The drivers were the ones that came with the Windows10 image I was using (Win10_20H2_v2_EnglishInternational_x64) and created according to the general HowTo. Maybe this image is newer than the one you were using and comes with the more recent drivers that get used automatically. I will try again over the weekend to see if another fresh install brings any changes.
I did manage to get everything working in Ubuntu 20.04 as a client VM (using ovmf), though. And it actually is already a proof that it's possible in general. Thus it really might be a (new) issue with Windows 10 as a client.
Does your ubuntu still works without one of the 2 params (addr / opregion) ?
It also means that EFI VM is working with non EFI IGD GPU.
at this point I think we have the same setup. Mine is working but I have a 2019 driver version. Each time I'm trying to upgrade I get the code 43.
I believe it could be the driver that understand it works on a VM and block the GPU? Or something else.
I never tried/managed to dump my vbios/rom nor to edit it to see if there is something like in Nvidia ones. Let me know if you manage to do that.
Hi all, did someone finally got the GPU passthrough into the VM?
I have a NUC8i5BEK and was right now able to get the Intel Iris Plus Graphics 655 passthrough into a Win10 VM.
But the GPU is not listed / not active and therefore OpenGL is not available.
Did someone get the GPU active within the VM? What step did I miss?
I'm stuck in the same situation.
Win10 machine can't use the GPU meanwhile the driver seems ok.
The same qemu parameters can work with Libreelec machine perfectly either seabios or ovmf BIOS.
In addition, I noticed that the host machine should be legacy bios boot up.
if the host switches to UEFI, the above qemu parameters will end up with a bunch of vfio_pci write errors, both on Win10 and Libreelec.
I also tried romfile, it seems not affects the result.
You're not alone.
I'm trying to get GPU passthrough to Windows 10 on my NUC10i5FNH.
Just like the other commenters, I can't get it to work. I never get any output over HDMI with neither the Windows 10 Installer nor an installed Windows 10 system.
Windows 10 boots and I can use the console to verify that the hardware is detected. I can install the intel drivers, but get Code 43.
You're not alone.
I'm trying to get GPU passthrough to Windows 10 on my NUC10i5FNH.
Just like the other commenters, I can't get it to work. I never get any output over HDMI with neither the Windows 10 Installer nor an installed Windows 10 system.
Windows 10 boots and I can use the console to verify that the hardware is detected. I can install the intel drivers, but get Code 43.
I'm on a NUC10i5FNH too. After setting up GPU passthrough, I can't even get my Windows 10 VM to boot, let alone get Code 43. Not a clue what I'm doing wrong. Just keeps saying Exit Code 1.
I'm on a NUC10i5FNH too. After setting up GPU passthrough, I can't even get my Windows 10 VM to boot, let alone get Code 43. Not a clue what I'm doing wrong. Just keeps saying Exit Code 1.
If I remove the PCI slot in the Hardware section for the GPU, and then try to start my VM, I get instead the following message in Task History:
"kvm: -device ide-cd,bus=ide.0,unit=1,drive=drive-ide1,id=ide1,bootindex=200: Can't create IDE unit 1, bus supports only 1 units
TASK ERROR: start failed: QEMU exited with code 1"
If I remove the PCI slot in the Hardware section for the GPU, and then try to start my VM, I get instead the following message in Task History:
"kvm: -device ide-cd,bus=ide.0,unit=1,drive=drive-ide1,id=ide1,bootindex=200: Can't create IDE unit 1, bus supports only 1 units
TASK ERROR: start failed: QEMU exited with code 1"
I don't know that this error implies, but maybe adding rombar=0 might help. Or try to copy the rom to a file before using the device? If you trying to passthrough the integrated GPU, I don't think that it will work anyway. Maybe someone else knows how to get it working?
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