What Are the Latest Virtualization Platform Recommendations
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Its going to take time for XenServer to catch up. Every since it became open source all that I've read so far is mainly performance improvement. Which is not bad at all but compare to what is being offered with KVM and Hyper-V.
And since discovering Mangolassi, XenServer seems to be only popular here when Xen Orchestra is being used with it.
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@black3dynamite said in What Are the Latest Virtualization Platform Recommendations:
Its going to take time for XenServer to catch up. Every since it became open source all that I've read so far is mainly performance improvement. Which is not bad at all but compare to what is being offered with KVM and Hyper-V.
And since discovering Mangolassi, XenServer seems to be only popular here when Xen Orchestra is being used with it.
The only reason to use any hyperviros if there are centralized tools for managing it.
The only one that does this in a way most people understand is Hyper-V via the Hyper-V Manager GUI on a Windows workstation or server.
KVM is as powerful as they come, but with no well known centralized management interface.
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Based on the management tools that is available to each hypervisors, free or paid. What is your preferred hypervisor?
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@scottalanmiller said in What Are the Latest Virtualization Platform Recommendations:
These days, I think that Hyper-V and KVM are the go to solutions for the majority of cases.
You've come to the dark side
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@black3dynamite said in What Are the Latest Virtualization Platform Recommendations:
And since discovering Mangolassi, XenServer seems to be only popular here when Xen Orchestra is being used with it.
that's the only context in which it makes sense. That's its one main management tool.
But saying that, you could say the same kind of thing for Vmware ESXi... it's only popular with vSphere to manage it. Of course, you need something to manage anything. When you have a management tool that is free and really good, there is no need for anything else and/or the two just become associated. That XS is only popular with XO just makes sense, as it is open, free and very powerful. XS has to have some tool, and that one is so good that no one else tries to compete.
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@scottalanmiller said in What Are the Latest Virtualization Platform Recommendations:
@black3dynamite said in What Are the Latest Virtualization Platform Recommendations:
And since discovering Mangolassi, XenServer seems to be only popular here when Xen Orchestra is being used with it.
that's the only context in which it makes sense. That's its one main management tool.
But saying that, you could say the same kind of thing for Vmware ESXi... it's only popular with vSphere to manage it. Of course, you need something to manage anything. When you have a management tool that is free and really good, there is no need for anything else and/or the two just become associated. That XS is only popular with XO just makes sense, as it is open, free and very powerful. XS has to have some tool, and that one is so good that no one else tries to compete.
Besides not supported better file systems for vm storage especially when using thin storage. I'm never a fan XenCenter it gets the job done but I much rather do things via CLI. I really hope XenServer devs integrated XO soon.
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@black3dynamite said in What Are the Latest Virtualization Platform Recommendations:
@scottalanmiller said in What Are the Latest Virtualization Platform Recommendations:
@black3dynamite said in What Are the Latest Virtualization Platform Recommendations:
And since discovering Mangolassi, XenServer seems to be only popular here when Xen Orchestra is being used with it.
that's the only context in which it makes sense. That's its one main management tool.
But saying that, you could say the same kind of thing for Vmware ESXi... it's only popular with vSphere to manage it. Of course, you need something to manage anything. When you have a management tool that is free and really good, there is no need for anything else and/or the two just become associated. That XS is only popular with XO just makes sense, as it is open, free and very powerful. XS has to have some tool, and that one is so good that no one else tries to compete.
Besides not supported better file systems for vm storage especially when using thin storage. I'm never a fan XenCenter it gets the job done but I much rather do things via CLI. I really hope XenServer devs integrated XO soon.
I think they should focus on things like not using ext3 first.
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@stacksofplates said in What Are the Latest Virtualization Platform Recommendations:
@black3dynamite said in What Are the Latest Virtualization Platform Recommendations:
@scottalanmiller said in What Are the Latest Virtualization Platform Recommendations:
@black3dynamite said in What Are the Latest Virtualization Platform Recommendations:
And since discovering Mangolassi, XenServer seems to be only popular here when Xen Orchestra is being used with it.
that's the only context in which it makes sense. That's its one main management tool.
But saying that, you could say the same kind of thing for Vmware ESXi... it's only popular with vSphere to manage it. Of course, you need something to manage anything. When you have a management tool that is free and really good, there is no need for anything else and/or the two just become associated. That XS is only popular with XO just makes sense, as it is open, free and very powerful. XS has to have some tool, and that one is so good that no one else tries to compete.
Besides not supported better file systems for vm storage especially when using thin storage. I'm never a fan XenCenter it gets the job done but I much rather do things via CLI. I really hope XenServer devs integrated XO soon.
I think they should focus on things like not using ext3 first.
Totally agree. They should really have two version of XenServer. One can be the current one. And the other will include things like ext4, xfs, LVM thin.
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Hyper-V is my go-to, unless an existing environment is something else and wouldn't make any business sense to make the switch.
I highly recommend the new Hyper-V 2016 Cookbook.
It'll help to kick you up to more of an expert level after combing through it well if you are a beginner. I read it even though I was already advanced, and still learned from it.
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I've been avoiding HyperV because of management tool issues. With XenServer ESXi the tools just run, load them up and enter login details and off you go.
But I found HyperV there was a lot of messing to get a workstation to talk (especially if your on a different network/domain)
This might of gotten easier since the last time I tried HyperV but it put me off.
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@hobbit666 said in What Are the Latest Virtualization Platform Recommendations:
But I found HyperV there was a lot of messing to get a workstation to talk (especially if your on a different network/domain)
Did you try 5Nine?
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@scottalanmiller said in What Are the Latest Virtualization Platform Recommendations:
@hobbit666 said in What Are the Latest Virtualization Platform Recommendations:
But I found HyperV there was a lot of messing to get a workstation to talk (especially if your on a different network/domain)
Did you try 5Nine?
For a single server and a lot of the basic config, it's great!
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@black3dynamite said in What Are the Latest Virtualization Platform Recommendations:
@stacksofplates said in What Are the Latest Virtualization Platform Recommendations:
@black3dynamite said in What Are the Latest Virtualization Platform Recommendations:
@scottalanmiller said in What Are the Latest Virtualization Platform Recommendations:
@black3dynamite said in What Are the Latest Virtualization Platform Recommendations:
And since discovering Mangolassi, XenServer seems to be only popular here when Xen Orchestra is being used with it.
that's the only context in which it makes sense. That's its one main management tool.
But saying that, you could say the same kind of thing for Vmware ESXi... it's only popular with vSphere to manage it. Of course, you need something to manage anything. When you have a management tool that is free and really good, there is no need for anything else and/or the two just become associated. That XS is only popular with XO just makes sense, as it is open, free and very powerful. XS has to have some tool, and that one is so good that no one else tries to compete.
Besides not supported better file systems for vm storage especially when using thin storage. I'm never a fan XenCenter it gets the job done but I much rather do things via CLI. I really hope XenServer devs integrated XO soon.
I think they should focus on things like not using ext3 first.
Totally agree. They should really have two version of XenServer. One can be the current one. And the other will include things like ext4, xfs, LVM thin.
Just use CentOS/Fedora/OpenSuse with KVM for that...
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@hobbit666 said in What Are the Latest Virtualization Platform Recommendations:
But I found HyperV there was a lot of messing to get a workstation to talk (especially if your on a different network/domain)
This might of gotten easier since the last time I tried HyperV but it put me off.
This! When I first switched to virtualization it was Hyper-V, and getting it to talk to my workstation was so unnecessarily difficult, I wanted so badly to just join it to the domain. 5Nine is awesome and totally remedied the awkward communication/credential problems. I ultimately bailed on Hyper-V and switched to XS around the same time I switched to Windows 10. We had just gotten a new virtual host and I wanted to try something new, and not paying the $350 a year for the 5nine license was a bonus.
I can't for the life of me get into XO though, XenCenter just works and does everything that I need it to do. Maybe I like it because I was used to 5Nine? I don't know. It seems to be a pain to log into the web interface and fumble around trying to find the stuff I need when I'm already used to XenCenter. I haven't given it a true chance though.
For what it's worth, I've had zero issues with XS since switching. For me, it's been a far better experience than Hyper-V was.
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@bnrstnr said
I can't for the life of me get into XO though, XenCenter just works and does everything that I need it to do. Maybe I like it because I was used to 5Nine? I don't know. It seems to be a pain to log into the web interface and fumble around trying to find the stuff I need when I'm already used to XenCenter. I haven't given it a true chance though.
Backups and easier patching are two big plusses.
I agree, though, that I find myself using XC for most tasks, and have had virtually no issues with XS. (Other than the recent one which I am sure is caused by older hardware.)
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@bnrstnr said in What Are the Latest Virtualization Platform Recommendations:
@hobbit666 said in What Are the Latest Virtualization Platform Recommendations:
But I found HyperV there was a lot of messing to get a workstation to talk (especially if your on a different network/domain)
This might of gotten easier since the last time I tried HyperV but it put me off.
This! When I first switched to virtualization it was Hyper-V, and getting it to talk to my workstation was so unnecessarily difficult, I wanted so badly to just join it to the domain. 5Nine is awesome and totally remedied the awkward communication/credential problems. I ultimately bailed on Hyper-V and switched to XS around the same time I switched to Windows 10. We had just gotten a new virtual host and I wanted to try something new, and not paying the $350 a year for the 5nine license was a bonus.
I can't for the life of me get into XO though, XenCenter just works and does everything that I need it to do. Maybe I like it because I was used to 5Nine? I don't know. It seems to be a pain to log into the web interface and fumble around trying to find the stuff I need when I'm already used to XenCenter. I haven't given it a true chance though.
For what it's worth, I've had zero issues with XS since switching. For me, it's been a far better experience than Hyper-V was.
XO is a single pane of glass, it is built to do everything that XC can do and more. Including the backups, restoration etc.
If you're not using XO for the backup capabilities, or any of the additional functionality, you're missing out on what it really shines at.
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@DustinB3403 said in What Are the Latest Virtualization Platform Recommendations:
If you're not using XO for the backup capabilities, or any of the additional functionality, you're missing out on what it really shines at.
I'm not using it at all currently. I use Unitrends now for backups, and I don't think it's ideal, but it does work.
Not to totally derail the thread, but the backups and stuff is what confuses me about XO, do you have to pay the $70/month to get automated backups and access to the other important features?
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@bnrstnr said in What Are the Latest Virtualization Platform Recommendations:
Not to totally derail the thread, but the backups and stuff is what confuses me about XO, do you have to pay the $70/month to get automated backups and access to the other important features?
All open source and free.
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@bnrstnr said in What Are the Latest Virtualization Platform Recommendations:
@DustinB3403 said in What Are the Latest Virtualization Platform Recommendations:
If you're not using XO for the backup capabilities, or any of the additional functionality, you're missing out on what it really shines at.
I'm not using it at all currently. I use Unitrends now for backups, and I don't think it's ideal, but it does work.
Not to totally derail the thread, but the backups and stuff is what confuses me about XO, do you have to pay the $70/month to get automated backups and access to the other important features?
Nope. And with the simple install found here on ML it's a piece of cake to set up.
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I prefer KVM/QEMU. It's worthwhile to invest time in learning all of the tools to manage everything from the CLI before trying to rely on any of the GUI based tools like virt-manager/virt-viewer.
I only interface with KVM on my home test environment now, but these are the tools I most frequently use. And aside from virsh, most of them are rarely used outside of a script.
- virsh
- qemu-img
- virt-clone
- virt-sysprep