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Cake day: June 8th, 2025

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  • The short answer is any. KVM is built in to the kernel. You can run VMM (Virtual Machine Manager) for a simple, easy GUI, but you can also manually edit the VM files if that’s your thing. You can air gap them by creating a bridge that doesn’t bind to a nic.

    Anything debian (which includes ubuntu based) just run

    apt install qemu-kvm virt-manager bridge-utils

    See: https://youtu.be/FNcImbM8ugg

    The much longer answer is, it really depends on your needs for a daily driver, not for virtualization. Figure out what you need for a dd, then use that and install the tools.