Skip to content

Navigation Menu

Sign in
Appearance settings

Search code, repositories, users, issues, pull requests...

Provide feedback

We read every piece of feedback, and take your input very seriously.

Saved searches

Use saved searches to filter your results more quickly

Sign up
Appearance settings

UtkarshVerma/qemu-vfio-win10

Repository files navigation

qemu-vfio-win10

This repo aims to serve as an example for getting VFIO passthrough working on a Windows 10 guest on Linux. Plain QEMU has been used to keep things minimal, and distro-specific utilities have been avoided to keep things general.

Features

The script has the following features:

  • Hugepages
  • HyperV enlightenments
  • Dynamic VFIO passthrough for NVIDIA GPU, i.e. GPU is usable by host after guest exits.
  • Respects NVIDIA Runtime D3 power management
  • evdev passthrough using persistent-evdev.py
  • Looking Glass
    • SPICE input and clipboard sharing
    • DMA buffer support
    • Auto shared memory creation
  • virtio devices
  • pulseaudio audio device passthrough
  • CPU pinning with qemu-affinity
  • CPU governor configuration
  • Runs QEMU with jemalloc() memory allocator

Usage

This script assumes you already have a working Windows 10 guest set up for Looking Glass and GPU passthrough. If you are new to VFIO passthrough, then these links should get you started:

Once you have a working Windows 10 guest, move the disk image file to this folder and rename it to hdd.qcow2. After that copy the OVMF file descriptors OVMF_CODE.fd and OVMF_VARS.fd next to the script as well so that you get the following tree:

.
├── LICENSE
├── OVMF_CODE.fd
├── OVMF_VARS.fd
├── README.md
├── SSDT1.dat
├── hdd.qcow2
├── launch.sh
├── persistent-evdev.json
├── persistent-evdev.py
├── qemu-affinity
└── vfio
0 directories, 11 files

You'll also need to configure a few variables in the script according to your machine.

USER=subaru # Your username
RAM=5 # RAM, in GB
CORES=3 # No. of cores
THREADS=2 # No. of threads per core
GPU=01:00.0 # PCI address of your NVIDIA GPU
GPU_AUDIO=01:00.1 # PCI address of your NVIDIA GPU's audio function
SHARED_FOLDER=/media/stuff # Folder to be shared to guest

Once that is out of the way, make sure you have jemalloc installed on your machine, and persistent-evdev.py configured through persistent-evdev.json if you plan on using evdev passthrough. Also make sure you have installed the qemu-affinity python package.

pip install qemu-affinity

Once that's done, run the launch script as root, and you're good to go.

sudo ./launch.sh

Running this command starts the guest and opens Looking Glass, with the QEMU monitor socket opened on /tmp/qemuwin.sock.

The script supports some command line flags:

Flags Usage
-s / --spice Use SPICE for input instead of evdev. Defaults to evdev.
-h / --hugepages Use hugepages. Disabled by default.
-f / --fullscreen Open the guest in fullscreen. Disabled by default.
-nd / --nodmabuf Disable DMABUF for Looking Glass, which is enabled by default.

What to expect from the guest

The guest performs really well for a VM. I don't experience any freezes. For normal usage and light gaming (Brawlhalla), I couldn't notice any issues with this setup on my laptop (ASUS TUF FX505DT).

Credits

This workflow would not have been possible without the following tools.

About

Shell script for launching a Windows 10 guest with GPU passthrough using Looking Glass.

Topics

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

AltStyle によって変換されたページ (->オリジナル) /