I have seen several articles that somewhat talk about this issue but I cannot find any concrete process on how to resolve the issue.
First off: I am not very knowledgeable using linux as all previous solutions I have worked with were strictly windows based so go easy on me
From my understanding Proxmox (QEMU) utilizes tablet drivers for cursor alignment (From the wiki). These apparently are loaded by default in the global configuration file in what I assume is the bare metal debian install that hosts Proxmox. Also, windows apparently loads these drivers natively and thus the cursor aligns properly by default in the VNC console sessions.
However, in CentOS I am having a serious alignment issue which appears to be caused by the workstation cursor and guest OS cursor being at completely different tracking speeds. So as to say their tracking speeds are not sync'ed. What I am trying to discover is the steps required to resolve this issue and make the CentOS GUI usable.
1) Is the driver already installed on the system? If so, how do I check? (And what would it be called)
2) If the driver is not already in the guest OS what package do I download with Yum?
3) Are there any other configurations I have to make before it takes effect?
Also, the resolution seems to be locked in a 800x600 max. But I can research that one later.
Thanks for your assistance.
First off: I am not very knowledgeable using linux as all previous solutions I have worked with were strictly windows based so go easy on me
From my understanding Proxmox (QEMU) utilizes tablet drivers for cursor alignment (From the wiki). These apparently are loaded by default in the global configuration file in what I assume is the bare metal debian install that hosts Proxmox. Also, windows apparently loads these drivers natively and thus the cursor aligns properly by default in the VNC console sessions.
However, in CentOS I am having a serious alignment issue which appears to be caused by the workstation cursor and guest OS cursor being at completely different tracking speeds. So as to say their tracking speeds are not sync'ed. What I am trying to discover is the steps required to resolve this issue and make the CentOS GUI usable.
1) Is the driver already installed on the system? If so, how do I check? (And what would it be called)
2) If the driver is not already in the guest OS what package do I download with Yum?
3) Are there any other configurations I have to make before it takes effect?
Also, the resolution seems to be locked in a 800x600 max. But I can research that one later.
Thanks for your assistance.