![]() bug 1939855, searched for 'kernel ice driver' on bugs.lp.net). * This has been available on Focal, which helps with some chance of issues being hit and * The firmware enables advanced features, increasing driver exposure and device activity. * Systems with devices managed by the ice driver on Bionic HWE kernel from Focal. Ice 0000:98:00.0: FW LLDP is disabled, DCBx/LLDP in SW mode. Ice 0000:98:00.0: DCB is enabled in the hardware, max number of TCs supported on this port are 8 Ice 0000:98:00.0: The DDP package was successfully loaded: ICE OS Default Package version 1.3.4.0 Advanced features disabled - Device now in Safe Mode Ice 0000:98:00.0: The DDP package file was not found or could not be read. Ice 0000:98:00.0: Direct firmware load for intel/ice/ ddp/ice. * commit 9ae61e7d8658 ("ice: Add package file for Intel E800 series driver")īrings the Bionic package in line with Focal (ice-1. Which is supported by the HWE kernel from Focal. Then click Finish.īe sure to use the Virtual Function (VF) PCI Host Device instead of the Physical Function (PF) to take advantage of VE high-speed drivers.* Missing firmware for Intel ICE driver on Bionic, If SR-IOV is required, select PCI Host Device and then select the PCI device for to the virtual function mapped to your host device’s external VLAN. Then click Finish.ĭo this again for your internal and HA networks. If SR-IOV is not required, select Network.įrom the Host device list, select the network interface adapter for your external network, and from the Device model list, select virtio. The Add New Virtual Hardware dialog box opens. The Virtual Machine configuration dialog box opens. Select the network interface adapter that corresponds to your management IP address, and click Finish. Select Customize configuration before install, and click the Advanced options arrow. From the CPUs list, select the number of CPU cores appropriate for your deployment, and click Forward. In the Memory (RAM) field, type the appropriate amount of memory (in megabytes) for your deployment. In the OS type setting, select Linux, for the Version setting, select Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6, and click Forward. Type the path to the extracted qcow file, or click Browse to navigate to the path location select the file, and then click the Choose Volume button to fill in the path. Select import existing disk image as the method for installing the operating system, and click Forward. In the Name field, type a name for the connection. The Create a new virtual machine, Step 1 of 4 dialog box opens. Right click localhost (QEMU), and from the popup menu, select New. Use VNC to access the KVM server, and then start Virt Manager. If the End User Software License is displayed, read it and then click I Accept.ĭownload the BIG-IP VE file package ending with qcow2.zip.Įxtract the file from the Zip archive and save it where your qcow2 files reside on the KVM server. Under Product Line, click the link similar to BIG-IP v.x/Virtual Edition.Ĭlick the link similar to x.x.x_Virtual-Edition. On the Downloads Overview page, click Find a Download. In a browser, open the F5 Downloads page and log in. ![]() The QEMU Q35 machine type is not supported. When using F5’s virtio synthetic driver, use the default i440FX machine type. ![]() Powerful than those recommended and described here. Do not change the configuration (CPU, RAM, and network adapters) of the KVM guest environment with settings less.
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