I--- Windows Xp Qcow2 -
Boot the ISO with this command:
qemu-img create -f qcow2 windows-xp.qcow2 20G Run qemu-img info windows-xp.qcow2 . You should see file format: qcow2 , virtual size: 20 GiB , and disk size: 196 KiB (tiny, because it's empty). Step 2: The First Boot (IDE Mode) Windows XP does not natively support VirtIO disks. You must install it using an emulated IDE controller first, then migrate. i--- Windows Xp Qcow2
qemu-img convert -f vmdk windows-xp.vmdk -O qcow2 windows-xp.qcow2 Simply having the image is not enough. You need it to fly. 1. Enable Copy-on-Write (CoW) Efficiently Modern Linux supports nocow on the host folder, but for Qcow2, disable CoW on the host file to prevent double-copying (Qcow2 handles its own CoW). Boot the ISO with this command: qemu-img create
chattr +C /var/lib/libvirt/images/windows-xp.qcow2 Do not just use the defaults. Use this optimized string for the best XP experience: You must install it using an emulated IDE
When you type the keyword into a search engine, you are likely looking for one of two things: how to install Windows XP as a Qcow2 image or how to download an existing image for immediate use. Qcow2 (QEMU Copy-On-Write version 2) is the native disk format for QEMU and Proxmox. Unlike VHD or VMDK, Qcow2 offers superior performance, snapshots, and compression.
virsh snapshot-create-as --domain windows-xp --name "Clean-SP3-Base"