Your decision on what platform to go with depends on your requirements of course. Some observations from my end: Running a non-HVM platform limits you currently to OS where the OS itself has been para-virtualized. An HVM-enabled platform enables your future for changes that you may not have planned for at this time. Also, keep in mind that as you look at the management tools available for Virtualized environments, you may be tempted to give Windows under XEN a try and you will only be able to do that if you have an HVM-enabled server. If you''re planning to re-deploy an existing server that''s one thing. But if you''re going to spend money to get the server, you might as well set yourself for the future. HTH. Jose Betancourt -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Message: 1 Date: Sun, 8 Oct 2006 13:36:46 +0100 From: "John Hannfield" <hal9020@gmail.com> Subject: [Xen- users] Should I use HVM? To: xen-users@lists.xensource.com Message- ID: <4d95b0990610080536p62c8cf43vbfa1c52e4745d61a@mail.gmail.com> Content- Type: text/plain; charset="iso- 8859- 1" Hi, I''m thinking of getting a new server, and I''m wondering about the AMD 2000 series processor with support for hardware virtualisation. But as I only ever use Linux, is this much of an issue? Everything I have read seems to say HVM is good for running unmodified guest OS''s - like windows. But I only need Linux which is already ported to xen, so do I really need hardware virtualisation? There must be other benefits to using it? But what are they? Any advice or pointers to more info on using HVM for linux domU''s would be useful. Thanks, John -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.xensource.com/archives/html/xen-users/attachments/20061008/fc8e6fbf/attachment.htm ------------------------------ _______________________________________________ Xen-users mailing list Xen-users@lists.xensource.com http://lists.xensource.com/xen-users