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Date:      Fri, 28 Oct 2016 13:31:52 +0100
From:      Olaoluwa Omokanwaiye <laoluomoks@gmail.com>
To:        Manish Jain <bourne.identity@hotmail.com>
Cc:        Emre Gundogan via freebsd-questions <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: Bhyve on freebsd11
Message-ID:  <CADZMNXLDT7MBdsTd10_Q9Hp-eZauRWkGKrxKTqD851JpanxN_Q@mail.gmail.com>
In-Reply-To: <VI1PR02MB0974612AD0F70F81D7B28243F6AD0@VI1PR02MB0974.eurprd02.prod.outlook.com>
References:  <mailman.97.1477656002.9771.freebsd-questions@freebsd.org> <VI1PR02MB0974612AD0F70F81D7B28243F6AD0@VI1PR02MB0974.eurprd02.prod.outlook.com>

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Dear Manish,

Thank you, my system is an i386 HP pavilion laptop.
I already did all these yesterday and even enabled virtualization in bios
as well. And also did this below
dmesg | grep POPCNT
And the system shows that it supports SVM and vmm.

If your board has VM feature (named something like SVM)...
How do I enable these?

What else could you think is the problem.

Sent from my MotoE2(4G-LTE)

On 28 Oct 2016 1:22 p.m., "Manish Jain" <bourne.identity@hotmail.com> wrote:

>
> On 10/28/16 17:30, freebsd-questions-request@freebsd.org wrote:
> > Message: 4
> > While trying to load vmm on FreeBSD 11, I am getting the error -
> kldload:can't load vmm: no such file or directory
>
> Probably your VM feature in BIOS is disabled. If your processor is AMD,
> you can check whether your motherboard has VM hardware with :
>
> dmesg | grep POPCNT
>
> If your board has VM feature (named something like SVM) and it is
> disabled, enable it and try again.
>
> Regards
> Manish Jain
>



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