As we all seek our own best options, list the ones you know about!
(note this list is not intended to include the software renditions such as VirtualBox)
I'll get the obvious ones out of the way..
> VMWare ESXi - comes in free edition (with hardware limitations) or paid edition (limited by license choice)
>> http://www.vmware.com/products/vsphere- ... rview.html
>> apparently isn't a heavily modified Linux kernel at the core
(UPDATED, see below) > ProxmoxVE - open-source (free), based on Debian, no obvious hardware limitations, paid support options
>> http://proxmox.com/products/proxmox-ve
>> utilizes interesting Kernel-sharing OpenVZ containers (http://wiki.openvz.org/Main_Page)
>> it's a slimmed down Debian Distro at the core
> Citrix XenServer - comes in free edition (with hardware limitations) or paid edition (limited by license choice)
>> http://www.citrix.com/English/ps2/produ ... f=prod_cat
>> essentially the competitor to VMware ESXi.
>> Also is a heavily modified Linux distro in the hands of a big corporation.
I know there's got to be more, but these are the ones I know about so far.
tell us!
bare-metal Virtualization OSs!
bare-metal Virtualization OSs!
Last edited by sgtfoo on Tue Aug 27, 2013 7:45 am, edited 1 time in total.
SgtFoo
HDA: VM inside oVirt FX-8300 95w (2 cores for HDA), 32GB RAM (2GB for HDA)
My PC: FX-8300, 16GB RAM, 3x 1TB HDDs, Radeon HD6970 2GB video; Win10 Pro x64
Other: PC, Asus 1215n (LXLE), Debian openZFS server (3x(2x2tb) mirrors)
Modem&Network: Thomson DCM475; Asus RT-AC66U; HP 1800-24G switch
HDA: VM inside oVirt FX-8300 95w (2 cores for HDA), 32GB RAM (2GB for HDA)
My PC: FX-8300, 16GB RAM, 3x 1TB HDDs, Radeon HD6970 2GB video; Win10 Pro x64
Other: PC, Asus 1215n (LXLE), Debian openZFS server (3x(2x2tb) mirrors)
Modem&Network: Thomson DCM475; Asus RT-AC66U; HP 1800-24G switch
Re: bare-metal Virtualization OSs!
Probably should add Microsoft Hyper-V. I have no real knowledge of it to list any feathures or pros.cons
Re: bare-metal Virtualization OSs!
Microsoft Hyper-V -- free until you add fancy features or support.
>> http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/server-c ... fault.aspx
>> interesting comparison chart.. http://www.microsoft.com/global/en-us/s ... 00x350.png
Fedora with KVM -- obviously free.. it's just Fedora with kernel-integrated and package-added KVM support.
>> not truly bare-metal, but with a minimal Fedora install, this could be.
.. some how-tos..
> http://www.techotopia.com/index.php/Ins ... ualization
> http://www.techotopia.com/index.php/Man ... st_Systems
>> features for this would be limited to what you have in the upcoming Fedora Gnome GUI add-in for using KVM VMs.
>> http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/server-c ... fault.aspx
>> interesting comparison chart.. http://www.microsoft.com/global/en-us/s ... 00x350.png
Fedora with KVM -- obviously free.. it's just Fedora with kernel-integrated and package-added KVM support.
>> not truly bare-metal, but with a minimal Fedora install, this could be.
.. some how-tos..
> http://www.techotopia.com/index.php/Ins ... ualization
> http://www.techotopia.com/index.php/Man ... st_Systems
>> features for this would be limited to what you have in the upcoming Fedora Gnome GUI add-in for using KVM VMs.
Last edited by sgtfoo on Tue Aug 27, 2013 7:11 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: bare-metal Virtualization OSs!
Marketers are funny peeps.
ESXi does do the 2 things that graphic says it doesnt.......migration and HA.
ESXi does do the 2 things that graphic says it doesnt.......migration and HA.
Re: bare-metal Virtualization OSs!
Got another OS to add to the list..
> OpenNode - open-source (free)
>> http://opennodecloud.com/
>> Uses very new repo content because it's core is CentOS 6.x
>> unique config that requires host/client control setup
>> relatively new
> OpenNode - open-source (free)
>> http://opennodecloud.com/
>> Uses very new repo content because it's core is CentOS 6.x
>> unique config that requires host/client control setup
>> relatively new
SgtFoo
HDA: VM inside oVirt FX-8300 95w (2 cores for HDA), 32GB RAM (2GB for HDA)
My PC: FX-8300, 16GB RAM, 3x 1TB HDDs, Radeon HD6970 2GB video; Win10 Pro x64
Other: PC, Asus 1215n (LXLE), Debian openZFS server (3x(2x2tb) mirrors)
Modem&Network: Thomson DCM475; Asus RT-AC66U; HP 1800-24G switch
HDA: VM inside oVirt FX-8300 95w (2 cores for HDA), 32GB RAM (2GB for HDA)
My PC: FX-8300, 16GB RAM, 3x 1TB HDDs, Radeon HD6970 2GB video; Win10 Pro x64
Other: PC, Asus 1215n (LXLE), Debian openZFS server (3x(2x2tb) mirrors)
Modem&Network: Thomson DCM475; Asus RT-AC66U; HP 1800-24G switch
Re: bare-metal Virtualization OSs!
Noting an update for those that use Proxmox..
> ProxmoxVE - open-source, based on Debian, no obvious hardware limitations, paid support options
>> http://proxmox.com/products/proxmox-ve
>> utilizes interesting Kernel-sharing OpenVZ containers (http://wiki.openvz.org/Main_Page)
>> it's a slimmed down Debian Distro at the core
>> as of version 3.1, has a subscription-based enterprise-grade repo for roughly $5 USD/ month. The community-grade repo that remains free of cost is now considered by the Proxmox team as "less stable".
For those wishing to have the convenience of built binaries of tested and enterprise production grade updates, the cost applied is per-CPU-socket.
Opinion: It's likely advised that you take on the "if it ain't broke, don't fix it" update pattern, as the less stable packages in the test/community repo begin to exist as such. If you're on version 3.0, stay there if you want to avoid the nag-window in v3.1, that is until we find a way to hack it to not pop up in the community version.
> ProxmoxVE - open-source, based on Debian, no obvious hardware limitations, paid support options
>> http://proxmox.com/products/proxmox-ve
>> utilizes interesting Kernel-sharing OpenVZ containers (http://wiki.openvz.org/Main_Page)
>> it's a slimmed down Debian Distro at the core
>> as of version 3.1, has a subscription-based enterprise-grade repo for roughly $5 USD/ month. The community-grade repo that remains free of cost is now considered by the Proxmox team as "less stable".
For those wishing to have the convenience of built binaries of tested and enterprise production grade updates, the cost applied is per-CPU-socket.
Opinion: It's likely advised that you take on the "if it ain't broke, don't fix it" update pattern, as the less stable packages in the test/community repo begin to exist as such. If you're on version 3.0, stay there if you want to avoid the nag-window in v3.1, that is until we find a way to hack it to not pop up in the community version.
SgtFoo
HDA: VM inside oVirt FX-8300 95w (2 cores for HDA), 32GB RAM (2GB for HDA)
My PC: FX-8300, 16GB RAM, 3x 1TB HDDs, Radeon HD6970 2GB video; Win10 Pro x64
Other: PC, Asus 1215n (LXLE), Debian openZFS server (3x(2x2tb) mirrors)
Modem&Network: Thomson DCM475; Asus RT-AC66U; HP 1800-24G switch
HDA: VM inside oVirt FX-8300 95w (2 cores for HDA), 32GB RAM (2GB for HDA)
My PC: FX-8300, 16GB RAM, 3x 1TB HDDs, Radeon HD6970 2GB video; Win10 Pro x64
Other: PC, Asus 1215n (LXLE), Debian openZFS server (3x(2x2tb) mirrors)
Modem&Network: Thomson DCM475; Asus RT-AC66U; HP 1800-24G switch
Re: bare-metal Virtualization OSs!
Yea, that stinks. I upgraded before I found the pop up. For now, I will just have to live with it. Until we have a better option, it's not that big a deal to click ok.
I wondered how long it would last before they would start wanting money. It's not that I mind paying, but would rather pay a small fee once and not monthly.
I wondered how long it would last before they would start wanting money. It's not that I mind paying, but would rather pay a small fee once and not monthly.
ßîgƒσστ65
Applications Manager
My HDA: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-3570K CPU @ 3.40GHz on MSI board, 16GB RAM, 1TBx1+2TBx2+4TBx2
Applications Manager
My HDA: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-3570K CPU @ 3.40GHz on MSI board, 16GB RAM, 1TBx1+2TBx2+4TBx2
Re: bare-metal Virtualization OSs!
Found a hack to remove the pop up in 3.1. Do the following via SSH:
Currently on line 450 of the file, however it may change with future updates, there is a line similar to below:
it will only show the pop up if you have a subscription instead of when you don't
Code: Select all
cp /usr/share/pve-manager/ext4/pvemanagerlib.js /usr/share/pve-manager/ext4/pvemanagerlib.js_BKP
If you remove the exclamation pointif (data.status !== 'Active') {
!
it will only show the pop up if you have a subscription instead of when you don't
ßîgƒσστ65
Applications Manager
My HDA: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-3570K CPU @ 3.40GHz on MSI board, 16GB RAM, 1TBx1+2TBx2+4TBx2
Applications Manager
My HDA: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-3570K CPU @ 3.40GHz on MSI board, 16GB RAM, 1TBx1+2TBx2+4TBx2
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