you should have a look at your I/O disk status.
try with iostat -dx 5 to see the disk utilization info over time. when it comes to slowdown on a virtual environment on a Desktop grade machine, i suspect disk I/O latency and bottleneck as a cause.
check that your disk is running at its optimal state. look at some indicators , such the the I/O utilization averages, server load averages hddtemp /dev/sda will check for heating ( under high load it might )
in any case , you still got plenty of ram to spend.
On Wed, Feb 23, 2011 at 1:46 AM, Rudi Ahlers Rudi@softdux.com wrote:
On Wed, Feb 23, 2011 at 1:41 AM, Ian Murray murrayie@yahoo.co.uk wrote:
Are they paravirt of HVM guests? qemu might have something to do with it if HVM guests are involved.
Uhm, I know that I should know this, but how do I tell from a quick glance? It's almost 2am in the morning here, and I'm a bit too tired to think straight right now. I've been reading up on a lot of forums and other google search results before I posted here.
The VM's were originally created with HyperVM, but then imported into CloudMin.
-- Kind Regards Rudi Ahlers SoftDux
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