Thank you. Yes, the immediate problem was that I was missing the qemu-kvm dependency.

On Tue, Jul 10, 2018 at 11:09 AM Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com> wrote:
On Tue, Jul 10, 2018 at 07:47:49AM -0600, Quincy Wofford wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I've tried over at IRC and it appears the solution to this problem may not
> be obvious.
>
> I'm working with a Centos7 box on HP ProLiant 380p hardware. The BIOS is a
> bit outdated, but both Intel Virtualization Options and VT-d are present
> and enabled in the firmware.
>
> Some relevant command outputs below:
>
> -bash-4.2$ dmesg | grep Virtualization
> [    1.299295] DMAR: Intel(R) Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O
> -bash-4.2$ lsmod | grep kvm
> kvm_intel             174841  0
> kvm                   578518  1 kvm_intel
> irqbypass              13503  1 kvm
>  sudo virt-install --virt-type kvm --name <my name> --memory 8192 --cdrom
> <my path>/CentOS-7-x86_64-Everything-1708.iso --disk size=4 --os-variant
> rhel7
> ERROR    Host does not support any virtualization options
>
> I don't see any options to increase the verbosity of virt-install. Any
> ideas?

Probably complaining that you're missing  the QEMU binary at a guess,
but also check that 'virt-host-validate qemu' doesn't report any fails
when run as root.


Regards,
Daniel
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