR is not initialized ... " 0.000000] Booting Linux on physical CPU 0x0000000000...
same sort of issue in Debian 13 Trixie - some part of parallels tools fails with not it needs to be run as root....
nope - seems to runic for now
- is Fedora 42 supported? I am having errors in the install of tools -- both with terminal using sudo and the gui-install.
I noticed at least 3 virtio drivers loaded in my Debian system under Parallels 20 .. is that a new thing?
1. Do I need to uninstall open-vm-tools from my Linux systems that include it automatically (OpenSuSE and Debian)? 2. So far I just have left well...
Same machine - 16 inch M2. VMware Fusion runs OpenSuse Tumbleweed updates fast. Parallels not so much. Seems network access is slow. Anyone else...
Apple provides an encrypted DNS lookup and a TOR-like network environment under iCloud Private Relay. Does anyone know if Parallels uses that...
Does Parallels provide support for using https://developer.apple.com/documentation/virtualization/running_intel_binaries_in_linux_vms_with_rosetta
The title says it all. Apple has a (poorly documented) interface to influence which type of processor (power or economy) an app gets scheduled on....
I have used both VMWare and Parallels for years (since Virtual PC times). I recently was reading the Apple Developer pages on MacOS VM services....
Doesn't work. Same symptoms.
1. Created ubuntu system using ZFS as filesystem (the ubuntu one - not the host Mac). 2. Started install of Parallels tools - wouldn't run 3. Log...
I vote for the open-vm-tools route ... makes sense to me
A simple way for Parallels to improve their *nix support is to provide the ability to configure a vm to use open-vm-tools (open software). This...
Well - from where I sit, a current list of *nix distros that are supported, and those users have found workarounds for would help. Don't get me...