hardware, but even then, many modern system can support this.
Please refer to your hardware vendor to check if they support this feature
-under Linux for your specific setup
+under Linux for your specific setup.
Configuration
enabled.
----
-# dmesg -e DMAR -e IOMMU -e AMD-Vi
+# dmesg | grep -e DMAR -e IOMMU -e AMD-Vi
----
should display that `IOMMU`, `Directed I/O` or `Interrupt Remapping` is
Mediated Devices (vGPU, GVT-g)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Mediated devices are another method to use reuse features and performance from
+Mediated devices are another method to reuse features and performance from
physical hardware for virtualized hardware. These are found most common in
virtualized GPU setups such as Intels GVT-g and Nvidias vGPUs used in their
GRID technology.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
In general your card's driver must support that feature, otherwise it will
-not work. So please refer to your vendor for compatbile drivers and how to
+not work. So please refer to your vendor for compatible drivers and how to
configure them.
-Intels drivers for GVT-g are integraded in the Kernel and should work
-with the 5th, 6th and 7th generation Intel Core Processors, further E3 v4, E3
-v5 and E3 v6 Xeon Processors are supported.
+Intels drivers for GVT-g are integrated in the Kernel and should work
+with 5th, 6th and 7th generation Intel Core Processors, as well as E3 v4, E3
+v5 and E3 v6 Xeon Processors.
To enable it for Intel Graphcs, you have to make sure to load the module
'kvmgt' (for example via `/etc/modules`) and to enable it on the Kernel