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On Sun, 2010-02-14 at 09:41 -0500, Shankar Viswanathan wrote: > On Sun, Feb 14, 2010 at 6:51 AM, Franklin H. Chasen <chasen-KVEKqrk+LIpWk0Htik3J/w at public.gmane.org> wrote: > > On Sat, 2010-02-13 at 23:06 -0500, Shankar Viswanathan wrote: > > > >> Every recent (i.e. mid-2006 or later) AMD processor supports AMD-V > >> extensions as well. > >> > > > > Does that include my netbook's AMD L110 called an Athlon by Gateway but > > perhaps actually a Sempron? > > The decoder ring that I was given to map external product names to > internal ones doesn't show the L110, so I cannot be 100% sure whether > it supports AMD-V or not. But as a general rule of thumb, barring the > Geode line of chips, all other AMD processors from mid-2006 onwards > support it (even Semprons). As Jerry mentioned in his other post, grep > for 'svm' in /proc/cpuinfo and that will tell you for sure. Otherwise, > email me the family/model/stepping identifiers of your chip and I can > look it up for you (can be got from the 'System Information' or some > such icon from the Windows control panel). > > -Shankar The AMD L110 processor does have "svm" in cpuinfo. I then booted into Vista and ran the "Microsoft Hyper-V compatibility check for systems with AMD processors" program from AMD. It reported that AMD-V technology is not enabled in BIOS. I booted into the Phoenix Bios setup (version v1.3103) but there is no option for enabling virtualization. Unless there is some way to enable AMD-V I will just have to live without it. -Frank