lots of free memory, and nothing much else running.
You need to have the kernel KVM module (eg. kvm_amd or kvm_intel)
-loaded, with the nested flag set. The nested flag defaults to true in
-recent kernels. /dev/kvm needs to be accessible. On some distros
-you may need to add your user to a special 'kvm' group.
+loaded, with the nested=1 flag. The nested flag defaults to true for
+AMD in recent kernels, but not for Intel. To force this, do:
+
+ mkdir -p /etc/modprobe.d
+ echo "options kvm_intel nested=1" > /etc/modprobe.d/kvm.conf
+
+To see if nested is enabled, use:
+
+ cat /sys/modules/kvm_(intel|amd)/parameters/nested
+
+/dev/kvm needs to be accessible. On some distros you may need to add
+your user to a special 'kvm' group.
You *don't* need to run this command as root. Running it as root may
give different results. Consult a qemu/KVM expert.