Hi Paul,

 

Did you load the virtio drivers in the W11 install environment?

 

Greetings,

 

Dominique.

 

Van: Paul Larochelle via Users <users@lists.libvirt.org>
Verzonden: maandag 19 mei 2025 19:30
Aan: users@lists.libvirt.org
Onderwerp: Windows 11 fails to install under QEMU/libvirt while VirtualBox succeeds — why?

 

Hello,

 

I'm writing to better understand a surprising discrepancy I encountered while attempting to install Windows 11 in different virtualization environments.

 

On my Arch Linux system, I tested two setups:

 

1. **VirtualBox (GUI):** Windows 11 installs successfully out of the box.

2. **QEMU/KVM with libvirt (manually crafted XML):** Windows 11 refuses to install, stating that the system doesn't meet the requirements.

 

The libvirt domain configuration includes:

- UEFI boot using OVMF (`OVMF_CODE.4m.fd` and `OVMF_VARS.ms.fd`)

- TPM 2.0 emulator (`tpm-crb` with `backend type='emulator' version='2.0'`)

- Secure Boot enabled (verified using Microsoft-signed vars)

- 8 GiB of RAM, 4 vCPUs

- VirtIO disk + virtio-win ISO attached

- QXL or VirtIO video model

- `<hyperv>` feature set enabled

- Valid boot order (CD-ROM first, then disk)

 

Despite this, Windows 11 either refuses installation with the "This PC can't run Windows 11" message or fails to detect a valid bootable device.

 

In contrast, VirtualBox seems to pass all checks without exposing TPM configuration explicitly or enabling Secure Boot manually.

 

---

 

**My question:**

 

What is VirtualBox doing under the hood that makes Windows 11 accept the environment without issues?

 

- Is it exposing a minimal TPM implicitly?

- Is it modifying SMBIOS/ACPI fields in a way that satisfies Windows validation logic?

- Are there known tricks or missing XML elements in libvirt domains to replicate this behavior?

 

My goal is not to bypass Microsoft's requirements, but rather to understand the technical differences and replicate a compliant setup in QEMU/libvirt, ideally without resorting to ISO modifications.

 

Any insight or guidance would be highly appreciated.

 

Best regards,  

Paul

 

signature_paul.png

Paul Larochelle

819 342-5487

 

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