F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Check if Windows 10 and Arch Linux can run together but stay separate.

Check if Windows 10 and Arch Linux can run together but stay separate.

Check if Windows 10 and Arch Linux can run together but stay separate.

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mumustrak
Senior Member
729
11-17-2016, 11:56 AM
#1
Find a solution that lets your PC work as both a home server and a desktop without dual booting. A setup with one CPU, one GPU, and two operating systems running side by side would suit your needs.
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mumustrak
11-17-2016, 11:56 AM #1

Find a solution that lets your PC work as both a home server and a desktop without dual booting. A setup with one CPU, one GPU, and two operating systems running side by side would suit your needs.

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ThaBear
Member
224
11-19-2016, 08:56 PM
#2
This task is limited to working within a virtual environment.
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ThaBear
11-19-2016, 08:56 PM #2

This task is limited to working within a virtual environment.

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cakecatz
Junior Member
16
11-20-2016, 04:30 AM
#3
I’m not aware of any specific free, lightweight virtualization tools that are highly regarded for gaming performance. You might want to explore open-source options like QEMU or use lightweight emulators such as DOSBox for compatibility.
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cakecatz
11-20-2016, 04:30 AM #3

I’m not aware of any specific free, lightweight virtualization tools that are highly regarded for gaming performance. You might want to explore open-source options like QEMU or use lightweight emulators such as DOSBox for compatibility.

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GalacticattYT
Member
155
11-20-2016, 10:53 AM
#4
I've used VMWare and VirtualBox, but I haven't managed to set up PCIe passthrough. I only tested from the Linux side while Windows ran inside the VM.
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GalacticattYT
11-20-2016, 10:53 AM #4

I've used VMWare and VirtualBox, but I haven't managed to set up PCIe passthrough. I only tested from the Linux side while Windows ran inside the VM.

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Browen1000
Member
224
11-20-2016, 11:17 AM
#5
Explore Kernel Virtual Machines. With a KVM setup, you can execute both operating systems within low-level virtual environments that deliver 99.9% native speed of the hardware provided. It's also feasible to run Arch Linux using KVM, allowing it to serve as the host OS while maintaining near-native performance for Windows. PCIe passthrough on Windows is achievable only via HyperV and appears to be supported starting with Windows Server 2016, according to current information.
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Browen1000
11-20-2016, 11:17 AM #5

Explore Kernel Virtual Machines. With a KVM setup, you can execute both operating systems within low-level virtual environments that deliver 99.9% native speed of the hardware provided. It's also feasible to run Arch Linux using KVM, allowing it to serve as the host OS while maintaining near-native performance for Windows. PCIe passthrough on Windows is achievable only via HyperV and appears to be supported starting with Windows Server 2016, according to current information.

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DuDu_002
Junior Member
45
11-20-2016, 05:30 PM
#6
Here you are—just the price is the Windows license. Not every Windows version supports running it in a VM, but there’s no real reason to prevent you from trying it at home.
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DuDu_002
11-20-2016, 05:30 PM #6

Here you are—just the price is the Windows license. Not every Windows version supports running it in a VM, but there’s no real reason to prevent you from trying it at home.

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OmqDace
Posting Freak
798
11-21-2016, 08:33 PM
#7
VMware Workstation Player 12 and VirtualBox function as type 2 hypervisors, using a VM runner as an app, whereas KVM operates as type 1, running directly on hardware. Type 1 outperforms type 2 in gaming speed, and 95-99% of performance is possible inside KVM with GPU support.
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OmqDace
11-21-2016, 08:33 PM #7

VMware Workstation Player 12 and VirtualBox function as type 2 hypervisors, using a VM runner as an app, whereas KVM operates as type 1, running directly on hardware. Type 1 outperforms type 2 in gaming speed, and 95-99% of performance is possible inside KVM with GPU support.