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It is "sparse," meaning the file only grows as data is added, making it compact and efficient for distribution. It is the standard format for
qemu-img convert -f raw windows.raw -O qcow2 -o compression_type=zstd,cluster_size=64K windows_xpqcow2.qcow2 windows+xpqcow2+top
This is the single biggest upgrade. Use VirtIO for Network and Disk I/O. Windows XP doesn't support these natively, so you'll need the VirtIO-win ISO It is "sparse," meaning the file only grows
to create a virtual hard drive. QCOW2 is preferred because it only takes up as much space as the files inside it actually use. qemu-img create -f qcow2 winxp_disk.qcow2 Use code with caution. Copied to clipboard 2. Recommended VM Settings Windows XP doesn't support these natively, so you'll
: A 10 GB to 20 GB QCOW2 disk is typically plenty for most legacy applications.
# Watch QEMU process using the Windows XPQCow2 image top -p $(pgrep -f "windows.xpqcow2")
command flickered—a silent sentinel monitoring the pulse of the machine. He watched as the CPU usage for the virtualization process spiked. The Awakening