Options to share file system with virtual machine [on hold]Linux: mount options to improve performance on...
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Options to share file system with virtual machine [on hold]
Linux: mount options to improve performance on slow HDDs?Spare machine as file/print shareHow small (spec wise) can a virtual machine be and still boot up and run some sort of OS?Disadvantages of having a virtual machine with a different file system than hostLinux Virtual Machine runs Slow depending on the Networkcan't share internet connection with virtual machineVMware OS X guests stuck at 3M video memoryVideo games running in VMware are running slow while in the host machine are running fineHow to create a virtual machine from a linux file system folderShare Host Internet behind Proxy with Authentication with Virtual Machine
I have a setup that I suspect is as ubiqutous as it gets to being a universal configuration: I develop on one system, and run another in a VM (whether that is a Windows host with a Linux VM or the other way around seems to be of little import for the question).
My problem is that of a shared file system or working tree. I have tried various options - mounting via samba, WebDAV, ssh-fs, WSL folders. All solutions I have tried have left me wanting - performance has been by and large abysmal on at least one of the participants, and sometimes even both.
Are there any good solutions to what I would imagine is a very common problem ? Or any common ways to improve performance in one of the solutions I tried ? I suppose what it comes down to is that all my solutions had one common problem: at least one party has very bad read performance, which means even if I edit very little, file wise, reading on the other side is a huge nightmare.
linux windows virtual-machine filesystems file-sharing
put on hold as too broad by DavidPostill♦ 18 mins ago
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
add a comment |
I have a setup that I suspect is as ubiqutous as it gets to being a universal configuration: I develop on one system, and run another in a VM (whether that is a Windows host with a Linux VM or the other way around seems to be of little import for the question).
My problem is that of a shared file system or working tree. I have tried various options - mounting via samba, WebDAV, ssh-fs, WSL folders. All solutions I have tried have left me wanting - performance has been by and large abysmal on at least one of the participants, and sometimes even both.
Are there any good solutions to what I would imagine is a very common problem ? Or any common ways to improve performance in one of the solutions I tried ? I suppose what it comes down to is that all my solutions had one common problem: at least one party has very bad read performance, which means even if I edit very little, file wise, reading on the other side is a huge nightmare.
linux windows virtual-machine filesystems file-sharing
put on hold as too broad by DavidPostill♦ 18 mins ago
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
You expect an answer when you haven't detailed what you have tried?
– DavidPostill♦
18 mins ago
add a comment |
I have a setup that I suspect is as ubiqutous as it gets to being a universal configuration: I develop on one system, and run another in a VM (whether that is a Windows host with a Linux VM or the other way around seems to be of little import for the question).
My problem is that of a shared file system or working tree. I have tried various options - mounting via samba, WebDAV, ssh-fs, WSL folders. All solutions I have tried have left me wanting - performance has been by and large abysmal on at least one of the participants, and sometimes even both.
Are there any good solutions to what I would imagine is a very common problem ? Or any common ways to improve performance in one of the solutions I tried ? I suppose what it comes down to is that all my solutions had one common problem: at least one party has very bad read performance, which means even if I edit very little, file wise, reading on the other side is a huge nightmare.
linux windows virtual-machine filesystems file-sharing
I have a setup that I suspect is as ubiqutous as it gets to being a universal configuration: I develop on one system, and run another in a VM (whether that is a Windows host with a Linux VM or the other way around seems to be of little import for the question).
My problem is that of a shared file system or working tree. I have tried various options - mounting via samba, WebDAV, ssh-fs, WSL folders. All solutions I have tried have left me wanting - performance has been by and large abysmal on at least one of the participants, and sometimes even both.
Are there any good solutions to what I would imagine is a very common problem ? Or any common ways to improve performance in one of the solutions I tried ? I suppose what it comes down to is that all my solutions had one common problem: at least one party has very bad read performance, which means even if I edit very little, file wise, reading on the other side is a huge nightmare.
linux windows virtual-machine filesystems file-sharing
linux windows virtual-machine filesystems file-sharing
asked 20 mins ago
TorqueTorque
14117
14117
put on hold as too broad by DavidPostill♦ 18 mins ago
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
put on hold as too broad by DavidPostill♦ 18 mins ago
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
You expect an answer when you haven't detailed what you have tried?
– DavidPostill♦
18 mins ago
add a comment |
You expect an answer when you haven't detailed what you have tried?
– DavidPostill♦
18 mins ago
You expect an answer when you haven't detailed what you have tried?
– DavidPostill♦
18 mins ago
You expect an answer when you haven't detailed what you have tried?
– DavidPostill♦
18 mins ago
add a comment |
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You expect an answer when you haven't detailed what you have tried?
– DavidPostill♦
18 mins ago