In fact, you shouldn't need to rename it at all, just remove it from the libvirt XML. Look there (in the UEFI stuff, somewhere?) for the ISO information.Īs others have said, you can't just rename the ISO and not remove it completely from the libvirt XML/setup data. A response that cannot result in modification of the program or operating. For a long time, the UEFI code in libvirt wasn't so good. (1) (ISO) A symbol whose meaning and use have not been determined by a general. Use the following steps to download SD Maid: Open the Google Play Store. Be aware that some files on Android can't and shouldn't be deleted because they are part of the root system or a specific app.
It can help you delete some files that you cannot delete in the My Files app. I've never used UEFI to boot any VM before. SD Maid is a system cleaning app for Android. Where is all that stuff? Must be something to do with UEFI. Where are all the devices? There should be HDDs, audio, optical, Spice + spice control channels and USB ports. I've never seen a libvirt XML file that short. var/lib/libvirt/qemu/nvram/win10test2_VARS.fd I used the command to edit the xml file but there does not appear (to me) to be an entry that points to the boot source (my only source, as shown in the gui is the vm image). libvirt did not prompt to remove the iso media. Windows is installed on another physical hd that I use when dual booting (if this kvm works I'm hoping to do away with dual booting as I hardly use win10) but is not installed on the ext4 hd that use for my kvm storage.
Not sure what you mean in first sentence.