Hi thanks for this video, In the end of it, i don't understand if both virtuals machines have the same IP ? 172.16.1.1 or ony one with 172.16.1.1 and the other 172.16.1.2 ?
@@franzpleurmann2585 It might just not support SR-IOV. Not even every pcie slot supports SR-IOV, even on motherboards that do support it. If you try to pass it through to the VM in its entirety, it might work.
Great explanation, thank you ;)
Nice value for my watchtime content. Thank you for sharing.
Thank you for sharing.
Demo definitely helped the underztanding. Thanks!
Hi thanks for this video, In the end of it, i don't understand if both virtuals machines have the same IP ? 172.16.1.1 or ony one with 172.16.1.1 and the other 172.16.1.2 ?
j-louis MALYCHA They have different ip addresses. The virtual functions act as standalone NICs.
Intel SR-IOV networks cards: www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/support/articles/000005722/network-and-i-o/ethernet-products.html
TheVault1999 Nice, that’s helpful
Would this also be working with a thunderbolt pcie enclosure with a sr-iov capable intel 82599 card or not?
It might, but I’m not 100% sure
I tried. It doesnt work but I dont know if it is related to thunderbolt security.
@@franzpleurmann2585 It might just not support SR-IOV. Not even every pcie slot supports SR-IOV, even on motherboards that do support it. If you try to pass it through to the VM in its entirety, it might work.
Can you do a single GPU passthrough guide in ubuntu.
I’m working on one for Intel iGPUs
Hi is there same for gpu without any licenses
Ismail Anwer There are some AMD server GPUs and Intel iGPUs that can do this.
Can one VF nic ping the other one in this example, as if they are on a switch?
or is there a net segmentation in place?