
Over four months, Jeff Fehlig enhanced virtualization documentation in the SUSE/doc-sle repository, focusing on clarity and technical accuracy. He improved SEV support in OVMF by isolating SEV firmware files and updating user guidance, reducing misconfiguration risks. Using Markdown and XML, Jeff removed outdated vCPU limitations to align with libvirt 10.10.0+ capabilities, and clarified save/restore workflows by detailing supported disk formats and providing practical examples. He also refined SEV-SNP verification instructions, specifying tool requirements to streamline onboarding. Jeff’s work demonstrated depth in technical writing and documentation, directly addressing user pain points and supporting maintainable, up-to-date virtualization guidance.

In September 2025, contributed to SUSE/doc-sle with a targeted editorial update to SEV-SNP verification guidance. The changes clarify how to verify SEV-SNP memory encryption using the snpguest tool and explicitly note that the MSR kernel module is required for correct operation, reducing user confusion and support overhead. The update aligns with security verification standards and supports faster onboarding for developers and system integrators.
In September 2025, contributed to SUSE/doc-sle with a targeted editorial update to SEV-SNP verification guidance. The changes clarify how to verify SEV-SNP memory encryption using the snpguest tool and explicitly note that the MSR kernel module is required for correct operation, reducing user confusion and support overhead. The update aligns with security verification standards and supports faster onboarding for developers and system integrators.
June 2025 monthly summary for SUSE/doc-sle: Delivered Save/Restore Documentation Improvements, clarifying supported disk formats, removing outdated information, and adding practical examples to help users save/restore VM states. This work included a parallel save/restore commit (#1839) and resulted in clearer guidance, improved onboarding, and reduced potential support inquiries.
June 2025 monthly summary for SUSE/doc-sle: Delivered Save/Restore Documentation Improvements, clarifying supported disk formats, removing outdated information, and adding practical examples to help users save/restore VM states. This work included a parallel save/restore commit (#1839) and resulted in clearer guidance, improved onboarding, and reduced potential support inquiries.
January 2025 monthly summary for SUSE/doc-sle: Delivered a focused documentation update to reflect current virtualization capabilities and reduce user confusion around VM vCPU limits. Specifically, removed an outdated note about exceeding 255 vCPUs, aligning docs with libvirt 10.10.0+ that auto-configures for larger VM configurations. The change improves accuracy, reduces support queries, and supports customers planning larger workloads. Commit tracing provided for governance and traceability.
January 2025 monthly summary for SUSE/doc-sle: Delivered a focused documentation update to reflect current virtualization capabilities and reduce user confusion around VM vCPU limits. Specifically, removed an outdated note about exceeding 255 vCPUs, aligning docs with libvirt 10.10.0+ that auto-configures for larger VM configurations. The change improves accuracy, reduces support queries, and supports customers planning larger workloads. Commit tracing provided for governance and traceability.
November 2024 monthly summary for SUSE/doc-sle: Focused on stabilizing SEV support in OVMF by isolating SEV firmware files and clarifying firmware paths in the docs. Introduced dedicated SEV-specific firmware files and updated user guidance to distinguish SEV, SEV-ES, and SEV-SNP paths. The work reduces user confusion and support overhead while improving firmware reliability.
November 2024 monthly summary for SUSE/doc-sle: Focused on stabilizing SEV support in OVMF by isolating SEV firmware files and clarifying firmware paths in the docs. Introduced dedicated SEV-specific firmware files and updated user guidance to distinguish SEV, SEV-ES, and SEV-SNP paths. The work reduces user confusion and support overhead while improving firmware reliability.
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